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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65036 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65036)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Young Folks Magazine, Vol. I, No. 1, March
-1902, by H. L. Coggins
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Young Folks Magazine, Vol. I, No. 1, March 1902
- An Illustrated Monthly Journal for Boys & Girls
-
-Editor: H. L. Coggins
-
-Release Date: April 09, 2021 [eBook #65036]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: hekula03, Mike Stember and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
- produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital
- Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK YOUNG FOLKS MAGAZINE, VOL. I, NO.
-1, MARCH 1902 ***
-
-
-
-
- YOUNG FOLKS MAGAZINE
-
- VOLUME 1 NUMBER 1
-
- 1902 MARCH
-
- _An_ ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY JOURNAL _for_ BOYS & GIRLS
-
- The Penn Publishing Company Philadelphia
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS FOR MARCH
-
-
- PAGE
- WITH WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE (Serial) W. Bert Foster 1
- Illustrated by F. A. Carter
-
- AT THE BEND OF THE TRAIL Otis T. Merrill 11
-
- TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW (Verse) Mackay 13
-
- A DAUGHTER OF THE FOREST (Serial) Evelyn Raymond 14
- Illustrated by Ida Waugh
-
- MARCH (Poem) Bayard Taylor 22
-
- WOOD-FOLK TALK J. Allison Atwood 23
- Illustrated by the Author
-
- LITTLE POLLY PRENTISS (Serial) Elizabeth Lincoln Gould 25
- Illustrated by Ida Waugh
-
- A RAMBLE IN EARLY SPRING Julia McNair Wright 31
-
- WITH THE EDITOR 32
-
- EVENT AND COMMENT 33
-
- IN-DOORS (Parlor Magic) Ellis Stanyon 34
-
- THE OLD TRUNK 36
-
- WITH THE PUBLISHER 37
-
-
- YOUNG FOLKS MAGAZINE
- _An Illustrated Monthly Journal for Boys and Girls_
-
- SINGLE COPIES 10 CENTS
- ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION $1.00
- Sent postpaid to any address
- Subscriptions can begin at any time and must be paid in advance
-
- Remittances may be made in the way most convenient to the sender,
- and should be sent to
-
- THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
- 923 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA.
-
-
- Copyright 1902 by The Penn Publishing Company
-
-
- Young Folks Magazine
-
- VOL. I MARCH 1902 No. 1
-
-
-
-
- WITH WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE
-
- By W. Bert Foster
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- Unwelcome Guests at the Three Oaks Inn
-
-All day the strident whistle of the locust had declared for a
-continuation of the parching heat. The meadows lay brown under the
-glare of the August sun; the roads were deep in powdery yellow dust.
-The cattle stood with sweating flanks in the shade of the oaks which
-bordered the stage track, and although the sun was now declining toward
-the summits of the distant mountains, all nature continued in the
-somnolence of a summer day.
-
-A huddle of sheep under a wagon shed and the lolling form of a big
-collie dog in the barnyard were the only signs of life about the Three
-Oaks Inn. Mistress and maids, as well as the guests now sheltered by
-its moss-grown roof, had retired to the cooler chambers, and Jonas
-Benson, the portly landlord, snored loudly in his armchair in the hall.
-Out of this hall, with its exposed beams of time-blackened oak and its
-high fanlight over the entrance, opened the main room, its floor sanded
-in an intricate pattern that very morning by one of the maids. Across
-the hall was the closed door of the darkened parlor.
-
-Had Jonas Benson been of a more wakeful mind this hot afternoon, it is
-quite likely that this narrative would never have been written. But
-he snored on while behind the closed door of the parlor were whispered
-words which, had they reached the ears of the landlord of the Three
-Oaks, would have put him instantly on the alert.
-
-The year was 1777, a fateful one indeed for the American arms in the
-struggle for liberty--a year of both blessing and misfortune for the
-patriot cause. Within its twelve months the Continental army achieved
-some notable victories; but it suffered, too, memorable defeats. It
-was the year when human liberty seemed trembling in the balance, when
-all nations--even France--stood aloof, waiting to see whether the
-star of the American Colonies was setting or on the ascendant. The
-British army, under Howe and Clinton, occupied New York. Washington
-and his little force lay near Philadelphia, then the capital of the
-newly-formed confederation. New Jersey--all the traveled ways between
-the two armies--was disputed territory, disturbed continually by a sort
-of guerilla warfare most hard for the peacefully-inclined farmers and
-tradespeople to bear.
-
-Spies of both sides in the great conflict infested the country:
-foraging parties, like the rain, descended upon the just and the
-unjust; and neighbors who had lived in harmony for years before the war
-broke out, now were at daggers’ points. The Tories had grown confident
-because of the many set-backs endured by the patriot forces. Many even
-prophesied that, when Burgoyne’s army, then being gathered beyond the
-Canadian border, should descend the valleys of upper New York and
-finally join Howe and Clinton, the handful of Americans bearing arms
-against the king would be fairly swept into the sea, or ground to
-powder between the victorious British lines.
-
-Jonas Benson was intensely patriotic, and the Three Oaks had given
-shelter oft and again to scouts and foraging parties of the Continental
-troops. The inn-keeper had given the pick of his horses to the army,
-reserving few but such nags as were positively needed for the coach
-which went down to Trenton at irregular intervals. There were more than
-his staid coach horses in the stable on this afternoon, however, and
-the fact was much to his distaste.
-
-There had arrived at the Three Oaks the evening before a private
-carriage drawn by a pair of handsome bays and driven by a most
-solemn-faced Jehu, whose accent was redolent of Bow Bells. With the
-carriage came a gentleman--a fierce, military-looking man, though
-not in uniform--who rode a charger, which, so Jonas told his wife,
-would have made a saint envious, providing the latter were a judge of
-horseflesh. Inside the carriage rode a very pretty girl of sixteen or
-seventeen, whose dress and appearance were much different from the
-plain country lasses of that region.
-
-“They’re surely gentle folk, Jonas,” Mistress Benson had declared. “The
-sweet child is a little lady--see how proud she holds herself. Law!
-it’s been a long day since we served real gentles here.”
-
-Jonas snorted disdainfully; he suspected that at heart his good
-wife had royalist tendencies. As for him, the American officers who
-sometimes made the Three Oaks their headquarters for a few days were
-fine enough folk. “I tell ye what, woman,” he said, “they may be great
-folk or not; one thing I do know. They possess great influence or
-they’d never gotten through the Britishers with them fine nags. And if
-the outposts weren’t so far away, I’m blessed if I believe they’d get
-away from here without our own lads having a shy at the horses.”
-
-But the Bensons were too busy making their guests comfortable to
-discuss them--or their horses--to any length. Colonel Creston Knowles
-was the name the gentleman gave, and the girl was his daughter, Miss
-Lillian. The driver of the carriage, who served the colonel as valet
-as well, was called William, and a more stony-faced, unemotional
-individual it had never been the fate of the Bensons to observe. It
-was utterly impossible to draw from this servant a word regarding his
-master’s business between the lines of the opposing armies.
-
-These visitors were not desired by Jonas. He kept a public house, and,
-for the sake of being at peace with everybody, his Tory neighbors
-included, he treated all guests who came to the Three Oaks with
-unfailing cordiality. But the presence of Colonel Knowles at this time
-was bound to cause trouble.
-
-The inn was on the road usually traversed by those in haste to reach
-Philadelphia, where, while Washington’s army was posted nearby,
-Congress held its session. Many a time in the dead of night there was
-the rattle of hoofs on the road, as a breathless rider dashed up to
-the door, and with a loud “Halloa” aroused the stable boy. Then in
-a few moments, mounted afresh, he would hurry on into the darkness.
-These dispatch-bearers of the American army knew they could trust mine
-host of the Three Oaks, and that a ridable nag could always be found
-somewhere in his stable.
-
-The very night Colonel Knowles arrived at the tavern there was an
-occurrence of this kind. And after the dispatch-bearer had gone, and
-Jonas and Hadley Morris, the stable boy, stood in the paved yard
-watching him disappear on the moonlit road, they saw a night-capped
-head at the colonel’s window.
-
-“We’ll have no peace, Had, while yon Britisher’s hereabout,” muttered
-the old man.
-
-“I wonder why he has come into this country, so far from New York?” was
-the boy’s observation. “He can’t be upon military service, though he be
-a colonel in his majesty’s army.”
-
-“He’s here for no good, mark that, Had,” grumbled Jonas. “I’d rather
-have no guests at the Three Oaks than men of his kidney.”
-
-“His daughter is a pretty girl, and kindly spoken.”
-
-“That may be--that may be,” testily. “You’re as shortsighted as my old
-wife, Had. You’ll both let this Master Creston Knowles throw dust in
-your eyes because he’s got a pretty daughter. Bah!”
-
-And Jonas stumbled back to bed, leaving Hadley Morris to retire to his
-couch on the loft floor of the stable.
-
-But had these well-founded suspicions been to any purpose, the
-inn-keeper surely would have remained awake on the afternoon our story
-opens, instead of lolling, sound asleep, in his wide chair in the hall.
-Behind the parlor door, not ten feet away from mine host of the Three
-Oaks, Colonel Creston Knowles was conversing in a low tone with his
-serving man.
-
-“And you say it happened twice during the night, sirrah?” queried
-the British officer, who spoke to everybody but his daughter with
-sternness.
-
-“Twice, hand it please ye, sir. Hi’m sure the stable was hopened once
-hafter the time you was hup, sir, hand another ’orse taken hout. My
-life! but Hi thought hit thieves hat first, sir--some o’ them murderin’
-cowboys; but the young lad has tends to the ’orses seemed to know them
-that came, hand they did not touch hour hanimals, sir.”
-
-“It’s a regular nest of rebels!” exclaimed the colonel, his brow black
-enough at the report. “Such places as this should be razed to the
-earth. The spies who report to this Mr. Washington and his brother
-rebels evidently have free course through the country. They even
-exchange their steeds here--and Malcolm’s troop lying less than six
-miles away this very day. William!”
-
-“Yes, sir?”
-
-The colonel beckoned him nearer and whispered an inaudible order in
-the man’s ear. There was no change of expression upon the servant’s
-countenance, and the command might have been welcome or distasteful as
-far as an observer could have told. When the colonel ceased speaking,
-William rose without a word and tiptoed cautiously to the door. On
-pulling this ajar, however, the lusty snoring of Jonas Benson warned
-him of the inn-keeper’s presence. He closed the door again, nodded to
-the colonel, and vaulted through one of the open windows, thus making
-his exit without disturbing the landlord.
-
-But although everybody about the tavern itself seemed to be slumbering,
-the colonel’s man found that he could not enter the stable without
-being observed. As he came out of the glare of sunshine into the half
-darkness of the wide threshing floor, the Englishman suddenly came upon
-a figure standing between him and the narrow window at the further
-end of the stable. It was the stable boy and he was just buckling the
-saddle-girth upon a nervous little black mare whose bit was fastened to
-a long halter hanging from one of the cross-beams.
-
-Hadley Morris was a brawny youth for his age, which was seventeen. He
-was by no means handsome, and few boys would be attractive-looking in
-the clothing of a stable boy. Yet there was that in his carriage, in
-the keenness of his eye, in the firm lines of his chin and lip, which
-would have attracted a second glance from any thoughtful observer.
-Hadley had been now more than a year at the Three Oaks Inn, ever since
-it had become too unpleasant for him to longer remain with his uncle,
-Ephraim Morris, a Tory farmer of the neighborhood. Hadley was legally
-bound to Ephraim, better known, perhaps, as “Miser Morris,” and, of
-course, was not permitted to join the patriot army as he had wished.
-The youth might have broken away from his uncle altogether had he so
-desired, but there were good reasons why he had not yet taken this
-decisive step.
-
-He had found it impossible to live longer under his uncle’s roof,
-however, and therefore had gone to work for Jonas Benson; but he still
-considered himself bound to his uncle, and Jonas grumblingly paid over
-to the farmer the monthly wage which the boy faithfully earned. Hadley
-found occasion oft and again to further the cause which in his soul he
-espoused. It was he rather than the landlord who saw to it that the
-fleetest horse in the stable was ready saddled against the expected
-arrival of one of those dispatch-bearers whose coming and going had
-disturbed Colonel Knowles the night before. As he now tightened the
-girth of the mare’s trappings she danced about as though eager to be
-footing it along the stage road toward the river.
-
-Hadley was startled by the sudden appearance of the colonel’s servant
-in the doorway of the barn.
-
-“So you are riding hout, too?” observed the latter, going toward the
-stalls occupied by his master’s thoroughbreds. “There’s a deal of going
-back and forth ’ere, hit seems to me.”
-
-“Oh, it’s nothing so lively as it was before the war broke out,” Hadley
-explained, good-naturedly. “Then the coaches went out thrice a week to
-Trenton, and one of the New York and Philadelphia stages always stopped
-here, going and coming. Business is killed and the country is all but
-dead now.”
-
-William grunted as he backed out one of the carriage horses and threw
-his master’s saddle upon it. “You’re going out yourself, I see.” Hadley
-said, observing that the man did not saddle the colonel’s charger.
-
-“Hi’ve got to give the beasts some hexercise if we’re goin’ ter lie
-’ere day hafter day,” grumbled William, and swung himself quickly into
-the saddle.
-
-The boy went to the open door and watched him ride heavily away from
-the inn, with a puzzled frown upon his brow. “He’s never going for
-exercise such a hot afternoon as this,” muttered the youth. “There!
-he’s put the horse on the gallop. He’s going somewhere a-purpose--and
-he’s in haste. Will he take the turn to the Mills, I wonder, or keep
-straight on for Trenton?”
-
-The trees which shaded the road hid horse and rider, and leaving the
-little mare dancing on the barn floor, Hadley ran hastily up the ladder
-to the loft, and then by a second ladder reached the little cupola,
-or ventilator, which Master Benson had built atop his barn. From this
-point of vantage all the roads converging near the Three Oaks Inn could
-be traced for several miles.
-
-Behind the cluster of tall trees which gave the inn its name, a road
-branched off toward the Mills. In a minute or less the watcher saw a
-horseman dash along this road amid a cloud of dust.
-
-“He’s bound for the Mills--and in a wonderful hurry. What was it Lafe
-Holdness told us when he was along here the other day? Something about
-a troop of British horse being at the Mills, I’ll be bound.” Then
-he turned toward the east and looked carefully along the brown road
-on which any person coming from the way of New York would naturally
-travel. “Well, there’s nobody in sight yet. If that fellow means
-mischief--Ah! but it’s six miles to the Mills and if he continues to
-ride like that on this hot day the horse will be winded long before he
-gets there.”
-
-He went down the ladders, however, with anxious face, and during the
-ensuing hour made many trips to the wide gateway which opened upon the
-dusty road. There was not a sign of life, however, in either direction.
-
-Meanwhile the tavern awakened to its ordinary life and bustle. The
-last rays of the sun slanted over the mountain tops and the shadows
-crept farther and farther across the meadows. The old collie arose
-and stretched himself lazily, while the tinkle of sheep bells and the
-heavier jangle which betrayed the approach of the cattle cut the warm
-air sharply. Even a breeze arose and curled the road dust in little
-spirals and rustled the oak leaves. Dusk was approaching to relieve
-panting nature.
-
-Jonas awoke with a start and came out upon the tavern porch to stretch
-himself. He saw Hadley standing by the gateway and asked:
-
-“Got the mare saddled, Had?”
-
-“Yes, sir. She’s been standing on the barn floor for an hour. One of
-the other horses has gone out, sir.”
-
-“Heh? How’s that?” He tiptoed softly to the end of the porch so as to
-be close above the boy. “Who’s been here?” he asked.
-
-“Nobody. But the colonel’s man took one of those bays and started for
-the Mills an hour ago.”
-
-“I d’know as I like the sound of that,” muttered Jonas. “I wish these
-folks warn’t here--that I do. They aint meanin’ no good--”
-
-“Hush!” whispered Hadley, warningly.
-
-From the wide tavern door there suddenly appeared the British colonel’s
-daughter. She was indeed a pretty girl and her smile was infectious.
-Even Jonas’ face cleared at sight of her and he hastened, as well as a
-man of his portliness could, to set a chair for her.
-
-“It is very beautiful here,” Miss Lillian said, “and so peaceful. I got
-so tired in New York seeing soldiers everywhere and hearing about war.
-It doesn’t seem as though anything ever happened here.”
-
-“I b’lieve something’s goin’ to happen b’fore long, though,” the
-landlord whispered anxiously to Hadley, and walked to the other end of
-the porch, leaving the two young people together.
-
-“It is usually very quiet about here,” Hadley said, trying to speak
-easily to the guest. He was not at all used to girls, and Miss Lillian
-was altogether out of his class. He felt himself rough and uncouth in
-her presence. “But we see soldiers once in a while.”
-
-“Our soldiers?” asked the girl, smiling.
-
-“No--not British soldiers,” Hadley replied, slowly.
-
-“Oh, you surely don’t call those ragamuffin colonists soldiers, do
-you?” she asked, quickly.
-
-A crimson flush spread from Hadley’s bronzed neck to his brow; but a
-little smile followed and his eyes twinkled. “I don’t know what you’d
-really call them; but they made your grenadiers fall back at Bunker
-Hill.”
-
-Miss Lillian bit her lip in anger; then, as she looked down into the
-stable boy’s face her own countenance cleared and she laughed aloud.
-“I don’t think I’ll quarrel with you,” she said. “You are a rebel, I
-suppose, and I am an English girl. You don’t know what it means to be
-born across the water, and--”
-
-“Oh, yes I do. I was born in England myself,” Hadley returned. “My
-mother brought me across when she came to keep house for Uncle Ephraim
-Morris--”
-
-“Who?” interposed Lillian, turning towards him again, with astonishment
-in both voice and countenance.
-
-“My mother.”
-
-“No, no! I mean the man--your uncle. What is his name?”
-
-“Ephraim Morris. He is a farmer back yonder,” and Hadley pointed over
-his shoulder. “My name is Hadley Morris.”
-
-Before Lillian could comment upon this, or explain her sudden interest
-in his uncle’s name, both were startled by an exclamation from the
-landlord at the other end of the porch.
-
-“Had! Had!” he called. “He’s coming.”
-
-Hadley left the gate at once and leaped into the road. Far down the
-dusty highway there appeared a little balloon of dust, and the faint
-ring of rapid hoofs reached their ears. Somebody was riding furiously
-toward the inn from the east. Lillian rose to look, too, and in the
-doorway appeared the military figure of her father. His face looked
-very grim indeed as he gazed, as the others were doing, down the road.
-
-The advancing horseman was less than a quarter of a mile away when, of
-a sudden, there sounded a single pistol shot--then another and another.
-It was a scattering volley, but at the first report those watching at
-the inn could see the approaching horse fairly leap ahead under the
-spur of its rider.
-
-“Ha! the scoundrels are after him!” cried the inn-keeper, his fat face
-paling.
-
-The colonel’s countenance expressed sudden satisfaction. “Go into
-the house, Lillian!” he commanded. “There will be trouble here in a
-moment.” He brought out from under his coat tails as he spoke a huge
-pistol such as was usually carried in saddle holsters at that day.
-
-Hadley Morris, from the centre of the road, did not see the colonel’s
-weapon. He only observed the approaching horseman in the cloud of dust,
-and knew him to be a dispatch-bearer aiming to reach the ferry and
-Washington’s headquarters beyond. In a moment there loomed up behind
-him a group of pursuers riding neck and neck upon his trail. They were
-British dragoons and the space between them and their prey was scarce a
-hundred yards.
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- RELATING A WILD NIGHT RIDE
-
-It did not take a very sharp eye to observe that the horse which
-the messenger bestrode was laboring sorely, while his pursuers were
-blessed with comparatively fresh mounts. The American had ridden long
-and hard, and his steed was in no shape for such a spurt of speed as
-it was put to now. The British had kept clear of this road for weeks,
-because of the foraging parties from Philadelphia, and, doubtless, the
-dispatch-bearer hoped to find at the Three Oaks those who would stand
-him well in this emergency.
-
-At least, there would be a fresh horse there, and perhaps a faithful
-man or two to help beat off the dragoons until he could escape with
-his precious charge. He had no thought that there was a still greater
-danger ahead of him. The dragoons were lashing and spurring their
-horses to the utmost; and now and again one took a potshot at him; but
-there on the porch of the old inn stood Colonel Knowles, waiting with
-all the calmness of a sportsman to bring the fleeing man to earth.
-
-Young Hadley Morris did not notice the colonel; he had forgotten his
-presence in his interest in the flight and pursuit. But Jonas Benson
-saw his guest’s big pistol and realized the danger to the approaching
-fugitive. Yet there seemed nothing he could do to avert the calamity.
-He dared not openly attack the colonel, for whether the dispatch-bearer
-escaped or no, the dragoons would be at the inn in a few moments, and,
-there being no such force of Americans in the neighborhood, they might
-wreak vengeance on him and his family. The old man was hard put to it,
-indeed, in this emergency.
-
-Not so Hadley, however. He was quick of thought and quite as brisk of
-action. The charge of galloping horse was but a short distance away,
-the American still a little in the lead, when the boy darted back to
-the heavy barred gate which shut the yard from the road. The barrier
-had been swung wide open and fastened with a loop of rope to a hook in
-the side of the house. He slipped this fastening and stood ready to
-shut the gate between the fugitive and his pursuers, and thus delay the
-latter for a possible few moments.
-
-If the dispatch-bearer got into the yard safely he could leap upon the
-back of the black mare now standing impatiently on the barn floor,
-and escape his pursuers through the fields and orchard back of the
-outbuildings. No ordinary horse would be able to leap the high gate,
-and Hadley did not believe the dragoons were overly well mounted. As
-the dispatch-bearer dashed up, foam flying from his horse’s mouth and
-the blood dripping from its flanks where the cruel spurs had done
-their work, it looked to Colonel Knowles as though the American would
-ride right by, and he raised his pistol in a deliberate intention of
-bringing the man to earth.
-
-But as he pulled the trigger old Jonas stumbled against him and the
-ball went wide of its mark. The shot did much harm, however, for it
-frightened the already maddened horse, which leaped to one side,
-pitching the man completely over its head upon the paving of the yard.
-The horse fell, too, but outside the gate, and Hadley was able to slam
-the barrier and drop the bar into place before the dragoons arrived.
-
-The explosion of the colonel’s pistol and that officer’s angry shout
-warned Hadley of the added and closer danger. He darted to the side of
-the fallen messenger. The poor fellow had struggled partly up and was
-tearing at his coat. His face was covered with blood, for he was badly
-injured by his fall; but one thought kept him conscious.
-
-[Illustration: HE DARTED TOWARD THE FALLEN MESSENGER]
-
-“The papers--the papers, lad!” he gasped. “For General
-Washington--quick!”
-
-But he had only half pulled the packet from his inner pocket when he
-dropped back upon the flagstones, and, with a groan, lay still.
-
-Hadley seized the precious packet and leaped to his feet. With a
-clatter of hoofs and amid a cloud of dust the dragoons arrived at the
-yard gate.
-
-“There he is! He’s down--down!” shouted the leader. “We’ve got him
-safe! Hi, there landlord! open your gate or we’ll batter it in!”
-
-“They’ve got him safe, that’s a fact,” muttered Hadley, in distress.
-“But--but they haven’t got the papers!”
-
-He turned swiftly and ran toward the barn.
-
-“There goes one of them running!” shouted a voice behind. Then a pistol
-exploded and Hadley leaped forward as though the ball had stung him,
-although it whistled far above his head.
-
-“Look out for that boy!” he heard Colonel Knowles say, and, glancing
-back, Hadley saw the officer leaning out of one of the windows which
-overlooked the yard. At a neighboring casement the fleeing youth saw
-Miss Lillian. Even at that distance, and in so perilous a moment,
-Hadley noted that the girl’s face was very pale and that she watched
-him with clasped hands and anxious countenance.
-
-One of the dragoons had dismounted and now unbarred the gate. Before
-Hadley reached the wide doorway of the great barn the soldiers were
-trooping through into the yard.
-
-“The boy has the papers--look after him, I tell you!” he heard the
-colonel shout. Then Hadley pulled the great door shut and fastened it
-securely on the inside. For an instant he could breathe.
-
-But only for an instant. The dragoons were at the door then, beating
-upon it with the hilts of their sabres and pistol-butts, demanding
-entrance. Hadley had no weapon had he desired to defend the barn from
-attack. And that would be a foolish attempt, indeed. It would be an
-easy matter for the dragoons to break down the fences and surround the
-barn so that he could not escape, and then beat in the door and capture
-him--and with him the papers. He did not know how valuable those
-documents might be; but the man now lying senseless in the inn yard had
-saved them at the risk of his life; the boy felt it his duty to do as
-much.
-
-Colonel Knowles had now come out into the yard and taken command of the
-attack. Evidently he was recognized by the British soldiers, despite
-his civilian’s dress. He gave orders for a timber to be brought to beat
-in the door, and Hadley likewise heard him send two of the soldiers
-around the barn to watch the rear. If the boy would escape it must be
-within the next few seconds.
-
-He ran back to the rear of the building. Here was another wide door and
-he flung it open. The soldiers had not appeared; but the doorsill was
-a good eight feet and more from the ground. The barn had been built
-on a hillside. Directly below the door was a pen in which hogs were
-kept. Eight feet was a good drop, and besides it would be impossible to
-escape the soldiers on foot.
-
-A crash sounded at the front of the building. The men had brought up
-the timber for a battering ram. The door would certainly be burst
-inward before many moments. Hadley ran back to the waiting mare that
-already seemed to share his own excitement. He freed her from the
-halter and sprang into the saddle. He dared not try getting past his
-enemies when the door fell and with a quick jerk of the rein he pulled
-the mare around. She trotted swiftly to the rear door which the boy had
-flung open; but when she saw the distance to the ground below, her ears
-went back and she crouched.
-
-“You’ve got to do it, Molly!” exclaimed the boy, desperately. He
-reached to the stanchion at his right hand and seized a riding-whip
-hanging there. As the mare continued to back, Hadley brought the lash
-down again and again upon her quivering flank. The poor beast was not
-used to such treatment, and in her rage and fright she forgot the
-danger ahead and leaped straight out from the open stable door.
-
-Hadley stood up in the stirrups when he felt her go. He knew where she
-would land, and he believed the feat would be without danger; but he
-was ready to kick out of the stirrups and save himself if the little
-mare missed her footing.
-
-Fortunately she landed just where her rider had planned. There was a
-pile of straw and barn scrapings below the door, and from this Black
-Molly rebounded as though from a mattress. She was not an instant
-in recovering herself, and, still frightened by the sting of the
-whip-lash, darted out through the orchard. Hadley flung away the whip,
-and, leaning forward, hugged her neck so as not to be swept off by the
-low branches of the apple trees.
-
-There was a wild halloa behind him. The dragoons sent to cut off his
-escape had arrived too late; but they emptied their pistols at the
-black mare and her young rider.
-
-“They won’t give up so easily,” Hadley muttered, not daring to look
-around while still in the orchard. “That Colonel Knowles would rather
-die than be outwitted by a boy. I’ll make right for the ferry, and
-perhaps I may meet Holdness somewhere on the road. I can give the
-papers up to him, and I know he’ll find some way of getting them to
-General Washington.”
-
-He pulled Black Molly’s head around and took a nearer slant for the
-road. The mare was more easily managed now, and when he reached the
-rail fence which divided the orchard from the highway his mount had
-forgotten her fright and allowed him to stop and fling down a part
-of the fence so that they could get through and down the bank into
-the road. Looking back before descending the bank, Hadley saw several
-horsemen streaming through the orchard behind him, and, more to be
-feared than these, was the party leaving the inn yard and taking to
-the very road out upon which he had come. At the head of this second
-cavalcade rode Colonel Knowles himself on his great charger, and
-Hadley’s heart sank. Black Molly was famed throughout the countryside
-for her speed; but that great beast of the colonel’s--evidently brought
-from across the sea, and a thoroughbred hunter--would be more than a
-match for the little mare in a long chase.
-
-“We must do our best, Molly,” cried the boy, slapping her side with his
-palm and riding down into the dusty road. “You can keep ahead of them,
-I know, for a short distance, and you must do your best now. It will
-soon be too dark for them to see us--that’s a blessing.”
-
-The little mare needed no spur or urging. She clattered along the
-darkening road with head down and neck outstretched, Hadley riding with
-a loose rein and letting her pick her own way over the track. He could
-trust to her instinct more safely than to his own sight. The oaks cast
-thick shadows across his path, and now the whole sky was turning a deep
-indigo, dotted here and there with star points. There was no moon until
-later, and he believed the darkness was more favorable to him than to
-his pursuers.
-
-He could hear the thunder of the hoofs behind him, however, and he
-patted Molly’s neck encouragingly and talked to her as she ran. “Go it,
-girl! you’ve got to go!” he said. “Just make your little feet fly.
-Remember the times I’ve rubbed you down, and fed you, and taken you to
-water. Just do your very prettiest, my girl, for it’s more than my life
-you’ve got to save--it’s these papers, whatever they be.”
-
-And the little mare seemed to understand what he said, for she strained
-every effort for speed. She fairly skimmed over the ground, and for the
-first mile or more the hoof-beats gained not at all upon them. Then, to
-Hadley’s straining ears, it seemed as though the pursuit grew closer.
-It was not a mob of hoof-beats which he heard, but the steady, unbroken
-gallop of one horse. And it took little intuition for the boy to know
-which this leading pursuer was. The great black charger, the colonel’s
-mount, had left the dragoons behind, and its stride was now shortening
-the distance rapidly between its master and himself.
-
-“Oh, Molly, run--run!” gasped the boy, digging his heels into the
-mare’s sides.
-
-Molly was doing her best, but the sound of the black horse’s hoofs grew
-louder. The road was not straight or Hadley might have looked back and
-seen the colonel bearing down upon him. But the officer could doubtless
-follow his prey by the sound of Molly’s feet, quite as accurately as
-Hadley could estimate his speed. At this thought, and hoping to put his
-pursuer at a disadvantage for the moment, the boy pulled the mare out
-upon the level sward beside the road. There Black Molly pattered along
-silently: but the boy could hear the thunder of pursuit growing louder
-and louder.
-
-Now that the clatter of his own mount’s hoofs were not in his ears,
-Hadley was suddenly aware of a new sound cutting the night air. And it
-was not from the rear, but from ahead--the loud complaint of ungreased
-axles: a low, heavy wagon was coming slowly along the road.
-
-“If it should be Holdness!” gasped the boy. “It sounds like his wagon.”
-
-Around another turn in the crooked road they flashed and then the
-creaking of the wheels was quite near. A great covered wagon loomed up
-in the dusk, and Hadley uttered a cry of joy.
-
-“Lafe! Lafe Holdness!” he shouted, while yet the wagon was some rods
-away.
-
-But the driver of the squeaking vehicle heard him, and there was a
-flash of light as he rose up on the footboard and held the lantern
-above his head.
-
-“Hi, there! slow down or ye’ll run over me!” drawled a nasal voice.
-
-“The British are after me--I’ve got dispatches!” shouted the boy,
-reining in the mare beside the wagon.
-
-“Had Morris, as I’m a livin’ sinner! What ye doin’ here?” Then the
-driver cocked his head and listened to the thud of hoofs behind the
-flying boy. “They’re arter ye close, lad--an’ Molly’s winded. Quick!
-there’s naught but straw in here. It’s your best chance.”
-
-The wagon was still creaking slowly along and Holdness did not stop his
-team. He dropped the lantern and dodged back to the rear of the wagon.
-There he quickly flung aside the end curtain and then returned to the
-driver’s seat.
-
-Hadley had ridden by, but the instant he saw the curtain raised he
-wheeled Molly about and aimed her for the end of the huge wagon.
-“Quick, girl! You’ve done it before,” muttered the boy, and the little
-mare obeyed. The driver did not bring his wagon to a stop, but it was
-moving very slowly. Molly had long since learned the trick expected of
-her, and she trotted up to the rear of the vehicle, rose in the air,
-and landed firmly on the straw-covered bottom.
-
-“Draw the curtain, Had, ’n’ keep yer hand on her nose,” commanded
-Holdness, the teamster, without turning his head.
-
-Already the boy had ordered the little mare to lie down and she had
-sunk upon the straw. He whipped down the curtain, fastened it, and then
-lay down beside the mare with his hand upon her velvety nose, ready to
-stifle any desire on her part to whinny when the pursuing horses should
-arrive.
-
-And they were here in a moment now. Colonel Knowles, on his great
-charger, ahead, and the company of dragoons not many rods behind.
-
-[TO BE CONTINUED]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- AT THE BEND OF THE TRAIL
-
- By OTIS T. MERRILL
-
-
-“Well, hurry back, boy. You’re rather green, you know, to be going out
-alone.” The captain winked at Sergeant Mills as Tom Ray turned towards
-his horse.
-
-There had been no fighting as yet, and Tom was rather disappointed,
-for, to tell the truth, it was love of adventure rather than patriotism
-that had induced him to join the little squad of cavalry then
-journeying through the heart of the Apache country. They had encamped
-in the little valley of the Salt River, in Arizona. The land was dry
-and parched. Even the hardy cactus was taking on a leathery hue.
-
-To Tom it was a monotonous view--the yellow earth: that everlasting
-Giant Cactus; and occasionally the tall, bleached form of a dead tree,
-reaching its arms despairingly upward from the dearth of life below.
-
-With some little impatience he urged the pony into a gallop. In an hour
-he must be at the fork of the Salt to receive Custer’s dispatches.
-Everybody had wondered why Tom Ray, the only one in the party who
-had never heard an Indian war-whoop, should have been chosen for the
-work. It was a case of eloquence. Tom pleaded, and the captain--who
-wasn’t much afraid of Indians himself--forgot his military caution and
-consented.
-
-The first two miles of the journey lay back along their own trail to
-the point where a long depression in the plain marked the bed of some
-old river. From there he must turn sharp to the right and make for the
-foot of the lone gray butte, about whose base wound the west branch of
-the Salt. He had started early, and it was not yet four o’clock when
-he reached the crossing of the low ground. He paused for a moment and
-looked about him.
-
-A large shadow rolled along the ground before him and caught his eye.
-From overhead came the shrill cry of an eagle--the same bird who, in
-spite of numerous rifle balls, had aroused the admiration of the whole
-party on the previous day, by its mad swoops in their direction.
-
-Tom cast a reluctant glance at the distant cottonwood and the huge pile
-of sticks saddled in its crotch. The old egg-collecting instinct welled
-up strongly within him, but he held the mustang’s head resolutely away.
-In his mind he already pictured the impatience of the old scout at the
-fork and, hardly daring to take a second look at the nest, he again
-brought the little pony to a full gallop.
-
-Cris Wood had been a bearer of government dispatches ever since the
-thriving settlement of Hopkins’ Bend could boast of a telegraph wire.
-His greeting for the “youngster,” as he termed Tom Ray, was that of an
-old friend:--
-
-“What have you been waiting for, t’ give the Indians a chance to scalp
-me?”
-
-Tom laughed as he looked at the scant fringe of gray beneath the rough,
-worn hat.
-
-“I guess they wouldn’t be paid for their trouble,” he answered, as he
-took the well-handled dispatches from the old scout.
-
-“No, not by me,” retorted the latter, grimly. “But, anyway, there’s
-only one lot of Indians around, and they’re way over at the crossing,”
-referring to a point on Tom’s return journey.
-
-“All right,” responded Tom, amused at the scout’s time-honored attempt
-to play on his nerves. “If I see them, I’ll give them the chase of
-their lives.”
-
-“You’ll be the front party, most likely, though.”
-
-A few more courtesies were tossed freely from one to the other,
-together with what little news had fallen in the way of both before
-they parted.
-
-Half an hour later, as the return road before him sank gently to the
-lower ground, Tom’s eyes were again drawn instinctively to the tall
-cottonwood. Though still distant, he could already see the watchful
-eagle silhouetted from its topmost point. The sun was yet high--he
-might as well have a look at the nest. With this Tom drew the horse’s
-head in the direction of the great cottonwood.
-
-The boy’s approach to the lofty tree was greatly resented by the pair
-of golden eagles who had chosen it as a site for their home. A little
-ball of cottony down showed itself over the side of the rude structure.
-There was at least one eaglet, and Tom knew then that it would be with
-no small danger to himself if he chose to investigate. Then there came
-to him the misty recollection of the tame eagle which Jack Warren, one
-of the cowboys, had brought into camp. With this bit of memory his
-hesitation vanished.
-
-The tree was bare and barked. Its lower branches had long since rotted
-and now lay on the ground crumbling. Rough knots remained, however,
-here and there, and by grasping these Tom was able to make the ascent.
-The old birds whirled round the tree in giant spirals. First one and
-then the other would suddenly swerve from the circle and sweep past the
-boy’s head so close that he would involuntarily throw up his arm in
-defence.
-
-When Tom was about thirty feet from the ground all thought of the
-infuriated birds was suddenly driven from his mind. At a distance of
-perhaps one hundred yards stood an unusually thick clump of cactus.
-In the midst of this, peering intently at him, was a dark, bronzed
-face--that of an Apache Indian. A wave of terror swept over the boy,
-and in his fright he imagined he could even discern the triumphant
-expression upon the swarthy visage, as it sank behind the dark barrier.
-
-Then all of a sudden he became cool. He looked for his horse. To his
-dismay he discovered that the animal had wandered some little distance
-from the tree. Then he realized his danger.
-
-If he descended at once it would be to certain death. His only hope lay
-in strategy.
-
-Immediately he again began the struggle upward. All the suppressed
-energy of the moment went into the grip of his hands as they took hold
-of the rough knots. The eagles became more demonstrative, and more than
-once the swish of a powerful wing caused him to duck his head. But of
-this he was hardly conscious. When at length he bent over the nest,
-under pretense of examining it, Tom’s eyes were in reality strained
-in an attempt to locate the enemy. He never knew whether the nest
-contained one or two eaglets.
-
-His mustang and the Indian were about the same distance from the tree.
-But how was he to reach the animal? A too sudden descent would arouse
-suspicion. At length, with every nerve on edge for the trial to come,
-he began to work his way down. The eagles, their courage increased with
-apparent victory, gave even freer utterance to their rage, and their
-shrieks as they swooped past his head rang in the boy’s ears for many
-a day afterward. On a sudden thought, as if in mockery, he took up the
-cries of the birds, imitating them by long, piercing whistles.
-
-Presently the sound varied, yet to such a slight degree that a listener
-might not have noted it. Tip, the pony, however, did seem to notice
-it, and at each call would lift his head impatiently and look in the
-direction of the tree. Finally, as if by a familiar impulse, he tossed
-his head in air, and walked slowly toward the well-known call.
-
-All the while Tom had kept his face in such a direction that the Indian
-could not have left his ambush without being discovered. The pony was
-now within twenty paces of the tree. By way of distracting the Indian’s
-attention, the boy waved his hat and shouted to an imaginary comrade.
-
-Then, fifteen feet from the ground, first throwing a quick glance
-at his steed, Tom allowed himself to drop. As he did so the dreaded
-war-whoop rang out from the distant clump. To his horror, an answering
-call came from just ahead of him. Once on the ground, he darted toward
-the horse. A cactus plant, which on ordinary occasions he would
-have given a wide berth, brushed sharply against him, yet, in his
-excitement, he hardly felt the pain it caused.
-
-In the next instant he had swung into the saddle and wheeled the pony’s
-head toward the camp. The first glance ahead, however, revealed the
-supple body of an Indian half concealed by a cactus bush. There was
-no choice. Striking his spurs into the pony, Tom dashed forward. The
-Indian suddenly dropped his rifle and crouched beside a Giant Cactus.
-As Tom and the mustang flew past he made a panther-like leap, and
-throwing his arms about the boy, tried to drag him from the saddle.
-Turning upon him, Tom seized the lithe arms and with all his strength
-tried to throw the enemy from him. But the grip of the savage was like
-that of a wild animal, and the boy’s most vigorous efforts failed to
-break it.
-
-While the Indian and boy were thus struggling, the mustang had made
-good some one hundred yards, in spite of the double burden. Though
-greatly excited, Tom thought of the six-shooter at his belt, but before
-he could reach it a quick movement of the savage pinned his arms to
-his side. The boy then worked his hand under the wiry arm which held a
-strangling grip on his neck. As he did so, his eyes met a sight that
-changed his purpose. He thought a moment of the savage clinging to him.
-Then, with all his strength, he wrapped his arms around the Indian and
-imprisoned him. The Indian was confused by the change of action, and,
-like a wild animal, fought to release himself, for by this time he,
-too, saw Sergeant Mills and three other approaching horsemen.
-
-A party of soldiers, wondering at the boy’s delay, had ridden out from
-the camp, and they were not a little surprised to see Tom galloping
-toward them, carrying what to them was a very odd looking burden. When,
-upon nearer approach, this object developed into a full-grown Apache
-Indian, their astonishment knew no bounds, and they hastened forward,
-lest the prisoner, in his fierce struggles, should escape them.
-
-Ten minutes later, the Indian, bound hand and foot, was brought before
-the captain, and at the same time Tom handed over the all-important
-dispatches. As he did so, the boy’s spirits reacted from their strained
-condition and his sense of humor asserted itself.
-
-“Well, captain,” he said, “I knew that you didn’t want me to be out
-alone, so I brought this Indian along, just to keep me company.”
-
-
-
-
- TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW
-
-
- If fortune, with a smiling face
- Strew roses on our way,
- When shall we stoop to pick them up?
- To-day, my friend, to-day.
- But should she frown with face of care,
- And talk of coming sorrow,
- When shall we grieve, if grieve we must?
- To-morrow, friend, to-morrow.
-
- --_Mackay_
-
-
-
-
- A DAUGHTER OF THE FOREST
-
- By Evelyn Raymond
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- The Storm
-
-“Margot! Margot!”
-
-Mother Angelique’s anxious call rang out over the water, once,
-twice, many times. But, though she shaded her brows with her hands
-and strained her keen ears to listen, there was no one visible and
-no response came back to her. So she climbed the hill again and,
-reëntering the cabin, began to stir with almost vicious energy the
-contents of a pot swinging in the wide fireplace. As she toiled she
-muttered and wagged her gray head, with sage misgivings.
-
-“For my soul! There is the ver’ bad hoorican’ will come, and the child
-so heedless. But the signs, the omens! This same day I did fall asleep
-at the knitting and waked a-smother. True, ’twas Meroude, the cat,
-crouched on my breast; yet what sent her, save for a warning?”
-
-Though even in her scolding, the woman smiled, recalling how Margot
-had jeered at her superstition; and that when she had dropped her bit
-of looking-glass the girl had merrily congratulated her on the fact;
-since by so doing, she had secured “two mirrors in which to behold such
-loveliness!”
-
-“No, no; not so. Death lurks in a broken glass; or, at the best, must
-follow seven full years of bad luck and sorrow.”
-
-On which had come the instant reproof:
-
-“Silly Angelique! When there is no such thing as luck, but all is of
-the will of God.”
-
-The old nurse had frowned. The maid was too wise for her years. She
-talked too much with the master. It was not good for women-kind to
-listen to grave speech or plague their heads with graver books. Books,
-indeed, were for priests and doctors; and, maybe, now and then, for men
-who could not live without them, like Master Hugh. She, Angelique, had
-never read a book in all her life. She never meant to do so. She had
-not even learned a single letter printed in their foolish pages--not
-she. Yet was not she a most excellent cook and seamstress? Was there
-any cabin in all that northland as tidy as that she ruled? Would
-matters have been the better had she bothered her poor brain with
-books? She knew her duty and she did it. What more could mortal?
-
-This argument had been early in the day--a day on which the master
-had gone away to the mainland and the house mistress had improved by
-giving the house an extra cleaning. To escape the soapsuds and the
-loneliness, Margot had also gone, alone and unquestioned; taking with
-her a luncheon of brown bread and cold fowl, her book and microscope.
-Angelique had watched the little canoe push off from the shore, without
-regret, since now she could work unhindered at clearing the room of the
-“rubbishy specimens” which the others had brought in to mess the place.
-
-Now, at supper time, perfect order reigned, and perfect quiet, as well;
-save for the purring of Meroude upon the hearth and the simmering of
-the kettle. Angelique wiped her face with her apron.
-
-“The great heat, and May but young yet. It means trouble. I wish--”
-
-Suddenly the cat waked from her sleep, and, with a sharp “meouw,”
-leaped to her mistress’s shoulder; who screamed, dropped the ladle,
-splashed the stew, and boxed the animal’s ears--all within a few
-seconds. Her nerves were already tingling from the electricity in the
-air, and her anxiety returned with such force that, again swinging the
-crane around away from the fire, she hurried to the beach.
-
-To one so weather-wise, the unusual heat, the leaden sky, and the
-intense hush were ominous. There was not a breath of wind stirring,
-apparently, yet the surface of the lake was already dotted by tiny
-white-caps, racing and chasing shoreward, like live creatures at
-play. Not many times, even in her long life in that solitude, had
-Angelique Ricord seen just that curious coloring of cloud and water,
-and she recalled these with a shudder. The child she loved was strong
-and skillful, but what would that avail? Her thin face darkened, its
-features sharpened, and, making a trumpet of her hands, she put all her
-force into a long, terrified halloo.
-
-“Ah-ho-a-ah! Margot--Mar-g-o-t--Margot!”
-
-Something clutched her shoulder, and with another frightened scream,
-the woman turned, to confront her master.
-
-“Is the child away?”
-
-“Yes, yes; I know not where.”
-
-“Since when?”
-
-“It seems but an hour, maybe two--three--and she was here, laughing,
-singing, all as ever. Though it was before the mid-day, and she went in
-her canoe, still singing.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-She pointed due east, but now into a gloom that was impenetrable. On
-the instant the lapping wavelets became breakers, the wind rose to a
-deafening shriek, throwing Angelique to the ground, and causing even
-the strong man to reel before it. As soon as he could right himself,
-he lifted her in his arms and staggered up the slope. Rather, he was
-almost blown up it and through the open door into the cabin, about
-which the furnishings were flying wildly. Here the woman recovered
-herself and lent her aid in closing the door against the tempest, a
-task that, for a time, seemed impossible. Her next thought was for her
-dinner-pot, now swaying in the fireplace, up which the draught was
-roaring furiously. Once the precious stew was in a sheltered corner,
-her courage failed again, and she sank down beside it, moaning and
-wringing her hands.
-
-“It is the end of the world!”
-
-“Angelique!”
-
-Her wails ceased. That was a tone of voice she had never disobeyed in
-all her fifteen years of service.
-
-“Yes, Master Hugh?”
-
-“Spread some blankets. Brew some herb tea. Get out a change of dry
-clothing. Make everything ready against I bring Margot in.”
-
-She watched him hurrying about, securing all the windows, piling wood
-on the coals, straightening the disordered furniture, fastening a
-bundle of kindlings to his own shoulders, putting matches in the pocket
-of his closely-buttoned coat, and she caught something of his spirit.
-After all, it was a relief to be doing something, even though the roar
-of the tempest and the incessant flashes of lightning turned her sick
-with fear. But it was all too short a task; and when, at last, her
-master climbed outward through a sheltered rear window, closing it
-behind him, her temporary courage sank again.
-
-“The broken glass! the broken glass! Yet who would dream it is my
-darling’s bright young life must pay for that and not mine, the old and
-careworn? Ouch! the blast! That bolt struck--and near! Ah, me! Ah, me!”
-
-Meroude rubbed pleadingly against her arm, and, glad of any living
-companionship, she put out her hand to touch him; but drew it back in
-dread, for his sur-charged fur sparkled and set her flesh a-tingle,
-while the whole room grew luminous with an uncanny radiance. Feeling
-that her own last hour had come, poor Angelique crouched still lower in
-her corner and began to say her prayers with so much earnestness that
-she became almost oblivious to the tornado without.
-
-Meanwhile, by stooping and clinging to whatever support offered, Hugh
-Dutton made his slow way beachward. But the bushes uprooted in his
-clasp and the bowlders slipped by him on this new torrent rushing to
-the lake. Then he flung himself face downward and cautiously crawled
-toward the Point of Rocks whereon he meant to make his beacon fire.
-
-“She will see it and steer by it,” he reflected; for he would not
-acknowledge how hopeless would be any human steering under such a
-stress.
-
-Alas! the beacon would not light. The wind had turned icy cold and
-the rain changed to hail which hurled itself upon the tiny blaze and
-stifled its first breath. A sort of desperate patience fell on the man,
-and he began again, with utmost care, to build and shelter his little
-stock of firewood. Match after match he struck, and with unvarying
-failure, till all were gone; and realizing at last how chilled and
-rigid he was growing, he struggled to his feet and set them into motion.
-
-Then there came a momentary lull in the storm and he shouted aloud, as
-Angelique had done:
-
-“Margot! Little Margot! Margot!”
-
-Another gust swept over the lake and island. He could hear the great
-trees falling in the forest, the bang, bang, bang, of the deafening
-thunder, as, blinded by lightning and overcome by exhaustion, he sank
-down behind the pile of rocks and knew no more.
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- SPIRIT OR MORTAL?
-
-The end of that great storm was almost as sudden as its beginning.
-
-Aroused by the silence that succeeded the uproar, Angelique stood up
-and rubbed her limbs, stiff with long kneeling. The fire had gone out.
-Meroude was asleep on the blankets spread for Margot, who had not
-returned, nor the master. As for that matter, the house mistress had
-not expected that they ever would.
-
-“There is nothin’ left. I am alone. It was the glass. Ah! that the
-palsy had seized my unlucky hand before I took it from its shelf! How
-still it is. How clear, too, is my darling’s laugh--it rings through
-the room--it is a ghost. It will haunt me always, always.”
-
-Unable longer to bear the indoor silence, which her fancy filled with
-familiar sounds, she unbarred the heavy door and stepped out.
-
-“Ah! is it possible--can the sun be setting that way--as if there had
-been nothin’ happen?”
-
-Wrecks strewed the open ground about the cabin, poultry coops were
-washed away, the cow-shed was a heap of ruins, into which the trembling
-observer dared not peer. That Snowfoot should be dead was a calamity
-but second only to the loss of master and nursling.
-
-“Ah! my beast, my beauty. The best in all this northern Maine. That the
-master bought and brought in the big canoe for an Easter gift to his so
-faithful Angelique. And yet the sun sets as red and calm as if all were
-the same as ever.”
-
-It was, indeed, a scene of grandeur. The storm, in passing northward,
-had left scattered banks of clouds, now colored most brilliantly by
-the setting sun and widely reflected on the once more placid lake. But
-neither the beauty nor the sweet, rain-washed air, appealed to the
-distracted islander, who faced the west and shook her hand in impotent
-rage toward it.
-
-“Shine, will you? With the harm all done and nothin’ left but me, old
-Angelique. Pouf! I turn my back on you!”
-
-Then she ran shoreward with all speed, dreading what she might find,
-yet eager to know the worst, if there it might be learned. With her
-apron over her head, she saw only what lay straight before her, and so
-passed the Point of Rocks without observing her master lying behind it.
-But a few steps further she paused, arrested by a sight which turned
-her numb with superstitious terror. What was that coming over the
-water? A ghost! a spirit!
-
-Did spirits paddle canoes and sing as this one was singing?
-
- “The boatman’s song is borne along far over the water so blue,
- And, loud and clear, the voice we hear of the boatman so honest and true;
- He’s rowing, rowing, rowing along,
- He’s rowing, rowing, rowing along--
- He’s rowing and singing his song.”
-
-The subsiding wind wafted to her ears snatches of the jolly little
-ballad, in which one could catch the very rhythm and dip of oar or
-paddle. Still it was as well to wait and see if this were flesh or
-apparition before pronouncing judgment.
-
-It was certainly a canoe, snowy white and most familiar--so familiar
-that the watcher began to lose her first terror. A girl knelt in it,
-Indian-fashion, gracefully and evenly dipping her paddle to the melody
-of her lips. Her bare head was thrown back and her fair hair floated
-loose. Her face was lighted by the western glow, on which she fixed
-her eyes with such intentness that she did not perceive the woman who
-awaited her with such mixed emotions.
-
-[Illustration: A GIRL KNELT IN THE CANOE, INDIAN-FASHION]
-
-But Tom saw. Tom, the eagle, perched in the bow, keen of vision and of
-prejudice. Between him and old Angelique was a grudge of long standing.
-Whenever they met, even after a brief separation, he expressed his
-feelings by his hoarsest screech. He did so now, and, by so doing,
-recalled Margot from sky-gazing and his enemy from doubt.
-
-“Ah, Angelique! Watching for me? How kind of you. Hush, Tom; let her
-alone; good Angelique, poor Angelique.”
-
-The eagle flapped his wings with a melancholy disdain and plunged his
-beak in his breast. The old woman on the beach was not worth minding,
-after all, by a monarch of the sky--as he would be but for his broken
-wing--but the girl was worth everything, even his obedience.
-
-She laughed at his sulkiness, plying her paddle the faster, and soon
-reached the pebbly beach, where she sprang out, and, drawing her canoe
-out of the water, swept her old nurse a courtesy.
-
-“Home again, mother, and hungry for my supper.”
-
-“Supper, indeed! Breakin’ my heart with your run-about ways! and the
-hoorican, with ever’thin’ ruined; ever’thin’! The master--where’s
-he, I know not. The great pine broken like a match; the coops, the
-cow-house, and Snowfoot--Ah, me! yet the little one talks of supper!”
-
-Margot looked about her in astonishment, scarcely noticing the other’s
-words. The devastation of her beloved home was evident, even down on
-the open beach, and she dared not think what it might be further inland.
-
-“Why, it must have been a cyclone! We were reading about them only
-yesterday. And Uncle Hugh--did you say that you knew--where is he?”
-
-Angelique shook her head.
-
-“Can I tell anythin’, me? Into the storm he went and out of it he will
-come alive, as you have--if the good Lord wills,” she added, reverently.
-
-The girl sprang to the woman’s side, and caught her arm impatiently.
-
-“Tell me, quick! Where is he? where did you last see him?”
-
-“Goin’ into the hoorican, with wood upon his shoulder. To make a beacon
-for you. So I guess. But you--tell how you come out alive of all
-that?”--sweeping her arm over the outlook.
-
-Margot did not stop to answer, but darted toward the Point of Rocks,
-where, if anywhere, she knew her guardian would have tried his signal
-fire. In a moment she found him.
-
-“Angelique! Angelique! he’s here! Quick, quick!--He’s--oh! is he dead?
-is he dead?”
-
-There was both French and Indian blood in Mother Ricord’s veins, a
-passionate loyalty in her heart, and the suppleness of youth still in
-her spare frame. With a dash she was at the girl’s side and had thrust
-her away, to kneel herself and lift her master’s head from its hard
-pillow of rock.
-
-With swift, nervous motions she unfastened his coat and bent her ear to
-his breast.
-
-“’Tis only a faint--maybe shock. In all the world was only Margot,
-and Margot he believed was lost. Ugh! the hail. See, it is still
-here--look! water, and--yes, the tea! It was for you--ah!”
-
-Her words ended with a sigh of satisfaction as a slight motion stirred
-the features into which she peered so earnestly, and she raised her
-master’s head a bit higher. Then his eyes slowly opened and the dazed
-look gradually gave place to a normal expression.
-
-“Why, Margot! Angelique! What’s happened?”
-
-“Oh! Uncle Hugh! are you hurt? are you ill? I found you here behind the
-rocks, and Angelique says--but I wasn’t hurt at all. I wasn’t out in
-any storm--I didn’t know there had been one, that is, worth minding,
-till I came home--”
-
-“Like a ghost out of the lake. She was not even dead--not she. And she
-was singin’ fit to burst her throat while you were--well, maybe, not
-dead, yourself, but, near it.”
-
-At this juncture, Tom, the inquisitive, thrust his white head forward
-into the midst of the group, and, in her relief from her first fear,
-Margot laughed aloud.
-
-“Don’t, Tom! You’re one of the family, of course, and since none of the
-rest of us will die, to please that broken mirror, you may have to!
-Especially, if there’s a new brood out--”
-
-But here Angelique threw up her free hand with such a gesture of
-despair that Margot said no more, and her face sobered again,
-remembering that, even though they were all still alive, there might
-be suffering untold among her humbler woodland friends. Then, as Mr.
-Dutton rose, almost unaided, a fresh regret came:
-
-“That there should be a cyclone right here at home, and I not to see
-it! See! look! Uncle, look! you can trace its very path, just as we
-read. Away to the south there is no sign of it, nor on the northeast.
-It must have swept up to us out of the southeast and taken our island
-in its track. Oh! I wouldn’t have missed it for anything.”
-
-The man rested his hand upon her shoulder and turned her gently
-homeward. His weakness had left him as it had come upon him, with
-a suddenness like that of the recent tempest. It was not the first
-seizure of the kind which he had had, though neither of these others
-knew it, and the fact added a deeper gravity to his always thoughtful
-manner.
-
-“I am most thankful that you were not here; but where could you have
-been to escape it?”
-
-“All day in the long cave. To the very end of it, I believe, and see!
-I found these. They are like the specimens you brought the other day.
-They must be some rich metal.”
-
-“In the long cave, you? Alone? all day? Margot, Margot, is not the
-glass enough? but you must tempt worse luck by goin’ there!” cried
-Angelique, who had preceded the others on the path, but now faced
-about, trembling indignantly. What foolish creature was this who
-would pass a whole day in that haunted spot, in spite of the dreadful
-tales that had been told of it? “Pouf! but I wear out my old brain
-everlastin’, studying the charms that will save you from evil. And
-yet--”
-
-“You would do well to use some of your charms on Tom, yonder. He’s
-found an over-turned coop and looks too happy to be out of mischief.”
-
-The woman wheeled again and was off up the slope like a flash, where
-presently the king of birds was treated to the indignity of a sound
-boxing, which he resented with squawks and screeches, but not with
-talons, since under each foot he held the plump body of a fat chicken.
-
-“Tom thinks a bird in the hand is worth a score of cuffs! and
-Angelique’s so determined to have somebody die--I hope it won’t be he.
-A pity, though, that harm should have happened to her own pets. Hark!
-what is that?”
-
-“Some poor woodland creature in distress. The storm--”
-
-“That’s no sound belonging to the forest. But it is--distress!”
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- AN ESTRAY FROM CIVILIZATION
-
-They paused by the cabin door, left open by Angelique, and listened
-intently. She, too, had caught the alien sound, the faint, appealing
-halloo of a human voice--the rarest of all cries in that wilderness.
-Even the eagle’s screeches could not drown it, but she had had enough
-of anxieties for one day. Let other people look out for themselves;
-her precious ones should not stir afield again--no, not for anything.
-Let the evil bird devour the dead chickens, if he must, her place was
-in the cabin, and she rushed back down the slope, fairly forcing the
-others inward from the threshold where they hesitated.
-
-“’Tis a loon. You should know that, I think, and that they’re always
-cryin’ fit to scare the dead. Come! The supper’s waitin’ this long
-time.”
-
-With a smile that disarmed offense, Margot caught the woman’s shoulder
-and lightly swung her aside out of the way.
-
-“Eat, then, hungry one! I, too, am hungry, but--hark!”
-
-The cry came again, prolonged, entreating, not to be confounded with
-that of any forest wildling.
-
-“It’s from the north end of our own island!”
-
-The master’s ear was not less keen than the girl’s, and both had the
-acuteness of an Indian’s, but his judgment was better.
-
-“From the mainland, across the narrows.”
-
-Neither delayed, and a mutual impulse sent them toward the shore, but
-again Angelique interposed.
-
-“Thoughtless child, have you no sense? With the master just out of a
-faint that was nigh death itself! With nothin’ in his poor stomach
-since the mornin’, and your own as empty. Wait; eat; then chase loons,
-if you will.”
-
-Mr. Dutton laughed, though he also frowned, and cast a swift, anxious
-glance toward Margot. But she was intent upon nothing save answering
-that far-off cry.
-
-“Which canoe, uncle?”
-
-“Mine.”
-
-The devoted servant made a last protest, and caught the girl’s arm as
-it pushed the light craft downward into the water.
-
-“Ma petite, he is not fit. Believe me. Better leave others to their
-fate than that he should overtax himself again, so soon.”
-
-Margot was astonished. In all her life she had never before associated
-thought of physical weakness with her stalwart guardian, and a sharp
-fear of some unknown trouble shot through her heart.
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-The master had reached them, and now laid his own hand upon Angelique’s
-detaining one.
-
-“There, woman, that’s enough. The storm has shaken your nerves. If
-you’re afraid to stay alone, Margot shall stop with you. But let’s have
-no more nonsense.”
-
-Mother Ricord stepped back--away. She had done her best. Let come what
-might, her conscience was clear.
-
-A few seconds later the canoe pushed off over the now darkening water,
-and its inmates made all speed toward that point from which the cry had
-been heard, but was heard no more. However, the steersman followed a
-perfectly direct course, and if he were still weak from his seizure,
-his movements showed no signs of it, so that Margot’s fear for him was
-lost in the interest of their present adventure. She rhymed her own
-stroke to her uncle’s, and when he rested, her paddle instantly stopped.
-
-“Halloo! hal-l-oo!” he shouted, but as no answer came, said: “Now--both
-together.”
-
-The girl’s shriller treble may have had further carrying power than the
-man’s voice, for there was promptly returned to them an echoing halloo,
-coming apparently from a great distance. But it was repeated at close
-intervals, and each time with more distinctness.
-
-“We’ll beach the boat just yonder, under that tamarack. Whoever it is
-has heard and is coming back.”
-
-Margot’s impatience broke bounds, and she darted forward among the
-trees, shouting: “This way! this way! here we are--here!” Her peculiar
-life and training had made her absolutely fearless, and she would have
-been surprised by her guardian’s command to “Wait!” had she heard it,
-which she did not. Also, she knew the forest as other girls know their
-city streets, and the dimness was no hindrance to her nimble feet. In
-a brief time she caught the crashing of boughs, as some person, less
-familiar than she, blundered through the underbrush and finally came
-into view where a break in the timber gave a faint light.
-
-“Here! here! this way!”
-
-He staggered and held out his hands, as if for aid, and Margot clasped
-them firmly. They were cold and tremulous. They were, also, slender
-and smooth, not at all like the hands of any men whom she was used to
-seeing. At the relief of her touch, his strength left him, but she
-caught his murmured “Thank God! I--had--given up--”
-
-His voice, too, was different from any she knew, save her uncle’s. This
-was somebody, then, from that outside world of which she dreamed so
-much and knew so little. It was like a fairy tale come true.
-
-“Are you ill? There; lean on me. Don’t fear. Oh! I’m strong, very
-strong, and uncle is just yonder, coming this way. Uncle--uncle!”
-
-The stranger was almost past speech. Mr. Dutton recognized that at
-once and added his support to Margot’s. Between them they half led,
-half carried the wanderer to the canoe and lifted him into it, where
-he sank exhausted. Then they dipped their paddles and the boat shot
-homeward, racing with death. Angelique was still on the beach and
-still complaining of their foolhardiness, but one word from her master
-silenced that.
-
-“Lend a hand, woman! Here’s something real to worry about. Margot, go
-ahead and get the lights.”
-
-As the girl sprang from it, the housekeeper pulled the boat to a spot
-above the water, and, stooping, lifted a generous share of the burden
-it contained.
-
-It had not been a loon, then. No. Well, she had known that from the
-beginning, just as she had known that her beloved master was in no
-condition to go man-hunting. This one he had found was, probably, dead,
-any way. Of course. Somebody had to die--beyond chickens and such--had
-not the broken glass so said?
-
-Even in the twilight, Mr. Dutton could detect the grim satisfaction
-on her face, and smiled, foreseeing her change of expression when this
-seemingly lifeless guest should revive.
-
-They laid him on the lounge that had been spread with blankets for
-Margot, and she was already beside it, waiting to administer the herb
-tea which had, also, been prepared for herself, and which she had
-marveled to find so opportunely prepared.
-
-Mr. Dutton smiled again. In her simplicity the girl did not dream that
-the now bitter decoction was not a common restorative outside their
-primitive life, and in all good faith forced a spoonful of it between
-the closed lips.
-
-“After all, it doesn’t matter. The poor fellow is, doubtless, used to
-richer cordials, but it’s hot and strong and will do the work. You,
-Angelique, make us a pot of your best coffee, and swing round that
-dinner-pot. The man is almost starved, and I’m on the road to follow
-him. How about you, Margot?”
-
-“I? Oh!--I guess I’m hungry--I will be--see! He’s swallowing it--fast.
-Give me that bigger spoon, Angel--quick!”
-
-“What would you? Scald the creature’s throat? So he isn’t dead, after
-all. Well, he needn’t have made a body think so, he needn’t. There,
-Margot! you’ve messed him with the black stuff!”
-
-Indignantly brushing the child aside, the woman seized the cup and
-deftly administered its entire contents. The stranger had not yet
-opened his eyes, but accepted the warm liquid mechanically, and his
-nurse hurried to fill a bowl with the broth of the stew in the kettle.
-This, in turn, was taken from her by Margot, who jealously exclaimed:
-
-“He’s mine. I heard him first. I found him first; let me be the first
-he sees. Dish up the supper, please, and set my uncle’s place.”
-
-So, when a moment later, having been nearly choked by the more
-substantial food forced into his mouth, the guest opened his eyes, they
-beheld the eager face of a brown-skinned, fair-haired girl very close
-to his and heard her joyous cry:
-
-“He sees me! he sees everything! he’s getting well already!”
-
-He had never seen anybody like her. Her hair was as abundant as a
-mantle and rippled over her shoulders like spun gold. So it looked in
-the lamplight. In fact, it had never been bound nor covered, and what
-in a different social condition might have been much darker, had in
-this outdoor life become bleached almost white. The weather which had
-whitened the hair had tanned the skin to bronze, making the blue eyes
-more vivid by contrast and the red lips redder. These were smiling now,
-over well-kept teeth, and there was about the whole bearing of the maid
-something suggestive of the woodland in which she had been reared.
-
-Purity, honesty, freedom--all spoke in every motion and tone, and, to
-this observer, at least, seemed better than any beauty. Presently, he
-was able to push her too-willing hand gently away and to say:
-
-“Not quite so fast, please.”
-
-“Oh, uncle! hear him? He talks just as you do! Not a bit like Pierre,
-or Joe, or the rest.”
-
-Mr. Dutton came forward, smiling and remonstrating.
-
-“My dear, our new friend will think you quite rude, if you discuss him
-before his face so frankly. But, sir, I assure you she means nothing
-but delight at your recovery. We are all most thankful that you are
-here and safe. There, Margot; let the gentleman rest a few minutes.
-Then a cup of coffee may be better than the stew. Were you long without
-food, friend?”
-
-The stranger tried to answer, but the effort tired him, and with a
-beckoning nod to the young nurse, the woodlander led the way back to
-the table and their own delayed supper. Both needed it and both ate it
-rather hastily, much to the disgust of Angelique, who felt that her
-skill was wasted; but one was anxious to be off out-of-doors to learn
-the damage left by the storm, and the other to be back on her stool
-beside the lounge. When Mr. Dutton rose, the housekeeper left her own
-seat.
-
-“I’ll fetch the lantern, master. But that’s the last of Snowfoot’s
-good milk you’ll ever drink,” she sighed, touching the pitcher, sadly.
-
-“What! is anything wrong with her?”
-
-“The cow-house is in ruins; so are the poultry coops. What with falling
-ill yourself just at the worst time and fetchin’ home other sick folks,
-we might all go to wrack and nobody the better.”
-
-The familiar grumbling provoked only a smile from the master, who would
-readily have staked his life on the woman’s devotion to “her people,”
-and knew that the apparent crossness was not that in reality.
-
-“Fie, good Angelique! You are never so happy as when you’re miserable.
-Come on; nothing must suffer if we can prevent. Take care of our guest
-Margot; but give him his nourishment slowly at intervals. I’ll get some
-tools, and join you at the shed, Angelique.”
-
-He went out and the housekeeper followed with the lantern, not needed
-in the moonlight, but possibly of use at the fallen cow-house.
-
-They were long gone. The stranger dozed, waked, ate, and dozed again.
-Margot, accustomed to early hours, also slept soundly, till a fearful
-shriek roused her. Her patient was wildly kicking and striking at
-some hideous monster which had settled on his chest and would not be
-displaced.
-
-“He’s killing me! Help--help! Oh--a--ah!”
-
-
-[TO BE CONTINUED]
-
-
-
-
- MARCH
-
-
- With rushing winds and gloomy skies
- The dark and stubborn Winter dies;
- Far-off, unseen, Spring faintly cries,
- Bidding her earliest child arise:
- March!
-
- By streams still held in icy snare,
- On southern hillsides, melting bare,
- O’er fields that motley colors wear,
- That summons fills the changeful air:
- March!
-
- What though conflicting seasons make
- Thy days their field, they woo or shake
- The sleeping lids of Life awake,
- And hope is stronger for thy sake,
- March!
-
- _Bayard Taylor_
-
-
-
-
- WOOD-FOLK TALK
-
- By J. ALLISON ATWOOD
-
-
- THE CROW
-
-What does the crow say? The syllable “caw” repeated several times? I
-thought you would say that. A tradition is hard to break; but just
-listen for yourself sometime, and you will be convinced that the crow
-has been sadly misunderstood. It is “Hawk, Hawk, Hawk,” just as plainly
-as one could wish.
-
-Of course, you wonder why one bird should spend all his time calling
-out the name of another. Well, that’s just what I want to tell you
-about.
-
-It was a long time ago--before any white people had invaded Birdland.
-The year had been unusually mild and all the birds had returned from
-the south where they spent the winter. So great was the rejoicing
-because of the early season that the king had sent invitations far and
-wide to a spring reception.
-
-Then what an excitement! For weeks nothing was discussed but the
-reception and new spring plumages.
-
-When the day arrived, birds from tree-top and meadow came by the
-score--waders, climbers, perchers--in fact, all kinds under the
-sun. The table, which, by the way, very closely resembled the
-ground, was festooned and hung with arbutus. Before each guest was a
-relish--a dainty little worm, served upon an equally exquisite plate
-of shellbark. But why torment ourselves with the “bill o’ fare”?
-Sufficient to say that it was worthy of the occasion.
-
-At the head of the table sat the king himself, a sturdy little fellow,
-nicely dressed in black and white, and wearing a concealed crown of
-gold on his head. One of the remarkable things about the king was that
-he did not flaunt his royalty before his subjects. Whenever he wore his
-crown he always concealed it under a cap of feathers, and trusted that
-his actions would speak his worth.
-
-Next to him sat Bob-o-link, a cheerful little dandy, but noted,
-nevertheless, for a good deal of courage and common sense. He was the
-king’s right-wing bird.
-
-On the other side was Brown Thrasher, dressed in a long-tailed coat of
-brown and a beautiful spotted vest. Thrasher was liked for his wit and
-sauciness, but on the whole he was a good deal of an adventurer. He had
-several times claimed kinship to the Thrushes, but they would have none
-of him.
-
-Among other celebrities were Mocking Bird, a great jester and
-all-around wit; Quail, the famous toastmaster, and, in fact, all
-civilized birds except Night Hawk and Whip-poor-will, who were
-ridiculously shy of all public gatherings, and Crow, who had not been
-invited.
-
-Of course, it was a great pity that Crow did not receive an invitation,
-but, somehow, the king had taken a strong dislike to him. The reason
-for this, he told his subjects, was because Crow could not sing, but
-it was really because he was black. The king had even hesitated about
-inviting Blackbird in spite of his gorgeous rainbow lustre.
-
-Well, to say the least, poor Crow’s feelings were greatly hurt. He was
-very sad as he sat high up in a nearby tree and looked down upon the
-gay tumult. Crow was a sociable fellow, and, moreover, he was very
-hungry. Suddenly a thought came into his cunning black head.
-
-Just as the party was at its merriest, he stood erect and called out in
-his loudest tone, “Hawk, Hawk, Hawk!” Instantly there was a confusion.
-Thrasher, quickly gathering his coat over his new vest, scurried into
-the nearest thicket. Quail, greedily bolting the last of his dessert,
-so far forgot his manners as to run straight across the table and hide
-himself in the tall grass; while Bob-o-link, checked in the midst of
-a brilliant speech, vanished among the nearby reeds. Last of all, the
-king, yielding to the universal panic, took wing. In a moment there was
-not a bird in sight.
-
-Then Crow, laughing to himself, flew down to the table and made short
-work of the feast to which he had not been invited. Just as he was
-finishing the last mouthful, King Bird, ashamed of his hasty flight,
-returned, ready to confront his deadly enemy. Instead of the expected
-Hawk, however, he found only Crow, just then hopping up from the table
-and carefully rubbing his bill against the side of a branch.
-
-Oh, what a rage he was in when he saw the trick that had been played
-upon them. With a snap of his bill, he flew at Crow like an arrow, and
-would undoubtedly have injured him had not the rascal taken instant
-flight.
-
-From that day to this, Crow has been an outcast. If you watch him
-carefully you will notice how warily he flies, for the smaller birds
-have never ceased to torment and abuse him.
-
-King Bird in particular has never forgiven the outrage, and whenever
-he hears Crow’s mocking voice calling “Hawk, Hawk, Hawk,” chases madly
-after him, crying out, angrily, “Cheat-thief, cheat-thief.”
-
-Sometimes Crow, as he thinks of the feast, laughs exultantly as if to
-say, “I got the best of you all that time.”
-
-Whereupon Quail, first glancing proudly at his own sleek form with the
-air of one who has not lived in vain, mounts the top of a nearby stump,
-and in his clear, shrill voice answers, “Not quite! not--quite!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- LITTLE POLLY PRENTISS
-
- BY ELIZABETH LINCOLN GOULD
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- AN INTERRUPTED STORY
-
-Although it was only five o’clock, and Manser Farm stood on a hill
-so that its windows caught the last gleam of the sun on a pleasant
-afternoon, the garret was growing dark.
-
-“Is it five or six days it’s been raining without any stop?” inquired
-Mrs. Ramsdell, as she dropped the lid of her horse-hair trunk and
-turned the key in the lock.
-
-“It’s only three days come six o’clock to-night,” said Aunty Peebles in
-her cheery treble. “Don’t you recall we were just going down to supper
-Monday when we heard the first drops on the tin roof? And this is only
-Thursday.”
-
-“Well, it seems like two weeks, that’s all I’ve got to say about
-it,” grumbled Mrs. Ramsdell, as she rose stiffly and whisked her
-black alpaca skirt back and forth till every speck of dust had flown
-away from it. Most of the specks settled on Grandma Manser who sat
-tranquilly knitting in her corner by the south window.
-
-“Do you know where Polly is?” suddenly demanded Mrs. Ramsdell, bending
-over the knitter and shouting fiercely in her ear. “Why isn’t she up
-here this dull afternoon? The only bright thing there is in this house!
-What’s your daughter-in-law keeping her downstairs for?”
-
-“Polly?” repeated Grandma Manser, gently. She had evidently heard only
-part of the gusty speech. “Polly told me she was planning to be out in
-the woodshed, to help Uncle Sam Blodgett saw and split, this afternoon.
-She said she’d be up to recite a piece to us before supper.”
-
-“H’m! I should think it was high time she came, then,” said Mrs.
-Ramsdell, crossly. But after a minute her wrinkled face grew still more
-wrinkled with the smile that broke over it as she heard a clattering
-sound on the garret stairs. A second later a rosy face about which
-danced a mop of short brown curls peeped around the old bureau which
-hid the stairway from the group gathered near the windows.
-
-“You’re a naughty little piece, that’s what you are, to stay down
-in the woodshed with Sam’l Blodgett, instead of coming up here
-to entertain us,” cried Mrs. Ramsdell, with twinkling eyes that
-contradicted the severity of her tone. “What have you been doing down
-there, I’d like to know?”
-
-“I’ve been listening to war stories,” said Polly Prentiss, coming out
-from behind the bureau. “I’ve been hearing about Uncle Blodgett’s
-nephew who died down South and ‘though but nineteen years of age
-displayed great bravery on the field of battle.’ That’s on his
-tombstone,” said Polly, seating herself on a little stool close to
-Grandma Manser and reaching out her hand to pat Ebenezer, the big
-Maltese cat.
-
-“Pretty doings!” grumbled Mrs. Ramsdell, but she smiled at Polly as she
-went over to the rocking chair by Aunty Peebles. “We old folks have
-been taking things out of our trunks and putting ’em back again just to
-keep up heart till you came, except grandma there; she’s kept to her
-knitting, so’s not to disturb Ebenezer of his nap, I suppose.”
-
-“Ebenezer’s a splendid cat, if he does like to sleep most of the time,
-and looks like Mrs. Manser’s old sack that the moths got into,” said
-Polly, with a laugh. “Oh, did any of you know there was a visitor
-downstairs?--that Miss Pomeroy with the sharp eyes. Seemed as if
-she’d look right through me last Sunday, after church. I guess she’s
-pleasant, though.”
-
-“Folks can afford to be pleasant when they own property and have good
-clothes to their backs.” said Mrs. Ramsdell. “I don’t know as Hetty
-Pomeroy’s disposition would be any better than some other folks’ if
-’twas tried in the furnace. Her father had a high temper, I’ve heard.”
-
-“She’s had her trials, Miss Hetty has,” said Aunty Peebles, gently.
-“She’s all alone in the world now, excepting for Arctura Green that’s
-always worked in the family. You know she was to have had her brother’s
-little girl to adopt, and the child died of diphtheria last fall. I
-understand it was a great grief to Miss Hetty.”
-
-“What’s she here for in all this rain?” questioned Mrs. Ramsdell,
-sharply.
-
-“Why, it’s almost stopped raining,” said Polly stroking Ebenezer, who
-stretched out one paw and curved it round her finger without opening
-his eyes. “She drove up to the shed to ask Uncle Blodgett to put her
-horse in the barn. Then I showed her the way to the sitting-room and,
-she said she had an errand with Mrs. Manser, and I’d better run away
-soon as I’d called her. I should have, anyway,” said Polly, nodding at
-each of her old friends in turn, “for I was anxious to hurry up here,
-and tell you about the things Uncle Blodgett’s been telling me.”
-
-Polly’s quick eyes had seen a half-frightened glance exchanged between
-Mrs. Ramsdell and Aunty Peebles when she spoke of Miss Hetty’s errand,
-but as neither of the old ladies seemed disposed to speak when she
-paused, Polly went on, thinking “it’s just one of their mysteries, I
-suppose.”
-
-“First, he recited me a poem,” said Polly; “at least, he really recited
-it to himself, ‘just to keep his hand in.’ I’m not very good about
-remembering poems, but this was by Dr. Goldsmith, Uncle Blodgett said,
-and it was all about a Madam Blaize. I asked him the name twice, to be
-sure.”
-
-“Never heard of either of ’em,” said Mrs. Ramsdell. “Must both be
-fictitious persons. I wonder Samu’l Blodgett never recites poems to us
-of an evening. I must say.”
-
-“’Twas only because I happened to be there, picking up the chips,”
-exclaimed Polly; “and I don’t know whether Dr. Goldsmith and Madam
-Blaize were fick--the kind of persons you said--but she was a grand
-lady in the poem. It’s funny, too,” said Polly, showing her dimples;
-“in one place it says ‘The king himself has followed her when she has
-walked before.’ Of course, he’d have to; isn’t that funny?”
-
-“What else did he recite?” demanded Mrs. Ramsdell.
-
-“He didn’t recite anything else,” said Polly, releasing her fingers
-from Ebenezer’s clasp, and springing to her feet, “but he told me a
-very exciting adventure he had once, and I can act it all out for you.
-You see, he was going home through some thick woods to his log-hut.
-We’ll play the bureau is the hut, and just on the edge of the woods. If
-you and Aunty Peebles will move your rocking chairs a little farther
-apart you’ll make a splendid edge of the woods,” said Polly to Mrs.
-Ramsdell, in a coaxing tone, “then I can come through between.”
-
-[Illustration: I CAN ACT IT ALL OUT FOR YOU.]
-
-“Anything to help out,” said the old lady, quickly hitching her chair
-away from Aunty Peebles.
-
-“Now I think,” said Polly, squinting up her eyes, “that Grandma Manser
-is in just about the right place for the panther.”
-
-“Mercy on us, it’s a wild beast tale,” chuckled Mrs. Ramsdell.
-
-“Grandma Manser, can you snarl like a panther?” asked Polly, bending
-over the quiet knitter, whose soft eyes had been following the little
-girl’s movements. “It’s in Uncle Blodgett’s adventure, and I’m going to
-act it all out, and speak so slow and clear, you’ll hear everything.”
-
-“My yarn’s more used to snarling than I am, dear child,” said Grandma
-Manser, smiling up at the earnest face, “but I’ll do my best. You let
-me know the right minute, someway.”
-
-“When I point my right arm at you with this stick in my hand, it’s a
-gun that never missed,” explained Polly to her assistants, “that’ll be
-the time for you to snarl, please.”
-
-Grandma Manser nodded cheerfully, and Polly, gun in hand, ran to her
-position behind Mrs. Ramsdell and Aunty Peebles.
-
-“As I was walking slowly along,” said Polly, with her lips pouted
-out in imitation of Uncle Blodgett, and the gun over her shoulder,
-“suddenly off to the left, not more than a dozen rods from the house,
-what should I see, but--”
-
-“Mary!” came a querulous voice from the foot of the garret stairs.
-“Mary Prentiss! Are you up there?”
-
-“Yes’m,” answered Polly, as the gun dropped to the floor, and Grandma
-Manser, fearing she had mistaken the signal, gave a very mild sound,
-meant for a fierce snarl. “Yes’m, I’m here. Do you want me downstairs?”
-
-“No, I’ll mount; I’m used to trouble, and they might as well hear the
-news at once,” said the fretful voice, drawing nearer. The stairs
-creaked under the slow steps; the little company in the garret waited;
-disappointment was on Polly’s face, but the old people looked sad and
-anxious.
-
-Mrs. Manser’s tall, thin figure and sallow, discontented face had
-a depressing effect on all of them, as she stood in her dark brown
-calico, leaning against the old bureau.
-
-“Mary Prentiss,” she said, solemnly, “your chance has come, thanks to
-the way I’ve brought you up and kept you clean. Miss Hester Pomeroy,
-of Pomeroy Oaks, is coming next Thursday morning to take you home with
-her for a month’s trial, and if you do your best and follow all I tell
-you, there’s a likelihood Miss Pomeroy will adopt you for good and
-all. And now, we won’t have any talk or fuss over it, for I shall need
-everybody’s help to get you fit to go in time. We’re going to have
-supper early to-night, so you’d better all follow me down right off, to
-be on hand.”
-
-Then Mrs. Manser turned and creaked slowly down the stairs, while Polly
-looked from the bewildered panther to the trembling edges of the wood
-with something very like tears in her brown eyes, and Ebenezer, after a
-thorough stretching of all his paws, disappeared around the bureau and
-hurried down to his evening meal.
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- GETTING READY
-
-It seemed to Polly that no days before ever flew so fast as the ones
-between that rainy Thursday afternoon in April and the next Thursday
-morning. To be sure, Polly was not accustomed to having new clothes
-especially made for her, and the hours spent in being fitted and
-re-fitted were just a waste of precious time, in her eyes.
-
-Aunty Peebles was the best dressmaker at Manser Farm. Her fingers were
-old and sometimes they trembled, but in her day she had been a famous
-seamstress, and even now she could hem a ruffle much better than Mrs.
-Manser.
-
-“I don’t know just what the reason is my work looks better than some,”
-said Aunty Peebles, flushing with delight, one morning when Polly had
-said, “Oh, what bee-yu-tiful even, little bits of stitches you do make!”
-
-“It’s experience, that’s all it is,” said Mrs. Manser, dejectedly,
-as she sat gathering the top of a pink gingham sleeve; “if I’d been
-brought up to it instead of all the education I had that’s no good to
-me now, I should be thankful, I’m sure.”
-
-“She’d never be thankful for anything,” whispered Mrs. Ramsdell, who
-was ripping out bastings and constantly encountering knots which had
-been “machined in” and did not soothe her temper; “’taint in her, and
-you know it, Miss Peebles, well as I do.”
-
-“Mary,” said Mrs. Manser, fretfully, “don’t sit there doing nothing.
-Let me see how you’re getting on with that patchwork. My back’s
-almost broken, and I’ve got chills. You go and tell Father Manser
-to bring in some wood, and then you thread me up some needles, and
-fill the pincushion, and I’ve got some basting for you to do. What a
-looking square you’ve made of that last one! Well, I don’t
-believe Miss Hetty’ll keep you more than just the month, and all this
-sewing and these two nice ginghams will go for nothing.”
-
-“I’ll try to behave so she’ll keep me,” said Polly, with a flushed face
-as she hurried out to old Father Manser. She returned with him after a
-moment. He was a thin little man, who had a kind word for everybody,
-but spoke in a husky tone, which Mrs. Ramsdell claimed Mrs. Manser had
-“frightened him into with her education when she first married him.”
-However that might be, Father Manser never made a statement in his
-wife’s presence without an appealing glance toward her for approval.
-
-“Fill up the stove,” said Mrs. Manser, in her most dismal tone, “and
-see if you can take the chill off this room, father. I presume, though,
-it’s in my bones and won’t come out; I notice the others are warm
-enough, for, of course, I’d have heard complaints if they weren’t. Then
-you might as well oil the machine and get ready to run up the seams of
-those aprons, if your mother ever gets them done.”
-
-“I declare it riles me to see a man doing woman’s work,” said Mrs.
-Ramsdell, tugging at a vicious knot, “and doing it all hodge-podge into
-the bargain!”
-
-Father Manser, all unconscious of her unfavorable criticism, filled up
-the stove, and then set about oiling the sewing-machine. By the time he
-had finished, Grandma Manser had put the last careful basting in the
-last apron seam, and his work was ready for him.
-
-“Now, don’t make your feet go so fast,” cautioned Mrs. Manser, “and
-stop off carefully, so you won’t break the needles the way you did
-yesterday, and do keep by the bastings, father. Are your specs on? No,
-they aren’t. You put them on, this minute!”
-
-“Yes’m,” said Father Manser, meekly, and when his spectacles were
-astride his nose, he was allowed to put his feet on the treadles and
-start on his first seam.
-
-“He likes to run the machine,” said Aunty Peebles to Polly. “Seems as
-if he thought he’d got his foot in the stirrups and was riding, bold
-and free.”
-
-There were many such times for Father Manser during this dressmaking
-season, and he enjoyed them, though he knew how much he would miss
-Polly when she had gone.
-
-In spite of hours spent in the house instead of out in the sweet
-spring weather, in spite of unwonted tasks, and many serious rebukes
-from Mrs. Manser, the days flew by instead of dragging slowly along as
-little Polly wished they would. “Aunty” Peebles, who had never had a
-real niece; “Grandma” Manser, who had no grandchildren; even poor Mrs.
-Ramsdell, with her sharp tongue, who had “known all sorts of trials and
-seen better days,”--all were friends to Polly, the only friends she
-had in the world beside Mrs. Manser, who had brought her up, with much
-grumbling, to be sure; kind Father Manser, who sometimes gave her a
-stick of candy in the dark; and Uncle Sam Blodgett, with whom she had
-such exciting talks, the hero of the adventure, the tale of which was
-so suddenly interrupted.
-
-Polly’s heart was sore at the thought of leaving them all; she even
-felt sorry that she must say good-bye to poor Bob Rust, the grown man
-with a boy’s mind, who could not be depended on to do the simplest
-errand.
-
-“He’s scatter-witted, I know,” said Polly to herself, “but I shall miss
-seeing Bob, because I’m used to him.”
-
-Thursday morning came all too soon. Miss Pomeroy was to come for Polly
-about ten o’clock. At half-past nine Polly, with anxiety written all
-over her rosy face, was twirling slowly around in the middle of the
-kitchen, while Mrs. Manser regarded her forlornly from her position in
-the doorway, with a hand pressed against her forehead.
-
-“I suppose you’ll have to do as you are,” she said at last, with a
-heavy sigh. “My head aches so, I’m fit for nothing, or I’d see what
-more I could do with that hair of yours. Is that the very flattest
-you can get it, Mary? I hope you’re going to remember to answer Miss
-Pomeroy when she says ‘Mary’ better than you do me, child. It’s your
-rightful name, and, of course Polly’s no kind of a name for a girl to
-be adopted by. Did you say you’d done the very best you could with your
-hair?”
-
-“Yes’m,” said Polly, twisting her hands together, locking and unlocking
-her fingers in evident excitement. “I wet it sopping wet, and then
-I patted it all down hard; but it doesn’t stay down very well, I’m
-afraid.”
-
-Polly was right; in spots her hair was still damp and sleek on her
-little head, but around these satisfactory spots her short curls rose
-and danced defiance to brush and water.
-
-“Oh, Ebenezer, I wish I had fur like yours instead of hair!” cried
-Polly, but Ebenezer only blinked at her, and retired hastily
-behind the stove as if he feared she might attempt an exchange of
-head-covering.
-
-“Well,” said Mrs. Manser, dropping into a rocking-chair and clasping
-her head with both hands, “all I’ve got to say is, you must do the best
-you can by Miss Pomeroy and all of us. You know just how much depends
-on Miss Pomeroy’s adopting you. You know what it’ll mean to Father
-Manser and me and the old folks that I board for almost nothing to
-keep them off the town, if you are adopted. And Grandma--you’re always
-saying you’re so fond of her--you’d like her to have one of those new
-hearing apparatuses, I should suppose.”
-
-“Oh, yes’m,” said Polly, eagerly, “I do love Grandma Manser so, and I
-want her to have the ap-apyoratus. Will it cost a great deal?”
-
-“I don’t just know,” said Mrs. Manser; “but they say Miss Pomeroy’s
-going to give five hundred dollars to whatever institution or place she
-finds the child she keeps, and a present of money to the folks that
-have brought her up. She didn’t mention it to me, but the butcher told
-me yesterday ’twas known all about, and she’s been sent for to several
-places to see children. But she never took a fancy to one till she saw
-you in church with me. She thinks you’ve got a look about the eyes
-that’s like Eleanor, that was her brother’s little girl who died last
-fall. I guess you’re about as different from her as a child could be,
-every other way.”
-
-“I suppose Eleanor was an awful good, quiet little girl, wasn’t she?”
-asked Polly, timidly. “Her name sounds kind of still. I don’t believe
-she ever tore her clothes, did she?”
-
-“I don’t suppose another such good child ever lived, according to Miss
-Hetty’s ideas,” said Mrs. Manser, dismally. “She’d never been here
-in town since she was a baby, and the mother’s folks brought her and
-Bobby, the twin, one summer to Pomeroy Oaks. As I’ve told you, both
-parents died, leastways they were destroyed in an accident, when the
-twins were less than a year old.”
-
-“And Bobby lives with his grandpa and grandma now,” said Polly, with
-the air of reciting an oft-repeated lesson, “and folks say that saw
-him when he was here last winter that he just sits and reads all the
-time; he doesn’t care for play or being out-doors much; and he never
-makes a speck of dirt or a mite of noise. And when somebody said what
-a good child he was, Miss Hetty Pomeroy, she said, ‘Wait till you see
-Eleanor!’ So anybody can tell what she must have been,” concluded poor
-little Polly, with a gasping breath.
-
-“And so, of course,” said Mrs. Manser, fixing a forlorn gaze on the
-little figure in stiffly starched pink gingham, “if you run wild
-out-doors, picking flowers and chasing round after the live stock and
-wasting time with the birds the way you’ve been allowed to do here,
-you’ll lose your chance, that’s all. You came of good folks: your
-mother was my third cousin and your father was a well-meaning man,
-though he wasn’t forehanded, and always enjoyed poor health. I’ve
-brought you up the best I could for over seven years, but I expect
-nothing but what Miss Hetty’ll send you back when the month’s up.”
-
-“I’ll try real hard not to lose the chance,” said Polly, earnestly. Her
-eyes shone with an odd mixture of determination and fright; there was,
-moreover, a decided suggestion of tears, but Mrs. Manser, with her head
-in her hands again, failed to notice it.
-
-“It isn’t to be supposed you can take Eleanor’s place,” she groaned.
-“You’re willing to fetch and carry, and you’ve got a fair disposition,
-but you do hate to stay still. Your father was like that--one of these
-restless folks.”
-
-Polly’s face was overcast with doubt and trouble, but she stood her
-ground. “I’ll be just as like Eleanor as ever I can,” she said, slowly.
-“If I could only ask Miss Pomeroy just what Eleanor would have done
-every day, I guess I could do the same. But you’ve told me I mustn’t
-speak about Eleanor, because Miss Pomeroy doesn’t want anybody to.”
-Polly looked wistfully at Mrs. Manser’s bowed head.
-
-“That makes it harder,” said Polly, when there was no answer to this
-half-question, save another groan, “but I guess I can manage someway.”
-Her face looked as nearly stern as was possible for such a combination
-of soft curves and dimples, but her eyes were misty.
-
-Through the open door the soft air of the April morning blew in to her,
-and her little body thrilled with the love of the spring, and living,
-growing out-door friends. But if on her behavior depended the bestowal
-of Miss Hetty’s princely sum, Manser Farm should have it. In all the
-ten years of Polly’s life she had never before heard of such a large
-amount of money, except in arithmetic examples, which, as everybody
-knows, deal with all things in a bold way, unhampered by probability.
-
-With a final groan, Mrs. Manser rose and went to the door. Then she
-turned quickly to Polly.
-
-“Here comes Miss Hetty now, up the road,” she said. “Go and make your
-goodbyes to the folks, child, and put on your hat and jacket and then
-get your bag, so as not to keep her waiting--she may be in a hurry.”
-
-
-[TO BE CONTINUED]
-
- * * * * *
-
- Kind wishes and good deeds--they make not poor
- They’ll home again, full laden, to thy door.
-
- _Richard H. Dana_
-
-
-
-
- A RAMBLE IN EARLY SPRING
-
- By Julia McNair Wright
-
-
-Going out for a walk on some March morning, we find the air soft and
-warm, the skies of a summer blue, the water rippling in every little
-runnel. We look about, half expecting to see a bluebird perched upon a
-fence post, a robin stepping among the stubble. The stems and branches
-which appeared dry and dead all the winter have now a fresh exhibition
-of life. We can almost see the sap creeping up through their vessels
-and distributing vigor where it goes.
-
-Let us go to the woods, to some sunny southern slope where maples grow.
-
-Turning over the light, soft earth, we shall find the maple seeds that
-ripened last autumn and are now germinating. The seeds of the maple are
-in pairs, which are called keys. They look more like little tan-colored
-moths than keys; the distinctly-veined, winged husk is very like the
-narrow and veined wings of many moths.
-
-These seeds are winged in order that they may be blown abroad on the
-wind and plant new forests farther afield. If they all dropped close
-under the shade of the parent tree few would live beyond a year or two.
-
-Where the wing-like husks come together there is a thickening of the
-base of each into an ear-like lobe, holding a seed. The wrapping of
-this seed softens, the seed enlarges as the embryo within it grows, the
-husk is pushed open, and slowly comes forth the baby tree, composed
-of two leaves and a stem. These two leaves, although very small, are
-perfect and even green in the unopened seed.
-
-They are soft and fleshy; in fact, they are pantries, full of food,
-ready for the weak little plant to feed upon until it is strong enough
-to forage and digest for itself. Everyone knows that babies must be
-carefully fed on delicate food until they get their teeth. The baby
-plant also needs well-prepared food.
-
-Between the two leaves is a little white stem. The two leaves unfold,
-and in a few days the air and sun have made them bright green. The
-stem between them thrusts a little root into the earth; this root is
-furnished with hairs. When the root is well-formed and the two seeds
-have reached full size, a bud has formed in the axil between them.
-
-This is the growing point of the new tree. This bud presently opens
-into a pair of well-formed maple leaves.
-
-As these leaves increase the seed-leaves diminish; the plant is feeding
-upon them. The ascending stem presses its first pair of leaves upward,
-forms between them two more, and then two more, and thus on.
-
-Small branches are formed by the end of summer, the seed-leaves are
-exhausted, and the plant is doing its own work.
-
-Under the trees in March we find many interesting examples of
-seed-growth. The feeding or seed-leaves of the young plant are called
-cotyledons. All flowering plants have cotyledons; the plants whose
-leaves have dividing or radiate veins, and whose stems are woody, or,
-at least, not hollow, have two cotyledons; grasses, reeds, corn, and
-other grains, lilies, bamboos, all plants with hollow stems and the
-leaf-veins parallel have one cotyledon, while pines and trees of their
-class have from three to twelve cotyledons, always set in a circle.
-
-The seeds, the new plants, or seedlings of any variety are very
-numerous. This is needful, as they are subject to many disasters. They
-may be eaten by animals or birds, withered by too great dry heat,
-devoured by worms, frozen or ruined by overmuch shade. If plantlets
-were not very numerous the varieties of plants would presently die out.
-
-When the March winds shake out the leaf-buds and the seeds in the
-ground begin to stir with strong life, we are led to think of the
-plant’s host of enemies.
-
-These enemies of the plant will not all begin their work in March, but
-they are enlisting, drilling, and furnishing their regiments for the
-season’s strife.
-
-
-
-
- WITH THE EDITOR
-
-
-In the early days of our country the guest was always honored. Friend
-or stranger, the door was thrown open to him, and the circle around the
-fireplace parted willingly to receive him. After his comfort had been
-assured, however, there came inevitably to the mind of the host the
-natural queries--seldom expressed in words--“What is his name? What his
-purpose?” Then the wayfarer, his reserve thawing before the friendly
-greeting, would just as naturally open his heart and speak of himself.
-
-Such was the old-time hospitality which Hawthorne so quaintly pictures
-in “The Ambitious Guest.”
-
-To-day, the railroad and the comparative luxury of travel have made the
-wayside visitor a being of tradition, but the primitive impulses of
-hospitality and curiosity still survive.
-
-You have opened your doors to us and have welcomed us into that most
-sacred of places--the family circle. You do not ask, yet we cannot
-but feel, the old question in your kindly gaze. You would know our
-name?--our purpose?
-
-Until better advised, we shall call ourselves Young Folks Magazine.
-
-Our purpose is to provide good reading for young people. By good
-reading, we mean that which is interesting enough to catch and hold
-the attention of the reader, and which, in the end, leaves him better
-or wiser for having read it. But it must be interesting, or all its
-other virtues fail. The young person, particularly the boy, looks with
-distrust upon the story which comes too emphatically recommended as
-useful. To him, mere utility is closely related to dullness. With this
-knowledge fresh in our memory, we promise at the outset that our pages
-shall not be lacking in a keen and healthy human interest.
-
-“But,” we hear our host exclaim, “why another magazine in a time and
-country already over-run with literature?”
-
-Just think a moment. Count upon your fingers all the juvenile
-periodicals which you know even by name. Compare this supply with
-the demand. We are certainly understating the figures when we say
-that there are twenty million young people in the United States. Even
-the most widely-circulated of these periodicals does not claim half a
-million subscribers. We believe it safe to say that of our whole great
-nation of young people, not one in ten is yet supplied with a monthly
-or weekly periodical. After all, is there not ample room for us at the
-American fireside?
-
-Finally, may we not ask of you a little lenience toward our early and
-inevitable shortcomings? In return, we promise you that our own most
-constant aim shall be, with each succeeding visit, better to deserve
-your kindly welcome.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In spite of its traditional violence we always look forward to the
-first month of spring. All the more do we hail it when, as in the
-present case, it brings with it the Easter season. The name Easter is
-supposed to have been derived from Oestre, the heathen deity of Spring,
-in whose honor the ancient Teutons held their annual festival. Since
-the Christian era, however, Easter has been in sole commemoration of
-the Resurrection.
-
-During the centuries following its inauguration many quaint customs
-have sprung up and passed away. In parts of Ireland there is still a
-belief that on Easter morning the sun dances in the sky.
-
-The use of eggs for decoration and as playthings for children at this
-season is of very early origin. Nowhere is this observance now so
-common as in the capital of our own country. By immemorial custom, on
-the Easter holiday, the grounds of the White House are thrown open
-to the sport of children, who come from far and near to roll their
-Easter eggs across its sloping lawns. It is a pleasant sight to see
-the home of the nation’s chief executive so completely in the hands of
-frolicking children.
-
-
-
-
- EVENT AND COMMENT
-
-
- The National University
-
-Mr. Andrew Carnegie has offered the sum of ten million dollars to the
-government of the United States to endow a national institution for the
-promotion of the higher scientific research.
-
-While the generosity of the donor is universally acknowledged, there
-are some who question the practical value of the proposed university.
-
-“Why,” they ask, “devote this vast sum to the special education of a
-select few, while thousands of our children can only with difficulty
-obtain the rudiments of a common education?”
-
-If the endowment in question were intended merely for the present
-generation, this question would be difficult to answer. In reality,
-however, the very form and nature of the gift show that it is dedicated
-not to the individual but to the race; and it is chiefly under the
-leadership of the scientific specialist that the race advances. It is
-his work rather than the influence of the common schools that has given
-to mankind the steam-engine, the telegraph, and the electric light.
-
-Heretofore, however, the development of men like Watt, Morse, Bell, and
-Edison has been wholly dependent upon chance and their own phenomenal
-perseverance. Who can say how many more of such men have been lost
-to the public service through mere want of opportunity? It is this
-opportunity that Mr. Carnegie’s gift would insure to coming generations.
-
-As our great military school at West Point supplies the nation with
-men educated for military leadership, so this institution will create
-and perpetuate a corps of savants, forever at the service of the whole
-people.
-
-One cannot but feel that with this gift Mr. Carnegie has exercised an
-even wiser forethought than in his many other generous benefactions.
-
-
- Wireless Telegraphy
-
-Signor Marconi, by means of his system of wireless telegraphy, has at
-length succeeded in transmitting the equivalent of the letter “s” from
-Europe to America. A glance at the work of the young inventor, however,
-will show that his success is not yet insured.
-
-His system--indeed, we might say all systems--of wireless telegraphy
-depends upon the properties of luminiferous ether--that mysterious
-medium that is supposed to exist in every known substance. The
-discharge of an electric spark produces in this ether a bubble-like
-wave which radiates in all directions. It is upon the reception and
-recording, at Newfoundland, of this wave, produced at England, that the
-success of Marconi’s experiment depends.
-
-Even to the ordinary mind, such a proposition presents innumerable
-difficulties. One of the most apparent would be the confusion arising
-from two sets of signals operated in the same locality. But just as
-we can throw all the rays of a search-light in one direction, Marconi
-reflects these waves of ether toward his receiving station.
-
-Perhaps one of the real drawbacks of this system would be the expense
-of maintaining a current of sufficient voltage to signal long
-distances. Nevertheless, we feel confident that, whether it be from
-the brain of Marconi or Tesla, or the united efforts of Orling and
-Armstrong, wireless telegraphy is insured to the future.
-
-
- The Great Tunnel
-
-We all remember with what wonder the public viewed the construction of
-the great suspension bridge between New York and Brooklyn. Remarkable
-as was that feat of engineering, a far more difficult one is now under
-way. It is proposed to run a continuous tunnel under the North river,
-New York City, and the East river, connecting the Pennsylvania Railroad
-in New Jersey with the Long Island Railroad at Brooklyn. It is to be
-eight miles long. Its chief purpose is to give trains, especially those
-from the West, a direct and unimpeded entrance to New York City.
-
-Beginning in the neighborhood of West Hoboken, the tunnel will
-penetrate the hard ridge of the Palisades, and continue with a downward
-incline until, under the North, or Hudson, river, it will reach a depth
-of one hundred feet.
-
-At Thirty-third street, in New York City, it will rise to within
-twenty-five feet of the surface, and at this level cross beneath
-Manhattan Island, where, at some central point, a large station will be
-erected. Proceeding, east, the tunnel will again take a dip to pass the
-East river, and come to light on the Brooklyn side in the neighborhood
-of the present terminal of the Long Island Railroad.
-
-The work of construction will begin early in the summer of 1902, and
-will require a period of three or four years. Its estimated cost is not
-less than $40,000,000.
-
-
- Isthmian Canal
-
-An important question which has arisen recently is the location of the
-future Isthmian canal. Shall it cross at Nicaragua or Panama?
-
-The House of Representatives, on January 9th, 1902, chose the former,
-the best reasons being:
-
-The saving of two days in the voyage between our Atlantic and Pacific
-ports;
-
-Its healthier climate, and the alleged lesser cost of construction.
-
-The _Engineering Magazine_, on the other hand, sums up the advantages
-of the already-undertaken Panama canal as follows:
-
-It is three-fourths shorter, and could be maintained at a cost of
-$1,350,000 a year less than the Nicaragua canal, is exempt from fifty
-miles of dangerous river navigation, and its completion would require
-but half the amount necessary to build the Nicaragua canal.
-
-
- The Danish West Indies
-
-On January 24th, 1902, the government of Denmark, through the pen of
-their minister in Washington, ceded to the United States the group
-of islands known as the Danish West Indies. Unsuccessful attempts to
-purchase these islands were made in the years 1869 and 1877.
-
-This last effort which, so far, promises success, was begun two years
-ago. The delay has been due to a difference of price. The amount now
-agreed upon is believed to be $5,000,000.
-
-
-
-
- IN-DOORS
-
-
- PARLOR MAGIC
-
- By Ellis Stanyon
-
-The first thing for the student of magic to do is to learn palming,
-the art of holding small objects concealed in the hand by a slight
-contraction of the palm.
-
-Practice first with a half-dollar. Lay it in the right hand as shown
-in Fig. 1. Then slightly contract the palm by pressing the ball of the
-thumb inward, moving the coin about with the forefinger of the left
-hand until you find it is in a favorable position to be gripped by the
-fleshy portions of the hand. Continue to practice this until you can
-turn the hand over without letting the coin fall.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 1.--PALMING COIN]
-
-When this can be accomplished with ease, lay the coin on the tips
-of the second and third fingers, steadying it with the thumb, as in
-Fig. 2. Then, moving the thumb aside to the right, bend the fingers,
-and pass the coin up along the side of the thumb into the palm,
-which should open to receive it, and where, if you have followed the
-instructions carefully, you will find no difficulty in retaining it.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 2.--PALMING COIN]
-
-Practice this movement with the right hand in motion toward the left,
-as if you really intended to place the coin in that hand. To get the
-movement perfect, it is advisable to work in front of a mirror. Take
-the coin in the right hand and actually place it in the left several
-times; then study to execute the same movement exactly, with the
-exception that you retain the coin in the right hand by palming.
-
-The student who desires to become a finished performer should palm the
-various objects with equal facility in either hand.
-
-When you can hold a coin properly, as described, practice with other
-objects of a similar size. In this case, however, owing to the greater
-extent of surface, it will not be found necessary to press the object
-into the palm, but simply to close the fingers round it, in the act of
-apparently placing it in the left hand.
-
-THE PASS. Second only in importance to the palming is the pass. Hold
-the coin between the fingers and thumb of the left hand (Fig. 3), and
-then appear to take it in the right by passing the thumb under and the
-fingers over the coin.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 3.--THE PASS]
-
-Under cover of the right hand the coin is allowed to fall into the
-fingers of the left, where, by a slight contraction, it may be held
-between the first and second joints, or it may be allowed to fall
-into the palm proper. The right hand must be closed and raised as
-if it really contained the coin, and be followed by the eyes of the
-performer; the left falling to the side. This pass should be performed
-equally well from either hand.
-
-THE FINGER PALM.--Lay a coin on the fingers as shown in Fig. 4. Then,
-in the act of apparently placing it in the left hand, raise the
-forefinger slightly and clip the coin between it and the second finger.
-The left hand must now close as if it contained the coin, and be
-followed by the eyes of the performer, while the right hand disposes of
-the coin as may be necessary.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 4.--THE FINGER PALM]
-
-Following is an illustration of the way in which this sleight can be
-employed with good effect.
-
-Place a candle on the table to your left, and then execute the pass as
-above described. The thumb of the right hand should now close on the
-edge of the coin nearest to itself and draw it back a little; and at
-the same time the candle should be taken from the candlestick between
-the thumb and fingers of the same hand. (Fig. 5.) The left hand, which
-is supposed to contain the coin, should now be held over the candle
-and opened slowly, the effect to the spectators being that the coin is
-dissolved into the flame. Both hands at this point should be shown back
-and front, as the coin, owing to its peculiar position, cannot be seen
-at a short distance. You now take the upper part of the candle in the
-left hand, then lower the right hand to the lower end and produce the
-coin from thence, the effect being that the money is passing through
-the candle from one end to the other.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 5]
-
-TO CHANGE A COIN.--Sometimes, in order to bring about a desired result,
-it is necessary to change, or, in conjurer’s parlance, to “ring” a
-borrowed or marked coin for a substitute of your own. There are many
-ways of effecting this, but having once mastered the various “palms”
-the student will readily invent means for himself. The following,
-however, is the one generally adopted by conjurers:
-
-Borrow a coin and have it marked. Then take it between the fingers and
-thumb of the left hand, as in the pass (Fig. 3), having previously
-secreted the substitute in the palm of the right. Now take the coin in
-the right hand, and in so doing drop the substitute into the palm of
-the left, which you immediately close, and remark, “You have all seen
-me take the coin visibly from the left hand. I will now make it return
-invisibly.” Saying this, you appear to throw the marked coin into the
-left hand, really palming it, and showing your own, which every one
-takes to be the original borrowed one. You may now proceed with the
-trick in question, disposing of the marked coin as may be necessary.
-
-Let the student practice faithfully the steps here given. He shall then
-be prepared to make practical use of them, as we shall endeavor to show
-in the next paper.
-
-
-
-
- THE OLD TRUNK
-
-This department we believe is destined soon to become one of the most
-popular features of the magazine. Not only shall we spare no pains upon
-our part, but we also earnestly ask your co-operation in providing
-puzzles of all shapes and descriptions to bewilder and tangle the
-most ingenious of intellects. To each of the first three persons who
-shall correctly solve all the following puzzles, we will give a year’s
-subscription to Young Folks Magazine, to be sent to any desired address.
-
-
- ZIGZAG
-
- 1. A plant, but better known as a beverage.
- 2. To cross out.
- 3. An instrument for pounding.
- 4. A kind of ointment.
- 5. Reddish-brown.
- 6. To flee from danger.
- 7. To breathe out.
- 8. A planet.
-
-When these words of six letters are correctly guessed and placed in the
-order given, from 1 to 8 will spell the name of a common mineral found
-in rocks.
-
- . . . 1 . .
- . . . . 2 .
- . . . 3 . .
- . . . . 4 .
- . . . 5 . .
- . . . . 6 .
- . . . 7 . .
- . . . . 8 .
-
- --_Frank F. Rider_
-
-
- ENIGMA
-
-I am composed of sixteen letters:
-
-My 2, 9, 6, 8, 16, 12, is a very small but useful household implement.
-
-My 5, 4, 10, 11, 1, 15, is another implement, very common in the
-school-room.
-
-My 13, 14, 7, 3, is the part of a person closely in touch with both.
-
-My whole is a building known throughout the land.
-
- --_Samuel Baird_
-
-
- BIRD PIE
-
- Gtkinle,
- Yulbeaj,
- Orinb,
- Rildbbake,
- Rwco,
- Doshwhurot.
-
- --_J. F. Stokes_
-
-
- ENIGMA
-
-I am composed of seventeen letters:
-
-My 4, 9, 10, 12, grows on an evergreen tree.
-
-My 11, 1, 14, 5, is a small valley.
-
-My 8, 15, 16, 5, is to grow less.
-
-My 17, 3, 7, is a noise.
-
-My 2, 1, 6, 13, is the home of a wild animal.
-
-My whole is a book which you have all, doubtless, enjoyed.
-
- --_E. L. Barnes_
-
-
- DIAGONAL
-
-When the following words of eight letters are guessed correctly and
-placed one above the other in the order given, so as to form a square,
-the diagonal from the upper left-hand corner to the lower right will
-spell the name of one of the most important battles of the Revolution:
-
- 1. Reasonable.
- 2. Adherent.
- 3. Kind-hearted.
- 4. Ensnare.
- 5. Goods.
- 6. Resonant.
- 7. To barter.
- 8. One of Longfellow’s poems.
-
- --_Bessie M_----
-
-
- HIDING ANIMALS.
-
-In each of the following sentences there are three hiding animals:
-
-“It must be,” averred Caleb, earnestly, as he gazed at the new easel.
-
-Wampum, a kind of money, used by the Indians, was made ere Cabot
-terrified them by his presence.
-
-Morse altered his plans, and accepting the offer, returned from his
-foreign travel, knowing it to be for the best.
-
- --_Margaret West_
-
-
- A BUNCH OF KEYS
-
- A JINGLE
-
- A key to bear one up the mountain side;
- A key to guard where freedom is denied.
- The third, oft heard to chatter, ne’er in song.
- The fourth beware! ’twill lead to gravest wrong.
- This key his master serves, to ride, to work, to wait;
- This one, spring-hatched, at Christmas meets his fate.
-
- --_Caroline L_----
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-
-A number of typographical errors have been corrected silently.
-
-Archaic spellings have been retained.
-
-Cover image is in the public domain.
-
-The table of contents refers to a "With the Publisher" page that does
-not exist in the transcribed image so does not exist in the transcription.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK YOUNG FOLKS MAGAZINE, VOL. I, NO. 1,
-MARCH 1902 ***
-
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-be renamed.
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Young Folks Magazine, Vol. I, No. 1, March 1902, by H. L. Coggins</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<table style='min-width:0; padding:0; margin-left:0; border-collapse:collapse'>
- <tr><td>Title:</td><td>Young Folks Magazine, Vol. I, No. 1, March 1902</td></tr>
- <tr><td></td><td>An Illustrated Monthly Journal for Boys & Girls</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: H. L. Coggins</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 09, 2021 [eBook #65036]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: hekula03, Mike Stember and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK YOUNG FOLKS MAGAZINE, VOL. I, NO. 1, MARCH 1902 ***</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_cover" style="max-width: 72em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover" />
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1>YOUNG<br />
-FOLKS<br />
-MAGAZINE</h1>
-
-<p class="center">VOLUME 1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NUMBER 1</p>
-
-<p class="center">1902<br />
-MARCH</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>An</i> ILLUSTRATED
-MONTHLY
-JOURNAL <i>for</i>
-BOYS &amp;
-GIRLS</p>
-
-<p class="center">The Penn Publishing Company Philadelphia
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
- </div>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak gesperrt bordcontents" id="CONTENTS">
- CONTENTS FOR MARCH
- </h2>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="Contents">
-<tr class="title">
- <td class="title"></td>
- <td class="author" ></td>
- <td class="page"><span class="allsmcap">PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title">
- <td class="title"><a href="#WITH_WASHINGTON">WITH WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE</a> (Serial)</td>
- <td class="author">W. Bert Foster </td>
- <td class="page"> 1 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="illus"> Illustrated by F. A. Carter</td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title">
- <td class="title"><a href="#AT_THE_BEND_OF_THE_TRAIL">AT THE BEND OF THE TRAIL</a></td>
- <td class="author">Otis T. Merrill </td>
- <td class="page"> 11 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#TO-DAY_AND_TO-MORROW">TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW</a> (Verse)</td>
- <td class="author">Mackay </td>
- <td class="page"> 13 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#A_DAUGHTER">A DAUGHTER OF THE FOREST</a> (Serial)</td>
- <td class="author">Evelyn Raymond </td>
- <td class="page"> 14 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td class="illus">Illustrated by Ida Waugh</td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#MARCH">MARCH</a> (Poem)</td>
- <td class="author">Bayard Taylor </td>
- <td class="page"> 22 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#Wood-Folk_Talk">WOOD-FOLK TALK</a></td>
- <td class="author">J. Allison Atwood </td>
- <td class="page"> 23 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td class="illus">Illustrated by the Author</td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#LITTLE_POLLY_PRENTISS">LITTLE POLLY PRENTISS</a> (Serial)</td>
- <td class="author">Elizabeth Lincoln Gould </td>
- <td class="page"> 25 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td class="illus">Illustrated by Ida Waugh</td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#A_RAMBLE">A RAMBLE IN EARLY SPRING</a></td>
- <td class="author">Julia McNair Wright </td>
- <td class="page"> 31 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#WITH_THE_EDITOR">WITH THE EDITOR</a></td>
- <td class="author"> </td>
- <td class="page"> 32 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#EVENT_AND_COMMENT">EVENT AND COMMENT</a></td>
- <td class="author"> </td>
- <td class="page"> 33 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#IN-DOORS">IN-DOORS (Parlor Magic)</a></td>
- <td class="author">Ellis Stanyon </td>
- <td class="page"> 34 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title"><a href="#THE_OLD_TRUNK">THE OLD TRUNK</a></td>
- <td class="author"> </td>
- <td class="page"> 36 </td>
- </tr>
-<tr class="title"><td class="title">WITH THE PUBLISHER</td>
- <td class="author"> </td>
- <td class="page"> 37 </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="double" />
-
-<h2 class="center">YOUNG FOLKS MAGAZINE<br />
- </h2>
-
-<p class="center"><i><span class="gesperrt"><strong>An Illustrated Monthly Journal for Boys and Girls</strong></span></i>
-<br />
-<strong><small>SINGLE COPIES 10 CENTS&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION $1.00</small><br />
-<small>Sent postpaid to any address&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Subscriptions can begin at any time and must be paid in advance</small><br />
-<small>Remittances may be made in the way most convenient to the sender, and should be sent to</small></strong></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap"><strong>The Penn Publishing Company</strong></span><br />
-<strong><small>923 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA.</small></strong><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="center">Copyright 1902 by The Penn Publishing Company</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
- </div>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Young Folks Magazine
- </h2>
-
-<p class="h2sub">VOL. I&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;MARCH 1902&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;No. 1
- </p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="bbox">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="WITH_WASHINGTON">WITH WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE
- </h2>
- <p class="h2sub">By W. Bert Foster</p>
- </div>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER I<br />
- Unwelcome Guests at the Three Oaks Inn
- </h3>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">A</span>LL day the strident whistle of the
-locust had declared for a continuation
-of the parching heat. The
-meadows lay brown under the glare of the
-August sun; the roads were deep in
-powdery yellow dust. The cattle stood
-with sweating flanks in the shade of the
-oaks which bordered the stage track, and
-although the sun was now declining toward
-the summits of the distant mountains,
-all nature continued in the somnolence of
-a summer day.</p>
-
-<p>A huddle of sheep under a wagon shed
-and the lolling form of a big collie dog in
-the barnyard were the only signs of life
-about the Three Oaks Inn. Mistress and
-maids, as well as the guests now sheltered
-by its moss-grown roof, had retired to the
-cooler chambers, and Jonas Benson, the
-portly landlord, snored loudly in his armchair
-in the hall. Out of this hall, with its
-exposed beams of time-blackened oak and
-its high fanlight over the entrance, opened
-the main room, its floor sanded in an intricate
-pattern that very morning by one of the
-maids. Across the hall was the closed door
-of the darkened parlor.</p>
-
-<p>Had Jonas Benson been of a more wakeful
-mind this hot afternoon, it is quite likely
-that this narrative would never have been
-written. But he snored on while behind
-the closed door of the parlor were whispered
-words which, had they reached the ears of
-the landlord of the Three Oaks, would have
-put him instantly on the alert.</p>
-
-<p>The year was 1777, a fateful one indeed
-for the American arms in the struggle for
-liberty&mdash;a year of both blessing and misfortune
-for the patriot cause. Within its
-twelve months the Continental army
-achieved some notable victories; but it suffered,
-too, memorable defeats. It was the
-year when human liberty seemed trembling
-in the balance, when all nations&mdash;even
-France&mdash;stood aloof, waiting to see whether
-the star of the American Colonies was setting
-or on the ascendant. The British
-army, under Howe and Clinton, occupied
-New York. Washington and his little
-force lay near Philadelphia, then the capital
-of the newly-formed confederation. New
-Jersey&mdash;all the traveled ways between the
-two armies&mdash;was disputed territory, disturbed
-continually by a sort of guerilla warfare
-most hard for the peacefully-inclined
-farmers and tradespeople to bear.</p>
-
-<p>Spies of both sides in the great conflict
-infested the country: foraging parties, like
-the rain, descended upon the just and the
-unjust; and neighbors who had lived in
-harmony for years before the war broke out,
-now were at daggers’ points. The Tories
-had grown confident because of the many
-set-backs endured by the patriot forces.
-Many even prophesied that, when Burgoyne’s
-army, then being gathered beyond
-the Canadian border, should descend the
-valleys of upper New York and finally join
-Howe and Clinton, the handful of Americans
-bearing arms against the king would
-be fairly swept into the sea, or ground to
-powder between the victorious British
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>Jonas Benson was intensely patriotic, and
-the Three Oaks had given shelter oft and
-again to scouts and foraging parties of the
-Continental troops. The inn-keeper had
-given the pick of his horses to the army,
-reserving few but such nags as were positively
-needed for the coach which went
-down to Trenton at irregular intervals.
-There were more than his staid coach
-horses in the stable on this afternoon, however,
-and the fact was much to his distaste.</p>
-
-<p>There had arrived at the Three Oaks the
-evening before a private carriage drawn by
-a pair of handsome bays and driven by a
-most solemn-faced Jehu, whose accent was
-redolent of Bow Bells. With the carriage
-came a gentleman&mdash;a fierce, military-looking
-man, though not in uniform&mdash;who rode
-a charger, which, so Jonas told his wife,
-would have made a saint envious, providing
-the latter were a judge of horseflesh. Inside
-the carriage rode a very pretty girl of
-sixteen or seventeen, whose dress and appearance
-were much different from the plain
-country lasses of that region.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re surely gentle folk, Jonas,” Mistress
-Benson had declared. “The sweet
-child is a little lady&mdash;see how proud she
-holds herself. Law! it’s been a long day
-since we served real gentles here.”</p>
-
-<p>Jonas snorted disdainfully; he suspected
-that at heart his good wife had royalist
-tendencies. As for him, the American
-officers who sometimes made the Three
-Oaks their headquarters for a few days were
-fine enough folk. “I tell ye what, woman,”
-he said, “they may be great folk or not;
-one thing I do know. They possess great
-influence or they’d never gotten through
-the Britishers with them fine nags. And if
-the outposts weren’t so far away, I’m
-blessed if I believe they’d get away from
-here without our own lads having a shy
-at the horses.”</p>
-
-<p>But the Bensons were too busy making
-their guests comfortable to discuss them&mdash;or
-their horses&mdash;to any length. Colonel
-Creston Knowles was the name the gentleman
-gave, and the girl was his daughter,
-Miss Lillian. The driver of the carriage,
-who served the colonel as valet as well, was
-called William, and a more stony-faced, unemotional
-individual it had never been the
-fate of the Bensons to observe. It was
-utterly impossible to draw from this servant
-a word regarding his master’s business between
-the lines of the opposing armies.</p>
-
-<p>These visitors were not desired by Jonas.
-He kept a public house, and, for the sake of
-being at peace with everybody, his Tory
-neighbors included, he treated all guests
-who came to the Three Oaks with unfailing
-cordiality. But the presence of Colonel
-Knowles at this time was bound to cause
-trouble.</p>
-
-<p>The inn was on the road usually traversed
-by those in haste to reach Philadelphia,
-where, while Washington’s army was
-posted nearby, Congress held its session.
-Many a time in the dead of night there was
-the rattle of hoofs on the road, as a breathless
-rider dashed up to the door, and with
-a loud “Halloa” aroused the stable boy.
-Then in a few moments, mounted afresh, he
-would hurry on into the darkness. These
-dispatch-bearers of the American army
-knew they could trust mine host of the
-Three Oaks, and that a ridable nag could
-always be found somewhere in his stable.</p>
-
-<p>The very night Colonel Knowles arrived
-at the tavern there was an occurrence of this
-kind. And after the dispatch-bearer had
-gone, and Jonas and Hadley Morris, the
-stable boy, stood in the paved yard watching
-him disappear on the moonlit road, they
-saw a night-capped head at the colonel’s
-window.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll have no peace, Had, while yon
-Britisher’s hereabout,” muttered the old
-man.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder why he has come into this
-country, so far from New York?” was the
-boy’s observation. “He
-can’t be upon military
-service, though he be a
-colonel in his majesty’s
-army.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s here for no
-good, mark that, Had,”
-grumbled Jonas. “I’d
-rather have no guests at
-the Three Oaks than
-men of his kidney.”</p>
-
-<p>“His daughter is a
-pretty girl, and kindly
-spoken.”</p>
-
-<p>“That may be&mdash;that
-may be,” testily.
-“You’re as shortsighted
-as my old wife, Had.
-You’ll both let this Master
-Creston Knowles throw
-dust in your eyes because
-he’s got a pretty daughter.
-Bah!”</p>
-
-<p>And Jonas stumbled
-back to bed, leaving
-Hadley Morris to retire
-to his couch on the loft
-floor of the stable.</p>
-
-<p>But had these well-founded
-suspicions been
-to any purpose, the inn-keeper
-surely would have
-remained awake on the
-afternoon our story
-opens, instead of lolling,
-sound asleep, in his wide
-chair in the hall. Behind
-the parlor door, not ten
-feet away from mine
-host of the Three Oaks,
-Colonel Creston Knowles was conversing
-in a low tone with his serving man.</p>
-
-<p>“And you say it happened twice during
-the night, sirrah?” queried the British officer,
-who spoke to everybody but his
-daughter with sternness.</p>
-
-<p>“Twice, hand it please ye, sir. Hi’m sure
-the stable was hopened once hafter the time
-you was hup, sir, hand another ’orse taken
-hout. My life! but Hi thought hit thieves
-hat first, sir&mdash;some o’ them murderin’ cowboys;
-but the young lad has tends to the
-’orses seemed to know them that came,
-hand they did not touch hour hanimals,
-sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a regular nest of rebels!” exclaimed
-the colonel, his brow black enough at the
-report. “Such places as this should be
-razed to the earth. The spies who report
-to this Mr. Washington and his brother
-rebels evidently have free course through
-the country. They even exchange their
-steeds here&mdash;and Malcolm’s troop lying
-less than six miles away this very day.
-William!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel beckoned him nearer and
-whispered an inaudible order in the man’s
-ear. There was no change of expression
-upon the servant’s countenance, and the
-command might have been welcome or distasteful
-as far as an observer could have
-told. When the colonel ceased speaking,
-William rose without a word and tiptoed
-cautiously to the door. On pulling this
-ajar, however, the lusty snoring of Jonas
-Benson warned him of the inn-keeper’s
-presence. He closed the door again,
-nodded to the colonel, and vaulted through
-one of the open windows, thus making his
-exit without disturbing the landlord.</p>
-
-<p>But although everybody about the tavern
-itself seemed to be slumbering, the colonel’s
-man found that he could not enter the stable
-without being observed. As he came out
-of the glare of sunshine into the half darkness
-of the wide threshing floor, the Englishman
-suddenly came upon a figure standing
-between him and the narrow window
-at the further end of the stable. It was the
-stable boy and he was just buckling the
-saddle-girth upon a nervous little black
-mare whose bit was fastened to a long
-halter hanging from one of the cross-beams.</p>
-
-<p>Hadley Morris was a brawny youth for
-his age, which was seventeen. He was by
-no means handsome, and few boys would
-be attractive-looking in the clothing of a
-stable boy. Yet there was that in his carriage,
-in the keenness of his eye, in the
-firm lines of his chin and lip, which would
-have attracted a second glance from any
-thoughtful observer. Hadley had been
-now more than a year at the Three Oaks
-Inn, ever since it had become too unpleasant
-for him to longer remain with his
-uncle, Ephraim Morris, a Tory farmer of
-the neighborhood. Hadley was legally
-bound to Ephraim, better known, perhaps,
-as “Miser Morris,” and, of course, was not
-permitted to join the patriot army as he
-had wished. The youth might have broken
-away from his uncle altogether had he
-so desired, but there were good reasons
-why he had not yet taken this decisive
-step.</p>
-
-<p>He had found it impossible to live longer
-under his uncle’s roof, however, and therefore
-had gone to work for Jonas Benson;
-but he still considered himself bound to his
-uncle, and Jonas grumblingly paid over to
-the farmer the monthly wage which the boy
-faithfully earned. Hadley found occasion
-oft and again to further the cause which in
-his soul he espoused. It was he rather than
-the landlord who saw to it that the fleetest
-horse in the stable was ready saddled
-against the expected arrival of one of those
-dispatch-bearers whose coming and going
-had disturbed Colonel Knowles the night
-before. As he now tightened the girth of
-the mare’s trappings she danced about as
-though eager to be footing it along the
-stage road toward the river.</p>
-
-<p>Hadley was startled by the sudden appearance
-of the colonel’s servant in the
-doorway of the barn.</p>
-
-<p>“So you are riding hout, too?” observed
-the latter, going toward the stalls occupied
-by his master’s thoroughbreds. “There’s a
-deal of going back and forth ’ere, hit seems
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s nothing so lively as it was before
-the war broke out,” Hadley explained,
-good-naturedly. “Then the coaches went
-out thrice a week to Trenton, and one of the
-New York and Philadelphia stages always
-stopped here, going and coming. Business
-is killed and the country is all but dead
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>William grunted as he backed out one
-of the carriage horses and threw his
-master’s saddle upon it. “You’re going
-out yourself, I see.” Hadley said, observing
-that the man did not saddle the colonel’s
-charger.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi’ve got to give the beasts some hexercise
-if we’re goin’ ter lie ’ere day hafter
-day,” grumbled William, and swung himself
-quickly into the saddle.</p>
-
-<p>The boy went to the open door and
-watched him ride heavily away from the
-inn, with a puzzled frown upon his brow.
-“He’s never going for exercise such a hot
-afternoon as this,” muttered the youth.
-“There! he’s put the horse on the gallop.
-He’s going somewhere a-purpose&mdash;and he’s
-in haste. Will he take the turn to the
-Mills, I wonder, or keep straight on for
-Trenton?”</p>
-
-<p>The trees which shaded the road hid
-horse and rider, and leaving the little mare
-dancing on the barn floor, Hadley ran
-hastily up the ladder to the loft, and then
-by a second ladder reached the little cupola,
-or ventilator, which Master Benson had
-built atop his barn. From this point of
-vantage all the roads converging near the
-Three Oaks Inn could be traced for several
-miles.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the cluster of tall trees which gave
-the inn its name, a road branched off toward
-the Mills. In a minute or less the watcher
-saw a horseman dash along this road amid
-a cloud of dust.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s bound for the Mills&mdash;and in a
-wonderful hurry. What was it Lafe Holdness
-told us when he was along here the
-other day? Something about a troop of
-British horse being at the Mills, I’ll be
-bound.” Then he turned toward the east
-and looked carefully along the brown road
-on which any person coming from the way
-of New York would naturally travel. “Well,
-there’s nobody in sight yet. If that fellow
-means mischief&mdash;Ah! but it’s six miles
-to the Mills and if he continues to ride like
-that on this hot day the horse will be
-winded long before he gets there.”</p>
-
-<p>He went down the ladders, however, with
-anxious face, and during the ensuing hour
-made many trips to the wide gateway which
-opened upon the dusty road. There was not
-a sign of life, however, in either direction.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the tavern awakened to its
-ordinary life and bustle. The last rays of
-the sun slanted over the mountain tops and
-the shadows crept farther and farther across
-the meadows. The old collie arose and
-stretched himself lazily, while the tinkle of
-sheep bells and the heavier jangle which betrayed
-the approach of the cattle cut the
-warm air sharply. Even a breeze arose
-and curled the road dust in little spirals
-and rustled the oak leaves. Dusk was approaching
-to relieve panting nature.</p>
-
-<p>Jonas awoke with a start and came out
-upon the tavern porch to stretch himself.
-He saw Hadley standing by the gateway
-and asked:</p>
-
-<p>“Got the mare saddled, Had?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. She’s been standing on the
-barn floor for an hour. One of the other
-horses has gone out, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heh? How’s that?” He tiptoed softly
-to the end of the porch so as to be close
-above the boy. “Who’s been here?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody. But the colonel’s man took
-one of those bays and started for the Mills
-an hour ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“I d’know as I like the sound of that,”
-muttered Jonas. “I wish these folks warn’t
-here&mdash;that I do. They aint meanin’ no
-good&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush!” whispered Hadley, warningly.</p>
-
-<p>From the wide tavern door there suddenly
-appeared the British colonel’s
-daughter. She was indeed a pretty girl and
-her smile was infectious. Even Jonas’ face
-cleared at sight of her and he hastened, as
-well as a man of his portliness could, to set
-a chair for her.</p>
-
-<p>“It is very beautiful here,” Miss Lillian
-said, “and so peaceful. I got so tired in
-New York seeing soldiers everywhere and
-hearing about war. It doesn’t seem as
-though anything ever happened here.”</p>
-
-<p>“I b’lieve something’s goin’ to happen
-b’fore long, though,” the landlord whispered
-anxiously to Hadley, and walked to
-the other end of the porch, leaving the two
-young people together.</p>
-
-<p>“It is usually very quiet about here,”
-Hadley said, trying to speak easily to the
-guest. He was not at all used to girls, and
-Miss Lillian was altogether out of his class.
-He felt himself rough and uncouth in her
-presence. “But we see soldiers once in a
-while.”</p>
-
-<p>“Our soldiers?” asked the girl, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“No&mdash;not British soldiers,” Hadley replied,
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you surely don’t call those ragamuffin
-colonists soldiers, do you?” she
-asked, quickly.</p>
-
-<p>A crimson flush spread from Hadley’s
-bronzed neck to his brow; but a little smile
-followed and his eyes twinkled. “I don’t
-know what you’d really call them; but they
-made your grenadiers fall back at Bunker
-Hill.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Lillian bit her lip in anger; then, as
-she looked down into the stable boy’s face
-her own countenance cleared and she
-laughed aloud. “I don’t think I’ll quarrel
-with you,” she said. “You are a rebel, I
-suppose, and I am an English girl. You
-don’t know what it means to be born across
-the water, and&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes I do. I was born in England
-myself,” Hadley returned. “My mother
-brought me across when she came to keep
-house for Uncle Ephraim Morris&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” interposed Lillian, turning towards
-him again, with astonishment in both
-voice and countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“My mother.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no! I mean the man&mdash;your uncle.
-What is his name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ephraim Morris. He is a farmer back
-yonder,” and Hadley pointed over his
-shoulder. “My name is Hadley Morris.”</p>
-
-<p>Before Lillian could comment upon this,
-or explain her sudden interest in his uncle’s
-name, both were startled by an exclamation
-from the landlord at the other end of the
-porch.</p>
-
-<p>“Had! Had!” he called. “He’s coming.”</p>
-
-<p>Hadley left the gate at once and leaped
-into the road. Far down the dusty highway
-there appeared a little balloon of dust, and
-the faint ring of rapid hoofs reached their
-ears. Somebody was riding furiously toward
-the inn from the east. Lillian rose to
-look, too, and in the doorway appeared the
-military figure of her father. His face
-looked very grim indeed as he gazed, as
-the others were doing, down the road.</p>
-
-<p>The advancing horseman was less than a
-quarter of a mile away when, of a sudden,
-there sounded a single pistol shot&mdash;then
-another and another. It was a scattering
-volley, but at the first report those watching
-at the inn could see the approaching horse
-fairly leap ahead under the spur of its
-rider.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! the scoundrels are after him!”
-cried the inn-keeper, his fat face paling.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel’s countenance expressed
-sudden satisfaction. “Go into the house,
-Lillian!” he commanded. “There will be
-trouble here in a moment.” He brought
-out from under his coat tails as he spoke a
-huge pistol such as was usually carried in
-saddle holsters at that day.</p>
-
-<p>Hadley Morris, from the centre of the
-road, did not see the colonel’s weapon. He
-only observed the approaching horseman in
-the cloud of dust, and knew him to be a
-dispatch-bearer aiming to reach the ferry
-and Washington’s headquarters beyond.
-In a moment there loomed up behind him
-a group of pursuers riding neck and neck
-upon his trail. They were British dragoons
-and the space between them and their prey
-was scarce a hundred yards.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-RELATING A WILD NIGHT RIDE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>T did not take a very sharp eye to observe
-that the horse which the messenger
-bestrode was laboring sorely,
-while his pursuers were blessed with comparatively
-fresh mounts. The American
-had ridden long and hard, and his steed was
-in no shape for such a spurt of speed as it
-was put to now. The British had kept
-clear of this road for weeks, because of the
-foraging parties from Philadelphia, and,
-doubtless, the dispatch-bearer hoped to find
-at the Three Oaks those who would stand
-him well in this emergency.</p>
-
-<p>At least, there would be a fresh horse
-there, and perhaps a faithful man or two
-to help beat off the dragoons until he could
-escape with his precious charge. He had
-no thought that there was a still greater
-danger ahead of him. The dragoons were
-lashing and spurring their horses to the
-utmost; and now and again one took a potshot
-at him; but there on the porch of the
-old inn stood Colonel Knowles, waiting
-with all the calmness of a sportsman to
-bring the fleeing man to earth.</p>
-
-<p>Young Hadley Morris did not notice the
-colonel; he had forgotten his presence in
-his interest in the flight and pursuit. But
-Jonas Benson saw his guest’s big pistol
-and realized the danger to the approaching
-fugitive. Yet there seemed nothing he
-could do to avert the calamity. He dared
-not openly attack the colonel, for whether
-the dispatch-bearer escaped or no, the
-dragoons would be at the inn in a few
-moments, and, there being no such force of
-Americans in the neighborhood, they might
-wreak vengeance on him and his family.
-The old man was hard put to it, indeed, in
-this emergency.</p>
-
-<p>Not so Hadley, however. He was quick
-of thought and quite as brisk of action.
-The charge of galloping horse was but a
-short distance away, the American still a
-little in the lead, when the boy darted back
-to the heavy barred gate which shut the
-yard from the road. The barrier had
-been swung wide open and fastened with
-a loop of rope to a hook in the side of
-the house. He slipped this fastening and
-stood ready to shut the gate between the
-fugitive and his pursuers, and thus delay
-the latter for a possible few moments.</p>
-
-<p>If the dispatch-bearer got into the yard
-safely he could leap upon the back of the
-black mare now standing impatiently on
-the barn floor, and escape his pursuers
-through the fields and orchard back of
-the outbuildings. No ordinary horse
-would be able to leap the high gate, and
-Hadley did not believe the dragoons were
-overly well mounted. As the dispatch-bearer
-dashed up, foam flying from his
-horse’s mouth and the blood dripping from
-its flanks where the cruel spurs had done
-their work, it looked to Colonel Knowles
-as though the American would ride right
-by, and he raised his pistol in a deliberate
-intention of bringing the man to earth.</p>
-
-<p>But as he pulled the trigger old Jonas
-stumbled against him and the ball went
-wide of its mark. The shot did much
-harm, however, for it frightened the already
-maddened horse, which leaped to one
-side, pitching the man completely over its
-head upon the paving of the yard. The
-horse fell, too, but outside the gate, and
-Hadley was able to slam the barrier and
-drop the bar into place before the dragoons
-arrived.</p>
-
-<p>The explosion of the colonel’s pistol and
-that officer’s angry shout warned Hadley
-of the added and closer danger. He darted
-to the side of the fallen messenger. The
-poor fellow had struggled partly up and
-was tearing at his coat. His face was
-covered with blood, for he was badly injured
-by his fall; but one thought kept him
-conscious.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp52" id="i_darted" style="max-width: 46.4375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_darted.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>HE DARTED TOWARD THE FALLEN MESSENGER</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“The papers&mdash;the papers, lad!” he
-gasped. “For General Washington&mdash;quick!”</p>
-
-<p>But he had only half pulled the packet
-from his inner pocket when he dropped
-back upon the flagstones, and, with a groan,
-lay still.</p>
-
-<p>Hadley seized the precious packet and
-leaped to his feet. With a clatter of hoofs
-and amid a cloud of dust the dragoons
-arrived at the yard gate.</p>
-
-<p>“There he is! He’s down&mdash;down!”
-shouted the leader. “We’ve got him safe!
-Hi, there landlord! open your gate or
-we’ll batter it in!”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve got him safe, that’s a fact,”
-muttered Hadley, in distress. “But&mdash;but
-they haven’t got the papers!”</p>
-
-<p>He turned swiftly and ran toward the
-barn.</p>
-
-<p>“There goes one of them running!”
-shouted a voice behind. Then a pistol exploded
-and Hadley leaped forward as
-though the ball had stung him, although it
-whistled far above his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Look out for that boy!” he heard Colonel
-Knowles say, and, glancing back,
-Hadley saw the officer leaning out of
-one of the windows which overlooked the
-yard. At a neighboring casement the
-fleeing youth saw Miss Lillian. Even at
-that distance, and in so perilous a moment,
-Hadley noted that the girl’s face was very
-pale and that she watched him with clasped
-hands and anxious countenance.</p>
-
-<p>One of the dragoons had dismounted and
-now unbarred the gate. Before Hadley
-reached the wide doorway of the great barn
-the soldiers were trooping through into the
-yard.</p>
-
-<p>“The boy has the papers&mdash;look after him,
-I tell you!” he heard the colonel shout.
-Then Hadley pulled the great door shut and
-fastened it securely on the inside. For an
-instant he could breathe.</p>
-
-<p>But only for an instant. The dragoons
-were at the door then, beating upon it with
-the hilts of their sabres and pistol-butts,
-demanding entrance. Hadley had no
-weapon had he desired to defend the
-barn from attack. And that would be a
-foolish attempt, indeed. It would be an
-easy matter for the dragoons to break down
-the fences and surround the barn so that
-he could not escape, and then beat in the
-door and capture him&mdash;and with him the
-papers. He did not know how valuable
-those documents might be; but the man
-now lying senseless in the inn yard had
-saved them at the risk of his life; the boy
-felt it his duty to do as much.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Knowles had now come out into
-the yard and taken command of the attack.
-Evidently he was recognized by the British
-soldiers, despite his civilian’s dress. He
-gave orders for a timber to be brought to
-beat in the door, and Hadley likewise heard
-him send two of the soldiers around the
-barn to watch the rear. If the boy would
-escape it must be within the next few
-seconds.</p>
-
-<p>He ran back to the rear of the building.
-Here was another wide door and he flung
-it open. The soldiers had not appeared;
-but the doorsill was a good eight feet and
-more from the ground. The barn had been
-built on a hillside. Directly below the
-door was a pen in which hogs were kept.
-Eight feet was a good drop, and besides it
-would be impossible to escape the soldiers
-on foot.</p>
-
-<p>A crash sounded at the front of the building.
-The men had brought up the timber
-for a battering ram. The door would certainly
-be burst inward before many moments.
-Hadley ran back to the waiting
-mare that already seemed to share his
-own excitement. He freed her from the
-halter and sprang into the saddle. He
-dared not try getting past his enemies when
-the door fell and with a quick jerk of the
-rein he pulled the mare around. She trotted
-swiftly to the rear door which the boy had
-flung open; but when she saw the distance
-to the ground below, her ears went back
-and she crouched.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got to do it, Molly!” exclaimed
-the boy, desperately. He reached to the
-stanchion at his right hand and seized a
-riding-whip hanging there. As the mare
-continued to back, Hadley brought the lash
-down again and again upon her quivering
-flank. The poor beast was not used to
-such treatment, and in her rage and fright
-she forgot the danger ahead and leaped
-straight out from the open stable door.</p>
-
-<p>Hadley stood up in the stirrups when he
-felt her go. He knew where she would
-land, and he believed the feat would be
-without danger; but he was ready to kick
-out of the stirrups and save himself if the
-little mare missed her footing.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately she landed just where her
-rider had planned. There was a pile of
-straw and barn scrapings below the door,
-and from this Black Molly rebounded as
-though from a mattress. She was not an
-instant in recovering herself, and, still
-frightened by the sting of the whip-lash,
-darted out through the orchard. Hadley
-flung away the whip, and, leaning forward,
-hugged her neck so as not to be swept off
-by the low branches of the apple trees.</p>
-
-<p>There was a wild halloa behind him.
-The dragoons sent to cut off his escape had
-arrived too late; but they emptied their
-pistols at the black mare and her young
-rider.</p>
-
-<p>“They won’t give up so easily,” Hadley
-muttered, not daring to look around while
-still in the orchard. “That Colonel
-Knowles would rather die than be outwitted
-by a boy. I’ll make right for the
-ferry, and perhaps I may meet Holdness
-somewhere on the road. I can give the
-papers up to him, and I know he’ll find
-some way of getting them to General
-Washington.”</p>
-
-<p>He pulled Black Molly’s head around and
-took a nearer slant for the road. The mare
-was more easily managed now, and when
-he reached the rail fence which divided
-the orchard from the highway his mount
-had forgotten her fright and allowed him to
-stop and fling down a part of the fence so
-that they could get through and down the
-bank into the road. Looking back before
-descending the bank, Hadley saw several
-horsemen streaming through the orchard
-behind him, and, more to be feared than
-these, was the party leaving the inn yard
-and taking to the very road out upon which
-he had come. At the head of this second
-cavalcade rode Colonel Knowles himself on
-his great charger, and Hadley’s heart sank.
-Black Molly was famed throughout the
-countryside for her speed; but that great
-beast of the colonel’s&mdash;evidently brought
-from across the sea, and a thoroughbred
-hunter&mdash;would be more than a match for
-the little mare in a long chase.</p>
-
-<p>“We must do our best, Molly,” cried the
-boy, slapping her side with his palm and
-riding down into the dusty road. “You
-can keep ahead of them, I know, for a short
-distance, and you must do your best now.
-It will soon be too dark for them to see us&mdash;that’s
-a blessing.”</p>
-
-<p>The little mare needed no spur or urging.
-She clattered along the darkening road with
-head down and neck outstretched, Hadley
-riding with a loose rein and letting her
-pick her own way over the track. He
-could trust to her instinct more safely than
-to his own sight. The oaks cast thick
-shadows across his path, and now the whole
-sky was turning a deep indigo, dotted here
-and there with star points. There was
-no moon until later, and he believed the
-darkness was more favorable to him than
-to his pursuers.</p>
-
-<p>He could hear the thunder of the hoofs
-behind him, however, and he patted Molly’s
-neck encouragingly and talked to her as she
-ran. “Go it, girl! you’ve got to go!” he
-said. “Just make your little feet fly. Remember
-the times I’ve rubbed you down,
-and fed you, and taken you to water. Just
-do your very prettiest, my girl, for it’s more
-than my life you’ve got to save&mdash;it’s these
-papers, whatever they be.”</p>
-
-<p>And the little mare seemed to understand
-what he said, for she strained every effort
-for speed. She fairly skimmed over the
-ground, and for the first mile or more the
-hoof-beats gained not at all upon them.
-Then, to Hadley’s straining ears, it seemed
-as though the pursuit grew closer. It was
-not a mob of hoof-beats which he heard,
-but the steady, unbroken gallop of one
-horse. And it took little intuition for the
-boy to know which this leading pursuer
-was. The great black charger, the colonel’s
-mount, had left the dragoons behind, and its
-stride was now shortening the distance
-rapidly between its master and himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Molly, run&mdash;run!” gasped the
-boy, digging his heels into the mare’s
-sides.</p>
-
-<p>Molly was doing her best, but the sound
-of the black horse’s hoofs grew louder.
-The road was not straight or Hadley might
-have looked back and seen the colonel
-bearing down upon him. But the officer
-could doubtless follow his prey by the
-sound of Molly’s feet, quite as accurately as
-Hadley could estimate his speed. At this
-thought, and hoping to put his pursuer at
-a disadvantage for the moment, the boy
-pulled the mare out upon the level sward
-beside the road. There Black Molly pattered
-along silently: but the boy could
-hear the thunder of pursuit growing louder
-and louder.</p>
-
-<p>Now that the clatter of his own mount’s
-hoofs were not in his ears, Hadley was
-suddenly aware of a new sound cutting the
-night air. And it was not from the rear,
-but from ahead&mdash;the loud complaint of
-ungreased axles: a low, heavy wagon was
-coming slowly along the road.</p>
-
-<p>“If it should be Holdness!” gasped the
-boy. “It sounds like his wagon.”</p>
-
-<p>Around another turn in the crooked road
-they flashed and then the creaking of the
-wheels was quite near. A great covered
-wagon loomed up in the dusk, and Hadley
-uttered a cry of joy.</p>
-
-<p>“Lafe! Lafe Holdness!” he shouted,
-while yet the wagon was some rods away.</p>
-
-<p>But the driver of the squeaking vehicle
-heard him, and there was a flash of light
-as he rose up on the footboard and held
-the lantern above his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, there! slow down or ye’ll run over
-me!” drawled a nasal voice.</p>
-
-<p>“The British are after me&mdash;I’ve got dispatches!”
-shouted the boy, reining in the
-mare beside the wagon.</p>
-
-<p>“Had Morris, as I’m a livin’ sinner!
-What ye doin’ here?” Then the driver
-cocked his head and listened to the thud
-of hoofs behind the flying boy. “They’re
-arter ye close, lad&mdash;an’ Molly’s winded.
-Quick! there’s naught but straw in here.
-It’s your best chance.”</p>
-
-<p>The wagon was still creaking slowly
-along and Holdness did not stop his team.
-He dropped the lantern and dodged back to
-the rear of the wagon. There he quickly
-flung aside the end curtain and then returned
-to the driver’s seat.</p>
-
-<p>Hadley had ridden by, but the instant he
-saw the curtain raised he wheeled Molly
-about and aimed her for the end of the huge
-wagon. “Quick, girl! You’ve done it before,”
-muttered the boy, and the little mare
-obeyed. The driver did not bring his
-wagon to a stop, but it was moving very
-slowly. Molly had long since learned the
-trick expected of her, and she trotted up to
-the rear of the vehicle, rose in the air, and
-landed firmly on the straw-covered bottom.</p>
-
-<p>“Draw the curtain, Had, ’n’ keep yer
-hand on her nose,” commanded Holdness,
-the teamster, without turning his head.</p>
-
-<p>Already the boy had ordered the little
-mare to lie down and she had sunk upon
-the straw. He whipped down the curtain,
-fastened it, and then lay down beside the
-mare with his hand upon her velvety nose,
-ready to stifle any desire on her part to
-whinny when the pursuing horses should
-arrive.</p>
-
-<p>And they were here in a moment now.
-Colonel Knowles, on his great charger,
-ahead, and the company of dragoons not
-many rods behind.</p>
-
-<p>[TO BE CONTINUED]</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_soldiers" style="max-width: 65.0625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_soldiers.jpg" alt="Soldiers on Road in Winter" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="AT_THE_BEND_OF_THE_TRAIL">AT THE BEND OF THE TRAIL</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">By OTIS T. MERRILL</p>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">“W</span>ELL, hurry back, boy. You’re
-rather green, you know, to be
-going out alone.” The captain
-winked at Sergeant Mills as Tom Ray
-turned towards his horse.</p>
-
-<p>There had been no fighting as yet, and
-Tom was rather disappointed, for, to tell
-the truth, it was love of adventure rather
-than patriotism that had induced him to
-join the little squad of cavalry then journeying
-through the heart of the Apache country.
-They had encamped in the little valley
-of the Salt River, in Arizona. The land was
-dry and parched. Even the hardy cactus
-was taking on a leathery hue.</p>
-
-<p>To Tom it was a monotonous view&mdash;the
-yellow earth: that everlasting Giant Cactus;
-and occasionally the tall, bleached form of
-a dead tree, reaching its arms despairingly
-upward from the dearth of life below.</p>
-
-<p>With some little impatience he urged
-the pony into a gallop. In an hour he
-must be at the fork of the Salt to receive
-Custer’s dispatches. Everybody had wondered
-why Tom Ray, the only one in the
-party who had never heard an Indian war-whoop,
-should have been chosen for the
-work. It was a case of eloquence. Tom
-pleaded, and the captain&mdash;who wasn’t much
-afraid of Indians himself&mdash;forgot his military
-caution and consented.</p>
-
-<p>The first two miles of the journey lay
-back along their own trail to the point
-where a long depression in the plain
-marked the bed of some old river. From
-there he must turn sharp to the right and
-make for the foot of the lone gray butte,
-about whose base wound the west branch
-of the Salt. He had started early, and it
-was not yet four o’clock when he reached
-the crossing of the low ground. He
-paused for a moment and looked about him.</p>
-
-<p>A large shadow rolled along the ground
-before him and caught his eye. From
-overhead came the shrill cry of an eagle&mdash;the
-same bird who, in spite of numerous
-rifle balls, had aroused the admiration of
-the whole party on the previous day, by its
-mad swoops in their direction.</p>
-
-<p>Tom cast a reluctant glance at the distant
-cottonwood and the huge pile of sticks
-saddled in its crotch. The old egg-collecting
-instinct welled up strongly within him,
-but he held the mustang’s head resolutely
-away. In his mind he already pictured the
-impatience of the old scout at the fork and,
-hardly daring to take a second look at the
-nest, he again brought the little pony to a
-full gallop.</p>
-
-<p>Cris Wood had been a bearer of government
-dispatches ever since the thriving
-settlement of Hopkins’ Bend could boast of
-a telegraph wire. His greeting for the
-“youngster,” as he termed Tom Ray, was
-that of an old friend:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What have you been waiting for, t’ give
-the Indians a chance to scalp me?”</p>
-
-<p>Tom laughed as he looked at the scant
-fringe of gray beneath the rough, worn hat.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess they wouldn’t be paid for their
-trouble,” he answered, as he took the well-handled
-dispatches from the old scout.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not by me,” retorted the latter,
-grimly. “But, anyway, there’s only one lot
-of Indians around, and they’re way over at
-the crossing,” referring to a point on Tom’s
-return journey.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” responded Tom, amused at
-the scout’s time-honored attempt to play
-on his nerves. “If I see them, I’ll give
-them the chase of their lives.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be the front party, most likely,
-though.”</p>
-
-<p>A few more courtesies were tossed freely
-from one to the other, together with what
-little news had fallen in the way of both
-before they parted.</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later, as the return road
-before him sank gently to the lower ground,
-Tom’s eyes were again drawn instinctively
-to the tall cottonwood. Though still distant,
-he could already see the watchful
-eagle silhouetted from its topmost point.
-The sun was yet high&mdash;he might as well
-have a look at the nest. With this Tom
-drew the horse’s head in the direction of
-the great cottonwood.</p>
-
-<p>The boy’s approach to the lofty tree was
-greatly resented by the pair of golden
-eagles who had chosen it as a site for their
-home. A little ball of cottony down
-showed itself over the side of the rude
-structure. There was at least one eaglet,
-and Tom knew then that it would be with
-no small danger to himself if he chose to
-investigate. Then there came to him the
-misty recollection of the tame eagle which
-Jack Warren, one of the cowboys, had
-brought into camp. With this bit of memory
-his hesitation vanished.</p>
-
-<p>The tree was bare and barked. Its lower
-branches had long since rotted and now lay
-on the ground crumbling. Rough knots
-remained, however, here and there, and by
-grasping these Tom was able to make the
-ascent. The old birds whirled round the
-tree in giant spirals. First one and then
-the other would suddenly swerve from the
-circle and sweep past the boy’s head so
-close that he would involuntarily throw up
-his arm in defence.</p>
-
-<p>When Tom was about thirty feet from
-the ground all thought of the infuriated
-birds was suddenly driven from his mind.
-At a distance of perhaps one hundred yards
-stood an unusually thick clump of cactus.
-In the midst of this, peering intently at him,
-was a dark, bronzed face&mdash;that of an
-Apache Indian. A wave of terror swept
-over the boy, and in his fright he imagined
-he could even discern the triumphant expression
-upon the swarthy visage, as it sank
-behind the dark barrier.</p>
-
-<p>Then all of a sudden he became cool.
-He looked for his horse. To his dismay he
-discovered that the animal had wandered
-some little distance from the tree. Then
-he realized his danger.</p>
-
-<p>If he descended at once it would be to
-certain death. His only hope lay in
-strategy.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately he again began the struggle
-upward. All the suppressed energy of the
-moment went into the grip of his hands as
-they took hold of the rough knots. The
-eagles became more demonstrative, and
-more than once the swish of a powerful
-wing caused him to duck his head. But of
-this he was hardly conscious. When at
-length he bent over the nest, under pretense
-of examining it, Tom’s eyes were in reality
-strained in an attempt to locate the enemy.
-He never knew whether the nest contained
-one or two eaglets.</p>
-
-<p>His mustang and the Indian were about
-the same distance from the tree. But how
-was he to reach the animal? A too sudden
-descent would arouse suspicion. At length,
-with every nerve on edge for the trial to
-come, he began to work his way down.
-The eagles, their courage increased with
-apparent victory, gave even freer utterance
-to their rage, and their shrieks as they
-swooped past his head rang in the boy’s
-ears for many a day afterward. On a sudden
-thought, as if in mockery, he took up
-the cries of the birds, imitating them by
-long, piercing whistles.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the sound varied, yet to such a
-slight degree that a listener might not have
-noted it. Tip, the pony, however, did seem
-to notice it, and at each call would lift his
-head impatiently and look in the direction
-of the tree. Finally, as if by a familiar impulse,
-he tossed his head in air, and walked
-slowly toward the well-known call.</p>
-
-<p>All the while Tom had kept his face in
-such a direction that the Indian could not
-have left his ambush without being discovered.
-The pony was now within twenty
-paces of the tree. By way of distracting
-the Indian’s attention, the boy waved
-his hat and shouted to an imaginary
-comrade.</p>
-
-<p>Then, fifteen feet from the ground, first
-throwing a quick glance at his steed, Tom
-allowed himself to drop. As he did so the
-dreaded war-whoop rang out from the distant
-clump. To his horror, an answering
-call came from just ahead of him. Once
-on the ground, he darted toward the horse.
-A cactus plant, which on ordinary occasions
-he would have given a wide berth, brushed
-sharply against him, yet, in his excitement,
-he hardly felt the pain it caused.</p>
-
-<p>In the next instant he had swung into
-the saddle and wheeled the pony’s head
-toward the camp. The first glance ahead,
-however, revealed the supple body of an
-Indian half concealed by a cactus bush.
-There was no choice. Striking his spurs
-into the pony, Tom dashed forward. The
-Indian suddenly dropped his rifle and
-crouched beside a Giant Cactus. As Tom
-and the mustang flew past he made a
-panther-like leap, and throwing his arms
-about the boy, tried to drag him from the
-saddle. Turning upon him, Tom seized the
-lithe arms and with all his strength tried to
-throw the enemy from him. But the grip
-of the savage was like that of a wild animal,
-and the boy’s most vigorous efforts failed
-to break it.</p>
-
-<p>While the Indian and boy were thus
-struggling, the mustang had made good
-some one hundred yards, in spite of the
-double burden. Though greatly excited,
-Tom thought of the six-shooter at his belt,
-but before he could reach it a quick movement
-of the savage pinned his arms to his
-side. The boy then worked his hand under
-the wiry arm which held a strangling grip
-on his neck. As he did so, his eyes met a
-sight that changed his purpose. He
-thought a moment of the savage clinging
-to him. Then, with all his strength, he
-wrapped his arms around the Indian and
-imprisoned him. The Indian was confused
-by the change of action, and, like a wild
-animal, fought to release himself, for by
-this time he, too, saw Sergeant Mills and
-three other approaching horsemen.</p>
-
-<p>A party of soldiers, wondering at the
-boy’s delay, had ridden out from the camp,
-and they were not a little surprised to see
-Tom galloping toward them, carrying
-what to them was a very odd looking burden.
-When, upon nearer approach, this
-object developed into a full-grown Apache
-Indian, their astonishment knew no bounds,
-and they hastened forward, lest the prisoner,
-in his fierce struggles, should escape
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes later, the Indian, bound
-hand and foot, was brought before the
-captain, and at the same time Tom handed
-over the all-important dispatches. As he
-did so, the boy’s spirits reacted from their
-strained condition and his sense of humor
-asserted itself.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, captain,” he said, “I knew that
-you didn’t want me to be out alone, so I
-brought this Indian along, just to keep me
-company.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="TO-DAY_AND_TO-MORROW">TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">If fortune, with a smiling face</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Strew roses on our way,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When shall we stoop to pick them up?</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To-day, my friend, to-day.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But should she frown with face of care,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And talk of coming sorrow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When shall we grieve, if grieve we must?</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To-morrow, friend, to-morrow.</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>Mackay</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox">
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="A_DAUGHTER">A DAUGHTER OF THE FOREST
- </h2>
- <p class="smcap h2sub">By Evelyn Raymond</p>
- </div>
-
-<h3>
- CHAPTER I<br />
- <small>The Storm</small>
- </h3>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">“M</span>ARGOT! Margot!”</p>
-
-<p>Mother Angelique’s anxious call
-rang out over the water, once,
-twice, many times. But, though she shaded
-her brows with her hands and strained her
-keen ears to listen, there was no one visible
-and no response came back to her. So
-she climbed the hill again and, reëntering
-the cabin, began to stir with almost vicious
-energy the contents of a pot swinging in
-the wide fireplace. As she toiled she muttered
-and wagged her gray head, with sage
-misgivings.</p>
-
-<p>“For my soul! There is the ver’ bad
-hoorican’ will come, and the child so heedless.
-But the signs, the omens! This
-same day I did fall asleep at the knitting
-and waked a-smother. True, ’twas Meroude,
-the cat, crouched on my breast; yet
-what sent her, save for a warning?”</p>
-
-<p>Though even in her scolding, the woman
-smiled, recalling how Margot had jeered at
-her superstition; and that when she had
-dropped her bit of looking-glass the girl
-had merrily congratulated her on the fact;
-since by so doing, she had secured “two
-mirrors in which to behold such loveliness!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no; not so. Death lurks in a
-broken glass; or, at the best, must follow
-seven full years of bad luck and sorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>On which had come the instant reproof:</p>
-
-<p>“Silly Angelique! When there is no
-such thing as luck, but all is of the will of
-God.”</p>
-
-<p>The old nurse had frowned. The maid
-was too wise for her years. She talked too
-much with the master. It was not good for
-women-kind to listen to grave speech or
-plague their heads with graver books.
-Books, indeed, were for priests and doctors;
-and, maybe, now and then, for men
-who could not live without them, like Master
-Hugh. She, Angelique, had never read
-a book in all her life. She never meant to
-do so. She had not even learned a single
-letter printed in their foolish pages&mdash;not
-she. Yet was not she a most excellent
-cook and seamstress? Was there any
-cabin in all that northland as tidy as that
-she ruled? Would matters have been the
-better had she bothered her poor brain with
-books? She knew her duty and she did it.
-What more could mortal?</p>
-
-<p>This argument had been early in the day&mdash;a
-day on which the master had gone away
-to the mainland and the house mistress had
-improved by giving the house an extra
-cleaning. To escape the soapsuds and the
-loneliness, Margot had also gone, alone
-and unquestioned; taking with her a luncheon
-of brown bread and cold fowl, her
-book and microscope. Angelique had
-watched the little canoe push off from the
-shore, without regret, since now she could
-work unhindered at clearing the room of
-the “rubbishy specimens” which the others
-had brought in to mess the place.</p>
-
-<p>Now, at supper time, perfect order
-reigned, and perfect quiet, as well; save for
-the purring of Meroude upon the hearth
-and the simmering of the kettle. Angelique
-wiped her face with her apron.</p>
-
-<p>“The great heat, and May but young
-yet. It means trouble. I wish&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the cat waked from her sleep,
-and, with a sharp “meouw,” leaped to her
-mistress’s shoulder; who screamed, dropped
-the ladle, splashed the stew, and boxed the
-animal’s ears&mdash;all within a few seconds.
-Her nerves were already tingling from the
-electricity in the air, and her anxiety returned
-with such force that, again swinging
-the crane around away from the fire, she
-hurried to the beach.</p>
-
-<p>To one so weather-wise, the unusual heat,
-the leaden sky, and the intense hush were
-ominous. There was not a breath of wind
-stirring, apparently, yet the surface of the
-lake was already dotted by tiny white-caps,
-racing and chasing shoreward, like live
-creatures at play. Not many times, even in
-her long life in that solitude, had Angelique
-Ricord seen just that curious coloring of
-cloud and water, and she recalled these
-with a shudder. The child she loved was
-strong and skillful, but what would that
-avail? Her thin face darkened, its features
-sharpened, and, making a trumpet of
-her hands, she put all her force into a long,
-terrified halloo.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah-ho-a-ah! Margot&mdash;Mar-g-o-t&mdash;Margot!”</p>
-
-<p>Something clutched her shoulder, and
-with another frightened scream, the woman
-turned, to confront her master.</p>
-
-<p>“Is the child away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes; I know not where.”</p>
-
-<p>“Since when?”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems but an hour, maybe two&mdash;three&mdash;and
-she was here, laughing, singing,
-all as ever. Though it was before the mid-day,
-and she went in her canoe, still
-singing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>She pointed due east, but now into a
-gloom that was impenetrable. On the instant
-the lapping wavelets became breakers,
-the wind rose to a deafening shriek, throwing
-Angelique to the ground, and causing
-even the strong man to reel before it. As
-soon as he could right himself, he lifted
-her in his arms and staggered up the slope.
-Rather, he was almost blown up it and
-through the open door into the cabin,
-about which the furnishings were flying
-wildly. Here the woman recovered herself
-and lent her aid in closing the door
-against the tempest, a task that, for a time,
-seemed impossible. Her next thought was
-for her dinner-pot, now swaying in the
-fireplace, up which the draught was roaring
-furiously. Once the precious stew was in
-a sheltered corner, her courage failed again,
-and she sank down beside it, moaning and
-wringing her hands.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the end of the world!”</p>
-
-<p>“Angelique!”</p>
-
-<p>Her wails ceased. That was a tone of
-voice she had never disobeyed in all her
-fifteen years of service.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Master Hugh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Spread some blankets. Brew some
-herb tea. Get out a change of dry
-clothing. Make everything ready against
-I bring Margot in.”</p>
-
-<p>She watched him hurrying about, securing
-all the windows, piling wood on the
-coals, straightening the disordered furniture,
-fastening a bundle of kindlings to his
-own shoulders, putting matches in the
-pocket of his closely-buttoned coat, and she
-caught something of his spirit. After all,
-it was a relief to be doing something, even
-though the roar of the tempest and the incessant
-flashes of lightning turned her sick
-with fear. But it was all too short a task;
-and when, at last, her master climbed outward
-through a sheltered rear window,
-closing it behind him, her temporary
-courage sank again.</p>
-
-<p>“The broken glass! the broken glass!
-Yet who would dream it is my darling’s
-bright young life must pay for that and not
-mine, the old and careworn? Ouch! the
-blast! That bolt struck&mdash;and near! Ah,
-me! Ah, me!”</p>
-
-<p>Meroude rubbed pleadingly against her
-arm, and, glad of any living companionship,
-she put out her hand to touch him; but
-drew it back in dread, for his sur-charged
-fur sparkled and set her flesh a-tingle,
-while the whole room grew luminous with
-an uncanny radiance. Feeling that her
-own last hour had come, poor Angelique
-crouched still lower in her corner and began
-to say her prayers with so much earnestness
-that she became almost oblivious to
-the tornado without.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, by stooping and clinging to
-whatever support offered, Hugh Dutton
-made his slow way beachward. But the
-bushes uprooted in his clasp and the bowlders
-slipped by him on this new torrent
-rushing to the lake. Then he flung
-himself face downward and cautiously
-crawled toward the Point of Rocks
-whereon he meant to make his beacon
-fire.</p>
-
-<p>“She will see it and steer by it,” he reflected;
-for he would not acknowledge how
-hopeless would be any human steering
-under such a stress.</p>
-
-<p>Alas! the beacon would not light. The
-wind had turned icy cold and the rain
-changed to hail which hurled itself upon the
-tiny blaze and stifled its first breath. A
-sort of desperate patience fell on the man,
-and he began again, with utmost care, to
-build and shelter his little stock of firewood.
-Match after match he struck, and
-with unvarying failure, till all were gone;
-and realizing at last how chilled and rigid
-he was growing, he struggled to his feet
-and set them into motion.</p>
-
-<p>Then there came a momentary lull in the
-storm and he shouted aloud, as Angelique
-had done:</p>
-
-<p>“Margot! Little Margot! Margot!”</p>
-
-<p>Another gust swept over the lake and island.
-He could hear the great trees falling
-in the forest, the bang, bang, bang, of
-the deafening thunder, as, blinded by
-lightning and overcome by exhaustion, he
-sank down behind the pile of rocks and
-knew no more.</p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER II<br />
- SPIRIT OR MORTAL?
- </h3>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE end of that great storm was almost
-as sudden as its beginning.</p>
-
-<p>Aroused by the silence that succeeded
-the uproar, Angelique stood up and
-rubbed her limbs, stiff with long kneeling.
-The fire had gone out. Meroude was
-asleep on the blankets spread for Margot,
-who had not returned, nor the master. As
-for that matter, the house mistress had not
-expected that they ever would.</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothin’ left. I am alone. It
-was the glass. Ah! that the palsy had
-seized my unlucky hand before I took it
-from its shelf! How still it is. How clear,
-too, is my darling’s laugh&mdash;it rings through
-the room&mdash;it is a ghost. It will haunt me
-always, always.”</p>
-
-<p>Unable longer to bear the indoor silence,
-which her fancy filled with familiar sounds,
-she unbarred the heavy door and stepped
-out.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! is it possible&mdash;can the sun be
-setting that way&mdash;as if there had been
-nothin’ happen?”</p>
-
-<p>Wrecks strewed the open ground about
-the cabin, poultry coops were washed
-away, the cow-shed was a heap of ruins,
-into which the trembling observer dared not
-peer. That Snowfoot should be dead was
-a calamity but second only to the loss of
-master and nursling.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! my beast, my beauty. The best in
-all this northern Maine. That the master
-bought and brought in the big canoe for
-an Easter gift to his so faithful Angelique.
-And yet the sun sets as red and calm as if
-all were the same as ever.”</p>
-
-<p>It was, indeed, a scene of grandeur.
-The storm, in passing northward, had left
-scattered banks of clouds, now colored most
-brilliantly by the setting sun and widely
-reflected on the once more placid lake.
-But neither the beauty nor the sweet, rain-washed
-air, appealed to the distracted
-islander, who faced the west and shook her
-hand in impotent rage toward it.</p>
-
-<p>“Shine, will you? With the harm all done
-and nothin’ left but me, old Angelique.
-Pouf! I turn my back on you!”</p>
-
-<p>Then she ran shoreward with all speed,
-dreading what she might find, yet eager to
-know the worst, if there it might be learned.
-With her apron over her head, she saw only
-what lay straight before her, and so passed
-the Point of Rocks without observing her
-master lying behind it. But a few steps
-further she paused, arrested by a sight
-which turned her numb with superstitious
-terror. What was that coming over the
-water? A ghost! a spirit!</p>
-
-<p>Did spirits paddle canoes and sing as this
-one was singing?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The boatman’s song is borne along far over the water so blue,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And, loud and clear, the voice we hear of the boatman so honest and true;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He’s rowing, rowing, rowing along,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">He’s rowing, rowing, rowing along&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">He’s rowing and singing his song.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The subsiding wind wafted to her ears
-snatches of the jolly little ballad, in which
-one could catch the very rhythm and dip of
-oar or paddle. Still it was as well to wait
-and see if this were flesh or apparition before
-pronouncing judgment.</p>
-
-<p>It was certainly a canoe, snowy white and
-most familiar&mdash;so familiar
-that the watcher
-began to lose her first
-terror. A girl knelt in
-it, Indian-fashion, gracefully
-and evenly dipping
-her paddle to the melody
-of her lips. Her
-bare head was thrown
-back and her fair hair
-floated loose. Her face
-was lighted by the western
-glow, on which she
-fixed her eyes with such
-intentness that she did
-not perceive the woman
-who awaited her with
-such mixed emotions.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp55" id="i_canoe" style="max-width: 47em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_canoe.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>A GIRL KNELT IN THE CANOE, INDIAN-FASHION</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But Tom saw. Tom,
-the eagle, perched in
-the bow, keen of vision
-and of prejudice. Between
-him and old Angelique
-was a grudge of
-long standing. Whenever
-they met, even
-after a brief separation,
-he expressed his feelings
-by his hoarsest
-screech. He did so
-now, and, by so doing,
-recalled Margot from
-sky-gazing and his enemy
-from doubt.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Angelique!
-Watching for me? How
-kind of you. Hush,
-Tom; let her alone;
-good Angelique, poor Angelique.”</p>
-
-<p>The eagle flapped his wings with a melancholy
-disdain and plunged his beak in
-his breast. The old woman on the beach
-was not worth minding, after all, by a
-monarch of the sky&mdash;as he would be but
-for his broken wing&mdash;but the girl was
-worth everything, even his obedience.</p>
-
-<p>She laughed at his sulkiness, plying her
-paddle the faster, and soon reached the
-pebbly beach, where she sprang out, and,
-drawing her canoe out of the water, swept
-her old nurse a courtesy.</p>
-
-<p>“Home again, mother, and hungry for
-my supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Supper, indeed! Breakin’ my heart
-with your run-about ways! and the hoorican,
-with ever’thin’ ruined; ever’thin’!
-The master&mdash;where’s he, I know not. The
-great pine broken like a match; the coops,
-the cow-house, and Snowfoot&mdash;Ah, me! yet
-the little one talks of supper!”</p>
-
-<p>Margot looked about her in astonishment,
-scarcely noticing the other’s words.
-The devastation of her beloved home was
-evident, even down on the open beach, and
-she dared not think what it might be further
-inland.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it must have been a cyclone! We
-were reading about them only yesterday.
-And Uncle Hugh&mdash;did you say that you
-knew&mdash;where is he?”</p>
-
-<p>Angelique shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“Can I tell anythin’, me? Into the
-storm he went and out of it he will come
-alive, as you have&mdash;if the good Lord wills,”
-she added, reverently.</p>
-
-<p>The girl sprang to the woman’s side, and
-caught her arm impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me, quick! Where is he? where
-did you last see him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Goin’ into the hoorican, with wood
-upon his shoulder. To make a beacon for
-you. So I guess. But you&mdash;tell how you
-come out alive of all that?”&mdash;sweeping her
-arm over the outlook.</p>
-
-<p>Margot did not stop to answer, but
-darted toward the Point of Rocks, where,
-if anywhere, she knew her guardian would
-have tried his signal fire. In a moment she
-found him.</p>
-
-<p>“Angelique! Angelique! he’s here!
-Quick, quick!&mdash;He’s&mdash;oh! is he dead? is
-he dead?”</p>
-
-<p>There was both French and Indian blood
-in Mother Ricord’s veins, a passionate loyalty
-in her heart, and the suppleness of
-youth still in her spare frame. With a dash
-she was at the girl’s side and had thrust
-her away, to kneel herself and lift her
-master’s head from its hard pillow of rock.</p>
-
-<p>With swift, nervous motions she unfastened
-his coat and bent her ear to his
-breast.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis only a faint&mdash;maybe shock. In all
-the world was only Margot, and Margot
-he believed was lost. Ugh! the hail. See,
-it is still here&mdash;look! water, and&mdash;yes, the
-tea! It was for you&mdash;ah!”</p>
-
-<p>Her words ended with a sigh of satisfaction
-as a slight motion stirred the features
-into which she peered so earnestly, and she
-raised her master’s head a bit higher. Then
-his eyes slowly opened and the dazed look
-gradually gave place to a normal expression.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Margot! Angelique! What’s
-happened?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Uncle Hugh! are you hurt? are
-you ill? I found you here behind the rocks,
-and Angelique says&mdash;but I wasn’t hurt at
-all. I wasn’t out in any storm&mdash;I didn’t
-know there had been one, that is, worth
-minding, till I came home&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Like a ghost out of the lake. She was
-not even dead&mdash;not she. And she was
-singin’ fit to burst her throat while you
-were&mdash;well, maybe, not dead, yourself,
-but, near it.”</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture, Tom, the inquisitive,
-thrust his white head forward into the
-midst of the group, and, in her relief from
-her first fear, Margot laughed aloud.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, Tom! You’re one of the family,
-of course, and since none of the rest of us
-will die, to please that broken mirror, you
-may have to! Especially, if there’s a new
-brood out&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>But here Angelique threw up her free
-hand with such a gesture of despair that
-Margot said no more, and her face sobered
-again, remembering that, even though they
-were all still alive, there might be suffering
-untold among her humbler woodland
-friends. Then, as Mr. Dutton rose, almost
-unaided, a fresh regret came:</p>
-
-<p>“That there should be a cyclone right
-here at home, and I not to see it! See!
-look! Uncle, look! you can trace its very
-path, just as we read. Away to the south
-there is no sign of it, nor on the northeast.
-It must have swept up to us out of the
-southeast and taken our island in its track.
-Oh! I wouldn’t have missed it for anything.”</p>
-
-<p>The man rested his hand upon her shoulder
-and turned her gently homeward. His
-weakness had left him as it had come upon
-him, with a suddenness like that of the
-recent tempest. It was not the first
-seizure of the kind which he had had,
-though neither of these others knew it, and
-the fact added a deeper gravity to his always
-thoughtful manner.</p>
-
-<p>“I am most thankful that you were not
-here; but where could you have been to
-escape it?”</p>
-
-<p>“All day in the long cave. To the very
-end of it, I believe, and see! I found these.
-They are like the specimens you brought the
-other day. They must be some rich metal.”</p>
-
-<p>“In the long cave, you? Alone? all day?
-Margot, Margot, is not the glass enough?
-but you must tempt worse luck by goin’
-there!” cried Angelique, who had preceded
-the others on the path, but now faced about,
-trembling indignantly. What foolish creature
-was this who would pass a whole day
-in that haunted spot, in spite of the dreadful
-tales that had been told of it? “Pouf! but I
-wear out my old brain everlastin’, studying
-the charms that will save you from evil.
-And yet&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You would do well to use some of your
-charms on Tom, yonder. He’s found an
-over-turned coop and looks too happy to be
-out of mischief.”</p>
-
-<p>The woman wheeled again and was off
-up the slope like a flash, where presently
-the king of birds was treated to the indignity
-of a sound boxing, which he resented
-with squawks and screeches, but not
-with talons, since under each foot he held
-the plump body of a fat chicken.</p>
-
-<p>“Tom thinks a bird in the hand is worth
-a score of cuffs! and Angelique’s so determined
-to have somebody die&mdash;I hope it
-won’t be he. A pity, though, that harm
-should have happened to her own pets.
-Hark! what is that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Some poor woodland creature in distress.
-The storm&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s no sound belonging to the forest.
-But it is&mdash;distress!”</p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III<br />
-AN ESTRAY FROM CIVILIZATION</h3>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HEY paused by the cabin door, left
-open by Angelique, and listened intently.
-She, too, had caught the
-alien sound, the faint, appealing halloo of
-a human voice&mdash;the rarest of all cries in
-that wilderness. Even the eagle’s screeches
-could not drown it, but she had had enough
-of anxieties for one day. Let other people
-look out for themselves; her precious ones
-should not stir afield again&mdash;no, not for
-anything. Let the evil bird devour the
-dead chickens, if he must, her place was in
-the cabin, and she rushed back down the
-slope, fairly forcing the others inward from
-the threshold where they hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a loon. You should know that, I
-think, and that they’re always cryin’ fit to
-scare the dead. Come! The supper’s
-waitin’ this long time.”</p>
-
-<p>With a smile that disarmed offense,
-Margot caught the woman’s shoulder and
-lightly swung her aside out of the way.</p>
-
-<p>“Eat, then, hungry one! I, too, am
-hungry, but&mdash;hark!”</p>
-
-<p>The cry came again, prolonged, entreating,
-not to be confounded with that of any
-forest wildling.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s from the north end of our own
-island!”</p>
-
-<p>The master’s ear was not less keen than
-the girl’s, and both had the acuteness of an
-Indian’s, but his judgment was better.</p>
-
-<p>“From the mainland, across the narrows.”</p>
-
-<p>Neither delayed, and a mutual impulse
-sent them toward the shore, but again Angelique
-interposed.</p>
-
-<p>“Thoughtless child, have you no sense?
-With the master just out of a faint that was
-nigh death itself! With nothin’ in his poor
-stomach since the mornin’, and your own as
-empty. Wait; eat; then chase loons, if you
-will.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dutton laughed, though he also
-frowned, and cast a swift, anxious glance
-toward Margot. But she was intent upon
-nothing save answering that far-off cry.</p>
-
-<p>“Which canoe, uncle?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mine.”</p>
-
-<p>The devoted servant made a last protest,
-and caught the girl’s arm as it pushed the
-light craft downward into the water.</p>
-
-<p>“Ma petite, he is not fit. Believe me.
-Better leave others to their fate than that he
-should overtax himself again, so soon.”</p>
-
-<p>Margot was astonished. In all her life
-she had never before associated thought of
-physical weakness with her stalwart guardian,
-and a sharp fear of some unknown
-trouble shot through her heart.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>The master had reached them, and now
-laid his own hand upon Angelique’s detaining
-one.</p>
-
-<p>“There, woman, that’s enough. The
-storm has shaken your nerves. If you’re
-afraid to stay alone, Margot shall stop with
-you. But let’s have no more nonsense.”</p>
-
-<p>Mother Ricord stepped back&mdash;away.
-She had done her best. Let come what
-might, her conscience was clear.</p>
-
-<p>A few seconds later the canoe pushed off
-over the now darkening water, and its inmates
-made all speed toward that point
-from which the cry had been heard, but was
-heard no more. However, the steersman
-followed a perfectly direct course, and if
-he were still weak from his seizure, his
-movements showed no signs of it, so that
-Margot’s fear for him was lost in the interest
-of their present adventure. She
-rhymed her own stroke to her uncle’s, and
-when he rested, her paddle instantly
-stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“Halloo! hal-l-oo!” he shouted, but as
-no answer came, said: “Now&mdash;both together.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl’s shriller treble may have had
-further carrying power than the man’s
-voice, for there was promptly returned to
-them an echoing halloo, coming apparently
-from a great distance. But it was repeated
-at close intervals, and each time with more
-distinctness.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll beach the boat just yonder, under
-that tamarack. Whoever it is has heard
-and is coming back.”</p>
-
-<p>Margot’s impatience broke bounds, and
-she darted forward among the trees, shouting:
-“This way! this way! here we are&mdash;here!”
-Her peculiar life and training had
-made her absolutely fearless, and she would
-have been surprised by her guardian’s command
-to “Wait!” had she heard it, which
-she did not. Also, she knew the forest as
-other girls know their city streets, and the
-dimness was no hindrance to her nimble
-feet. In a brief time she caught the crashing
-of boughs, as some person, less familiar
-than she, blundered through the underbrush
-and finally came into view where a
-break in the timber gave a faint light.</p>
-
-<p>“Here! here! this way!”</p>
-
-<p>He staggered and held out his hands, as
-if for aid, and Margot clasped them firmly.
-They were cold and tremulous. They were,
-also, slender and smooth, not at all like the
-hands of any men whom she was used to
-seeing. At the relief of her touch, his
-strength left him, but she caught his murmured
-“Thank God! I&mdash;had&mdash;given up&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>His voice, too, was different from any
-she knew, save her uncle’s. This was
-somebody, then, from that outside world of
-which she dreamed so much and knew so
-little. It was like a fairy tale come true.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you ill? There; lean on me. Don’t
-fear. Oh! I’m strong, very strong, and
-uncle is just yonder, coming this way.
-Uncle&mdash;uncle!”</p>
-
-<p>The stranger was almost past speech.
-Mr. Dutton recognized that at once and
-added his support to Margot’s. Between
-them they half led, half carried the wanderer
-to the canoe and lifted him into it, where
-he sank exhausted. Then they dipped
-their paddles and the boat shot homeward,
-racing with death. Angelique was still on
-the beach and still complaining of their
-foolhardiness, but one word from her master
-silenced that.</p>
-
-<p>“Lend a hand, woman! Here’s something
-real to worry about. Margot, go
-ahead and get the lights.”</p>
-
-<p>As the girl sprang from it, the housekeeper
-pulled the boat to a spot above the
-water, and, stooping, lifted a generous share
-of the burden it contained.</p>
-
-<p>It had not been a loon, then. No. Well,
-she had known that from the beginning,
-just as she had known that her beloved
-master was in no condition to go man-hunting.
-This one he had found was, probably,
-dead, any way. Of course. Somebody
-had to die&mdash;beyond chickens and such&mdash;had
-not the broken glass so said?</p>
-
-<p>Even in the twilight, Mr. Dutton could
-detect the grim satisfaction on her face,
-and smiled, foreseeing her change of expression
-when this seemingly lifeless guest
-should revive.</p>
-
-<p>They laid him on the lounge that had
-been spread with blankets for Margot, and
-she was already beside it, waiting to administer
-the herb tea which had, also, been
-prepared for herself, and which she had
-marveled to find so opportunely prepared.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dutton smiled again. In her simplicity
-the girl did not dream that the now
-bitter decoction was not a common restorative
-outside their primitive life, and in all
-good faith forced a spoonful of it between
-the closed lips.</p>
-
-<p>“After all, it doesn’t matter. The poor
-fellow is, doubtless, used to richer cordials,
-but it’s hot and strong and will do the
-work. You, Angelique, make us a pot of
-your best coffee, and swing round that
-dinner-pot. The man is almost starved,
-and I’m on the road to follow him. How
-about you, Margot?”</p>
-
-<p>“I? Oh!&mdash;I guess I’m hungry&mdash;I will be&mdash;see!
-He’s swallowing it&mdash;fast. Give me
-that bigger spoon, Angel&mdash;quick!”</p>
-
-<p>“What would you? Scald the creature’s
-throat? So he isn’t dead, after all. Well,
-he needn’t have made a body think so, he
-needn’t. There, Margot! you’ve messed
-him with the black stuff!”</p>
-
-<p>Indignantly brushing the child aside, the
-woman seized the cup and deftly administered
-its entire contents. The stranger
-had not yet opened his eyes, but accepted
-the warm liquid mechanically, and his nurse
-hurried to fill a bowl with the broth of the
-stew in the kettle. This, in turn, was taken
-from her by Margot, who jealously exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>“He’s mine. I heard him first. I found
-him first; let me be the first he sees. Dish
-up the supper, please, and set my uncle’s
-place.”</p>
-
-<p>So, when a moment later, having been
-nearly choked by the more substantial food
-forced into his mouth, the guest opened his
-eyes, they beheld the eager face of a brown-skinned,
-fair-haired girl very close to his
-and heard her joyous cry:</p>
-
-<p>“He sees me! he sees everything! he’s
-getting well already!”</p>
-
-<p>He had never seen anybody like her.
-Her hair was as abundant as a mantle and
-rippled over her shoulders like spun gold.
-So it looked in the lamplight. In fact, it
-had never been bound nor covered, and
-what in a different social condition might
-have been much darker, had in this outdoor
-life become bleached almost white. The
-weather which had whitened the hair had
-tanned the skin to bronze, making the blue
-eyes more vivid by contrast and the red lips
-redder. These were smiling now, over
-well-kept teeth, and there was about the
-whole bearing of the maid something suggestive
-of the woodland in which she had
-been reared.</p>
-
-<p>Purity, honesty, freedom&mdash;all spoke in
-every motion and tone, and, to this observer,
-at least, seemed better than any
-beauty. Presently, he was able to push her
-too-willing hand gently away and to say:</p>
-
-<p>“Not quite so fast, please.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, uncle! hear him? He talks just as
-you do! Not a bit like Pierre, or Joe, or
-the rest.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dutton came forward, smiling and
-remonstrating.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear, our new friend will think you
-quite rude, if you discuss him before his
-face so frankly. But, sir, I assure you she
-means nothing but delight at your recovery.
-We are all most thankful that you are here
-and safe. There, Margot; let the gentleman
-rest a few minutes. Then a cup of
-coffee may be better than the stew. Were
-you long without food, friend?”</p>
-
-<p>The stranger tried to answer, but the
-effort tired him, and with a beckoning nod
-to the young nurse, the woodlander led the
-way back to the table and their own delayed
-supper. Both needed it and both ate it
-rather hastily, much to the disgust of Angelique,
-who felt that her skill was wasted;
-but one was anxious to be off out-of-doors
-to learn the damage left by the storm, and
-the other to be back on her stool beside the
-lounge. When Mr. Dutton rose, the
-housekeeper left her own seat.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll fetch the lantern, master. But that’s
-the last of Snowfoot’s good milk you’ll ever
-drink,” she sighed, touching the pitcher,
-sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“What! is anything wrong with her?”</p>
-
-<p>“The cow-house is in ruins; so are the
-poultry coops. What with falling ill yourself
-just at the worst time and fetchin’ home
-other sick folks, we might all go to wrack
-and nobody the better.”</p>
-
-<p>The familiar grumbling provoked only a
-smile from the master, who would readily
-have staked his life on the woman’s devotion
-to “her people,” and knew that the
-apparent crossness was not that in reality.</p>
-
-<p>“Fie, good Angelique! You are never
-so happy as when you’re miserable. Come
-on; nothing must suffer if we can prevent.
-Take care of our guest Margot; but give
-him his nourishment slowly at intervals.
-I’ll get some tools, and join you at the shed,
-Angelique.”</p>
-
-<p>He went out and the housekeeper followed
-with the lantern, not needed in the
-moonlight, but possibly of use at the fallen
-cow-house.</p>
-
-<p>They were long gone. The stranger
-dozed, waked, ate, and dozed again. Margot,
-accustomed to early hours, also slept
-soundly, till a fearful shriek roused her.
-Her patient was wildly kicking and striking
-at some hideous monster which had settled
-on his chest and would not be displaced.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s killing me! Help&mdash;help! Oh&mdash;a&mdash;ah!”</p>
-
-<p>[TO BE CONTINUED]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="MARCH">MARCH</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">With</span> rushing winds and gloomy skies</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The dark and stubborn Winter dies;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Far-off, unseen, Spring faintly cries,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bidding her earliest child arise:</div>
- <div class="right">March!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">By streams still held in icy snare,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On southern hillsides, melting bare,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O’er fields that motley colors wear,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That summons fills the changeful air:</div>
- <div class="right">March!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">What though conflicting seasons make</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thy days their field, they woo or shake</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The sleeping lids of Life awake,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And hope is stronger for thy sake,</div>
- <div class="right">March!</div>
- <div class="right"><i>Bayard Taylor</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="Wood-Folk_Talk">Wood-Folk Talk
- </h2>
- </div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">By J. ALLISON ATWOOD</p>
-
-<h3>THE CROW</h3>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">W</span>HAT does the crow say? The
-syllable “caw” repeated several
-times? I thought you would say
-that. A tradition is hard to break; but just
-listen for yourself sometime, and you will
-be convinced that the crow has been sadly
-misunderstood. It is “Hawk, Hawk,
-Hawk,” just as plainly as one could wish.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, you wonder why one bird
-should spend all his time calling out the
-name of another. Well, that’s just what I
-want to tell you about.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long time ago&mdash;before any white
-people had invaded Birdland. The year had
-been unusually mild and all the birds had
-returned from the south where they spent
-the winter. So great was the rejoicing because
-of the early season that the king had
-sent invitations far and wide to a spring reception.</p>
-
-<p>Then what an excitement! For weeks
-nothing was discussed but the reception
-and new spring plumages.</p>
-
-<p>When the day arrived, birds from tree-top
-and meadow came by the score&mdash;waders,
-climbers, perchers&mdash;in fact, all
-kinds under the sun. The table, which, by
-the way, very closely resembled the ground,
-was festooned and hung with arbutus. Before
-each guest was a relish&mdash;a dainty little
-worm, served upon an equally exquisite
-plate of shellbark. But why torment ourselves
-with the “bill o’ fare”? Sufficient to
-say that it was worthy of the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>At the head of the table sat the king
-himself, a sturdy little fellow, nicely dressed
-in black and white, and wearing a concealed
-crown of gold on his head. One of the
-remarkable things about the king was that
-he did not flaunt his royalty before his subjects.
-Whenever he wore his crown he
-always concealed it under a cap of feathers,
-and trusted that his actions would speak
-his worth.</p>
-
-<p>Next to him sat Bob-o-link, a cheerful
-little dandy, but noted, nevertheless, for a
-good deal of courage and common sense.
-He was the king’s right-wing bird.</p>
-
-<p>On the other side was Brown Thrasher,
-dressed in a long-tailed coat of brown and a
-beautiful spotted vest. Thrasher was liked
-for his wit and sauciness, but on the whole
-he was a good deal of an adventurer. He
-had several times claimed kinship to the
-Thrushes, but they would have none of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Among other celebrities were Mocking
-Bird, a great jester and all-around wit;
-Quail, the famous toastmaster, and, in fact,
-all civilized birds except Night Hawk and
-Whip-poor-will, who were ridiculously shy
-of all public gatherings, and Crow, who had
-not been invited.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, it was a great pity that Crow
-did not receive an invitation, but, somehow,
-the king had taken a strong dislike to him.
-The reason for this, he told his subjects, was
-because Crow could not sing, but it was
-really because he was black. The king
-had even hesitated about inviting Blackbird
-in spite of his gorgeous rainbow
-lustre.</p>
-
-<p>Well, to say the least, poor Crow’s feelings
-were greatly hurt. He was very sad as he
-sat high up in a nearby tree and looked
-down upon the gay tumult. Crow was a
-sociable fellow, and, moreover, he was very
-hungry. Suddenly a thought came into
-his cunning black head.</p>
-
-<p>Just as the party was at its merriest, he
-stood erect and called out in his loudest
-tone, “Hawk, Hawk, Hawk!” Instantly
-there was a confusion. Thrasher, quickly
-gathering his coat over his new vest, scurried
-into the nearest thicket. Quail, greedily
-bolting the last of his dessert, so far
-forgot his manners as to run straight across
-the table and hide himself in the tall grass;
-while Bob-o-link, checked in the midst of a
-brilliant speech, vanished among the nearby
-reeds. Last of all, the king, yielding to
-the universal panic, took wing. In a moment
-there was not a bird in sight.</p>
-
-<p>Then Crow, laughing to himself, flew
-down to the table and made short work
-of the feast to which he had not been
-invited. Just as he was finishing the last
-mouthful, King Bird, ashamed of his hasty
-flight, returned, ready to confront his
-deadly enemy. Instead of the expected
-Hawk, however, he found only Crow, just
-then hopping up from the table and carefully
-rubbing his bill against the side of a
-branch.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, what a rage he was in when he saw
-the trick that had been played upon them.
-With a snap of his bill, he flew at Crow like
-an arrow, and would undoubtedly have injured
-him had not the rascal taken instant
-flight.</p>
-
-<p>From that day to this, Crow has been an
-outcast. If you watch him carefully you
-will notice how warily he flies, for the
-smaller birds have never ceased to torment
-and abuse him.</p>
-
-<p>King Bird in particular has never forgiven
-the outrage, and whenever he hears
-Crow’s mocking voice calling “Hawk,
-Hawk, Hawk,” chases madly after him,
-crying out, angrily, “Cheat-thief, cheat-thief.”</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes Crow, as he thinks of the
-feast, laughs exultantly as if to say, “I got
-the best of you all that time.”</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon Quail, first glancing proudly
-at his own sleek form with the air of one
-who has not lived in vain, mounts the top
-of a nearby stump, and in his clear, shrill
-voice answers, “Not quite! not&mdash;quite!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_bird" style="max-width: 32.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_bird.jpg" alt="Four Birds" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox">
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="LITTLE_POLLY_PRENTISS">LITTLE POLLY PRENTISS
- </h2>
- <p class="h2sub"><span class="allsmcap">BY</span> ELIZABETH LINCOLN GOULD</p>
- </div>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER I<br />
- AN INTERRUPTED STORY
- </h3>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">A</span>LTHOUGH it was only five o’clock,
-and Manser Farm stood on a hill
-so that its windows caught the last
-gleam of the sun on a pleasant afternoon,
-the garret was growing dark.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it five or six days it’s been raining
-without any stop?” inquired Mrs. Ramsdell,
-as she dropped the lid of her horse-hair
-trunk and turned the key in the lock.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s only three days come six o’clock
-to-night,” said Aunty Peebles in her cheery
-treble. “Don’t you recall we were just
-going down to supper Monday when we
-heard the first drops on the tin roof? And
-this is only Thursday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it seems like two weeks, that’s
-all I’ve got to say about it,” grumbled Mrs.
-Ramsdell, as she rose stiffly and whisked
-her black alpaca skirt back and forth till
-every speck of dust had flown away from
-it. Most of the specks settled on Grandma
-Manser who sat tranquilly knitting in her
-corner by the south window.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know where Polly is?” suddenly
-demanded Mrs. Ramsdell, bending over
-the knitter and shouting fiercely in her ear.
-“Why isn’t she up here this dull afternoon?
-The only bright thing there is in this
-house! What’s your daughter-in-law keeping
-her downstairs for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Polly?” repeated Grandma Manser,
-gently. She had evidently heard only part
-of the gusty speech. “Polly told me she
-was planning to be out in the woodshed,
-to help Uncle Sam Blodgett saw and split,
-this afternoon. She said she’d be up to
-recite a piece to us before supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m! I should think it was high time
-she came, then,” said Mrs. Ramsdell,
-crossly. But after a minute her wrinkled
-face grew still more wrinkled with the smile
-that broke over it as she heard a clattering
-sound on the garret stairs. A second later
-a rosy face about which danced a mop of
-short brown curls peeped around the old
-bureau which hid the stairway from the
-group gathered near the windows.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a naughty little piece, that’s
-what you are, to stay down in the woodshed
-with Sam’l Blodgett, instead of coming
-up here to entertain us,” cried Mrs.
-Ramsdell, with twinkling eyes that contradicted
-the severity of her tone. “What
-have you been doing down there, I’d like
-to know?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been listening to war stories,” said
-Polly Prentiss, coming out from behind the
-bureau. “I’ve been hearing about Uncle
-Blodgett’s nephew who died down South
-and ‘though but nineteen years of age displayed
-great bravery on the field of battle.’
-That’s on his tombstone,” said Polly, seating
-herself on a little stool close to Grandma
-Manser and reaching out her hand to
-pat Ebenezer, the big Maltese cat.</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty doings!” grumbled Mrs. Ramsdell,
-but she smiled at Polly as she went
-over to the rocking chair by Aunty Peebles.
-“We old folks have been taking things out
-of our trunks and putting ’em back again
-just to keep up heart till you came, except
-grandma there; she’s kept to her knitting,
-so’s not to disturb Ebenezer of his nap, I
-suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ebenezer’s a splendid cat, if he does
-like to sleep most of the time, and looks like
-Mrs. Manser’s old sack that the moths got
-into,” said Polly, with a laugh. “Oh, did
-any of you know there was a visitor downstairs?&mdash;that
-Miss Pomeroy with the sharp
-eyes. Seemed as if she’d look right
-through me last Sunday, after church. I
-guess she’s pleasant, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Folks can afford to be pleasant when
-they own property and have good clothes
-to their backs.” said Mrs. Ramsdell. “I
-don’t know as Hetty Pomeroy’s disposition
-would be any better than some other folks’
-if ’twas tried in the furnace. Her father
-had a high temper, I’ve heard.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s had her trials, Miss Hetty has,”
-said Aunty Peebles, gently. “She’s all
-alone in the world now, excepting for Arctura
-Green that’s always worked in the
-family. You know she was to have had her
-brother’s little girl to adopt,
-and the child died of diphtheria
-last fall. I understand
-it was a great grief to Miss
-Hetty.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s she here for in all
-this rain?” questioned Mrs.
-Ramsdell, sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it’s almost stopped
-raining,” said
-Polly stroking
-Ebenezer, who
-stretched out
-one paw and
-curved it round
-her finger without
-opening his
-eyes. “She
-drove up to the
-shed to ask
-Uncle Blodgett
-to put her horse
-in the barn.
-Then I showed
-her the way to
-the sitting-room
-and, she
-said she had an
-errand with
-Mrs. Manser,
-and I’d better
-run away soon
-as I’d called
-her. I should
-have, anyway,”
-said Polly, nodding
-at each of
-her old friends
-in turn, “for I was anxious to hurry up
-here, and tell you about the things Uncle
-Blodgett’s been telling me.”</p>
-
-<p>Polly’s quick eyes had seen a half-frightened
-glance exchanged between Mrs.
-Ramsdell and Aunty Peebles when she
-spoke of Miss Hetty’s errand, but as neither
-of the old ladies seemed disposed to speak
-when she paused, Polly went on, thinking
-“it’s just one of their mysteries, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“First, he recited me a poem,” said Polly;
-“at least, he really recited it to himself, ‘just
-to keep his hand in.’ I’m not very good
-about remembering poems,
-but this was by Dr. Goldsmith,
-Uncle Blodgett said,
-and it was all about a Madam
-Blaize. I asked him the name
-twice, to be sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never heard of either of
-’em,” said Mrs. Ramsdell.
-“Must both be fictitious persons.
-I wonder
-Samu’l Blodgett
-never recites
-poems to
-us of an evening.
-I must
-say.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Twas only
-because I happened
-to be
-there, picking
-up the chips,”
-exclaimed
-Polly; “and I
-don’t know
-whether Dr.
-Goldsmith and
-Madam Blaize
-were fick&mdash;the
-kind of persons
-you said&mdash;but
-she was a grand
-lady in the
-poem. It’s
-funny, too,”
-said Polly,
-showing her
-dimples; “in
-one place it says
-‘The king himself has followed her when
-she has walked before.’ Of course, he’d
-have to; isn’t that funny?”</p>
-
-<p>“What else did he recite?” demanded
-Mrs. Ramsdell.</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t recite anything else,” said
-Polly, releasing her fingers from Ebenezer’s
-clasp, and springing to her feet, “but he told
-me a very exciting adventure he had once,
-and I can act it all out for you. You see,
-he was going home through some thick
-woods to his log-hut. We’ll play the
-bureau is the hut, and just on the edge of
-the woods. If you and Aunty Peebles will
-move your rocking chairs a little farther
-apart you’ll make a splendid edge of the
-woods,” said Polly to Mrs. Ramsdell, in a
-coaxing tone, “then I can come through between.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp45" id="i_girl" style="max-width: 39.1875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_girl.jpg" alt="Girl in Dress" />
- <div class="caption"><p>I CAN ACT IT ALL OUT FOR YOU.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Anything to help out,” said the old lady,
-quickly hitching her chair away from Aunty
-Peebles.</p>
-
-<p>“Now I think,” said Polly, squinting up
-her eyes, “that Grandma Manser is in just
-about the right place for the panther.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mercy on us, it’s a wild beast tale,”
-chuckled Mrs. Ramsdell.</p>
-
-<p>“Grandma Manser, can you snarl like a
-panther?” asked Polly, bending over the
-quiet knitter, whose soft eyes had been following
-the little girl’s movements. “It’s in
-Uncle Blodgett’s adventure, and I’m going
-to act it all out, and speak so slow and
-clear, you’ll hear everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“My yarn’s more used to snarling than I
-am, dear child,” said Grandma Manser,
-smiling up at the earnest face, “but I’ll do
-my best. You let me know the right
-minute, someway.”</p>
-
-<p>“When I point my right arm at you with
-this stick in my hand, it’s a gun that never
-missed,” explained Polly to her assistants,
-“that’ll be the time for you to snarl, please.”</p>
-
-<p>Grandma Manser nodded cheerfully, and
-Polly, gun in hand, ran to her position behind
-Mrs. Ramsdell and Aunty Peebles.</p>
-
-<p>“As I was walking slowly along,” said
-Polly, with her lips pouted out in imitation
-of Uncle Blodgett, and the gun over her
-shoulder, “suddenly off to the left, not more
-than a dozen rods from the house, what
-should I see, but&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Mary!” came a querulous voice from
-the foot of the garret stairs. “Mary Prentiss!
-Are you up there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes’m,” answered Polly, as the gun
-dropped to the floor, and Grandma Manser,
-fearing she had mistaken the signal, gave a
-very mild sound, meant for a fierce snarl.
-“Yes’m, I’m here. Do you want me downstairs?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’ll mount; I’m used to trouble, and
-they might as well hear the news at once,”
-said the fretful voice, drawing nearer. The
-stairs creaked under the slow steps; the
-little company in the garret waited; disappointment
-was on Polly’s face, but the old
-people looked sad and anxious.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Manser’s tall, thin figure and sallow,
-discontented face had a depressing effect on
-all of them, as she stood in her dark brown
-calico, leaning against the old bureau.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary Prentiss,” she said, solemnly,
-“your chance has come, thanks to the way
-I’ve brought you up and kept you clean.
-Miss Hester Pomeroy, of Pomeroy Oaks, is
-coming next Thursday morning to take you
-home with her for a month’s trial, and if
-you do your best and follow all I tell you,
-there’s a likelihood Miss Pomeroy will
-adopt you for good and all. And now, we
-won’t have any talk or fuss over it, for I
-shall need everybody’s help to get you fit to
-go in time. We’re going to have supper
-early to-night, so you’d better all follow me
-down right off, to be on hand.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Mrs. Manser turned and creaked
-slowly down the stairs, while Polly looked
-from the bewildered panther to the trembling
-edges of the wood with something
-very like tears in her brown eyes, and
-Ebenezer, after a thorough stretching of all
-his paws, disappeared around the bureau
-and hurried down to his evening meal.</p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER II<br />
- GETTING READY
- </h3>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>T seemed to Polly that no days before
-ever flew so fast as the ones between
-that rainy Thursday afternoon in April
-and the next Thursday morning. To be
-sure, Polly was not accustomed to having
-new clothes especially made for her, and the
-hours spent in being fitted and re-fitted
-were just a waste of precious time, in her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Aunty Peebles was the best dressmaker
-at Manser Farm. Her fingers were old and
-sometimes they trembled, but in her day
-she had been a famous seamstress, and even
-now she could hem a ruffle much better
-than Mrs. Manser.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know just what the reason is my
-work looks better than some,” said Aunty
-Peebles, flushing with delight, one morning
-when Polly had said, “Oh, what bee-yu-tiful
-even, little bits of stitches you do
-make!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s experience, that’s all it is,” said Mrs.
-Manser, dejectedly, as she sat gathering the
-top of a pink gingham sleeve; “if I’d been
-brought up to it instead of all the education
-I had that’s no good to me now, I
-should be thankful, I’m sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’d never be thankful for anything,”
-whispered Mrs. Ramsdell, who was ripping
-out bastings and constantly encountering
-knots which had been “machined in” and
-did not soothe her temper; “’taint in her,
-and you know it, Miss Peebles, well as I
-do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mary,” said Mrs. Manser, fretfully,
-“don’t sit there doing nothing. Let me see
-how you’re getting on with that patchwork.
-My back’s almost broken, and I’ve got
-chills. You go and tell Father Manser to
-bring in some wood, and then you thread
-me up some needles, and fill the pincushion,
-and I’ve got some basting for you
-to do. What a looking square you’ve made
-of that last one! Well, I don’t believe Miss
-Hetty’ll keep you more than just the month,
-and all this sewing and these two nice ginghams
-will go for nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll try to behave so she’ll keep me,” said
-Polly, with a flushed face as she hurried out
-to old Father Manser. She returned with
-him after a moment. He was a thin little
-man, who had a kind word for everybody,
-but spoke in a husky tone, which Mrs.
-Ramsdell claimed Mrs. Manser had
-“frightened him into with her education
-when she first married him.” However
-that might be, Father Manser never made a
-statement in his wife’s presence without an
-appealing glance toward her for approval.</p>
-
-<p>“Fill up the stove,” said Mrs. Manser, in
-her most dismal tone, “and see if you can
-take the chill off this room, father. I presume,
-though, it’s in my bones and won’t
-come out; I notice the others are warm
-enough, for, of course, I’d have heard complaints
-if they weren’t. Then you might as
-well oil the machine and get ready to run
-up the seams of those aprons, if your
-mother ever gets them done.”</p>
-
-<p>“I declare it riles me to see a man doing
-woman’s work,” said Mrs. Ramsdell, tugging
-at a vicious knot, “and doing it all
-hodge-podge into the bargain!”</p>
-
-<p>Father Manser, all unconscious of her
-unfavorable criticism, filled up the stove,
-and then set about oiling the sewing-machine.
-By the time he had finished,
-Grandma Manser had put the last careful
-basting in the last apron seam, and his work
-was ready for him.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, don’t make your feet go so fast,”
-cautioned Mrs. Manser, “and stop off carefully,
-so you won’t break the needles the
-way you did yesterday, and do keep by the
-bastings, father. Are your specs on? No,
-they aren’t. You put them on, this
-minute!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes’m,” said Father Manser, meekly,
-and when his spectacles were astride his
-nose, he was allowed to put his feet on the
-treadles and start on his first seam.</p>
-
-<p>“He likes to run the machine,” said
-Aunty Peebles to Polly. “Seems as if he
-thought he’d got his foot in the stirrups
-and was riding, bold and free.”</p>
-
-<p>There were many such times for Father
-Manser during this dressmaking season,
-and he enjoyed them, though he knew how
-much he would miss Polly when she had
-gone.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of hours spent in the house instead
-of out in the sweet spring weather, in
-spite of unwonted tasks, and many serious
-rebukes from Mrs. Manser, the days flew
-by instead of dragging slowly along as little
-Polly wished they would. “Aunty”
-Peebles, who had never had a real niece;
-“Grandma” Manser, who had no grandchildren;
-even poor Mrs. Ramsdell, with her
-sharp tongue, who had “known all sorts of
-trials and seen better days,”&mdash;all were
-friends to Polly, the only friends she had
-in the world beside Mrs. Manser, who had
-brought her up, with much grumbling, to
-be sure; kind Father Manser, who sometimes
-gave her a stick of candy in the dark;
-and Uncle Sam Blodgett, with whom she
-had such exciting talks, the hero of the adventure,
-the tale of which was so suddenly
-interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>Polly’s heart was sore at the thought of
-leaving them all; she even felt sorry that
-she must say good-bye to poor Bob Rust,
-the grown man with a boy’s mind, who
-could not be depended on to do the simplest
-errand.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s scatter-witted, I know,” said Polly
-to herself, “but I shall miss seeing Bob, because
-I’m used to him.”</p>
-
-<p>Thursday morning came all too soon.
-Miss Pomeroy was to come for Polly about
-ten o’clock. At half-past nine Polly, with
-anxiety written all over her rosy face, was
-twirling slowly around in the middle of the
-kitchen, while Mrs. Manser regarded her
-forlornly from her position in the doorway,
-with a hand pressed against her forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you’ll have to do as you are,”
-she said at last, with a heavy sigh. “My
-head aches so, I’m fit for nothing, or I’d see
-what more I could do with that hair of
-yours. Is that the very flattest you can
-get it, Mary? I hope you’re going to remember
-to answer Miss Pomeroy when she
-says ‘Mary’ better than you do me, child.
-It’s your rightful name, and, of course
-Polly’s no kind of a name for a girl to be
-adopted by. Did you say you’d done the
-very best you could with your hair?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes’m,” said Polly, twisting her hands
-together, locking and unlocking her fingers
-in evident excitement. “I wet it sopping
-wet, and then I patted it all down hard; but
-it doesn’t stay down very well, I’m afraid.”</p>
-
-<p>Polly was right; in spots her hair was still
-damp and sleek on her little head, but
-around these satisfactory spots her short
-curls rose and danced defiance to brush and
-water.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Ebenezer, I wish I had fur like
-yours instead of hair!” cried Polly, but
-Ebenezer only blinked at her, and retired
-hastily behind the stove as if he feared she
-might attempt an exchange of head-covering.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Mrs. Manser, dropping into
-a rocking-chair and clasping her head with
-both hands, “all I’ve got to say is, you must
-do the best you can by Miss Pomeroy and
-all of us. You know just how much depends
-on Miss Pomeroy’s adopting you.
-You know what it’ll mean to Father Manser
-and me and the old folks that I board for
-almost nothing to keep them off the town,
-if you are adopted. And Grandma&mdash;you’re
-always saying you’re so fond of her&mdash;you’d
-like her to have one of those new hearing
-apparatuses, I should suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes’m,” said Polly, eagerly, “I do
-love Grandma Manser so, and I want her to
-have the ap-apyoratus. Will it cost a great
-deal?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t just know,” said Mrs. Manser;
-“but they say Miss Pomeroy’s going to give
-five hundred dollars to whatever institution
-or place she finds the child she keeps, and
-a present of money to the folks that have
-brought her up. She didn’t mention it to
-me, but the butcher told me yesterday ’twas
-known all about, and she’s been sent for to
-several places to see children. But she
-never took a fancy to one till she saw you
-in church with me. She thinks you’ve got
-a look about the eyes that’s like Eleanor,
-that was her brother’s little girl who died
-last fall. I guess you’re about as different
-from her as a child could be, every other
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose Eleanor was an awful good,
-quiet little girl, wasn’t she?” asked Polly,
-timidly. “Her name sounds kind of still.
-I don’t believe she ever tore her clothes,
-did she?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t suppose another such good child
-ever lived, according to Miss Hetty’s ideas,”
-said Mrs. Manser, dismally. “She’d never
-been here in town since she was a baby, and
-the mother’s folks brought her and Bobby,
-the twin, one summer to Pomeroy Oaks.
-As I’ve told you, both parents died, leastways
-they were destroyed in an accident,
-when the twins were less than a year old.”</p>
-
-<p>“And Bobby lives with his grandpa and
-grandma now,” said Polly, with the air of
-reciting an oft-repeated lesson, “and folks
-say that saw him when he was here last
-winter that he just sits and reads all the
-time; he doesn’t care for play or being out-doors
-much; and he never makes a speck
-of dirt or a mite of noise. And when somebody
-said what a good child he was, Miss
-Hetty Pomeroy, she said, ‘Wait till you see
-Eleanor!’ So anybody can tell what she
-must have been,” concluded poor little
-Polly, with a gasping breath.</p>
-
-<p>“And so, of course,” said Mrs. Manser,
-fixing a forlorn gaze on the little figure in
-stiffly starched pink gingham, “if you run
-wild out-doors, picking flowers and chasing
-round after the live stock and wasting time
-with the birds the way you’ve been allowed
-to do here, you’ll lose your chance, that’s
-all. You came of good folks: your
-mother was my third cousin and your father
-was a well-meaning man, though he wasn’t
-forehanded, and always enjoyed poor
-health. I’ve brought you up the best I
-could for over seven years, but I expect
-nothing but what Miss Hetty’ll send you
-back when the month’s up.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll try real hard not to lose the chance,”
-said Polly, earnestly. Her eyes shone with
-an odd mixture of determination and fright;
-there was, moreover, a decided suggestion
-of tears, but Mrs. Manser, with her head in
-her hands again, failed to notice it.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t to be supposed you can take
-Eleanor’s place,” she groaned. “You’re
-willing to fetch and carry, and you’ve got a
-fair disposition, but you do hate to stay
-still. Your father was like that&mdash;one of
-these restless folks.”</p>
-
-<p>Polly’s face was overcast with doubt and
-trouble, but she stood her ground. “I’ll
-be just as like Eleanor as ever I can,” she
-said, slowly. “If I could only ask Miss
-Pomeroy just what Eleanor would have
-done every day, I guess I could do the
-same. But you’ve told me I mustn’t
-speak about Eleanor, because Miss
-Pomeroy doesn’t want anybody to.”
-Polly looked wistfully at Mrs. Manser’s
-bowed head.</p>
-
-<p>“That makes it harder,” said Polly, when
-there was no answer to this half-question,
-save another groan, “but I guess I can
-manage someway.” Her face looked as
-nearly stern as was possible for such a combination
-of soft curves and dimples, but her
-eyes were misty.</p>
-
-<p>Through the open door the soft air of the
-April morning blew in to her, and her little
-body thrilled with the love of the spring,
-and living, growing out-door friends. But
-if on her behavior depended the bestowal of
-Miss Hetty’s princely sum, Manser Farm
-should have it. In all the ten years of
-Polly’s life she had never before heard of
-such a large amount of money, except in
-arithmetic examples, which, as everybody
-knows, deal with all things in a bold way,
-unhampered by probability.</p>
-
-<p>With a final groan, Mrs. Manser rose and
-went to the door. Then she turned quickly
-to Polly.</p>
-
-<p>“Here comes Miss Hetty now, up the
-road,” she said. “Go and make your goodbyes
-to the folks, child, and put on your
-hat and jacket and then get your bag, so
-as not to keep her waiting&mdash;she may be in
-a hurry.”</p>
-
-<p>[TO BE CONTINUED]</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">Kind</span> wishes and good deeds&mdash;they make not poor</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They’ll home again, full laden, to thy door.</div>
- <div class="right"><i>Richard H. Dana</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak sans-serif" id="A_RAMBLE">A RAMBLE IN EARLY SPRING</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">By Julia McNair Wright</p>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">G</span>OING out for a walk on some March
-morning, we find the air soft and
-warm, the skies of a summer blue,
-the water rippling in every little runnel.
-We look about, half expecting to see a bluebird
-perched upon a fence post, a robin
-stepping among the stubble. The stems
-and branches which appeared dry and dead
-all the winter have now a fresh exhibition of
-life. We can almost see the sap creeping
-up through their vessels and distributing
-vigor where it goes.</p>
-
-<p>Let us go to the woods, to some sunny
-southern slope where maples grow.</p>
-
-<p>Turning over the light, soft earth, we
-shall find the maple seeds that ripened last
-autumn and are now germinating. The
-seeds of the maple are in pairs, which are
-called keys. They look more like little tan-colored
-moths than keys; the distinctly-veined,
-winged husk is very like the narrow
-and veined wings of many moths.</p>
-
-<p>These seeds are winged in order that
-they may be blown abroad on the wind and
-plant new forests farther afield. If they
-all dropped close under the shade of the
-parent tree few would live beyond a year
-or two.</p>
-
-<p>Where the wing-like husks come together
-there is a thickening of the base of each
-into an ear-like lobe, holding a seed. The
-wrapping of this seed softens, the seed enlarges
-as the embryo within it grows, the
-husk is pushed open, and slowly comes
-forth the baby tree, composed of two leaves
-and a stem. These two leaves, although
-very small, are perfect and even green in
-the unopened seed.</p>
-
-<p>They are soft and fleshy; in fact, they
-are pantries, full of food, ready for the weak
-little plant to feed upon until it is strong
-enough to forage and digest for itself.
-Everyone knows that babies must be carefully
-fed on delicate food until they get
-their teeth. The baby plant also needs
-well-prepared food.</p>
-
-<p>Between the two leaves is a little white
-stem. The two leaves unfold, and in a few
-days the air and sun have made them bright
-green. The stem between them thrusts a
-little root into the earth; this root is furnished
-with hairs. When the root is well-formed
-and the two seeds have reached full
-size, a bud has formed in the axil between
-them.</p>
-
-<p>This is the growing point of the new tree.
-This bud presently opens into a pair of well-formed
-maple leaves.</p>
-
-<p>As these leaves increase the seed-leaves
-diminish; the plant is feeding upon them.
-The ascending stem presses its first pair of
-leaves upward, forms between them two
-more, and then two more, and thus on.</p>
-
-<p>Small branches are formed by the end of
-summer, the seed-leaves are exhausted, and
-the plant is doing its own work.</p>
-
-<p>Under the trees in March we find many
-interesting examples of seed-growth. The
-feeding or seed-leaves of the young plant
-are called cotyledons. All flowering plants
-have cotyledons; the plants whose leaves
-have dividing or radiate veins, and whose
-stems are woody, or, at least, not hollow,
-have two cotyledons; grasses, reeds, corn,
-and other grains, lilies, bamboos, all plants
-with hollow stems and the leaf-veins parallel
-have one cotyledon, while pines and
-trees of their class have from three to twelve
-cotyledons, always set in a circle.</p>
-
-<p>The seeds, the new plants, or seedlings of
-any variety are very numerous. This is
-needful, as they are subject to many disasters.
-They may be eaten by animals or
-birds, withered by too great dry heat, devoured
-by worms, frozen or ruined by overmuch
-shade. If plantlets were not very
-numerous the varieties of plants would
-presently die out.</p>
-
-<p>When the March winds shake out the
-leaf-buds and the seeds in the ground begin
-to stir with strong life, we are led to think
-of the plant’s host of enemies.</p>
-
-<p>These enemies of the plant will not all
-begin their work in March, but they are enlisting,
-drilling, and furnishing their regiments
-for the season’s strife.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-</div>
-
- <div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_190" style="max-width: 69.625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_witheditor.jpg" alt="WITH THE EDITOR" />
- </div>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="WITH_THE_EDITOR">WITH THE EDITOR
- </h2>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>N the early days of our country the
-guest was always honored. Friend or
-stranger, the door was thrown open to
-him, and the circle around the fireplace
-parted willingly to receive him. After his
-comfort had been assured, however, there
-came inevitably to the mind of the host the
-natural queries&mdash;seldom expressed in words&mdash;“What
-is his name? What his purpose?”
-Then the wayfarer, his reserve
-thawing before the friendly greeting, would
-just as naturally open his heart and speak
-of himself.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the old-time hospitality which
-Hawthorne so quaintly pictures in “The
-Ambitious Guest.”</p>
-
-<p>To-day, the railroad and the comparative
-luxury of travel have made the wayside
-visitor a being of tradition, but the primitive
-impulses of hospitality and curiosity still
-survive.</p>
-
-<p>You have opened your doors to us and
-have welcomed us into that most sacred of
-places&mdash;the family circle. You do not ask,
-yet we cannot but feel, the old question in
-your kindly gaze. You would know our
-name?&mdash;our purpose?</p>
-
-<p>Until better advised, we shall call ourselves
-Young Folks Magazine.</p>
-
-<p>Our purpose is to provide good reading
-for young people. By good reading, we
-mean that which is interesting enough to
-catch and hold the attention of the reader,
-and which, in the end, leaves him better or
-wiser for having read it. But it must be
-interesting, or all its other virtues fail.
-The young person, particularly the boy,
-looks with distrust upon the story which
-comes too emphatically recommended as
-useful. To him, mere utility is closely related
-to dullness. With this knowledge
-fresh in our memory, we promise at the
-outset that our pages shall not be lacking
-in a keen and healthy human interest.</p>
-
-<p>“But,” we hear our host exclaim, “why
-another magazine in a time and country
-already over-run with literature?”</p>
-
-<p>Just think a moment. Count upon your
-fingers all the juvenile periodicals which
-you know even by name. Compare this
-supply with the demand. We are certainly
-understating the figures when we say
-that there are twenty million young people
-in the United States. Even the most widely-circulated
-of these periodicals does not
-claim half a million subscribers. We believe
-it safe to say that of our whole great
-nation of young people, not one in ten is yet
-supplied with a monthly or weekly periodical.
-After all, is there not ample room for
-us at the American fireside?</p>
-
-<p>Finally, may we not ask of you a little
-lenience toward our early and inevitable
-shortcomings? In return, we promise you
-that our own most constant aim shall be,
-with each succeeding visit, better to deserve
-your kindly welcome.</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img class="center" src="images/i_witheditor-hr.jpg" alt="decoration" />
- </div>
-
-<p>In spite of its traditional violence we
-always look forward to the first month of
-spring. All the more do we hail it when,
-as in the present case, it brings with it the
-Easter season. The name Easter is supposed
-to have been derived from Oestre, the
-heathen deity of Spring, in whose honor
-the ancient Teutons held their annual festival.
-Since the Christian era, however,
-Easter has been in sole commemoration of
-the Resurrection.</p>
-
-<p>During the centuries following its inauguration
-many quaint customs have sprung
-up and passed away. In parts of Ireland
-there is still a belief that on Easter morning
-the sun dances in the sky.</p>
-
-<p>The use of eggs for decoration and as
-playthings for children at this season is of
-very early origin. Nowhere is this observance
-now so common as in the capital of
-our own country. By immemorial custom,
-on the Easter holiday, the grounds of the
-White House are thrown open to the sport
-of children, who come from far and near to
-roll their Easter eggs across its sloping
-lawns. It is a pleasant sight to see the
-home of the nation’s chief executive so completely
-in the hands of frolicking children.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="EVENT_AND_COMMENT">EVENT AND COMMENT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3>The National University</h3>
-
-<p>Mr. Andrew Carnegie has offered the sum
-of ten million dollars to the government of the
-United States to endow a national institution for
-the promotion of the higher scientific research.</p>
-
-<p>While the generosity of the donor is universally
-acknowledged, there are some who question
-the practical value of the proposed university.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” they ask, “devote this vast sum to
-the special education of a select few, while
-thousands of our children can only with difficulty
-obtain the rudiments of a common education?”</p>
-
-<p>If the endowment in question were intended
-merely for the present generation, this question
-would be difficult to answer. In reality, however,
-the very form and nature of the gift show
-that it is dedicated not to the individual but to
-the race; and it is chiefly under the leadership
-of the scientific specialist that the race advances.
-It is his work rather than the influence of the
-common schools that has given to mankind the
-steam-engine, the telegraph, and the electric
-light.</p>
-
-<p>Heretofore, however, the development of men
-like Watt, Morse, Bell, and Edison has been
-wholly dependent upon chance and their own
-phenomenal perseverance. Who can say how
-many more of such men have been lost to the
-public service through mere want of opportunity?
-It is this opportunity that Mr. Carnegie’s gift
-would insure to coming generations.</p>
-
-<p>As our great military school at West Point
-supplies the nation with men educated for military
-leadership, so this institution will create and
-perpetuate a corps of savants, forever at the
-service of the whole people.</p>
-
-<p>One cannot but feel that with this gift Mr.
-Carnegie has exercised an even wiser forethought
-than in his many other generous benefactions.</p>
-
-<h3>Wireless Telegraphy</h3>
-
-<p>Signor Marconi, by means of his system of
-wireless telegraphy, has at length succeeded in
-transmitting the equivalent of the letter “s” from
-Europe to America. A glance at the work of the
-young inventor, however, will show that his success
-is not yet insured.</p>
-
-<p>His system&mdash;indeed, we might say all systems&mdash;of
-wireless telegraphy depends upon the properties
-of luminiferous ether&mdash;that mysterious
-medium that is supposed to exist in every known
-substance. The discharge of an electric spark
-produces in this ether a bubble-like wave which
-radiates in all directions. It is upon the reception
-and recording, at Newfoundland, of this
-wave, produced at England, that the success of
-Marconi’s experiment depends.</p>
-
-<p>Even to the ordinary mind, such a proposition
-presents innumerable difficulties. One of the
-most apparent would be the confusion arising
-from two sets of signals operated in the same
-locality. But just as we can throw all the rays of
-a search-light in one direction, Marconi reflects
-these waves of ether toward his receiving station.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps one of the real drawbacks of this
-system would be the expense of maintaining a
-current of sufficient voltage to signal long distances.
-Nevertheless, we feel confident that,
-whether it be from the brain of Marconi or Tesla,
-or the united efforts of Orling and Armstrong,
-wireless telegraphy is insured to the future.</p>
-
-<h3>The Great Tunnel</h3>
-
-<p>We all remember with what wonder the public
-viewed the construction of the great suspension
-bridge between New York and Brooklyn. Remarkable
-as was that feat of engineering, a far more
-difficult one is now under way. It is proposed to
-run a continuous tunnel under the North river,
-New York City, and the East river, connecting
-the Pennsylvania Railroad in New Jersey with
-the Long Island Railroad at Brooklyn. It is
-to be eight miles long. Its chief purpose is to
-give trains, especially those from the West, a
-direct and unimpeded entrance to New York
-City.</p>
-
-<p>Beginning in the neighborhood of West
-Hoboken, the tunnel will penetrate the hard
-ridge of the Palisades, and continue with a downward
-incline until, under the North, or Hudson,
-river, it will reach a depth of one hundred feet.</p>
-
-<p>At Thirty-third street, in New York City, it
-will rise to within twenty-five feet of the surface,
-and at this level cross beneath Manhattan Island,
-where, at some central point, a large station will
-be erected. Proceeding, east, the tunnel will
-again take a dip to pass the East river, and come
-to light on the Brooklyn side in the neighborhood
-of the present terminal of the Long Island
-Railroad.</p>
-
-<p>The work of construction will begin early in
-the summer of 1902, and will require a period of
-three or four years. Its estimated cost is not less
-than $40,000,000.</p>
-
-<h3>Isthmian Canal</h3>
-
-<p>An important question which has arisen recently
-is the location of the future Isthmian
-canal. Shall it cross at Nicaragua or Panama?</p>
-
-<p>The House of Representatives, on January 9th,
-1902, chose the former, the best reasons being:</p>
-
-<p>The saving of two days in the voyage between
-our Atlantic and Pacific ports;</p>
-
-<p>Its healthier climate, and the alleged lesser cost
-of construction.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Engineering Magazine</i>, on the other hand,
-sums up the advantages of the already-undertaken
-Panama canal as follows:</p>
-
-<p>It is three-fourths shorter, and could be maintained
-at a cost of $1,350,000 a year less than the
-Nicaragua canal, is exempt from fifty miles of
-dangerous river navigation, and its completion
-would require but half the amount necessary to
-build the Nicaragua canal.</p>
-
-<h3>The Danish West Indies</h3>
-
-<p>On January 24th, 1902, the government of
-Denmark, through the pen of their minister in
-Washington, ceded to the United States the
-group of islands known as the Danish West
-Indies. Unsuccessful attempts to purchase these
-islands were made in the years 1869 and 1877.</p>
-
-<p>This last effort which, so far, promises success,
-was begun two years ago. The delay has been
-due to a difference of price. The amount now
-agreed upon is believed to be $5,000,000.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_indoors" style="max-width: 65.9375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_indoors.jpg" alt="" />
- </div>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="IN-DOORS">IN-DOORS
- </h2>
- </div>
-
-<h3>PARLOR MAGIC</h3>
-
-<p class="h2sub">By Ellis Stanyon</p>
-
-<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE first thing for the student of magic
-to do is to learn palming, the art of
-holding small objects concealed in
-the hand by a slight contraction of the
-palm.</p>
-
-<p>Practice first with a half-dollar. Lay it
-in the
-right
-hand as
-shown in
-Fig. 1.
-Then
-slightly
-contract
-the palm
-by pressing
-the ball of the thumb inward, moving
-the coin about with the forefinger of the
-left hand until you find it is in a favorable
-position to
-be gripped
-by the fleshy
-portions of
-the hand.
-Continue to
-practice this
-until you can
-turn the
-hand over without letting the coin fall.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_fig1" style="max-width: 22.375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_fig1.jpg" alt="Coin in Palm" />
- <div class="caption"><p>Fig. 1.&mdash;<span class="allsmcap">PALMING COIN</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When this can be accomplished with ease,
-lay the coin on the tips of the second and
-third fingers, steadying it with the thumb,
-as in Fig. 2. Then, moving the thumb
-aside to the right, bend the fingers, and
-pass the coin up along the side of the
-thumb into the palm, which should open to
-receive it, and where, if you have followed
-the instructions carefully, you will find no
-difficulty in retaining it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_fig2" style="max-width: 21.4375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_fig2.jpg" alt="Coin betwen thumb and middle finger" />
- <div class="caption"><p>Fig. 2.&mdash;<span class="allsmcap">PALMING COIN</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Practice this movement with the right
-hand in motion toward the left, as if you
-really intended to place the coin in that
-hand. To get the movement perfect, it is
-advisable to work in front of a mirror.
-Take the coin in the
-right hand and actually
-place it in the left several
-times; then study to execute
-the same movement
-exactly, with the exception
-that you retain the
-coin in the right hand by
-palming.</p>
-
-<p>The student who desires
-to become a finished
-performer should palm the
-various objects with equal
-facility in either hand.</p>
-
-<p>When you can hold a coin properly, as
-described, practice with other objects of a
-similar size. In this case, however, owing
-to the greater extent of surface, it will not
-be found necessary to press the object into
-the palm, but simply to close the fingers
-round it, in the act of apparently placing it
-in the left hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Pass.</span> Second only in importance
-to the palming is the pass. Hold the coin
-between the fingers and thumb of the left
-hand (Fig. 3), and then appear to take it
-in the right by passing the thumb under
-and the fingers over the coin.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp38" id="i_fig3" style="max-width: 10.1875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_fig3.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>Fig. 3.&mdash;<span class="allsmcap">THE PASS</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Under cover of the right hand the coin is
-allowed to fall into the fingers of the left,
-where, by a slight contraction, it may be
-held between the first and second joints, or it
-may be allowed to fall into the palm proper.
-The right hand must be closed and raised
-as if it really contained the coin, and be
-followed by the eyes of the performer; the
-left falling to the side. This pass should
-be performed equally well from either hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Finger Palm.</span>&mdash;Lay a coin on the
-fingers as shown in Fig. 4. Then, in the
-act of apparently placing it in the left hand,
-raise the forefinger
-slightly and clip the
-coin between it and the
-second finger. The left
-hand must now close
-as if it contained the
-coin, and be followed
-by the eyes of the performer,
-while the right
-hand disposes of the
-coin as may be necessary.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp47" id="i_fig4" style="max-width: 13.9375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_fig4.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>Fig. 4.&mdash;<span class="allsmcap">THE FINGER
-PALM</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Following is an illustration
-of the way
-in which this sleight
-can be employed with good effect.</p>
-
-<p>Place a candle on the table to your left,
-and then execute the pass as above described.
-The thumb of the right hand
-should now close on the edge of the coin
-nearest to itself and draw it back a little;
-and at the same time the candle should be
-taken from the candlestick between the
-thumb and fingers of the same hand.
-(Fig. 5.) The left hand, which is supposed
-to contain the coin, should now be
-held over the candle and opened slowly, the
-effect to the spectators being that the coin
-is dissolved into the flame. Both hands
-at this point should be shown back and
-front, as the coin, owing to its peculiar
-position, cannot be seen at a short distance.
-You now take the upper part of the candle
-in the left hand, then lower the right hand
-to the lower end and produce the coin from
-thence, the effect being that the money is
-passing through the candle from one end
-to the other.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp96" id="i_fig5" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_fig5.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>Fig. 5</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">To Change a Coin.</span>&mdash;Sometimes, in
-order to bring about a desired result, it is
-necessary to change, or, in conjurer’s parlance,
-to “ring” a borrowed or marked coin
-for a substitute of your own. There are
-many ways of effecting this, but having
-once mastered the various “palms” the student
-will readily invent means for himself.
-The following, however, is the one generally
-adopted by conjurers:</p>
-
-<p>Borrow a coin and have it marked.
-Then take it between the fingers and thumb
-of the left hand, as in the pass (Fig. 3),
-having previously secreted the substitute in
-the palm of the right. Now take the coin
-in the right hand, and in so doing drop the
-substitute into the palm of the left, which
-you immediately close, and remark, “You
-have all seen me take the coin visibly from
-the left hand. I will now make it return
-invisibly.” Saying this, you appear to
-throw the marked coin into the left hand,
-really palming it, and showing your own,
-which every one takes to be the original
-borrowed one. You may now proceed
-with the trick in question, disposing of the
-marked coin as may be necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Let the student practice faithfully the
-steps here given. He shall then be prepared
-to make practical use of them, as we
-shall endeavor to show in the next paper.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" style="max-width: 69.125em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_oldtrunk.jpg" alt="The Old Trunk Decoration" />
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_OLD_TRUNK">THE OLD TRUNK
- </h2>
-
-<p>This department we believe is destined soon to become
-one of the most popular features of the magazine.
-Not only shall we spare no pains upon our
-part, but we also earnestly ask your co-operation in
-providing puzzles of all shapes and descriptions
-to bewilder and tangle the most ingenious of intellects.
-To each of the first three persons who shall
-correctly solve all the following puzzles, we will
-give a year’s subscription to <span class="smcap">Young Folks Magazine</span>,
-to be sent to any desired address.</p>
-
-<h3>ZIGZAG</h3>
-
-<ul><li>1. A plant, but better known as a beverage.</li>
-<li>2. To cross out.</li>
-<li>3. An instrument for pounding.</li>
-<li>4. A kind of ointment.</li>
-<li>5. Reddish-brown.</li>
-<li>6. To flee from danger.</li>
-<li>7. To breathe out.</li>
-<li>8. A planet.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>When these words of six letters are correctly
-guessed and placed in the order given, from 1 to
-8 will spell the name of a common mineral found
-in rocks.</p>
-
-<table class="square" summary="Puzzle">
-<tr><td>.</td><td>.</td><td> .</td><td> 1</td><td> .</td><td> .</td></tr>
-<tr><td>.</td><td>.</td><td> .</td><td> .</td><td> 2</td><td> .</td></tr>
-<tr><td>.</td><td>.</td><td> .</td><td> 3</td><td> .</td><td> .</td></tr>
-<tr><td>.</td><td>.</td><td> .</td><td> .</td><td> 4</td><td> .</td></tr>
-<tr><td>.</td><td>.</td><td> .</td><td> 5</td><td> .</td><td> .</td></tr>
-<tr><td>.</td><td>.</td><td> .</td><td> .</td><td> 6</td><td> .</td></tr>
-<tr><td>.</td><td>.</td><td> .</td><td> 7</td><td> .</td><td> .</td></tr>
-<tr><td>.</td><td>.</td><td> .</td><td> .</td><td> 8</td><td> .</td></tr>
-</table>
-<p class="right">&mdash;<i>Frank F. Rider</i>
- </p>
-
-<h3>ENIGMA</h3>
-
-<p>I am composed of sixteen letters:</p>
-
-<p>My 2, 9, 6, 8, 16, 12, is a very small but useful
-household implement.</p>
-
-<p>My 5, 4, 10, 11, 1, 15, is another implement,
-very common in the school-room.</p>
-
-<p>My 13, 14, 7, 3, is the part of a person closely
-in touch with both.</p>
-
-<p>My whole is a building known throughout the
-land.</p>
-
-<p>
-&mdash;<i>Samuel Baird</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<h3>BIRD PIE</h3>
-
-<p>
-Gtkinle,<br />
-Yulbeaj,<br />
-Orinb,<br />
-Rildbbake,<br />
-Rwco,<br />
-Doshwhurot.<br />
-&mdash;<i>J. F. Stokes</i>
-</p>
-
-<h3>ENIGMA</h3>
-
-<p>I am composed of seventeen letters:</p>
-<p>My 4, 9, 10, 12, grows on an evergreen tree.</p>
-<p>My 11, 1, 14, 5, is a small valley.</p>
-<p>My 8, 15, 16, 5, is to grow less.</p>
-<p>My 17, 3, 7, is a noise.</p>
-<p>My 2, 1, 6, 13, is the home of a wild animal.</p>
-<p>My whole is a book which you have all,
-doubtless, enjoyed.</p>
-
-<p>
-&mdash;<i>E. L. Barnes</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<h3>DIAGONAL</h3>
-
-<p>When the following words of eight letters
-are guessed correctly and placed one above the
-other in the order given, so as to form a square,
-the diagonal from the upper left-hand corner
-to the lower right will spell the name of one of
-the most important battles of the Revolution:</p>
-
-<ul><li>1. Reasonable.</li>
-<li>2. Adherent.</li>
-<li>3. Kind-hearted.</li>
-<li>4. Ensnare.</li>
-<li>5. Goods.</li>
-<li>6. Resonant.</li>
-<li>7. To barter.</li>
-<li>8. One of Longfellow’s poems.</li>
-<li><span class="right">&mdash;<i>Bessie M</i>&mdash;&mdash;</span></li>
-</ul>
-
-<h3>HIDING ANIMALS.</h3>
-
-<p>In each of the following sentences there are
-three hiding animals:</p>
-
-<p>“It must be,” averred Caleb, earnestly, as he
-gazed at the new easel.</p>
-
-<p>Wampum, a kind of money, used by the
-Indians, was made ere Cabot terrified them by
-his presence.</p>
-
-<p>Morse altered his plans, and accepting the
-offer, returned from his foreign travel, knowing
-it to be for the best.</p>
-
-<p class="right">&mdash;<i>Margaret West</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<h2>A BUNCH OF KEYS</h2>
-
-<h3>A JINGLE</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">A key to bear one up the mountain side;</div>
- <div class="verse">A key to guard where freedom is denied.</div>
- <div class="verse">The third, oft heard to chatter, ne’er in song.</div>
- <div class="verse">The fourth beware! ’twill lead to gravest wrong.</div>
- <div class="verse">This key his master serves, to ride, to work, to wait;</div>
- <div class="verse">This one, spring-hatched, at Christmas meets his fate.</div>
- <div class="right">&mdash;<i>Caroline L</i>&mdash;&mdash;</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
- </div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p>Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-<p>A number of typographical errors have been corrected silently.</p>
-<p>Archaic spellings have been retained.</p>
-<p>Cover image is in the public domain.</p>
-<p>The table of contents refers to a "With the Publisher" page that does
-not exist in the transcribed image so does not exist in the transcription.</p>
-<p>Alt text for images are in the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK YOUNG FOLKS MAGAZINE, VOL. I, NO. 1, MARCH 1902 ***</div>
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