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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.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #56308 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/56308)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of When I was your age, by Laura E. Richards
-
-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/license
-
-
-Title: When I was your age
-
-Author: Laura E. Richards
-
-Release Date: January 4, 2018 [EBook #56308]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif, Suzanne Shell and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE
-
- [Illustration: GREEN PEACE.]
-
-
-
-
- WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE
-
- BY
-
- LAURA E. RICHARDS
-
- AUTHOR OF “CAPTAIN JANUARY,” “MELODY,”
- “QUEEN HILDEGARDE,” ETC.
-
- _ILLUSTRATED_
-
- BOSTON
-
- ESTES AND LAURIAT
-
- 1894
-
-
- _Copyright, 1893_,
- BY ESTES AND LAURIAT.
-
- University Press:
- JOHN WILSON AND SON, CAMBRIDGE, U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
- TO THE
-
- Dear and Honored Memory of my Father,
-
- DR. SAMUEL GRIDLEY HOWE.
-
-
- _Thy voice comes down the rolling years_
- _Like ring of steel on steel;_
- _With it I hear the tramp of steeds,_
- _And the trumpet’s silver peal._
-
- _I see thee ride thy fearless way,_
- _With steadfast look intent,_
- _God’s servant, still by night and day,_
- _On his high errand bent._
-
- _Thy lance lay ever in the rest_
- _’Gainst tyranny and wrong._
- _Thy steed was swift, thine aim was sure,_
- _Thy sword was keen and strong._
-
- _But were the fainting to be raised,_
- _The sorrowing comforted,--_
- _The warrior vanished, and men saw_
- _An angel stoop instead._
-
- _O soldier Father! dear I hold_
- _Thine honored name to-day;_
- _Thy high soul draws mine eyes above,_
- _And beacons me the way._
-
- _And when my heart beats quick to learn_
- _Some deed of high emprise,_
- _I almost see the answering flash_
- _That lightens from thine eyes._
-
- _I greet thee fair! I bless thee dear!_
- _And here, in token meet,_
- _I pluck these buds from memory’s wreath,_
- _And lay them at thy feet._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
-I. OURSELVES 13
-
-II. MORE ABOUT OURSELVES 27
-
-III. GREEN PEACE 42
-
-IV. THE VALLEY 62
-
-V. OUR FATHER 77
-
-VI. JULIA WARD 107
-
-VII. OUR MOTHER 129
-
-VIII. OUR TEACHERS 163
-
-IX. OUR FRIENDS 180
-
-X. OUR GUESTS 194
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
-GREEN PEACE _Frontispiece_
-
-MAUD 43
-
-LAURA WAS FOUND IN THE SUGAR-BARREL 53
-
-DR. SAMUEL GRIDLEY HOWE 79
-
-THE DOCTOR TO THE RESCUE! 97
-
-JULIA WARD AND HER BROTHERS, AS CHILDREN 109
-
- (From a miniature by Miss Anne Hall.)
-
-LIEUT.-COLONEL SAMUEL WARD 117
-
- (Born Nov. 17, 1756; Died Aug. 16, 1832.)
-
-JULIA WARD 125
-
-JULIA WARD HOWE 131
-
-JULIA ROMANA HOWE 149
-
-JULIA WARD HOWE 157
-
- (From a recent photograph.)
-
-LAURA E. RICHARDS 177
-
-
-
-
-WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-OURSELVES.
-
-
-There were five of us. There had been six, but the Beautiful Boy was
-taken home to heaven while he was still very little; and it was good for
-the rest of us to know that there was always one to wait for and welcome
-us in the Place of Light to which we should go some day. So, as I said,
-there were five of us here,--Julia Romana, Florence, Harry, Laura, and
-Maud. Julia was the eldest. She took her second name from the ancient
-city in which she was born, and she was as beautiful as a soft Italian
-evening,--with dark hair, clear gray eyes, perfect features, and a
-complexion of such pure and wonderful red and white as I have never
-seen in any other face. She had a look as if when she came away from
-heaven she had been allowed to remember it, while others must forget;
-and she walked in a dream always, of beauty and poetry, thinking of
-strange things. Very shy she was, very sensitive. When Flossy (this was
-Florence’s home name) called her “a great red-haired giant,” she wept
-bitterly, and reproached her sister for hurting her feelings. Julia knew
-everything, according to the belief of the younger children. What story
-was there she could not tell? She it was who led the famous
-before-breakfast walks, when we used to start off at six o’clock and
-walk to the Yellow Chases’ (we never knew any other name for them; it
-was the house that was yellow, not the people) at the top of the long
-hill, or sometimes even to the windmill beyond it, where we could see
-the miller at work, all white and dusty, and watch the white sails
-moving slowly round. And on the way Julia told us stories, from Scott or
-Shakspere; or gave us the plot of some opera, “Ernani” or “Trovatore,”
-with snatches of song here and there. “Ai nostri monti ritornaremo,”
-whenever I hear this familiar air ground out by a hand-organ, everything
-fades from my eyes save a long white road fringed with buttercups and
-wild marigolds, and five little figures, with rosy hungry faces,
-trudging along, and listening to the story of the gypsy queen and her
-stolen troubadour.
-
-Julia wrote stories herself, too,--very wonderful stories, we all
-thought, and, indeed, I think so still. She began when she was a little
-girl, not more than six or seven years old. There lies beside me now on
-the table a small book, about five inches square, bound in faded pink
-and green, and filled from cover to cover with writing in a cramped,
-childish hand. It is a book of novels and plays, written by our Julia
-before she was ten years old; and I often think that the beautiful and
-helpful things she wrote in her later years were hardly more remarkable
-than these queer little romances. They are very sentimental; no child of
-eight, save perhaps Marjorie Fleming, was ever so sentimental as
-Julia,--“Leonora Mayre; A Tale,” “The Lost Suitor,” “The Offers.” I must
-quote a scene from the last-named play.
-
-
- SCENE I.
-
-Parlor at MRS. EVANS’S. FLORENCE EVANS _alone_.
-
-_Enter_ ANNIE.
-
- A. Well, Florence, Bruin is going to make an offer, I suppose.
-
- F. Why so?
-
- A. Here’s a pound of candy from him. He said he had bought it for
- you, but on arriving he was afraid it was too trifling a gift; but
- hoping you would not throw it away, he requested me to give it to
- that virtuous young lady, as he calls you.
-
- F. Well, I am young, but I did not know that I was virtuous.
-
- A. I think you are.
-
-
- SCENE II.
-
-Parlor. MR. BRUIN _alone_.
-
- MR. B. Why doesn’t she come? She doesn’t usually keep me waiting.
-
-_Enter_ FLORENCE.
-
- F. How do you do? I am sorry to have kept you waiting.
-
- MR. B. I have not been here more than a few minutes. Your parlor is
- so warm this cold day that I could wait.
-
-[_Laughs._
-
- F. You sent me some candy the other day which I liked very much.
-
- MR. B. Well, you liked the candy; so I pleased you. Now you can
- please me. I don’t care about presents; I had rather have something
- that can love me. You.
-
- F. I do not love you.
-
-[_Exit_ MR. BRUIN.
-
-
- SCENE III.
-
-FLORENCE _alone_. _Enter_ MR. CAS.
-
- F. How do you do?
-
- MR. C. Very well.
-
- F. It is a very pleasant day.
-
- MR. C. Yes. It would be still pleasanter if you will be my bride. I
- want a respectful refusal, but prefer a cordial acception.
-
- F. You can have the former.
-
-[_Exit_ MR. CAS.
-
-
- SCENE IV.
-
- FLORENCE _with_ MR. EMERSON.
-
- MR. E. I love you, Florence. You may not love me, for I am inferior
- to you; but tell me whether you do or not. If my hopes are true,
- let me know it, and I shall not be doubtful any longer. If they are
- not, tell me, and I shall not expect any more.
-
- F. They are.
-
-[_Exit_ MR. EMERSON.
-
-
-
-
-The fifth scene of this remarkable drama is laid in the church, and is
-very thrilling. The stage directions are brief, but it is evident from
-the text that as Mr. Emerson and his taciturn bride advance to the
-altar, Messrs. Cas and Bruin, “to gain some private ends,” do the same.
-The Bishop is introduced without previous announcement.
-
-
- SCENE V.
-
- BISHOP. Are you ready?
-
- MR. B. Yes.
-
- BISHOP. Mr. Emerson, are you ready?
-
- MR. C. Yes.
-
- BISHOP. Mr. Emerson, I am waiting.
-
- BRUIN _and_ CAS [_together_]. So am I.
-
- MR. E. I am ready. But what have these men to do with our marriage?
-
- MR. B. Florence, I charge you with a breach of promise. You said
- you would be my bride.
-
- F. I did not.
-
- MR. C. You promised me.
-
- F. When?
-
- MR. C. A month ago. You said you would marry me.
-
- MR. B. A fortnight ago you promised me. You said we would be
- married to-day.
-
- MR. C. Bishop, what does this mean? Florence Evans promised to
- marry me, and this very day was fixed upon. And see how false she
- has been! She has, as you see, promised both of us, and now is
- going to wed this man.
-
- BISHOP. But Mr. Emerson and Miss Evans made the arrangements with
- me; how is it that neither of you said anything of it beforehand?
-
- MR. C. I forgot.
-
- MR. B. So did I.
-
-[F. _weeps._
-
-_Enter_ ANNIE.
-
- A. I thought I should be too late to be your bridesmaid, but I find
- I am in time. But I thought you were to be married at half-past
- four, and it is five by the church clock.
-
- MR. E. We should have been married by this time, but these men say
- that Florence has promised to marry them. Is it true, Florence?
-
- F. No. [BESSY, _her younger sister, supports her._
-
- A. It isn’t true, for you know, Edward Bruin, that you and I are
- engaged; and Mr. Cas and Bessy have been for some time. And both
- engagements have been out for more than a week.
-
-[BESSY _looks reproachfully at_ CAS.
-
- B. Why, Joseph Cas!
-
- BISHOP. Come, Mr. Emerson! I see that Mr. Cas and Mr. Bruin have
- been trying to worry your bride. But their story can’t be true, for
- these other young ladies say that they are engaged to them.
-
- F. They each of them made me an offer, which I refused.
-
-[_The_ BISHOP _marries them_.
-
- F. [_After they are married._] I shall never again be troubled with
- such offers [_looks at_ CAS _and_ BRUIN] as _yours_!
-
-
-I meant to give one scene, and I have given the whole play, not knowing
-where to stop. There was nothing funny about it to Julia. The heroine,
-with her wonderful command of silence, was her ideal of maiden reserve
-and dignity; the deep-dyed villany of Bruin and Cas, the retiring
-manners of the fortunate Emerson, the singular sprightliness of the
-Bishop, were all perfectly natural, as her vivid mind saw them.
-
-So she was bitterly grieved one day when a dear friend of the family, to
-whom our mother had read the play, rushed up to her, and seizing her
-hand, cried,--
-
-“‘Julia, will you have me?’ ‘No!’ Exit Mr. Bruin.”
-
-Deeply grieved the little maiden was; and it cannot have been very long
-after that time that she gave the little book to her dearest aunt, who
-has kept it carefully through all these years.
-
-If Julia was like Milton’s “Penseroso,” Flossy was the “Allegro” in
-person, or like Wordsworth’s maiden,--
-
- “A dancing shape, an image gay,
- To haunt, to startle, and waylay”
-
-She was very small as a child. One day a lady, not knowing that the
-little girl was within hearing, said to her mother, “What a pity Flossy
-is so small!”
-
-“I’m big inside!” cried a little angry voice at her elbow; and there was
-Flossy, swelling with rage, like an offended bantam. And she _was_ big
-inside! her lively, active spirit seemed to break through the little
-body and carry it along in spite of itself. Sometimes it was an impish
-spirit; always it was an enterprising one.
-
-She it was who invented the dances which seemed to us such wonderful
-performances. We danced every evening in the great parlor, our mother
-playing for us on the piano. There was the “Macbeth” dance, in which
-Flossy figured as Lady Macbeth. With a dagger in her hand, she crept and
-rushed and pounced and swooped about in a most terrifying manner, always
-graceful as a fairy. A sofa-pillow played the part of Duncan, and had a
-very hard time of it. The “Julius Cæsar” dance was no less tragic; we
-all took part in it, and stabbed right and left with sticks of
-kindling-wood. One got the curling-stick and was happy, for it was the
-next thing to the dagger, which no one but Flossy could have. Then there
-was the dance of the “Four Seasons,” which had four figures. In spring
-we sowed, in summer we reaped; in autumn we hunted the deer, and in
-winter there was much jingling of bells. The hunting figure was most
-exciting. It was performed with knives (kindling-wood), as Flossy
-thought them more romantic than guns; they were held close to the side,
-with point projecting, and in this way we moved with a quick _chassé_
-step, which, coupled with a savage frown, was supposed to be peculiarly
-deadly.
-
-Flossy invented many other amusements, too. There was the school-loan
-system. We had school in the little parlor at that time, and our desks
-had lids that lifted up. In her desk Flossy kept a number of precious
-things, which she lent to the younger children for so many pins an hour.
-The most valuable thing was a set of three colored worsted balls, red,
-green, and blue. You could set them twirling, and they would keep going
-for ever so long. It was a delightful sport; but they were very
-expensive, costing, I think, twenty pins an hour. It took a long time to
-collect twenty pins, for of course it was not fair to take them out of
-the pin-cushions.
-
-Then there was a glass eye-cup without a foot; that cost ten pins, and
-was a great favorite with us. You stuck it in your eye, and tried to
-hold it there while you winked with the other. Of course all this was
-done behind the raised desk-lid, and I have sometimes wondered what the
-teacher was doing that she did not find us out sooner. She was not very
-observant, and I am quite sure she was afraid of Flossy. One sad day,
-however, she caught Laura with the precious glass in her eye, and it was
-taken away forever. It was a bitter thing to the child (I know all about
-it, for I was Laura) to be told that she could never have it again, even
-after school. She had paid her ten pins, and she could not see what
-right the teacher had to take the glass away. But after that the
-school-loan system was forbidden, and I have never known what became of
-the three worsted balls.
-
-Flossy also told stories; or rather she told one story which had no end,
-and of which we never tired. Under the sea, she told us, lived a fairy
-named Patty, who was a most intimate friend of hers, and whom she
-visited every night. This fairy dwelt in a palace hollowed out of a
-single immense pearl. The rooms in it were countless, and were
-furnished in a singular and delightful manner. In one room the chairs
-and sofas were of chocolate; in another, of fresh strawberries; in
-another, of peaches,--and so on. The floors were paved with squares of
-chocolate and cream candy; the windows were of transparent barley-sugar,
-and when you broke off the arm of a chair and ate it, or took a square
-or two out of the pavement, they were immediately replaced, so that
-there was no trouble for anyone. Patty had a ball every evening, and
-Flossy never failed to go. Sometimes, when we were good, she would take
-us; but the singular thing about it was that we never remembered what
-had happened. In the morning our infant minds were a cheerful blank,
-till Flossy told us what a glorious time we had had at Patty’s the night
-before, how we had danced with Willie Winkie, and how much ice-cream we
-had eaten. We listened to the recital with unalloyed delight, and
-believed every word of it, till a sad day of awakening came. We were
-always made to understand that we could not bring away anything from
-Patty’s, and were content with this arrangement; but on this occasion
-there was to be a ball of peculiar magnificence, and Flossy, in a fit of
-generosity, told Harry that he was to receive a pair of diamond
-trousers, which he would be allowed to bring home. Harry was a child
-with a taste for magnificence; and he went to bed full of joy, seeing
-already in anticipation the glittering of the jewelled garment, and the
-effects produced by it on the small boys of his acquaintance. Bitter was
-the disappointment when, on awakening in the morning, the chair by his
-bedside bore only the familiar brown knickerbockers, with a patch of a
-lighter shade on one knee. Harry wept, and would not be comforted; and
-after that, though we still liked to hear the Patty stories, we felt
-that the magic of them was gone,--that they were only stories, like
-“Blue-beard” or “Jack and the Beanstalk.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-MORE ABOUT OURSELVES.
-
-
-Julia and Flossy did not content themselves with writing plays and
-telling stories. They aspired to making a language,--a real language,
-which should be all their own, and should have grammars and dictionaries
-like any other famous tongue. It was called Patagonian,--whether with
-any idea of future missionary work among the people of that remote
-country, or merely because it sounded well, I cannot say. It was a
-singular language. I wish more of it had survived; but I can give only a
-few of its more familiar phrases.
-
-MILLDAM--Yes.
-
-PILLDAM--No.
-
-MOUCHE--Mother.
-
-BIS VON SNOUT?--Are you well?
-
-BRUNK TU TOUCHY SNOUT--I am very well.
-
-CHING CHU STICK STUMPS?--Will you have some doughnuts?
-
-These fragments will, I am sure, make my readers regret deeply the loss
-of this language, which has the merit of entire originality.
-
-As to Flossy’s talent for making paper-dolls, it is a thing not to be
-described. There were no such paper-dolls as those. Their figures might
-not be exactly like the human figure, but how infinitely more graceful!
-Their waists were so small that they sometimes broke in two when called
-upon to courtesy to a partner or a queen: that was the height of
-delicacy! They had ringlets invariably, and very large eyes with amazing
-lashes; they smiled with unchanging sweetness, filling our hearts with
-delight. Many and wonderful were their dresses. The crinoline of the day
-was magnified into a sort of vast semi-circular cloud, adorned about the
-skirt with strange patterns; one small doll would sometimes wear a whole
-sheet of foolscap in an evening dress! That was extravagant, but our
-daughters must be in the fashion. There was one yellow dress belonging
-to my doll Parthenia (a lovely creature of Jewish aspect, whose waist
-was smaller than her legs), which is not even now to be remembered
-without emotion. We built houses for the paper-dolls with books from the
-parlor table, even borrowing some from the bookcase when we wanted an
-extra suite of rooms. I do not say it was good for the books, but it was
-very convenient for the dolls. I have reason to think that our mother
-did not know of this practice. In the matter of their taking exercise,
-however, she aided us materially, giving us sundry empty trinket-boxes
-lined with satin, which made the most charming carriages in the world.
-The state coach was a silver-gilt portemonnaie lined with red silk. It
-had seen better days, and the clasp was broken; but that did not make it
-less available as a coach. I wish you could have seen Parthenia in it!
-
-I do not think we cared so much for other dolls, yet there were some
-that must be mentioned. Vashti Ann was named for a cook; she belonged
-to Julia, and I have an idea that she was of a very haughty and
-disagreeable temper, though I cannot remember her personal appearance.
-Still more shadowy is my recollection of Eliza Viddipock,--a name to be
-spoken with bated breath. What dark crime this wretched doll had
-committed to merit her fearful fate, I do not know; it was a thing not
-to be spoken of to the younger children, apparently. But I do know that
-she was hanged, with all solemnity of judge and hangman. It seems unjust
-that I should have forgotten the name of Julia’s good doll, who died,
-and had the cover of the sugar-bowl buried with her, as a tribute to her
-virtues.
-
-Sally Bradford and Clara both belonged to Laura. Sally was an
-india-rubber doll; Clara, a doll with a china head of the old-fashioned
-kind, smooth, shining black hair, brilliant rosy cheeks, and calm (very
-calm) blue eyes. I prefer this kind of doll to any other. Clara’s life
-was an uneventful one, on the whole, and I remember only one remarkable
-thing in it. A little girl in the neighborhood invited Laura to a
-dolls’ party on a certain day: she was to bring Clara by special
-request. Great was the excitement, for Laura was very small, and had
-never yet gone to a party. A seamstress was in the house making the
-summer dresses, and our mother said that Clara should have a new frock
-for the party. It seemed a very wonderful thing to have a real new white
-muslin frock, made by a real seamstress, for one’s beloved doll. Clara
-had a beautiful white neck, so the frock was made low and trimmed with
-lace. When the afternoon came, Laura brought some tiny yellow roses from
-the greenhouse, and the seamstress sewed them on down the front of the
-frock and round the neck and hem. It is not probable that any other doll
-ever looked so beautiful as Clara when her toilet was complete.
-
-Then Laura put on her own best frock, which was not one half so fine,
-and tied on her gray felt bonnet, trimmed with quillings of pink and
-green satin ribbon, and started off, the proudest and happiest child in
-the whole world. She reached the house (it was very near) and climbed
-up the long flight of stone steps, and stood on tiptoe to ring the
-bell,--then waited with a beating heart. Would there be many other
-dolls? Would any of them be half so lovely as Clara? Would
-there--dreadful thought!--would there be big girls there?
-
-The door opened. If any little girls read this they will now be very
-sorry for Laura. There was no dolls’ party! Rosy’s mother (the little
-girl’s name was Rosy) had heard nothing at all about it; Rosy had gone
-to spend the afternoon with Sarah Crocker.
-
-“Sorry, little girl! What a pretty dolly! Good-by, dear!” and then the
-door was shut again.
-
-Laura toddled down the long stone steps, and went solemnly home. She did
-not cry, because it would not be nice to cry in the street; but she
-could not see very clearly. She never went to visit Rosy again, and
-never knew whether the dolls’ party had been forgotten, or why it was
-given up.
-
-Before leaving the subject of dolls, I must say a word about little
-Maud’s first doll. Maud was a child of rare beauty, as beautiful as
-Julia, though very different. Her fair hair was of such color and
-quality that our mother used to call her Silk-and-silver, a name which
-suited her well; her eyes were like stars under their long black lashes.
-So brilliant, so vivid was the child’s coloring that she seemed to flash
-with silver and rosy light as she moved about. She was so much younger
-than the others that in many of their reminiscences she has no share;
-yet she has her own stories, too. A friend of our father’s, being much
-impressed with this starry beauty of the child, thought it would be
-pleasant to give her the prettiest doll that could be found; accordingly
-he appeared one day bringing a wonderful creature, with hair almost like
-Maud’s own, and great blue eyes that opened and shut, and cheeks whose
-steadfast roses did not flash in and out, but bloomed always. I think
-the doll was dressed in blue and silver, but am not sure; she was
-certainly very magnificent.
-
-Maud was enchanted, of course, and hugged her treasure, and went off
-with it. It happened that she had been taken only the day before to see
-the blind children at the Institution near by, where our father spent
-much of his time. It was the first time she had talked with the little
-blind girls, and they made a deep impression on her baby mind, though
-she said little at the time. As I said, she went off with her new doll,
-and no one saw her for some time. At length she returned, flushed and
-triumphant.
-
-“My dolly is blind, now!” she cried; and she displayed the doll, over
-whose eyes she had tied a ribbon, in imitation of Laura Bridgman. “She
-is blind Polly! ain’t got no eyes ’t all!”
-
-Alas! it was even so. Maud had poked the beautiful blue glass eyes till
-they fell in, and only empty sockets were hidden by the green ribbon.
-There was a great outcry, of course; but it did not disturb Maud in the
-least. She wanted a blind doll, and she had one; and no pet could be
-more carefully tended than was poor blind Polly.
-
-More precious than any doll could be, rises in my memory the majestic
-form of Pistachio. It was Flossy, ever fertile in invention, who
-discovered the true worth of Pistachio, and taught us to regard with awe
-and reverence this object of her affection. Pistachio was an oval
-mahogany footstool, covered with green cloth of the color of the nut
-whose name he bore. I have the impression that he had lost a leg, but am
-not positive on this point. He was considered an invalid, and every
-morning he was put in the baby-carriage and taken in solemn procession
-down to the brook for his morning bath. One child held a parasol over
-his sacred head (only he had no head!), two more propelled the carriage,
-while the other two went before as outriders. No mirth was allowed on
-this occasion, the solemnity of which was deeply impressed on us.
-Arrived at the brook, Pistachio was lifted from the carriage by his
-chief officer, Flossy herself, and set carefully down on the flat stone
-beside the brook. His sacred legs were dipped one by one into the clear
-water, and dried with a towel. Happy was the child who was allowed to
-perform this function! After the bath, he was walked gently up and
-down, and rubbed, to assist the circulation; then he was put back in his
-carriage, and the procession started for home again, with the same
-gravity and decorum as before. The younger children felt sure there was
-some mystery about Pistachio. I cannot feel sure, even now, that he was
-nothing more than an ordinary oval cricket; but his secret, whatever it
-was, has perished with him.
-
-I perceive that I have said little or nothing thus far about Harry; yet
-he was a very important member of the family. The only boy: and such a
-boy! He was by nature a Very Imp, such as has been described by Mr.
-Stockton in one of his delightful stories. Not two years old was he when
-he began to pull the tails of all the little dogs he met,--a habit which
-he long maintained. The love of mischief was deeply rooted in him. It
-was not safe to put him in the closet for misbehavior; for he cut off
-the pockets of the dresses hanging there, and snipped the fringe off his
-teacher’s best shawl. Yet he was a sweet and affectionate child, with a
-tender heart and sensitive withal. When about four years old, he had the
-habit of summoning our father to breakfast; and, not being able to say
-the word, would announce, “Brescott is ready!” This excited mirth among
-the other children, which he never could endure; accordingly, one
-morning he appeared at the door of the dressing-room and said solemnly,
-“Papa, your food is prepared!”
-
-It is recorded of this child that he went once to pay a visit to some
-dear relatives, and kept them in a fever of anxiety until he was taken
-home again. One day it was his little cousin’s rocking-horse, which
-disappeared from the nursery, and shortly after was seen airing itself
-on the top of the chimney, kicking its heels in the sunshine, and
-appearing to enjoy its outing. Another time it was down the chimney that
-the stream of mischief took its way; and a dear and venerable visitor
-(no other than Dr. Coggeshall, of Astor Library fame), sitting before
-the fire in the twilight, was amazed by a sudden shower of boots
-tumbling down, one after another, into the ashes, whence he
-conscientiously rescued them with the tongs, at peril of receiving some
-on his good white head.
-
-Such boots and shoes as escaped this fiery ordeal were tacked by Master
-Harry to the floor of the closets in the various rooms; and while he was
-in the closet, what could be easier or pleasanter than to cut off the
-pockets of the dresses hanging there? Altogether, Egypt was glad when
-Harry departed; and I do not think he made many more visits away from
-home, till he had outgrown the days of childhood.
-
-At the age of six, Harry determined to marry, and offered his hand and
-heart to Mary, the nurse, an excellent woman some thirty years older
-than he. He sternly forbade her to sew or do other nursery work, saying
-that his wife must not work for her living. About this time, too, he
-told our mother that he thought he felt his beard growing.
-
-He was just two years older than Laura, and the tie between them was
-very close. Laura’s first question to a stranger was always, “Does you
-know my bulla Hally? I hope you does!” and she was truly sorry for any
-one who had not that privilege.
-
-The two children slept in tiny rooms adjoining each other. It was both
-easy and pleasant to “talk across” while lying in bed, when they were
-supposed to be sound asleep. Neither liked to give up the last word of
-greeting, and they would sometimes say “Good-night!” “Good-night!” over
-and over, backward and forward, for ten minutes together. In general,
-Harry was very kind to Laura, playing with her, and protecting her from
-any roughness of neighbor children. (They said “bunnit” and “apurn,” and
-“I wunt;” and we were fond of correcting them, which they not brooking,
-quarrels were apt to ensue.) But truth compels me to tell of one
-occasion on which Harry did not show a brotherly spirit. In the garden,
-under a great birch-tree, stood a trough for watering the horses. It was
-a large and deep trough, and always full of beautiful, clear water. It
-was pleasant to lean over the edge, and see the sky and the leaves of
-the tree reflected as if in a crystal mirror; to see one’s own rosy,
-freckled face, too, and make other faces; to see which could open eyes
-or mouth widest.
-
-Now one day, as little Laura, being perhaps four years old, was hanging
-over the edge of the trough, forgetful of all save the delight of
-gazing, it chanced that Harry came up behind her; and the spirit of
-mischief that was always in him triumphed over brotherly affection, and
-he
-
- “Ups with her heels,
- And smothers her squeals”
-
-in the clear, cold water.
-
-Laura came up gasping and puffing, her hair streaming all over her round
-face, her eyes staring with wonder and fright!
-
-By the time help arrived, as it fortunately did, in the person of Thomas
-the gardener, poor Laura was in a deplorable condition, half choked with
-water, and frightened nearly out of her wits.
-
-Thomas carried the dripping child to the house and put her into Mary’s
-kind arms, and then reported to our mother what Harry had done.
-
-We were almost never whipped; but for this misdeed Harry was put to bed
-at once, and our mother, sitting beside him, gave him what we used to
-call a “talking to,” which he did not soon forget.
-
-Nurse Mary probably thought it would gratify Laura to know that naughty
-Harry was being punished for his misdoings; but she had mistaken her
-child. When the mother came back to the nursery from Harry’s room, she
-found Laura (in dry raiment, but with cheeks still crimson and shining)
-sitting in the middle of the floor, with clenched fists and flashing
-eyes, and roaring at the top of her lungs, “I’ll tumble my mudder down
-wid a ’tick!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-GREEN PEACE.
-
-
-Not many children can boast of having two homes; some, alas! have hardly
-one. But we actually had two abiding-places, both of which were so dear
-to us that we loved them equally. First, there was Green Peace. When our
-mother first came to the place, and saw the fair garden, and the house
-with its lawn and its shadowing trees, she gave it this name, half in
-sport; and the title clung to it always.
-
-The house itself was pleasant. The original building, nearly two hundred
-years old, was low and squat, with low-studded rooms, and great posts in
-the corners, and small many-paned windows. As I recall it now, it
-consisted largely of cupboards,--the queerest cupboards that ever were;
-some square and some three-cornered, and others of no shape
-
-[Illustration: MAUD.]
-
-at all. They were squeezed into staircase walls, they lurked beside
-chimneys, they were down near the floor, they were close beneath the
-ceiling. It was as if a child had built the house for the express
-purpose of playing hide-and-seek in it. Ah, how we children did play
-hide-and-seek there! To lie curled up in the darkest corner of the
-“twisty” cupboard, that went burrowing in under the front stairs,--to
-lie curled up there, eating an apple, and hear the chase go clattering
-and thumping by, that was a sensation!
-
-Then the stairs! There was not very much of them, for a tall man
-standing on the ground floor could touch the top step with his hand. But
-they had a great deal of variety; no two steps went the same way: they
-seemed to have fallen out with one another, and never to have “made up”
-again. When you had once learned how to go up and down, it was very
-well, except in the dark; and even then you had only to remember that
-you must tread on the farther side of the first two steps, and on the
-hither side of the next three, and in the middle of four after, and
-then you were near the top or the bottom, as the case might be, and
-could scramble or jump for it. But it was not well for strangers to go
-up and down those stairs.
-
-There was another flight that was even more perilous, but our father had
-it boarded over, as he thought it unsafe for any one to use. One always
-had a shiver in passing through a certain dark passage, when one felt
-boards instead of plaster under one’s hand, and knew that behind those
-boards lurked the hidden staircase. There was something uncanny about
-it,--
-
- “O’er all there hung the shadow of a fear;
- A sense of mystery the spirit daunted.”
-
-Perhaps the legend of the hidden staircase was all the more awful
-because it was never told.
-
-Just to the right of the school-room, a door opened into the new part of
-the house which our father had built. The first room was the great
-dining-room; and very great it was. On the floor was a wonderful carpet,
-all in one piece, which was made in France, and had belonged to Joseph
-Bonaparte, a brother of the great Emperor. In the middle was a medallion
-of Napoleon and Marie Louise, with sun-rays about them; then came a
-great circle, with strange beasts on it ramping and roaring (only they
-roared silently); and then a plain space, and in the corners birds and
-fishes such as never were seen in air or sea. Yes, that _was_ a carpet!
-It was here we danced the wonderful dances. We hopped round and round
-the circle, and we stamped on the beasts and the fishes; but it was not
-good manners to step on the Emperor and Empress,--one must go round
-them. Here our mother sang to us; but the singing belongs to another
-chapter.
-
-The great dining-room had a roof all to itself,--a flat roof, covered
-with tar and gravel, and railed in; so that one could lie on one’s face
-and kick one’s heels, pick out white pebbles, and punch the bubbles of
-tar all hot in the sun.
-
-But, after all, we did not stay in the house much. Why should we, with
-the garden calling us out with its thousand voices? On each side of the
-house lay an oval lawn, green as emerald. One lawn had the
-laburnum-tree, where at the right time of year we sat under a shower of
-fragrant gold; the other had the three hawthorn-trees, one with white
-blossoms, another with pink, and a third with deep red, rose-like
-flowers. Other trees were there, but I do not remember them. Directly in
-front of the house stood two giant Balm-of-Gilead trees, towering over
-the low-roofed dwelling. These trees were favorites of ours, for at a
-certain time they dropped down to us thousands and thousands of sticky
-catkins, full of the most charming, silky cotton. We called them the
-“cottonwool-trees,” and loved them tenderly. Then, between the trees, a
-flight of steps plunged down to the green-house. A curious place this
-was,--summer-house, hot-house, and bowling-alley, all in one. The
-summer-house part was not very interesting, being all filled with seeds
-and pots and dry bulbs, and the like. But from it a swing-door opened
-into Elysium! Here the air was soft and balmy, and full of the smell of
-roses. One went down two steps, and there were the roses themselves!
-Great vines trained along the walls, heavy with long white or yellow or
-tea-colored buds,--I remember no red ones. Mr. Arrow, the gardener,
-never let us touch the roses, and he never gave us a bud; but when a
-rose was fully open, showing its golden heart, he would often pick it
-for us, with a sigh, but a kind look too. Mr. Arrow was an Englishman,
-stout and red-faced. Julia made a rhyme about him once, beginning,--
-
- “Poor Mr. Arrow, he once was narrow,
- But that was a long time ago.”
-
-Midway in the long glass-covered building was a tiny oval pond, lined
-with green moss. I think it once had goldfish in it, but they did not
-thrive. When Mr. Arrow was gone to dinner, it was pleasant to fill the
-brass syringe with water from this pond, and squirt at the roses, and
-feel the heavy drops plashing back in one’s upturned face. Sometimes a
-child fell into the pond; but as the water was only four or five inches
-deep, no harm was done, save to stockings and petticoats.
-
-The bowling-alley was divided by a low partition from the hot-house, so
-that when we went to play at planets we breathed the same soft, perfumed
-air. The planets were the balls. The biggest one was Uranus; then came
-Saturn, and so on down to Mercury, a little dot of a ball. They were of
-some dark, hard, foreign wood, very smooth, with a dusky polish. It was
-a great delight to roll them, either over the smooth floor, against the
-ninepins, or along the rack at the side. When one rolled Uranus or
-Jupiter, it sounded like thunder,--Olympian thunder, suggestive of angry
-gods. Then the musical tinkle of the pins, as they clinked and fell
-together! Sometimes they were British soldiers, and we the Continentals,
-firing the “iron six-pounder” from the other end of the battle-field.
-Sometimes, regardless of dates, we introduced artillery into the Trojan
-war, and Hector bowled Achilles off his legs, or _vice versa_.
-
-The bowling-alley was also used for other sports. It was here that
-Flossy gave a grand party for Cotchy, her precious Maltese cat. All the
-cat-owning little girls in the neighborhood were invited, and about
-twelve came, each bringing her pet in a basket. Cotchy was beautifully
-dressed in a cherry-colored ribbon, which set off her gray, satiny coat
-to perfection. She received her guests with much dignity, but was not
-inclined to do much toward entertaining them. Flossy tried to make the
-twelve cats play with one another, but they were shy on first
-acquaintance, and a little stiff. Perhaps Flossy did not in those days
-know the proper etiquette for introducing cats, though since then she
-has studied all kinds of etiquette thoroughly. But the little girls
-enjoyed themselves, if the cats did not, and there was a great deal of
-chattering and comparing notes. Then came the feast, which consisted of
-milk and fish-bones; and next every cat had her nose buttered by way of
-dessert. Altogether, the party was voted a great success.
-
-Below, and on both sides of the green-house, the fertile ground was set
-thick with fruit-trees, our father’s special pride. The pears and
-peaches of Green Peace were known far and wide; I have never seen such
-peaches since, nor is it only the halo of childish recollection that
-shines around them, for others bear the same testimony. Crimson-glowing,
-golden-hearted, smooth and perfect as a baby’s cheek, each one was a
-thing of wonder and beauty; and when you ate one, you ate summer and
-sunshine. Our father gave us a great deal of fruit, but we were never
-allowed to take it ourselves without permission; indeed, I doubt if it
-ever occurred to us to do so. One of us still remembers the thrill of
-horror she felt when a little girl who had come to spend the afternoon
-picked up a fallen peach and ate it, without asking leave. It seemed a
-dreadful thing not to know that the garden was a field of honor. As to
-the proverbial sweetness of stolen fruit, we knew nothing about it. The
-fruit was sweet enough from our dear father’s hand, and, as I said, he
-gave us plenty of it.
-
-How was it, I wonder, that this sense of honor seemed sometimes to stay
-in the garden and not always to come into the house?
-
-[Illustration: LAURA WAS FOUND IN THE SUGAR-BARREL.]
-
-For as I write, the thought comes to me of a day when Laura was found
-with her feet sticking out of the sugar-barrel, into which she had
-fallen head foremost while trying to get a lump of sugar. She has never
-eaten a lump of sugar, save in her tea, since that day. Also, it is
-recorded of Flossy and Julia, that, being one day at the Institution,
-they found the store-room open, and went in, against the law. There was
-a beautiful polished tank, which appeared to be full of rich brown
-syrup. Julia and Flossy liked syrup; so each filled a mug, and then they
-counted one, two, three, and each took a good draught,--and it was
-train-oil!
-
-But in both these cases the culprits were hardly out of babyhood; so
-perhaps they had not yet learned about the “broad stone of honor,” on
-which it is good to set one’s feet.
-
-I must not leave the garden without speaking of the cherry-trees. These
-must have been planted by early settlers, perhaps by the same hand that
-planned the crooked stairs and quaint cupboards of the old
-house,--enormous trees, gnarled and twisted like ancient apple-trees,
-and as sturdy as they. They had been grafted--whether by our father’s or
-some earlier hand I know not--with the finest varieties of
-“white-hearts” and “black-hearts,” and they bore amazing quantities of
-cherries. These attracted flocks of birds, which our father in vain
-tried to frighten away with scarecrows. Once he put the cat in a
-bird-cage, and hung her up in the white-heart tree; but the birds soon
-found that she could not get at them, and poor pussy was so miserable
-that she was quickly released.
-
-I perceive that we shall not get to the summer home in this chapter; but
-I must say a word about the Institution for the Blind, which was within
-a few minutes’ walk of Green Peace.
-
-Many of our happiest hours were spent in this pleasant place, the home
-of patient cheerfulness and earnest work. We often went to play with the
-blind children when our lessons and theirs were over, and they came
-trooping out into the sunny playground. I do not think it occurred to us
-to pity these boys and girls deprived of one of the chief sources of
-pleasure in life; they were so happy, so merry, that we took their
-blindness as a matter of course.
-
-Our father often gave us baskets of fruit to take to them. That was a
-great pleasure. We loved to turn the great globe in the hall, and,
-shutting our eyes, pass our fingers over the raised surfaces, trying to
-find different places. We often “played blind,” and tried to read the
-great books with raised print, but never succeeded that I remember. The
-printing-office was a wonderful place to linger in; and one could often
-get pieces of marbled paper, which was valuable in the paper-doll world.
-Then there was the gymnasium, with its hanging rings, and its wonderful
-tilt, which went up so high that it took one’s breath away. Just beyond
-the gymnasium, were some small rooms, in which were stored worn-out
-pianos, disabled after years of service under practising fingers. It was
-very good fun to play on a worn-out piano. There were always a good many
-notes that really sounded, and they had quite individual sounds, not
-like those of common pianos; then there were some notes that buzzed, and
-some that growled, and some that made no noise at all; and one could
-poke in under the cover, and twang the strings, and play with the
-chamois-leather things that went flop (we have since learned that they
-are called hammers), and sometimes pull them out, though that seemed
-wicked.
-
-Then there was the matron’s room, where we were always made welcome by
-the sweet and gracious woman who still makes sunshine in that place by
-her lovely presence. Dear Miss M---- was never out of patience with our
-pranks, had always a picture-book or a flower or a curiosity to show us,
-and often a story to tell when a spare half-hour came. For her did
-Flossy and Julia act their most thrilling tragedies, no other spectators
-being admitted. To her did Harry and Laura confide their infant joys and
-woes. Other friends will have a chapter to themselves, but it seems most
-fitting to speak of this friend here, in telling of the home she has
-made bright for over fifty years.
-
-Over the way from the Institution stood the workshop, where blind men
-and women, many of them graduates of the Institution, made mattresses
-and pillows, mats and brooms. This was another favorite haunt of ours.
-There was a stuffy but not unpleasant smell of feathers and hemp about
-the place. I should know that smell if I met it in Siberia! There were
-coils of rope, sometimes so large that one could squat down and hide in
-the middle, piles of hemp, and dark mysterious bins full of curled hair,
-white and black. There was a dreadful mystery about the black-hair bin;
-the little ones ran past it, with their heads turned away. But they
-never told what it was, and one of them never knew.
-
-But the crowning joy of the workshop was the feather-room,--a long room,
-with smooth, clean floor; along one side of it were divisions, like the
-stalls in a stable, and each division was half filled with feathers. Boy
-and girl readers will understand what a joy this must have been,--to sit
-down in the feathers, and let them cover you up to the neck, and be a
-setting hen! or to lie at full length, and be a traveller lost in the
-snow,--Harry making it snow feathers till you were all covered up, and
-then turning into the faithful hound and dragging you out! or to play
-the game of “Winds,” and blow the feathers about the room! But old
-Margaret did not allow this last game, and we could do it only when she
-happened to go out for a moment, which was not very often. Old Margaret
-was the presiding genius of the feather-room, a half-blind woman, who
-kept the feathers in order and helped to sew up the pillows and
-mattresses. She was always kind to us, and let us rake feathers with the
-great wooden rake as much as we would. Later, when Laura was perhaps ten
-years old, she used to go and read to old Margaret. Mrs. Browning’s
-poems were making a new world for the child at that time, and she never
-felt a moment’s doubt about the old woman’s enjoying them: in after
-years doubts did occur to her.
-
-It was probably a quaint picture, if any one had looked in upon it: the
-long, low room, with the feather-heaps, white and dusky gray; the
-half-blind, withered crone, nodding over her knitting, and the little
-earnest child, throwing her whole soul into “The Romaunt of the Page,”
-or the “Rhyme of the Duchess May.”
-
- “Oh! the little birds sang east,
- And the little birds sang west,
- Toll slowly!”
-
-The first sound of the words carries me back through the years to the
-feather-room and old blind Margaret.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE VALLEY.
-
-
-The time of our summer flitting varied. Sometimes we stayed at Green
-Peace till after strawberry-time, and lingered late at the Valley;
-sometimes we went early, and came back in time for the peaches. But in
-one month or another there came a season of great business and bustle.
-Woollen dresses were put away in the great cedar-lined camphor-chests
-studded with brass nails; calico dresses were lengthened, and joyfully
-assumed; trunks were packed, and boxes and barrels; carpets were taken
-up and laid away; and white covers were put over pictures and mirrors.
-Finally we departed, generally in more or less confusion.
-
-I remember one occasion when our rear column reached the Old Colony
-Station just as the train was starting. The advance-guard, consisting
-of our mother and the older children, was already on board; and Harry
-and Laura have a vivid recollection of being caught up by our father and
-tumbled into the moving baggage-car, he flashing in after us, and all
-sitting on trunks, panting, till we were sufficiently revived to pass
-through to our seats in the passenger-car. In those days the railway ran
-no farther than Fall River. There we must take a carriage and drive
-twelve miles to our home in the Island of Rest. Twelve long and weary
-miles they were, much dreaded by us all. The trip was made in a large
-old-fashioned vehicle, half hack, half stage. The red cushions were hard
-and uncomfortable; the horses were aged; their driver, good,
-snuff-colored Mr. Anthony, felt keenly his duty to spare them, and
-considered the passengers a minor affair. So we five children were
-cramped and cooped up, I know not how long. It seemed hours that we must
-sit there, while the ancient horses crawled up the sandy hills, or
-jogged meditatively along the level spaces. Every joint developed a
-separate ache; our legs were cramped,--the short ones from hanging over
-the seat, the long ones because the floor of the coach was piled with
-baskets and bandboxes. It was hot, hot! The flies buzzed, and would not
-let one go to sleep; the dust rolled in thick yellow clouds from under
-the wheels, and filled eyes and mouth, and set all a-sneezing.
-Decidedly, it was a most tiresome jaunt. But all the more delightful was
-the arrival! To drive in under the apple-trees, just as the evening was
-falling cool and sweet; to tumble out of the stuffy prison-coach, and
-race through the orchard, and out to the barn, and up the hill behind
-the house,--ah, that was worth all the miseries of the journey!
-
-From the hill behind the house we could see the sunset; and that was one
-thing we did not have at Green Peace, shut in by its great trees. Here,
-before our eyes, still aching from the dust of the road, lay the great
-bay, all a sheet of silver, with white sails here and there; beyond it
-Conanicut, a long island, brown in the noon-light, now softened into
-wonderful shades of amethyst and violet; and the great sun going down in
-a glory of gold and flame! Nowhere else are such sunsets. Sometimes the
-sky was all strewn with fiery flakes and long delicate flame-feathers,
-glowing with rosy light; sometimes there were purple cloud-islands,
-edged with crimson, and between them and the real island a space of
-delicate green, so pure, so cold, that there is nothing to compare with
-it save a certain chrysoprase our mother had.
-
-Gazing at these wonders, the children would stand, full of vague
-delight, not knowing what they thought, till the tea-bell summoned them
-to the house for a merry picnic supper. Then there was clattering
-upstairs, washing of hands in the great basin with purple grapes on it
-(it belonged in the guest-chamber, and we were not allowed to use it
-save on special occasions like this), hasty smoothing of hair and
-straightening of collars, and then clatter! clatter! down again.
-
-There was nothing remarkable about the house at the Valley. It was just
-a pleasant cottage, with plenty of sunny windows and square,
-comfortable rooms. But we were seldom in the house, save at meal-times
-or when it rained; and our real home was under the blue sky. First,
-there was the orchard. It was an ideal orchard, with the queerest old
-apple-trees that ever were seen. They did not bear many apples, but they
-were delightful to climb in, with trunks slanting so that one could
-easily run up them, and branches that curled round so as to make a
-comfortable back to lean against. There are few pleasanter things than
-to sit in an apple-tree and read poetry, with birds twittering
-undismayed beside you, and green leaves whispering over your head. Laura
-was generally doing this when she ought to have been mending her
-stockings.
-
-Then there was the joggling-board, under the two biggest trees. The
-delight of a joggling-board is hardly to be explained to children who
-have never known it; but I trust many children do know it. The board is
-long and smooth and springy, supported at both ends on stands; and one
-can play all sorts of things on it. Many a circus has been held on the
-board at the Valley! We danced the tight-rope on it; we leaped through
-imaginary rings, coming down on the tips of our toes; we hopped its
-whole length on one foot; we wriggled along it on our stomachs, on our
-backs; we bumped along it on hands and knees. Dear old joggling-board!
-it is not probable that any other was ever quite so good as ours.
-
-Near by was the pump, a never-failing wonder to us when we were little.
-The well over which it stood was very deep, and it took a long time to
-bring the bucket up. It was a chain-pump, and the chain went
-rattlety-clank! rattlety-clank! round and round; and the handle creaked
-and groaned,--“Ah-_ho_! ah-_ho_!” When you had turned a good while there
-came out of the spout a stream of--water? No! of daddy-long-legses! They
-lived, apparently, in the spout, and they did not like the water; so
-when they heard the bucket coming up, with the water going “lip! lap!”
-as it swung to and fro, they came running out, dozens and dozens of
-them, probably thinking what unreasonable people we were to disturb
-them. When the water did finally come, it was wonderfully cold, and
-clear as crystal.
-
-The hill behind the house was perhaps our favorite play-room. It was a
-low, rocky hill, covered with “prostrate juniper” bushes, which bore
-blue berries very useful in our housekeeping. At the top of the rise the
-bare rock cropped out, dark gray, covered with flat, dry lichens. This
-was our house. It had several rooms: the drawing-room was really
-palatial,--a broad floor of rock, with flights of steps leading up to
-it. The state stairway was used for kings and queens, conquerors, and
-the like; the smaller was really more convenient, as the steps were more
-sharply defined, and you were not so apt to fall down them. Then there
-was the dining-room rock, where meals were served,--daisy pudding and
-similar delicacies; and the kitchen rock, which had a real oven, and the
-most charming cupboards imaginable. Here were stored hollyhock cheeses,
-and sorrel leaves, and twigs of black birch, fragrant and spicy, and
-many other good things.
-
-On this hill was celebrated, on the first of August, the annual festival
-of “Yeller’s Day.” This custom was begun by Flossy, and adhered to for
-many years. Immediately after breakfast on the appointed day, all the
-children assembled on the top of the hill and yelled. Oh, how we yelled!
-It was a point of honor to make as much noise as possible. We roared and
-shrieked and howled, till we were too hoarse to make a sound; then we
-rested, and played something else, perhaps, till our voices were
-restored, and then--yelled again! Yeller’s Day was regarded as one of
-the great days of the summer. By afternoon we were generally quite
-exhausted, and we were hoarse for several days afterward. I cannot
-recommend this practice. In fact, I sincerely hope that no child will
-attempt to introduce it; for it is very bad for the voice, and might in
-some cases do real injury.
-
-Almost every morning we went down to the bay to bathe. It was a walk of
-nearly a mile through the fields,--such a pleasant walk! The fields were
-not green, but of a soft russet, the grass being thin and dry, with
-great quantities of a little pinkish fuzzy plant whose name we never
-knew.[1] They were divided by stone walls, which we were skilful in
-climbing. In some places there were bars which must be let down, or
-climbed over, or crawled through, as fancy suggested. There were many
-blackberries, of the lowbush variety, bearing great clusters of berries,
-glossy, beautiful, delicious. We were not allowed to eat them on the way
-down, but only when coming home. Some of these fields belonged to the
-Cross Farmer, who had once been rude to us. We regarded him as a manner
-of devil, and were always looking round to see if his round-shouldered,
-blue-shirted figure were in sight. At last the shore was reached, and
-soon we were all in the clear water, shrieking with delight, paddling
-about, puffing and blowing like a school of young porpoises.
-
-At high-tide the beach was pebbled; at low-tide we went far out, the
-ground sloping very gradually, to a delightful place where the bottom
-was of fine white sand, sparkling as if mixed with diamond dust.
-Starfish crawled about on it, and other creatures,--crabs, too,
-sometimes, that would nip an unwary toe if they got a chance. Sometimes
-the water was full of jelly-fish, which we did not like, in spite of
-their beauty. Beyond the white sand was a bed of eel-grass, very
-dreadful, not to be approached. If a person went into it, he was
-instantly seized and entangled, and drowned before the eyes of his
-companions. This was our firm belief. It was probably partly due to
-Andersen’s story of the “Little Sea-Maid,” which had made a deep
-impression on us all, with its clutching polyps and other submarine
-terrors.
-
-We all learned to swim more or less, but Flossy was the best swimmer.
-
-Sometimes we went to bathe in the afternoon instead of the morning, if
-the tide suited better. I remember one such time when we came
-delightfully near having an adventure. It was full moon, and the tide
-was very high. We had loitered along the beach after our bath, gathering
-mussels to boil for tea, picking up gold-shells or scallop-shells, and
-punching seaweed bladders, which pop charmingly if you do them right.
-
-German Mary, the good, stupid nurse who was supposed to be taking care
-of us, knew nothing about tides; and when we came back to the little
-creek which we must cross on leaving the beach, lo! the creek was a
-deep, broad stream, the like of which we had never seen. What was to be
-done? Valiant Flossy proposed to swim across and get help, but Mary
-shrieked and would not hear of it, and we all protested that it was
-impossible. Then we perceived that we must spend the night on the beach;
-and when we were once accustomed to the idea, it was not without
-attraction for us. The sand was warm and dry, and full of shells and
-pleasant things; it was August, and the night would be just cool enough
-for comfort after the hot day; we had a pailful of blackberries which we
-had picked on the way down, meaning to eat them during our homeward
-walk; Julia could tell us stories. Altogether it would be a very
-pleasant occasion. And then to think of the romance of it! “The
-Deserted Children!” “Alone on a Sandbank!” “The Watchers of the Tide!”
-There was no end to the things that could be made out of it. So, though
-poor Mary wept and wrung her hands, mindful (which I cannot remember
-that we were) of our mother waiting for us at home, we were all very
-happy.
-
-The sun went down in golden state. Then, turning to the land, we watched
-the moon rising, in softer radiance, but no less wonderful and glorious.
-Slowly the great orb rose, turning from pale gold to purest silver. The
-sea darkened, and presently a little wind came up, and began to sing
-with the murmuring waves. We sang, too, some of the old German
-student-songs which our mother had taught us, and which were our
-favorite ditties. They rang out merrily over the water:--
-
- _Die Binschgauer wollten wallfahrten geh’n!_
- (The Binschgauer would on a pilgrimage go!)
-
-or,--
-
- _Was kommt dort von der Hoh’?_
- (What comes there over the hill?)
-
-Then Julia told us a story. Perhaps it was the wonderful story of
-Red-cap,--a boy who met a giant in the forest, and did something to help
-him, I cannot remember what. Whereupon the grateful giant gave Red-cap a
-covered silver dish, with a hunter and a hare engraved upon it. When the
-boy wanted anything he must put the cover on, and ask the hunter and
-hare to give him what he desired; but there must be a rhyme in the
-request, else it could not be granted. Red-cap thanked the giant, and as
-soon as he was alone put the cover on the dish and said,--
-
- “Silver hunter, silver hare,
- Give me a ripe and juicy pear!”
-
-Taking off the cover, he found the finest pear that ever was seen,
-shining like pure gold, with a crimson patch on one side. It was so
-delicious that it made Red-cap hungry; so he covered the dish again and
-said:
-
- “Silver hunter, silver rabbit,
- Give me an apple, and I’ll grab it!”
-
-Off came the cover, and, lo! there was an apple the very smell of which
-was too good for any one save the truly virtuous. It was so large that
-it filled the dish, and its flavor was not to be described, so wonderful
-was it! A third time the happy Red-cap covered his dish, and cried,--
-
- “Hunter and hare, of silver each,
- Give me a soft and velvet peach!”
-
-And when he saw the peach he cried out for joy, for it was like the
-peaches that grew on the crooked tree just by the south door of the
-greenhouse at Green Peace; and those were the best trees in the garden,
-and therefore the best in the world.
-
-The trouble about this story is that I never can remember any more of
-it, and I cannot find the book that contains it. But it must have been
-about this time that we were hailed from the opposite side of the creek;
-and presently a boat was run out, and came over to the sand beach and
-took us off. The people at the Poor Farm, which was on a hill close by,
-had seen the group of Crusoes and come to our rescue. They greeted us
-with words of pity (which were quite unnecessary), rowed us to the
-shore, and then kindly harnessed the farm-horse and drove us home.
-German Mary was loud in her thanks and expressions of relief; our mother
-also was grateful to the good people; but from us they received scant
-and grudging thanks. If they had only minded their own business and let
-us alone, we could have spent the night on a sandbank. Now it was not
-likely that we ever should! And, indeed, we never did.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-OUR FATHER.
-
-(THE LATE DR. SAMUEL GRIDLEY HOWE.)
-
-
-There is so much to tell about our father that I hardly know where to
-begin. First, you must know something of his appearance. He was tall and
-very erect, with the carriage and walk of a soldier. His hair was black,
-with silver threads in it; his eyes were of the deepest and brightest
-blue I ever saw. They were eyes full of light: to us it was the soft,
-beaming light of love and tenderness, but sometimes to others it was the
-flash of a sword. He was very handsome; in his youth he had been thought
-one of the handsomest men of his day. It was a gallant time, this youth
-of our father. When hardly more than a lad, he went out to help the
-brave Greeks who were fighting to free their country from the cruel
-yoke of the Turks. At an age when most young men were thinking how they
-could make money, and how they could best advance themselves in the
-world, our father thought only how he could do most good, be of most
-help to others. So he went out to Greece, and fought in many a battle
-beside the brave mountaineers. Dressed like them in the “snowy chemise
-and the shaggy capote,” he shared their toils and their hardships;
-slept, rolled in his cloak, under the open stars, or sat over the
-camp-fire, roasting wasps strung on a stick like dried cherries. The old
-Greek chieftains called him “the beautiful youth,” and loved him. Once
-he saved the life of a wounded Greek, at the risk of his own, as you
-shall read by and by in Whittier’s beautiful words; and the rescued man
-followed him afterward like a dog, not wishing to lose sight of him for
-an hour, and would even sleep at his feet at night.
-
-Our father’s letters and journals give vivid pictures of the wild life
-among the rugged Greek mountains. Now he describes his
-
-[Illustration: DR. SAMUEL GRIDLEY HOWE.]
-
-lodging in a village, which he has reached late at night, in a pouring
-rain:--
-
- “Squatted down upon a sort of straw pillow placed on the ground, I
- enjoy all the luxury of a Grecian hut; which in point of elegance,
- ease, and comfort, although not equal to the meanest of our negro
- huts, is nevertheless somewhat superior to the naked rock. We have
- two apartments, but no partitions between them, the different rooms
- being constituted by the inequality of the ground,--we living up
- the hill, while the servants and horses live down in the lower
- part; and the smoke of our fires, rising to the roof and seeking in
- vain for some hole to escape, comes back again to me.”
-
-Again, he gives a pleasant account of his visit to a good old Greek
-priest, who lived with his family in a tiny cottage, the best house in
-the village. He found the good old man just sitting down to supper with
-his wife and children, and was invited most cordially to join them. The
-supper consisted of a huge beet, boiled, and served with butter and
-black bread. This was enough for the whole family, and the guest too;
-and after describing the perfect contentment and cheerfulness which
-reigned in the humble dwelling, our father makes some reflections on the
-different things which go to make up a pleasant meal, and decides that
-the old “Papa” (as a Greek priest is called) had a much better supper
-than many rich people he remembered at home, who feasted three times a
-day on all that money could furnish in the way of good cheer, and found
-neither joy nor comfort in their victuals.
-
-Once our father and his comrades lay hidden for hours in the hollow of
-an ancient wall (built thousands of years ago, perhaps in Homer’s day),
-while the Turks, scimitar in hand, scoured the fields in search of them.
-Many years after, he showed this hollow to Julia and Laura, who went
-with him on his fourth journey to Greece, and told them the story.
-
-When our father saw the terrible sufferings of the Greek women and
-children, who were starving while their husbands and fathers were
-fighting for life and freedom, he thought that he could help best by
-helping them; so, though I know he loved the fighting, for he was a
-born soldier, he came back to this country, and told all that he had
-seen, and asked for money and clothes and food for the perishing wives
-and mothers and children. He told the story well, and put his whole
-heart into it; and people listen to a story so told. Many hearts beat in
-answer to his, and in a short time he sailed for Greece again, with a
-good ship full of rice and flour, and cloth to make into garments, and
-money to buy whatever else might be needed. When he landed in Greece,
-the women came flocking about him by thousands, crying for bread, and
-praying God to bless him. He felt blessed enough when he saw the
-children eating bread, and saw the naked backs covered, and the sad,
-hungry faces smiling again. So he went about doing good, and helping
-whenever he saw need. Perhaps many a poor woman may have thought that
-the beautiful youth was almost like an angel sent by God to relieve her;
-and she may not have been far wrong.
-
-When the war was over, and Greece was a free country, our father came
-home, and looked about him again to see what he could do to help
-others. He talked with a friend of his, Dr. Fisher, and they decided
-that they would give their time to helping the blind, who needed help
-greatly. There were no schools for them in those days; and if a child
-was blind, it must sit with folded hands and learn nothing.
-
-Our father found several blind children, and took them to his home and
-taught them. By and by some kind friends gave money, and one--Colonel
-Perkins--gave a fine house to be a school for these children and others;
-and that was the beginning of the Perkins Institution for the Blind, now
-a great school where many blind boys and girls learn to read and study,
-and to play on various instruments, and to help themselves and others in
-the world.
-
-Our father always said, “Help people to help themselves; don’t accustom
-them to being helped by others.” Another saying of his, perhaps his
-favorite one, next to the familiar “Let justice be done, if the heavens
-fall!” was this: “Obstacles are things to be overcome.” Indeed, this
-was one of the governing principles of his life; and there were few
-obstacles that did not go down before that keen lance of his, always in
-rest and ready for a charge.
-
-When our father first began his work in philanthropy, some of his
-friends used to laugh at him, and call him Don Quixote. Especially was
-this the case when he took up the cause of the idiotic and weak-minded,
-and vowed that instead of being condemned to live like animals, and be
-treated as such, they should have their rights as human beings, and
-should be taught all the more carefully and tenderly because their minds
-were weak and helpless.
-
-“What do you think Howe is going to do now?” cried one gentleman to
-another, merrily. “He is going to teach the idiots, ha, ha, ha!” and
-they both laughed heartily, and thought it a very good joke. But people
-soon ceased to laugh when they saw the helpless creatures beginning to
-help themselves; saw the girls learning to sew and the boys to work; saw
-light gradually come into the vacant eyes (dim and uncertain light it
-might be, but how much better than blank darkness!), and strength and
-purpose to the nerveless fingers.
-
-So the School for Feeble-minded Children was founded, and has been ever
-since a pleasant place, full of hope and cheer; and when people found
-that this Don Quixote knew very well the difference between a giant and
-a windmill, and that he always brought down his giants, they soon ceased
-to laugh, and began to wonder and admire.
-
-All my readers have probably heard about Laura Bridgman, whom he found a
-little child, deaf, dumb, and blind, knowing no more than an animal, and
-how he taught her to read and write, to talk with her fingers, and to
-become an earnest, thoughtful, industrious woman. It is a wonderful
-story; but it has already been told, and will soon be still more fully
-told, so I will not dwell upon it now.
-
-But I hope you will all read, some day, a Life of our father, and learn
-about all the things he did, for it needs a whole volume to tell them.
-
-But it is especially as our father that I want to describe this great
-and good man. I suppose there never was a tenderer or kinder father. He
-liked to make companions of his children, and was never weary of having
-us “tagging” at his heels. We followed him about the garden like so many
-little dogs, watching the pruning or grafting which were his special
-tasks. We followed him up into the wonderful pear-room, where were many
-chests of drawers, every drawer full of pears lying on cotton-wool. Our
-father watched their ripening with careful heed, and told us many things
-about their growth and habits. We learned about the Curé pear, which,
-one fancied, had been named for an old gentleman with a long and waving
-nose; and about the Duchesse d’Angoulême, which suggested, in appearance
-as in name, a splendid dame in gold and crimson velvet. Then there were
-all the Beurrés, from the pale beauty of the Beurré Diel to the Beurré
-Bosc in its coat of rich russet, and the Easter Beurré, latest of all.
-There, too, was the Winter Nelis,--which we persisted in calling “Winter
-Nelly,” and regarded as a friend of our own age, though this never
-prevented us from eating her with delight whenever occasion
-offered,--and the Glout Morceau, and the Doyenne d’Eté, and hundreds
-more. Julia’s favorite was always the Bartlett, which appealed to her
-both by its beauty and its sweetness; but Flossy always held, and Laura
-held with her, and does hold, and will hold till she dies, that no pear
-is to be named in the same breath with the Louise Bonne de Jersey.
-
-Oh good Louise, you admirable woman, for whom this green-coated ambrosia
-was named! what a delightful person you must have been! How sweetness
-and piquancy must have mingled in your adorable disposition! Happy was
-the man who called you his! happy was the island of Jersey, which saw
-you and your pears ripening and mellowing side by side!
-
-I must not leave the pear-room without mentioning the beloved Strawberry
-Book, which was usually to be found there, and over which we children
-used to pore by the hour together. “Fruits of America” was its real
-name, but we did not care for that; we loved it for its brilliant
-pictures of strawberries and all other fruits, and perhaps even more for
-the wonderful descriptions which were really as satisfying as many an
-actual feast. Was it not almost as good as eating a pear, to read these
-words about it:--
-
- “Skin a rich golden yellow, dappled with orange and crimson, smooth
- and delicate; flesh smooth, melting, and buttery; flavor rich,
- sprightly, vinous, and delicious!”
-
-Almost as good, I say, but not quite; and it is pleasant to recall that
-we seldom left the pear-room empty-handed.
-
-Then there was his own room, where we could examine the wonderful
-drawers of his great bureau, and play with the “picknickles” and
-“bucknickles.” I believe our father invented these words. They
-were--well, all kinds of pleasant little things,--amber mouthpieces, and
-buckles and bits of enamel, and a wonderful Turkish pipe, and seals and
-wax, and some large pins two inches long which were great treasures. On
-his writing-table were many clean pens in boxes, which you could lay out
-in patterns; and a sand-box--very delightful! We were never tired of
-pouring the fine black sand into our hands, where it felt so cool and
-smooth, and then back again into the box with its holes arranged
-star-fashion. And to see him shake sand over his paper when he wrote a
-letter, and then pour it back in a smooth stream, while the written
-lines sparkled and seemed to stand up from the page! Ah, blotting-paper
-is no doubt very convenient, but I should like to have a sand-box,
-nevertheless!
-
-I cannot remember that our father was ever out of patience when we
-pulled his things about. He had many delightful stories,--one of “Jacky
-Nory,” which had no end, and went on and on, through many a walk and
-garden prowl. Often, too, he would tell us of his own pranks when he was
-a little boy,--how they used to tease an old Portuguese sailor with a
-wooden leg, and how the old man would get very angry, and cry out,
-“Calabash me rompe you!” meaning, “I’ll break your head!” How when he
-was a student in college, and ought to have known better, he led the
-president’s old horse upstairs and left him in an upper room of one of
-the college buildings, where the poor beast astonished the passers-by by
-putting his head out of the windows and neighing. And then our father
-would shake his head and say he was a very naughty boy, and Harry must
-never do such things. (But Harry did!)
-
-He loved to play and romp with us. Sometimes he would put on his great
-fur-coat, and come into the dining-room at dancing-time, on all-fours,
-growling horribly, and pursue us into corners, we shrieking with
-delighted terror. Or he would sing for us, sending us into fits of
-laughter, for he had absolutely no ear for music. There was one tune
-which he was quite sure he sang correctly, but no one could recognize
-it. At last he said, “Oh--Su-_san_na!” and then we all knew what the
-tune was. “Hail to the Chief!” was his favorite song, and he sang it
-with great spirit and fervor, though the air was strictly original, and
-very peculiar. When he was tired of romping or carrying us on his
-shoulder, he would say, “No; no more! I have a bone in my leg!” which
-excuse was accepted by us little ones in perfect good faith, as we
-thought it some mysterious but painful malady.
-
-If our father had no ear for music, he had a fine one for metre, and
-read poetry aloud very beautifully. His voice was melodious and ringing,
-and we were thrilled with his own enthusiasm as he read to us from Scott
-or Byron, his favorite poets. I never can read “The Assyrian came down,”
-without hearing the ring of his voice and seeing the flash of his blue
-eyes as he recited the splendid lines. He had a great liking for Pope,
-too (as I wish more people had nowadays), and for Butler’s “Hudibras,”
-which he was constantly quoting. He commonly, when riding, wore but one
-spur, giving Hudibras’s reason, that if one side of the horse went, the
-other must perforce go with it; and how often, on some early morning
-walk or ride, have I heard him say,--
-
- “And, like a lobster boiled, the morn
- From black to red began to turn.”
-
-Or if war or fighting were mentioned, he would often cry,--
-
- “Ay me! what perils do environ
- The man that meddles with cold iron!”
-
-I must not leave the subject of reading without speaking of his reading
-of the Bible, which was most impressive. No one who ever heard him read
-morning prayers at the Institution (which he always did until his health
-failed in later years) can have forgotten the grave, melodious voice,
-the reverent tone, the majestic head bent above the sacred book. Nor was
-it less impressive when on Sunday afternoons he read to us, his
-children. He would have us read, too, allowing us to choose our favorite
-psalms or other passages.
-
-He was an early riser, and often shared our morning walks. Each child,
-as soon as it was old enough, was taught to ride; and the rides before
-breakfast with him are things never to be forgotten. He took one child
-at a time, so that all in turn might have the pleasure. It seems hardly
-longer ago than yesterday,--the coming downstairs in the cool, dewy
-morning, nibbling a cracker for fear of hunger, springing into the
-saddle, the little black mare shaking her head, impatient to be off; the
-canter through the quiet streets, where only an early milkman or baker
-was to be seen, though on our return we should find them full of boys,
-who pointed the finger and shouted,--
-
- “Lady on a hossback,
- Row, row, row!”
-
-then out into the pleasant country, galloping over the smooth road, or
-pacing quietly under shady trees. Our father was a superb rider; indeed,
-he never seemed so absolutely at home as in the saddle. He was very
-particular about our holding whip and reins in the right way.
-
-Speaking of his riding reminds me of a story our mother used to tell us.
-When Julia was a baby, they were travelling in Italy, driving in an
-old-fashioned travelling-carriage. One day they stopped at the door of
-an inn, and our father went in to make some inquiries. While he was
-gone, the rascally driver thought it a good opportunity for him to slip
-in at the side door to get a draught of wine; and, the driver gone, the
-horses saw that here was _their_ opportunity; so they took it, and ran
-away with our mother, the baby, and nurse in the carriage.
-
-Our father, hearing the sound of wheels, came out, caught sight of the
-driver’s guilty face peering round the corner in affright, and at once
-saw what had happened. He ran at full speed along the road in the
-direction in which the horses were headed. Rounding a corner of the
-mountain which the road skirted, he saw at a little distance a country
-wagon coming slowly toward him, drawn by a stout horse, the wagoner half
-asleep on the seat. Instantly our father’s resolve was taken. He ran up,
-stopped the horse, unhitched him in the twinkling of an eye, leaped upon
-his back, and was off like a flash, before the astonished driver, who
-was not used to two-legged whirlwinds, could utter a word.
-
-Probably the horse was equally astonished; but he felt a master on his
-back, and, urged by hand and voice, he sprang to his topmost speed,
-galloped bravely on, and soon overtook the lumbering carriage-horses,
-which were easily stopped. No one was hurt, though our mother and the
-nurse had of course been sadly frightened. The horses were turned, and
-soon they came in sight of the unhappy countryman, still sitting on his
-wagon, petrified with astonishment. He received a liberal reward, and
-probably regretted that there were no more mad Americans to “steal a
-ride,” and pay for it.
-
-This presence of mind, this power of acting on the instant, was one of
-our father’s great qualities. It was this that made him, when the
-wounded Greek sank down before him--
-
- “ ... fling him from his saddle,
- And place the stranger there.”
-
-It was this, when arrested and imprisoned by the Prussian government on
-suspicion of befriending unhappy Poland, that taught him what to do with
-the important papers he carried. In the minute during which he was left
-alone, before the official came to search
-
-[Illustration: THE DOCTOR TO THE RESCUE!]
-
-him, he thrust the documents up into the hollow head of a bust of the
-King of Prussia which stood on a shelf; then tore some unimportant
-papers into the smallest possible fragments, and threw them into a basin
-of water which stood close at hand.
-
-Next day the fragments carefully pasted together were shown to him,
-hours having been spent in the painful and laborious task; but nobody
-thought of looking for more papers in the head of King Friedrich
-Wilhelm.
-
-Our father, though nothing could be proved against him, might have
-languished long in that Prussian prison had it not been for the
-exertions of a fellow-countryman. This gentleman had met him in the
-street the day before, had asked his address, and promised to call on
-him. Inquiring for him next day at the hotel, he was told that no such
-person was or had been there. Instantly suspecting foul play, this good
-friend went to the American minister, and told his story. The minister
-took up the matter warmly, and called upon the Prussian officials to
-give up his countryman. This, after repeated denials of any knowledge
-of the affair, they at length reluctantly consented to do. Our father
-was taken out of prison at night, placed in a carriage, and driven
-across the border into France, where he was dismissed with a warning
-never to set foot in Prussia again.
-
-One day, I remember, we were sitting at the dinner-table, when a
-messenger came flying, “all wild with haste and fear,” to say that a
-fire had broken out at the Institution. Now, in those days there lay
-between Green Peace and the Institution a remnant of the famous
-Washington Heights, where Washington and his staff had once made their
-camp.
-
-Much of the high ground had already been dug away, but there still
-remained a great hill sloping back and up from the garden wall, and
-terminating, on the side toward the Institution, in an abrupt precipice,
-some sixty feet high. The bearer of the bad news had been forced to come
-round by way of several streets, thus losing precious minutes; but the
-Doctor did not know what it was to lose a minute. Before any one could
-speak or ask what he would do he was out of the house, ran through the
-garden, climbed the slope at the back, rushed like a flame across the
-green hill-top, and slid down the almost perpendicular face of the
-precipice! Bruised and panting, he reached the Institution and saw at a
-glance that the fire was in the upper story. Take time to go round to
-the door and up the stairs? Not he! He “swarmed” up the gutter-spout,
-and in less time than it takes to tell it was on the roof, and cutting
-away at the burning timbers with an axe, which he had got hold of no one
-knows how. That fire was put out, as were several others at which our
-father assisted.
-
-Fire is swift, but it could not get ahead of the Doctor.
-
-These are a few of the stories; but, as I said, it needs a volume to
-tell all about our father’s life. I cannot tell in this short space how
-he worked with the friends of liberty to free the slave; how he raised
-the poor and needy, and “helped them to help themselves;” how he was a
-light to the blind, and to all who walked in darkness, whether of
-sorrow, sin, or suffering. Most men, absorbed in such high works as
-these would have found scant leisure for family life and communion; but
-no finger-ache of our father’s smallest child ever escaped his loving
-care, no childish thought or wish ever failed to win his sympathy. We
-who had this high privilege of being his children love to think of him
-as the brave soldier, the wise physician, the great philanthropist; but
-dearest of all is the thought of him as our loving and tender father.
-
-And now, to end this chapter, you shall hear what Mr. Whittier, the
-noble and honored poet, thought of this friend of his:--
-
-
-THE HERO.
-
- “Oh for a knight like Bayard,
- Without reproach or fear;
- My light glove on his casque of steel,
- My love-knot on his spear!
-
- “Oh for the white plume floating
- Sad Zutphen’s field above,--
- The lion heart in battle,
- The woman’s heart in love!
-
- “Oh that man once more were manly,
- Woman’s pride and not her scorn;
- That once more the pale young mother
- Dared to boast ‘a man is born’!
-
- “But now life’s slumberous current
- No sun-bowed cascade wakes;
- No tall, heroic manhood
- The level dullness breaks.
-
- “Oh for a knight like Bayard,
- Without reproach or fear!
- My light glove on his casque of steel,
- My love-knot on his spear!”
-
- Then I said, my own heart throbbing
- To the time her proud pulse beat,
- “Life hath its regal natures yet,--
- True, tender, brave, and sweet!
-
- “Smile not, fair unbeliever!
- One man at least I know
- Who might wear the crest of Bayard,
- Or Sidney’s plume of snow.
-
- “Once, when over purple mountains
- Died away the Grecian sun,
- And the far Cyllenian ranges
- Paled and darkened one by one,--
-
- “Fell the Turk, a bolt of thunder,
- Cleaving all the quiet sky;
- And against his sharp steel lightnings
- Stood the Suliote but to die.
-
- “Woe for the weak and halting!
- The crescent blazed behind
- A curving line of sabres
- Like fire before the wind!
-
- “Last to fly and first to rally,
- Rode he of whom I speak,
- When, groaning in his bridle-path,
- Sank down a wounded Greek.--
-
- “With the rich Albanian costume
- Wet with many a ghastly stain,
- Gazing on earth and sky as one
- Who might not gaze again!
-
- “He looked forward to the mountains,
- Back on foes that never spare;
- Then flung him from his saddle,
- And placed the stranger there.
-
- “‘Alla! hu!’ Through flashing sabres,
- Through a stormy hail of lead,
- The good Thessalian charger
- Up the slopes of olives sped.
-
- “Hot spurred the turbaned riders,--
- He almost felt their breath,
- Where a mountain stream rolled darkly down
- Between the hills and death.
-
- “One brave and manful struggle,--
- He gained the solid land,
- And the cover of the mountains
- And the carbines of his band.”
-
- “It was very brave and noble,”
- Said the moist-eyed listener then;
- “But one brave deed makes no hero;
- Tell me what he since hath been?”
-
- “Still a brave and generous manhood,
- Still an honor without stain,
- In the prison of the Kaiser,
- By the barricades of Seine.
-
- “But dream not helm and harness
- The sign of valor true;
- Peace hath higher tests of manhood
- Than battle ever knew.
-
- “Wouldst know him now? Behold him,
- The Cadmus of the blind,
- Giving the dumb lip language,
- The idiot clay a mind;
-
- “Walking his round of duty
- Serenely day by day,
- With the strong man’s hand of labor,
- And childhood’s heart of play;
-
- “True as the knights of story,
- Sir Lancelot and his peers,
- Brave in his calm endurance
- As they in tilt of spears.
-
- “As waves in stillest waters,
- As stars in noon-day skies,
- All that wakes to noble action
- In his noon of calmness lies.
-
- “Wherever outraged nature
- Asks word or action brave;
- Wherever struggles labor,
- Wherever groans a slave;
-
- “Wherever rise the peoples,
- Wherever sinks a throne,--
- The throbbing heart of Freedom finds
- An answer in his own!
-
- “Knight of a better era,
- Without reproach or fear!
- Said I not well that Bayards
- And Sidneys still are here?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-JULIA WARD.
-
-
-Once upon a time, in a great house standing at the corner of Bond Street
-and Broadway, New York city, there lived a little girl. She was named
-Julia, after her lovely young mother; but as she grew she showed no
-resemblance to that mother, with her great dark eyes and wealth of black
-ringlets. This little girl had red hair, and that was a dreadful thing
-in those days. Very fine, soft hair it was, thick and wavy, but--it was
-red. Visitors, coming to see her mother, would shake their heads and
-say, “Poor little Julia! what a pity she has red hair!” and the tender
-mother would sigh, and regret that her child should have this
-misfortune, when there was no red hair in the family so far as one knew.
-And the beautiful hair was combed with a leaden comb, as one old lady
-said that would turn it dark; and it was soaked in honey-water, as
-another old lady said that was really the best thing you could do with
-it; and the little Julia felt that she might almost as well be a
-hunchback or a cripple as that unfortunate creature, a red-haired child.
-
-When she was six years old, her beautiful mother died; and after that
-Julia and her brothers and sisters were brought up by their good aunt,
-who came to make her home with them and their father. A very good aunt
-she was, and devoted to the motherless children; but sometimes she did
-funny things. They went out to ride every day--the children, I mean--in
-a great yellow chariot lined with fine blue cloth. Now, it occurred to
-their kind aunt that it would have a charming effect if the children
-were dressed to match the chariot. So thought, so done! Dressmakers and
-milliners plied their art; and one day Broadway was electrified by the
-sight of the little Misses Ward, seated in uneasy state on the blue
-cushions, clad in wonderful raiment of yellow and blue. They
-
-[Illustration: JULIA WARD AND HER BROTHERS, AS CHILDREN.
-
-(From a miniature by Miss Anne Hall.)]
-
-had blue pelisses and yellow satin bonnets. And this was all very well
-for the two younger ones, with their dark eyes and hair, and their rosy
-cheeks; but Julia, young as she was, felt dimly that blue and yellow was
-not the combination to set off her tawny locks and exquisite sea-shell
-complexion. It is not probable, however, that she sorrowed deeply over
-the funny clothes; for her mind was never set on clothes, either in
-childhood or in later life. Did not her sister meet her one day coming
-home from school with one blue shoe and one green? Her mind was full of
-beautiful thoughts; her eyes were lifted to the green trees and the blue
-sky bending above them: what did she care about shoes? Yes; and later is
-it not recorded that her sisters had great difficulty in persuading her
-to choose the stuff for her wedding-gown? So indifferent was she to all
-matters of dress!
-
-Auntie F. had her own ideas about shoes and stockings,--not the color,
-but the quality of them. She did not believe in “pompeying” the
-children; so in the coldest winter weather Julia and her sisters went
-to school in thin slippers and white cotton stockings. You shiver at the
-bare thought of this, my girl readers! You look at your comfortable
-leggings and overshoes (that is, if you live in upper New England, or
-anywhere in the same latitude), and wonder how the Ward children lived
-through such a course of “hardening”! But they did live, and Julia seems
-now far younger and stronger than any of her children.
-
-School, which some children regard with mingled feelings (or so I have
-been told), was a delight to Julia. She grasped at knowledge with both
-hands,--plucked it as a little child plucks flowers, with unwearying
-enjoyment. Her teachers, like the “people” in the case of the
-
- “Young lady whose eyes
- Were unique as to color and size,”
-
-all turned aside, and started away in surprise, as this little
-red-haired girl went on learning and learning and learning. At nine
-years old she was studying Paley’s “Moral Philosophy,” with girls of
-sixteen and eighteen. She could not have been older when she heard a
-class reciting an Italian lesson, and fell in love with the melodious
-language. She listened, and listened again; then got a grammar and
-studied secretly, and one day handed to the astonished Italian teacher a
-letter correctly written in Italian, begging that she might join the
-class.
-
-When I was speaking of the good aunt who was a second mother to the Ward
-children, I meant to say a word of the stern but devoted father who was
-the principal figure in Julia’s early life. She says of him: “He was a
-majestic person, of somewhat severe aspect and reserved manners, but
-with a vein of true geniality and a great benevolence of heart.” And she
-adds: “His great gravity, and the absence of a mother, naturally subdued
-the tone of the whole household; and though a greatly cherished set of
-children, we were not a very merry one.”
-
-Still, with all his gravity, Grandfather Ward had his gleams of fun
-occasionally. It is told that Julia had a habit of dropping off her
-slippers while at table. One day her father felt a wandering shell of
-kid, with no foot to keep it steady. He put his own foot on it and moved
-it under his chair, then said in his deep, grave voice, “My daughter,
-will you bring me my seals, which I have left on the table in my room?”
-And poor Julia, after a vain and frantic hunting with both feet, was
-forced to go, crimson-cheeked, white-stockinged and slipperless, on the
-required errand. She would never have dreamed of asking for the shoe.
-She was the eldest daughter, the companion and joy of this sternly
-loving father. She always sat next him at table, and sometimes he would
-take her right hand in his left, and hold it for many minutes together,
-continuing to eat his dinner with his right hand; while she would rather
-go dinnerless than ask him to release her own fingers.
-
-Grandfather Ward! It is a relief to confess our faults; and it may be my
-duty to say that as soon as I could reach it on tiptoe, it was my joy to
-pull the nose of his marble bust, which stood in the great dining-room
-at Green Peace. It was a fine, smooth, long nose, most pleasant to
-pull; I fear I soiled it sometimes with my little grimy fingers. I trust
-children never do such naughty things nowadays.
-
-Then there was Great-grandfather Ward, Julia’s grandfather, who had the
-cradle and the great round spectacles. Doubtless he had many other
-things besides, for he was a substantial New York merchant; but the
-cradle and the spectacles are the only possessions of his that I have
-seen. I have the cradle now, and I can testify that Great-grandfather
-Ward (for I believe he was rocked in it, as his descendants for four
-generations since have been) must have been an extremely long baby. It
-is a fine old affair, of solid mahogany, and was evidently built to last
-as long as the Wards should last. Not so very long ago, two dear people
-who had been rocked together in that cradle fifty--or is it
-sixty?--years ago, sat down and clasped hands over it, and wept for pure
-love and tenderness and _léal souvenir_. Not less pleasant is its
-present use as the good ship “Pinafore,” when six rosy, shouting
-children tumble into it and rock violently, singing with might and
-main,--
-
- “We sail the ocean blue,
- And our saucy ship’s a beauty!”
-
-That is all about the cradle.
-
-My mother writes thus of Great-grandfather Ward, her own grandfather:--
-
- “He had been a lieutenant-colonel in the war of American
- Independence. A letter from the Commander-in-Chief to Governor
- Samuel Ward (of Rhode Island) mentions a visit from “your son, a
- tall young man of soldierly aspect.” I cannot quote the exact
- words. My grandfather had seen service in Arnold’s march through
- ‘the wilderness’ to Quebec. He was present at the battle of Red
- Bank. After the close of the war he engaged in commercial pursuits,
- and made a voyage to India as supercargo of a merchant vessel
- belonging to Moses Brown, of Providence. He was in Paris at the
- time of the king’s death (Louis XVI.), and for some time before
- that tragic event. He speaks in his journal of having met several
- of the leading revolutionists of that time at a friend’s house, and
- characterizes them as ‘exceeding plain men, but very zealous.’ He
- passed the day of the king’s execution, which he calls ‘one of
- horror,’ in Versailles, and was grieved at the conduct of several
-
-[Illustration: LIEUT.-COL. SAMUEL WARD.
-
-Born Nov 17, 1756 Died Aug. 16, 1832.]
-
- Americans, who not only remained in town, but also attended the
- execution. When he finally left Paris, a proscribed nobleman,
- disguised as a footman, accompanied the carriage, and so cheated
- the guillotine of one expected victim.
-
- “Colonel Ward, as my grandfather was always called, was a graduate
- of Brown University, and a man of scholarly tastes. He possessed a
- diamond edition of Latin classics, which always went with him in
- his campaigns, and which is still preserved in the family. In
- matters of art he was not so well posted. Of the pictures in the
- gallery of the Luxembourg he remarks in his diary: ‘The old
- pictures are considered the best. I cannot think why.’
-
- “I remember him as very tall, stooping a little, with white hair
- and mild blue eyes, which matched well his composed speech and
- manners.”
-
-I have called Great-grandfather Ward a merchant, but he was far more
-than that. The son of Governor Ward of Rhode Island, he was only
-eighteen when, as a gallant young captain, he marched his company to the
-siege of Boston; and then (as his grandson writes me to-day) he “marched
-through the wilderness of Maine, through snow and ice, barefoot, to
-Quebec.” Some of my readers may possess an engraving of Trumbull’s
-famous painting of the “Attack on Quebec.” Look in the left-hand corner,
-and you will see a group of three,--one of them a young, active figure
-with flashing eyes; that is Great-grandfather Ward. He rose to be major,
-then lieutenant-colonel; was at Peekskill, Valley Forge, and Red Bank,
-and wrote the official account of the last-named battle, which may be
-found in Washington’s correspondence. Besides being a good man and a
-brave soldier, he was a very good grandfather; and this made it all the
-more naughty for his granddaughter Julia to behave as she did one day.
-Being then a little child, she sat down at the piano, placed a
-music-book on the rack, and began to pound and thump on the keys, making
-the hideous discord which seems always to afford pleasure to the young.
-Her grandfather was sitting by, book in hand; and after enduring the
-noise for some time patiently, he said in his kind, courtly way, “Is it
-so set down in the book, my dear?”
-
-“Yes, Grandpapa!” said naughty Julia, and went on banging; while
-grandpapa, who made no pretense of being a musician, offered no further
-comment or remonstrance.
-
-Julia grew up a student and a dreamer. She confesses to having been an
-extremely absent person, and much of the time unconscious of what passed
-around her. “In the large rooms of my father’s house,” she says, “I
-walked up and down, perpetually alone, dreaming of extraordinary things
-that I should see and do. I now began to read Shakspere and Byron, and
-to try my hand at poems and plays.” She rejoices that none of the
-productions of this period were published, and adds: “I regard it as a
-piece of great good fortune; for a little praise or a little censure
-would have been a much more disturbing element in those days than in
-these.” I wish these sentiments were more general with young writers.
-
-Still, life was not all study and dreaming. There were sometimes
-merrymakings: witness the gay ball after which Julia wrote to her
-brother, “I have been through the burning fiery furnace; and I am
-Sad-rake, Me-sick, and Abed-no-go.” There was mischief, too, and
-sometimes downright naughtiness, Who was the poor gentleman, an intimate
-friend of the family, from whom Julia and her sisters extracted a
-promise that he would eat nothing for three days but what they should
-send him,--they in return promising three meals a day? He consented,
-innocently thinking that these dear young creatures wanted to display
-their skill in cookery, and expecting all kinds of delicacies and airy
-dainties of pastry and confectionery. Yes! and being a man of his word,
-he lived for three days on gruel, of which those “dear young creatures”
-sent him a bowl at morning, noon, and night; and on nothing else!
-
-In a certain little cabinet where many precious things are kept, I have
-a manuscript poem, written by Julia Ward for the amusement of her
-brothers and sisters when she was still a very young girl. It is called
-“The Ill-cut Mantell; A Romaunt of the time of Kynge Arthur.” The story
-is an old one, but the telling of it is all Julia’s own, and I must
-quote a few lines:--
-
- “I cannot well describe in rhyme
- The female toilet of that time.
- I do not know how trains were carried,
- How single ladies dressed or married;
- If caps were proper at a ball,
- Or even if caps were worn at all;
- If robes were made of crape or tulle,
- If skirts were narrow, gored, or full.
- Perhaps, without consulting grace,
- The hair was scraped back from the face,
- While on the head a mountain rose,
- Crowned, like Mont Blanc, with endless snows.
- It may be that the locks were shorn;
- It may be that the lofty puff,
- The stomacher, the rising ruff,
- The bodice, or the veil were worn,
- Perhaps mantillas were the passion,
- Perhaps ferronières were in fashion,--
- I cannot, and I will not tell.
- But this one thing I wot full well,
- That every lady there was dressed
- In what she thought became her best.
- All further notices, I grieve,
- I must to your imagination leave.”
-
-Julia sometimes tried to awaken in her sisters’ minds the poetic
-aspirations which filled her own. One day she found the two little girls
-playing some childish game, which seemed to her unnecessarily frivolous.
-(You all know, I am sure, the eldest sister’s motto,--
-
- “Good advice and counsel sage,
- And ‘I never did so when I was your age;’”
-
-and the companion sentiment of the younger sister,--
-
- “‘Sister, don’t!’ and ‘Sister, do!’
- And ‘Why may not I as well as you?’”)
-
-Miss Ward,--she was always called Miss Ward, poor little dear! and her
-dolls were taken away from her when she was only nine years old, that
-she might better feel the dignity of her position!--Miss Ward rebuked
-the little sisters, and bade them lay aside their foolish toys and
-improve their minds by composing poetry. Louisa shook her black curls,
-and would not,--moreover, did not, being herself a child of some
-firmness. But little sweet Annie would try, to please Sister Julia; and
-after much thought and labor she produced the following pious
-effusion:--
-
- “He feeds the ravens when they call,
- And stands them in a pleasant hall.”
-
-I never can recall these lines without having an instant vision of a
-pillared hall, fair and
-
-[Illustration: JULIA WARD.]
-
-stately, with ravens standing in niches along the sides, between the
-marble columns!
-
-So this maiden, Julia, grew up to womanhood, dreamy and absent, absorbed
-in severe study and composition, yet always ready with the brilliant
-flashes of her wit, which broke like sunbeams through the mist of
-dreams. She was very fair to look upon. No one now pitied her for the
-glorious crown of red-gold hair, which set off the rose and ivory of her
-matchless complexion; every one recognized and acknowledged in her
-“stately Julia, queen of all.”
-
-Once, while on a visit to Boston, Julia heard the wonderful story of
-Laura Bridgman, who had just been led out of darkness into the light of
-life and joy by a certain Dr. Howe, a man of whom people spoke as a
-modern paladin of romance, a Roland or Bayard. She saw him, and felt at
-once that he was the most remarkable man she had ever known. He, on his
-part, saw a youthful prophetess, radiant and inspired, crowned with
-golden hair. Acquaintance ripened into friendship, friendship into love;
-and so it happened that, in the year 1843, Samuel G. Howe and Julia
-Ward were married. The next chapter shall tell you of Julia Ward Howe,
-as we, her children, have known her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-OUR MOTHER.
-
-(MRS JULIA WARD HOWE.)
-
-
-Our mother’s story should be sung rather than said, so much has music to
-do with it. My earliest recollection of my mother is of her standing by
-the piano in the great dining-room, dressed in black velvet, with her
-beautiful neck and arms bare, and singing to us. Her voice was a very
-rare and perfect one, we have since learned; we knew then only that we
-did not care to hear any one else sing when we might hear her. The time
-for singing was at twilight, when the dancing was over, and we gathered
-breathless and exhausted about the piano for the last and greatest
-treat. Then the beautiful voice would break out, and flood the room with
-melody, and fill our childish hearts with almost painful rapture. Our
-mother knew all the songs in the world,--that was our firm belief.
-Certainly we never found an end to her repertory.
-
-There were German student songs, which she had learned from her brother
-when he came back from Heidelberg,--merry, jovial ditties, with choruses
-of “Juvevallera!” and “Za hi! Za he! Za ho-o-o-o-o-oh!” in which we
-joined with boundless enthusiasm. There were gay little French songs,
-all ripple and sparkle and trill; and soft, melting Italian serenades
-and barcaroles, which we thought must be like the notes of the
-nightingale. And when we called to have our favorites repeated again and
-again, she would sing them over and over with never failing patience;
-and not one of us ever guessed, as we listened with all our souls, that
-the cunning mother was giving us a French lesson, or a German or Italian
-lesson, as the case might be, and that what was learned in that way
-would never be forgotten all our lives long.
-
-Besides the foreign songs, there were many songs of our mother’s own
-making, which we were never weary of hearing. Sometimes
-
-[Illustration: JULIA WARD HOWE.]
-
-she composed a melody for some old ballad, but more often the words and
-music both were hers. Where were such nonsense-songs as hers?
-
- “Little old dog sits under the chair,
- Twenty-five grasshoppers snarled in his hair.
- Little old dog’s beginning to snore,
- Mother forbids him to do so no more.”
-
-Or again,--
-
- “Hush, my darling, don’t you cry!
- Your sweetheart will come by and by.
- When he comes, he’ll come in green,--
- That’s a sign that you’re his queen.
-
- “Hush, my darling, don’t you cry!
- Your sweetheart will come by and by.
- When he comes, he’ll come in blue,--
- That’s a sign that he’ll be true.”
-
-And so on through all the colors of the rainbow, till finally
-expectation was wrought up to the highest pitch by the concluding lines:
-
- “When he comes, he’ll come in gray,--
- That’s a sign he’ll come to-day!”
-
-Then it was a pleasant thing that each child could have his or her own
-particular song merely for the asking. Laura well remembers her
-good-night song, which was sung to the very prettiest tune in the world:
-
- “Sleep, my little child,
- So gentle, sweet, and mild!
- The little lamb has gone to rest,
- The little bird is in its nest,”--
-
-“Put in the donkey!” cried Laura, at this point of the first singing.
-“Please put in the donkey!” So the mother went on,--
-
- “The little donkey in the stable
- Sleeps as sound as he is able;
- All things now their rest pursue,
- You are sleepy too.”
-
-It was with this song sounding softly in her ears, and with the
-beautiful hand, like soft warm ivory, stroking her hair, that Laura used
-to fall asleep. Do you not envy the child?
-
-Maud’s songs were perhaps the loveliest of all, though they could not be
-dearer than my donkey-song. Here is one of them:--
-
- “Baby with the hat and plume,
- And the scarlet cloak so fine,
- Come where thou hast rest and room,
- Little baby mine!
-
- “Whence those eyes so crystal clear?
- Whence those curls, so silky soft?
- Thou art Mother’s darling dear,
- I have told thee oft.
-
- “I have told thee many times,
- And repeat it yet again,
- Wreathing thee about with rhymes
- Like a flowery chain,--
-
- “Rhymes that sever and unite
- As the blossom fetters do,
- As the mother’s weary night
- Happy days renew.”
-
-Perhaps some of my readers may already know the lovely verses called
-“Baby’s Shoes.”
-
- “Little feet, pretty feet,
- Feet of fairy Maud,--
- Fair and fleet, trim and neat,
- Carry her abroad!
-
- “Be as wings, tiny things,
- To my butterfly;
- In the flowers, hours on hours,
- Let my darling lie.
-
- “Shine ye must, in the dust,
- Twinkle as she runs,
- Threading a necklace gay,
- Through the summer suns.
-
- “Stringing days, borrowing phrase,
- Weaving wondrous plots,
- With her eyes blue and wise
- As forget-me-nots
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Cinderel, grown a belle,
- Coming from her ball,
- Frightened much, let just such
- A tiny slipper fall.
-
- “If men knew as I do
- Half thy sweets, my own,
- They’d not delay another day,--
- I should be alone.
-
- “Come and go, friend and foe,
- Fairy Prince most fine!
- Take your gear otherwhere!
- Maud is only mine.”
-
-But it was not all singing, of course. Our mother read to us a great
-deal too, and told us stories, from the Trojan War down to “Puss in
-Boots.” It was under her care, I think, that we used to look over the
-“Shakspere book.” This was a huge folio, bound in rusty-brown leather,
-and containing the famous Boydell prints illustrating the plays of
-Shakspere. The frontispiece represented Shakspere nursed by Tragedy and
-Comedy,--the prettiest, chubbiest of babies, seated on the ground with
-his little toes curled up under him, while a lovely, laughing lady bent
-down to whisper in his ear; and another one, grave but no less
-beautiful, gazed earnestly upon him. Then came the “Tempest,”--oh, most
-lovely! The first picture showed Ariel dancing along the “yellow sands,”
-while Prospero waved him on with a commanding gesture; in the second,
-Miranda, all white and lovely, was coming out of the darksome cavern,
-and smiling with tender compassion on Ferdinand, who was trying to lift
-an impossible log. Then there was the delicious terror of the “Macbeth”
-pictures, with the witches and Banquo’s ghost. But soon our mother would
-turn the page and show us the exquisite figure of Puck, sitting on a
-toadstool, and make us shout with laughter over Nick Bottom and his
-rustic mates. From these magic pages we learned to hate Richard III.
-duly, and to love the little princes, whom Northcote’s lovely picture
-showed in white-satin doublet and hose, embracing each other, while the
-wicked uncle glowered at them from behind; and we wept over the second
-picture, where they lay asleep, unconscious of the fierce faces bending
-over them. Yes, we loved the “Shakspere book” very much.
-
-Sometimes our mother would give us a party,--and that was sure to be a
-delightful affair, with charades or magic lantern or something of the
-kind. Here is an account of one such party, written by our mother
-herself in a letter to her sister, which lies before me:--
-
- “My guests arrived in omnibus loads at four o’clock. My notes to
- parents concluded with the following P. S.: ‘Return omnibus
- provided, with insurance against plum-cake and other accidents.’ A
- donkey carriage afforded great amusement out of doors, together
- with swing, bowling-alley, and the Great Junk. [I have not
- mentioned the Junk yet, but you shall hear of it in good time.]
- While all this was going on, the H.’s, J. S., and I prepared a
- theatrical exhibition, of which I had made a hasty outline. It was
- the story of ‘Blue Beard.’ We had curtains which drew back and
- forth, and regular footlights. You can’t think how good it was!
- There were four scenes. My antique cabinet was the ‘Blue Beard’
- cabinet; we yelled in delightful chorus when the door was opened,
- and the children stretched their necks to the last degree to see
- the horrible sight. The curtain closed upon a fainting-fit, done by
- four women. In the third scene we were scrubbing the fatal key,
- when I cried out, ‘Try the mustang liniment! It’s _the_ liniment
- for us, for you know we _must hang_ if we don’t succeed!’ This,
- which was made on the spur of the moment, overcame the whole
- audience with laughter, and I myself shook so that I had to go down
- into the tub in which we were scrubbing the key. Well, to make a
- long story short, our play was very successful, and immediately
- afterward came supper. There were four long tables for the
- children; twenty sat at each. Ice-cream, cake, blancmange, and
- delicious sugar-plums, also oranges, etc., were served up ‘in
- style.’ We had our supper a little later. Three omnibus-loads went
- from my door; the last--the grown people--at nine o’clock.”
-
-In another letter to the same dear sister, our mother says:--
-
- “I have written a play for our doll theatre, and performed it
- yesterday afternoon with great success. It occupied nearly an hour.
- I had alternately to grunt and squeak the parts, while Chev played
- the puppets. [Chev was the name by which she always called our
- father; it was an abbreviation of Chevalier, for he was always to
- her the ‘knight without reproach or fear.’] The effect was really
- extremely good. The spectators were in a dark room, and the little
- theatre, lighted by a lamp from the top, looked very pretty.”
-
-This may have been the play of “Beauty and the Beast,” of which the
-manuscript is unhappily lost. I can recall but one passage:
-
- “But he thought on ‘Beauty’s’ flower,
- And he popped into a bower,
- And he plucked the fairest rose
- That grew beneath his nose.”
-
-I remember the theatre well, and the puppets. They were quite unearthly
-in their beauty,--all except the “Beast,” a strange, fur-covered
-monstrosity. The “Prince” was gilded in a most enchanting manner, and
-his mustache curled with an expression of royal pride. I have seen no
-other prince like him.
-
-All this was at Green Peace; but many as are the associations with her
-beloved presence there, it is at the Valley that I most constantly
-picture our mother. She loved the Valley more than any other place on
-earth, I think; so it is always pleasant to fancy her there. Study
-formed always an important part of her life. It was her delight and
-recreation, when wearied with household cares, to plunge into German
-metaphysics, or into the works of the Latin poets, whom she greatly
-loved. She has told, in one of her own poems, how she used to sit under
-the apple-trees with her favorite poet,--
-
- “Here amid shadows, lovingly embracing,
- Dropt from above by apple-trees unfruitful,
- With a chance scholar, caught and held to help me,
- Read I in Horace,” etc.
-
-But I do not think she had great need of the “chance scholar.” I
-remember the book well,--two great brown volumes, morocco-bound, with
-“Horatius Ed. Orelli” on the back. We naturally supposed this to be the
-writer’s entire name; and to this day, ‘Quintus Horatius Flaccus’
-(though I have nothing to say against its authenticity) does not seem to
-me as _real_ a name as “Horatius Ed. Orelli.”
-
-Our mother’s books,--alas that we should have been so familiar with the
-outside of them, and have known so little of the inside! There was
-Tacitus, who was high-shouldered and pleasant to handle, being bound in
-smooth brown calf. There was Kant, who could not spell his own name (we
-thought it ought to begin with a C!). There was Spinoza, whom we fancied
-a hunchback, with a long, thin, vibrating nose. (“What’s in a name?” A
-great deal, dear Juliet, I assure you.) Fichte had a sneezing sort of
-face, with the nose all “squinnied up,” as we used to say; and as for
-Hilpert, who wrote the great German dictionary, there can be no
-reasonable doubt that he was a cripple and went on crutches, though I
-have no authority to give for the fact beyond the resemblance of his
-name to the Scotch verb “hirple,” meaning “to hobble.”
-
-Very, very much our mother loved her books. Yet how quickly were they
-laid aside when any head was bumped, any knee scratched, any finger cut!
-When we tumbled down and hurt ourselves, our father always cried, “Jump
-up and take another!” and that was very good for us; but our mother’s
-kiss made it easier to jump up.
-
-Horace could be brought out under the apple-trees; even Kant and Spinoza
-sometimes came there, though I doubt whether they enjoyed the fresh air.
-But our mother had other work besides study, and many of her most
-precious hours were spent each day at the little black table in her own
-room, where papers lay heaped like snowdrifts. Here she wrote the
-beautiful poems, the brilliant essays, the earnest and thoughtful
-addresses, which have given pleasure and help and comfort to so many
-people throughout the length and breadth of the land. Many of her words
-have become household sayings which we could not spare; but there is one
-poem which every child knows, at whose opening line every heart, from
-youth to age, must thrill,--“The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” Thirty
-years have passed since this noble poem was written. It came in that
-first year of the war, like the sound of a silver trumpet, like the
-flash of a lifted sword; and all men felt that this was the word for
-which they had been waiting. You shall hear, in our mother’s own words,
-how it came to be written:--
-
- “In the late autumn of the year 1861 I visited the national capital
- in company with my husband Dr. Howe, and a party of friends, among
- whom were Governor and Mrs. Andrew, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Whipple, and
- my dear pastor Rev. James Freeman Clarke.
-
- “The journey was one of vivid, even romantic interest. We were
- about to see the grim Demon of War face to face; and long before we
- reached the city his presence made itself felt in the blaze of
- fires along the road where sat or stood our pickets, guarding the
- road on which we travelled.
-
- “One day we drove out to attend a review of troops, appointed to
- take place some distance from the city. In the carriage with me
- were James Freeman Clarke and Mr. and Mrs. Whipple. The day was
- fine, and everything promised well; but a sudden surprise on the
- part of the enemy interrupted the proceedings before they were well
- begun. A small body of our men had been surrounded and cut off from
- their companions; reinforcements were sent to their assistance, and
- the expected pageant was necessarily given up. The troops who were
- to have taken part in it were ordered back to their quarters, and
- we also turned our horses’ heads homeward.
-
- “For a long distance the foot-soldiers nearly filled the road. They
- were before and behind, and we were obliged to drive very slowly.
- We presently began to sing some of the well-known songs of the war,
- and among them--
-
- ‘John Brown’s body lies a-mouldering in the grave.’
-
- This seemed to please the soldiers, who cried, ‘Good for you!’ and
- themselves took up the strain. Mr. Clarke said to me, ‘You ought to
- write some new words to that tune.’ I replied that I had often
- wished to do so.
-
- “In spite of the excitement of the day I went to bed and slept as
- usual, but awoke next morning in the gray of the early dawn, and to
- my astonishment found that the wished-for lines were arranging
- themselves in my brain. I lay quite still until the last verse had
- completed itself in my thoughts, then hastily rose, saying to
- myself, ‘I shall lose this if I don’t write it down immediately.’ I
- searched for a sheet of paper and an old stump of a pen which I had
- had the night before, and began to scrawl the lines almost without
- looking, as I had learned to do by often scratching down verses in
- the darkened room where my little children were sleeping. Having
- completed this, I lay down again and fell asleep, but not without
- feeling that something of importance had happened to me.
-
- “The poem was published soon after this time in the Atlantic
- Monthly. It first came prominently into notice when Chaplain
- McCabe, newly released from Libby Prison, gave a lecture in
- Washington, and in the course of it told how he and his
- fellow-prisoners, having somehow become possessed of a copy of the
- ‘Battle Hymn,’ sang it with a will in their prison, on receiving
- surreptitious tidings of a Union victory.”
-
-Our mother’s genius might soar as high as heaven on the wings of such a
-song as this; but we always considered that she was tied to our little
-string, and we never doubted (alas!) our perfect right to pull her down
-to earth whenever a matter of importance--such as a doll’s funeral or a
-sick kitten--was at hand.
-
-To her our confidences were made, for she had a rare understanding of
-the child-mind. We were always sure that Mamma knew “just how it was.”
-
-To her did Julia, at the age of five, or it may have been six, impart
-the first utterances of her infant Muse. “Mamma,” said the child,
-trembling with delight and awe, “I have made a poem, and set it to
-music!” Of course our mother was deeply interested, and begged to hear
-the composition; whereupon, encouraged by her voice and smile, Julia
-sang as follows:--
-
-[Illustration: Music
-
-I had a lit-tle boy;
-He died when he was young.]
-
-[Illusration: Music
-
-As soon as he was dead,
-He walked upon his tongue!]
-
-Our mother’s ear for music was exquisitely fine,--so fine, that when she
-was in her own room, and a child practising below-stairs played a false
-note, she would open her door and cry, “B _flat_, clear! not B natural!”
-This being; so, it was grievous to her when one day, during her precious
-study hour, Harry came and chanted outside her door:
-
- “Hong-kong! hong-kong! hong-kong!”
-
-“Harry!” she cried, “do stop that dreadful noise!” But when the little
-lad showed a piteous face, and said reproachfully, “Why, Mamma, I was
-singing to you!” who so ready as our mother to listen to the funny song
-and thank the child for it?
-
-When ten-year-old Laura wrote, in a certain precious little volume bound
-in Scotch plaid, “Whence these longings after the infinite?” (I cannot
-remember any more!) be sure that if any eyes were suffered to rest upon
-the sacred lines they were those kind, clear, understanding gray eyes of
-our mother.
-
-Through all and round all, like a laughing river, flowed the current of
-her wit and fun. No child could be sad in her company. If we were cold,
-there was a merry bout of “fisticuffs” to warm us; if we were too warm,
-there was a song or story while we sat still and “cooled off.” We all
-had nicknames, our own names being often too sober to suit her laughing
-mood. We were “Petotty,” “Jehu,” “Wolly,” and “Bunks of Bunktown.”
-
-[Illustration: JULIA ROMANA HOWE.]
-
-On one occasion our mother’s presence of mind saved the life of the
-child Laura, then a baby of two years old. We were all staying at the
-Institution for some reason, and the nursery was in the fourth story of
-the lofty building. One day our mother came into the room, and to her
-horror saw little Laura rolling about on the broad window-sill, the
-window being wide open; only a few inches space between her and the
-edge, and then--the street, fifty feet below! The nurse was, I know not
-where,--anywhere save where she ought to have been. Our mother stepped
-quickly and quietly back out of sight, and called gently, “Laura! come
-here, dear! Come to me! I have something to show you.” A moment’s
-agonized pause,--and then she heard the little feet patter on the floor,
-and in another instant held the child clasped in her arms. If she had
-screamed, or rushed forward, the child would have started, and probably
-would have fallen and been dashed to pieces.
-
-It was very strange to us to find other children holding their revels
-without their father and mother. “Papa and Mamma” were always the life
-and soul of ours.
-
-Our mother’s letters to her sister are delightful, and abound in
-allusions to the children. In one of them she playfully upbraids her
-sister for want of attention to the needs of the baby of the day, in
-what she calls “Family Trochaics”:--
-
- “Send along that other pink shoe
- You have been so long in knitting!
- Are you not ashamed to think that
- Wool was paid for at Miss Carman’s
- With explicit understanding
- You should knit it for my baby?
- And that baby’s now a-barefoot,
- While your own, no doubt, has choice of
- Pink, blue, yellow--every color,
- For its little drawn-up toe-toes,
- For its toe-toes, small as green peas,
- Counted daily by the mother,
- To be sure that none is missing!”
-
-Our mother could find amusement in almost anything. Even a winter day of
-pouring rain, which made other housewives groan and shake their heads at
-thought of the washing, could draw from her the following lines:--
-
-
-THE RAINY DAY.
-
-(_After Longfellow._)
-
- The morn was dark, the weather low,
- The household fed by gaslight show,--
- When from the street a shriek arose:
- The milkman, bellowing through his nose,
- Expluvior!
-
- The butcher came, a walking flood,
- Drenching the kitchen where he stood:
- “Deucalion is your name, I pray?”
- “Moses!” he choked, and slid away.
- Expluvior!
-
- The neighbor had a coach and pair
- To struggle out and take the air;
- Slip-slop, the loose galoshes went;
- I watched his paddling with content.
- Expluvior!
-
- A wretch came floundering up the ice
- (The rain had washed it smooth and nice),
- Two ribs stove in above his head,
- As, turning inside out, he said,
- Expluvior!
-
-No doubt, alas! we often imposed upon the tenderness of this dear
-mother. She was always absent-minded, and of this quality advantage was
-sometimes taken. One day, when guests were dining with her, Harry came
-and asked if he might do something that happened to be against the
-rules. “No, dear,” said our mother, and went on with the conversation.
-In a few moments Harry was at her elbow again with the same question,
-and received the same answer. This was repeated an indefinite number of
-times; at length our mother awoke suddenly to the absurdity of it, and,
-turning to the child, said: “Harry, what do you mean by asking me this
-question over and over again, when I have said ‘no’ each time?”
-“Because,” was the reply, “Flossy said that if I asked often enough, you
-might say ‘yes!’”
-
-I am glad to say that our mother did _not_ “say yes” on this occasion.
-But, on the other hand, Maud was not whipped for taking the cherries,
-when she needed a whipping sorely. The story is this: it was in the
-silent days of her babyhood, for Maud did not speak a single word till
-she was two years and a half old; then she said, one day, “Look at that
-little dog!” and after that talked as well as any child. But if she did
-not speak in those baby days, she thought a great deal. One day she
-thought she wanted some wild cherries from the little tree by the
-stone-wall, down behind the corn-crib at the Valley. So she took them,
-such being her disposition. Our mother, coming upon the child thus,
-forbade her strictly to touch the cherries, showing her at the same time
-a little switch, and saying: “If you eat any more cherries, I shall have
-to whip you with this switch!” She went into the house, and forgot the
-incident. But presently Maud appeared, with a bunch of cherries in one
-hand and the switch in the other. Fixing her great blue eyes on our
-mother with earnest meaning, she put the cherries in her mouth, and then
-held out the switch. Alas! and our mother--did--not--whip her! I mention
-this merely to show that our mother was (and, indeed, is) mortal. But
-Maud was the baby, and the prettiest thing in the world, and had a way
-with her that was very hard to resist.
-
-It was worth while to have measles and things of that sort, not because
-one had stewed prunes and cream-toast--oh, no!--but because our mother
-sat by us, and sang “Lord Thomas and Fair Elinor,” or some mystic
-ballad.
-
-The walks with her are never to be forgotten,--twilight walks round the
-hill behind the house, with the wonderful sunset deepening over the bay,
-turning all the world to gold and jewels; or through the Valley itself,
-the lovely wild glen, with its waterfall and its murmuring stream, and
-the solemn Norway firs, with their warning fingers. The stream was clear
-as crystal, its rocky banks fringed with jewel-weed and rushes; the
-level sward was smooth and green as emerald. By the waterfall stood an
-old mill, whose black walls looked down on a deep brown pool, into which
-the foaming cascade fell with a musical, rushing sound. I have described
-the Valley very fully elsewhere,[2] but cannot resist dwelling on its
-beauty again in connection with our mother,--who loved so to wander
-through it, or to sit with her work under the huge ash-tree in the
-middle, where
-
-[Illustration: JULIA WARD HOWE.
-
-(From a recent photograph.)]
-
-our father had placed seats and a rustic table. Here, and in the lovely,
-lonely fields, as we walked, our mother talked with us, and we might
-share the rich treasures of her thought.
-
- “And oh the words that fell from her mouth
- Were words of wonder and words of truth!”
-
-One such word, dropped in the course of conversation as the maiden in
-the fairy-story dropped diamonds and pearls, comes now to my mind, and I
-shall write it here because it is good to think of and to say over to
-one’s self:--
-
- “I gave my son a palace
- And a kingdom to control,--
- The palace of his body,
- The kingdom of his soul.”
-
-In the Valley, too, many famous parties and picnics were given. The
-latter are to be remembered with especial delight. A picnic with our
-mother and one without her are two very different things. I never knew
-that a picnic could be dull till I grew up and went to one where that
-brilliant, gracious presence was lacking. The games we played, the
-songs we sang, the garlands of oak and maple leaves that we wove,
-listening to the gay talk if we were little, joining in it when we were
-older; the simple feast, and then the improvised charades or tableaux,
-always merry, often graceful and lovely!--ah, these are things to
-remember!
-
-Our mother’s hospitality was boundless. She loved to fill the little
-house to overflowing in summer days, when every one was glad to get out
-into the fresh, green country. Often the beds were all filled, and we
-children had to take to sofas and cots: once, I remember, Harry slept on
-a mattress laid on top of the piano, there being no other vacant spot.
-
-Sometimes strangers as well as friends shared this kindly hospitality. I
-well remember one wild stormy night, when two men knocked at the door
-and begged for a night’s lodging. They were walking to the town, they
-said, five miles distant, but had been overtaken by the storm. The
-people at the farm-house near by had refused to take them in; there was
-no other shelter near. Our mother hesitated a moment. Our father was
-away; the old coachman slept in the barn, at some distance from the
-house; she was alone with the children and the two maids, and Julia was
-ill with a fever. These men might be vagabonds, or worse. Should she let
-them in? Then, perhaps, she may have heard, amid the howling of the
-storm, a voice which she has followed all her life, saying, “I was a
-stranger, and ye took me in!” She bade the men enter, in God’s name, and
-gave them food, and then led them to an upper bedroom, cautioning them
-to tread softly as they passed the door of the sick child’s room.
-
-Well, that is all. Nothing happened. The men proved to be quiet,
-respectable persons, who departed, thankful, the next morning.
-
-The music of our mother’s life is still sounding on, noble, helpful, and
-beautiful. Many people may still look into her serene face, and hear her
-silver voice; and no one will look or hear without being the better for
-it. I cannot close this chapter better than with some of her own
-words,--a poem which I wish every child, and every grown person too,
-who reads this might learn by heart.
-
-
-A PARABLE.
-
- “I sent a child of mine to-day:
- I hope you used him well.”
- “Now, Lord, no visitor of yours
- Has waited at my bell.
-
- “The children of the millionaire
- Run up and down our street;
- I glory in their well-combed hair,
- Their dress and trim complete.
-
- “But yours would in a chariot come
- With thoroughbreds so gay,
- And little merry maids and men
- To cheer him on his way.”
-
- “Stood, then, no child before your door?”
- The Lord, persistent, said.
- “Only a ragged beggar-boy,
- With rough and frowzy head.
-
- “The dirt was crusted on his skin,
- His muddy feet were bare;
- The cook gave victuals from within:
- I cursed his coming there.”
-
- What sorrow, silvered with a smile,
- Glides o’er the face divine?
- What tenderest whisper thrills rebuke?
- “The beggar-boy was mine!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-OUR TEACHERS.
-
-
-I do not know why we had so many teachers. No doubt it was partly
-because we were very troublesome children. But I think it was also
-partly owing to the fact that our father was constantly overrun by needy
-foreigners seeking employment. He was a philanthropist; he had been
-abroad, and spoke foreign languages,--that was enough! His office was
-besieged by “all peoples, nations, and languages,”--all, as a rule,
-hungry,--Greeks, Germans, Poles, Hungarians, occasionally a Frenchman or
-an Englishman, though these last were rare. Many of them were political
-exiles; sometimes they brought letters from friends in Europe, sometimes
-not.
-
-Our father’s heart never failed to respond to any appeal of this kind
-when the applicant really wanted work; for sturdy beggars he had no
-mercy. So it sometimes happened that, while waiting for something else
-to turn up, the exile of the day would be set to teaching us,--partly to
-give him employment, partly also by way of finding out what he knew and
-was fit for. In this way did Professor Feaster (this may not be the
-correct spelling, but it was our way, and suited him well) come to be
-our tutor for a time. He was a very stout man, so stout that we
-considered him a second Daniel Lambert. He may have been an excellent
-teacher, but almost my only recollection of him is that he made the most
-enchanting little paper houses, with green doors and blinds that opened
-and shut. He painted the inside of the houses in some mysterious
-way,--at least there were patterns on the floor, like mosaic-work,--and
-the only drawback to our perfect happiness on receiving one of them was
-that we were too big to get inside.
-
-I say this is almost my only recollection of this worthy man; but candor
-compels me to add that the other picture which his name conjures up is
-of Harry and Laura marching round the dining-room table, each
-shouldering a log of wood, and shouting,--
-
- “We’ll kill old Feaster!
- We’ll kill old Feaster!”
-
-This was very naughty indeed; but, as I have said before, we were often
-naughty.
-
-One thing more I do recollect about poor Professor Feaster. Flossy was
-at once his delight and his terror. She was so bright, so original,
-so--alas! so impish. She used to climb up on his back, lean over his
-shoulder, and pull out his watch to see if the lesson-hour were over. To
-be sure, she was only eight at this time, and possibly the scenes from
-“Wilhelm Tell” which he loved to declaim with republican fervor may have
-been rather beyond her infant comprehension.
-
-One day Flossy made up her mind that the Professor should take her way
-about something--I quite forget what--rather than his own. She set
-herself deliberately against him,--three feet to six!--and declared that
-he should do as she said. The poor Professor looked down on this fiery
-pygmy with eyes that sparkled through his gold-bowed spectacles. “I haf
-refused,” he cried in desperation, “to opey ze Emperor of Austria, mees!
-Do you sink I will opey _you?_”
-
-Then there was Madame S----, a Danish lady, very worthy, very
-accomplished, and--ugly enough to frighten all knowledge out of a
-child’s head. She was my childish ideal of personal uncomeliness, yet
-she was most good and kind.
-
-It was whispered that she had come to this country with intent to join
-the Mormons (of course we heard nothing of this till years after), but
-the plan had fallen through; she, Madame S----, did not understand why,
-but our mother, on looking at her, thought the explanation not so
-difficult. She had a religion of her own, this poor, good, ugly dame. It
-was probably an entirely harmless one, though she startled our mother
-one day by approving the action of certain fanatics who had killed one
-of their number (by his own consent) because he had a devil. “If he did
-have a devil,” quoth Madame, beaming mildly over the purple
-morning-glory she was crocheting, “it may have been a good thing that he
-was killed.”
-
-As I say, this startled our mother, who began to wonder what would
-happen if Madame S---- should take it into her head that any of our
-family was possessed by a devil; but neither poison nor dagger appeared,
-and Madame was never anything but the meekest of women.
-
-I must not forget to say that before she began to teach she had wished
-to become a lecturer. She had a lecture all ready; it began with a
-poetical outburst, as follows:
-
- “I am a Dane! I am a Dane!
- I am not ashamed of the royal name!”
-
-But we never heard of its being delivered. I find this mention of Madame
-S---- in a letter from our mother to her sister:--
-
- “Danish woman very ugly,
- But remarkably instructive,--
- Drawing, painting, French, and German,
- Fancy-work of all descriptions,
- With geography and grammar.
- She will teach for very little,
- And is a superior person.”
-
-I remember some of the fancy-work. There were pink-worsted roses, very
-wonderful,--really not at all like the common roses one sees in gardens.
-You wound the worsted round and round, spirally, and then you ran your
-needle down through the petal and pulled it a little; this, as any
-person of intelligence will readily perceive, made a rose-petal with a
-dent of the proper shape in it. These petals had to be pressed in a book
-to keep them flat, while others were making. Sometimes, years and years
-after, one would find two or three of them between the leaves of an old
-volume of “Punch,” or some other book; and instantly would rise up
-before the mind’s eye the figure of Madame S----, with scarlet face and
-dark-green dress, and a very remarkable nose.
-
-Flossy reminds me that she always smelt of peppermint. So she did, poor
-lady! and probably took it for its medicinal properties.
-
-Then there was the wax fruit. You young people of sophisticated to-day,
-who make such things of real beauty with your skilful,
-kindergarten-trained fingers, what would you say to the wax fruit and
-flowers of our childhood? Perhaps you would like to know how to make
-them. We bought wax at the apothecary’s, white wax, in round flat cakes,
-pleasant to nibble, and altogether gratifying,--wax, and chrome-yellow
-and carmine, the colors in powder. We put the wax in a pipkin (I always
-say “pipkin” when I have a chance, because it is such a charming word;
-but if my readers prefer “saucepan,” let them have it by all means!)--we
-put it, I say, in a pipkin, and melted it. (For a pleasure wholly
-without alloy, I can recommend the poking and punching of half-melted
-wax.) Then, when it was ready, we stirred in the yellow powder, which
-produced a fine Bartlett color. Then we poured the mixture--oh,
-joy!--into the two pear or peach shaped halves of the plaster mold, and
-clapped them together; and when the pear or peach was cool and dry, we
-took a camel’s-hair brush and painted a carmine cheek on one side. I do
-not say that this was art, or advancement of culture; I do not say that
-its results were anything but hideous and abnormal; but I do maintain
-that it was a delightful and enchanting amusement. And if there was a
-point of rapture beyond this, it was the coloring of melted wax to a
-delicate rose hue, and dipping into it a dear little spaddle (which, be
-it explained to the ignorant, is a flat disk with a handle to it) and
-taking out liquid rose-petals, which hardened in a few minutes and were
-rolled delicately off with the finger. When one had enough (say, rather,
-when one could tear one’s self away from the magic pipkin), one put the
-petals together; and there you had a rose that was like nothing upon
-earth.
-
-After all, were wax flowers so much more hideous, I wonder, than some
-things one sees to-day? Why is it that such a stigma attaches to the
-very name of them? Why do not people go any longer to see the wax
-figures in the Boston Museum? Perhaps they are not there now; perhaps
-they are grown forlorn and dilapidated--indeed, they never were very
-splendid!--and have been hustled away into some dim lumber-room, from
-whose corners they glare out at the errant call-boy of the theatre, and
-frighten him into fits. Daniel Lambert, in scarlet waistcoat and
-knee-breeches! the “Drunkard’s Career,” the bare recollection of which
-brings a thrill of horror,--there was one child at least who regarded
-you as miracles of art!
-
-Speaking of wax reminds me of Monsieur N----, who gave us, I am inclined
-to think, our first French lessons, besides those we received from our
-mother. He was a very French Frenchman, with blond mustache and imperial
-waxed à la Louis Napoleon, and a military carriage. He had been a
-soldier, and taught fencing as well as French, though not to us. This
-unhappy gentleman had married a Smyrniote woman, out of gratitude to her
-family, who had rescued him from some pressing danger. Apparently he did
-them a great service by marrying the young woman and taking her away,
-for she had a violent temper,--was, in short, a perfect vixen. The evils
-of this were perhaps lessened by the fact that she could not speak
-French, while her husband had no knowledge of her native Greek. It is
-the simple truth that this singular couple in their disputes, which
-unfortunately were many, used often to come and ask our father to act as
-interpreter between them. Monsieur N---- himself was a kind man, and a
-very good teacher.
-
-There is a tale told of a christening feast which he gave in honor of
-Candide, his eldest child. Julia and Flossy were invited, and also the
-governess of the time, whoever she was. The company went in two hacks to
-the priest’s house, where the ceremony was to be performed; on the way
-the rival hackmen fell out, and jeered at each other, and, whipping up
-their lean horses, made frantic efforts each to obtain the front rank in
-the small cortége. Whereupon Monsieur N----, very angry at this
-infringement of the dignity of the occasion, thrust his head out of the
-window and shrieked to his hackman:--
-
-“Firts or sekind, vich you bleece!” which delighted the children more
-than any other part of the entertainment.
-
-There was poor Miss R----, whom I recall with mingled dislike and
-compassion. She must have been very young, and she had about as much
-idea of managing children (we required a great deal of managing) as a
-tree might have. Her one idea of discipline was to give us
-“misdemeanors,” which in ordinary speech were “black marks.” What is it
-I hear her say in the monotonous sing-song voice which always
-exasperated us?--“Doctor, Laura has had fourteen misdemeanors!” Then
-Laura was put to bed, no doubt very properly; but she has always felt
-that she need not have had the “misdemeanors” if the teaching had been a
-little different. Miss R---- it was who took away the glass eye-cup;
-therefore I am aware that I cannot think of her with clear and
-unprejudiced mind. But she must have had bitter times with us, poor
-thing! I can distinctly remember Flossy urging Harry, with fiery zeal,
-not to recite his geography lesson,--I cannot imagine why.
-
-Miss R---- often rocked in the junk with us. That reminds me that I
-promised to describe the junk. But how shall I picture that perennial
-fount of joy? It was crescent-shaped, or rather it was like a
-longitudinal slice cut out of a watermelon. Magnify the slice a
-hundred-fold; put seats up and down the sides, with iron bars in front
-to hold on by; set it on two grooved rails and paint it red,--there you
-have the junk! Nay! you have it not entire; for it should be filled with
-rosy, shouting children, standing or sitting, holding on by the bars and
-rocking with might and main,--
-
- “Yo-ho! Here we go!
- Up and down! Heigh-ho!”
-
-Why are there no junks nowadays? Surely it would be better for us, body
-and mind, if there were; for, as for the one, the rocking exercised
-every muscle in the whole bodily frame, and as for the other, black Care
-could not enter the junk (at least he did not), nor weariness, nor
-“shadow of annoyance.” There ought to be a junk on Boston Common, free
-to all, and half a dozen in Central Park; and I hope every young person
-who reads these words will suggest this device to his parents or
-guardians.
-
-But teaching is not entirely confined to the archery practice of the
-young idea; and any account of our teachers would be incomplete without
-mention of our dancing-master,--of _the_ dancing-master, for there was
-but one. You remember that the dandy in “Punch,” being asked of whom he
-buys his hats, replies: “Scott. Is there another fellah?” Even so it
-would be difficult for the Boston generation of middle or elder life to
-acknowledge that there could have been “another fellah” to teach dancing
-besides Lorenzo Papanti. Who does not remember--nay! who could ever
-forget--that tall, graceful figure; that marvellous elastic glide, like
-a wave flowing over glass? Who could ever forget the shrewd, kindly
-smile when he was pleased, the keen lightning of his glance when
-angered? What if he did rap our toes sometimes till the timorous wept,
-and those of stouter heart flushed scarlet, and clenched their small
-hands and inly vowed revenge? No doubt we richly deserved it, and it did
-us good.
-
-If I were to hear a certain strain played in the desert of Sahara or on
-the plains of Idaho, I should instantly “forward and back and cross
-over,”--and so, I warrant, would most of my generation of Boston people.
-There is one grave and courteous gentleman of my acquaintance, whom to
-see dance the shawl-dance with his fairy sister was a dream of poetry.
-As for the gavotte--O beautiful Amy! O lovely Alice! I see you now, with
-your short, silken skirts flowing out to extreme limit of crinoline;
-with your fair locks confined by the discreet net, sometimes of brown or
-scarlet chenille, sometimes of finest silk; with snowy stockings, and
-slippers fastened by elastic bands crossed over the foot and behind the
-ankle; with arms and neck bare. If your daughters to-day chance upon a
-photograph of you taken in those days, they laugh and ask mamma how she
-could wear such queer things, and make such a fright of herself! But I
-remember how lovely you were, and how perfectly you always dressed, and
-with what exquisite grace you danced the gavotte.
-
-[Illustration: LAURA E. RICHARDS.]
-
-So, I think, all we who jumped and changed our feet, who pirouetted and
-chasséed under Mr. Papanti, owe him a debt of gratitude. His hall was a
-paradise, the stiff little dressing-room, with its rows of shoe-boxes,
-the antechamber of delight,--and thereby hangs a tale. The child Laura
-grew up, and married one who had jumped and changed his feet beside her
-at Papanti’s, and they two went to Europe and saw many strange lands and
-things; and it fell upon a time that they were storm-bound in a little
-wretch of a grimy steamer in the Gulf of Corinth. With them was a
-travelling companion who also had had the luck to be born in Boston, and
-to go to dancing-school; the other passengers were a Greek, an Italian,
-and--I think the third was a German, but as he was seasick it made no
-difference. Three days were we shut up there while the storm raged and
-bellowed, and right thankful we were for the snug little harbor which
-stretched its protecting arms between us and the white churning waste of
-billows outside the bar.
-
-We played games to make the time pass; we talked endlessly,--and in the
-course of talk it naturally came to pass that we told of our adventures,
-and where we came from, and, in short, who we were. The Greek gentleman
-turned out to be an old acquaintance of our father, and was greatly
-overjoyed to see me, and told me many interesting things about the old
-fighting-days of the revolution. The Italian spoke little during this
-conversation, but when he heard the word “Boston” he pricked up his
-ears; and when a pause came, he asked if we came from Boston. “Yes,” we
-all answered, with the inward satisfaction which every Bostonian feels
-at being able to make the reply. And had we ever heard, in Boston, he
-went on to inquire, of “un certo Papanti, maestro di ballo?” “Heard of
-him!” cried the three dancing-school children,--“we never heard of any
-one else!” Thereupon ensued much delighted questioning and
-counter-questioning. This gentleman came from Leghorn, Mr. Papanti’s
-native city. He knew his family; they were excellent people. Lorenzo
-himself he had never seen, as he left Italy so many years ago; but
-reports had reached Leghorn that he was very successful,--that he taught
-the best people (O Beacon street! O purple windows and brown-stone
-fronts, I should think so!); that he had invented “un piano sopra
-molle,” a floor on springs. Was this true? Whereupon we took up our
-parable, and unfolded to the Livornese mind the glory of Papanti, till
-he fairly glowed with pride in his famous fellow-townsman.
-
-And, finally, was not this a pleasant little episode in a storm-bound
-steamer in the Gulf of Corinth?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-OUR FRIENDS.
-
-
-We had so many friends that I hardly know where to begin. First of all,
-perhaps, I should put the dear old Scotch lady whom we called “D. D.”
-She had another name, but that is nobody’s business but her own. D. D.
-was a thousand years old. She always said so when we asked her age, and
-she certainly ought to have known. No one would have thought it to look
-at her, for she had not a single gray hair, and her eyes were as bright
-and black as a young girl’s. One of the pleasantest things about her was
-the way she dressed, in summer particularly. She wore a gown of white
-dimity, always spotlessly clean, made with a single plain skirt, and a
-jacket. The jacket was a little open in front, showing a handkerchief of
-white net fastened with a brooch of hair in the shape of a harp.
-Fashions made no difference to D. D. People might wear green or yellow
-or purple, as they pleased,--she wore her white dimity; and we children
-knew instinctively that it was the prettiest and most becoming dress
-that she could have chosen.
-
-Another wonderful thing about D. D. was her store-closet. There never
-was such a closet as that! It was all full of glass jars, and the jars
-were full of cinnamon and nutmeg and cloves and raisins, and all manner
-of good things. Yes, and they were not screwed down tight, as jars are
-likely to be nowadays; but one could take off the top, and see what was
-inside; and if it was cinnamon, one might take even a whole stick, and
-D. D. would not mind. Sometimes a friend of hers who lived at the South
-would send her a barrel of oranges (she called it a “bar’l of awnges,”
-because she was Scotch, and we thought it sounded a great deal prettier
-than the common way), and then we had glorious times; for D. D. thought
-oranges were very good for us, and we thought so too. Then she had some
-very delightful and interesting drawers, full of old daguerreotypes and
-pieces of coral, and all kinds of alicumtweezles. Have I explained
-before that “alicumtweezles” are nearly the same as “picknickles” and
-“bucknickles”?
-
-D. D.’s son was a gallant young soldier, and it was his hair that she
-wore in the harp-shaped brooch. Many of the daguerreotypes were of him,
-and he certainly was as handsome a fellow as any mother could wish a son
-to be. When we went to take tea with D. D., which was quite often, we
-always looked over her treasures, and asked the same questions over and
-over, the dear old lady never losing patience with us. And such jam as
-we had for tea! D. D.’s jams and jellies were famous, and she often made
-our whole provision of sweet things for the winter. Then we were sure of
-having the best quince marmalade and the clearest jelly; while as for
-the peach marmalade--no words can describe it!
-
-D. D. was a wonderful nurse; and when we were ill she often came and
-helped our mother in taking care of us. Then she would sing us her
-song,--a song that no one but D. D. and the fortunate children who had
-her for a friend ever heard. It is such a good song that I must write it
-down, being very sure that D. D. would not care.
-
- “There was an old man. and he was mad,
- And he ran up the steeple;
- He took off his great big hat.
- And waved it over the people.”
-
-To D. D. we owe the preservation of one of Laura’s first compositions,
-written when she was ten years old. She gave it to the good lady, who
-kept it for many years in her treasure-drawer till Laura’s own children
-were old enough to read it. It is a story, and is called--
-
-
-LOST AND FOUND.
-
- Marion Gray, a lovely girl of thirteen, one day tied on her gypsy
- hat, and, singing a merry song, bade good-by to her mother, and ran
- quickly toward the forest. She was the youngest daughter of Sir
- Edward Gray, a celebrated nobleman in great favor with the king,
- and consequently Marion had everything she wished for. When she
- reached the wood she set her basket down under a chestnut-tree,
- and climbing up into the branches she shook them till the ripe
- fruit came tumbling down. She then jumped down, and having filled
- her basket was proceeding to another tree, when all of a sudden a
- dark-looking man stepped out, who, when she attempted to fly,
- struck her severely with a stick, and she fell senseless to the
- ground.
-
- Meanwhile all was in confusion at the manorhouse. Marion’s faithful
- dog Carlo had seen the man lurking in the thicket, and had tried to
- warn his mistress of the danger. But seeing she did not mind, the
- minute he saw the man prepare to spring out he had run to the
- house. He made them understand that some one had stolen Marion.
- “Who, Carlo, who?” exclaimed the agonized mother. Carlo instantly
- picked up some A-B-C blocks which lay on the floor, and putting
- together the letters that form the word “Gypsies,” looked up at his
- master and wagged his tail. “The Gypsies!” exclaimed Sir Edward;
- “alas! if the gypsies have stolen our child, we shall never see her
- again.” Nevertheless they searched and searched the wood, but no
- trace of her was to be found.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “Hush! here she is! Isn’t she a beauty?”
-
- “Yes! but what is her name?”
-
- “Marion Gray. I picked her up in the wood. A splendid addition to
- our train, for she can beg charity and a night’s lodging; and then
- the easiest thing in the world is just to find out where they keep
- the key, and let us in. Hush! hush! she’s coming to.”
-
- These words were spoken by a withered hag of seventy and the man
- who had stolen her. Slowly Marion opened her eyes, and what was her
- horror to find herself in a gypsy camp!
-
- I will skip over the five long years of pain and suffering, and
- come to the end of my story. Five years have passed, and the new
- king sits on his royal throne, judging and condemning a band of
- gypsies. They are all condemned but one young girl, who stands with
- downcast eyes before him; but when she hears her doom, she raises
- her dark flashing eyes on the king. A piercing shriek is heard, the
- crown and sceptre roll down the steps of the throne, and Marion
- Gray is clasped in her father’s arms!
-
-Another dear friend was Miss Mary. She was a small, brisk woman, with
-“New England” written all over her. She used to stay with us a good
-deal, helping my mother in household matters, or writing for our father;
-and we all loved her dearly. She had the most beautiful hair, masses
-and masses of it, of a deep auburn, and waving in a lovely fashion. She
-it was who used to say, “Hurrah for Jackson!” whenever anything met her
-special approval; and we all learned to say it too, and to this day some
-of us cheer the name of “Old Hickory,” who has been in his grave these
-fifty years. Miss Mary came of seafaring people, and had many strange
-stories of wreck and tempest, of which we were never weary. Miss Mary’s
-energy was untiring, her activity unceasing. She used to make long
-woodland expeditions with us in the woods around the Valley, leading the
-way “over hill, over dale, thorough bush, thorough brier,” finding all
-manner of wild-wood treasures,--creeping-jenny, and ferns and mosses
-without end,--which were brought home to decorate the parlors. She knew
-the name of every plant, and what it was good for. She knew when the
-barberries must be gathered, and when the mullein flowers were ready.
-She walked so fast and so far that she wore out an unreasonable number
-of shoes in a season.
-
-Speaking of her shoes reminds me that at the fire of which I spoke in a
-previous chapter, at the Institution for the Blind, Miss Mary was the
-first person to give the alarm. She had on a brand-new pair of morocco
-slippers when the fire broke out, and by the time it was extinguished
-they were in holes. This will give you some idea of Miss Mary’s energy.
-
-Then there was Mr. Ford, one of the very best of our friends. He was a
-sort of factotum of our father, and, like The Bishop in the “Bab
-Ballads,” was “short and stout and round-about, and zealous as could
-be.” We were very fond of trotting at his heels, and loved to pull him
-about and tease him, which the good man never seemed to resent. Once,
-however, we carried our teasing too far, as you shall hear. One day our
-mother was sitting quietly at her writing, thinking that the children
-were all happy and good, and possessing her soul in patience. Suddenly
-to her appeared Julia, her hair flying, eyes wide open, mouth
-ditto,--the picture of despair.
-
-“Oh, Mamma!” gasped the child, “I have done the most dreadful thing! Oh,
-the most dreadful, terrible thing!”
-
-“What is it?” exclaimed our mother, dropping her pen in distress; “what
-have you done, dear? Tell me quickly!”
-
-“Oh, I cannot tell you!” sobbed the child; “I cannot!”
-
-“Have you set the house on fire?” cried our mother.
-
-“Oh, worse than that!” gasped poor Julia, “much worse!”
-
-“Have you dropped the baby?”
-
-“Worse than that!”
-
-Now, there _was_ nothing worse than dropping the baby, so our mother
-began to feel relieved.
-
-“Tell me at once, Julia,” she said, “what you have done!”
-
-“I--I--” sobbed poor Julia,--“I pulled--I pulled--off--Mr. Ford’s wig!”
-
-There were few people we loved better than Tomty, the gardener. This
-dear, good man must have been a martyr to our pranks, and the only
-wonder is that he was able to do any gardening at all. It was “Tomty”
-here and “Tomty” there, from morning till night. When Laura wanted her
-bonnet-strings tied (oh, that odious little bonnet! with the rows of
-pink and green quilled ribbon which was always coming off), she never
-thought of going into the house to Mary, though Mary was good and kind
-too,--she always ran to Tomty, who must “lay down the shovel and the
-hoe,” and fashion bow-knots with his big, clumsy, good-natured fingers.
-When Harry was playing out in the hot sun without a hat, and Mary called
-to him to come in like a good boy and get his hat, did he go? Oh, no! He
-tumbled the potatoes or apples out of Tomty’s basket, and put that on
-his head instead of a hat, and it answered just as well.
-
-Poor, dear Tomty! He went to California in later years, and was cruelly
-murdered by some base wretches for the sake of a little money which he
-had saved.
-
-Somehow we had not very many friends of our own age. I suppose one
-reason was that we were so many ourselves that there were always enough
-to have a good time.
-
-There were one or two little girls who used to go with us on the famous
-maying-parties, which were great occasions. On May-day morning we would
-take to ourselves baskets,--some full of goodies, some empty,--and start
-for a pleasant wooded place not far from Green Peace. Here, on a sunny
-slope where the savins grew not too thickly to prevent the sun from
-shining merrily down on the mossy sward, we would pitch our tent (only
-there was no tent), and prepare to be perfectly happy. We gathered such
-early flowers as were to be found, and made garlands of them; we chose a
-queen and crowned her; and then we had a feast, which was really the
-object of the whole expedition.
-
-It was the proper thing to buy certain viands for this feast, the home
-dainties being considered not sufficiently rare.
-
-Well, we ate our oranges and nibbled our cocoanut, and the older ones
-drank the milk, if there was any in the nut: this was considered the
-very height of luxury, and the little ones knew it was too much for
-them to expect. I cannot remember whether we were generally ill after
-these feasts, but I think it highly probable.
-
-In mentioning our friends, is it right to pass over the good
-“four-footers,” who were so patient with us, and bore with so many of
-our vagaries? Can we ever forget Oggy the Steamboat, so called from the
-loudness of her purring? Do not some of us still think with compunction
-of the day when this good cat was put in a tin pan, and covered over
-with a pot-lid, while on the lid was set her deadly enemy Ella, the fat
-King Charles spaniel? What a snarling ensued! what growls, hisses,
-yells, mingled with the clashing of tin and the “unseemly laughter” of
-naughty children!
-
-And Lion, the good Newfoundland dog, who let us ride on his back--when
-he was in the mood, and tumbled us off when he was not! He was a dear
-dog; but Fannie, his mate, was anything but amiable, and sometimes gave
-sore offence to visitors by snapping at their heels and growling.
-
-But if the cats and dogs suffered from us, we suffered from José! O
-José! what a tyrannous little beast you were! Never was a brown donkey
-prettier, I am quite sure; never did a brown donkey have his own way so
-completely.
-
-Whether a child could take a ride or not depended entirely on whether
-José was in the mood for it. If not, he trotted a little way till he got
-the child alone; and then he calmly rubbed off his rider against a tree
-or fence, and trotted away to the stable. Of course this was when we
-were very little; but by the time the little ones were big enough to
-manage him José was dead; so some of us never “got even with him,” as
-the boys say. When the dearest uncle in the world sent us the
-donkey-carriage, things went better; for the obstinate little brown
-gentleman could not get rid of that, of course, and there were many
-delightful drives, with much jingling of harness and all manner of style
-and splendor.
-
-These were some of our friends, two-footers and four-footers. There were
-many others, of course, but time and space fail to tell of them. After
-all, perhaps they were just like other children’s friends. I must not
-weary my readers by rambling on indefinitely in these long-untrodden
-paths; but I wish other children could have heard Oggy purr!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-OUR GUESTS.
-
-
-Many interesting visitors came and went, both at Green Peace and the
-Valley,--many more than I can recollect. The visit of Kossuth, the great
-Hungarian patriot, made no impression upon me, as I was only a year old
-when he came to this country; but there was a great reception for him at
-Green Peace, and many people assembled to do honor to the brave man who
-had tried so hard to free his country from the Austrian yoke, and had so
-nearly succeeded. I remember a certain hat, which we younger children
-firmly believed to have been his, though I have since been informed that
-we were mistaken. At all events, we used to play with the hat (I wonder
-whose it was!) under this impression, and it formed an important
-element in “dressing up,” which was one of our chief delights.
-
-One child would put on Kossuth’s hat, another Lord Byron’s helmet,--a
-superb affair of steel and gold, which had been given to our father in
-Greece, after Byron’s death (we ought not to have been allowed to touch
-so precious a relic, far less to dress up in it!); while a third would
-appropriate a charming little square Polish cap of fine scarlet, which
-ought to have belonged to Thaddeus of Warsaw, but did not, I fear.
-
-What pleasant things we had to dress up in! There was our father’s
-wedding-coat, bright blue, with brass buttons; and the waistcoat he had
-worn with it, white satin with raised velvet flowers,--such a fine
-waistcoat! There were two embroidered crape gowns which had been our
-grandmother’s, with waists a few inches long, and long, skimp skirts;
-and the striped blue and yellow moiré, which our mother had worn in some
-private theatricals,--that was beyond description! And the white gauze
-with gold flounces--oh! and the peach-blossom silk with flowers all over
-it--ah!
-
-But this is a digression, and has nothing whatever to do with our
-guests, who never played “dressing up,” that I can remember.
-
-One of our most frequent visitors at Green Peace was the great statesman
-and patriot, Charles Sumner. He was a very dear friend of our father,
-and they loved to be together whenever the strenuous business of their
-lives would permit.
-
-We children used to call Mr. Sumner “the Harmless Giant;” and indeed he
-was very kind to us, and had always a pleasant word for us in that deep,
-melodious voice which no one, once hearing it, could ever forget. He
-towered above us to what seemed an enormous height; yet we were told
-that he stood six feet in his stockings,--no more. This impression being
-made on Laura’s mind, she was used to employ the great senator as an
-imaginary foot-rule (six-foot rule, I should say), and, until she was
-almost a woman grown, would measure a thing in her own mind by saying
-“two feet higher than Mr. Sumner,” or “twice as high as Mr. Summer,” as
-the case might be. I can remember him carrying the baby Maud on his
-shoulder, and bowing his lofty crest to pass through the doorway.
-Sometimes his mother, Madam Sumner, came with him, a gracious and
-charming old lady. I am told that on a day when she was spending an hour
-at Green Peace, and sitting in the parlor window with our mother, Laura
-felt it incumbent upon her to entertain the distinguished visitor; so,
-being arrayed in her best white frock, she took up her station on the
-gravel path below the window, and filling a little basket with gravel,
-proceeded to pour it over her head, exclaiming, “Mit Humner! hee my
-ektibiton!” This meant “exhibition.” Laura could not pronounce the
-letter S in childhood’s happy hour. “Mamma,” she would say, if she saw
-our mother look grave, “Id you had? Why id you had?” and then she would
-bring a doll’s dish, or it might be a saucepan, and give it to her
-mother and say, with infinite satisfaction, “Dere! ’mooge you’helf wid
-dat!”
-
-Another ever welcome guest was John A. Andrew, the great War Governor,
-as we loved to call him. He was not governor in those days,--that is,
-when I first remember him; but he was then, as always, one of the most
-delightful of men. Who else could tell a story with such exquisite
-humor? The stories themselves were better than any others, but his way
-of telling them set every word in gold. The very sound of his voice made
-the air brighter and warmer, and his own delightful atmosphere of sunny
-geniality went always with him. That was a wonderful evening when at one
-of our parties some scenes from Thackeray’s “The Rose and the Ring” were
-given. Our mother was Countess Gruffanuff, our father Kutasoff Hedzoff;
-Governor Andrew took the part of Prince Bulbo, while Flossy made a
-sprightly Angelica, and Julia as Betsinda was a vision of rarest beauty.
-I cannot remember who was Prince Giglio, but the figure of Bulbo, with
-closely curling hair, his fine face aglow with merriment, and the magic
-rose in his buttonhole, comes distinctly before me.
-
-Who were the guests at those dinner-parties so well remembered? Alas! I
-know not. Great people they often were, famous men and women, who
-talked, no doubt, brilliantly and delightfully. But is it their
-conversation which lingers like a charm in my memory? Again, alas! my
-recollection is of finger-bowls, crimson and purple, which sang beneath
-the wetted finger of some kindly elder; of almonds and raisins, and
-bonbons mystic, wonderful, all gauze and tinsel and silver paper, with
-flat pieces of red sugar within. The red sugar was something of an
-anticlimax after the splendors of its envelope, being insipidly sweet,
-with no special flavor. The scent of coffee comes back to me, rich,
-delicious, breathing of “the golden days of good Haroun Alraschid.” We
-were never allowed to drink coffee or tea; but standing by our mother’s
-chair, just before saying good-night, we received the most exquisite
-dainty the world afforded,--a “coffee-duck,” which to the ignorant is
-explained to be a lump of sugar dipped in coffee (black coffee, _bien
-entendu_) and held in the amber liquid till it begins to melt in
-delicious “honeycomb” (this was probably the true ambrosia of the gods);
-and then we said good-night, and--and--went and begged the cook for a
-“whip,” or some “floating-island,” or a piece of frosted cake! Was it
-strange that occasionally, after one of these feasts, Laura could not
-sleep, and was smitten with the “terror by night” (it was generally a
-locomotive which was coming in at the window to annihilate her; Julia
-was the one who used to weep at night for fear of foxes), and would come
-trotting down into the lighted drawing-room, among all the silks and
-satins, arrayed in the simple garment known as a “leg-nightgown,”
-demanding her mother? Ay, and I remember that she always got her mother,
-too.
-
-But these guests? I remember the great Professor Agassiz, with his wise,
-kindly face and genial smile. I can see him putting sugar into his
-coffee, lump after lump, till it stood up above the liquid like one of
-his own glaciers. I remember all the “Abolition” leaders, for our own
-parents were stanch Abolitionists, and worked heart and soul for the
-cause of freedom. I remember when Swedish ships came into Boston Harbor,
-probably for the express purpose of filling our parlors with fair-haired
-officers, wonderful, magnificent, shining with epaulets and buttons.
-There may have been other reasons for the visit; there may have been
-deep political designs, and all manner of mysteries relating to the
-peace of nations I know not. But I know that there was a little
-midshipman in white trousers, who danced with Laura, and made her a bow
-afterward and said, “I tanks you for de polska.” He was a dear little
-midshipman! There was an admiral too, who corresponded more or less with
-Southey’s description,--
-
- “And last of all an admiral came,
- A terrible man with a terrible name,--
- A name which, you all must know very well,
- Nobody can speak, and nobody can spell.”
-
-The admiral said to Harry, “I understand you shall not go to sea in
-future times?” and that is all I remember about him.
-
-I remember Charlotte Cushman, the great actress and noble woman, who was
-a dear friend of our mother; with a deep, vibrating, melodious voice,
-and a strong, almost masculine face, which was full of wisdom and
-kindliness.
-
-I remember Edwin Booth, in the early days, when his brilliant genius and
-the splendor of his melancholy beauty were taking all hearts by storm.
-He was very shy, this all-powerful Richelieu, this conquering Richard,
-this princely Hamlet. He came to a party given in his honor by our
-mother, and instead of talking to all the fine people who were dying for
-a word with him, he spent nearly the whole evening in a corner with
-little Maud, who enjoyed herself immensely. What wonder, when he made
-dolls for her out of handkerchiefs, and danced them with dramatic
-fervor? She was very gracious to Mr. Booth, which was a good thing; for
-one never knew just what Maud would say or do. Truth compels me to add
-that she was the _enfant terrible_ of the family, and that the elders
-always trembled when visitors noticed or caressed the beautiful child.
-
-One day, I remember, a very wise and learned man came to Green Peace to
-see our mother,--a man of high reputation, and withal a valued friend.
-He was fond of children, and took Maud on his knee, meaning to have a
-pleasant chat with her. But Maud fixed her great gray eyes on him, and
-surveyed him with an air of keen and hostile criticism. “What makes all
-those little red lines in your nose?” she asked, after an ominous
-silence. Mr. H----, somewhat taken aback, explained as well as he could
-the nature of the veins, and our mother was about to send the child on
-some suddenly-bethought-of errand, when her clear, melodious voice broke
-out again, relentless, insistent: “Do you know, I think you are the
-ugliest man I ever saw in my life!” “That will do, Maud!” said Mr.
-H----, putting her down from his knee. “You are charming, but you may go
-now, my dear.” Then he and our mother both tried to become very much
-interested in metaphysics; and next day he went and asked a mutual
-friend if he were really the ugliest man that ever was seen, telling
-her what Maud had said.
-
-Again, there was a certain acquaintance--long since dead--who was in the
-habit of making interminable calls at Green Peace, and who would talk by
-the hour together without pausing. Our parents were often wearied by
-this gentleman’s conversational powers, and one of them (let this be a
-warning to young and old) chanced one day to speak of him in Maud’s
-hearing as “a great bore.” This was enough! The next time the unlucky
-talker appeared, the child ran up to him, and greeted him cordially
-with, “How do you do, bore? Oh, you great bore!” A quick-witted friend
-who was in the room instantly asked Mr. S---- if he had seen the copy of
-Snyder’s “Boar Hunt” which our father had lately bought, thinking it
-better that he should fancy himself addressed as a beast of the forest
-than as _Borus humanus_; but he kept his own counsel, and we never knew
-what he really thought of Maud’s greeting.
-
-But of all visitors at either house, there was one whom we loved more
-than all others put together. Marked with a white stone was the happy
-day which brought the wonderful uncle, the fairy godfather, the
-realization of all that is delightful in man, to Green Peace or the
-Valley. Uncle Sam Ward!--uncle by adoption to half the young people he
-knew, but our very own uncle, our mother’s beloved brother. We might
-have said to him, with Shelley,--
-
- “Rarely, rarely comest thou,
- Spirit of delight!”
-
-for he was a busy man, and Washington was a long way off; but when he
-did come, as I said, it was a golden day. We fairly smothered him,--each
-child wanting to sit on his knee, to see his great watch, and the
-wonderful sapphire that he always wore on his little finger. Then he
-must sing for us; and he would sing the old Studenten Lieder in his
-full, joyous voice; but he must always wind up with “Balzoroschko
-Schnego” (at least that is what it sounded like), a certain Polish
-drinking-song, in which he sneezed and yodeled, and did all kinds of
-wonderful things.
-
-Then would come an hour of quiet talk with our mother, when we knew
-enough to be silent and listen,--feeling, perhaps, rather than realizing
-that it was not a common privilege to listen to such talk.
-
-“No matter how much I may differ from Sam Ward in principles or
-opinion,” said Charles Sumner once, “when I have been with him five
-minutes, I forget everything except that he is the most delightful man
-in the world.”
-
-Again (but this was the least part of the pleasure), he never came
-empty-handed. Now it was a basket of wonderful peaches, which he thought
-might rival ours; now a gold bracelet for a niece’s wrist; now a
-beautiful book, or a pretty dress-pattern that had caught his eye in
-some shop-window. Now he came direct from South America, bringing for
-our mother a silver pitcher which he had won as a prize at a
-shooting-match in Paraguay. One of us will never forget being waked in
-the gray dawn of a summer morning at the Valley, by the sound of a
-voice singing outside,--will never forget creeping to the window and
-peeping out through the blinds. There on the door-step stood the fairy
-uncle, with a great basket of peaches beside him; and he was singing the
-lovely old French song, which has always since then seemed to me to
-belong to him:
-
- “Noble Châtelaine,
- Voyez notre peine,
- Et dans vos domaines
- Rendez charité!
- Voyez le disgrace
- Qui nous menace,
- Et donnez, par grace,
- L’hospitalité!
- Toi que je révère,
- Entends ma prière.
- O Dieu tutelaire,
- Viens dans ta bonte,
- Pour sauver l’innocence,
- Et que ta puissance
- Un jour recompense
- L’hospitalité!”
-
-There is no sweeter song. And do you think we did not tumble into our
-clothes and rush down, in wrappers, in petticoats, in whatever gown
-could be most quickly put on, and unbar the door, and bring the dear
-wanderer in, with joyful cries, with laughter, almost with tears of pure
-pleasure?
-
-All, that was “long ago and long ago;” and now the kind uncle, the great
-heart that overflowed with love and charity and goodwill to all human
-kind, has passed through another door, and will not return! Be sure that
-on knocking at that white portal, he found hospitality within.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now it is time that these rambling notes should draw to a close.
-There are many things that I might still speak of. But, after all, long
-ago _is_ long ago, and these glimpses of our happy childhood must
-necessarily be fragmentary and brief. I trust they may have given
-pleasure to some children. I wish all childhood might be as bright, as
-happy, as free from care or sorrow, as was ours.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] I find it to be stone clover.
-
-[2] In the book entitled “Queen Hildegarde.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of When I was your age, by Laura E. Richards
-
-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/license
-
-
-Title: When I was your age
-
-Author: Laura E. Richards
-
-Release Date: January 4, 2018 [EBook #56308]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif, Suzanne Shell and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
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-
-</pre>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 374px;">
-<a href="images/cover_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="374" height="500" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""
-style="border: 2px black solid;margin: 1em auto 2em auto;max-width:50%;
-padding:1%;">
-<tr><td>
-
-<p class="c"><a href="#CONTENTS">Contents.</a></p>
-
-<p class="c"><a href="#LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">List of Illustrations</a><br /> <span class="nonvis">(In certain versions of this etext [in certain browsers]
-clicking on the image will bring up a larger version.)</span></p>
-
-<p class="c">(etext transcriber's note)</p></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="c">WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_001" id="page_001"></a>{1}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_002" id="page_002"></a>{2}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_003" id="page_003"></a>{3}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_004" id="page_004"></a>{4}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><a name="front" id="front"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 478px;">
-<a href="images/illus01_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus01_sml.jpg" width="478" height="338" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Green Peace.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_005" id="page_005"></a>{5}</span></p>
-
-<h1>
-<span class="smcap">When I was Your Age</span></h1>
-
-<p class="c">BY<br />
-<br />
-LAURA E. RICHARDS<br />
-<br />
-<small>AUTHOR OF “CAPTAIN JANUARY,” “MELODY,”<br />
-“QUEEN HILDEGARDE,” ETC.</small><br />
-<br /><br />
-<i>ILLUSTRATED</i><br />
-<br /><br />
-BOSTON<br />
-ESTES AND LAURIAT<br />
-1894<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_006" id="page_006"></a>{6}</span><br />
-<br />
-<i>Copyright, 1893</i>,<br />
-<small><span class="smcap">By Estes and Lauriat</span>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="eng">University Press:</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U. S. A.</span></small></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_007" id="page_007"></a>{7}</span></p>
-
-<h2>TO THE<br /><br />
-<span class="eng">Dear and Honored Memory of my Father,</span></h2>
-
-<p class="c">DR. SAMUEL GRIDLEY HOWE.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>Thy voice comes down the rolling years</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>Like ring of steel on steel;</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>With it I hear the tramp of steeds,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>And the trumpet’s silver peal.</i><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>I see thee ride thy fearless way,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>With steadfast look intent,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>God’s servant, still by night and day,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>On his high errand bent.</i><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>Thy lance lay ever in the rest</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>’Gainst tyranny and wrong.</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>Thy steed was swift, thine aim was sure,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>Thy sword was keen and strong.</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_008" id="page_008"></a>{8}</span><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>But were the fainting to be raised,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>The sorrowing comforted,&mdash;</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>The warrior vanished, and men saw</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>An angel stoop instead.</i><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>O soldier Father! dear I hold</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>Thine honored name to-day;</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>Thy high soul draws mine eyes above,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>And beacons me the way.</i><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>And when my heart beats quick to learn</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>Some deed of high emprise,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>I almost see the answering flash</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>That lightens from thine eyes.</i><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>I greet thee fair! I bless thee dear!</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>And here, in token meet,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0"><i>I pluck these buds from memory’s wreath,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i2"><i>And lay them at thy feet.</i><br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_009" id="page_009"></a>{9}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-
-<tr><td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td><td class="rt"><span class="smcap">Page</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">I.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_I"> <span class="smcap">Ourselves</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_013">13</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">II.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_II"> <span class="smcap">More about Ourselves</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_027">27</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">III.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_III"> <span class="smcap">Green Peace</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_042">42</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV"> <span class="smcap">The Valley</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_062">62</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">V.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_V"> <span class="smcap">Our Father</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_077">77</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI"> <span class="smcap">Julia Ward</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_107">107</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII"> <span class="smcap">Our Mother</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_129">129</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII"> <span class="smcap">Our Teachers</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_163">163</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">IX.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX"> <span class="smcap">Our Friends</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_180">180</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rt" valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">X.</a></td><td valign="top"><a href="#CHAPTER_X"> <span class="smcap">Our Guests</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_194">194</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_010" id="page_010"></a>{10}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_011" id="page_011"></a>{11}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<h2><a name="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rt"><span class="smcap">Page</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#front"><span class="smcap">Green Peace</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#front"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_043"><span class="smcap">Maud</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_043">43</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_053"><span class="smcap">Laura was found in the Sugar-Barrel</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_053">53</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_079"><span class="smcap">Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_079">79</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_097"><span class="smcap">The Doctor to the Rescue!</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_097">97</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_109"><span class="smcap">Julia Ward and her Brothers, as Children</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_109">109</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="csml" colspan="3">(From a miniature by Miss Anne Hall.)</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_117"><span class="smcap">Lieut.-Colonel Samuel Ward</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_117">117</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="csml" colspan="3">(Born Nov. 17, 1756; Died Aug. 16, 1832.)</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_125"><span class="smcap">Julia Ward</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_125">125</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_131"><span class="smcap">Julia Ward Howe</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_131">131</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_149"><span class="smcap">Julia Romana Howe</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_149">149</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_157"><span class="smcap">Julia Ward Howe</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_157">157</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="csml" colspan="3">(From a recent photograph.)</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_177"><span class="smcap">Laura E. Richards</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_177">177</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_012" id="page_012"></a>{12}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_013" id="page_013"></a>{13}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<h1>WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE.</h1>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.<br /><br />
-<small>OURSELVES.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">There were five of us. There had been six, but the Beautiful Boy was
-taken home to heaven while he was still very little; and it was good for
-the rest of us to know that there was always one to wait for and welcome
-us in the Place of Light to which we should go some day. So, as I said,
-there were five of us here,&mdash;Julia Romana, Florence, Harry, Laura, and
-Maud. Julia was the eldest. She took her second name from the ancient
-city in which she was born, and she was as beautiful as a soft Italian
-evening,&mdash;with dark hair, clear gray eyes, perfect features, and a
-complexion of such pure and wonderful red and white as I have never<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_014" id="page_014"></a>{14}</span>
-seen in any other face. She had a look as if when she came away from
-heaven she had been allowed to remember it, while others must forget;
-and she walked in a dream always, of beauty and poetry, thinking of
-strange things. Very shy she was, very sensitive. When Flossy (this was
-Florence’s home name) called her “a great red-haired giant,” she wept
-bitterly, and reproached her sister for hurting her feelings. Julia knew
-everything, according to the belief of the younger children. What story
-was there she could not tell? She it was who led the famous
-before-breakfast walks, when we used to start off at six o’clock and
-walk to the Yellow Chases’ (we never knew any other name for them; it
-was the house that was yellow, not the people) at the top of the long
-hill, or sometimes even to the windmill beyond it, where we could see
-the miller at work, all white and dusty, and watch the white sails
-moving slowly round. And on the way Julia told us stories, from Scott or
-Shakspere; or gave us the plot of some opera, “Ernani” or “Trovatore,”
-with<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_015" id="page_015"></a>{15}</span> snatches of song here and there. “Ai nostri monti ritornaremo,”
-whenever I hear this familiar air ground out by a hand-organ, everything
-fades from my eyes save a long white road fringed with buttercups and
-wild marigolds, and five little figures, with rosy hungry faces,
-trudging along, and listening to the story of the gypsy queen and her
-stolen troubadour.</p>
-
-<p>Julia wrote stories herself, too,&mdash;very wonderful stories, we all
-thought, and, indeed, I think so still. She began when she was a little
-girl, not more than six or seven years old. There lies beside me now on
-the table a small book, about five inches square, bound in faded pink
-and green, and filled from cover to cover with writing in a cramped,
-childish hand. It is a book of novels and plays, written by our Julia
-before she was ten years old; and I often think that the beautiful and
-helpful things she wrote in her later years were hardly more remarkable
-than these queer little romances. They are very sentimental; no child of
-eight, save perhaps Marjorie Fleming,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_016" id="page_016"></a>{16}</span> was ever so sentimental as
-Julia,&mdash;“Leonora Mayre; A Tale,” “The Lost Suitor,” “The Offers.” I must
-quote a scene from the last-named play.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquott"><h3><span class="smcap">Scene I.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="c">
-Parlor at <span class="smcap">Mrs. Evans’s</span>. <span class="smcap">Florence Evans</span> <i>alone</i>.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Enter</i> <span class="smcap">Annie</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>A. Well, Florence, Bruin is going to make an offer, I suppose.</p>
-
-<p>F. Why so?</p>
-
-<p>A. Here’s a pound of candy from him. He said he had bought it for
-you, but on arriving he was afraid it was too trifling a gift; but
-hoping you would not throw it away, he requested me to give it to
-that virtuous young lady, as he calls you.</p>
-
-<p>F. Well, I am young, but I did not know that I was virtuous.</p>
-
-<p>A. I think you are.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Scene II.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="c">
-Parlor. <span class="smcap">Mr. Bruin</span> <i>alone</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span> Why doesn’t she come? She doesn’t usually keep me waiting.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_017" id="page_017"></a>{17}</span></p>
-
-<p class="c">
-<i>Enter</i> <span class="smcap">Florence</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>F. How do you do? I am sorry to have kept you waiting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span> I have not been here more than a few minutes. Your parlor is
-so warm this cold day that I could wait.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-[<i>Laughs.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>F. You sent me some candy the other day which I liked very much.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span> Well, you liked the candy; so I pleased you. Now you can
-please me. I don’t care about presents; I had rather have something
-that can love me. You.</p>
-
-<p>F. I do not love you.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-[<i>Exit</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Bruin</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Scene III.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="c">
-<span class="smcap">Florence</span> <i>alone</i>. <i>Enter</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Cas</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>F. How do you do?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C.</span> Very well.</p>
-
-<p>F. It is a very pleasant day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C.</span> Yes. It would be still pleasanter if you will be my bride. I
-want a respectful refusal, but prefer a cordial acception.</p>
-
-<p>F. You can have the former.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-[<i>Exit</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Cas</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Scene IV.</span></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Florence</span> <i>with</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Emerson</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. E.</span> I love you, Florence. You may not love me, for I am inferior
-to you; but tell me<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_018" id="page_018"></a>{18}</span> whether you do or not. If my hopes are true,
-let me know it, and I shall not be doubtful any longer. If they are
-not, tell me, and I shall not expect any more.</p>
-
-<p>F. They are.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-[<i>Exit</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Emerson</span>.<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>The fifth scene of this remarkable drama is laid in the church, and is
-very thrilling. The stage directions are brief, but it is evident from
-the text that as Mr. Emerson and his taciturn bride advance to the
-altar, Messrs. Cas and Bruin, “to gain some private ends,” do the same.
-The Bishop is introduced without previous announcement.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquott"><h3><span class="smcap">Scene V.</span></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bishop.</span> Are you ready?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span> Yes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bishop.</span> Mr. Emerson, are you ready?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C.</span> Yes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bishop.</span> Mr. Emerson, I am waiting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bruin</span> <i>and</i> <span class="smcap">Cas</span> [<i>together</i>]. So am I.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. E.</span> I am ready. But what have these men to do with our marriage?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span> Florence, I charge you with a breach of promise. You said
-you would be my bride.</p>
-
-<p>F. I did not.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_019" id="page_019"></a>{19}</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C.</span> You promised me.</p>
-
-<p>F. When?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C.</span> A month ago. You said you would marry me.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span> A fortnight ago you promised me. You said we would be
-married to-day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C.</span> Bishop, what does this mean? Florence Evans promised to
-marry me, and this very day was fixed upon. And see how false she
-has been! She has, as you see, promised both of us, and now is
-going to wed this man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bishop.</span> But Mr. Emerson and Miss Evans made the arrangements with
-me; how is it that neither of you said anything of it beforehand?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C.</span> I forgot.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. B.</span> So did I.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-[F. <i>weeps.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="c">
-<i>Enter</i> <span class="smcap">Annie</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>A. I thought I should be too late to be your bridesmaid, but I find
-I am in time. But I thought you were to be married at half-past
-four, and it is five by the church clock.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. E.</span> We should have been married by this time, but these men say
-that Florence has promised to marry them. Is it true, Florence?</p>
-
-<p>F. No. [<span class="smcap">Bessy</span>, <i>her younger sister, supports her.</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_020" id="page_020"></a>{20}</span></p>
-
-<p>A. It isn’t true, for you know, Edward Bruin, that you and I are
-engaged; and Mr. Cas and Bessy have been for some time. And both
-engagements have been out for more than a week.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-[<span class="smcap">Bessy</span> <i>looks reproachfully at</i> <span class="smcap">Cas</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>B. Why, Joseph Cas!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bishop.</span> Come, Mr. Emerson! I see that Mr. Cas and Mr. Bruin have
-been trying to worry your bride. But their story can’t be true, for
-these other young ladies say that they are engaged to them.</p>
-
-<p>F. They each of them made me an offer, which I refused.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-[<i>The</i> <span class="smcap">Bishop</span> <i>marries them</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>F. [<i>After they are married.</i>] I shall never again be troubled with
-such offers [<i>looks at</i> <span class="smcap">Cas</span> <i>and</i> <span class="smcap">Bruin</span>] as <i>yours</i>!</p></div>
-
-<p>I meant to give one scene, and I have given the whole play, not knowing
-where to stop. There was nothing funny about it to Julia. The heroine,
-with her wonderful command of silence, was her ideal of maiden reserve
-and dignity; the deep-dyed villany of Bruin and Cas, the retiring
-manners of the fortunate Emerson, the singular sprightliness of the
-Bishop, were all perfectly natural, as her vivid mind saw them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_021" id="page_021"></a>{21}</span></p>
-
-<p>So she was bitterly grieved one day when a dear friend of the family, to
-whom our mother had read the play, rushed up to her, and seizing her
-hand, cried,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="lftspc">‘</span>Julia, will you have me?’ ‘No!’ Exit Mr. Bruin.”</p>
-
-<p>Deeply grieved the little maiden was; and it cannot have been very long
-after that time that she gave the little book to her dearest aunt, who
-has kept it carefully through all these years.</p>
-
-<p>If Julia was like Milton’s “Penseroso,” Flossy was the “Allegro” in
-person, or like Wordsworth’s maiden,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“A dancing shape, an image gay,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">To haunt, to startle, and waylay”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>She was very small as a child. One day a lady, not knowing that the
-little girl was within hearing, said to her mother, “What a pity Flossy
-is so small!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m big inside!” cried a little angry voice at her elbow; and there was
-Flossy, swelling with rage, like an offended bantam. And she <i>was</i> big
-inside! her lively, active spirit seemed to break through the little
-body and carry it along in spite of itself. Sometimes<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_022" id="page_022"></a>{22}</span> it was an impish
-spirit; always it was an enterprising one.</p>
-
-<p>She it was who invented the dances which seemed to us such wonderful
-performances. We danced every evening in the great parlor, our mother
-playing for us on the piano. There was the “Macbeth” dance, in which
-Flossy figured as Lady Macbeth. With a dagger in her hand, she crept and
-rushed and pounced and swooped about in a most terrifying manner, always
-graceful as a fairy. A sofa-pillow played the part of Duncan, and had a
-very hard time of it. The “Julius Cæsar” dance was no less tragic; we
-all took part in it, and stabbed right and left with sticks of
-kindling-wood. One got the curling-stick and was happy, for it was the
-next thing to the dagger, which no one but Flossy could have. Then there
-was the dance of the “Four Seasons,” which had four figures. In spring
-we sowed, in summer we reaped; in autumn we hunted the deer, and in
-winter there was much jingling of bells. The hunting figure was most
-exciting. It was performed with knives <span class="pagenum"><a name="page_023" id="page_023"></a>{23}</span>(kindling-wood), as Flossy
-thought them more romantic than guns; they were held close to the side,
-with point projecting, and in this way we moved with a quick <i>chassé</i>
-step, which, coupled with a savage frown, was supposed to be peculiarly
-deadly.</p>
-
-<p>Flossy invented many other amusements, too. There was the school-loan
-system. We had school in the little parlor at that time, and our desks
-had lids that lifted up. In her desk Flossy kept a number of precious
-things, which she lent to the younger children for so many pins an hour.
-The most valuable thing was a set of three colored worsted balls, red,
-green, and blue. You could set them twirling, and they would keep going
-for ever so long. It was a delightful sport; but they were very
-expensive, costing, I think, twenty pins an hour. It took a long time to
-collect twenty pins, for of course it was not fair to take them out of
-the pin-cushions.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was a glass eye-cup without a foot; that cost ten pins, and
-was a great favorite with us. You stuck it in your eye,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_024" id="page_024"></a>{24}</span> and tried to
-hold it there while you winked with the other. Of course all this was
-done behind the raised desk-lid, and I have sometimes wondered what the
-teacher was doing that she did not find us out sooner. She was not very
-observant, and I am quite sure she was afraid of Flossy. One sad day,
-however, she caught Laura with the precious glass in her eye, and it was
-taken away forever. It was a bitter thing to the child (I know all about
-it, for I was Laura) to be told that she could never have it again, even
-after school. She had paid her ten pins, and she could not see what
-right the teacher had to take the glass away. But after that the
-school-loan system was forbidden, and I have never known what became of
-the three worsted balls.</p>
-
-<p>Flossy also told stories; or rather she told one story which had no end,
-and of which we never tired. Under the sea, she told us, lived a fairy
-named Patty, who was a most intimate friend of hers, and whom she
-visited every night. This fairy dwelt in a palace hollowed out of a
-single immense<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_025" id="page_025"></a>{25}</span> pearl. The rooms in it were countless, and were
-furnished in a singular and delightful manner. In one room the chairs
-and sofas were of chocolate; in another, of fresh strawberries; in
-another, of peaches,&mdash;and so on. The floors were paved with squares of
-chocolate and cream candy; the windows were of transparent barley-sugar,
-and when you broke off the arm of a chair and ate it, or took a square
-or two out of the pavement, they were immediately replaced, so that
-there was no trouble for anyone. Patty had a ball every evening, and
-Flossy never failed to go. Sometimes, when we were good, she would take
-us; but the singular thing about it was that we never remembered what
-had happened. In the morning our infant minds were a cheerful blank,
-till Flossy told us what a glorious time we had had at Patty’s the night
-before, how we had danced with Willie Winkie, and how much ice-cream we
-had eaten. We listened to the recital with unalloyed delight, and
-believed every word of it, till a sad day of awakening came. We were
-always made to understand that we could not<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_026" id="page_026"></a>{26}</span> bring away anything from
-Patty’s, and were content with this arrangement; but on this occasion
-there was to be a ball of peculiar magnificence, and Flossy, in a fit of
-generosity, told Harry that he was to receive a pair of diamond
-trousers, which he would be allowed to bring home. Harry was a child
-with a taste for magnificence; and he went to bed full of joy, seeing
-already in anticipation the glittering of the jewelled garment, and the
-effects produced by it on the small boys of his acquaintance. Bitter was
-the disappointment when, on awakening in the morning, the chair by his
-bedside bore only the familiar brown knickerbockers, with a patch of a
-lighter shade on one knee. Harry wept, and would not be comforted; and
-after that, though we still liked to hear the Patty stories, we felt
-that the magic of them was gone,&mdash;that they were only stories, like
-“Blue-beard” or “Jack and the Beanstalk.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_027" id="page_027"></a>{27}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.<br /><br />
-<small>MORE ABOUT OURSELVES.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">Julia and Flossy did not content themselves with writing plays and
-telling stories. They aspired to making a language,&mdash;a real language,
-which should be all their own, and should have grammars and dictionaries
-like any other famous tongue. It was called Patagonian,&mdash;whether with
-any idea of future missionary work among the people of that remote
-country, or merely because it sounded well, I cannot say. It was a
-singular language. I wish more of it had survived; but I can give only a
-few of its more familiar phrases.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p><span class="smcap">Milldam</span>&mdash;Yes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Pilldam</span>&mdash;No.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mouche</span>&mdash;Mother.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bis von snout</span>?&mdash;Are you well?<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_028" id="page_028"></a>{28}</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Brunk tu touchy snout</span>&mdash;I am very well.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Ching chu stick stumps</span>?&mdash;Will you have some doughnuts?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>These fragments will, I am sure, make my readers regret deeply the loss
-of this language, which has the merit of entire originality.</p>
-
-<p>As to Flossy’s talent for making paper-dolls, it is a thing not to be
-described. There were no such paper-dolls as those. Their figures might
-not be exactly like the human figure, but how infinitely more graceful!
-Their waists were so small that they sometimes broke in two when called
-upon to courtesy to a partner or a queen: that was the height of
-delicacy! They had ringlets invariably, and very large eyes with amazing
-lashes; they smiled with unchanging sweetness, filling our hearts with
-delight. Many and wonderful were their dresses. The crinoline of the day
-was magnified into a sort of vast semi-circular cloud, adorned about the
-skirt with strange patterns; one small doll would sometimes wear a whole
-sheet of foolscap in an evening dress! That was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_029" id="page_029"></a>{29}</span> extravagant, but our
-daughters must be in the fashion. There was one yellow dress belonging
-to my doll Parthenia (a lovely creature of Jewish aspect, whose waist
-was smaller than her legs), which is not even now to be remembered
-without emotion. We built houses for the paper-dolls with books from the
-parlor table, even borrowing some from the bookcase when we wanted an
-extra suite of rooms. I do not say it was good for the books, but it was
-very convenient for the dolls. I have reason to think that our mother
-did not know of this practice. In the matter of their taking exercise,
-however, she aided us materially, giving us sundry empty trinket-boxes
-lined with satin, which made the most charming carriages in the world.
-The state coach was a silver-gilt portemonnaie lined with red silk. It
-had seen better days, and the clasp was broken; but that did not make it
-less available as a coach. I wish you could have seen Parthenia in it!</p>
-
-<p>I do not think we cared so much for other dolls, yet there were some
-that must be mentioned. Vashti Ann was named for a cook;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_030" id="page_030"></a>{30}</span> she belonged
-to Julia, and I have an idea that she was of a very haughty and
-disagreeable temper, though I cannot remember her personal appearance.
-Still more shadowy is my recollection of Eliza Viddipock,&mdash;a name to be
-spoken with bated breath. What dark crime this wretched doll had
-committed to merit her fearful fate, I do not know; it was a thing not
-to be spoken of to the younger children, apparently. But I do know that
-she was hanged, with all solemnity of judge and hangman. It seems unjust
-that I should have forgotten the name of Julia’s good doll, who died,
-and had the cover of the sugar-bowl buried with her, as a tribute to her
-virtues.</p>
-
-<p>Sally Bradford and Clara both belonged to Laura. Sally was an
-india-rubber doll; Clara, a doll with a china head of the old-fashioned
-kind, smooth, shining black hair, brilliant rosy cheeks, and calm (very
-calm) blue eyes. I prefer this kind of doll to any other. Clara’s life
-was an uneventful one, on the whole, and I remember only one remarkable
-thing in it. A little girl in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_031" id="page_031"></a>{31}</span> neighborhood invited Laura to a
-dolls’ party on a certain day: she was to bring Clara by special
-request. Great was the excitement, for Laura was very small, and had
-never yet gone to a party. A seamstress was in the house making the
-summer dresses, and our mother said that Clara should have a new frock
-for the party. It seemed a very wonderful thing to have a real new white
-muslin frock, made by a real seamstress, for one’s beloved doll. Clara
-had a beautiful white neck, so the frock was made low and trimmed with
-lace. When the afternoon came, Laura brought some tiny yellow roses from
-the greenhouse, and the seamstress sewed them on down the front of the
-frock and round the neck and hem. It is not probable that any other doll
-ever looked so beautiful as Clara when her toilet was complete.</p>
-
-<p>Then Laura put on her own best frock, which was not one half so fine,
-and tied on her gray felt bonnet, trimmed with quillings of pink and
-green satin ribbon, and started off, the proudest and happiest child in
-the whole world. She reached the house (it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_032" id="page_032"></a>{32}</span> very near) and climbed
-up the long flight of stone steps, and stood on tiptoe to ring the
-bell,&mdash;then waited with a beating heart. Would there be many other
-dolls? Would any of them be half so lovely as Clara? Would
-there&mdash;dreadful thought!&mdash;would there be big girls there?</p>
-
-<p>The door opened. If any little girls read this they will now be very
-sorry for Laura. There was no dolls’ party! Rosy’s mother (the little
-girl’s name was Rosy) had heard nothing at all about it; Rosy had gone
-to spend the afternoon with Sarah Crocker.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry, little girl! What a pretty dolly! Good-by, dear!” and then the
-door was shut again.</p>
-
-<p>Laura toddled down the long stone steps, and went solemnly home. She did
-not cry, because it would not be nice to cry in the street; but she
-could not see very clearly. She never went to visit Rosy again, and
-never knew whether the dolls’ party had been forgotten, or why it was
-given up.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving the subject of dolls, I must say a word about little
-Maud’s first doll.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_033" id="page_033"></a>{33}</span> Maud was a child of rare beauty, as beautiful as
-Julia, though very different. Her fair hair was of such color and
-quality that our mother used to call her Silk-and-silver, a name which
-suited her well; her eyes were like stars under their long black lashes.
-So brilliant, so vivid was the child’s coloring that she seemed to flash
-with silver and rosy light as she moved about. She was so much younger
-than the others that in many of their reminiscences she has no share;
-yet she has her own stories, too. A friend of our father’s, being much
-impressed with this starry beauty of the child, thought it would be
-pleasant to give her the prettiest doll that could be found; accordingly
-he appeared one day bringing a wonderful creature, with hair almost like
-Maud’s own, and great blue eyes that opened and shut, and cheeks whose
-steadfast roses did not flash in and out, but bloomed always. I think
-the doll was dressed in blue and silver, but am not sure; she was
-certainly very magnificent.</p>
-
-<p>Maud was enchanted, of course, and hugged her treasure, and went off
-with it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_034" id="page_034"></a>{34}</span> It happened that she had been taken only the day before to see
-the blind children at the Institution near by, where our father spent
-much of his time. It was the first time she had talked with the little
-blind girls, and they made a deep impression on her baby mind, though
-she said little at the time. As I said, she went off with her new doll,
-and no one saw her for some time. At length she returned, flushed and
-triumphant.</p>
-
-<p>“My dolly is blind, now!” she cried; and she displayed the doll, over
-whose eyes she had tied a ribbon, in imitation of Laura Bridgman. “She
-is blind Polly! ain’t got no eyes ’t all!”</p>
-
-<p>Alas! it was even so. Maud had poked the beautiful blue glass eyes till
-they fell in, and only empty sockets were hidden by the green ribbon.
-There was a great outcry, of course; but it did not disturb Maud in the
-least. She wanted a blind doll, and she had one; and no pet could be
-more carefully tended than was poor blind Polly.</p>
-
-<p>More precious than any doll could be, rises in my memory the majestic
-form of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_035" id="page_035"></a>{35}</span> Pistachio. It was Flossy, ever fertile in invention, who
-discovered the true worth of Pistachio, and taught us to regard with awe
-and reverence this object of her affection. Pistachio was an oval
-mahogany footstool, covered with green cloth of the color of the nut
-whose name he bore. I have the impression that he had lost a leg, but am
-not positive on this point. He was considered an invalid, and every
-morning he was put in the baby-carriage and taken in solemn procession
-down to the brook for his morning bath. One child held a parasol over
-his sacred head (only he had no head!), two more propelled the carriage,
-while the other two went before as outriders. No mirth was allowed on
-this occasion, the solemnity of which was deeply impressed on us.
-Arrived at the brook, Pistachio was lifted from the carriage by his
-chief officer, Flossy herself, and set carefully down on the flat stone
-beside the brook. His sacred legs were dipped one by one into the clear
-water, and dried with a towel. Happy was the child who was allowed to
-perform this function!<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_036" id="page_036"></a>{36}</span> After the bath, he was walked gently up and
-down, and rubbed, to assist the circulation; then he was put back in his
-carriage, and the procession started for home again, with the same
-gravity and decorum as before. The younger children felt sure there was
-some mystery about Pistachio. I cannot feel sure, even now, that he was
-nothing more than an ordinary oval cricket; but his secret, whatever it
-was, has perished with him.</p>
-
-<p>I perceive that I have said little or nothing thus far about Harry; yet
-he was a very important member of the family. The only boy: and such a
-boy! He was by nature a Very Imp, such as has been described by Mr.
-Stockton in one of his delightful stories. Not two years old was he when
-he began to pull the tails of all the little dogs he met,&mdash;a habit which
-he long maintained. The love of mischief was deeply rooted in him. It
-was not safe to put him in the closet for misbehavior; for he cut off
-the pockets of the dresses hanging there, and snipped the fringe off his
-teacher’s best shawl. Yet he<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_037" id="page_037"></a>{37}</span> was a sweet and affectionate child, with a
-tender heart and sensitive withal. When about four years old, he had the
-habit of summoning our father to breakfast; and, not being able to say
-the word, would announce, “Brescott is ready!” This excited mirth among
-the other children, which he never could endure; accordingly, one
-morning he appeared at the door of the dressing-room and said solemnly,
-“Papa, your food is prepared!”</p>
-
-<p>It is recorded of this child that he went once to pay a visit to some
-dear relatives, and kept them in a fever of anxiety until he was taken
-home again. One day it was his little cousin’s rocking-horse, which
-disappeared from the nursery, and shortly after was seen airing itself
-on the top of the chimney, kicking its heels in the sunshine, and
-appearing to enjoy its outing. Another time it was down the chimney that
-the stream of mischief took its way; and a dear and venerable visitor
-(no other than Dr. Coggeshall, of Astor Library fame), sitting before
-the fire in the twilight, was amazed by a sudden<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_038" id="page_038"></a>{38}</span> shower of boots
-tumbling down, one after another, into the ashes, whence he
-conscientiously rescued them with the tongs, at peril of receiving some
-on his good white head.</p>
-
-<p>Such boots and shoes as escaped this fiery ordeal were tacked by Master
-Harry to the floor of the closets in the various rooms; and while he was
-in the closet, what could be easier or pleasanter than to cut off the
-pockets of the dresses hanging there? Altogether, Egypt was glad when
-Harry departed; and I do not think he made many more visits away from
-home, till he had outgrown the days of childhood.</p>
-
-<p>At the age of six, Harry determined to marry, and offered his hand and
-heart to Mary, the nurse, an excellent woman some thirty years older
-than he. He sternly forbade her to sew or do other nursery work, saying
-that his wife must not work for her living. About this time, too, he
-told our mother that he thought he felt his beard growing.</p>
-
-<p>He was just two years older than Laura,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_039" id="page_039"></a>{39}</span> and the tie between them was
-very close. Laura’s first question to a stranger was always, “Does you
-know my bulla Hally? I hope you does!” and she was truly sorry for any
-one who had not that privilege.</p>
-
-<p>The two children slept in tiny rooms adjoining each other. It was both
-easy and pleasant to “talk across” while lying in bed, when they were
-supposed to be sound asleep. Neither liked to give up the last word of
-greeting, and they would sometimes say “Good-night!” “Good-night!” over
-and over, backward and forward, for ten minutes together. In general,
-Harry was very kind to Laura, playing with her, and protecting her from
-any roughness of neighbor children. (They said “bunnit” and “apurn,” and
-“I wunt;” and we were fond of correcting them, which they not brooking,
-quarrels were apt to ensue.) But truth compels me to tell of one
-occasion on which Harry did not show a brotherly spirit. In the garden,
-under a great birch-tree, stood a trough for watering the horses. It was
-a large and deep trough, and always full of beautiful, clear water. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_040" id="page_040"></a>{40}</span>
-was pleasant to lean over the edge, and see the sky and the leaves of
-the tree reflected as if in a crystal mirror; to see one’s own rosy,
-freckled face, too, and make other faces; to see which could open eyes
-or mouth widest.</p>
-
-<p>Now one day, as little Laura, being perhaps four years old, was hanging
-over the edge of the trough, forgetful of all save the delight of
-gazing, it chanced that Harry came up behind her; and the spirit of
-mischief that was always in him triumphed over brotherly affection, and
-he</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Ups with her heels,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And smothers her squeals”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">in the clear, cold water.</p>
-
-<p>Laura came up gasping and puffing, her hair streaming all over her round
-face, her eyes staring with wonder and fright!</p>
-
-<p>By the time help arrived, as it fortunately did, in the person of Thomas
-the gardener, poor Laura was in a deplorable condition, half choked with
-water, and frightened nearly out of her wits.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas carried the dripping child to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_041" id="page_041"></a>{41}</span> house and put her into Mary’s
-kind arms, and then reported to our mother what Harry had done.</p>
-
-<p>We were almost never whipped; but for this misdeed Harry was put to bed
-at once, and our mother, sitting beside him, gave him what we used to
-call a “talking to,” which he did not soon forget.</p>
-
-<p>Nurse Mary probably thought it would gratify Laura to know that naughty
-Harry was being punished for his misdoings; but she had mistaken her
-child. When the mother came back to the nursery from Harry’s room, she
-found Laura (in dry raiment, but with cheeks still crimson and shining)
-sitting in the middle of the floor, with clenched fists and flashing
-eyes, and roaring at the top of her lungs, “I’ll tumble my mudder down
-wid a ’tick!”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_042" id="page_042"></a>{42}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.<br /><br />
-<small>GREEN PEACE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">Not many children can boast of having two homes; some, alas! have hardly
-one. But we actually had two abiding-places, both of which were so dear
-to us that we loved them equally. First, there was Green Peace. When our
-mother first came to the place, and saw the fair garden, and the house
-with its lawn and its shadowing trees, she gave it this name, half in
-sport; and the title clung to it always.</p>
-
-<p>The house itself was pleasant. The original building, nearly two hundred
-years old, was low and squat, with low-studded rooms, and great posts in
-the corners, and small many-paned windows. As I recall it now, it
-consisted largely of cupboards,&mdash;the queerest cupboards that ever were;
-some square and some three-cornered, and others of no shape<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_043" id="page_043"></a>{43}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 156px;">
-<a href="images/illus02_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus02_sml.jpg" width="156" height="195" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Maud.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_044" id="page_044"></a>{44}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_045" id="page_045"></a>{45}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p class="nind">at all. They were squeezed into staircase walls, they lurked beside
-chimneys, they were down near the floor, they were close beneath the
-ceiling. It was as if a child had built the house for the express
-purpose of playing hide-and-seek in it. Ah, how we children did play
-hide-and-seek there! To lie curled up in the darkest corner of the
-“twisty” cupboard, that went burrowing in under the front stairs,&mdash;to
-lie curled up there, eating an apple, and hear the chase go clattering
-and thumping by, that was a sensation!</p>
-
-<p>Then the stairs! There was not very much of them, for a tall man
-standing on the ground floor could touch the top step with his hand. But
-they had a great deal of variety; no two steps went the same way: they
-seemed to have fallen out with one another, and never to have “made up”
-again. When you had once learned how to go up and down, it was very
-well, except in the dark; and even then you had only to remember that
-you must tread on the farther side of the first two steps, and on the
-hither side of the next three, and in the middle of four<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_046" id="page_046"></a>{46}</span> after, and
-then you were near the top or the bottom, as the case might be, and
-could scramble or jump for it. But it was not well for strangers to go
-up and down those stairs.</p>
-
-<p>There was another flight that was even more perilous, but our father had
-it boarded over, as he thought it unsafe for any one to use. One always
-had a shiver in passing through a certain dark passage, when one felt
-boards instead of plaster under one’s hand, and knew that behind those
-boards lurked the hidden staircase. There was something uncanny about
-it,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“O’er all there hung the shadow of a fear;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">A sense of mystery the spirit daunted.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">Perhaps the legend of the hidden staircase was all the more awful
-because it was never told.</p>
-
-<p>Just to the right of the school-room, a door opened into the new part of
-the house which our father had built. The first room was the great
-dining-room; and very great it was. On the floor was a wonderful carpet,
-all in one piece, which was made in France,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_047" id="page_047"></a>{47}</span> and had belonged to Joseph
-Bonaparte, a brother of the great Emperor. In the middle was a medallion
-of Napoleon and Marie Louise, with sun-rays about them; then came a
-great circle, with strange beasts on it ramping and roaring (only they
-roared silently); and then a plain space, and in the corners birds and
-fishes such as never were seen in air or sea. Yes, that <i>was</i> a carpet!
-It was here we danced the wonderful dances. We hopped round and round
-the circle, and we stamped on the beasts and the fishes; but it was not
-good manners to step on the Emperor and Empress,&mdash;one must go round
-them. Here our mother sang to us; but the singing belongs to another
-chapter.</p>
-
-<p>The great dining-room had a roof all to itself,&mdash;a flat roof, covered
-with tar and gravel, and railed in; so that one could lie on one’s face
-and kick one’s heels, pick out white pebbles, and punch the bubbles of
-tar all hot in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>But, after all, we did not stay in the house much. Why should we, with
-the garden calling us out with its thousand voices? On<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_048" id="page_048"></a>{48}</span> each side of the
-house lay an oval lawn, green as emerald. One lawn had the
-laburnum-tree, where at the right time of year we sat under a shower of
-fragrant gold; the other had the three hawthorn-trees, one with white
-blossoms, another with pink, and a third with deep red, rose-like
-flowers. Other trees were there, but I do not remember them. Directly in
-front of the house stood two giant Balm-of-Gilead trees, towering over
-the low-roofed dwelling. These trees were favorites of ours, for at a
-certain time they dropped down to us thousands and thousands of sticky
-catkins, full of the most charming, silky cotton. We called them the
-“cottonwool-trees,” and loved them tenderly. Then, between the trees, a
-flight of steps plunged down to the green-house. A curious place this
-was,&mdash;summer-house, hot-house, and bowling-alley, all in one. The
-summer-house part was not very interesting, being all filled with seeds
-and pots and dry bulbs, and the like. But from it a swing-door opened
-into Elysium! Here the air was soft and balmy, and full of the smell of
-roses. One went<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_049" id="page_049"></a>{49}</span> down two steps, and there were the roses themselves!
-Great vines trained along the walls, heavy with long white or yellow or
-tea-colored buds,&mdash;I remember no red ones. Mr. Arrow, the gardener,
-never let us touch the roses, and he never gave us a bud; but when a
-rose was fully open, showing its golden heart, he would often pick it
-for us, with a sigh, but a kind look too. Mr. Arrow was an Englishman,
-stout and red-faced. Julia made a rhyme about him once, beginning,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Poor Mr. Arrow, he once was narrow,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">But that was a long time ago.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Midway in the long glass-covered building was a tiny oval pond, lined
-with green moss. I think it once had goldfish in it, but they did not
-thrive. When Mr. Arrow was gone to dinner, it was pleasant to fill the
-brass syringe with water from this pond, and squirt at the roses, and
-feel the heavy drops plashing back in one’s upturned face. Sometimes a
-child fell into the pond; but as the water was only four or five inches
-deep, no harm was done, save to stockings and petticoats.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_050" id="page_050"></a>{50}</span></p>
-
-<p>The bowling-alley was divided by a low partition from the hot-house, so
-that when we went to play at planets we breathed the same soft, perfumed
-air. The planets were the balls. The biggest one was Uranus; then came
-Saturn, and so on down to Mercury, a little dot of a ball. They were of
-some dark, hard, foreign wood, very smooth, with a dusky polish. It was
-a great delight to roll them, either over the smooth floor, against the
-ninepins, or along the rack at the side. When one rolled Uranus or
-Jupiter, it sounded like thunder,&mdash;Olympian thunder, suggestive of angry
-gods. Then the musical tinkle of the pins, as they clinked and fell
-together! Sometimes they were British soldiers, and we the Continentals,
-firing the “iron six-pounder” from the other end of the battle-field.
-Sometimes, regardless of dates, we introduced artillery into the Trojan
-war, and Hector bowled Achilles off his legs, or <i>vice versa</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The bowling-alley was also used for other sports. It was here that
-Flossy gave a grand party for Cotchy, her precious Maltese cat.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_051" id="page_051"></a>{51}</span> All the
-cat-owning little girls in the neighborhood were invited, and about
-twelve came, each bringing her pet in a basket. Cotchy was beautifully
-dressed in a cherry-colored ribbon, which set off her gray, satiny coat
-to perfection. She received her guests with much dignity, but was not
-inclined to do much toward entertaining them. Flossy tried to make the
-twelve cats play with one another, but they were shy on first
-acquaintance, and a little stiff. Perhaps Flossy did not in those days
-know the proper etiquette for introducing cats, though since then she
-has studied all kinds of etiquette thoroughly. But the little girls
-enjoyed themselves, if the cats did not, and there was a great deal of
-chattering and comparing notes. Then came the feast, which consisted of
-milk and fish-bones; and next every cat had her nose buttered by way of
-dessert. Altogether, the party was voted a great success.</p>
-
-<p>Below, and on both sides of the green-house, the fertile ground was set
-thick with fruit-trees, our father’s special pride. The pears and
-peaches of Green Peace were<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_052" id="page_052"></a>{52}</span> known far and wide; I have never seen such
-peaches since, nor is it only the halo of childish recollection that
-shines around them, for others bear the same testimony. Crimson-glowing,
-golden-hearted, smooth and perfect as a baby’s cheek, each one was a
-thing of wonder and beauty; and when you ate one, you ate summer and
-sunshine. Our father gave us a great deal of fruit, but we were never
-allowed to take it ourselves without permission; indeed, I doubt if it
-ever occurred to us to do so. One of us still remembers the thrill of
-horror she felt when a little girl who had come to spend the afternoon
-picked up a fallen peach and ate it, without asking leave. It seemed a
-dreadful thing not to know that the garden was a field of honor. As to
-the proverbial sweetness of stolen fruit, we knew nothing about it. The
-fruit was sweet enough from our dear father’s hand, and, as I said, he
-gave us plenty of it.</p>
-
-<p>How was it, I wonder, that this sense of honor seemed sometimes to stay
-in the garden and not always to come into the house?<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_053" id="page_053"></a>{53}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 264px;">
-<a href="images/illus03_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus03_sml.jpg" width="264" height="340" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Laura was found in the Sugar-Barrel.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_054" id="page_054"></a>{54}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_055" id="page_055"></a>{55}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p>For as I write, the thought comes to me of a day when Laura was found
-with her feet sticking out of the sugar-barrel, into which she had
-fallen head foremost while trying to get a lump of sugar. She has never
-eaten a lump of sugar, save in her tea, since that day. Also, it is
-recorded of Flossy and Julia, that, being one day at the Institution,
-they found the store-room open, and went in, against the law. There was
-a beautiful polished tank, which appeared to be full of rich brown
-syrup. Julia and Flossy liked syrup; so each filled a mug, and then they
-counted one, two, three, and each took a good draught,&mdash;and it was
-train-oil!</p>
-
-<p>But in both these cases the culprits were hardly out of babyhood; so
-perhaps they had not yet learned about the “broad stone of honor,” on
-which it is good to set one’s feet.</p>
-
-<p>I must not leave the garden without speaking of the cherry-trees. These
-must have been planted by early settlers, perhaps by the same hand that
-planned the crooked stairs and quaint cupboards of the old
-house,&mdash;enormous trees, gnarled and twisted like<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_056" id="page_056"></a>{56}</span> ancient apple-trees,
-and as sturdy as they. They had been grafted&mdash;whether by our father’s or
-some earlier hand I know not&mdash;with the finest varieties of
-“white-hearts” and “black-hearts,” and they bore amazing quantities of
-cherries. These attracted flocks of birds, which our father in vain
-tried to frighten away with scarecrows. Once he put the cat in a
-bird-cage, and hung her up in the white-heart tree; but the birds soon
-found that she could not get at them, and poor pussy was so miserable
-that she was quickly released.</p>
-
-<p>I perceive that we shall not get to the summer home in this chapter; but
-I must say a word about the Institution for the Blind, which was within
-a few minutes’ walk of Green Peace.</p>
-
-<p>Many of our happiest hours were spent in this pleasant place, the home
-of patient cheerfulness and earnest work. We often went to play with the
-blind children when our lessons and theirs were over, and they came
-trooping out into the sunny playground. I do not think it occurred to us
-to pity these<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_057" id="page_057"></a>{57}</span> boys and girls deprived of one of the chief sources of
-pleasure in life; they were so happy, so merry, that we took their
-blindness as a matter of course.</p>
-
-<p>Our father often gave us baskets of fruit to take to them. That was a
-great pleasure. We loved to turn the great globe in the hall, and,
-shutting our eyes, pass our fingers over the raised surfaces, trying to
-find different places. We often “played blind,” and tried to read the
-great books with raised print, but never succeeded that I remember. The
-printing-office was a wonderful place to linger in; and one could often
-get pieces of marbled paper, which was valuable in the paper-doll world.
-Then there was the gymnasium, with its hanging rings, and its wonderful
-tilt, which went up so high that it took one’s breath away. Just beyond
-the gymnasium, were some small rooms, in which were stored worn-out
-pianos, disabled after years of service under practising fingers. It was
-very good fun to play on a worn-out piano. There were always a good many
-notes that really sounded, and they had quite individual<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_058" id="page_058"></a>{58}</span> sounds, not
-like those of common pianos; then there were some notes that buzzed, and
-some that growled, and some that made no noise at all; and one could
-poke in under the cover, and twang the strings, and play with the
-chamois-leather things that went flop (we have since learned that they
-are called hammers), and sometimes pull them out, though that seemed
-wicked.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was the matron’s room, where we were always made welcome by
-the sweet and gracious woman who still makes sunshine in that place by
-her lovely presence. Dear Miss M&mdash;&mdash; was never out of patience with our
-pranks, had always a picture-book or a flower or a curiosity to show us,
-and often a story to tell when a spare half-hour came. For her did
-Flossy and Julia act their most thrilling tragedies, no other spectators
-being admitted. To her did Harry and Laura confide their infant joys and
-woes. Other friends will have a chapter to themselves, but it seems most
-fitting to speak of this friend here, in telling of the home she has
-made bright for over fifty years.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_059" id="page_059"></a>{59}</span></p>
-
-<p>Over the way from the Institution stood the workshop, where blind men
-and women, many of them graduates of the Institution, made mattresses
-and pillows, mats and brooms. This was another favorite haunt of ours.
-There was a stuffy but not unpleasant smell of feathers and hemp about
-the place. I should know that smell if I met it in Siberia! There were
-coils of rope, sometimes so large that one could squat down and hide in
-the middle, piles of hemp, and dark mysterious bins full of curled hair,
-white and black. There was a dreadful mystery about the black-hair bin;
-the little ones ran past it, with their heads turned away. But they
-never told what it was, and one of them never knew.</p>
-
-<p>But the crowning joy of the workshop was the feather-room,&mdash;a long room,
-with smooth, clean floor; along one side of it were divisions, like the
-stalls in a stable, and each division was half filled with feathers. Boy
-and girl readers will understand what a joy this must have been,&mdash;to sit
-down in the feathers, and let them cover you up to the neck,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_060" id="page_060"></a>{60}</span> and be a
-setting hen! or to lie at full length, and be a traveller lost in the
-snow,&mdash;Harry making it snow feathers till you were all covered up, and
-then turning into the faithful hound and dragging you out! or to play
-the game of “Winds,” and blow the feathers about the room! But old
-Margaret did not allow this last game, and we could do it only when she
-happened to go out for a moment, which was not very often. Old Margaret
-was the presiding genius of the feather-room, a half-blind woman, who
-kept the feathers in order and helped to sew up the pillows and
-mattresses. She was always kind to us, and let us rake feathers with the
-great wooden rake as much as we would. Later, when Laura was perhaps ten
-years old, she used to go and read to old Margaret. Mrs. Browning’s
-poems were making a new world for the child at that time, and she never
-felt a moment’s doubt about the old woman’s enjoying them: in after
-years doubts did occur to her.</p>
-
-<p>It was probably a quaint picture, if any one had looked in upon it: the
-long, low<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_061" id="page_061"></a>{61}</span> room, with the feather-heaps, white and dusky gray; the
-half-blind, withered crone, nodding over her knitting, and the little
-earnest child, throwing her whole soul into “The Romaunt of the Page,”
-or the “Rhyme of the Duchess May.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Oh! the little birds sang east,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And the little birds sang west,<br /></span>
-<span class="i6">Toll slowly!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The first sound of the words carries me back through the years to the
-feather-room and old blind Margaret.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_062" id="page_062"></a>{62}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.<br /><br />
-<small>THE VALLEY.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">The time of our summer flitting varied. Sometimes we stayed at Green
-Peace till after strawberry-time, and lingered late at the Valley;
-sometimes we went early, and came back in time for the peaches. But in
-one month or another there came a season of great business and bustle.
-Woollen dresses were put away in the great cedar-lined camphor-chests
-studded with brass nails; calico dresses were lengthened, and joyfully
-assumed; trunks were packed, and boxes and barrels; carpets were taken
-up and laid away; and white covers were put over pictures and mirrors.
-Finally we departed, generally in more or less confusion.</p>
-
-<p>I remember one occasion when our rear column reached the Old Colony
-Station just as the train was starting. The <span class="pagenum"><a name="page_063" id="page_063"></a>{63}</span>advance-guard, consisting
-of our mother and the older children, was already on board; and Harry
-and Laura have a vivid recollection of being caught up by our father and
-tumbled into the moving baggage-car, he flashing in after us, and all
-sitting on trunks, panting, till we were sufficiently revived to pass
-through to our seats in the passenger-car. In those days the railway ran
-no farther than Fall River. There we must take a carriage and drive
-twelve miles to our home in the Island of Rest. Twelve long and weary
-miles they were, much dreaded by us all. The trip was made in a large
-old-fashioned vehicle, half hack, half stage. The red cushions were hard
-and uncomfortable; the horses were aged; their driver, good,
-snuff-colored Mr. Anthony, felt keenly his duty to spare them, and
-considered the passengers a minor affair. So we five children were
-cramped and cooped up, I know not how long. It seemed hours that we must
-sit there, while the ancient horses crawled up the sandy hills, or
-jogged meditatively along the level spaces. Every joint<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_064" id="page_064"></a>{64}</span> developed a
-separate ache; our legs were cramped,&mdash;the short ones from hanging over
-the seat, the long ones because the floor of the coach was piled with
-baskets and bandboxes. It was hot, hot! The flies buzzed, and would not
-let one go to sleep; the dust rolled in thick yellow clouds from under
-the wheels, and filled eyes and mouth, and set all a-sneezing.
-Decidedly, it was a most tiresome jaunt. But all the more delightful was
-the arrival! To drive in under the apple-trees, just as the evening was
-falling cool and sweet; to tumble out of the stuffy prison-coach, and
-race through the orchard, and out to the barn, and up the hill behind
-the house,&mdash;ah, that was worth all the miseries of the journey!</p>
-
-<p>From the hill behind the house we could see the sunset; and that was one
-thing we did not have at Green Peace, shut in by its great trees. Here,
-before our eyes, still aching from the dust of the road, lay the great
-bay, all a sheet of silver, with white sails here and there; beyond it
-Conanicut, a long island, brown in the noon-light, now softened into<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_065" id="page_065"></a>{65}</span>
-wonderful shades of amethyst and violet; and the great sun going down in
-a glory of gold and flame! Nowhere else are such sunsets. Sometimes the
-sky was all strewn with fiery flakes and long delicate flame-feathers,
-glowing with rosy light; sometimes there were purple cloud-islands,
-edged with crimson, and between them and the real island a space of
-delicate green, so pure, so cold, that there is nothing to compare with
-it save a certain chrysoprase our mother had.</p>
-
-<p>Gazing at these wonders, the children would stand, full of vague
-delight, not knowing what they thought, till the tea-bell summoned them
-to the house for a merry picnic supper. Then there was clattering
-upstairs, washing of hands in the great basin with purple grapes on it
-(it belonged in the guest-chamber, and we were not allowed to use it
-save on special occasions like this), hasty smoothing of hair and
-straightening of collars, and then clatter! clatter! down again.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing remarkable about the house at the Valley. It was just
-a pleasant cottage, with plenty of sunny windows and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_066" id="page_066"></a>{66}</span> square,
-comfortable rooms. But we were seldom in the house, save at meal-times
-or when it rained; and our real home was under the blue sky. First,
-there was the orchard. It was an ideal orchard, with the queerest old
-apple-trees that ever were seen. They did not bear many apples, but they
-were delightful to climb in, with trunks slanting so that one could
-easily run up them, and branches that curled round so as to make a
-comfortable back to lean against. There are few pleasanter things than
-to sit in an apple-tree and read poetry, with birds twittering
-undismayed beside you, and green leaves whispering over your head. Laura
-was generally doing this when she ought to have been mending her
-stockings.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was the joggling-board, under the two biggest trees. The
-delight of a joggling-board is hardly to be explained to children who
-have never known it; but I trust many children do know it. The board is
-long and smooth and springy, supported at both ends on stands; and one
-can play all sorts of things on it. Many a circus<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_067" id="page_067"></a>{67}</span> has been held on the
-board at the Valley! We danced the tight-rope on it; we leaped through
-imaginary rings, coming down on the tips of our toes; we hopped its
-whole length on one foot; we wriggled along it on our stomachs, on our
-backs; we bumped along it on hands and knees. Dear old joggling-board!
-it is not probable that any other was ever quite so good as ours.</p>
-
-<p>Near by was the pump, a never-failing wonder to us when we were little.
-The well over which it stood was very deep, and it took a long time to
-bring the bucket up. It was a chain-pump, and the chain went
-rattlety-clank! rattlety-clank! round and round; and the handle creaked
-and groaned,&mdash;“Ah-<i>ho</i>! ah-<i>ho</i>!” When you had turned a good while there
-came out of the spout a stream of&mdash;water? No! of daddy-long-legses! They
-lived, apparently, in the spout, and they did not like the water; so
-when they heard the bucket coming up, with the water going “lip! lap!”
-as it swung to and fro, they came running out, dozens and dozens of
-them, probably thinking what<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_068" id="page_068"></a>{68}</span> unreasonable people we were to disturb
-them. When the water did finally come, it was wonderfully cold, and
-clear as crystal.</p>
-
-<p>The hill behind the house was perhaps our favorite play-room. It was a
-low, rocky hill, covered with “prostrate juniper” bushes, which bore
-blue berries very useful in our housekeeping. At the top of the rise the
-bare rock cropped out, dark gray, covered with flat, dry lichens. This
-was our house. It had several rooms: the drawing-room was really
-palatial,&mdash;a broad floor of rock, with flights of steps leading up to
-it. The state stairway was used for kings and queens, conquerors, and
-the like; the smaller was really more convenient, as the steps were more
-sharply defined, and you were not so apt to fall down them. Then there
-was the dining-room rock, where meals were served,&mdash;daisy pudding and
-similar delicacies; and the kitchen rock, which had a real oven, and the
-most charming cupboards imaginable. Here were stored hollyhock cheeses,
-and sorrel leaves, and twigs of black birch, fragrant and spicy, and
-many other good things.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_069" id="page_069"></a>{69}</span></p>
-
-<p>On this hill was celebrated, on the first of August, the annual festival
-of “Yeller’s Day.” This custom was begun by Flossy, and adhered to for
-many years. Immediately after breakfast on the appointed day, all the
-children assembled on the top of the hill and yelled. Oh, how we yelled!
-It was a point of honor to make as much noise as possible. We roared and
-shrieked and howled, till we were too hoarse to make a sound; then we
-rested, and played something else, perhaps, till our voices were
-restored, and then&mdash;yelled again! Yeller’s Day was regarded as one of
-the great days of the summer. By afternoon we were generally quite
-exhausted, and we were hoarse for several days afterward. I cannot
-recommend this practice. In fact, I sincerely hope that no child will
-attempt to introduce it; for it is very bad for the voice, and might in
-some cases do real injury.</p>
-
-<p>Almost every morning we went down to the bay to bathe. It was a walk of
-nearly a mile through the fields,&mdash;such a pleasant walk! The fields were
-not green, but of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_070" id="page_070"></a>{70}</span> soft russet, the grass being thin and dry, with
-great quantities of a little pinkish fuzzy plant whose name we never
-knew.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> They were divided by stone walls, which we were skilful in
-climbing. In some places there were bars which must be let down, or
-climbed over, or crawled through, as fancy suggested. There were many
-blackberries, of the lowbush variety, bearing great clusters of berries,
-glossy, beautiful, delicious. We were not allowed to eat them on the way
-down, but only when coming home. Some of these fields belonged to the
-Cross Farmer, who had once been rude to us. We regarded him as a manner
-of devil, and were always looking round to see if his round-shouldered,
-blue-shirted figure were in sight. At last the shore was reached, and
-soon we were all in the clear water, shrieking with delight, paddling
-about, puffing and blowing like a school of young porpoises.</p>
-
-<p>At high-tide the beach was pebbled; at low-tide we went far out, the
-ground sloping very gradually, to a delightful place where<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_071" id="page_071"></a>{71}</span> the bottom
-was of fine white sand, sparkling as if mixed with diamond dust.
-Starfish crawled about on it, and other creatures,&mdash;crabs, too,
-sometimes, that would nip an unwary toe if they got a chance. Sometimes
-the water was full of jelly-fish, which we did not like, in spite of
-their beauty. Beyond the white sand was a bed of eel-grass, very
-dreadful, not to be approached. If a person went into it, he was
-instantly seized and entangled, and drowned before the eyes of his
-companions. This was our firm belief. It was probably partly due to
-Andersen’s story of the “Little Sea-Maid,” which had made a deep
-impression on us all, with its clutching polyps and other submarine
-terrors.</p>
-
-<p>We all learned to swim more or less, but Flossy was the best swimmer.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes we went to bathe in the afternoon instead of the morning, if
-the tide suited better. I remember one such time when we came
-delightfully near having an adventure. It was full moon, and the tide
-was very high. We had loitered along the beach after our bath, gathering
-mussels to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_072" id="page_072"></a>{72}</span> boil for tea, picking up gold-shells or scallop-shells, and
-punching seaweed bladders, which pop charmingly if you do them right.</p>
-
-<p>German Mary, the good, stupid nurse who was supposed to be taking care
-of us, knew nothing about tides; and when we came back to the little
-creek which we must cross on leaving the beach, lo! the creek was a
-deep, broad stream, the like of which we had never seen. What was to be
-done? Valiant Flossy proposed to swim across and get help, but Mary
-shrieked and would not hear of it, and we all protested that it was
-impossible. Then we perceived that we must spend the night on the beach;
-and when we were once accustomed to the idea, it was not without
-attraction for us. The sand was warm and dry, and full of shells and
-pleasant things; it was August, and the night would be just cool enough
-for comfort after the hot day; we had a pailful of blackberries which we
-had picked on the way down, meaning to eat them during our homeward
-walk; Julia could tell us stories. Altogether it would be a very
-pleasant occasion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_073" id="page_073"></a>{73}</span> And then to think of the romance of it! “The
-Deserted Children!” “Alone on a Sandbank!” “The Watchers of the Tide!”
-There was no end to the things that could be made out of it. So, though
-poor Mary wept and wrung her hands, mindful (which I cannot remember
-that we were) of our mother waiting for us at home, we were all very
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>The sun went down in golden state. Then, turning to the land, we watched
-the moon rising, in softer radiance, but no less wonderful and glorious.
-Slowly the great orb rose, turning from pale gold to purest silver. The
-sea darkened, and presently a little wind came up, and began to sing
-with the murmuring waves. We sang, too, some of the old German
-student-songs which our mother had taught us, and which were our
-favorite ditties. They rang out merrily over the water:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><i>Die Binschgauer wollten wallfahrten geh’n!</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0">(The Binschgauer would on a pilgrimage go!)<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">or,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i1"><i>Was kommt dort von der Hoh’?</i><br /></span>
-<span class="i0">(What comes there over the hill?)<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_074" id="page_074"></a>{74}</span></p>
-
-<p>Then Julia told us a story. Perhaps it was the wonderful story of
-Red-cap,&mdash;a boy who met a giant in the forest, and did something to help
-him, I cannot remember what. Whereupon the grateful giant gave Red-cap a
-covered silver dish, with a hunter and a hare engraved upon it. When the
-boy wanted anything he must put the cover on, and ask the hunter and
-hare to give him what he desired; but there must be a rhyme in the
-request, else it could not be granted. Red-cap thanked the giant, and as
-soon as he was alone put the cover on the dish and said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Silver hunter, silver hare,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Give me a ripe and juicy pear!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">Taking off the cover, he found the finest pear that ever was seen,
-shining like pure gold, with a crimson patch on one side. It was so
-delicious that it made Red-cap hungry; so he covered the dish again and
-said:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Silver hunter, silver rabbit,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Give me an apple, and I’ll grab it!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">Off came the cover, and, lo! there was an apple the very smell of which
-was too good<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_075" id="page_075"></a>{75}</span> for any one save the truly virtuous. It was so large that
-it filled the dish, and its flavor was not to be described, so wonderful
-was it! A third time the happy Red-cap covered his dish, and cried,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Hunter and hare, of silver each,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Give me a soft and velvet peach!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">And when he saw the peach he cried out for joy, for it was like the
-peaches that grew on the crooked tree just by the south door of the
-greenhouse at Green Peace; and those were the best trees in the garden,
-and therefore the best in the world.</p>
-
-<p>The trouble about this story is that I never can remember any more of
-it, and I cannot find the book that contains it. But it must have been
-about this time that we were hailed from the opposite side of the creek;
-and presently a boat was run out, and came over to the sand beach and
-took us off. The people at the Poor Farm, which was on a hill close by,
-had seen the group of Crusoes and come to our rescue. They greeted us
-with words of pity (which were quite unnecessary), rowed us to the
-shore, and then<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_076" id="page_076"></a>{76}</span> kindly harnessed the farm-horse and drove us home.
-German Mary was loud in her thanks and expressions of relief; our mother
-also was grateful to the good people; but from us they received scant
-and grudging thanks. If they had only minded their own business and let
-us alone, we could have spent the night on a sandbank. Now it was not
-likely that we ever should! And, indeed, we never did.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_077" id="page_077"></a>{77}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.<br /><br />
-<small>OUR FATHER.</small><br /><br />
-<small>(THE LATE DR. SAMUEL GRIDLEY HOWE.)</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">There is so much to tell about our father that I hardly know where to
-begin. First, you must know something of his appearance. He was tall and
-very erect, with the carriage and walk of a soldier. His hair was black,
-with silver threads in it; his eyes were of the deepest and brightest
-blue I ever saw. They were eyes full of light: to us it was the soft,
-beaming light of love and tenderness, but sometimes to others it was the
-flash of a sword. He was very handsome; in his youth he had been thought
-one of the handsomest men of his day. It was a gallant time, this youth
-of our father. When hardly more than a lad, he went out to help the
-brave Greeks who were fighting to free<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_078" id="page_078"></a>{78}</span> their country from the cruel
-yoke of the Turks. At an age when most young men were thinking how they
-could make money, and how they could best advance themselves in the
-world, our father thought only how he could do most good, be of most
-help to others. So he went out to Greece, and fought in many a battle
-beside the brave mountaineers. Dressed like them in the “snowy chemise
-and the shaggy capote,” he shared their toils and their hardships;
-slept, rolled in his cloak, under the open stars, or sat over the
-camp-fire, roasting wasps strung on a stick like dried cherries. The old
-Greek chieftains called him “the beautiful youth,” and loved him. Once
-he saved the life of a wounded Greek, at the risk of his own, as you
-shall read by and by in Whittier’s beautiful words; and the rescued man
-followed him afterward like a dog, not wishing to lose sight of him for
-an hour, and would even sleep at his feet at night.</p>
-
-<p>Our father’s letters and journals give vivid pictures of the wild life
-among the rugged Greek mountains. Now he describes his<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_079" id="page_079"></a>{79}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 281px;">
-<a href="images/illus04_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus04_sml.jpg" width="281" height="359" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_080" id="page_080"></a>{80}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_081" id="page_081"></a>{81}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p class="nind">lodging in a village, which he has reached late at night, in a pouring
-rain:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquottt"><p>“Squatted down upon a sort of straw pillow placed on the ground, I
-enjoy all the luxury of a Grecian hut; which in point of elegance,
-ease, and comfort, although not equal to the meanest of our negro
-huts, is nevertheless somewhat superior to the naked rock. We have
-two apartments, but no partitions between them, the different rooms
-being constituted by the inequality of the ground,&mdash;we living up
-the hill, while the servants and horses live down in the lower
-part; and the smoke of our fires, rising to the roof and seeking in
-vain for some hole to escape, comes back again to me.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Again, he gives a pleasant account of his visit to a good old Greek
-priest, who lived with his family in a tiny cottage, the best house in
-the village. He found the good old man just sitting down to supper with
-his wife and children, and was invited most cordially to join them. The
-supper consisted of a huge beet, boiled, and served with butter and
-black bread. This was enough for the whole family, and the guest too;
-and after describing the perfect contentment and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_082" id="page_082"></a>{82}</span> cheerfulness which
-reigned in the humble dwelling, our father makes some reflections on the
-different things which go to make up a pleasant meal, and decides that
-the old “Papa” (as a Greek priest is called) had a much better supper
-than many rich people he remembered at home, who feasted three times a
-day on all that money could furnish in the way of good cheer, and found
-neither joy nor comfort in their victuals.</p>
-
-<p>Once our father and his comrades lay hidden for hours in the hollow of
-an ancient wall (built thousands of years ago, perhaps in Homer’s day),
-while the Turks, scimitar in hand, scoured the fields in search of them.
-Many years after, he showed this hollow to Julia and Laura, who went
-with him on his fourth journey to Greece, and told them the story.</p>
-
-<p>When our father saw the terrible sufferings of the Greek women and
-children, who were starving while their husbands and fathers were
-fighting for life and freedom, he thought that he could help best by
-helping them; so, though I know he loved the fighting,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_083" id="page_083"></a>{83}</span> for he was a
-born soldier, he came back to this country, and told all that he had
-seen, and asked for money and clothes and food for the perishing wives
-and mothers and children. He told the story well, and put his whole
-heart into it; and people listen to a story so told. Many hearts beat in
-answer to his, and in a short time he sailed for Greece again, with a
-good ship full of rice and flour, and cloth to make into garments, and
-money to buy whatever else might be needed. When he landed in Greece,
-the women came flocking about him by thousands, crying for bread, and
-praying God to bless him. He felt blessed enough when he saw the
-children eating bread, and saw the naked backs covered, and the sad,
-hungry faces smiling again. So he went about doing good, and helping
-whenever he saw need. Perhaps many a poor woman may have thought that
-the beautiful youth was almost like an angel sent by God to relieve her;
-and she may not have been far wrong.</p>
-
-<p>When the war was over, and Greece was a free country, our father came
-home, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_084" id="page_084"></a>{84}</span> looked about him again to see what he could do to help
-others. He talked with a friend of his, Dr. Fisher, and they decided
-that they would give their time to helping the blind, who needed help
-greatly. There were no schools for them in those days; and if a child
-was blind, it must sit with folded hands and learn nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Our father found several blind children, and took them to his home and
-taught them. By and by some kind friends gave money, and one&mdash;Colonel
-Perkins&mdash;gave a fine house to be a school for these children and others;
-and that was the beginning of the Perkins Institution for the Blind, now
-a great school where many blind boys and girls learn to read and study,
-and to play on various instruments, and to help themselves and others in
-the world.</p>
-
-<p>Our father always said, “Help people to help themselves; don’t accustom
-them to being helped by others.” Another saying of his, perhaps his
-favorite one, next to the familiar “Let justice be done, if the heavens
-fall!” was this: “Obstacles are things<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_085" id="page_085"></a>{85}</span> to be overcome.” Indeed, this
-was one of the governing principles of his life; and there were few
-obstacles that did not go down before that keen lance of his, always in
-rest and ready for a charge.</p>
-
-<p>When our father first began his work in philanthropy, some of his
-friends used to laugh at him, and call him Don Quixote. Especially was
-this the case when he took up the cause of the idiotic and weak-minded,
-and vowed that instead of being condemned to live like animals, and be
-treated as such, they should have their rights as human beings, and
-should be taught all the more carefully and tenderly because their minds
-were weak and helpless.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think Howe is going to do now?” cried one gentleman to
-another, merrily. “He is going to teach the idiots, ha, ha, ha!” and
-they both laughed heartily, and thought it a very good joke. But people
-soon ceased to laugh when they saw the helpless creatures beginning to
-help themselves; saw the girls learning to sew and the boys to work; saw
-light gradually come into<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_086" id="page_086"></a>{86}</span> the vacant eyes (dim and uncertain light it
-might be, but how much better than blank darkness!), and strength and
-purpose to the nerveless fingers.</p>
-
-<p>So the School for Feeble-minded Children was founded, and has been ever
-since a pleasant place, full of hope and cheer; and when people found
-that this Don Quixote knew very well the difference between a giant and
-a windmill, and that he always brought down his giants, they soon ceased
-to laugh, and began to wonder and admire.</p>
-
-<p>All my readers have probably heard about Laura Bridgman, whom he found a
-little child, deaf, dumb, and blind, knowing no more than an animal, and
-how he taught her to read and write, to talk with her fingers, and to
-become an earnest, thoughtful, industrious woman. It is a wonderful
-story; but it has already been told, and will soon be still more fully
-told, so I will not dwell upon it now.</p>
-
-<p>But I hope you will all read, some day, a Life of our father, and learn
-about all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_087" id="page_087"></a>{87}</span> things he did, for it needs a whole volume to tell them.</p>
-
-<p>But it is especially as our father that I want to describe this great
-and good man. I suppose there never was a tenderer or kinder father. He
-liked to make companions of his children, and was never weary of having
-us “tagging” at his heels. We followed him about the garden like so many
-little dogs, watching the pruning or grafting which were his special
-tasks. We followed him up into the wonderful pear-room, where were many
-chests of drawers, every drawer full of pears lying on cotton-wool. Our
-father watched their ripening with careful heed, and told us many things
-about their growth and habits. We learned about the Curé pear, which,
-one fancied, had been named for an old gentleman with a long and waving
-nose; and about the Duchesse d’Angoulême, which suggested, in appearance
-as in name, a splendid dame in gold and crimson velvet. Then there were
-all the Beurrés, from the pale beauty of the Beurré Diel to the Beurré
-Bosc in its coat of rich<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_088" id="page_088"></a>{88}</span> russet, and the Easter Beurré, latest of all.
-There, too, was the Winter Nelis,&mdash;which we persisted in calling “Winter
-Nelly,” and regarded as a friend of our own age, though this never
-prevented us from eating her with delight whenever occasion
-offered,&mdash;and the Glout Morceau, and the Doyenne d’Eté, and hundreds
-more. Julia’s favorite was always the Bartlett, which appealed to her
-both by its beauty and its sweetness; but Flossy always held, and Laura
-held with her, and does hold, and will hold till she dies, that no pear
-is to be named in the same breath with the Louise Bonne de Jersey.</p>
-
-<p>Oh good Louise, you admirable woman, for whom this green-coated ambrosia
-was named! what a delightful person you must have been! How sweetness
-and piquancy must have mingled in your adorable disposition! Happy was
-the man who called you his! happy was the island of Jersey, which saw
-you and your pears ripening and mellowing side by side!</p>
-
-<p>I must not leave the pear-room without mentioning the beloved Strawberry
-Book,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_089" id="page_089"></a>{89}</span> which was usually to be found there, and over which we children
-used to pore by the hour together. “Fruits of America” was its real
-name, but we did not care for that; we loved it for its brilliant
-pictures of strawberries and all other fruits, and perhaps even more for
-the wonderful descriptions which were really as satisfying as many an
-actual feast. Was it not almost as good as eating a pear, to read these
-words about it:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquottt"><p>“Skin a rich golden yellow, dappled with orange and crimson, smooth
-and delicate; flesh smooth, melting, and buttery; flavor rich,
-sprightly, vinous, and delicious!”</p></div>
-
-<p>Almost as good, I say, but not quite; and it is pleasant to recall that
-we seldom left the pear-room empty-handed.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was his own room, where we could examine the wonderful
-drawers of his great bureau, and play with the “picknickles” and
-“bucknickles.” I believe our father invented these words. They
-were&mdash;well, all kinds of pleasant little things,&mdash;amber mouthpieces, and
-buckles and bits of enamel, and a wonderful Turkish pipe, and seals and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_090" id="page_090"></a>{90}</span>
-wax, and some large pins two inches long which were great treasures. On
-his writing-table were many clean pens in boxes, which you could lay out
-in patterns; and a sand-box&mdash;very delightful! We were never tired of
-pouring the fine black sand into our hands, where it felt so cool and
-smooth, and then back again into the box with its holes arranged
-star-fashion. And to see him shake sand over his paper when he wrote a
-letter, and then pour it back in a smooth stream, while the written
-lines sparkled and seemed to stand up from the page! Ah, blotting-paper
-is no doubt very convenient, but I should like to have a sand-box,
-nevertheless!</p>
-
-<p>I cannot remember that our father was ever out of patience when we
-pulled his things about. He had many delightful stories,&mdash;one of “Jacky
-Nory,” which had no end, and went on and on, through many a walk and
-garden prowl. Often, too, he would tell us of his own pranks when he was
-a little boy,&mdash;how they used to tease an old Portuguese sailor with a
-wooden leg, and how the old man would get very angry, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_091" id="page_091"></a>{91}</span> cry out,
-“Calabash me rompe you!” meaning, “I’ll break your head!” How when he
-was a student in college, and ought to have known better, he led the
-president’s old horse upstairs and left him in an upper room of one of
-the college buildings, where the poor beast astonished the passers-by by
-putting his head out of the windows and neighing. And then our father
-would shake his head and say he was a very naughty boy, and Harry must
-never do such things. (But Harry did!)</p>
-
-<p>He loved to play and romp with us. Sometimes he would put on his great
-fur-coat, and come into the dining-room at dancing-time, on all-fours,
-growling horribly, and pursue us into corners, we shrieking with
-delighted terror. Or he would sing for us, sending us into fits of
-laughter, for he had absolutely no ear for music. There was one tune
-which he was quite sure he sang correctly, but no one could recognize
-it. At last he said, “Oh&mdash;Su-<i>san</i>na!” and then we all knew what the
-tune was. “Hail to the Chief!” was his favorite song, and he sang<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_092" id="page_092"></a>{92}</span> it
-with great spirit and fervor, though the air was strictly original, and
-very peculiar. When he was tired of romping or carrying us on his
-shoulder, he would say, “No; no more! I have a bone in my leg!” which
-excuse was accepted by us little ones in perfect good faith, as we
-thought it some mysterious but painful malady.</p>
-
-<p>If our father had no ear for music, he had a fine one for metre, and
-read poetry aloud very beautifully. His voice was melodious and ringing,
-and we were thrilled with his own enthusiasm as he read to us from Scott
-or Byron, his favorite poets. I never can read “The Assyrian came down,”
-without hearing the ring of his voice and seeing the flash of his blue
-eyes as he recited the splendid lines. He had a great liking for Pope,
-too (as I wish more people had nowadays), and for Butler’s “Hudibras,”
-which he was constantly quoting. He commonly, when riding, wore but one
-spur, giving Hudibras’s reason, that if one side of the horse went, the
-other must perforce go with it; and how often, on some early morning
-walk or ride, have I heard him say,&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_093" id="page_093"></a>{93}</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“And, like a lobster boiled, the morn<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">From black to red began to turn.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">Or if war or fighting were mentioned, he would often cry,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Ay me! what perils do environ<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The man that meddles with cold iron!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I must not leave the subject of reading without speaking of his reading
-of the Bible, which was most impressive. No one who ever heard him read
-morning prayers at the Institution (which he always did until his health
-failed in later years) can have forgotten the grave, melodious voice,
-the reverent tone, the majestic head bent above the sacred book. Nor was
-it less impressive when on Sunday afternoons he read to us, his
-children. He would have us read, too, allowing us to choose our favorite
-psalms or other passages.</p>
-
-<p>He was an early riser, and often shared our morning walks. Each child,
-as soon as it was old enough, was taught to ride; and the rides before
-breakfast with him are things never to be forgotten. He took one child
-at a time, so that all in turn might have the pleasure. It seems hardly
-longer<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_094" id="page_094"></a>{94}</span> ago than yesterday,&mdash;the coming downstairs in the cool, dewy
-morning, nibbling a cracker for fear of hunger, springing into the
-saddle, the little black mare shaking her head, impatient to be off; the
-canter through the quiet streets, where only an early milkman or baker
-was to be seen, though on our return we should find them full of boys,
-who pointed the finger and shouted,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Lady on a hossback,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Row, row, row!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">then out into the pleasant country, galloping over the smooth road, or
-pacing quietly under shady trees. Our father was a superb rider; indeed,
-he never seemed so absolutely at home as in the saddle. He was very
-particular about our holding whip and reins in the right way.</p>
-
-<p>Speaking of his riding reminds me of a story our mother used to tell us.
-When Julia was a baby, they were travelling in Italy, driving in an
-old-fashioned travelling-carriage. One day they stopped at the door of
-an inn, and our father went in to make some inquiries. While he was
-gone, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_095" id="page_095"></a>{95}</span> rascally driver thought it a good opportunity for him to slip
-in at the side door to get a draught of wine; and, the driver gone, the
-horses saw that here was <i>their</i> opportunity; so they took it, and ran
-away with our mother, the baby, and nurse in the carriage.</p>
-
-<p>Our father, hearing the sound of wheels, came out, caught sight of the
-driver’s guilty face peering round the corner in affright, and at once
-saw what had happened. He ran at full speed along the road in the
-direction in which the horses were headed. Rounding a corner of the
-mountain which the road skirted, he saw at a little distance a country
-wagon coming slowly toward him, drawn by a stout horse, the wagoner half
-asleep on the seat. Instantly our father’s resolve was taken. He ran up,
-stopped the horse, unhitched him in the twinkling of an eye, leaped upon
-his back, and was off like a flash, before the astonished driver, who
-was not used to two-legged whirlwinds, could utter a word.</p>
-
-<p>Probably the horse was equally astonished; but he felt a master on his
-back, and, urged<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_096" id="page_096"></a>{96}</span> by hand and voice, he sprang to his topmost speed,
-galloped bravely on, and soon overtook the lumbering carriage-horses,
-which were easily stopped. No one was hurt, though our mother and the
-nurse had of course been sadly frightened. The horses were turned, and
-soon they came in sight of the unhappy countryman, still sitting on his
-wagon, petrified with astonishment. He received a liberal reward, and
-probably regretted that there were no more mad Americans to “steal a
-ride,” and pay for it.</p>
-
-<p>This presence of mind, this power of acting on the instant, was one of
-our father’s great qualities. It was this that made him, when the
-wounded Greek sank down before him&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“ ... fling him from his saddle,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And place the stranger there.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">It was this, when arrested and imprisoned by the Prussian government on
-suspicion of befriending unhappy Poland, that taught him what to do with
-the important papers he carried. In the minute during which he was left
-alone, before the official came to search<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_097" id="page_097"></a>{97}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 546px;">
-<a href="images/illus05_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus05_sml.jpg" width="546" height="333" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">The Doctor to the Rescue!</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_098" id="page_098"></a>{98}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_099" id="page_099"></a>{99}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p class="nind">him, he thrust the documents up into the hollow head of a bust of the
-King of Prussia which stood on a shelf; then tore some unimportant
-papers into the smallest possible fragments, and threw them into a basin
-of water which stood close at hand.</p>
-
-<p>Next day the fragments carefully pasted together were shown to him,
-hours having been spent in the painful and laborious task; but nobody
-thought of looking for more papers in the head of King Friedrich
-Wilhelm.</p>
-
-<p>Our father, though nothing could be proved against him, might have
-languished long in that Prussian prison had it not been for the
-exertions of a fellow-countryman. This gentleman had met him in the
-street the day before, had asked his address, and promised to call on
-him. Inquiring for him next day at the hotel, he was told that no such
-person was or had been there. Instantly suspecting foul play, this good
-friend went to the American minister, and told his story. The minister
-took up the matter warmly, and called upon the Prussian officials to
-give up his countryman. This, after repeated denials of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_100" id="page_100"></a>{100}</span> any knowledge
-of the affair, they at length reluctantly consented to do. Our father
-was taken out of prison at night, placed in a carriage, and driven
-across the border into France, where he was dismissed with a warning
-never to set foot in Prussia again.</p>
-
-<p>One day, I remember, we were sitting at the dinner-table, when a
-messenger came flying, “all wild with haste and fear,” to say that a
-fire had broken out at the Institution. Now, in those days there lay
-between Green Peace and the Institution a remnant of the famous
-Washington Heights, where Washington and his staff had once made their
-camp.</p>
-
-<p>Much of the high ground had already been dug away, but there still
-remained a great hill sloping back and up from the garden wall, and
-terminating, on the side toward the Institution, in an abrupt precipice,
-some sixty feet high. The bearer of the bad news had been forced to come
-round by way of several streets, thus losing precious minutes; but the
-Doctor did not know what it was to lose a minute. Before any one could
-speak or ask<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_101" id="page_101"></a>{101}</span> what he would do he was out of the house, ran through the
-garden, climbed the slope at the back, rushed like a flame across the
-green hill-top, and slid down the almost perpendicular face of the
-precipice! Bruised and panting, he reached the Institution and saw at a
-glance that the fire was in the upper story. Take time to go round to
-the door and up the stairs? Not he! He “swarmed” up the gutter-spout,
-and in less time than it takes to tell it was on the roof, and cutting
-away at the burning timbers with an axe, which he had got hold of no one
-knows how. That fire was put out, as were several others at which our
-father assisted.</p>
-
-<p>Fire is swift, but it could not get ahead of the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>These are a few of the stories; but, as I said, it needs a volume to
-tell all about our father’s life. I cannot tell in this short space how
-he worked with the friends of liberty to free the slave; how he raised
-the poor and needy, and “helped them to help themselves;” how he was a
-light to the blind, and to all who walked in darkness, whether<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_102" id="page_102"></a>{102}</span> of
-sorrow, sin, or suffering. Most men, absorbed in such high works as
-these would have found scant leisure for family life and communion; but
-no finger-ache of our father’s smallest child ever escaped his loving
-care, no childish thought or wish ever failed to win his sympathy. We
-who had this high privilege of being his children love to think of him
-as the brave soldier, the wise physician, the great philanthropist; but
-dearest of all is the thought of him as our loving and tender father.</p>
-
-<p>And now, to end this chapter, you shall hear what Mr. Whittier, the
-noble and honored poet, thought of this friend of his:&mdash;</p>
-
-<h3>THE HERO.</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Oh for a knight like Bayard,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Without reproach or fear;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">My light glove on his casque of steel,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">My love-knot on his spear!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Oh for the white plume floating<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Sad Zutphen’s field above,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The lion heart in battle,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">The woman’s heart in love!<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_103" id="page_103"></a>{103}</span><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Oh that man once more were manly,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Woman’s pride and not her scorn;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">That once more the pale young mother<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Dared to boast ‘a man is born’!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“But now life’s slumberous current<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">No sun-bowed cascade wakes;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">No tall, heroic manhood<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">The level dullness breaks.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Oh for a knight like Bayard,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Without reproach or fear!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">My light glove on his casque of steel,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">My love-knot on his spear!”<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i1">Then I said, my own heart throbbing<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">To the time her proud pulse beat,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">“Life hath its regal natures yet,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">True, tender, brave, and sweet!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Smile not, fair unbeliever!<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">One man at least I know<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Who might wear the crest of Bayard,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Or Sidney’s plume of snow.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Once, when over purple mountains<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Died away the Grecian sun,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And the far Cyllenian ranges<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Paled and darkened one by one,&mdash;<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Fell the Turk, a bolt of thunder,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Cleaving all the quiet sky;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And against his sharp steel lightnings<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Stood the Suliote but to die.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_104" id="page_104"></a>{104}</span><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Woe for the weak and halting!<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">The crescent blazed behind<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">A curving line of sabres<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Like fire before the wind!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Last to fly and first to rally,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Rode he of whom I speak,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">When, groaning in his bridle-path,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Sank down a wounded Greek.&mdash;<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“With the rich Albanian costume<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Wet with many a ghastly stain,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Gazing on earth and sky as one<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Who might not gaze again!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“He looked forward to the mountains,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Back on foes that never spare;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Then flung him from his saddle,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">And placed the stranger there.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“<span class="lftspc">‘</span>Alla! hu!’ Through flashing sabres,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Through a stormy hail of lead,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The good Thessalian charger<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Up the slopes of olives sped.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Hot spurred the turbaned riders,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">He almost felt their breath,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Where a mountain stream rolled darkly down<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Between the hills and death.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“One brave and manful struggle,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">He gained the solid land,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And the cover of the mountains<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">And the carbines of his band.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_105" id="page_105"></a>{105}</span><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“It was very brave and noble,”<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Said the moist-eyed listener then;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">“But one brave deed makes no hero;<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Tell me what he since hath been?”<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Still a brave and generous manhood,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Still an honor without stain,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">In the prison of the Kaiser,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">By the barricades of Seine.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i1">“But dream not helm and harness<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">The sign of valor true;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Peace hath higher tests of manhood<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Than battle ever knew.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Wouldst know him now? Behold him,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">The Cadmus of the blind,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Giving the dumb lip language,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">The idiot clay a mind;<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Walking his round of duty<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Serenely day by day,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">With the strong man’s hand of labor,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">And childhood’s heart of play;<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“True as the knights of story,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Sir Lancelot and his peers,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Brave in his calm endurance<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">As they in tilt of spears.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“As waves in stillest waters,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">As stars in noon-day skies,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">All that wakes to noble action<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">In his noon of calmness lies.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_106" id="page_106"></a>{106}</span><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Wherever outraged nature<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Asks word or action brave;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Wherever struggles labor,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Wherever groans a slave;<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Wherever rise the peoples,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Wherever sinks a throne,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The throbbing heart of Freedom finds<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">An answer in his own!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Knight of a better era,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Without reproach or fear!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Said I not well that Bayards<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">And Sidneys still are here?”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_107" id="page_107"></a>{107}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.<br /><br />
-<small>JULIA WARD.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">Once upon a time, in a great house standing at the corner of Bond Street
-and Broadway, New York city, there lived a little girl. She was named
-Julia, after her lovely young mother; but as she grew she showed no
-resemblance to that mother, with her great dark eyes and wealth of black
-ringlets. This little girl had red hair, and that was a dreadful thing
-in those days. Very fine, soft hair it was, thick and wavy, but&mdash;it was
-red. Visitors, coming to see her mother, would shake their heads and
-say, “Poor little Julia! what a pity she has red hair!” and the tender
-mother would sigh, and regret that her child should have this
-misfortune, when there was no red hair in the family so far as one knew.
-And the beautiful hair was combed with a leaden<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_108" id="page_108"></a>{108}</span> comb, as one old lady
-said that would turn it dark; and it was soaked in honey-water, as
-another old lady said that was really the best thing you could do with
-it; and the little Julia felt that she might almost as well be a
-hunchback or a cripple as that unfortunate creature, a red-haired child.</p>
-
-<p>When she was six years old, her beautiful mother died; and after that
-Julia and her brothers and sisters were brought up by their good aunt,
-who came to make her home with them and their father. A very good aunt
-she was, and devoted to the motherless children; but sometimes she did
-funny things. They went out to ride every day&mdash;the children, I mean&mdash;in
-a great yellow chariot lined with fine blue cloth. Now, it occurred to
-their kind aunt that it would have a charming effect if the children
-were dressed to match the chariot. So thought, so done! Dressmakers and
-milliners plied their art; and one day Broadway was electrified by the
-sight of the little Misses Ward, seated in uneasy state on the blue
-cushions, clad in wonderful raiment of yellow and blue. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_109" id="page_109"></a>{109}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 326px;">
-<a href="images/illus06_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus06_sml.jpg" width="326" height="306" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Julia Ward and her Brothers, as Children.</span></p>
-
-<p>(From a miniature by Miss Anne Hall.)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_110" id="page_110"></a>{110}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_111" id="page_111"></a>{111}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p class="nind">had blue pelisses and yellow satin bonnets. And this was all very well
-for the two younger ones, with their dark eyes and hair, and their rosy
-cheeks; but Julia, young as she was, felt dimly that blue and yellow was
-not the combination to set off her tawny locks and exquisite sea-shell
-complexion. It is not probable, however, that she sorrowed deeply over
-the funny clothes; for her mind was never set on clothes, either in
-childhood or in later life. Did not her sister meet her one day coming
-home from school with one blue shoe and one green? Her mind was full of
-beautiful thoughts; her eyes were lifted to the green trees and the blue
-sky bending above them: what did she care about shoes? Yes; and later is
-it not recorded that her sisters had great difficulty in persuading her
-to choose the stuff for her wedding-gown? So indifferent was she to all
-matters of dress!</p>
-
-<p>Auntie F. had her own ideas about shoes and stockings,&mdash;not the color,
-but the quality of them. She did not believe in “pompeying” the
-children; so in the coldest winter<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_112" id="page_112"></a>{112}</span> weather Julia and her sisters went
-to school in thin slippers and white cotton stockings. You shiver at the
-bare thought of this, my girl readers! You look at your comfortable
-leggings and overshoes (that is, if you live in upper New England, or
-anywhere in the same latitude), and wonder how the Ward children lived
-through such a course of “hardening”! But they did live, and Julia seems
-now far younger and stronger than any of her children.</p>
-
-<p>School, which some children regard with mingled feelings (or so I have
-been told), was a delight to Julia. She grasped at knowledge with both
-hands,&mdash;plucked it as a little child plucks flowers, with unwearying
-enjoyment. Her teachers, like the “people” in the case of the</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Young lady whose eyes<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Were unique as to color and size,”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">all turned aside, and started away in surprise, as this little
-red-haired girl went on learning and learning and learning. At nine
-years old she was studying Paley’s “Moral Philosophy,” with girls of
-sixteen and eighteen.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_113" id="page_113"></a>{113}</span> She could not have been older when she heard a
-class reciting an Italian lesson, and fell in love with the melodious
-language. She listened, and listened again; then got a grammar and
-studied secretly, and one day handed to the astonished Italian teacher a
-letter correctly written in Italian, begging that she might join the
-class.</p>
-
-<p>When I was speaking of the good aunt who was a second mother to the Ward
-children, I meant to say a word of the stern but devoted father who was
-the principal figure in Julia’s early life. She says of him: “He was a
-majestic person, of somewhat severe aspect and reserved manners, but
-with a vein of true geniality and a great benevolence of heart.” And she
-adds: “His great gravity, and the absence of a mother, naturally subdued
-the tone of the whole household; and though a greatly cherished set of
-children, we were not a very merry one.”</p>
-
-<p>Still, with all his gravity, Grandfather Ward had his gleams of fun
-occasionally. It is told that Julia had a habit of dropping off her
-slippers while at table. One day her<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_114" id="page_114"></a>{114}</span> father felt a wandering shell of
-kid, with no foot to keep it steady. He put his own foot on it and moved
-it under his chair, then said in his deep, grave voice, “My daughter,
-will you bring me my seals, which I have left on the table in my room?”
-And poor Julia, after a vain and frantic hunting with both feet, was
-forced to go, crimson-cheeked, white-stockinged and slipperless, on the
-required errand. She would never have dreamed of asking for the shoe.
-She was the eldest daughter, the companion and joy of this sternly
-loving father. She always sat next him at table, and sometimes he would
-take her right hand in his left, and hold it for many minutes together,
-continuing to eat his dinner with his right hand; while she would rather
-go dinnerless than ask him to release her own fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Grandfather Ward! It is a relief to confess our faults; and it may be my
-duty to say that as soon as I could reach it on tiptoe, it was my joy to
-pull the nose of his marble bust, which stood in the great dining-room
-at Green Peace. It was a fine, smooth, long<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_115" id="page_115"></a>{115}</span> nose, most pleasant to
-pull; I fear I soiled it sometimes with my little grimy fingers. I trust
-children never do such naughty things nowadays.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was Great-grandfather Ward, Julia’s grandfather, who had the
-cradle and the great round spectacles. Doubtless he had many other
-things besides, for he was a substantial New York merchant; but the
-cradle and the spectacles are the only possessions of his that I have
-seen. I have the cradle now, and I can testify that Great-grandfather
-Ward (for I believe he was rocked in it, as his descendants for four
-generations since have been) must have been an extremely long baby. It
-is a fine old affair, of solid mahogany, and was evidently built to last
-as long as the Wards should last. Not so very long ago, two dear people
-who had been rocked together in that cradle fifty&mdash;or is it
-sixty?&mdash;years ago, sat down and clasped hands over it, and wept for pure
-love and tenderness and <i>léal souvenir</i>. Not less pleasant is its
-present use as the good ship “Pinafore,” when six rosy, shouting<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_116" id="page_116"></a>{116}</span>
-children tumble into it and rock violently, singing with might and
-main,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“We sail the ocean blue,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And our saucy ship’s a beauty!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">That is all about the cradle.</p>
-
-<p>My mother writes thus of Great-grandfather Ward, her own grandfather:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquottt"><p>“He had been a lieutenant-colonel in the war of American
-Independence. A letter from the Commander-in-Chief to Governor
-Samuel Ward (of Rhode Island) mentions a visit from “your son, a
-tall young man of soldierly aspect.” I cannot quote the exact
-words. My grandfather had seen service in Arnold’s march through
-‘the wilderness’ to Quebec. He was present at the battle of Red
-Bank. After the close of the war he engaged in commercial pursuits,
-and made a voyage to India as supercargo of a merchant vessel
-belonging to Moses Brown, of Providence. He was in Paris at the
-time of the king’s death (Louis XVI.), and for some time before
-that tragic event. He speaks in his journal of having met several
-of the leading revolutionists of that time at a friend’s house, and
-characterizes them as ‘exceeding plain men, but very zealous.’ He
-passed the day of the king’s execution, which he calls ‘one of
-horror,’ in Versailles, and was grieved at the conduct of several</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_117" id="page_117"></a>{117}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 192px;">
-<a href="images/illus07_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus07_sml.jpg" width="192" height="295" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Lieut.-Col. Samuel Ward.</span></p>
-
-<p>Born Nov 17, 1756 Died Aug. 16, 1832.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_118" id="page_118"></a>{118}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_119" id="page_119"></a>{119}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<div class="blockquottt"><p>Americans, who not only remained in town, but also attended the
-execution. When he finally left Paris, a proscribed nobleman,
-disguised as a footman, accompanied the carriage, and so cheated
-the guillotine of one expected victim.</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel Ward, as my grandfather was always called, was a graduate
-of Brown University, and a man of scholarly tastes. He possessed a
-diamond edition of Latin classics, which always went with him in
-his campaigns, and which is still preserved in the family. In
-matters of art he was not so well posted. Of the pictures in the
-gallery of the Luxembourg he remarks in his diary: ‘The old
-pictures are considered the best. I cannot think why.’</p>
-
-<p>“I remember him as very tall, stooping a little, with white hair
-and mild blue eyes, which matched well his composed speech and
-manners.”</p></div>
-
-<p>I have called Great-grandfather Ward a merchant, but he was far more
-than that. The son of Governor Ward of Rhode Island, he was only
-eighteen when, as a gallant young captain, he marched his company to the
-siege of Boston; and then (as his grandson writes me to-day) he “marched
-through the wilderness of Maine, through snow and ice, barefoot, to
-Quebec.” Some of my readers<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_120" id="page_120"></a>{120}</span> may possess an engraving of Trumbull’s
-famous painting of the “Attack on Quebec.” Look in the left-hand corner,
-and you will see a group of three,&mdash;one of them a young, active figure
-with flashing eyes; that is Great-grandfather Ward. He rose to be major,
-then lieutenant-colonel; was at Peekskill, Valley Forge, and Red Bank,
-and wrote the official account of the last-named battle, which may be
-found in Washington’s correspondence. Besides being a good man and a
-brave soldier, he was a very good grandfather; and this made it all the
-more naughty for his granddaughter Julia to behave as she did one day.
-Being then a little child, she sat down at the piano, placed a
-music-book on the rack, and began to pound and thump on the keys, making
-the hideous discord which seems always to afford pleasure to the young.
-Her grandfather was sitting by, book in hand; and after enduring the
-noise for some time patiently, he said in his kind, courtly way, “Is it
-so set down in the book, my dear?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Grandpapa!” said naughty Julia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_121" id="page_121"></a>{121}</span> and went on banging; while
-grandpapa, who made no pretense of being a musician, offered no further
-comment or remonstrance.</p>
-
-<p>Julia grew up a student and a dreamer. She confesses to having been an
-extremely absent person, and much of the time unconscious of what passed
-around her. “In the large rooms of my father’s house,” she says, “I
-walked up and down, perpetually alone, dreaming of extraordinary things
-that I should see and do. I now began to read Shakspere and Byron, and
-to try my hand at poems and plays.” She rejoices that none of the
-productions of this period were published, and adds: “I regard it as a
-piece of great good fortune; for a little praise or a little censure
-would have been a much more disturbing element in those days than in
-these.” I wish these sentiments were more general with young writers.</p>
-
-<p>Still, life was not all study and dreaming. There were sometimes
-merrymakings: witness the gay ball after which Julia wrote to her
-brother, “I have been through the burning fiery furnace; and I am
-Sad-rake, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page_122" id="page_122"></a>{122}</span>Me-sick, and Abed-no-go.” There was mischief, too, and
-sometimes downright naughtiness, Who was the poor gentleman, an intimate
-friend of the family, from whom Julia and her sisters extracted a
-promise that he would eat nothing for three days but what they should
-send him,&mdash;they in return promising three meals a day? He consented,
-innocently thinking that these dear young creatures wanted to display
-their skill in cookery, and expecting all kinds of delicacies and airy
-dainties of pastry and confectionery. Yes! and being a man of his word,
-he lived for three days on gruel, of which those “dear young creatures”
-sent him a bowl at morning, noon, and night; and on nothing else!</p>
-
-<p>In a certain little cabinet where many precious things are kept, I have
-a manuscript poem, written by Julia Ward for the amusement of her
-brothers and sisters when she was still a very young girl. It is called
-“The Ill-cut Mantell; A Romaunt of the time of Kynge Arthur.” The story
-is an old one, but the telling of it is all Julia’s own, and I must
-quote a few lines:&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_123" id="page_123"></a>{123}</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“I cannot well describe in rhyme<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The female toilet of that time.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">I do not know how trains were carried,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">How single ladies dressed or married;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">If caps were proper at a ball,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Or even if caps were worn at all;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">If robes were made of crape or tulle,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">If skirts were narrow, gored, or full.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Perhaps, without consulting grace,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The hair was scraped back from the face,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">While on the head a mountain rose,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Crowned, like Mont Blanc, with endless snows.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">It may be that the locks were shorn;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">It may be that the lofty puff,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The stomacher, the rising ruff,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The bodice, or the veil were worn,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Perhaps mantillas were the passion,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Perhaps ferronières were in fashion,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">I cannot, and I will not tell.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">But this one thing I wot full well,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">That every lady there was dressed<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">In what she thought became her best.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">All further notices, I grieve,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">I must to your imagination leave.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Julia sometimes tried to awaken in her sisters’ minds the poetic
-aspirations which filled her own. One day she found the two little girls
-playing some childish game, which seemed to her unnecessarily frivolous.
-(You all know, I am sure, the eldest sister’s motto,&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_124" id="page_124"></a>{124}</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Good advice and counsel sage,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And ‘I never did so when I was your age;’<span class="lftspc">”</span><br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">and the companion sentiment of the younger sister,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“<span class="lftspc">‘</span>Sister, don’t!’ and ‘Sister, do!’<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And ‘Why may not I as well as you?’<span class="lftspc">”</span>)<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">Miss Ward,&mdash;she was always called Miss Ward, poor little dear! and her
-dolls were taken away from her when she was only nine years old, that
-she might better feel the dignity of her position!&mdash;Miss Ward rebuked
-the little sisters, and bade them lay aside their foolish toys and
-improve their minds by composing poetry. Louisa shook her black curls,
-and would not,&mdash;moreover, did not, being herself a child of some
-firmness. But little sweet Annie would try, to please Sister Julia; and
-after much thought and labor she produced the following pious
-effusion:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“He feeds the ravens when they call,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And stands them in a pleasant hall.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">I never can recall these lines without having an instant vision of a
-pillared hall, fair and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_125" id="page_125"></a>{125}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 216px;">
-<a href="images/illus08_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus08_sml.jpg" width="216" height="288" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Julia Ward.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_126" id="page_126"></a>{126}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_127" id="page_127"></a>{127}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p class="nind">stately, with ravens standing in niches along the sides, between the
-marble columns!</p>
-
-<p>So this maiden, Julia, grew up to womanhood, dreamy and absent, absorbed
-in severe study and composition, yet always ready with the brilliant
-flashes of her wit, which broke like sunbeams through the mist of
-dreams. She was very fair to look upon. No one now pitied her for the
-glorious crown of red-gold hair, which set off the rose and ivory of her
-matchless complexion; every one recognized and acknowledged in her
-“stately Julia, queen of all.”</p>
-
-<p>Once, while on a visit to Boston, Julia heard the wonderful story of
-Laura Bridgman, who had just been led out of darkness into the light of
-life and joy by a certain Dr. Howe, a man of whom people spoke as a
-modern paladin of romance, a Roland or Bayard. She saw him, and felt at
-once that he was the most remarkable man she had ever known. He, on his
-part, saw a youthful prophetess, radiant and inspired, crowned with
-golden hair. Acquaintance ripened into friendship, friendship into love;
-and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_128" id="page_128"></a>{128}</span> so it happened that, in the year 1843, Samuel G. Howe and Julia
-Ward were married. The next chapter shall tell you of Julia Ward Howe,
-as we, her children, have known her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_129" id="page_129"></a>{129}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.<br /><br />
-<small>OUR MOTHER.</small><br /><br />
-<small>(MRS JULIA WARD HOWE.)</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">Our mother’s story should be sung rather than said, so much has music to
-do with it. My earliest recollection of my mother is of her standing by
-the piano in the great dining-room, dressed in black velvet, with her
-beautiful neck and arms bare, and singing to us. Her voice was a very
-rare and perfect one, we have since learned; we knew then only that we
-did not care to hear any one else sing when we might hear her. The time
-for singing was at twilight, when the dancing was over, and we gathered
-breathless and exhausted about the piano for the last and greatest
-treat. Then the beautiful voice would break out, and flood the room with
-melody, and fill our childish hearts with almost painful rapture. Our
-mother knew all the songs in the world,&mdash;that was our firm<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_130" id="page_130"></a>{130}</span> belief.
-Certainly we never found an end to her repertory.</p>
-
-<p>There were German student songs, which she had learned from her brother
-when he came back from Heidelberg,&mdash;merry, jovial ditties, with choruses
-of “Juvevallera!” and “Za hi! Za he! Za ho-o-o-o-o-oh!” in which we
-joined with boundless enthusiasm. There were gay little French songs,
-all ripple and sparkle and trill; and soft, melting Italian serenades
-and barcaroles, which we thought must be like the notes of the
-nightingale. And when we called to have our favorites repeated again and
-again, she would sing them over and over with never failing patience;
-and not one of us ever guessed, as we listened with all our souls, that
-the cunning mother was giving us a French lesson, or a German or Italian
-lesson, as the case might be, and that what was learned in that way
-would never be forgotten all our lives long.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the foreign songs, there were many songs of our mother’s own
-making, which we were never weary of hearing. Sometimes<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_131" id="page_131"></a>{131}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 278px;">
-<a href="images/illus09_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus09_sml.jpg" width="278" height="357" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Julia Ward Howe.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_132" id="page_132"></a>{132}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_133" id="page_133"></a>{133}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p class="nind">she composed a melody for some old ballad, but more often the words and
-music both were hers. Where were such nonsense-songs as hers?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Little old dog sits under the chair,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Twenty-five grasshoppers snarled in his hair.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Little old dog’s beginning to snore,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Mother forbids him to do so no more.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">Or again,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Hush, my darling, don’t you cry!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Your sweetheart will come by and by.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">When he comes, he’ll come in green,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">That’s a sign that you’re his queen.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Hush, my darling, don’t you cry!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Your sweetheart will come by and by.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">When he comes, he’ll come in blue,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">That’s a sign that he’ll be true.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">And so on through all the colors of the rainbow, till finally
-expectation was wrought up to the highest pitch by the concluding lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“When he comes, he’ll come in gray,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">That’s a sign he’ll come to-day!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then it was a pleasant thing that each child could have his or her own
-particular song merely for the asking. Laura well remembers<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_134" id="page_134"></a>{134}</span> her
-good-night song, which was sung to the very prettiest tune in the world:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Sleep, my little child,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">So gentle, sweet, and mild!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The little lamb has gone to rest,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The little bird is in its nest,”&mdash;<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Put in the donkey!” cried Laura, at this point of the first singing.
-“Please put in the donkey!” So the mother went on,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“The little donkey in the stable<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Sleeps as sound as he is able;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">All things now their rest pursue,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">You are sleepy too.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was with this song sounding softly in her ears, and with the
-beautiful hand, like soft warm ivory, stroking her hair, that Laura used
-to fall asleep. Do you not envy the child?</p>
-
-<p>Maud’s songs were perhaps the loveliest of all, though they could not be
-dearer than my donkey-song. Here is one of them:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Baby with the hat and plume,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And the scarlet cloak so fine,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Come where thou hast rest and room,<br /></span>
-<span class="i5">Little baby mine!<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_135" id="page_135"></a>{135}</span><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Whence those eyes so crystal clear?<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Whence those curls, so silky soft?<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Thou art Mother’s darling dear,<br /></span>
-<span class="i5">I have told thee oft.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“I have told thee many times,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And repeat it yet again,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Wreathing thee about with rhymes<br /></span>
-<span class="i5">Like a flowery chain,&mdash;<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Rhymes that sever and unite<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">As the blossom fetters do,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">As the mother’s weary night<br /></span>
-<span class="i5">Happy days renew.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Perhaps some of my readers may already know the lovely verses called
-“Baby’s Shoes.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Little feet, pretty feet,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Feet of fairy Maud,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Fair and fleet, trim and neat,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Carry her abroad!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Be as wings, tiny things,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">To my butterfly;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">In the flowers, hours on hours,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Let my darling lie.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Shine ye must, in the dust,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Twinkle as she runs,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Threading a necklace gay,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Through the summer suns.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_136" id="page_136"></a>{136}</span><br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Stringing days, borrowing phrase,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Weaving wondrous plots,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">With her eyes blue and wise<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">As forget-me-nots<br /></span>
-<span style="margin-left: 3em;">. . . . . . . . . .</span><br />
-<span class="i0">“Cinderel, grown a belle,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Coming from her ball,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Frightened much, let just such<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">A tiny slipper fall.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“If men knew as I do<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Half thy sweets, my own,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">They’d not delay another day,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">I should be alone.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Come and go, friend and foe,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Fairy Prince most fine!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Take your gear otherwhere!<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Maud is only mine.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But it was not all singing, of course. Our mother read to us a great
-deal too, and told us stories, from the Trojan War down to “Puss in
-Boots.” It was under her care, I think, that we used to look over the
-“Shakspere book.” This was a huge folio, bound in rusty-brown leather,
-and containing the famous Boydell prints illustrating the plays of
-Shakspere. The frontispiece represented Shakspere nursed by Tragedy and
-Comedy,&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_137" id="page_137"></a>{137}</span>the prettiest, chubbiest of babies, seated on the ground with
-his little toes curled up under him, while a lovely, laughing lady bent
-down to whisper in his ear; and another one, grave but no less
-beautiful, gazed earnestly upon him. Then came the “Tempest,”&mdash;oh, most
-lovely! The first picture showed Ariel dancing along the “yellow sands,”
-while Prospero waved him on with a commanding gesture; in the second,
-Miranda, all white and lovely, was coming out of the darksome cavern,
-and smiling with tender compassion on Ferdinand, who was trying to lift
-an impossible log. Then there was the delicious terror of the “Macbeth”
-pictures, with the witches and Banquo’s ghost. But soon our mother would
-turn the page and show us the exquisite figure of Puck, sitting on a
-toadstool, and make us shout with laughter over Nick Bottom and his
-rustic mates. From these magic pages we learned to hate Richard III.
-duly, and to love the little princes, whom Northcote’s lovely picture
-showed in white-satin doublet and hose, embracing each other, while the
-wicked uncle<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_138" id="page_138"></a>{138}</span> glowered at them from behind; and we wept over the second
-picture, where they lay asleep, unconscious of the fierce faces bending
-over them. Yes, we loved the “Shakspere book” very much.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes our mother would give us a party,&mdash;and that was sure to be a
-delightful affair, with charades or magic lantern or something of the
-kind. Here is an account of one such party, written by our mother
-herself in a letter to her sister, which lies before me:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquottt"><p>“My guests arrived in omnibus loads at four o’clock. My notes to
-parents concluded with the following P. S.: ‘Return omnibus
-provided, with insurance against plum-cake and other accidents.’ A
-donkey carriage afforded great amusement out of doors, together
-with swing, bowling-alley, and the Great Junk. [I have not
-mentioned the Junk yet, but you shall hear of it in good time.]
-While all this was going on, the H.’s, J. S., and I prepared a
-theatrical exhibition, of which I had made a hasty outline. It was
-the story of ‘Blue Beard.’ We had curtains which drew back and
-forth, and regular footlights. You can’t think how good it was!
-There were four scenes. My antique cabinet<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_139" id="page_139"></a>{139}</span> was the ‘Blue Beard’
-cabinet; we yelled in delightful chorus when the door was opened,
-and the children stretched their necks to the last degree to see
-the horrible sight. The curtain closed upon a fainting-fit, done by
-four women. In the third scene we were scrubbing the fatal key,
-when I cried out, ‘Try the mustang liniment! It’s <i>the</i> liniment
-for us, for you know we <i>must hang</i> if we don’t succeed!’ This,
-which was made on the spur of the moment, overcame the whole
-audience with laughter, and I myself shook so that I had to go down
-into the tub in which we were scrubbing the key. Well, to make a
-long story short, our play was very successful, and immediately
-afterward came supper. There were four long tables for the
-children; twenty sat at each. Ice-cream, cake, blancmange, and
-delicious sugar-plums, also oranges, etc., were served up ‘in
-style.’ We had our supper a little later. Three omnibus-loads went
-from my door; the last&mdash;the grown people&mdash;at nine o’clock.”</p></div>
-
-<p>In another letter to the same dear sister, our mother says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquottt"><p>“I have written a play for our doll theatre, and performed it
-yesterday afternoon with great success. It occupied nearly an hour.
-I had alternately to grunt and squeak the parts, while Chev<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_140" id="page_140"></a>{140}</span> played
-the puppets. [Chev was the name by which she always called our
-father; it was an abbreviation of Chevalier, for he was always to
-her the ‘knight without reproach or fear.’] The effect was really
-extremely good. The spectators were in a dark room, and the little
-theatre, lighted by a lamp from the top, looked very pretty.”</p></div>
-
-<p>This may have been the play of “Beauty and the Beast,” of which the
-manuscript is unhappily lost. I can recall but one passage:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“But he thought on ‘Beauty’s’ flower,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And he popped into a bower,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And he plucked the fairest rose<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">That grew beneath his nose.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I remember the theatre well, and the puppets. They were quite unearthly
-in their beauty,&mdash;all except the “Beast,” a strange, fur-covered
-monstrosity. The “Prince” was gilded in a most enchanting manner, and
-his mustache curled with an expression of royal pride. I have seen no
-other prince like him.</p>
-
-<p>All this was at Green Peace; but many as are the associations with her
-beloved presence there, it is at the Valley that I most constantly
-picture our mother. She loved<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_141" id="page_141"></a>{141}</span> the Valley more than any other place on
-earth, I think; so it is always pleasant to fancy her there. Study
-formed always an important part of her life. It was her delight and
-recreation, when wearied with household cares, to plunge into German
-metaphysics, or into the works of the Latin poets, whom she greatly
-loved. She has told, in one of her own poems, how she used to sit under
-the apple-trees with her favorite poet,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Here amid shadows, lovingly embracing,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Dropt from above by apple-trees unfruitful,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">With a chance scholar, caught and held to help me,<br /></span>
-<span class="i5">Read I in Horace,” etc.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But I do not think she had great need of the “chance scholar.” I
-remember the book well,&mdash;two great brown volumes, morocco-bound, with
-“Horatius Ed. Orelli” on the back. We naturally supposed this to be the
-writer’s entire name; and to this day, ‘Quintus Horatius Flaccus’
-(though I have nothing to say against its authenticity) does not seem to
-me as <i>real</i> a name as “Horatius Ed. Orelli.”</p>
-
-<p>Our mother’s books,&mdash;alas that we should<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_142" id="page_142"></a>{142}</span> have been so familiar with the
-outside of them, and have known so little of the inside! There was
-Tacitus, who was high-shouldered and pleasant to handle, being bound in
-smooth brown calf. There was Kant, who could not spell his own name (we
-thought it ought to begin with a C!). There was Spinoza, whom we fancied
-a hunchback, with a long, thin, vibrating nose. (“What’s in a name?” A
-great deal, dear Juliet, I assure you.) Fichte had a sneezing sort of
-face, with the nose all “squinnied up,” as we used to say; and as for
-Hilpert, who wrote the great German dictionary, there can be no
-reasonable doubt that he was a cripple and went on crutches, though I
-have no authority to give for the fact beyond the resemblance of his
-name to the Scotch verb “hirple,” meaning “to hobble.”</p>
-
-<p>Very, very much our mother loved her books. Yet how quickly were they
-laid aside when any head was bumped, any knee scratched, any finger cut!
-When we tumbled down and hurt ourselves, our father always cried, “Jump
-up and take another!” and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_143" id="page_143"></a>{143}</span> that was very good for us; but our mother’s
-kiss made it easier to jump up.</p>
-
-<p>Horace could be brought out under the apple-trees; even Kant and Spinoza
-sometimes came there, though I doubt whether they enjoyed the fresh air.
-But our mother had other work besides study, and many of her most
-precious hours were spent each day at the little black table in her own
-room, where papers lay heaped like snowdrifts. Here she wrote the
-beautiful poems, the brilliant essays, the earnest and thoughtful
-addresses, which have given pleasure and help and comfort to so many
-people throughout the length and breadth of the land. Many of her words
-have become household sayings which we could not spare; but there is one
-poem which every child knows, at whose opening line every heart, from
-youth to age, must thrill,&mdash;“The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” Thirty
-years have passed since this noble poem was written. It came in that
-first year of the war, like the sound of a silver trumpet, like the
-flash of a lifted sword; and all men felt that this was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_144" id="page_144"></a>{144}</span> word for
-which they had been waiting. You shall hear, in our mother’s own words,
-how it came to be written:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquottt"><p>“In the late autumn of the year 1861 I visited the national capital
-in company with my husband Dr. Howe, and a party of friends, among
-whom were Governor and Mrs. Andrew, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Whipple, and
-my dear pastor Rev. James Freeman Clarke.</p>
-
-<p>“The journey was one of vivid, even romantic interest. We were
-about to see the grim Demon of War face to face; and long before we
-reached the city his presence made itself felt in the blaze of
-fires along the road where sat or stood our pickets, guarding the
-road on which we travelled.</p>
-
-<p>“One day we drove out to attend a review of troops, appointed to
-take place some distance from the city. In the carriage with me
-were James Freeman Clarke and Mr. and Mrs. Whipple. The day was
-fine, and everything promised well; but a sudden surprise on the
-part of the enemy interrupted the proceedings before they were well
-begun. A small body of our men had been surrounded and cut off from
-their companions; reinforcements were sent to their assistance, and
-the expected pageant was necessarily given up. The troops who were
-to have taken part in it were<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_145" id="page_145"></a>{145}</span> ordered back to their quarters, and
-we also turned our horses’ heads homeward.</p>
-
-<p>“For a long distance the foot-soldiers nearly filled the road. They
-were before and behind, and we were obliged to drive very slowly.
-We presently began to sing some of the well-known songs of the war,
-and among them&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">‘John Brown’s body lies a-mouldering in the grave.’<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">This seemed to please the soldiers, who cried, ‘Good for you!’ and
-themselves took up the strain. Mr. Clarke said to me, ‘You ought to
-write some new words to that tune.’ I replied that I had often
-wished to do so.</p>
-
-<p>“In spite of the excitement of the day I went to bed and slept as
-usual, but awoke next morning in the gray of the early dawn, and to
-my astonishment found that the wished-for lines were arranging
-themselves in my brain. I lay quite still until the last verse had
-completed itself in my thoughts, then hastily rose, saying to
-myself, ‘I shall lose this if I don’t write it down immediately.’ I
-searched for a sheet of paper and an old stump of a pen which I had
-had the night before, and began to scrawl the lines almost without
-looking, as I had learned to do by often scratching down verses in
-the darkened room where my little children were sleeping. Having
-completed this, I lay<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_146" id="page_146"></a>{146}</span> down again and fell asleep, but not without
-feeling that something of importance had happened to me.</p>
-
-<p>“The poem was published soon after this time in the Atlantic
-Monthly. It first came prominently into notice when Chaplain
-McCabe, newly released from Libby Prison, gave a lecture in
-Washington, and in the course of it told how he and his
-fellow-prisoners, having somehow become possessed of a copy of the
-‘Battle Hymn,’ sang it with a will in their prison, on receiving
-surreptitious tidings of a Union victory.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Our mother’s genius might soar as high as heaven on the wings of such a
-song as this; but we always considered that she was tied to our little
-string, and we never doubted (alas!) our perfect right to pull her down
-to earth whenever a matter of importance&mdash;such as a doll’s funeral or a
-sick kitten&mdash;was at hand.</p>
-
-<p>To her our confidences were made, for she had a rare understanding of
-the child-mind. We were always sure that Mamma knew “just how it was.”</p>
-
-<p>To her did Julia, at the age of five, or it may have been six, impart
-the first utterances<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_147" id="page_147"></a>{147}</span> of her infant Muse. “Mamma,” said the child,
-trembling with delight and awe, “I have made a poem, and set it to
-music!” Of course our mother was deeply interested, and begged to hear
-the composition; whereupon, encouraged by her voice and smile, Julia
-sang as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 332px;">
-<a href="images/music-a_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/music-a_sml.jpg" width="332" height="51" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>I had a lit-tle boy;
-He died when he was young.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 332px;">
-<a href="images/music-b_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/music-b_sml.jpg" width="332" height="50" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>As soon as he was dead,
-He walked upon his tongue!</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Our mother’s ear for music was exquisitely fine,&mdash;so fine, that when she
-was in her own room, and a child practising below-stairs played a false
-note, she would open her door and cry, “B <i>flat</i>, clear! not B natural!”
-This being; so, it was grievous to her when one day, during her precious
-study hour, Harry came and chanted outside her door:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Hong-kong! hong-kong! hong-kong!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_148" id="page_148"></a>{148}</span></p>
-
-<p>“Harry!” she cried, “do stop that dreadful noise!” But when the little
-lad showed a piteous face, and said reproachfully, “Why, Mamma, I was
-singing to you!” who so ready as our mother to listen to the funny song
-and thank the child for it?</p>
-
-<p>When ten-year-old Laura wrote, in a certain precious little volume bound
-in Scotch plaid, “Whence these longings after the infinite?” (I cannot
-remember any more!) be sure that if any eyes were suffered to rest upon
-the sacred lines they were those kind, clear, understanding gray eyes of
-our mother.</p>
-
-<p>Through all and round all, like a laughing river, flowed the current of
-her wit and fun. No child could be sad in her company. If we were cold,
-there was a merry bout of “fisticuffs” to warm us; if we were too warm,
-there was a song or story while we sat still and “cooled off.” We all
-had nicknames, our own names being often too sober to suit her laughing
-mood. We were “Petotty,” “Jehu,” “Wolly,” and “Bunks of Bunktown.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_149" id="page_149"></a>{149}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 248px;">
-<a href="images/illus10_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus10_sml.jpg" width="248" height="370" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Julia Romana Howe.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_150" id="page_150"></a>{150}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_151" id="page_151"></a>{151}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p>On one occasion our mother’s presence of mind saved the life of the
-child Laura, then a baby of two years old. We were all staying at the
-Institution for some reason, and the nursery was in the fourth story of
-the lofty building. One day our mother came into the room, and to her
-horror saw little Laura rolling about on the broad window-sill, the
-window being wide open; only a few inches space between her and the
-edge, and then&mdash;the street, fifty feet below! The nurse was, I know not
-where,&mdash;anywhere save where she ought to have been. Our mother stepped
-quickly and quietly back out of sight, and called gently, “Laura! come
-here, dear! Come to me! I have something to show you.” A moment’s
-agonized pause,&mdash;and then she heard the little feet patter on the floor,
-and in another instant held the child clasped in her arms. If she had
-screamed, or rushed forward, the child would have started, and probably
-would have fallen and been dashed to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>It was very strange to us to find other children holding their revels
-without their<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_152" id="page_152"></a>{152}</span> father and mother. “Papa and Mamma” were always the life
-and soul of ours.</p>
-
-<p>Our mother’s letters to her sister are delightful, and abound in
-allusions to the children. In one of them she playfully upbraids her
-sister for want of attention to the needs of the baby of the day, in
-what she calls “Family Trochaics”:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Send along that other pink shoe<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">You have been so long in knitting!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Are you not ashamed to think that<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Wool was paid for at Miss Carman’s<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">With explicit understanding<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">You should knit it for my baby?<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And that baby’s now a-barefoot,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">While your own, no doubt, has choice of<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Pink, blue, yellow&mdash;every color,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">For its little drawn-up toe-toes,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">For its toe-toes, small as green peas,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Counted daily by the mother,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">To be sure that none is missing!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Our mother could find amusement in almost anything. Even a winter day of
-pouring rain, which made other housewives groan and shake their heads at
-thought of the washing, could draw from her the following lines:&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_153" id="page_153"></a>{153}</span></p>
-
-<p>THE RAINY DAY.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>After Longfellow.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">The morn was dark, the weather low,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The household fed by gaslight show,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">When from the street a shriek arose:<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The milkman, bellowing through his nose,<br /></span>
-<span class="i6">Expluvior!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">The butcher came, a walking flood,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Drenching the kitchen where he stood:<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">“Deucalion is your name, I pray?”<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">“Moses!” he choked, and slid away.<br /></span>
-<span class="i6">Expluvior!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">The neighbor had a coach and pair<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">To struggle out and take the air;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Slip-slop, the loose galoshes went;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">I watched his paddling with content.<br /></span>
-<span class="i6">Expluvior!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">A wretch came floundering up the ice<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">(The rain had washed it smooth and nice),<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Two ribs stove in above his head,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">As, turning inside out, he said,<br /></span>
-<span class="i6">Expluvior!<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>No doubt, alas! we often imposed upon the tenderness of this dear
-mother. She was always absent-minded, and of this quality advantage was
-sometimes taken. One day,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_154" id="page_154"></a>{154}</span> when guests were dining with her, Harry came
-and asked if he might do something that happened to be against the
-rules. “No, dear,” said our mother, and went on with the conversation.
-In a few moments Harry was at her elbow again with the same question,
-and received the same answer. This was repeated an indefinite number of
-times; at length our mother awoke suddenly to the absurdity of it, and,
-turning to the child, said: “Harry, what do you mean by asking me this
-question over and over again, when I have said ‘no’ each time?”
-“Because,” was the reply, “Flossy said that if I asked often enough, you
-might say ‘yes!’<span class="lftspc">”</span></p>
-
-<p>I am glad to say that our mother did <i>not</i> “say yes” on this occasion.
-But, on the other hand, Maud was not whipped for taking the cherries,
-when she needed a whipping sorely. The story is this: it was in the
-silent days of her babyhood, for Maud did not speak a single word till
-she was two years and a half old; then she said, one day, “Look at that
-little dog!” and after that talked as well as any child. But if she<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_155" id="page_155"></a>{155}</span> did
-not speak in those baby days, she thought a great deal. One day she
-thought she wanted some wild cherries from the little tree by the
-stone-wall, down behind the corn-crib at the Valley. So she took them,
-such being her disposition. Our mother, coming upon the child thus,
-forbade her strictly to touch the cherries, showing her at the same time
-a little switch, and saying: “If you eat any more cherries, I shall have
-to whip you with this switch!” She went into the house, and forgot the
-incident. But presently Maud appeared, with a bunch of cherries in one
-hand and the switch in the other. Fixing her great blue eyes on our
-mother with earnest meaning, she put the cherries in her mouth, and then
-held out the switch. Alas! and our mother&mdash;did&mdash;not&mdash;whip her! I mention
-this merely to show that our mother was (and, indeed, is) mortal. But
-Maud was the baby, and the prettiest thing in the world, and had a way
-with her that was very hard to resist.</p>
-
-<p>It was worth while to have measles and things of that sort, not because
-one had<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_156" id="page_156"></a>{156}</span> stewed prunes and cream-toast&mdash;oh, no!&mdash;but because our mother
-sat by us, and sang “Lord Thomas and Fair Elinor,” or some mystic
-ballad.</p>
-
-<p>The walks with her are never to be forgotten,&mdash;twilight walks round the
-hill behind the house, with the wonderful sunset deepening over the bay,
-turning all the world to gold and jewels; or through the Valley itself,
-the lovely wild glen, with its waterfall and its murmuring stream, and
-the solemn Norway firs, with their warning fingers. The stream was clear
-as crystal, its rocky banks fringed with jewel-weed and rushes; the
-level sward was smooth and green as emerald. By the waterfall stood an
-old mill, whose black walls looked down on a deep brown pool, into which
-the foaming cascade fell with a musical, rushing sound. I have described
-the Valley very fully elsewhere,<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> but cannot resist dwelling on its
-beauty again in connection with our mother,&mdash;who loved so to wander
-through it, or to sit with her work under the huge ash-tree in the
-middle, where<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_157" id="page_157"></a>{157}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 343px;">
-<a href="images/illus11_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus11_sml.jpg" width="343" height="492" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Julia Ward Howe.</span></p>
-
-<p>(From a recent photograph.)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_158" id="page_158"></a>{158}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_159" id="page_159"></a>{159}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p class="nind">our father had placed seats and a rustic table. Here, and in the lovely,
-lonely fields, as we walked, our mother talked with us, and we might
-share the rich treasures of her thought.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“And oh the words that fell from her mouth<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Were words of wonder and words of truth!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">One such word, dropped in the course of conversation as the maiden in
-the fairy-story dropped diamonds and pearls, comes now to my mind, and I
-shall write it here because it is good to think of and to say over to
-one’s self:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“I gave my son a palace<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">And a kingdom to control,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The palace of his body,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">The kingdom of his soul.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the Valley, too, many famous parties and picnics were given. The
-latter are to be remembered with especial delight. A picnic with our
-mother and one without her are two very different things. I never knew
-that a picnic could be dull till I grew up and went to one where that
-brilliant, gracious presence was lacking. The games we<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_160" id="page_160"></a>{160}</span> played, the
-songs we sang, the garlands of oak and maple leaves that we wove,
-listening to the gay talk if we were little, joining in it when we were
-older; the simple feast, and then the improvised charades or tableaux,
-always merry, often graceful and lovely!&mdash;ah, these are things to
-remember!</p>
-
-<p>Our mother’s hospitality was boundless. She loved to fill the little
-house to overflowing in summer days, when every one was glad to get out
-into the fresh, green country. Often the beds were all filled, and we
-children had to take to sofas and cots: once, I remember, Harry slept on
-a mattress laid on top of the piano, there being no other vacant spot.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes strangers as well as friends shared this kindly hospitality. I
-well remember one wild stormy night, when two men knocked at the door
-and begged for a night’s lodging. They were walking to the town, they
-said, five miles distant, but had been overtaken by the storm. The
-people at the farm-house near by had refused to take them in; there was
-no other shelter near. Our mother hesitated a moment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_161" id="page_161"></a>{161}</span> Our father was
-away; the old coachman slept in the barn, at some distance from the
-house; she was alone with the children and the two maids, and Julia was
-ill with a fever. These men might be vagabonds, or worse. Should she let
-them in? Then, perhaps, she may have heard, amid the howling of the
-storm, a voice which she has followed all her life, saying, “I was a
-stranger, and ye took me in!” She bade the men enter, in God’s name, and
-gave them food, and then led them to an upper bedroom, cautioning them
-to tread softly as they passed the door of the sick child’s room.</p>
-
-<p>Well, that is all. Nothing happened. The men proved to be quiet,
-respectable persons, who departed, thankful, the next morning.</p>
-
-<p>The music of our mother’s life is still sounding on, noble, helpful, and
-beautiful. Many people may still look into her serene face, and hear her
-silver voice; and no one will look or hear without being the better for
-it. I cannot close this chapter better than with some of her own
-words,&mdash;a poem<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_162" id="page_162"></a>{162}</span> which I wish every child, and every grown person too,
-who reads this might learn by heart.</p>
-
-<h3>A PARABLE.</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“I sent a child of mine to-day:<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">I hope you used him well.”<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">“Now, Lord, no visitor of yours<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Has waited at my bell.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“The children of the millionaire<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Run up and down our street;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">I glory in their well-combed hair,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Their dress and trim complete.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“But yours would in a chariot come<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">With thoroughbreds so gay,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And little merry maids and men<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">To cheer him on his way.”<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Stood, then, no child before your door?”<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">The Lord, persistent, said.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">“Only a ragged beggar-boy,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">With rough and frowzy head.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“The dirt was crusted on his skin,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">His muddy feet were bare;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The cook gave victuals from within:<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">I cursed his coming there.”<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i1">What sorrow, silvered with a smile,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">Glides o’er the face divine?<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">What tenderest whisper thrills rebuke?<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">“The beggar-boy was mine!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_163" id="page_163"></a>{163}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.<br /><br />
-<small>OUR TEACHERS.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">I do not know why we had so many teachers. No doubt it was partly
-because we were very troublesome children. But I think it was also
-partly owing to the fact that our father was constantly overrun by needy
-foreigners seeking employment. He was a philanthropist; he had been
-abroad, and spoke foreign languages,&mdash;that was enough! His office was
-besieged by “all peoples, nations, and languages,”&mdash;all, as a rule,
-hungry,&mdash;Greeks, Germans, Poles, Hungarians, occasionally a Frenchman or
-an Englishman, though these last were rare. Many of them were political
-exiles; sometimes they brought letters from friends in Europe, sometimes
-not.</p>
-
-<p>Our father’s heart never failed to respond to any appeal of this kind
-when the applicant really wanted work; for sturdy beggars he had no
-mercy. So it sometimes happened<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_164" id="page_164"></a>{164}</span> that, while waiting for something else
-to turn up, the exile of the day would be set to teaching us,&mdash;partly to
-give him employment, partly also by way of finding out what he knew and
-was fit for. In this way did Professor Feaster (this may not be the
-correct spelling, but it was our way, and suited him well) come to be
-our tutor for a time. He was a very stout man, so stout that we
-considered him a second Daniel Lambert. He may have been an excellent
-teacher, but almost my only recollection of him is that he made the most
-enchanting little paper houses, with green doors and blinds that opened
-and shut. He painted the inside of the houses in some mysterious
-way,&mdash;at least there were patterns on the floor, like mosaic-work,&mdash;and
-the only drawback to our perfect happiness on receiving one of them was
-that we were too big to get inside.</p>
-
-<p>I say this is almost my only recollection of this worthy man; but candor
-compels me to add that the other picture which his name conjures up is
-of Harry and Laura<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_165" id="page_165"></a>{165}</span> marching round the dining-room table, each
-shouldering a log of wood, and shouting,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“We’ll kill old Feaster!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">We’ll kill old Feaster!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">This was very naughty indeed; but, as I have said before, we were often
-naughty.</p>
-
-<p>One thing more I do recollect about poor Professor Feaster. Flossy was
-at once his delight and his terror. She was so bright, so original,
-so&mdash;alas! so impish. She used to climb up on his back, lean over his
-shoulder, and pull out his watch to see if the lesson-hour were over. To
-be sure, she was only eight at this time, and possibly the scenes from
-“Wilhelm Tell” which he loved to declaim with republican fervor may have
-been rather beyond her infant comprehension.</p>
-
-<p>One day Flossy made up her mind that the Professor should take her way
-about something&mdash;I quite forget what&mdash;rather than his own. She set
-herself deliberately against him,&mdash;three feet to six!&mdash;and declared that
-he should do as she said. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_166" id="page_166"></a>{166}</span> poor Professor looked down on this fiery
-pygmy with eyes that sparkled through his gold-bowed spectacles. “I haf
-refused,” he cried in desperation, “to opey ze Emperor of Austria, mees!
-Do you sink I will opey <i>you?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Then there was Madame S&mdash;&mdash;, a Danish lady, very worthy, very
-accomplished, and&mdash;ugly enough to frighten all knowledge out of a
-child’s head. She was my childish ideal of personal uncomeliness, yet
-she was most good and kind.</p>
-
-<p>It was whispered that she had come to this country with intent to join
-the Mormons (of course we heard nothing of this till years after), but
-the plan had fallen through; she, Madame S&mdash;&mdash;, did not understand why,
-but our mother, on looking at her, thought the explanation not so
-difficult. She had a religion of her own, this poor, good, ugly dame. It
-was probably an entirely harmless one, though she startled our mother
-one day by approving the action of certain fanatics who had killed one
-of their number (by his own consent) because he had a devil. “If he did<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_167" id="page_167"></a>{167}</span>
-have a devil,” quoth Madame, beaming mildly over the purple
-morning-glory she was crocheting, “it may have been a good thing that he
-was killed.”</p>
-
-<p>As I say, this startled our mother, who began to wonder what would
-happen if Madame S&mdash;&mdash; should take it into her head that any of our
-family was possessed by a devil; but neither poison nor dagger appeared,
-and Madame was never anything but the meekest of women.</p>
-
-<p>I must not forget to say that before she began to teach she had wished
-to become a lecturer. She had a lecture all ready; it began with a
-poetical outburst, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“I am a Dane! I am a Dane!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">I am not ashamed of the royal name!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">But we never heard of its being delivered. I find this mention of Madame
-S&mdash;&mdash; in a letter from our mother to her sister:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Danish woman very ugly,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">But remarkably instructive,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Drawing, painting, French, and German,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Fancy-work of all descriptions,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">With geography and grammar.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">She will teach for very little,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And is a superior person.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_168" id="page_168"></a>{168}</span></p>
-
-<p>I remember some of the fancy-work. There were pink-worsted roses, very
-wonderful,&mdash;really not at all like the common roses one sees in gardens.
-You wound the worsted round and round, spirally, and then you ran your
-needle down through the petal and pulled it a little; this, as any
-person of intelligence will readily perceive, made a rose-petal with a
-dent of the proper shape in it. These petals had to be pressed in a book
-to keep them flat, while others were making. Sometimes, years and years
-after, one would find two or three of them between the leaves of an old
-volume of “Punch,” or some other book; and instantly would rise up
-before the mind’s eye the figure of Madame S&mdash;&mdash;, with scarlet face and
-dark-green dress, and a very remarkable nose.</p>
-
-<p>Flossy reminds me that she always smelt of peppermint. So she did, poor
-lady! and probably took it for its medicinal properties.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was the wax fruit. You young people of sophisticated to-day,
-who make such things of real beauty with your skilful,
-kindergarten-trained fingers, what would you<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_169" id="page_169"></a>{169}</span> say to the wax fruit and
-flowers of our childhood? Perhaps you would like to know how to make
-them. We bought wax at the apothecary’s, white wax, in round flat cakes,
-pleasant to nibble, and altogether gratifying,&mdash;wax, and chrome-yellow
-and carmine, the colors in powder. We put the wax in a pipkin (I always
-say “pipkin” when I have a chance, because it is such a charming word;
-but if my readers prefer “saucepan,” let them have it by all means!)&mdash;we
-put it, I say, in a pipkin, and melted it. (For a pleasure wholly
-without alloy, I can recommend the poking and punching of half-melted
-wax.) Then, when it was ready, we stirred in the yellow powder, which
-produced a fine Bartlett color. Then we poured the mixture&mdash;oh,
-joy!&mdash;into the two pear or peach shaped halves of the plaster mold, and
-clapped them together; and when the pear or peach was cool and dry, we
-took a camel’s-hair brush and painted a carmine cheek on one side. I do
-not say that this was art, or advancement of culture; I do not say that
-its results were anything but hideous and abnormal;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_170" id="page_170"></a>{170}</span> but I do maintain
-that it was a delightful and enchanting amusement. And if there was a
-point of rapture beyond this, it was the coloring of melted wax to a
-delicate rose hue, and dipping into it a dear little spaddle (which, be
-it explained to the ignorant, is a flat disk with a handle to it) and
-taking out liquid rose-petals, which hardened in a few minutes and were
-rolled delicately off with the finger. When one had enough (say, rather,
-when one could tear one’s self away from the magic pipkin), one put the
-petals together; and there you had a rose that was like nothing upon
-earth.</p>
-
-<p>After all, were wax flowers so much more hideous, I wonder, than some
-things one sees to-day? Why is it that such a stigma attaches to the
-very name of them? Why do not people go any longer to see the wax
-figures in the Boston Museum? Perhaps they are not there now; perhaps
-they are grown forlorn and dilapidated&mdash;indeed, they never were very
-splendid!&mdash;and have been hustled away into some dim lumber-room, from
-whose corners they glare out at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_171" id="page_171"></a>{171}</span> errant call-boy of the theatre, and
-frighten him into fits. Daniel Lambert, in scarlet waistcoat and
-knee-breeches! the “Drunkard’s Career,” the bare recollection of which
-brings a thrill of horror,&mdash;there was one child at least who regarded
-you as miracles of art!</p>
-
-<p>Speaking of wax reminds me of Monsieur N&mdash;&mdash;, who gave us, I am inclined
-to think, our first French lessons, besides those we received from our
-mother. He was a very French Frenchman, with blond mustache and imperial
-waxed à la Louis Napoleon, and a military carriage. He had been a
-soldier, and taught fencing as well as French, though not to us. This
-unhappy gentleman had married a Smyrniote woman, out of gratitude to her
-family, who had rescued him from some pressing danger. Apparently he did
-them a great service by marrying the young woman and taking her away,
-for she had a violent temper,&mdash;was, in short, a perfect vixen. The evils
-of this were perhaps lessened by the fact that she could not speak
-French, while her husband had no knowledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_172" id="page_172"></a>{172}</span> of her native Greek. It is
-the simple truth that this singular couple in their disputes, which
-unfortunately were many, used often to come and ask our father to act as
-interpreter between them. Monsieur N&mdash;&mdash; himself was a kind man, and a
-very good teacher.</p>
-
-<p>There is a tale told of a christening feast which he gave in honor of
-Candide, his eldest child. Julia and Flossy were invited, and also the
-governess of the time, whoever she was. The company went in two hacks to
-the priest’s house, where the ceremony was to be performed; on the way
-the rival hackmen fell out, and jeered at each other, and, whipping up
-their lean horses, made frantic efforts each to obtain the front rank in
-the small cortége. Whereupon Monsieur N&mdash;&mdash;, very angry at this
-infringement of the dignity of the occasion, thrust his head out of the
-window and shrieked to his hackman:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Firts or sekind, vich you bleece!” which delighted the children more
-than any other part of the entertainment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_173" id="page_173"></a>{173}</span>There was poor Miss R&mdash;&mdash;, whom I recall with mingled dislike and
-compassion. She must have been very young, and she had about as much
-idea of managing children (we required a great deal of managing) as a
-tree might have. Her one idea of discipline was to give us
-“misdemeanors,” which in ordinary speech were “black marks.” What is it
-I hear her say in the monotonous sing-song voice which always
-exasperated us?&mdash;“Doctor, Laura has had fourteen misdemeanors!” Then
-Laura was put to bed, no doubt very properly; but she has always felt
-that she need not have had the “misdemeanors” if the teaching had been a
-little different. Miss R&mdash;&mdash; it was who took away the glass eye-cup;
-therefore I am aware that I cannot think of her with clear and
-unprejudiced mind. But she must have had bitter times with us, poor
-thing! I can distinctly remember Flossy urging Harry, with fiery zeal,
-not to recite his geography lesson,&mdash;I cannot imagine why.</p>
-
-<p>Miss R&mdash;&mdash; often rocked in the junk with us. That reminds me that I
-promised to describe the junk. But how shall I picture<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_174" id="page_174"></a>{174}</span> that perennial
-fount of joy? It was crescent-shaped, or rather it was like a
-longitudinal slice cut out of a watermelon. Magnify the slice a
-hundred-fold; put seats up and down the sides, with iron bars in front
-to hold on by; set it on two grooved rails and paint it red,&mdash;there you
-have the junk! Nay! you have it not entire; for it should be filled with
-rosy, shouting children, standing or sitting, holding on by the bars and
-rocking with might and main,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Yo-ho! &nbsp; Here we go!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Up and down! &nbsp; Heigh-ho!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">Why are there no junks nowadays? Surely it would be better for us, body
-and mind, if there were; for, as for the one, the rocking exercised
-every muscle in the whole bodily frame, and as for the other, black Care
-could not enter the junk (at least he did not), nor weariness, nor
-“shadow of annoyance.” There ought to be a junk on Boston Common, free
-to all, and half a dozen in Central Park; and I hope every young person
-who reads these words will suggest this device to his parents or
-guardians.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_175" id="page_175"></a>{175}</span></p>
-
-<p>But teaching is not entirely confined to the archery practice of the
-young idea; and any account of our teachers would be incomplete without
-mention of our dancing-master,&mdash;of <i>the</i> dancing-master, for there was
-but one. You remember that the dandy in “Punch,” being asked of whom he
-buys his hats, replies: “Scott. Is there another fellah?” Even so it
-would be difficult for the Boston generation of middle or elder life to
-acknowledge that there could have been “another fellah” to teach dancing
-besides Lorenzo Papanti. Who does not remember&mdash;nay! who could ever
-forget&mdash;that tall, graceful figure; that marvellous elastic glide, like
-a wave flowing over glass? Who could ever forget the shrewd, kindly
-smile when he was pleased, the keen lightning of his glance when
-angered? What if he did rap our toes sometimes till the timorous wept,
-and those of stouter heart flushed scarlet, and clenched their small
-hands and inly vowed revenge? No doubt we richly deserved it, and it did
-us good.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_176" id="page_176"></a>{176}</span></p>
-
-<p>If I were to hear a certain strain played in the desert of Sahara or on
-the plains of Idaho, I should instantly “forward and back and cross
-over,”&mdash;and so, I warrant, would most of my generation of Boston people.
-There is one grave and courteous gentleman of my acquaintance, whom to
-see dance the shawl-dance with his fairy sister was a dream of poetry.
-As for the gavotte&mdash;O beautiful Amy! O lovely Alice! I see you now, with
-your short, silken skirts flowing out to extreme limit of crinoline;
-with your fair locks confined by the discreet net, sometimes of brown or
-scarlet chenille, sometimes of finest silk; with snowy stockings, and
-slippers fastened by elastic bands crossed over the foot and behind the
-ankle; with arms and neck bare. If your daughters to-day chance upon a
-photograph of you taken in those days, they laugh and ask mamma how she
-could wear such queer things, and make such a fright of herself! But I
-remember how lovely you were, and how perfectly you always dressed, and
-with what exquisite grace you danced the gavotte.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_177" id="page_177"></a>{177}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 335px;">
-<a href="images/illus12_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/illus12_sml.jpg" width="335" height="493" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Laura E. Richards.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_178" id="page_178"></a>{178}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_179" id="page_179"></a>{179}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p>So, I think, all we who jumped and changed our feet, who pirouetted and
-chasséed under Mr. Papanti, owe him a debt of gratitude. His hall was a
-paradise, the stiff little dressing-room, with its rows of shoe-boxes,
-the antechamber of delight,&mdash;and thereby hangs a tale. The child Laura
-grew up, and married one who had jumped and changed his feet beside her
-at Papanti’s, and they two went to Europe and saw many strange lands and
-things; and it fell upon a time that they were storm-bound in a little
-wretch of a grimy steamer in the Gulf of Corinth. With them was a
-travelling companion who also had had the luck to be born in Boston, and
-to go to dancing-school; the other passengers were a Greek, an Italian,
-and&mdash;I think the third was a German, but as he was seasick it made no
-difference. Three days were we shut up there while the storm raged and
-bellowed, and right thankful we were for the snug little harbor which
-stretched its protecting arms between us and the white churning waste of
-billows outside the bar.</p>
-
-<p>We played games to make the time pass;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_180" id="page_180"></a>{180}</span> we talked endlessly,&mdash;and in the
-course of talk it naturally came to pass that we told of our adventures,
-and where we came from, and, in short, who we were. The Greek gentleman
-turned out to be an old acquaintance of our father, and was greatly
-overjoyed to see me, and told me many interesting things about the old
-fighting-days of the revolution. The Italian spoke little during this
-conversation, but when he heard the word “Boston” he pricked up his
-ears; and when a pause came, he asked if we came from Boston. “Yes,” we
-all answered, with the inward satisfaction which every Bostonian feels
-at being able to make the reply. And had we ever heard, in Boston, he
-went on to inquire, of “un certo Papanti, maestro di ballo?” “Heard of
-him!” cried the three dancing-school children,&mdash;“we never heard of any
-one else!” Thereupon ensued much delighted questioning and
-counter-questioning. This gentleman came from Leghorn, Mr. Papanti’s
-native city. He knew his family; they were excellent people. Lorenzo
-himself he had never seen, as he left Italy so<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_181" id="page_181"></a>{181}</span> many years ago; but
-reports had reached Leghorn that he was very successful,&mdash;that he taught
-the best people (O Beacon street! O purple windows and brown-stone
-fronts, I should think so!); that he had invented “un piano sopra
-molle,” a floor on springs. Was this true? Whereupon we took up our
-parable, and unfolded to the Livornese mind the glory of Papanti, till
-he fairly glowed with pride in his famous fellow-townsman.</p>
-
-<p>And, finally, was not this a pleasant little episode in a storm-bound
-steamer in the Gulf of Corinth?<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_182" id="page_182"></a>{182}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.<br /><br />
-<small>OUR FRIENDS.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">We had so many friends that I hardly know where to begin. First of all,
-perhaps, I should put the dear old Scotch lady whom we called “D. D.”
-She had another name, but that is nobody’s business but her own. D. D.
-was a thousand years old. She always said so when we asked her age, and
-she certainly ought to have known. No one would have thought it to look
-at her, for she had not a single gray hair, and her eyes were as bright
-and black as a young girl’s. One of the pleasantest things about her was
-the way she dressed, in summer particularly. She wore a gown of white
-dimity, always spotlessly clean, made with a single plain skirt, and a
-jacket. The jacket was a little open in front, showing a handkerchief of
-white net fastened with a brooch of hair in the shape of a harp.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_183" id="page_183"></a>{183}</span>
-Fashions made no difference to D. D. People might wear green or yellow
-or purple, as they pleased,&mdash;she wore her white dimity; and we children
-knew instinctively that it was the prettiest and most becoming dress
-that she could have chosen.</p>
-
-<p>Another wonderful thing about D. D. was her store-closet. There never
-was such a closet as that! It was all full of glass jars, and the jars
-were full of cinnamon and nutmeg and cloves and raisins, and all manner
-of good things. Yes, and they were not screwed down tight, as jars are
-likely to be nowadays; but one could take off the top, and see what was
-inside; and if it was cinnamon, one might take even a whole stick, and
-D. D. would not mind. Sometimes a friend of hers who lived at the South
-would send her a barrel of oranges (she called it a “bar’l of awnges,”
-because she was Scotch, and we thought it sounded a great deal prettier
-than the common way), and then we had glorious times; for D. D. thought
-oranges were very good for us, and we thought so too. Then she had some
-very delightful and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_184" id="page_184"></a>{184}</span> interesting drawers, full of old daguerreotypes and
-pieces of coral, and all kinds of alicumtweezles. Have I explained
-before that “alicumtweezles” are nearly the same as “picknickles” and
-“bucknickles”?</p>
-
-<p>D. D.’s son was a gallant young soldier, and it was his hair that she
-wore in the harp-shaped brooch. Many of the daguerreotypes were of him,
-and he certainly was as handsome a fellow as any mother could wish a son
-to be. When we went to take tea with D. D., which was quite often, we
-always looked over her treasures, and asked the same questions over and
-over, the dear old lady never losing patience with us. And such jam as
-we had for tea! D. D.’s jams and jellies were famous, and she often made
-our whole provision of sweet things for the winter. Then we were sure of
-having the best quince marmalade and the clearest jelly; while as for
-the peach marmalade&mdash;no words can describe it!</p>
-
-<p>D. D. was a wonderful nurse; and when we were ill she often came and
-helped our mother in taking care of us. Then she<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_185" id="page_185"></a>{185}</span> would sing us her
-song,&mdash;a song that no one but D. D. and the fortunate children who had
-her for a friend ever heard. It is such a good song that I must write it
-down, being very sure that D. D. would not care.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“There was an old man. and he was mad,<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">And he ran up the steeple;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">He took off his great big hat.<br /></span>
-<span class="i3">And waved it over the people.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To D. D. we owe the preservation of one of Laura’s first compositions,
-written when she was ten years old. She gave it to the good lady, who
-kept it for many years in her treasure-drawer till Laura’s own children
-were old enough to read it. It is a story, and is called&mdash;</p>
-
-<h3>LOST AND FOUND.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquottt"><p>Marion Gray, a lovely girl of thirteen, one day tied on her gypsy
-hat, and, singing a merry song, bade good-by to her mother, and ran
-quickly toward the forest. She was the youngest daughter of Sir
-Edward Gray, a celebrated nobleman in great favor with the king,
-and consequently Marion had everything she wished for. When she
-reached<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_186" id="page_186"></a>{186}</span> the wood she set her basket down under a chestnut-tree,
-and climbing up into the branches she shook them till the ripe
-fruit came tumbling down. She then jumped down, and having filled
-her basket was proceeding to another tree, when all of a sudden a
-dark-looking man stepped out, who, when she attempted to fly,
-struck her severely with a stick, and she fell senseless to the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile all was in confusion at the manorhouse. Marion’s faithful
-dog Carlo had seen the man lurking in the thicket, and had tried to
-warn his mistress of the danger. But seeing she did not mind, the
-minute he saw the man prepare to spring out he had run to the
-house. He made them understand that some one had stolen Marion.
-“Who, Carlo, who?” exclaimed the agonized mother. Carlo instantly
-picked up some A-B-C blocks which lay on the floor, and putting
-together the letters that form the word “Gypsies,” looked up at his
-master and wagged his tail. “The Gypsies!” exclaimed Sir Edward;
-“alas! if the gypsies have stolen our child, we shall never see her
-again.” Nevertheless they searched and searched the wood, but no
-trace of her was to be found.</p>
-
-<p class="c">. . . . . . .</p>
-
-<p>“Hush! here she is! Isn’t she a beauty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! but what is her name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Marion Gray. I picked her up in the wood.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_187" id="page_187"></a>{187}</span> A splendid addition to
-our train, for she can beg charity and a night’s lodging; and then
-the easiest thing in the world is just to find out where they keep
-the key, and let us in. Hush! hush! she’s coming to.”</p>
-
-<p>These words were spoken by a withered hag of seventy and the man
-who had stolen her. Slowly Marion opened her eyes, and what was her
-horror to find herself in a gypsy camp!</p>
-
-<p>I will skip over the five long years of pain and suffering, and
-come to the end of my story. Five years have passed, and the new
-king sits on his royal throne, judging and condemning a band of
-gypsies. They are all condemned but one young girl, who stands with
-downcast eyes before him; but when she hears her doom, she raises
-her dark flashing eyes on the king. A piercing shriek is heard, the
-crown and sceptre roll down the steps of the throne, and Marion
-Gray is clasped in her father’s arms!</p></div>
-
-<p>Another dear friend was Miss Mary. She was a small, brisk woman, with
-“New England” written all over her. She used to stay with us a good
-deal, helping my mother in household matters, or writing for our father;
-and we all loved her dearly. She<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_188" id="page_188"></a>{188}</span> had the most beautiful hair, masses
-and masses of it, of a deep auburn, and waving in a lovely fashion. She
-it was who used to say, “Hurrah for Jackson!” whenever anything met her
-special approval; and we all learned to say it too, and to this day some
-of us cheer the name of “Old Hickory,” who has been in his grave these
-fifty years. Miss Mary came of seafaring people, and had many strange
-stories of wreck and tempest, of which we were never weary. Miss Mary’s
-energy was untiring, her activity unceasing. She used to make long
-woodland expeditions with us in the woods around the Valley, leading the
-way “over hill, over dale, thorough bush, thorough brier,” finding all
-manner of wild-wood treasures,&mdash;creeping-jenny, and ferns and mosses
-without end,&mdash;which were brought home to decorate the parlors. She knew
-the name of every plant, and what it was good for. She knew when the
-barberries must be gathered, and when the mullein flowers were ready.
-She walked so fast and so far that she wore out an unreasonable number
-of shoes in a season.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_189" id="page_189"></a>{189}</span></p>
-
-<p>Speaking of her shoes reminds me that at the fire of which I spoke in a
-previous chapter, at the Institution for the Blind, Miss Mary was the
-first person to give the alarm. She had on a brand-new pair of morocco
-slippers when the fire broke out, and by the time it was extinguished
-they were in holes. This will give you some idea of Miss Mary’s energy.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was Mr. Ford, one of the very best of our friends. He was a
-sort of factotum of our father, and, like The Bishop in the “Bab
-Ballads,” was “short and stout and round-about, and zealous as could
-be.” We were very fond of trotting at his heels, and loved to pull him
-about and tease him, which the good man never seemed to resent. Once,
-however, we carried our teasing too far, as you shall hear. One day our
-mother was sitting quietly at her writing, thinking that the children
-were all happy and good, and possessing her soul in patience. Suddenly
-to her appeared Julia, her hair flying, eyes wide open, mouth
-ditto,&mdash;the picture of despair.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_190" id="page_190"></a>{190}</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mamma!” gasped the child, “I have done the most dreadful thing! Oh,
-the most dreadful, terrible thing!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” exclaimed our mother, dropping her pen in distress; “what
-have you done, dear? Tell me quickly!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I cannot tell you!” sobbed the child; “I cannot!”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you set the house on fire?” cried our mother.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, worse than that!” gasped poor Julia, “much worse!”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you dropped the baby?”</p>
-
-<p>“Worse than that!”</p>
-
-<p>Now, there <i>was</i> nothing worse than dropping the baby, so our mother
-began to feel relieved.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me at once, Julia,” she said, “what you have done!”</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;I&mdash;” sobbed poor Julia,&mdash;“I pulled&mdash;I pulled&mdash;off&mdash;Mr. Ford’s wig!”</p>
-
-<p>There were few people we loved better than Tomty, the gardener. This
-dear, good man must have been a martyr to our pranks, and the only
-wonder is that he was able to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_191" id="page_191"></a>{191}</span> do any gardening at all. It was “Tomty”
-here and “Tomty” there, from morning till night. When Laura wanted her
-bonnet-strings tied (oh, that odious little bonnet! with the rows of
-pink and green quilled ribbon which was always coming off), she never
-thought of going into the house to Mary, though Mary was good and kind
-too,&mdash;she always ran to Tomty, who must “lay down the shovel and the
-hoe,” and fashion bow-knots with his big, clumsy, good-natured fingers.
-When Harry was playing out in the hot sun without a hat, and Mary called
-to him to come in like a good boy and get his hat, did he go? Oh, no! He
-tumbled the potatoes or apples out of Tomty’s basket, and put that on
-his head instead of a hat, and it answered just as well.</p>
-
-<p>Poor, dear Tomty! He went to California in later years, and was cruelly
-murdered by some base wretches for the sake of a little money which he
-had saved.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow we had not very many friends of our own age. I suppose one
-reason was that we were so many ourselves that there were always enough
-to have a good time.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_192" id="page_192"></a>{192}</span></p>
-
-<p>There were one or two little girls who used to go with us on the famous
-maying-parties, which were great occasions. On May-day morning we would
-take to ourselves baskets,&mdash;some full of goodies, some empty,&mdash;and start
-for a pleasant wooded place not far from Green Peace. Here, on a sunny
-slope where the savins grew not too thickly to prevent the sun from
-shining merrily down on the mossy sward, we would pitch our tent (only
-there was no tent), and prepare to be perfectly happy. We gathered such
-early flowers as were to be found, and made garlands of them; we chose a
-queen and crowned her; and then we had a feast, which was really the
-object of the whole expedition.</p>
-
-<p>It was the proper thing to buy certain viands for this feast, the home
-dainties being considered not sufficiently rare.</p>
-
-<p>Well, we ate our oranges and nibbled our cocoanut, and the older ones
-drank the milk, if there was any in the nut: this was considered the
-very height of luxury, and the little ones knew it was too much for
-them<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_193" id="page_193"></a>{193}</span> to expect. I cannot remember whether we were generally ill after
-these feasts, but I think it highly probable.</p>
-
-<p>In mentioning our friends, is it right to pass over the good
-“four-footers,” who were so patient with us, and bore with so many of
-our vagaries? Can we ever forget Oggy the Steamboat, so called from the
-loudness of her purring? Do not some of us still think with compunction
-of the day when this good cat was put in a tin pan, and covered over
-with a pot-lid, while on the lid was set her deadly enemy Ella, the fat
-King Charles spaniel? What a snarling ensued! what growls, hisses,
-yells, mingled with the clashing of tin and the “unseemly laughter” of
-naughty children!</p>
-
-<p>And Lion, the good Newfoundland dog, who let us ride on his back&mdash;when
-he was in the mood, and tumbled us off when he was not! He was a dear
-dog; but Fannie, his mate, was anything but amiable, and sometimes gave
-sore offence to visitors by snapping at their heels and growling.</p>
-
-<p>But if the cats and dogs suffered from us,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_194" id="page_194"></a>{194}</span> we suffered from José! O
-José! what a tyrannous little beast you were! Never was a brown donkey
-prettier, I am quite sure; never did a brown donkey have his own way so
-completely.</p>
-
-<p>Whether a child could take a ride or not depended entirely on whether
-José was in the mood for it. If not, he trotted a little way till he got
-the child alone; and then he calmly rubbed off his rider against a tree
-or fence, and trotted away to the stable. Of course this was when we
-were very little; but by the time the little ones were big enough to
-manage him José was dead; so some of us never “got even with him,” as
-the boys say. When the dearest uncle in the world sent us the
-donkey-carriage, things went better; for the obstinate little brown
-gentleman could not get rid of that, of course, and there were many
-delightful drives, with much jingling of harness and all manner of style
-and splendor.</p>
-
-<p>These were some of our friends, two-footers and four-footers. There were
-many others, of course, but time and space fail to tell of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_195" id="page_195"></a>{195}</span> them. After
-all, perhaps they were just like other children’s friends. I must not
-weary my readers by rambling on indefinitely in these long-untrodden
-paths; but I wish other children could have heard Oggy purr!<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_196" id="page_196"></a>{196}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.<br /><br />
-<small>OUR GUESTS.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="nind">Many interesting visitors came and went, both at Green Peace and the
-Valley,&mdash;many more than I can recollect. The visit of Kossuth, the great
-Hungarian patriot, made no impression upon me, as I was only a year old
-when he came to this country; but there was a great reception for him at
-Green Peace, and many people assembled to do honor to the brave man who
-had tried so hard to free his country from the Austrian yoke, and had so
-nearly succeeded. I remember a certain hat, which we younger children
-firmly believed to have been his, though I have since been informed that
-we were mistaken. At all events, we used to play with the hat (I wonder
-whose it was!) under this impression, and it formed an<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_197" id="page_197"></a>{197}</span> important
-element in “dressing up,” which was one of our chief delights.</p>
-
-<p>One child would put on Kossuth’s hat, another Lord Byron’s helmet,&mdash;a
-superb affair of steel and gold, which had been given to our father in
-Greece, after Byron’s death (we ought not to have been allowed to touch
-so precious a relic, far less to dress up in it!); while a third would
-appropriate a charming little square Polish cap of fine scarlet, which
-ought to have belonged to Thaddeus of Warsaw, but did not, I fear.</p>
-
-<p>What pleasant things we had to dress up in! There was our father’s
-wedding-coat, bright blue, with brass buttons; and the waistcoat he had
-worn with it, white satin with raised velvet flowers,&mdash;such a fine
-waistcoat! There were two embroidered crape gowns which had been our
-grandmother’s, with waists a few inches long, and long, skimp skirts;
-and the striped blue and yellow moiré, which our mother had worn in some
-private theatricals,&mdash;that was beyond description! And the white gauze
-with gold flounces&mdash;oh! and the peach-blossom silk with flowers all over
-it&mdash;ah!<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_198" id="page_198"></a>{198}</span></p>
-
-<p>But this is a digression, and has nothing whatever to do with our
-guests, who never played “dressing up,” that I can remember.</p>
-
-<p>One of our most frequent visitors at Green Peace was the great statesman
-and patriot, Charles Sumner. He was a very dear friend of our father,
-and they loved to be together whenever the strenuous business of their
-lives would permit.</p>
-
-<p>We children used to call Mr. Sumner “the Harmless Giant;” and indeed he
-was very kind to us, and had always a pleasant word for us in that deep,
-melodious voice which no one, once hearing it, could ever forget. He
-towered above us to what seemed an enormous height; yet we were told
-that he stood six feet in his stockings,&mdash;no more. This impression being
-made on Laura’s mind, she was used to employ the great senator as an
-imaginary foot-rule (six-foot rule, I should say), and, until she was
-almost a woman grown, would measure a thing in her own mind by saying
-“two feet higher than Mr. Sumner,” or “twice as high as Mr. Summer,” as
-the case might be. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_199" id="page_199"></a>{199}</span> can remember him carrying the baby Maud on his
-shoulder, and bowing his lofty crest to pass through the doorway.
-Sometimes his mother, Madam Sumner, came with him, a gracious and
-charming old lady. I am told that on a day when she was spending an hour
-at Green Peace, and sitting in the parlor window with our mother, Laura
-felt it incumbent upon her to entertain the distinguished visitor; so,
-being arrayed in her best white frock, she took up her station on the
-gravel path below the window, and filling a little basket with gravel,
-proceeded to pour it over her head, exclaiming, “Mit Humner! hee my
-ektibiton!” This meant “exhibition.” Laura could not pronounce the
-letter S in childhood’s happy hour. “Mamma,” she would say, if she saw
-our mother look grave, “Id you had? Why id you had?” and then she would
-bring a doll’s dish, or it might be a saucepan, and give it to her
-mother and say, with infinite satisfaction, “Dere! ’mooge you’helf wid
-dat!”</p>
-
-<p>Another ever welcome guest was John A. Andrew, the great War Governor,
-as we<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_200" id="page_200"></a>{200}</span> loved to call him. He was not governor in those days,&mdash;that is,
-when I first remember him; but he was then, as always, one of the most
-delightful of men. Who else could tell a story with such exquisite
-humor? The stories themselves were better than any others, but his way
-of telling them set every word in gold. The very sound of his voice made
-the air brighter and warmer, and his own delightful atmosphere of sunny
-geniality went always with him. That was a wonderful evening when at one
-of our parties some scenes from Thackeray’s “The Rose and the Ring” were
-given. Our mother was Countess Gruffanuff, our father Kutasoff Hedzoff;
-Governor Andrew took the part of Prince Bulbo, while Flossy made a
-sprightly Angelica, and Julia as Betsinda was a vision of rarest beauty.
-I cannot remember who was Prince Giglio, but the figure of Bulbo, with
-closely curling hair, his fine face aglow with merriment, and the magic
-rose in his buttonhole, comes distinctly before me.</p>
-
-<p>Who were the guests at those dinner-parties<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_201" id="page_201"></a>{201}</span> so well remembered? Alas! I
-know not. Great people they often were, famous men and women, who
-talked, no doubt, brilliantly and delightfully. But is it their
-conversation which lingers like a charm in my memory? Again, alas! my
-recollection is of finger-bowls, crimson and purple, which sang beneath
-the wetted finger of some kindly elder; of almonds and raisins, and
-bonbons mystic, wonderful, all gauze and tinsel and silver paper, with
-flat pieces of red sugar within. The red sugar was something of an
-anticlimax after the splendors of its envelope, being insipidly sweet,
-with no special flavor. The scent of coffee comes back to me, rich,
-delicious, breathing of “the golden days of good Haroun Alraschid.” We
-were never allowed to drink coffee or tea; but standing by our mother’s
-chair, just before saying good-night, we received the most exquisite
-dainty the world afforded,&mdash;a “coffee-duck,” which to the ignorant is
-explained to be a lump of sugar dipped in coffee (black coffee, <i>bien
-entendu</i>) and held in the amber liquid till it begins to melt<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_202" id="page_202"></a>{202}</span> in
-delicious “honeycomb” (this was probably the true ambrosia of the gods);
-and then we said good-night, and&mdash;and&mdash;went and begged the cook for a
-“whip,” or some “floating-island,” or a piece of frosted cake! Was it
-strange that occasionally, after one of these feasts, Laura could not
-sleep, and was smitten with the “terror by night” (it was generally a
-locomotive which was coming in at the window to annihilate her; Julia
-was the one who used to weep at night for fear of foxes), and would come
-trotting down into the lighted drawing-room, among all the silks and
-satins, arrayed in the simple garment known as a “leg-nightgown,”
-demanding her mother? Ay, and I remember that she always got her mother,
-too.</p>
-
-<p>But these guests? I remember the great Professor Agassiz, with his wise,
-kindly face and genial smile. I can see him putting sugar into his
-coffee, lump after lump, till it stood up above the liquid like one of
-his own glaciers. I remember all the “Abolition” leaders, for our own
-parents were stanch Abolitionists, and worked heart and soul for<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_203" id="page_203"></a>{203}</span> the
-cause of freedom. I remember when Swedish ships came into Boston Harbor,
-probably for the express purpose of filling our parlors with fair-haired
-officers, wonderful, magnificent, shining with epaulets and buttons.
-There may have been other reasons for the visit; there may have been
-deep political designs, and all manner of mysteries relating to the
-peace of nations I know not. But I know that there was a little
-midshipman in white trousers, who danced with Laura, and made her a bow
-afterward and said, “I tanks you for de polska.” He was a dear little
-midshipman! There was an admiral too, who corresponded more or less with
-Southey’s description,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“And last of all an admiral came,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">A terrible man with a terrible name,&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">A name which, you all must know very well,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Nobody can speak, and nobody can spell.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">The admiral said to Harry, “I understand you shall not go to sea in
-future times?” and that is all I remember about him.</p>
-
-<p>I remember Charlotte Cushman, the great actress and noble woman, who was
-a dear<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_204" id="page_204"></a>{204}</span> friend of our mother; with a deep, vibrating, melodious voice,
-and a strong, almost masculine face, which was full of wisdom and
-kindliness.</p>
-
-<p>I remember Edwin Booth, in the early days, when his brilliant genius and
-the splendor of his melancholy beauty were taking all hearts by storm.
-He was very shy, this all-powerful Richelieu, this conquering Richard,
-this princely Hamlet. He came to a party given in his honor by our
-mother, and instead of talking to all the fine people who were dying for
-a word with him, he spent nearly the whole evening in a corner with
-little Maud, who enjoyed herself immensely. What wonder, when he made
-dolls for her out of handkerchiefs, and danced them with dramatic
-fervor? She was very gracious to Mr. Booth, which was a good thing; for
-one never knew just what Maud would say or do. Truth compels me to add
-that she was the <i>enfant terrible</i> of the family, and that the elders
-always trembled when visitors noticed or caressed the beautiful child.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_205" id="page_205"></a>{205}</span></p>
-
-<p>One day, I remember, a very wise and learned man came to Green Peace to
-see our mother,&mdash;a man of high reputation, and withal a valued friend.
-He was fond of children, and took Maud on his knee, meaning to have a
-pleasant chat with her. But Maud fixed her great gray eyes on him, and
-surveyed him with an air of keen and hostile criticism. “What makes all
-those little red lines in your nose?” she asked, after an ominous
-silence. Mr. H&mdash;&mdash;, somewhat taken aback, explained as well as he could
-the nature of the veins, and our mother was about to send the child on
-some suddenly-bethought-of errand, when her clear, melodious voice broke
-out again, relentless, insistent: “Do you know, I think you are the
-ugliest man I ever saw in my life!” “That will do, Maud!” said Mr.
-H&mdash;&mdash;, putting her down from his knee. “You are charming, but you may go
-now, my dear.” Then he and our mother both tried to become very much
-interested in metaphysics; and next day he went and asked a mutual
-friend if he were really the ugliest man that<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_206" id="page_206"></a>{206}</span> ever was seen, telling
-her what Maud had said.</p>
-
-<p>Again, there was a certain acquaintance&mdash;long since dead&mdash;who was in the
-habit of making interminable calls at Green Peace, and who would talk by
-the hour together without pausing. Our parents were often wearied by
-this gentleman’s conversational powers, and one of them (let this be a
-warning to young and old) chanced one day to speak of him in Maud’s
-hearing as “a great bore.” This was enough! The next time the unlucky
-talker appeared, the child ran up to him, and greeted him cordially
-with, “How do you do, bore? Oh, you great bore!” A quick-witted friend
-who was in the room instantly asked Mr. S&mdash;&mdash; if he had seen the copy of
-Snyder’s “Boar Hunt” which our father had lately bought, thinking it
-better that he should fancy himself addressed as a beast of the forest
-than as <i>Borus humanus</i>; but he kept his own counsel, and we never knew
-what he really thought of Maud’s greeting.</p>
-
-<p>But of all visitors at either house, there<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_207" id="page_207"></a>{207}</span> was one whom we loved more
-than all others put together. Marked with a white stone was the happy
-day which brought the wonderful uncle, the fairy godfather, the
-realization of all that is delightful in man, to Green Peace or the
-Valley. Uncle Sam Ward!&mdash;uncle by adoption to half the young people he
-knew, but our very own uncle, our mother’s beloved brother. We might
-have said to him, with Shelley,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Rarely, rarely comest thou,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Spirit of delight!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">for he was a busy man, and Washington was a long way off; but when he
-did come, as I said, it was a golden day. We fairly smothered him,&mdash;each
-child wanting to sit on his knee, to see his great watch, and the
-wonderful sapphire that he always wore on his little finger. Then he
-must sing for us; and he would sing the old Studenten Lieder in his
-full, joyous voice; but he must always wind up with “Balzoroschko
-Schnego” (at least that is what it sounded like), a certain Polish
-drinking-song, in which he sneezed<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_208" id="page_208"></a>{208}</span> and yodeled, and did all kinds of
-wonderful things.</p>
-
-<p>Then would come an hour of quiet talk with our mother, when we knew
-enough to be silent and listen,&mdash;feeling, perhaps, rather than realizing
-that it was not a common privilege to listen to such talk.</p>
-
-<p>“No matter how much I may differ from Sam Ward in principles or
-opinion,” said Charles Sumner once, “when I have been with him five
-minutes, I forget everything except that he is the most delightful man
-in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>Again (but this was the least part of the pleasure), he never came
-empty-handed. Now it was a basket of wonderful peaches, which he thought
-might rival ours; now a gold bracelet for a niece’s wrist; now a
-beautiful book, or a pretty dress-pattern that had caught his eye in
-some shop-window. Now he came direct from South America, bringing for
-our mother a silver pitcher which he had won as a prize at a
-shooting-match in Paraguay. One of us will never forget being waked in
-the gray dawn of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_209" id="page_209"></a>{209}</span> summer morning at the Valley, by the sound of a
-voice singing outside,&mdash;will never forget creeping to the window and
-peeping out through the blinds. There on the door-step stood the fairy
-uncle, with a great basket of peaches beside him; and he was singing the
-lovely old French song, which has always since then seemed to me to
-belong to him:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Noble Châtelaine,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Voyez notre peine,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Et dans vos domaines<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Rendez charité!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Voyez le disgrace<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Qui nous menace,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Et donnez, par grace,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">L’hospitalité!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Toi que je révère,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Entends ma prière.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">O Dieu tutelaire,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Viens dans ta bonte,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Pour sauver l’innocence,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Et que ta puissance<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Un jour recompense<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">L’hospitalité!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">There is no sweeter song. And do you think we did not tumble into our
-clothes and rush down, in wrappers, in petticoats, in whatever gown
-could be most quickly put<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_210" id="page_210"></a>{210}</span> on, and unbar the door, and bring the dear
-wanderer in, with joyful cries, with laughter, almost with tears of pure
-pleasure?</p>
-
-<p>All, that was “long ago and long ago;” and now the kind uncle, the great
-heart that overflowed with love and charity and goodwill to all human
-kind, has passed through another door, and will not return! Be sure that
-on knocking at that white portal, he found hospitality within.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>And now it is time that these rambling notes should draw to a close.
-There are many things that I might still speak of. But, after all, long
-ago <i>is</i> long ago, and these glimpses of our happy childhood must
-necessarily be fragmentary and brief. I trust they may have given
-pleasure to some children. I wish all childhood might be as bright, as
-happy, as free from care or sorrow, as was ours.</p>
-
-<p class="c">THE END.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><p class="cb">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> I find it to be stone clover.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> In the book entitled “Queen Hildegarde.”</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's When I was your age, by Laura E. Richards
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