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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
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69521 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69521)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Surprise house, by Abbie Farwell Brown
-
-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: Surprise house
-
-Author: Abbie Farwell Brown
-
-Illustrator: Helen Mason Grose
-
-Release Date: December 10, 2022 [eBook #69521]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: David E. Brown and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SURPRISE HOUSE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-By Abbie Farwell Brown
-
-
- SURPRISE HOUSE. Illustrated.
-
- KISINGTON TOWN. Illustrated.
-
- SONGS OF SIXPENCE. Illustrated.
-
- THEIR CITY CHRISTMAS. Illustrated.
-
- THE CHRISTMAS ANGEL. Illustrated.
-
- JOHN OF THE WOODS. Illustrated.
-
- FRESH POSIES. Illustrated.
-
- FRIENDS AND COUSINS. Illustrated.
-
- BROTHERS AND SISTERS. Illustrated.
-
- THE STAR JEWELS AND OTHER WONDERS. Illustrated.
-
- THE FLOWER PRINCESS. Illustrated.
-
- THE CURIOUS BOOK OF BIRDS. Illustrated.
-
- A POCKETFUL OF POSIES. Illustrated.
-
- IN THE DAYS OF GIANTS. Illustrated.
-
- THE BOOK OF SAINTS AND FRIENDLY BEASTS. Illustrated.
-
- THE LONESOMEST DOLL. Illustrated.
-
-
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
-Surprise House
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “I DIDN’T!” PROTESTED JOHN. “IT WAS--SOMETHING, I DON’T
-KNOW WHAT--THAT SPOKE” (_Page 19_)]
-
-
-
-
- SURPRISE
- HOUSE
-
- BY
-
- Abbie Farwell Brown
-
- _With Illustrations_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- The Riverside Press Cambridge
- 1917
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY THE YOUNG CHURCHMAN COMPANY
- COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY ABBIE FARWELL BROWN
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
- _Published October 1917_
-
-
-
-
- --_And I as rich in having such a jewel
- As twenty seas, if all their sand were pearl,
- The water nectar, and the rocks pure gold._
-
-
-
-
-Contents
-
-
- I. THE HOUSE 1
-
- II. THE LIBRARY 10
-
- III. A VISITOR 17
-
- IV. THE BOOKS 25
-
- V. INSTRUCTIONS 34
-
- VI. THE LANTERN 43
-
- VII. CALIBAN 50
-
- VIII. THE BUST 58
-
- IX. THE ATTIC 72
-
- X. THE PORTRAIT POINTS 84
-
- XI. GEMS FROM SHAKESPEARE 91
-
- XII. THE PARTY 99
-
- NOTE:--Thanks are due to the publishers of _The Young Churchman_ for
- courteous permission to reprint chapters of this book which appeared
- as a serial in that publication under the title of “Aunt Nan’s
- Legacy.”
-
-
-
-
-Illustrations
-
-
- “I DIDN’T!” PROTESTED JOHN. “IT WAS--SOMETHING,
- I DON’T KNOW WHAT--THAT SPOKE” _Frontispiece_
-
- “OH, KATY, WHAT DO YOU SUPPOSE AUNT NAN
- MEANT THIS TIME?” 62
-
- THINGS THAT HAD BEEN WAITING THROUGH GENERATIONS
- OF AUNT NAN’S ANCESTORS FOR SOME ONE TO MAKE
- THEM USEFUL 80
-
- “OH, THEY ARE VERY BEAUTIFUL,” SAID MARY 96
-
- _From drawings by Helen Mason Grose._
-
-
-
-
-SURPRISE HOUSE
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE HOUSE
-
-
-On the main street of Crowfield stood a little old red house, with a
-gabled roof, a pillared porch, and a quaint garden. For many weeks it
-had been quite empty, the shutters closed and the doors locked; ever
-since the death of Miss Nan Corliss, the old lady who had lived there
-for years and years.
-
-It began to have the lonesome look which a house has when the heart has
-gone out of it and nobody puts a new heart in. The garden was growing
-sad and careless. The flowers drooped and pouted, and leaned peevishly
-against one another. Only the weeds seemed glad,--as undisturbed weeds
-do,--and made the most of their holiday to grow tall and impertinent
-and to crowd their more sensitive neighbors out of their very beds.
-
-But one September day something happened to the old house. A lady and
-gentleman, a big girl and a little boy, came walking over the slate
-stones between the rows of sulky flowers. The gentleman, who was tall
-and thin and pale, opened the front door with a key bearing a huge tag,
-and cried:--
-
-“Good-day, Crowfield! Welcome your new friends to their new home. We
-greet you kindly, old house. Be good to us!”
-
-“What a dear house!” said the lady, as they entered the front hall. “I
-know I am going to like it. This paneled woodwork is beautiful.”
-
-“Open the windows, John, so that we can see what we are about,” said
-Dr. Corliss.
-
-John shoved up the dusty windows and pushed out the queer little wooden
-shutters, and a flood of September sunshine poured into the old house,
-chasing away the shadows. It was just as if the house took a long
-breath and woke up from its nap.
-
-“What a funny place to live in!” cried Mary. “It’s like a museum.”
-
-“Whew!” whistled John. “I bet we’ll have fun here.”
-
-The hallway in which they stood did, indeed, seem rather like the
-entrance to a museum, as Mary Corliss said. On the white paneled walls
-which Mrs. Corliss admired were hanging all sorts of queer things:
-huge shells, and ships in glass cases, stuffed fishes, weapons, and
-china-ware. On a shelf between the windows stood a row of china cats,
-blue, red, green, and yellow, grinning mischievously at the family
-who confronted them. On the floor were rugs of bright colors, and odd
-chairs and tables sprawled about like quadrupeds ready to run.
-
-“Gee!” whispered John Corliss, “don’t they look as if they were just
-ready to bark and mew and wow at us? Do you suppose it’s welcome or
-unwelcome, Daddy?”
-
-“Oh, welcome, of course!” said Dr. Corliss. “I dare say they remember
-me, at least, though it’s thirty years since I was in this house.
-Thirty years! Just think of it!”
-
-They were in the parlor now, which had been Miss Corliss’s “best room.”
-And this was even queerer than the hallway had been. It was crowded
-with all sorts of collections in cabinets, trophies on the walls,
-pictures, and ornaments.
-
-Dr. Corliss looked around with a chuckle. “Hello!” he cried. “Here are
-a lot of the old relics I remember so well seeing when I was a boy,
-visiting Aunt Nan in the summer-time. Yes, there’s the old matchlock
-over the door; and here’s the fire-bucket, and the picture of George
-Washington’s family. I expect Aunt Nan didn’t change anything here in
-all the thirty years since she let any of her relatives come to see
-her. Yes, there’s the wax fruit in the glass jar--just as toothsome as
-ever! There’s the shell picture she made when she was a girl. My! How
-well I remember everything!”
-
-They moved from room to room of the old house, flinging open the blinds
-and letting fresh air and sunshine in upon the strange furniture and
-decorations. Mrs. Corliss looked about with increasing bewilderment.
-How was she ever to make this strange place look like their home? Aunt
-Nan and her queer ways seemed stamped upon everything.
-
-“It’s a funny collection of things, Owen!” she laughed to her husband.
-“All this furniture is mine, I suppose, according to Aunt Nan’s will.
-But I am glad we have some things of our own to bring and make it seem
-more like a truly home. Otherwise I should feel, as Mary says, as if we
-were living in a kind of museum.”
-
-“We can change it as much as we like, by and by,” her husband reassured
-her.
-
-“What a funny old lady Great-Aunt Nan must have been, Daddy!” said
-John, who had been examining a hooked rug representing a blue cat
-chasing a green mouse. “Did she make this, do you think?”
-
-“Oh, yes,” said Dr. Corliss. “I remember seeing her working at it. She
-hooked all these rugs. It was one of her favorite amusements. She was
-strange enough, I believe. I can remember some of the weird things she
-used to do when I was a lad. She used to put on a man’s coat and hat
-and shovel coal or snow like any laborer. She was always playing tricks
-on somebody, or making up a game about what she happened to be doing.
-We must expect surprises and mysteries about the house as we come to
-live here. It wouldn’t be Aunt Nan’s house without them.--Hello!”
-
-John had sat down on a little three-legged stool in the corner; and
-suddenly he went _bump!_ on the floor. The legs of the stool had spread
-as if of their own accord and let him down.
-
-“That was one of Aunt Nan’s jokes, I remember!” laughed Dr. Corliss.
-“Oh, yes! I got caught myself once in the same way when I was a boy.”
-
-“Tell about it, Father,” said Mary.
-
-“Well; I was about your age, John,--about ten; and I was terribly
-bashful. One day when I was visiting Aunt Nan the minister came to
-call. And though I tried to escape out of the back door, Aunt Nan spied
-me and made me come in to shake hands. As soon as I could I sidled away
-into a corner, hoping he would forget about me.
-
-“This innocent little stool stood there by the stuffed bird cabinet,
-just as it does now, and I sat down on it very quietly. Then _bump!_
-I went on to the floor, just as John did. Only I was not so lucky. I
-lost my balance and kicked my heels up almost in the minister’s face.
-I can tell you I was mortified! And Aunt Nan laughed. But the minister
-was very nice about it, I will say. I remember he only smiled kindly
-and said, ‘A little weak in the legs,--eh, John? I’m glad my stool in
-church isn’t like that, Miss Corliss. I’d never trust you to provide me
-with furniture,--eh, what?’”
-
-“I don’t think that was a bit funny joke,” spluttered John, who had got
-to his feet looking very red.
-
-“Neither do I,” said his mother. “I hate practical jokes. I hope we
-shan’t meet any more of this sort.”
-
-“You never can tell!” Dr. Corliss chuckled reminiscently.
-
-“What a horrid mirror!” exclaimed Mary, peering into the glass of a
-fine gilt frame. “See! It makes me look as broad as I am long, and ugly
-as a hippopotamus. The idea of putting this in the parlor!”
-
-“Probably she meant that to keep her guests from growing conceited,”
-suggested Dr. Corliss with a grin. “But we shall not need to have it
-here if we don’t like it. There’s plenty of room in the attic, if I
-remember rightly.”
-
-“Yes, we shall have to change a great many things,” said Mrs. Corliss,
-who had been moving about the room all by herself. “What do you suppose
-is in that pretty carved box on the mantel?”
-
-“It’s yours, Mother. Why don’t you open it?” said John eagerly.
-
-Mrs. Corliss lifted the cover and started back with a scream. For out
-sprang what looked like a real snake, straight into her face.
-
-“Oh! Is it alive?” cried Mary, shuddering.
-
-But John had picked up the Japanese paper snake and was dangling it
-merrily to reassure his mother. “I’ve seen those before,” he grinned.
-“The boys had them at school once.”
-
-“Come, come!” frowned Dr. Corliss. “That was really too bad of Aunt
-Nan. She knew that almost everybody hates snakes, though she didn’t
-mind them herself. I’ve often seen her put a live one in her pocket
-and bring it home to look at.”
-
-“Ugh!” shuddered Mrs. Corliss. “I hope they don’t linger about
-anywhere. I see I shall have to clean the whole house thoroughly from
-top to bottom. And if I find any more of these jokes--!” Mrs. Corliss
-nodded her head vigorously, implying bad luck to any snakes that might
-be playing hide-and-seek in house or garden.
-
-Secretly John thought all this was great fun, and he dashed ahead of
-the rest of the family on their tour of the house, hoping to find still
-other proofs of Aunt Nan’s special kind of humor. But to the relief of
-Mary and her mother the rest of their first exploring expedition was
-uneventful.
-
-They visited dining-room and kitchen and pantry, and the room that was
-to be Dr. Corliss’s study. Then they climbed the stairs to the bedroom
-floor, where there were three pretty little chambers. They took a peep
-into the attic; but even there, in the crowded shadows and cobwebs,
-nothing mysterious happened. It was a nice old house where the family
-felt that they were going to be very happy and contented.
-
-Down the stairs they came once more, to the door of the ell which they
-had not yet visited. It was a brown wooden door with a glass knob.
-
-“Well, here is your domain, Mary!” said Dr. Corliss, pausing and
-pointing to the door with a smile. “This is your library, my daughter.
-Have you the key ready?”
-
-Yes, indeed, Mary had the key ready; a great key tagged carefully,--as
-all the other keys of Aunt Nan’s property had been,--this one bearing
-the legend: “LIBRARY. Property of Mary Corliss.”
-
-“Here is the key, Father,” said Mary, stepping up proudly. “Let me
-put it in myself. Oh, I hope there are no horrid jokes in here!” And
-she hesitated a moment before fitting the key in the lock of her
-library--her very own library!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE LIBRARY
-
-
-According to the will left by that eccentric old lady, Miss Nan
-Corliss, her nephew, Dr. Corliss,--whom she had not seen for thirty
-years,--was to receive the old house at Crowfield. His wife inherited
-all the furniture of the old house, except what was in the library.
-John Corliss, the only grandnephew, was to have two thousand dollars to
-send him to college when he should be old enough to go. And to Mary,
-the unknown grandniece whom she had never seen, Aunt Nan had declared
-should belong “my library room at Crowfield, with everything therein
-remaining.”
-
-Mary was now going to see what her library was like, and what therein
-remained. She drew a long breath, turned the key, pushed open the
-door, and peered cautiously into the room, half expecting something to
-jump out at her. But nothing of the sort happened. John pushed her in
-impatiently, and they all followed, eager, as John said, to see “what
-sister had drawn.” Dr. Corliss himself had never been inside this room,
-Aunt Nan’s most sacred corner.
-
-What they saw was a plain, square room, with shelves from floor to
-ceiling packed tightly with rows of solemn-looking books. In one corner
-stood a tall clock, over the top of which perched a stuffed crow, black
-and stern. In the center of the room was a table-desk, with papers
-scattered about, just as Aunt Nan had left it weeks before. On the
-mantel above the fireplace was a bust of Shakespeare and some smaller
-ornaments, with an old tin lantern. Above the Shakespeare hung a
-portrait of a lady with gray curls, in an old-fashioned dress, holding
-a book in her hand. The other hand was laid upon her breast with the
-forefinger extended as if pointing.
-
-“Hello!” said Dr. Corliss when he spied the portrait, “this is Aunt Nan
-herself as she looked when I last saw her; and a very good likeness it
-is.”
-
-“She looks like a witch!” said John. “See what funny eyes she has!”
-
-“Sh! John! You mustn’t talk like that about your great-aunt,” corrected
-his mother. “She has been very good to us all. You must at least be
-respectful.”
-
-“She was eccentric, certainly,” said Dr. Corliss. “But she meant to
-be kind, I am sure. I never knew why she refused to see any of her
-family, all of a sudden--some whim, I suppose. She came to be a sort of
-hermitess after a while. She loved her books more than anything in the
-world. It meant a great deal that she wanted you to have them, Mary.”
-
-“I wish she had left _me_ two thousand dollars!” said Mary, pouting.
-“These old books don’t look very interesting. I want to go to college
-more than John does. But I don’t suppose I ever can, now.”
-
-“Books are rather useful, whether one goes to college or not,” her
-father reminded her. “She needn’t have left you anything, Mary. She
-never even saw you--or John either, for that matter. She hadn’t seen me
-since I was married. I take it very kindly of her to have remembered us
-so generously. I thought her pet hospital would receive everything.”
-
-“What do you suppose became of her jewelry, Owen?” asked Mrs. Corliss
-in an undertone. “I thought she might leave that to Mary, the only girl
-in the family. But there was no mention of it in her will.”
-
-“She must have sold it for the benefit of her hospital. She was very
-generous to that charity,” said Dr. Corliss.
-
-Mary and John had been poking about the library to see if they
-could find anything “queer.” But it all seemed disappointingly
-matter-of-fact. They stopped in front of the tall clock which had not
-been wound up for weeks.
-
-“We’ll have to start the clock, Father,” said Mary. “The old crow looks
-as if he expected us to.”
-
-“The key is probably inside the clock case,” said Dr. Corliss, opening
-the door.
-
-Sure enough, there was the key hanging on a peg. And tied to it was
-the usual tag. But instead of saying “Clock Key,” as one would have
-expected, this tag bore these mysterious words in the handwriting which
-Mary knew was Aunt Nan’s: “_Look under the raven’s wing._”
-
-“Now, what in the world does that mean?” asked Mary, staring about the
-room. “What did she mean by ‘the raven,’ do you suppose?”
-
-“I guess she means the old crow up there,” cried John, pointing at the
-stuffed bird over the clock.
-
-“Do you suppose she meant that, Father?” asked Mary again, looking
-rather ruefully at the ominous crow.
-
-“Maybe she meant that,” said her father, sitting down in a library
-chair to await what would happen. “But I believe this is another of
-Aunt Nan’s little jokes. It sounds so to me.”
-
-“Pooh! It’s just an old April Fool, I bet!” jeered John.
-
-Mary still stared at what Aunt Nan called “the raven,” and wondered.
-“Under which wing am I to look?” she thought. Finally she gathered
-courage to reach up her hand toward the right wing, very cautiously.
-She half expected that the creature might come alive and nip her. But
-nothing happened. There was nothing under the right wing but moth-eaten
-feathers, some of which came off in Mary’s fingers.
-
-“I’ll try the other wing,” said Mary to herself. She poked her fingers
-under the old bird’s left wing. Yes! There was something there.
-Something dangled by a hidden string from the wing-bone of Aunt Nan’s
-raven. Mary pulled, and presently something came away. In her hand she
-held a little gold watch and chain. On the case was engraved the letter
-_C_, which was of course as truly Mary’s initial as it had been Aunt
-Nan Corliss’s.
-
-“Why, it is Aunt Nan’s watch, sure enough!” said Dr. Corliss, beaming.
-“Well, Mary! I declare, that is something worth while. You needed a
-watch, my dear. But I don’t know when I could ever have bought a gold
-one for you. This is a beauty.”
-
-“It’s a bird of a watch!” piped John, wagging his head at the crow.
-
-“I like it better than wriggly snakes,” said Mrs. Corliss, smiling.
-
-“Oh, how good Aunt Nan was to leave it here for me!” said Mary. “I am
-beginning to like Aunt Nan, in spite of her queerness.”
-
-“I like this kind of joke she plays on you,” said John enviously. “I
-wish she’d play one like that on me, too. I say, Mary, do you suppose
-there are any more secrets hidden in your old library? Let’s look now.”
-
-“I wonder!” said Mary, looking curiously about the dingy room. “But I
-don’t want to look any further now. I am satisfied. Oh, Mumsie! Just
-look!” Mary put the chain of the new watch around her neck, tucked the
-little chronometer into her belt, and trotted away to see the effect in
-the crooked old mirror of the parlor.
-
-John wanted to take down the crow and examine him further.
-
-“Come along, John,” said his father, pushing the little brother toward
-the door. “This is Mary’s room, you know. We aren’t ever to poke
-around here without her leave, mind you.”
-
-“No,” said John reluctantly. “But I do wish--!” And he cast a longing
-glance back over his shoulder as his father shut the door on Mary’s
-mysterious library.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-A VISITOR
-
-
-The very next day Dr. Corliss shut himself up in his new study while
-Mrs. Corliss and Mary set to work to make the old house as fresh as
-new. They brushed up the dust and cobwebs and scrubbed and polished
-everything until it shone. They dragged many ugly old things off into
-the attic, and pushed others back into the corners until there should
-be time to decide what had best be done with them. Meanwhile, John
-was helping to tidy up the little garden, snipping off dead leaves,
-cheering up the flowers, and punishing the greedy weeds.
-
-The whistles of Crowfield factories shrieked noon before they all
-stopped to take breath. Then Mrs. Corliss gasped and said:--
-
-“Oh, Mary! I forgot all about luncheon! What are we going to feed your
-poor father with, I wonder, to say nothing of our hungry selves?”
-
-Just at this moment John came running into the house with a very dirty
-face. “There’s some one coming down the street,” he called upstairs;
-“I think she’s coming in here.” He peeped out of the parlor window
-discreetly. “Yes, she’s opening the gate now.”
-
-“Let Mary open the door when she rings,” warned his mother. “It will be
-the first time our doorbell rings for a visitor--quite an event, Mary!
-I am sure John’s face is dirty.”
-
-“I’m not very tidy myself,” said Mary, taking off her apron and the
-dusting-cap which covered her curls, and rolling down her sleeves.
-
-The latch of the little garden gate clicked while they were speaking,
-and looking out of the upstairs hall window Mary saw a girl of about
-her own age, thirteen or fourteen, coming up the path. She wore a
-pretty blue sailor suit and a broad hat, and her hair hung in two long
-flaxen braids down her back. Mary wore her own brown curls tied back
-with a ribbon. On her arm the visitor carried a large covered basket.
-
-“It’s one of the neighbors, I suppose,” said Mrs. Corliss, attempting a
-hasty toilet. “Go to the door, Mary, as soon as she rings, and ask her
-to come in. Even if we are not settled yet, it is not too soon to be
-hospitable.”
-
-Mary listened eagerly for the bell. Their first caller in Crowfield
-looked like a very nice little person. Perhaps she was going to be
-Mary’s friend.
-
-But the bell did not ring. Instead, Mary presently heard a little
-click; and then a voice in the hall below called, apparently through
-the keyhole of the closed door,--“Not at home.”
-
-There was a pause, and again,--“Not at home.” A third time the tired,
-monotonous voice declared untruthfully, “Not at home.” Then there was
-silence.
-
-“John!” cried Mary, horrified. For she thought her brother was playing
-some naughty trick. What did he mean by such treatment of their first
-caller? Mary ran down the stairs two steps at a time, and there she
-found John in the hall, staring with wide eyes at the front door.
-
-“What made you--?” began Mary.
-
-“I didn’t!” protested John. “It was--Something, I don’t know What, that
-spoke. When she pushed the bell-button it didn’t ring, but it made
-_that_. And now I guess she’s gone off mad!”
-
-“Oh, John!” Mary threw open the door and ran to the porch. Sure enough,
-the visitor was retreating slowly down the path. She turned, however,
-when she heard Mary open the door, and hesitated, looking rather
-reproachful. She was very pretty, with red cheeks and bright brown
-eyes.
-
-“Oh! I’m so sorry!” said Mary. “You didn’t ring, did you?”
-
-“Yes, I did,” said the girl, looking puzzled. “But I thought no one was
-at home. Somebody said so.” Her eyes twinkled.
-
-Mary liked the twinkle in her eyes.
-
-“I don’t understand it!” said Mary, wrinkling her forehead in
-puzzlement. Then an idea flashed into her head, and she showed her
-teeth in a broad smile. “Oh, it must have been one of Aunt Nan’s patent
-jokes.”
-
-The girl gave an answering smile. “You mean Miss Corliss?” she
-suggested. “I know she didn’t like callers. We never ventured to ring
-the bell in her day. But Mother thought you new neighbors might be
-different. And I saw you going by yesterday, so I thought I’d try--”
-She looked at Mary wistfully, with a little cock to her head. “My name
-is Katy Summers, and we are your nearest neighbors,” she added.
-
-“Oh, do come in,” urged Mary, holding open the door hospitably. “It is
-so nice to see you! I am Mary Corliss.”
-
-Katy Summers beamed at her as she crossed the doorsill. And from that
-moment Mary hoped that they were going to be the best of friends.
-
-John appeared just then, much excited and forgetting his dirty face.
-“It must be a kind of graphophone,” he said, without introduction. “Let
-me punch that button.”
-
-Twisting himself out into the porch, John pushed a dirty thumb against
-the bell-button of the Corliss home. Instantly sounded the same
-monotonous response,--“Not at home-- Not at home-- Not at home.”
-
-“I say! Isn’t it great!” shouted John, cutting a caper delightedly.
-“Aunt Nan must have had that fixed so as to scare away callers. Wasn’t
-she cute?”
-
-Mary blushed for her brother, and for the reputation of the house.
-“It wasn’t cute!” she said hastily. “We shall have to get that bell
-changed. We aren’t like that, really,” she explained to her visitor.
-“We love to see people. You were very good to come to this inhospitable
-old house.”
-
-“I wanted to,” said Katy simply, “and Mother thought you’d perhaps all
-be busy this morning, getting settled. So she sent you over this hot
-luncheon.” And she held out to Mary the heavy basket.
-
-“Oh, how kind of you!” cried Mary. “Let me tell Mother. She will be so
-pleased! It is so nice to have our nearest neighbor call on us right
-away.”
-
-“I can’t stop but a minute this time,” said Katy, “for my own luncheon
-is waiting on the table. But I’d like to see your mother. I’ll wait
-here in the hall.”
-
-At the end of the hall facing the front door was an armchair with a
-back studded with brass nails. Katy sat down in this chair to wait
-for Mrs. Corliss. Mary ran up the stairs feeling very happy, because
-already she had found this new friend in the town where she was afraid
-she was going to be lonesome.
-
-But hardly had she reached the top of the stairs when she heard a funny
-little cry from the hall below. It was Katy’s voice that called. “Oh!”
-it cried. “Help! Mary Corliss!”
-
-“What is it?” called Mary, leaning over the banisters to see what the
-matter was.
-
-And then she saw a queer thing. The chair in which Katy Summers sat was
-moving rapidly of its own accord straight toward the front door. Katy
-was too startled to move, and there she sat, grasping the arms of the
-chair, until it reached the doorsill. When it touched the sill, the
-chair stopped and gently tilted itself forward, making Katy slide out,
-whether she would or no.
-
-“Well, I never!” said Katy with a gasp. “If that isn’t the impolitest
-chair I ever saw!”
-
-“Oh, Katy!” cried Mary, flying down the stairs. “I am so sorry. We
-didn’t know it was that kind of chair. We hadn’t cleaned the hall yet,
-so we never suspected. It must be another of Aunt Nan’s jokes. She
-probably had this made so that peddlers or agents who got inside and
-insisted on waiting to see her would be discouraged. Please don’t blame
-us!”
-
-Then down came Mrs. Corliss, with Katy’s basket in her hand. “What a
-reception to our first caller!” she said with a rueful smile. “And you
-came on such a kind errand, too! But you must try to forget, little
-neighbor, that this was ever an inhospitable house, and come to see us
-often. We are going to change many things.”
-
-“Yes, indeed, I shall come again,” said Katy Summers. “I hope that Mary
-and I shall be in the same class at High School.”
-
-“So do I,” said Mary. “I begin to-morrow. Will you call for me so that
-I can have some one to introduce me on my first day?”
-
-“Yes,” said Katy, with a roguish look, “if you’ll let me wait for you
-in the garden.”
-
-Mary turned red. “You needn’t be afraid,” she said. “We won’t let
-those things happen any more, will we, Mother?”
-
-“No,” said Mrs. Corliss. “We will have the carpenter attend to those
-‘jokes’ at once.”
-
-But until the carpenter came John had a beautiful time riding down
-the front hall on the inhospitable chair, and making the automatic
-butler cry, “Not at home.” John thought it a great pity to change these
-ingenious devices which made the front hall of Aunt Nan’s house so
-interesting. But he was in the minority, and that very afternoon the
-carpenter took away an electric device from the old armchair, which
-ended its days of wandering forever. And instead of the “bell” he put
-an old-fashioned knocker on the front door.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE BOOKS
-
-
-The town of Crowfield was built on a swift-flowing river with a
-waterfall, which gave it strong water-power. So the houses were easily
-fitted with electricity. Even the old Corliss mansion was up to date
-in that respect, at least. This was why Aunt Nan had been able to
-carry out her liking for queer devices and unexpected mechanical
-effects, as Mr. Griggs, the carpenter, explained when he came to make
-more hospitable the front hall. He chuckled over the moving chair,
-the secret of which was a spring concealed under one of the brass
-nail-heads. Any one who sat down and leaned back was sure to press this
-button, whereupon the chair would begin to move.
-
-“It beats all how clever that old lady was!” said Mr. Griggs. “I never
-saw anything like this before. She must ’a’ got some electrician down
-from the city to fix this up for her. We don’t do that kind of job in
-Crowfield.”
-
-“Do you suppose there are any more such things about the house?”
-inquired Mrs. Corliss anxiously.
-
-“I’ll take a look,” said Mr. Griggs. “But I mightn’t find ’em, even so.”
-
-And he did not find them; Aunt Nan had her secrets carefully concealed.
-But for weeks the family were continually discovering strange new
-surprises in their housekeeping.
-
-That very night at supper, just after Mr. Griggs had left the house
-with his kit of tools, a queer thing happened. They were sitting about
-the round dining-table, the center of which, as they had noticed from
-the first, seemed to be a separate inlaid circle of wood. In the middle
-of this Mary had set a pretty vase of flowers--nasturtiums, mignonette,
-marigolds, and yellow poppies, the last lingerers in their garden.
-
-They were talking about their first day in Crowfield, about the visit
-of Katy Summers, and the funny things that had happened to their first
-caller; and they were all laughing merrily over Mary’s description of
-how Katy had looked when she went riding out toward the door in the
-inhospitable chair. Dr. Corliss had just reached out his hand for the
-sugar. Suddenly the table center began slowly to revolve, and the sugar
-bowl retreated from his hand as if by magic.
-
-“Well, I never!” said the Doctor. “This is a new kind of butler’s
-assistant!”
-
-“It makes me feel like Alice in Wonderland!” exclaimed Mary. “It is
-the Mad Hatter’s breakfast; only instead of every one’s moving on one
-place, the place moves on by itself!”
-
-They found that Mary had hit her knee by accident against a spring
-concealed under the table.
-
-“Aunt Nan lived here all alone,” said Mrs. Corliss, “and I dare say she
-found this an easy way to pass things to herself when she was eating
-her lonely meals.”
-
-“Let’s keep it like this,” said Mary. “Now I shan’t be needing always
-to ask John to pass the salt.”
-
-“I don’t think it’s fair!” protested John. “Now, Mary has the seat by
-the button, and she can make the table turn when she likes. I wish I
-had a button, too.”
-
-“You’d keep the table whirling all the time, John,” laughed his father.
-“No, it is better as it is. We chose our seats this way, before we knew
-about the lively center-piece. Let’s stick to what chance gave us. Aunt
-Nan’s house seems to be a kind of good-luck game, doesn’t it?”
-
-But in spite of the queer things that were continually happening there,
-it did not take long for the Corliss family to feel quite at home
-in this old house, and in Crowfield. Mary was admitted to the High
-School, and found herself in the same class with Katy Summers, which
-pleased them both very much. They soon became the closest chums. John
-went to the Grammar School, where he found some nice boys of his own
-age who lived just down the road; Ralph and James Perry, cousins in
-opposite houses, and Billy Barton a little farther on.
-
-These promptly formed the Big Four; and the neighborhood of the Big
-Four was the liveliest in town. The Corliss house, with its collections
-and curiosities, became their favorite meeting-place, and in these
-days could hardly recognize itself with the merry streams of children
-who were always running in and out, up and down the stairs. It was
-fortunate that Dr. Corliss, who kept himself shut up in his study with
-the book he was writing, was not of a nervous or easily distracted
-temperament.
-
-As for Mrs. Corliss--being a mother, she just smiled and loved
-everybody. It was her idea that first of all a home should be a happy
-place for the family and for every one who came there. The first thing
-she did was to send for the familiar furniture of the city house
-which they had left when Dr. Corliss was obliged to give up his
-professorship in college and move into the country. Now the queer rooms
-of Aunt Nan’s inhospitable old house were much less queer and much more
-homelike than they had ever been, and every corner radiated a merry
-hospitality.
-
-But in the library nothing was changed. Mary would not let anything be
-moved from the place in which Aunt Nan had put it. For she had grown
-much attached to the old lady’s memory, since the finding of that
-little watch and chain.
-
-You may be sure that Mary and John looked about the library carefully,
-to see if more of the same kind of nice joke might not be concealed
-somewhere. But they found nothing. It was not until nearly a week
-later, when there came a rainy Saturday, that they found time to look
-at the books themselves.
-
-“Hello! Here’s a funny book to find in an old lady’s library!” cried
-John. “It’s our old friend ‘Master Skylark,’ one of the nicest books I
-know. But how do you suppose a children’s book came to be here, Mary?
-Daddy says for years Aunt Nan never allowed any children in the house.”
-
-“I wonder!” said Mary. “And here’s another child’s book, right here
-on the desk. I noticed it the first time I came in here, but I never
-opened it before. ‘Shakespeare the Boy’ is the name of it. I wonder if
-it is interesting? I like Shakespeare. We read his plays in school, and
-once I wrote a composition about him, you know.”
-
-“Papa says Aunt Nan was crazy about Shakespeare,” said John.
-
-“Why, here’s a note inside the cover of the book, addressed to me!”
-said Mary wonderingly.
-
-“Let me look!” cried John, darting to her side. “Yes, it’s in that same
-handwriting, Mary. It’s a letter from Aunt Nan. Do hurry and open it!”
-
-Mary held the envelope somewhat dubiously. It was not quite pleasant
-to be receiving letters from a person no longer living in this world.
-She glanced up at the portrait over the mantel as she cut the end of
-the envelope with Aunt Nan’s desk shears, and it seemed to her that the
-eyes under the prim gray curls gleamed at her knowingly. She almost
-expected to see the long forefinger of the portrait’s right hand point
-directly at her.
-
-It was a brief letter that Aunt Nan had written; and it explained why
-she had left her library of precious books to this grandniece Mary whom
-she had never seen.
-
- Mary Corliss (it began): I shan’t call you dear Mary because I
- don’t know whether you are dear or not. You may be if you like the
- sort of things I always liked. And in that case I shall be glad you
- have them for your own, when I can no longer enjoy them. I mean
- the things in this room, which I have given all to you, because
- there is no one else whom I can bear to think of as handling them.
- I heard your father say once that he hated poetry. That was enough
- for me! I never wanted to see him again. He can have my house, but
- not my precious books. Well, I read in the paper which your mother
- sent me that you had won a prize at school for a composition about
- William Shakespeare, the greatest poet who ever lived. You have begun
- well! If you go on, as I did, you will care as I have cared about
- everything he wrote. So you shall have my library and get what you
- can out of it. Be kind to the books I have loved. Love them, if you
- can, for their own sake.
- Your Great-Aunt,
- NAN CORLISS.
-
-“What a queer letter!” said John. “So it was your composition that did
-it. My! Aren’t you lucky, Mary!”
-
-“I do like Shakespeare already,” said Mary, glancing first at Aunt
-Nan’s portrait, then at the bust of the poet below it. “And I guess I
-am going to like Aunt Nan.” She smiled up at the portrait, which she
-now thought seemed to smile back at her. “I must go and tell Father
-about it,” she said eagerly, running out of the room; and presently she
-came back, dragging him by the hand.
-
-“Well, Mary!” said Dr. Corliss. “So it was your Shakespeare essay that
-won you the library! I remember how fond Aunt Nan used to be of the
-Poet. She was always quoting from him. I am glad you like poetry, my
-dear; though for myself I never could understand it. This is, indeed,
-a real poetry library. I am glad she gave it to you instead of to me,
-Mary. There are any number of editions of Shakespeare here, I have
-noticed, and a lot of books about him, too. I suppose she would have
-liked you to read every one.”
-
-“I mean to,” said Mary firmly. “I want to; and I am going to begin with
-this one, ‘Shakespeare the Boy.’ I feel as if that was what she meant
-me to do.”
-
-As she said this Mary began to turn over the leaves of the book in
-which she had found the note from Aunt Nan. “The story sounds very
-nice,” she said.
-
-Just then something fell from between the leaves and fluttered to the
-floor. Her father stooped to pick it up.
-
-“Aunt Nan’s bookmark,” he said. “It would be nice to keep her marks
-when you can, Mary. Why!” he exclaimed suddenly, staring at what he
-held in his fingers. It was long and yellow, and printed on both sides.
-
-“Mary!” he cried, “did you ever see one of these before? I have
-never seen many of them myself, more’s the pity!” And he handed the
-“bookmark” to his daughter.
-
-It was a hundred-dollar bill.
-
-“Papa!” gasped Mary, “whose is it?”
-
-“It is yours, Mary, just as much as the watch and chain were; just as
-much as the library is,” said her father. “Everything in the room was
-to be yours; Aunt Nan said so in her will. This is certainly a part of
-your legacy. I wonder if Aunt Nan forgot it or put it there on purpose,
-as another of her little jokes?”
-
-“I think she put it there on purpose,” said John. “My! But she was a
-queer old lady!”
-
-“I think she was a very nice old lady,” said Mary. “Now I must go and
-tell Katy Summers about it.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-INSTRUCTIONS
-
-
-With the hundred dollars which she had found in the book Mary started
-an account in the Crowfield Savings Bank, under her own name. She was
-very proud of her little blue bank-book, and she hoped that some time,
-in some unexpected way, she would save enough money to go to college,
-as John was to do.
-
-But the outlook was rather hopeless. The Corliss family were far from
-well off. Even in Crowfield, where expenses were low, they had a hard
-time to live on the small income from what Dr. Corliss had managed to
-save while he was Professor of Philosophy in the city college. Dr.
-Corliss was writing a book which he hoped would some day make his
-fortune. But the book would not be finished for many a day. Meanwhile,
-though there was very little money coming in, it was steadily going
-out; as money has a way of doing.
-
-The best thing the family could do at present was to save as much as
-possible by going without servants and dainties and fine clothes--just
-as people have to do in war-time; and by doing things themselves,
-instead of having things done for them. Mrs. Corliss was a clever
-manager. She had learned how to cook and sew and do all kinds of things
-with her deft fingers; and Mary was a good assistant and pupil, while
-John did everything that a little boy could do to help. He ran errands
-and built the fires, and even set the table and helped wipe the dishes
-when his mother and sister were busy.
-
-The neighbors were very friendly, and there were so many pleasant new
-things in Crowfield that the family did not miss the pleasures they
-used to enjoy in the city, nor the pretty clothes and luxuries which
-were now out of the question. And Mary did not spend much time worrying
-about college. There would be time enough for that.
-
-After the finding of that hundred-dollar bill, Mary and John spent a
-great deal of time in opening and shutting the leaves of books in the
-library, hoping that they would come upon other bookmarks as valuable
-as that first one. But whether Aunt Nan had left the bill there by
-mistake, as Dr. Corliss imagined, or whether she had put it there
-on purpose, as Mary liked to think, apparently the old lady had not
-repeated herself. The only foreign things they found in the musty old
-volumes were bits of pressed flowers and ferns, and now and then a
-flattened bug which had been crushed in its pursuit of knowledge.
-
-John soon grew tired of this fruitless search. But Mary came upon
-so many interesting things in the books themselves that she often
-forgot what she was looking for. Many of the books had queer,
-old-fashioned pictures; some had names and dates of long ago written
-on the fly-leaf. In many Mary found that Aunt Nan had scrawled notes
-and comments--sometimes amusing and witty; sometimes very hard to
-understand.
-
-Mary loved her library. She had never before had a corner all to
-herself, except her tiny bedroom. And to feel that this spacious
-room, with everything in it, was all hers, in which to do just as she
-pleased, was a very pleasant thing.
-
-“Where’s Mary?” asked Katy Summers one afternoon, running into the
-Corliss house without knocking, as she had earned the right to do.
-
-“I think she is in the library,” said Mrs. Corliss, who was busy sewing
-in the living-room. “That is a pretty likely place in which to look
-nowadays, when she isn’t anywhere else!”
-
-“Shall I go there to find her?” asked Katy.
-
-“Yes, Dear; go right in,” said Mrs. Corliss. “She will be glad to see
-you, I am sure.”
-
-The door of the library was hospitably open. And Katy Summers, creeping
-up on tiptoe and peeping in softly, saw Mary with her thumb between the
-leaves of a book, kneeling before one of the bookshelves.
-
-“I spy!” cried Katy. “What’s the old Bookworm up to now? Or perhaps I
-ought to say, considering your position, what’s she _down_ to now?”
-
-Mary jumped hastily to her feet. “Hello, Katy,” she said cordially. “I
-was just looking up something. Say, Katy, do you know what fun it is to
-look up quotations?”
-
-“No,” said Katy, laughing. “I don’t see any fun in that. No more fun
-than looking up things in a dictionary.”
-
-“Well, it _is_ fun,” returned Mary. “I think I must be something like
-Aunt Nan. She loved quotations. Just look at this row of ‘Gems from the
-Poets.’ They’re full of quotations, Katy. I’m going to read them all,
-some time.”
-
-“Goodness!” cried Katy. “What an idea! I think poetry is stupid stuff,
-sing-song and silly.”
-
-“So Daddy thinks,” said Mary. “But it isn’t, really. It is full of the
-most interesting stories and legends and beautiful things. This library
-bores Daddy almost to death, because all the books on these two walls
-are poetry. I believe that Aunt Nan had the works of every old poet who
-ever wrote in the English language. And see, these are the lives of the
-poets.” She pointed to the shelves in one corner.
-
-“Huh!” grunted Katy. “Well, what of it?”
-
-“Well, you see,” said Mary, looking up at Aunt Nan’s portrait, “the
-more I stay in this library, the more I like Aunt Nan’s books, and the
-more I want to please Aunt Nan herself. I like her, Katy.”
-
-“I don’t!” said Katy, eyeing the portrait sideways. “You never had her
-for a neighbor, you see.”
-
-“She never did anything to you, did she?” asked Mary.
-
-“No-o,” drawled Katy reluctantly. “She never did anything either good
-or bad to me. But--she was awfully queer!”
-
-“Of course she was,” agreed Mary. “But that isn’t the worst thing in
-the world, to be queer. And she was awfully kind to me.-- Say, Katy,
-don’t you like Shakespeare?”
-
-“Not very well,” confessed Katy.
-
-“Well, I do,” Mary asserted. “I haven’t read much of him, but I’m going
-to. Every time I look at that head of Shakespeare on the mantelpiece, I
-remember that it was my composition about Shakespeare that was at the
-bottom of almost everything nice that has happened in Crowfield. Why,
-if it hadn’t been for him, perhaps we shouldn’t have come to live here
-at all, and then I shouldn’t ever have known _you_, Katy Summers!”
-
-“Gracious!” exclaimed Katy. “Wouldn’t that have been awful? Yes,
-I believe I do like him a little, since he did _that_. I wrote a
-composition about him once, too. It didn’t bring anything good in my
-direction. But then, it wasn’t a very good composition. I only got a
-_C_ with it.”
-
-“Well,” said Mary, “I feel as if I owe him something, and Aunt Nan
-something. And sooner or later I’m going to read everything he ever
-wrote.”
-
-“Goodness!” said Katy. “Then you’ll never have time to read anything
-else, I guess. Look!”-- She pointed around the walls. “Why, there are
-hundreds of Shakespeares. Hundreds and hundreds!”
-
-“They are mostly different editions of the same thing,” said Mary
-wisely. “I shan’t have to read every edition. There aren’t so very
-many books by him, really. Not more than thirty, I think. I’ve been
-looking at this little red set that’s so easy to handle and has such
-nice notes. I like the queer spelling. I’m going to read ‘Midsummer
-Night’s Dream’ first. I think that’s what Aunt Nan meant.”
-
-“What do you mean by ‘_what Aunt Nan meant_’?” asked Katy curiously.
-“Has she written you another letter?” Mary had told her about the will.
-
-“No, not exactly,” confessed Mary. “But see what I found just now when
-I finished reading ‘Shakespeare the Boy,’--the book that was lying on
-her desk with that first note she wrote me.” And she opened the volume
-which she held in her hand at the last page. Below the word “Finis”
-were penned in a delicate, old-fashioned writing these words:--
-
- Mem. Read in this order, _with notes_.
-
- 1. Midsummer Night’s Dream.
- 2. Julius Cæsar.
- 3. Twelfth Night.
- 4. Tempest.
- 5. As You Like It.
- 6. Merchant of Venice.
- 7. Hamlet, etc.
-
-
-“Pooh!” cried Katy. “I don’t believe she meant that for you, at all!
-She was just talking to herself. Let’s see if there was anything
-written at the end of ‘Master Skylark.’ Didn’t you say that was lying
-on her desk, too?”
-
-They ran to get this other child’s book, which, queerly enough, had
-also been left lying on the desk, as if Aunt Nan had just been reading
-both. And there, too, at the end was written exactly the same list,
-with the same instructions.
-
-“That settles it!” exclaimed Mary. “She did mean me to see that list,
-so she left it in both those children’s books, which she thought I
-would be sure to read first. I am going to read Shakespeare’s plays in
-just the order she wished. I’m going to read my very own books in my
-very own library. I’m going to begin this very afternoon!” Mary was
-quite excited.
-
-“Oh, no! Please not this afternoon!” begged Katy. “I want you to come
-with me while I do an errand at the express office in Ashley. It is a
-three-mile walk. I don’t want to go alone. Please, Mary!”
-
-“Oh, bother!” Mary was about to say; for she wanted to begin her
-reading. But she thought better of it. Katy had been so kind to her.
-And, after all, it was a beautiful afternoon, and the walk would be
-very pleasant down a new road which she had never traveled. She laid
-down the book reluctantly.
-
-“Well,” she said. “I can read my books any time, I suppose. Isn’t it
-nice to think of that? Yes--I’ll go with you, Katy. It will be fun.
-Just wait till I get my hat, and tell Mother.”
-
-“You’re a dear!” burst out Katy, hugging her.
-
-“If I go with you this time, Katy, you’ll have to read Shakespeare with
-me another time,” bargained Mary with good-natured guile.
-
-“All right,” said Katy. “Sometime, when it is not so nice and crisp and
-walky out of doors, as it is to-day.”
-
-And off the two girls started, with comradely arms about one another’s
-shoulders.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE LANTERN
-
-
-Mary had no chance to begin reading her Shakespeare until the following
-day. But just as soon as she had finished her French and algebra home
-lessons, she laid aside those books and seized the list which Aunt Nan
-had made for her.
-
-“‘Mem. Read in this order--Midsummer Night’s Dream.’ That sounds good
-for a beginning,” she said to herself. “I just love the name of it. I
-wonder what it’s about?” Running to the bookshelves on the left side
-of the fireplace, where one whole section was devoted to the works of
-William Shakespeare, Mary began fumbling among the little red books.
-“Here is ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’!” said she, settling herself
-in the big leather armchair to read. “Why, it’s full of fairies and
-private theatricals! I know it is going to be nice!”
-
-Mary read for some time and found that she liked the play even better
-than she had expected. She always liked to read about fairies, of whom,
-indeed, the book was full. And the scene of the play-acting was very
-funny, she thought, especially where Bottom wanted to play all the
-parts himself.
-
-Presently she came to a place in the text where a line was heavily
-underscored. It was where Moon says, “_This lantern is my lantern_.” “I
-wonder why Aunt Nan marked that line?” thought Mary. She turned to see
-if there was anything about a lantern in the notes. And there she found
-this remark in the writing which she had come to recognize as Aunt
-Nan’s: “_See lantern on mantelshelf._ CAREFUL!”
-
-“That is a funny note!” thought Mary. “What mantelshelf? There isn’t
-any in the play. Can she mean--why, yes! There’s a lantern over there
-on _my_ mantelshelf!”
-
-Sure enough! Mary had not noticed it especially until this minute.
-But there, not far from the bust of Shakespeare, was a queer old tin
-lantern, pierced with holes for a candle to shine through--the very
-kind that Moon must have used in the play, in Shakespeare’s day.
-
-Mary dropped the book and went over to the lantern, with a pleasant
-sense of possession. Everything in the room was hers. This would
-be just the thing to play Pyramus and Thisbe with! She took up the
-old lantern and examined it curiously. In the socket was the stub
-of a candle. “I wonder who lighted it last?” thought Mary idly.
-She tried to pull out the candle, but it stuck. She pulled harder,
-and presently--out it came! There was something in the socket
-below--something that rattled. Mary shook the lantern and out fell a
-tiny key; a gilt key with a green silk string tied to the top. That was
-all.
-
-“What a funny place for a key!” thought Mary. “I wonder how it got
-there.” Then she thought again of the quotation which had been
-underlined--“‘_This lantern is my lantern_.’ She wanted me to find it,
-I am sure!” thought Mary eagerly. “It is the key to something. Oh, if
-I could only find what that is! How in the world shall I know where to
-look?”
-
-“Oh, John!” she cried, “John!”--for just then she heard his whistle in
-the hall, and she ran down to show him her find.
-
-Up came John; up the stairs two steps at a time, with Mary close after
-him. “I bet I know what it is!” he cried. “It’s the key to a Secret
-Panel. I’ve read about them in books, lots of times. Let’s hunt till we
-find the keyhole.”
-
-The wall of the library between the bookshelves was, indeed, paneled
-in dark wood, like the doors. But there was little enough of this
-surface, because the built-in bookshelves took up so much space. With
-the aid of the library ladder it took Mary and John comparatively
-little time to go over every inch of the paneling very carefully,
-thumping the wall with the heel of Mary’s slipper, to see if it might
-be hollow. But no sound betrayed a secret hiding-place. No scratch or
-knot concealed a tiny keyhole. Tired and disgusted at last, they gave
-up the search.
-
-“I think that’s a pretty poor joke!” said John. “A key without anything
-to fit it to is about as silly as can be!”
-
-“Aunt Nan made some silly jokes in other parts of the house,” said
-Mary. “But she hasn’t done so in the library. I don’t believe she meant
-to tease me. Let’s go and tell Father. Perhaps he will know what it
-means.” And forthwith they tripped to the Doctor’s study, with the key
-and the lantern and the marked copy of “Midsummer Night’s Dream,” to
-puzzle the Philosopher. They laid the three exhibits on his desk, and
-stood off, challenging him with eager eyes.
-
-Dr. Corliss looked at these things critically; then he followed them
-back to the library and glanced about the walls.
-
-“Well, Father?” asked Mary at last. “What do you think it means?”
-
-The Doctor hummed and hawed. “Why, I think it means that Aunt Nan was
-playing a joke on _you_ this time, Mary!” he said, laughing. “It would
-be just like her, you know. You can’t hope to be the only one to escape
-her humors. Besides, this key doesn’t look to me like a real key to
-anything. You mustn’t expect too much, my girl, nor get excited over
-this legacy of yours, or I shall be sorry you have it. I suspect there
-are no more gold watches and hundred-dollar bills floating around in
-your library. It wouldn’t be like Aunt Nan to do the same thing twice.
-It was the unexpected that always pleased her. You had better make the
-most of your books for their own sakes, Mary.”
-
-“Yes, I am going to do that,” said Mary, taking the key from her father
-and putting the green string around her neck. “I am going to wear it as
-a sort of ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream’ charm. And I believe that some day
-I shall find out the key to the key, if I look long enough.”
-
-“If you read long enough, perhaps you may,” said her father,
-laughing. “I have heard that they find queer things in Shakespeare
-sometimes--ciphers and things like that. But I never had time to study
-them up. A cipher is _nothing_ to me.” And he chuckled at his little
-joke.
-
-“If I read long enough, perhaps I may find out something. That’s so!”
-said Mary. “I’ll keep on reading.”
-
-“Pooh! That’s a slow way!” said John. “If there was anything in _my_
-library, I’d want to find it out right away!”
-
-“If she has put anything in my library, that isn’t the way Aunt Nan
-meant me to find it,” retorted Mary. “I am going to do what Aunt Nan
-wanted, if I can discover what that is.”
-
-“That’s right, Mary!” said her father. “I believe you are on the right
-track.”
-
-Just at this moment there was a queer sound, apparently in one corner
-of the room.
-
-“Hark!” said Dr. Corliss. “What was that, Mary?”
-
-“It sounded like something rapping on the floor!” said John, with wide
-eyes.
-
-“Oh, I hear sounds like that quite often,” said Mary carelessly. “At
-first it frightened me, but I have got used to it. I suppose it must be
-a rat in the cellar.”
-
-“Yes, I dare say it is a rat,” said her father. “Old houses like this
-have strange noises, often. But I have never seen any rats.”
-
-“It sounded too big for a rat,” declared John. “Aren’t you afraid,
-Mary?”
-
-“No,” declared Mary; “I’m not afraid, whether it’s a rat or not. Some
-way, I think I couldn’t be afraid in this room.”
-
-“I thought girls were always afraid of rats,” murmured John.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-CALIBAN
-
-
-With rosy cheeks and sparkling eyes Mary returned from a walk with Katy
-Summers. It had been pleasant but uneventful. Just as she turned in at
-the little dooryard of home, she thought she spied a black Something
-dart like a shadow across the little strip of green beside the house.
-
-“It looks like a cat,” said Mary to herself. “I will see where it went
-to.” She followed to the end of the house, where the shape had seemed
-to disappear. There was nothing to be seen. She went around the ell,
-and back to the front of the house again. Still there was no trace of
-the little shadow that had streaked into invisibility.
-
-“If it was not my imagination, it must have gone under the house,”
-said Mary to herself. “Two or three times I have thought I spied a
-black blur in the act of disappearing; and I believe we are haunted by
-something on four legs. I will ask the family.”
-
-That night at the supper-table she broached the question.
-
-“Mother, have you ever seen a cat about the place--a black cat, a swift
-cat, a cat that never stays for a second in one spot--a mysterious cat
-that is gone as soon as you see it?”
-
-“That sounds spooky enough!” commented Dr. Corliss. “You make the
-shivers run down my sensitive spine!”
-
-“I have not seen any cat,” said Mrs. Corliss. “I think you must be
-mistaken, Mary.”
-
-“Yes, I’ve seen a cat!” volunteered John,--“a thin black cat, oh, so
-thin! I saw him run across the lawn once; and once I saw him crouching
-down by the lilac bush near the back door. I think he was catching
-mice.”
-
-“Then there _is_ a cat,” said Mary. “I thought I might be dreaming. He
-must be very wild. I believe he lives under our house.”
-
-“Under the house!” exclaimed Mrs. Corliss. “Surely, we should all have
-seen him if he lived so near. I can’t think he could have escaped my
-eyes. But now, I remember, I have heard strange noises in the cellar
-once or twice.”
-
-“I have, often,” said Mary, “under my library.”
-
-“Maybe it is a witch-cat!” suggested Dr. Corliss, pretending to look
-frightened. “You people are all so fond of poetry and ravens and
-mystery and magics--you attract strange doings, you see. Maybe Aunt Nan
-had a witch-cat who helped her play tricks on the ever-to-be-surprised
-world.”
-
-“Daddy!” cried John, “there’s no such thing as a witch-cat, is there,
-truly?”
-
-“Of course not!” laughed his mother. “Daddy is only joking. And now I
-come to think of it, I have wondered why the scraps I put out for the
-birds always vanished so quickly. A hungry cat prowling about would
-explain everything.”
-
-“It might be Aunt Nan’s cat,” said Mary thoughtfully. “Poor thing! He
-might have run away when he couldn’t find Aunt Nan any more. He might
-have been frightened, and have hid under the house.”
-
-“I think in that case he would have starved to death in all these
-weeks,” said Mrs. Corliss. “Besides, I should think the neighbors would
-have told us, or that Aunt Nan herself would have left some word.”
-
-“I’m going to find out, if I can,” said Mary. “If it’s Aunt Nan’s cat I
-want to be good to him. We want to be good to him, anyway, don’t we?”
-
-“Of course we do,” said Mrs. Corliss. “But there is nothing so hard to
-tame as a wild cat.”
-
-Katy Summers knew nothing of any cat belonging to Miss Corliss. Neither
-did the other neighbors.
-
-That next day on coming home from school Mary again spied the cat. Just
-as she clicked the gate she saw the long, black shape scurry across the
-lawn and vanish under the ell, under Mary’s library. Mary tiptoed to
-the house and, stooping, called gently, “Kitty! Kitty! Kitty!”
-
-At first there was no response. But presently there came a feeble and
-doleful “Miaou!” And Mary thought she could catch the gleam of two
-green eyes glaring out of the darkness.
-
-“I must get him something to eat,” said Mary. “Perhaps I can tempt him
-to make friends.” And running into the house she returned with a saucer
-of milk and a bit of meat, which she set down close to the house.
-“Kitty! Kitty! Kitty!” she called, in a tone of invitation.
-
-“Miaou!” cried the forlorn cat again. But he did not come forth from
-his hiding-place.
-
-“I shall have to go away, and give him a chance to eat when I am not
-by,” thought Mary. And this she did. From her chamber window she could
-just manage to watch the hole under the ell. After a long time she was
-rewarded by seeing the cat’s head emerge from the hole. For a minute
-he stared around with wild eyes, his body ready to spring. But finding
-himself safe, he hungrily seized the meat and retreated with it under
-the house. Presently he came out again, licking his chops eagerly,
-and began to lap the milk, retreating every now and then as if some
-fancied sound alarmed him. The poor creature’s sides were so thin that
-he resembled a cut-out pasteboard cat. His tail was like that of a long
-black rat. He seemed to be wearing a collar about his neck.
-
-“He must have been somebody’s pet cat,” said Mary to herself. “I must
-try to tame him.”
-
-But it took a great deal of time and patience to make friends with
-the poor black pussy, which had evidently been greatly frightened and
-almost starved. Day after day Mary set out the saucer of milk and a
-bit of meat. And each time she did so, she talked kindly to the cat
-hidden under the house, hoping that he would come out while she was
-still there. But it was many days before she got more than the mournful
-“Miaou!” in answer to her coaxing words.
-
-At last, one day, after waiting a long time beside the saucer of milk
-and a particularly savory plate of chicken-bones, Mary was rewarded
-by seeing the cat timidly thrust out his head while she was talking.
-He drew back almost immediately. But finally the smell of the chicken
-tempted him beyond caution, and he got up courage to face this stranger
-who seemed to show no evil intentions. He snatched a chicken-bone and
-vanished. But this was the beginning of friendship.
-
-The next day the cat came out almost immediately when Mary called
-him. Presently he would take things from her hand, timidly at first,
-then with increasing confidence, when he found that nothing dreadful
-happened. But still Mary had no chance to examine the collar, on which
-she saw that there were some words engraved.
-
-At last came a day when the cat let Mary stroke his fur, now grown
-much sleeker and covering a plumper body. And from that time it became
-easier to make friends. Soon Mary held the creature on her lap for a
-triumphant minute. And the next day she had a chance to examine the
-engraved collar. On the silver plate was traced,--“_Caliban. Home of N.
-Corliss. Crowfield_.”
-
-“He was Aunt Nan’s cat!” cried Mary in excitement. And she ran into the
-house with the news.
-
-Mrs. Corliss was astonished. “We must make Caliban feel at home
-again,” she said. “He must have had a terrible fright. But we will help
-him to forget that before long.”
-
-In a little while Mary succeeded in coaxing Caliban into the house.
-And once inside he did not behave like a stranger. For a few moments,
-indeed, he hesitated, cringing as if in fear of what might happen. But
-presently he raised his head, sniffed, and, looking neither to right
-nor left, marched straight toward the library. Mary tiptoed after
-him, in great excitement. Caliban went directly to the big armchair
-beside the desk, sniffed a moment at the cushion, then jumped up and
-curled himself down for a nap, giving a great sigh of contentment. From
-that moment he accepted partnership with Mary in the room and all its
-contents.
-
-“Well, I never!” cried Mrs. Corliss, who had followed softly. “The
-cat is certainly at home. I wonder how he ever happened to go away? I
-suppose we shall never know.”
-
-And they never did. They made inquiries of the neighbors. But nobody
-could tell them anything definite about Aunt Nan’s cat. Some persons
-had, indeed, seen a big black creature stalking about the lawn in the
-old lady’s time, and had not liked the look of him, as they said. But
-as Miss Corliss had never had anything to do with her neighbors, so
-her cat seemed to have followed her example. And when Aunt Nan’s day
-was over, the cat simply disappeared.
-
-Caliban must have lived precariously by catching mice and birds. But he
-never deserted the neighborhood of the old house when the new tenants
-came to live there; though it took him some time to realize that these
-were relatives of his mistress whom he might trust.
-
-Once more an inmate of the house, Caliban never wandered again. He
-adopted Mary as his new mistress, and allowed her to take all kinds of
-liberties with him. But to the rest of the family he was always rather
-haughty and stand-offish. John never quite got rid of the idea that
-Caliban was a witch-cat. And sometimes he had a rather creepy feeling
-when the great black cat blinked at him with his green eyes.
-
-But Mary said it was all nonsense. “He’s just a dear, good, soft
-pussy-cat,” she cried one day, hugging the now plump and handsome
-Caliban in her arms.
-
-And Caliban, stretching out a soft paw, laid it lovingly against his
-little mistress’s cheek.
-
-But John vowed that at the same moment Caliban winked wickedly at him!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE BUST
-
-
-For some weeks life went on quietly for the Corliss family, made more
-interesting by the coming of Caliban, who resembled his late mistress
-in some unexpected qualities. But the family had got used to being
-surprised by Aunt Nan’s jokes, so that they were no longer jokes at
-all. And nothing further of a mysterious nature happened in Mary’s
-library, so that everybody had about forgotten the excitement of the
-watch, the bookmark, and the unexplained key.
-
-The more Mary read her Shakespeare, the better she liked the plays,
-which, as she said, were “just full of familiar quotations!” Caliban
-approved heartily of Mary’s reading. He liked nothing better than
-to curl up in her lap while she sat in the big easy-chair, with her
-book resting on its broad arm; and his rumbling purr made a pleasant
-accompaniment whenever she read aloud. For Mary liked to read aloud to
-herself and to him. It made her understand the story so much better.
-
-Probably Caliban was used to assisting Aunt Nan in this same way. He
-was truly a cat of fine education. Mary wondered if he knew all the
-books in the library. “He looks wise enough to,” she thought.
-
-“I think Caliban likes some plays better than others,” she confided
-to her mother. “He didn’t seem to care so much for ‘Midsummer Night’s
-Dream,’ But then, I had almost finished it before he came. He was crazy
-over ‘Julius Cæsar,’--you ought to have heard him purr at Marc Antony’s
-great speech! And now that I have begun ‘The Tempest,’ he gets so
-excited, Mother!”
-
-“Of course,” said Mrs. Corliss; “that’s where he comes in, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes,” said Mary. “Oh, Mumsie, I was so surprised when I found
-Caliban’s name in the list of characters! I just shouted it right out;
-and you ought to have seen Caliban arch his neck and rub his head
-against me, and purr like a little furnace. I’m sure he knew it was
-_his_ play. And isn’t it a lovely play, Mother? I like it best of all.”
-
-“So do I,” said her mother.
-
-One day Mary coaxed Katy Summers home with her after school. “The time
-has come for you to keep your promise, Katy,” said Mary. “You’ve got
-to listen to Shakespeare now.”
-
-“All right,” said Katy resignedly. “I suppose I must, sooner or later.”
-
-“I am going to read you some of ‘The Tempest,’” said Mary. “I want you
-to like it as well as I do.”
-
-“You know I never cared for poetry,” said Katy doubtfully.
-
-“But you will care for _this_,” said Mary positively, “especially if
-you hear it read. That’s the way everybody ought to know poetry, I
-think. Why, even Caliban likes to hear me read poetry. See, here he
-comes to listen.”
-
-Sure enough, at the sound of Mary’s voice Caliban had come running into
-the library with a little purr. He looked very handsome and fluffy
-these days. Waving his tail majestically, he jumped up into Mary’s lap
-and sat on her knee blinking his green eyes at Katy as if to say, “Now
-you are going to hear something fine!”
-
-“I believe John is right,” said Katy. “He does look like a witch-cat.
-He’s too knowing by half! I suppose I shall have to like the reading,
-if he says so.” Katy was just a bit jealous of Mary’s new friend.
-
-“Of course Caliban knows what is best!” chuckled Mary. “Now, listen,
-Katy.” And she began to read the beautiful lines. Presently she caught
-up with her own bookmark, and went on with scenes which she had not
-read before. Mary read very nicely, and Katy listened patiently, while
-Caliban purred more and more loudly, “knitting” with busy paws on
-Mary’s knees.
-
-After a while Katy saw Mary’s eyes grow wide, and she paused in the
-reading, ceasing to stroke Caliban’s glossy fur. Caliban looked up at
-her and stopped purring, as if to say, “What is it, little Mistress?”
-
-“What is the matter? Go on, Mary,” cried Katy. “I like it!”
-
-“It’s a Song,” said Mary, in a queer voice, “and words of it are
-underlined, Katy, in the same way that the other place I told you of
-was underlined.”
-
-Katy nodded eagerly. She had heard about the clue to the finding of the
-key. “What does it say?” she asked.
-
-And Mary read the lines of the Song:--
-
- “Full fathom five thy father lies;
- _Of his bones are coral made_;
- _Those are pearls, that were his eyes_;
- Nothing of him that doth fade,
- But doth suffer a sea-change
- Into _something rich and strange_.
- Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell;
- Hark! now I hear them--Ding-dong, bell!”
-
-“It’s lovely!” cried Katy. “And which lines are underscored, Mary?”
-
-“‘_Of his bones are coral made_,’ and ‘_Those are pearls that were
-his eyes_,’ and ‘_something rich and strange_.’ Oh, Katy, what do you
-suppose Aunt Nan meant this time?” said Mary with eager eyes.
-
-[Illustration: “OH, KATY, WHAT DO YOU SUPPOSE AUNT NAN MEANT THIS
-TIME?”]
-
-At this point Caliban arched his back and yawned prodigiously, then
-jumped down on the floor and sat at Mary’s feet, switching his tail.
-
-“Hurry and look at the notes at the end of the book, Mary!” cried Katy,
-almost as much excited as her friend. “I did not know that poetry could
-be so interesting.”
-
-Mary turned hastily to the back of the book. In the margin beside the
-printed notes were penned several words; references to other plays
-which evidently Aunt Nan wanted Mary to look up. “Bother!” said Mary in
-disappointment; “it’s only more quotations. I don’t want to stop for
-_them_.”
-
-“You had better, Mary,” suggested Katy. “Perhaps if you do they will
-give you still another clue. See how queer Caliban looks!”
-
-The cat was looking up in Mary’s face expectantly; and when she stooped
-to pat him, he opened his mouth and gave a strange, soundless “Miaou!”
-
-“It looked as if he said ‘Yes!’ didn’t it, Katy?” said Mary. “Well,
-then, I suppose I had better do it. The first reference is to ‘As You
-Like It,’ Act II, Scene i.”
-
-Mary went to the Shakespeare shelf, found the volume quickly, and
-looked up the proper place. “Yes!” she exclaimed, “there is a line
-underscored here, too,--‘_Wears yet a precious jewel in his head_.’
-What a queer saying, Katy! What do you suppose it means? And this is
-the next quotation, in the ‘Sonnets’--Number CXXXV, Line 1. Here it is!
-‘_Whoever has her wish, you have your Will._’ Now, what connection can
-there be between those two things, Katy?”
-
-“I don’t know!” said Katy, disappointed. “Is that all, are you sure? It
-doesn’t seem to mean anything, does it?”
-
-“Wait a minute!” added Mary. “Here in the Sonnet-margin she has
-written, ‘_Will S.--Yours. Look!_’”
-
-“Look where?” wondered Katy. “What _Will S._ have you, Mary?”
-
-At the word “_Look!_” Mary had glanced up at the portrait of Aunt Nan,
-and it seemed to her as if the eyes in the picture were cast down on
-something below them. Mary’s own eyes followed the look, and fell on
-the bust of Shakespeare in the middle of the mantelshelf. “Does she
-mean--perhaps she does--that bust of Will Shakespeare?” said Mary.
-“It is mine now, of course. ‘_Whoever has her wish_’--‘_Wears yet a
-precious jewel in his head_’--‘_Something rich and strange_.’”
-
-“Oh, Mary! It all fits together!” cried Katy, clapping her hands. “Do
-have a look at that bust, dear! If it is your Will.”
-
-“That’s just what I will do!” cried Mary, running to the mantelpiece,
-with Katy close behind her, and Caliban following them both.
-
-The bust was a plaster one about six inches high, and it stood on a
-black marble block like a little pedestal. Mary had dusted it many
-times and she knew it was not fastened to the pedestal and that it was
-hollow. But was it also empty?
-
-While the girls were looking at the bust, Caliban suddenly made two
-leaps, one to a chair, then to the mantelshelf which he reached
-without a slip. Then he took up his pose beside the bust of
-Shakespeare, and sat blinking wisely at them.
-
-“Do look at Caliban!” cried Katy. “He certainly looks as if he knew
-secrets!”
-
-“Perhaps he does,” said Mary. “Maybe there is a secret about this bust.
-I am going to see. If you please, Master Will S.”
-
-She took down the bust and shook it gently. Nothing rattled inside.
-Nothing fell out. She poked with her finger as far as she could reach.
-There seemed to be nothing in the interior.
-
-“Try again, Mary,” begged Katy, producing something from her pocket.
-“Here’s my folding button-hook.” Cautiously Mary thrust the hook up
-into the place where the brains of William S. would have been, were
-they not distributed about the library instead in the form of books.
-
-Yes! There was something up in the head; something that was yielding to
-the touch of the steel; something that came out at last in her hand. It
-was a piece of soft chamois-skin, folded and tied with green silk cord
-like that on which hung the mysterious key.
-
-“Oh, Mary!” cried Katy, holding her breath. “What is it?”
-
-“Sh!” said Mary, with shining eyes. Cautiously she undid the little
-packet; and there inside was another packet, wrapped in silver foil,
-very tiny, very hard. Mary squeezed it gently, but the feeling gave no
-clue as to the contents.
-
-While Katy watched her with bulging eyes, Mary peeled off the silver
-paper, a bit at a time. First of all was revealed a pink bead; more
-pink beads; a whole necklace, strung on a pink thread, of the most
-beautiful coral.
-
-“Miaou!” cried Caliban suddenly.
-
-“Oh-h!” cried Katy. “I never saw anything so sweet!”
-
-“‘_Of his bones are coral made_,’” quoted Mary. “Oh, clever Aunt Nan!--
-What else?” for the next quotation was running in her head, and she
-was very eager. With trembling fingers she unwrapped the rest of the
-package, and brought to light a tiny pasteboard box of not more than an
-inch in any dimension.
-
-“I know what it is!” whispered Katy.
-
-But she gasped when she saw what really came out--yes, a ring, on a
-white velvet bed. But such a ring! It had two big pearls in it, side by
-side, as big as the end of Mary’s little finger.
-
-“Oh!” cried Mary with delight. “What a beautiful ring! I do love
-pearls.--‘_Those are pearls which were his eyes_,’ Katy, do you see?
-And this is the ‘_something rich and strange_.’ What fun it is to find
-a treasure all by the aid of lovely quotations!”
-
-“I think it is wonderful!” said Katy. “It is so poetic.”
-
-“Come; let’s show these to Father and Mother,” said Mary, giving
-Caliban a big hug. And off the two girls ran to exhibit the treasures.
-
-Mrs. Corliss was delighted with her daughter’s find. “I am glad you
-have the pretty necklace to wear with your best dresses,” she said. “It
-is very nice and suitable for a schoolgirl. But the pearl ring--I think
-we must put that away until you are older. It is too valuable and too
-conspicuous. I don’t like to see little girls wearing jewelry.”
-
-“I can wear it when I go to college--if I go; may I not, Mother?” asked
-Mary wistfully.
-
-“Oh, yes, _if_ you go to college, Dearie,” sighed her mother. “At any
-rate, you can wear it when you are eighteen.”
-
-Dr. Corliss examined the ring carefully. “Yes, I am sure I have seen
-Aunt Nan wear it,” he said. “It must be one of the set of famous
-pearls that she was once proud of. Doubtless she sold the rest long ago
-and gave the money to her hospital. I am glad Mary has this; but Mother
-is right. School-girls should not wear jewelry. Put it away until you
-are grown-up, my daughter.”
-
-So Mary fastened the pretty necklace about her round throat, and shut
-the pearl ring away in her bureau drawer, with a sigh.
-
-But Katy Summers said:--
-
-“I wouldn’t mind, Mary, even if you can’t wear it yet. Just to think
-that you have it, and that you got it in such a mysterious way! Why, it
-is like a story-book!”
-
-“Doesn’t it make you want to hear some more Shakespeare?” demanded
-Mary, laughing.
-
-“Indeed it does!” agreed Katy. “I’ll come and listen whenever you will
-let me. Who knows what may happen? Yes, I’ll wager that Caliban knows.”
-
-“The same thing never happens twice,” sighed Mary.
-
-John was disgusted when he came home from a meeting of the Big Four to
-find that he had missed this most exciting discovery; although, after
-all, when it came to the jewelry, John thought the result rather
-small. “My goodness, Mary!” he exclaimed, “I’ll bet there are lots more
-things hidden in that old library of yours. Don’t you go and do all the
-hunting when I’m not here.”
-
-“I don’t,” said Mary. “I didn’t mean to hunt. I don’t ever mean to
-hunt. But if things come--all right.”
-
-“I wish you’d let me have the fun of hunting in the library all I want,
-just once,” said John wistfully.
-
-Mary hesitated. She did not want anybody to rummage among her books.
-But she hated to be “stingy,” and she felt as if she were really having
-more than her share of fun out of Aunt Nan’s legacy, in spite of John’s
-two thousand dollars. So she said generously, without letting John see
-how great an effort it was: “All right, Johnny. To-morrow is Saturday,
-and I’ll give you free leave to hunt all you want to in my library. I
-won’t even come to bother you.”
-
-“Bully for you!” crowed John. “Finding’s having?”
-
-But that was more than Mary bargained for.
-
-“Oh, no, John!” she cried. “I don’t think Aunt Nan would like that. Do
-you?”
-
-“Oh, bother! I suppose not,” grumbled John. “She was a queer one!”
-
-The next Saturday morning John spent in hunting that library from floor
-to ceiling. Caliban, sitting on a corner of the mantelpiece, watched
-him gravely during the whole operation, but offered no suggestions.
-John poked behind the books, in every corner, under every rug. He even
-ripped open a bit of the cover on the old sofa. But nothing interesting
-could he find.
-
-“I say, Caliban, can’t you help me?” he said once, to the watching cat.
-
-But Caliban only blinked, and gave his tail a little switch.
-
-“I’ll give it up!” growled John at last, disgustedly, when Mary came to
-call him to dinner. “I guess you’ve got about all you are ever going to
-get out of Aunt Nan’s legacy. If Caliban knows anything more about it
-he won’t tell _me_. Anyway, I’ve got my two thousand, and that’s best
-of all.”
-
-“All right, John,” retorted Mary good-naturedly. “I’ve got my two
-thousand books, anyway, and Caliban. So I am not complaining.”
-
-She did not tell John that she still hoped to solve the mystery of the
-key on the green silk cord; not to solve it by hunting or by hurrying,
-but in Aunt Nan’s own way, whatever that might be.
-
-And Caliban, looking up at her, switched his tail and gave a wise,
-solemn wink.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE ATTIC
-
-
-The Corliss family were sadly in need of funds. There were the butcher
-and the baker and the candlestick-maker politely presenting their bills
-to the family recently arrived in Crowfield, suggesting in print and
-in writing and by word of mouth that “bills are payable monthly.” Now
-it was the end of the month, and there was no money to pay these same
-bills; for the expense of moving and settling in a new place had been
-heavy, and their small income had already disappeared.
-
-“How much money is it that we need for immediate bills, Mother?” asked
-Dr. Corliss wearily. It always tired him to talk about money.
-
-“Just about a hundred dollars would bridge us over nicely,” said his
-wife, with an anxious pucker in her forehead. “But I don’t see any sign
-of our getting that hundred dollars for a month to come. And then it
-will be needed for fresh bills.”
-
-“Why, of course, you must take my hundred dollars that I found in Aunt
-Nan’s book,” said Mary cheerfully, though it cost her a pang to think
-of using up her wonder-gift so soon in this way. “I’ll just take it out
-of the bank next Saturday morning.”
-
-“I hate to touch that money of yours, Mary, even if we put it back for
-you when we can,” sighed her mother. “I hoped we could save that for
-your nest-egg toward a college fund. Let me think it over a bit longer.
-Perhaps something will happen to help us. Or I may think of some way to
-earn the money.”
-
-They left discussion of the matter for that time. But they all took the
-troublesome problem away with them into their daily tasks.
-
-“It is a shame for Mary to have to give up her hundred dollars,”
-thought John. “I wish I could help earn some money so that she needn’t
-do it. If I was in the city I could sell papers or something. But what
-can I do here when I have to go to school every day? School takes up
-such a lot of time!”
-
-John sighed as he swung his books over his shoulder and started off for
-school. All day he thought about that needed money; and it was in his
-mind when he turned in at the gate that night.
-
-“I wish I was clever and could think up something,” said John to
-Caliban, who was sitting on the top step looking at him when John came
-in. “I wonder you don’t help us, Caliban. Come, now, can’t you think of
-something, old witch-cat?”
-
-Caliban did not seem to mind being spoken to in this impolite way. But
-he did look at John in a fashion that the boy thought very knowing, and
-he did unmistakably wink one eye.
-
-“Miaou!” said Caliban, and he turned his back on John, and began to
-walk upstairs.
-
-John was going upstairs too; so he followed Caliban, who, however,
-hopped three steps at a time, while John could only take two with his
-short legs. When they reached the top of the flight, Caliban looked
-about to see if John was still following him. John had not meant to do
-so, but when he saw Caliban turn and look, with that queer expression
-in his green eyes, John had an idea.
-
-“Maybe he wants me to follow him,” said he to himself. He tossed his
-books on to a chair and tiptoed after the big black cat. Caliban ambled
-unconcernedly along the hall and suddenly darted up the attic stairs.
-“Hello!” said John, with a whistle under his breath. “What is Caliban
-up to now? I thought he never went far from Mary’s library. But, I
-declare, he is coaxing me to follow him up into the attic! You bet I’ll
-follow you, old boy!”
-
-John had never paid much attention to the attic. He had looked into it,
-of course. But it was so dark and dusty and cobwebby that it was not
-much fun poking about up there. Since their first visit the family had
-not been there except to store away some of Aunt Nan’s superfluous old
-furniture and ornaments.
-
-If the house had seemed like a museum to the family when they first
-entered it, this attic looked like a junk-shop. Every corner was
-filled with furniture, boxes, bundles, strange garments hanging from
-hooks, bales bursting with mysterious contents. Away back in the dusty
-corners, where it was so dark that John’s eye could not distinguish,
-bulked other dim shapes.
-
-Caliban walked across the floor in a furtive fashion, then suddenly
-made a dive into a distant dark corner, where John immediately heard a
-scurrying and scratching.
-
-“He’s after a mouse!” thought John excitedly. And he, too, dived into
-the darkness after the cat, who had disappeared. But Caliban had
-scuttled into some hole too small for John to enter. John could hear
-him still scratching and sniffing. And an occasional squeak betrayed
-the misfortune of some long-tailed dweller in the garret that Caliban
-had taken by surprise.
-
-John got down on his hands and knees the better to investigate that
-corner. But still he could not spy the cat and his prey. He only bumped
-his nose against the low beams, and got his mouth full of cobwebs. But
-in that dark hiding-place he came upon an unexpected thing. This was
-something that at first he took to be a bicycle. But he soon found by
-feeling of it that there was but one wheel, and that it was made of
-wood. At one end was a curious bunch of what felt like long hair; it
-made John shudder. But presently he remembered.
-
-“It must be a spinning-wheel,” said John to himself. “I remember seeing
-one in the picture of Priscilla and John Alden.” Just then he bumped
-his head on something hard. “What is this great long-handled pan?” he
-said. “I’ve seen those in the curiosity shops, too. Hello! Here’s a
-cradle, the kind that rocks. I’ve seen those in pictures. And here’s
-a pair of andirons. My! this is a regular old curiosity shop. These
-things must be worth a lot of money.”
-
-Then a sudden wonderful idea popped into John’s head. “Why can’t we
-sell them, if they are worth a lot of money? Why, of course we can
-sell them, and save Mary’s hundred dollars! Maybe that is just what old
-Caliban knew, when he coaxed me to follow him up here. Say, you old
-rascal, where are you? Here, ’Ban! ’Ban! Come on out and let me see
-what you think about it!”
-
-But Caliban had disappeared with his mouse, or whatever it was, which
-had ceased to squeak. And there was nothing but darkness and silence in
-the old attic beside the little boy and that strange litter of ancient
-things.
-
-John looked around and shivered. “I guess I’ll be going,” he said. “I
-won’t stop to examine anything more. They all belong to Mother. I’ll
-let her do the looking-up. I’ll run down and tell her what I’ve found.”
-
-And hurrying as fast as he could out of the dark corner, where the
-cobwebs and the dust were trying to keep intruders away from the old
-things to which they clung, John made for the attic stairs. Two or
-three times he thought he heard strange noises behind him, and he
-couldn’t go fast enough. Probably it was Caliban still scratching in
-some dark subway under the rafters. But John had no wish to stop and
-investigate. He came clattering down the stairs, and burst into his
-mother’s room.
-
-“Mother!” he cried, “I’ve found something!”
-
-“Goodness, John!” she said. “What a dirty face you have, and your
-eyebrows are all cobwebby. Where in the world have you been, and what
-have you found?”
-
-“I’ve found things up in the attic!” exclaimed John triumphantly.
-“Caliban showed me the way. It was all his doings. I think he did it on
-purpose--to help Mary.”
-
-“To help Mary! What in the world do you mean?” cried Mrs. Corliss.
-“Have you found a treasure, John, or some more mysterious secrets?”
-
-“Well, no, not exactly,” confessed John, somewhat crestfallen. “Unless
-we make it a secret. I’d like that. But I think it’s a nice surprise,
-Mumsie, and I _think_ it will save some of Mary’s hundred dollars.
-Mother,--all the furniture belongs to you, doesn’t it?”
-
-“Why, yes, Johnny,” she answered, wondering. “Why do you ask?”
-
-“Because,” said John importantly, “I have been snooping around the
-attic, Mumsie, and I think there are a lot of things you can sell.”
-
-“What kind of things do you mean, John?” she asked, looking interested.
-
-“Why, you know, Mother,” said John, “there’s a lot of old truck in the
-corners up there that looks just like the stuff we used to see in the
-curiosity shops in the city. I didn’t look very far, Mumsie, ’cause it
-was so--well, so dirty in there. But there’s wheels and andirons and
-things that I bet are worth lots of money!”
-
-“Are there, John?” said Mrs. Corliss. “How clever of you to think of
-it! I never dreamed of looking in Aunt Nan’s attic to find the way out
-of our difficulty. Perhaps this is the solution!”
-
-“It’s Caliban’s idea,” said John, wishing to be fair and not to claim
-too much credit, but feeling well pleased with himself, just the same.
-
-“Let’s go up right away and see what we can find; shall we, John?” said
-his mother. “I can’t wait!”
-
-“All right,” agreed John. “But you’d better take a candle, Mumsie. It’s
-terribly dark and spooky up there. And noises sound louder in the dark.”
-
-Back to the garret they went, Mrs. Corliss as eager as John. And into
-those dark corners which had been undisturbed for many, many years they
-shed the light of their blinking, inquisitive candle. Mrs. Corliss was
-more thorough than John had cared to be. She untied strings, and lifted
-lids of trunks, and unwrapped coverings. Out of chests and bundles and
-crates they dragged things that had been waiting through generations of
-Aunt Nan’s ancestors for some one to make them useful; things that had
-been discarded or pushed back still farther in order to make room for
-her whims and “jokes.”
-
-[Illustration: THINGS THAT HAD BEEN WAITING THROUGH GENERATIONS OF AUNT
-NAN’S ANCESTORS FOR SOME ONE TO MAKE THEM USEFUL]
-
-Besides the old spinning-wheel, andirons, and warming-pan, they found
-parts of a four-post bedstead, a tall clock, and many quaint chairs.
-They unearthed a hair trunk, foot-warmers, mirrors, crockery, and lamps
-with prisms dangling; shawls and bonnets and carpet-bags. All of these
-things were old and most of them were ugly. But Mrs. Corliss knew that
-they would look beautiful to many persons, just because they were old;
-which seemed to John a strange reason.
-
-When they had brought all this old stuff together in the middle of the
-attic floor, Mrs. Corliss looked about and smiled through a face-veil
-of dusty cobwebs.
-
-“Well, John!” she said, “I believe my part of the legacy is not to be
-laughed at, either. We don’t want to keep these old things, for they
-have no history for us and they are not beautiful in themselves--the
-only two excuses I see for cherishing useless old things. Luckily
-there are plenty of people who think differently. I’ll go up to town
-to-morrow with a list of what you and I have found, and see what I can
-get for them at some reliable antique shop. Let’s keep it a secret, and
-surprise your father and Mary, if we have good luck with the venture.
-Shall we?”
-
-“Let’s!” cried John, clapping his hands.
-
-Just then out of the darkness crept Caliban, licking his chops, and
-looking very sly.
-
-“Now, don’t you go and tell Mary, Caliban!” charged John. “For this
-is our secret. You let me into it yourself, and you’ve got to be our
-partner now. Don’t you dare even to _purr_ about it!”
-
-Caliban did not promise; but he trotted downstairs before them very
-discreetly. And all that evening no one would have guessed by the
-manner of those three conspirators what a tremendous secret they were
-concealing in their hearts. John did not dare to look at his mother’s
-face, however, he was so bursting with importance.
-
-The next day Mrs. Corliss went to town on an errand which she explained
-rather vaguely to the rest of the family. She returned with a queer
-little old man with round shoulders and a white beard, who spoke
-English strangely and whose hands were not very clean. Mrs. Corliss
-took him straight up to the attic, which was the only part of the house
-he seemed anxious to visit. They stayed up there some time, and there
-was a great noise of pushing and rolling of furniture. When they came
-down, the little old man was looking very much pleased and rubbing his
-dirty hands together. And he went away still rubbing.
-
-Mrs. Corliss came to the supper-table with something which she
-fluttered triumphantly before the eyes of her bewildered family.
-
-“Hurrah!” she cried. “I’ve got it!”
-
-“What is it, Mother?” said Mary.
-
-“How much is it, Mumsie?” begged John at the same minute.
-
-“It is a check for a hundred dollars!” cried Mrs. Corliss. “It’s to pay
-the horrid bills. Hurrah!”
-
-“Where in the world did you get it?” asked Dr. Corliss. “Is it another
-of Mary’s bookmarks?”
-
-“Not a bit of it!” sang Mrs. Corliss. “Mary’s bookmark is all her own,
-safe in bank. I got this out of the attic--out of my furniture. Now,
-perhaps you will think something of my despised legacy. I sold only
-a few of the old things that are of so much less use to us than the
-space they occupy. There are plenty of them left, and the dealer is
-crazy to get them, too. We need be in no hurry to part with them. Aunt
-Nan’s attic is a perfect storehouse of treasures in that man’s eyes. It
-was Johnny who found it out.”
-
-“Me and Caliban,” said John loyally; “don’t forget him.” And he told
-the others the whole story of his following the cat.
-
-“You blessed old Caliban!” cried Mary, catching up the great bundle of
-fur and hugging him tightly. “You shall have an extra saucer of milk
-for your supper, so you shall!”
-
-Caliban did not explain to her about the nest of fat mice which he had
-discovered in the attic. That was his share of the “treasure.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE PORTRAIT POINTS
-
-
-One winter afternoon some weeks after the discovery of the coral
-necklace and the pearl ring, Mary was in the library alone, reading
-“Hamlet.” It was the last play on the list which Aunt Nan had
-suggested, and Mary liked it best of all. Nothing further of a
-“mysterious” nature had happened in the library; but Mary had almost
-forgotten to think about anything of the kind. She was reading now for
-the pleasure of it.
-
-She had kindled a little fire in the fireplace, and the library was
-very cozy, full of flickering shadows and dancing lights, that played
-about the old volumes, and seemed every minute to change the expression
-on the bust of Shakespeare and on Aunt Nan’s picture above it.
-
-But Mary, cuddled up in the big armchair with Caliban in her lap and
-the little red book in her hand, was too much interested in the fate
-of poor Ophelia and the unlucky Prince to notice lights or shadows.
-She had come to the scene where Hamlet is talking sorrowfully to his
-mother in her chamber, and every word was wonderful. Suddenly she came
-upon a line underscored; the last part doubly underscored:--
-
-“_Look here upon this picture_, THEN ON THIS.”
-
-Hamlet was pointing out to his mother the portraits of two kings, the
-good one who had been murdered, and his wicked brother who had killed
-him. The underscored line made Mary’s heart beat faster. She had
-learned to connect some pleasant surprise with Aunt Nan’s choice of
-quotations. In the margin opposite this line was penned an exclamation
-point--just that and nothing more. Eager as she was to go on with the
-story, and to find out what Hamlet had to say next, Mary knew that
-it was time to turn to the notes at the back of the book, to see if
-Aunt Nan meant anything in particular by that exclamation. She could
-not help feeling as if Aunt Nan herself had called out, “Stop! Look!
-Listen!”--just as the signs at the railway crossings do to absorbed
-travelers.
-
-Yes; there was something written in the notes, in a blank space at the
-end of a paragraph: “_Look at my portrait! Then turn to the play of
-Othello._--”
-
-“Oh, dear!” said Mary to herself. “I believe we are coming to another
-Secret!” And she felt her heart give a little jump of excitement. “‘_My
-portrait._’ There is only one portrait of Aunt Nan.” And she glanced
-up at the picture over the fireplace. Then, indeed, she noticed how
-the firelight was making Aunt Nan’s queer eyes dance and glitter, and
-how her mouth seemed to be smiling in the most knowing way. “_Look
-here upon this picture_, THEN ON THIS.” What did the last part of this
-line, doubly underscored, mean to Aunt Nan? Mary studied the picture
-long and earnestly. There was something about it that she did not quite
-understand. It was as if Aunt Nan were trying to tell her something,
-but could not make the words plain. Mary felt that she almost had the
-clue to something--but not quite. Caliban did not seem to help her. If
-John were only here; John was so good at guessing riddles!
-
-Mary put down Caliban, who promptly jumped up onto the desk. Then she
-ran out into the hall and called, “John! John!” for she knew that he
-was in the house, probably, as usual, ravenous for tea. “Come to the
-library, John!” she called again, in answer to his “Hello! What?”--“I
-think it’s another Secret. Quick!” she added, to bring him the sooner.
-
-Down came clattering boots, and John dashed into the room all
-excitement. “What’s up?” he asked eagerly. And Mary showed him the
-line. “H’m!” commented John, looking at the portrait curiously. “She
-does look sly, doesn’t she, Mary? But you haven’t looked up the other
-thing yet. I say, hurry! Let’s see what your old ‘Othello’ has to tell
-about it.”
-
-Sure enough! Mary had forgotten the reference to “Othello.” Hurriedly
-she got out the proper volume, and turned to the right page and line.
-
- “_A fixéd figure for the time of scorn
- To point his slow unmoving finger at._”
-
-She read slowly. “What in the world does that mean? I’m sure I don’t
-know.”
-
-John had been all this time studying the portrait with its queer
-expression. When Mary read the quotation he clapped his hands. “Oh, I
-say!” he cried. “It talks about a _finger_, pointing. That’s it! She
-means the hand of the portrait is pointing to something. It has been
-pointing all the time, and we’ve only got to find out _what at_! Look,
-Mary. Don’t you see she is pointing, just as plainly as can be?”
-
-Mary dropped “Othello” and ran to look at the picture. The queer eyes
-of Aunt Nan seemed to meet hers, and yes! she certainly seemed to be
-pointing with the long forefinger of her right hand which rested on her
-breast.
-
-Mary followed the direction of the pointing finger, as John was trying
-to do in the fading light. It seemed to point to a corner of the wall
-on which the portrait itself hung; to a shelf in the left-hand alcove
-by the fireplace. Both Mary and John ran eagerly to the corner and
-began to sight from finger to shelf and back again, to get a straight
-line from the pointing finger.
-
-“I think it falls _here_” said John, touching a fat brown book labeled
-“Concordance,” on the fourth shelf from the bottom. “But I have looked
-behind all the books on this shelf. I know I have!”
-
-“No, it doesn’t fall there,” said Mary. “I am sure she is pointing
-about _here_.” And she laid her hand on a row of green-and-gold
-volumes, whose titles she could hardly read in the dim light.
-
-“‘Gems from the Poets,’” spelled John with difficulty. “Do you suppose
-she means these? And what does she want us to do, anyway? Let’s try
-this one.” He took down Volume I, which turned out to be “Gems from
-Marlowe,” a poet of whom neither of them had even heard. John looked
-under the book, and examined the wall behind where it had stood, and
-began to look through the book itself, as carefully as possible. But
-Mary was searching farther. “I don’t think it is that one,” she said.
-“I think she is pointing farther along in the row.”
-
-“Let’s try them all,” suggested John, seizing another volume,--“‘Gems
-from Beaumont and Fletcher’--whoever they are!” He flapped the leaves
-and looked in the space at the back where the cover was loose. But
-there was nothing unusual about that book. Meanwhile Mary was still
-drawing an imaginary line from the point of the portrait’s finger to
-the shelf in the corner.
-
-“I am sure she is pointing _here_,” she said, laying her hand on the
-last volume in the row, which looked exactly like the others. “‘Gems
-from Shakespeare,’” she read the label on the back. “Yes, of course
-this ought to be the right one. She liked him best of all the poets,
-John. I believe this is it!”
-
-Mary pulled the volume from the shelf eagerly. But when she held it in
-her hands she uttered a cry of surprise that made John drop the book he
-was flapping strenuously, and turn to her.
-
-“What is it, Mary?” he asked. “Have you found something?”
-
-“Oh, John!” she whispered in the greatest excitement, “it isn’t a book
-at all! It is--something else! I think it is the Secret!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-GEMS FROM SHAKESPEARE
-
-
-It was an exciting moment when Mary stood with the “Gems from
-Shakespeare” in her hand, declaring that this was not a book at all,
-but something else! What was it, then, which made her so excited?
-Caliban eyed her from the desk benevolently. “Miaou!” he cried. But no
-one noticed him.
-
-“What do you think it is, Mary?” cried John. For he, too, saw in a
-moment that it was not a mere book at which his sister was gazing with
-wide eyes.
-
-The back, with its green-and-gold leather and its label, “Gems from
-Shakespeare,” matched the rest of the set, so far. And the sides were
-flat and cover-like. But the front and top and ends, where the edges
-of leaves would naturally show in any proper book, were enclosed in
-leather, so as to make the whole thing into a sort of case.
-
-“It’s a box!” said Mary solemnly.
-
-John thrust his face up close to the mystery, and presently he gave a
-start. In the end where you would naturally open the book to read, he
-had spied something strange.
-
-“Oh, Mary!” he cried; “Look! Here is a little keyhole! I believe we’ve
-found the clue to your key that was in the lantern. Have you got the
-key here? Quick, Mary!”
-
-Mary was shaking the box very gently. “Something rattles!” she said.
-“What do you suppose it is?”
-
-“Oh, do be careful. Maybe it is something breakable. Hurry and find out
-what it is!” begged John in the greatest excitement.
-
-Mary always wore the puzzling key about her neck, on the green silk
-cord which had come with it. She now pulled it out, and they carried
-the “Gems from Shakespeare” over to the table, so that they might see
-better under the lamp.
-
-Just then there came a knock at the door, and both children jumped as
-if they had been caught in doing something wrong. “Mary! John!” cried
-the voice of their mother, “where are you both? What in the world are
-you doing? I rang the bell for tea three times; and I never knew you
-both to be so late before!”
-
-“Oh, come in, Mother,” said Mary; “do come in, quickly!”
-
-The door opened, and there stood Mrs. Corliss with the Doctor close
-behind her.
-
-“I thought I heard you shouting at one another in here,” said Dr.
-Corliss. “What’s up? More surprises, eh? Something better than tea?”
-
-“Caliban looks as if he thought so,” said Mrs. Corliss. “See how his
-green eyes glitter!”
-
-“Oh, yes, Father!” said Mary; “it’s the most exciting surprise of all,
-we think; because Aunt Nan has taken pains to make it a part of her
-portrait.”
-
-“Part of the portrait! What do you mean, Mary?” exclaimed her father,
-advancing into the room, and like the rest of them forgetting all about
-tea in the excitement of the occasion.
-
-Mary showed them the “Gems from Shakespeare” with the keyhole in the
-end, and explained how the picture had guided them to it. They lighted
-the lamp hastily, and Dr. Corliss had to see just how the “slow
-unmoving finger” of Aunt Nan’s portrait pointed to the shelf in the
-corner where the “Gems” lived.
-
-“Why, yes!” exclaimed the Doctor, examining the picture still more
-closely than the children had done. “And now that I have a clue, I see
-something more, that you haven’t discovered. Look, children! Do you
-see what this book is on which Aunt Nan’s left hand is resting? It is a
-picture of this very same ‘Gems from Shakespeare,’ I can even make out
-a ‘G--S’ on the binding. But I never should have discovered it without
-your clue. I believe there is something in it, Mary!” And he looked as
-excited as any of them.
-
-“Well, do let’s find out what is in it!” urged Mrs. Corliss. “I can’t
-wait another minute!”
-
-“Neither can I!” cried John. “Hurry, Mary!”
-
-Mary took the little key and tried it in the keyhole. Yes, it just
-fitted. She turned it, and a lock clicked.
-
-“Lift the cover!” cried her father. And Mary opened what would have
-been the front cover of the book, if it had been a book which she was
-holding.
-
-Inside the hollow leathern shell which pretended to be a book was a
-box; a green wooden box, with brass trimmings. Mary lifted the cover of
-this with a rapidly beating heart. And what do you think she found?
-
-First of all she found a sheet of paper, at the top of which was
-written “GEMS FROM SHAKESPEARE.” Below it followed a list of quotations
-from Shakespeare, of a character that made them all very much excited;
-you will readily guess why. These are the quotations:--
-
- “The little casket bring me hither.--More jewels yet!”
- _T. of A._ I, ii.
-
- “The jewel that we find we stoop and take it.” _M. for M._, II, i.
-
- “Bid my woman search for a jewel.” _Cym._ II, iii.
-
- “And what says she to my little jewel?” _T. G. of V._, IV, vii.
-
-Under this sheet of quotations was spread a tiny silken blanket of
-pink. With trembling fingers Mary lifted this covering.
-
-“Gems from Shakespeare,” indeed! The sight made them all gasp. There,
-lying on velvet cushions, in little pens, were drops and clusters and
-strings of pearls; big and little, round and oval, creamy and lustrous
-and beautiful. Piece by piece Mary lifted them out of their beds. There
-was a long necklace which would go twice around her throat; earrings;
-brooches; bar-pins and bracelets and rings. Some of the pearls were set
-with diamonds, and some with emeralds and sapphires and rubies; some
-were made up into rosebuds with pink coral like that of the necklace
-which Mary had found in the bust of Shakespeare. It was a wonderful
-collection.
-
-“Well!” cried Dr. Corliss, the first one of the family to get his
-breath,--“well, Mary! So you have Aunt Nan’s jewels, after all. She
-did not sell them for the benefit of her hospital, as I believed. She
-wanted them to go with her beloved library. There can be no doubt that
-these belong to you, and that she wished you to have them, if you were
-clever enough to find them. And a pretty little fortune they will
-prove, if I am not mistaken.”
-
-[Illustration: “OH, THEY ARE VERY BEAUTIFUL,” SAID MARY]
-
-“Here is a note in the bottom of the box,” said Mary, drawing out a
-sheet of folded paper. Nowadays she did not dread Aunt Nan’s notes as
-she had done at first, for she began to think of the queer great-aunt
-whom she had never seen as one of her best and kindest friends.
-
-“_To Mary Corliss_” the note was addressed, and it read:--
-
- These are my jewels, Mary, since you have found them--my mere jewel
- stones. But by this time, as I hope, you will have learned the
- greater beauty of my other jewels--the real “Gems from Shakespeare.”
- You will know, if you have done as I wished, that books are the best
- treasure of all. And that in poetry--especially in Shakespeare’s
- poetry--are the most precious gems to be found in this world. These
- so-called _precious_ bits of stone and pearl have never been of any
- use to me. I have never worn them. Why I have not sold them long ago,
- I do not know. Perhaps because I wanted to play this one last joke
- with them, for somebody’s benefit. They have been waiting here in
- this secret place for years. Now I have played my last joke, and you
- shall do with the “Gems” whatever you please. I hope you will be a
- wise girl.
- N. C.
-
-“What do you suppose Aunt Nan meant by that last remark?” asked Mrs.
-Corliss wonderingly. “The pearls are far too splendid for our Mary ever
-to wear. I should hate to see her flaunting them, Owen.”
-
-“So should I!” said Dr. Corliss fervently. “They are grand enough for a
-princess to wear at a court ball. What do you say, Mary?”
-
-“Oh, they are very beautiful,” said Mary, “but I don’t want to wear
-them, any more than Aunt Nan did. Father, do you think it would be
-right to sell them? I’d like so much to have the money to help us
-all--and perhaps there would be enough so that I could go to college,
-too.”
-
-“That’s my daughter!” cried her father, hugging her proudly in his
-arms. “That is what I hoped you would say. I can see no possible reason
-why you should keep the jewels. Evidently Aunt Nan did not care for
-them herself, and you have no association with them except through
-her. They can do you no good, except in one way. So my girl will be
-able to go to college, after all, as well as my boy. I am so glad!”
-
-“Thanks to Aunt Nan--and to Shakespeare,” said Mary, patting the volume
-of “Hamlet” lovingly. “If Shakespeare hadn’t given the clue I might not
-have found the gems for ever and ever so long.”
-
-“You might never have found them, Mary!” cried John. “Ginger! how
-awful! They might have stayed here all your life; or some old
-bookseller might have got them when you began to fill up with new books
-in place of these old ones.”
-
-“Like Aladdin swapping off his old lamp for a new one,” smiled Dr.
-Corliss.
-
-“No,” said Mary, “that wouldn’t have happened. And I should have found
-them, anyway, sooner or later. For I shall never part with one of Aunt
-Nan’s books. And sooner or later I mean to dip into every one, and
-read it through, if I can. I guess Aunt Nan knew that.” She glanced
-gratefully at the portrait over the mantelpiece, which seemed to look
-very happy in the lamplight, while the box of gems stood open on the
-table.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-THE PARTY
-
-
-From Aunt Nan’s pearls Mary kept out a brooch for her mother and two
-bar-pins for herself and Katy Summers, just alike. The rest of the
-“Gems from Shakespeare” she entrusted to Mr. Wilde, the family lawyer,
-who undertook to sell them for her in the city.
-
-It was an exciting day for Mary when he told her the result of his
-mission.
-
-“My dear,” said he, with a twinkle in his wise old eyes, “those
-Shakespeare ‘Gems’ of yours made the eyes of the jewelers pop out of
-their heads. You won’t have any trouble in going to college when the
-time comes; if you still wish to do so, and if you haven’t already
-learned all there is to be known from that famous library of yours. I
-hold forty thousand dollars in trust for you. Are you disappointed?”
-
-“Forty thousand dollars!” Mary could only gasp. And the rest of the
-family had to pinch themselves to be sure they were not dreaming. But
-it was, indeed, a fact. There need be no more anxiety or overwork
-for any of them. With care and economy they were provided for until
-Mary and John should have finished college and be ready to earn their
-living. Dr. Corliss could go on writing his book in peace, without
-worrying about bills. Mrs. Corliss could have a little maid to help her
-in the housework.
-
-And Mary could have a party!
-
-“Mother,” said Mary, when they had recovered from the first excitement
-of the news which Mr. Wilde had brought them, and when they had seen
-that proud and delighted old gentleman off once more for the city where
-he lived,--“Mother, I want to have a party, and give the other children
-a good time. I want to celebrate not only our good luck, but the way we
-got it. I want to have a Shakespeare party.”
-
-“Oh, yes! Let’s have a party!” crowed John. “A dress-up party, Mary?”
-
-“Yes, a dress-up party. Everybody must be a Shakespeare character.”
-
-“I think that is a very nice idea,” said Mrs. Corliss. “Next month
-comes Shakespeare’s birthday, the twenty-third of April, which is also
-Saint George’s day. I think it would be lovely to have a party and show
-our Crowfield friends that Aunt Nan’s house is going to be hospitable
-and jolly from this time on.”
-
-They invited all the children in Mary’s class of the High School and
-in John’s class of the Grammar School. Everybody was told that he
-or she must come in a Shakespeare costume; and this set them all to
-looking up quotations and reading plays more than had ever before been
-done in Crowfield.
-
-For days before the party Mary’s library was crowded every afternoon
-with eager children who came to ask questions and get suggestions about
-their costumes. Mary and Katy Summers helped them as best they could,
-and Mrs. Corliss pinned and draped and made sketches to show how things
-ought to look.
-
-During these busy days Caliban retreated to the attic and sulked most
-of the time, because Mary paid him so little attention. But then, Mary
-said his costume was already nearly perfect. So why bother about him?
-
-They held the party in the library, the biggest room in the Corliss
-house. And Aunt Nan’s portrait looked down on a strange gathering
-of folk out of her favorite books. It seemed as if the old lady
-must be pleased if she knew how many persons had become interested
-in Shakespeare through the things which had happened and were still
-happening in her library.
-
-The door was opened by John dressed as Puck, in brown jacket and
-tights, with little wings sprouting out of his shoulder-blades.
-
-In the library the guests were received by Mary in long, glittering,
-green draperies to represent Ariel, with a wand and a crown of stars.
-She kept Caliban close at her side, beautiful in a green ribbon collar
-which bored him greatly.
-
-Katy Summers stood beside Mary, and looked sweet as Titania, in a fairy
-dress of white tarlatan, with a crown of flowers. Dr. Corliss had been
-made to represent Prospero, with a long white beard and gray robes. And
-Mrs. Corliss was one of the witches from “Macbeth.” She wore a dress of
-smoky gray veiling, with a veil over her long hair, which concealed her
-face. Some of the children were afraid of her at first, for they did
-not know who she really was; she looked very bent and witch-like, and
-acted her part weirdly.
-
-Ralph and James Perry, two members of John’s “Big Four,” came as
-the two Dromios, the clowns in “A Comedy of Errors.” Their faces
-were whitened, and they acted like real clowns in a circus, turning
-somersaults and making grimaces. Whatever one did the other imitated
-him immediately, and it kept the other children in gales of laughter.
-
-Billy Barton, the fourth member of the “Big Four,” made a hit as Nick
-Bottom, wearing the Ass’s head, and braying with comical effect; though
-as Billy had never heard the strange noise which a donkey really makes
-when it brays, he actually sounded more like a sick rooster. His
-long-eared head-piece soon grew so hot to wear that Billy took it off
-and hung it over his arm, which rather spoiled the illusion, but was
-much more comfortable.
-
-Then there was Charlie Connors, a very fat boy, who dressed as
-Falstaff, with a fierce mustache and impressive rubber boots, a plumed
-hat, belt full of pistols, and a sword. There was Lady Macbeth, in a
-white nightgown with her hair hanging loose, a dangerous dagger in one
-hand and a lighted candle in the other. But when she nearly set fire to
-the draperies of the Ghost of Hamlet’s father, Mrs. Corliss made the
-Lady extinguish her sleep-walking candle.
-
-Hamlet himself was there, too, in melancholy long black stockings, with
-a waterproof cape flung tragically over one shoulder. He carried one of
-Aunt Nan’s ostrich eggs in his hand to represent a skull. Indeed, the
-attic and the “Collections” had helped supply many necessary parts of
-this Shakespeare masquerade.
-
-There was Cleopatra, in a wonderful red sateen robe hauled out of one
-of the old chests; and Shylock, with a long beard hanging over a purple
-dressing-gown of the Early-Victorian period. There was Julius Cæsar in
-a Roman toga made from some of Aunt Nan’s discarded window-curtains,
-and Rosalind looking lovely in a blue bathing-suit and tam o’ shanter.
-
-There were also a number of little Grammar-School fairies in
-mosquito-netting robes, and many other citizens of places earthly and
-unearthly, who seemed to have wandered out of the books in Mary’s
-library. Ariel recognized them all, and named them to the company as
-they came in. They squatted about on the chairs and on the floor till
-everybody had arrived.
-
-And then they gave the play.
-
-Ever since reading “Midsummer Night’s Dream” Mary had wanted to try the
-delicious foolery of “Pyramus and Thisbe.” It required no scenery, no
-other costumes than a shawl or two, to cover up what the actors were
-already wearing to represent other characters. It was all a huge joke,
-as the audience soon saw; and throughout the scene the children laughed
-and squealed with delight, as Mary had thought they would. For the
-actors must have given the play as ridiculously as Shakespeare himself
-intended; which was saying a great deal.
-
-Billy Barton, covering himself with a mackintosh, acted Prologue, and
-introduced Mary, draped as Pyramus, and Katy as Thisbe; John, parted
-for a time from his wings, and tied up in a gray shawl, with a fringed
-rope fastened on for a tail, was the horribly roaring Lion. Ralph and
-Jimmie represented Wall and Moonshine.
-
-It was a very funny thing to see Wall hold up his fingers to make a
-chink through which Pyramus and Thisbe might kiss each other. And when
-Lion begged the audience not to be frightened by his roar, the children
-shrieked with laughter.
-
-But funniest of all was when Jimmy Perry as Moonshine came in with the
-old tin lantern to represent the Moon, and tried to make Caliban in his
-green ribbon act the part of the Moon Man’s dog. Caliban didn’t like
-theatricals. He would not act the part, but lay down in the middle of
-the floor, with his feet in the air, and his ears laid flat, ready to
-scratch the Moon Man if he persisted. The Prologue had to rush in again
-and drag him off.
-
-When the Lion had roared and made Pyramus think he had eaten poor
-Thisbe, so that the hasty fellow stabbed himself in grief; and when
-Thisbe had died, too, after sobbing about her lover’s “lily lips” and
-“cherry nose,” the little play was over, and everybody in a good humor.
-And the children said, “I didn’t know Shakespeare was so funny, did
-you?”
-
-Then Ariel and Titania, Prospero, and the Witch made a magic--they
-were a mighty quartet, you see. John suggested that they were really
-the “Biggest Four.” They waved their wands and lifted their hands, and
-Caliban helped with a mighty “Wow!” Then in came Puck and the other
-fairies bearing a huge iron kettle, with a ladle sticking out of the
-top. From the kettle rose a cloud of smoke and a sweet smell that made
-Caliban sneeze. The fairies put the kettle in the middle of the room,
-and the four magicians waved their wands over it, and moved slowly
-about it singing,--
-
- “Double, double, toil and trouble,
- Fire, burn, and cauldron, bubble!”
-
-When the spell was finished, the smoke died away, and the Witch stooped
-over and ladled something out, which she threw into the fireplace.
-“Now, come, everybody!” she cried in a cracked voice, “and dip pot-luck
-out of the magic kettle.”
-
-One by one the guests came and helped themselves to a ladleful of
-pot-luck. The “luck” turned out to be a tissue-paper package tied
-with red ribbon. In each package was a little present. Sometimes the
-children did not get an appropriate gift; but then they could “swap.”
-Shylock, who was one of the biggest boys, drew a Japanese doll, which
-he exchanged for a jack-knife that had fallen to the lot of a little
-girl-fairy. Cleopatra drew a conductor’s whistle, and Hamlet had a
-beautiful bow of pink hair-ribbon; so they made a trade. The Ghost
-was made happy with a jews-harp, and the Ass secured a fan; while fat
-Falstaff made every one roar with laughter by unrolling from the great
-bundle of tissue paper, which he had carefully picked out, a tiny
-thimble.
-
-After this they danced and played games, and made the roof of Aunt
-Nan’s old house echo with such sounds as it had not heard for many
-years. Shakespeare characters flitted from room to room, up the stairs
-to the attic and down to the cellar, in a joyous game of hide-and-seek.
-And nobody said “Don’t!” or “Careful!” or “Sh!” This was a night when
-Dream-People had their way undisturbed.
-
-Then they all went out into the dining-room and had supper--sandwiches
-and chocolate and cake and ice-cream. And they all voted that they
-liked Shakespeare very much, and that they ought to celebrate his
-birthday every year.
-
-Nobody wanted to go home, of course. But in time, mere ordinary fathers
-and mothers and big sisters and big brothers, in ugly, common clothes,
-came and dragged away the Shakespeare people, one by one. When they
-had all, as Prospero said, “melted into air, into thin air,” when even
-Titania had waved her wand and disappeared with a kiss on Ariel’s
-cheek, this happy Spirit and Prospero and the Witch, Puck and Caliban,
-were left alone in front of the library fireplace.
-
-“Wasn’t it a lovely party!” cried Puck.
-
-“I am sure Aunt Nan would have been pleased,” said the Witch, looking
-up at the portrait over the mantel.
-
-“Just think what a happy time she has given us; dear Aunt Nan!” said
-Ariel.
-
-“Yes; it was a very nice party, indeed,” acknowledged Prospero,
-stroking his long beard gravely. “I confess I never expected to get
-so much pleasure out of poetry. But now, to quote myself, ‘I’ll to my
-book.’ Good-night.” And he retired to his study.
-
-“I’m so sleepy!” said John. “Isn’t it too bad that poor Shakespeare
-died before they invented ice-cream?”
-
-“Yes,” said Mary, “I wish he were still alive. I should like to see
-him. But when I look about the library now I feel as if all the books
-were alive--just full of live people!”
-
-“They are alive so long as we read them,” said Mrs. Corliss.
-
-“I’m going to keep them alive!” cried Mary.
-
-“Miaou!” protested Caliban, scratching wearily at his ribbon. He at
-least was tired of wearing his costume.
-
-“Poor Caliban!” said Mary, untying the ribbon. “Now you can go to sleep
-comfortably. To-morrow I shan’t be Ariel any more. But you will still
-be Caliban, for you are the realest of us all!”
-
-Caliban switched his tail, yawned, and jumped up into the armchair,
-where he curled himself to sleep.
-
-Mary had a strange dream that night. Perhaps she had eaten too much
-ice-cream. She thought that as soon as the house was quiet, Caliban
-rose on tiptoe and put on little wings like those of Puck, and flew
-right out of the open window, away to the land of fairies and shadows
-and book-folk. She dreamed that though she hunted and hunted, she
-never could find him again. The dream made her cry, and she woke up
-very early in the morning, still sobbing.
-
-The dream was still too real! She jumped out of bed, flung on her
-little blue wrapper, thrust her feet into her blue slippers, and
-hurried downstairs into the library. There in the middle of the
-mantelpiece, under Aunt Nan’s portrait and close beside the bust
-of Shakespeare, sat Caliban. He blinked in grave surprise at her
-unexpected entrance.
-
-“Oh, Caliban, dear Caliban!” cried Mary, running up to him and hugging
-him tight. “I was afraid you had ‘vanished into thin air,’ too. I
-couldn’t have borne that, Caliban. I don’t know what I should ever do
-without you, pussy dear!”
-
-“Miaou!” said Caliban, fondly kissing her cheek.
-
-And Aunt Nan’s portrait smiled down upon the pair.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Surprise house, by Abbie Farwell Brown</p>
-<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>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Surprise house</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Abbie Farwell Brown</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Helen Mason Grose</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: December 10, 2022 [eBook #69521]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: David E. Brown and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SURPRISE HOUSE ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt=""></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="bbox">
-
-<p class="ph1"><span class="antiqua">By Abbie Farwell Brown</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tiny">
-
-<p>SURPRISE HOUSE. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>KISINGTON TOWN. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>SONGS OF SIXPENCE. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>THEIR CITY CHRISTMAS. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>THE CHRISTMAS ANGEL. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>JOHN OF THE WOODS. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>FRESH POSIES. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>FRIENDS AND COUSINS. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>BROTHERS AND SISTERS. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>THE STAR JEWELS AND OTHER WONDERS. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>THE FLOWER PRINCESS. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>THE CURIOUS BOOK OF BIRDS. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>A POCKETFUL OF POSIES. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>IN THE DAYS OF GIANTS. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>THE BOOK OF SAINTS AND FRIENDLY BEASTS. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>THE LONESOMEST DOLL. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class="center">HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY<br>
-<span class="smcap">Boston and New York</span></p>
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1>Surprise House</h1>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_0"></span>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i006.jpg" alt=""></div>
-<p class="caption">“I DIDN’T!” PROTESTED JOHN. “IT WAS—SOMETHING,<br>
-I DON’T KNOW WHAT—THAT SPOKE” (<i>Page <a href="#Page_19">19</a></i>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt=""></div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p><span class="xxxlarge">SURPRISE<br>
-HOUSE</span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br>
-
-<span class="xlarge">Abbie Farwell Brown</span></p>
-
-<p><i>With Illustrations</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_titlelogo.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<p>BOSTON AND NEW YORK<br>
-
-<span class="large">HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY</span><br>
-
-<span class="antiqua">The Riverside Press Cambridge</span><br>
-
-1917</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY THE YOUNG CHURCHMAN COMPANY<br>
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY ABBIE FARWELL BROWN<br>
-
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED<br>
-<br>
-<i>Published October 1917</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">—<i>And I as rich in having such a jewel</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>As twenty seas, if all their sand were pearl,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The water nectar, and the rocks pure gold.</i></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">Contents</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table>
-<tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The House</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Library</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_10"> 10</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Visitor</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_17"> 17</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Books</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_25"> 25</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Instructions</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_34"> 34</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Lantern</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_43"> 43</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Caliban</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_50"> 50</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Bust</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_58"> 58</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Attic</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_72"> 72</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Portrait Points</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_84"> 84</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Gems from Shakespeare</span> &#160; &#160;</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_91"> 91</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Party</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_99"> 99</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>:—Thanks are due to the publishers of <i>The Young Churchman</i>
-for courteous permission to reprint chapters of this book which appeared as
-a serial in that publication under the title of “Aunt Nan’s Legacy.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">Illustrations</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table>
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">“I didn’t!” protested John. “It was—Something,<br>
- &#160; &#160;I don’t know what—that spoke”</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_0"> <i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>“<span class="smcap">Oh, Katy, what do you suppose Aunt Nan<br>
- &#160; &#160;meant this time?</span>”</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_62"> 62</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Things that had been waiting through Generations<br>
- &#160; &#160;of Aunt Nan’s Ancestors for some<br>
- &#160; &#160;one to make them Useful</span> </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_80"> 80</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">“Oh, they are very Beautiful,” said Mary</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_96"> 96</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center"><i>From drawings by Helen Mason Grose.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-<p class="ph2">SURPRISE HOUSE</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br>
-
-<small>THE HOUSE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ON the main street of Crowfield stood a little
-old red house, with a gabled roof, a pillared
-porch, and a quaint garden. For many weeks it
-had been quite empty, the shutters closed and
-the doors locked; ever since the death of Miss
-Nan Corliss, the old lady who had lived there for
-years and years.</p>
-
-<p>It began to have the lonesome look which a
-house has when the heart has gone out of it and
-nobody puts a new heart in. The garden was
-growing sad and careless. The flowers drooped
-and pouted, and leaned peevishly against one
-another. Only the weeds seemed glad,—as
-undisturbed weeds do,—and made the most
-of their holiday to grow tall and impertinent
-and to crowd their more sensitive neighbors
-out of their very beds.</p>
-
-<p>But one September day something happened
-to the old house. A lady and gentleman, a big
-girl and a little boy, came walking over the slate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-stones between the rows of sulky flowers. The
-gentleman, who was tall and thin and pale,
-opened the front door with a key bearing a huge
-tag, and cried:—</p>
-
-<p>“Good-day, Crowfield! Welcome your new
-friends to their new home. We greet you kindly,
-old house. Be good to us!”</p>
-
-<p>“What a dear house!” said the lady, as they
-entered the front hall. “I know I am going to
-like it. This paneled woodwork is beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Open the windows, John, so that we can see
-what we are about,” said Dr. Corliss.</p>
-
-<p>John shoved up the dusty windows and pushed
-out the queer little wooden shutters, and a flood
-of September sunshine poured into the old house,
-chasing away the shadows. It was just as if the
-house took a long breath and woke up from its
-nap.</p>
-
-<p>“What a funny place to live in!” cried Mary.
-“It’s like a museum.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whew!” whistled John. “I bet we’ll have
-fun here.”</p>
-
-<p>The hallway in which they stood did, indeed,
-seem rather like the entrance to a museum, as
-Mary Corliss said. On the white paneled walls
-which Mrs. Corliss admired were hanging all
-sorts of queer things: huge shells, and ships in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-glass cases, stuffed fishes, weapons, and china-ware.
-On a shelf between the windows stood a
-row of china cats, blue, red, green, and yellow,
-grinning mischievously at the family who confronted
-them. On the floor were rugs of bright
-colors, and odd chairs and tables sprawled about
-like quadrupeds ready to run.</p>
-
-<p>“Gee!” whispered John Corliss, “don’t they
-look as if they were just ready to bark and mew
-and wow at us? Do you suppose it’s welcome
-or unwelcome, Daddy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, welcome, of course!” said Dr. Corliss.
-“I dare say they remember me, at least, though
-it’s thirty years since I was in this house. Thirty
-years! Just think of it!”</p>
-
-<p>They were in the parlor now, which had been
-Miss Corliss’s “best room.” And this was even
-queerer than the hallway had been. It was
-crowded with all sorts of collections in cabinets,
-trophies on the walls, pictures, and ornaments.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Corliss looked around with a chuckle.
-“Hello!” he cried. “Here are a lot of the old
-relics I remember so well seeing when I was a
-boy, visiting Aunt Nan in the summer-time.
-Yes, there’s the old matchlock over the door;
-and here’s the fire-bucket, and the picture of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-George Washington’s family. I expect Aunt Nan
-didn’t change anything here in all the thirty
-years since she let any of her relatives come to
-see her. Yes, there’s the wax fruit in the glass
-jar—just as toothsome as ever! There’s the
-shell picture she made when she was a girl.
-My! How well I remember everything!”</p>
-
-<p>They moved from room to room of the old
-house, flinging open the blinds and letting fresh
-air and sunshine in upon the strange furniture
-and decorations. Mrs. Corliss looked about
-with increasing bewilderment. How was she
-ever to make this strange place look like their
-home? Aunt Nan and her queer ways seemed
-stamped upon everything.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a funny collection of things, Owen!” she
-laughed to her husband. “All this furniture is
-mine, I suppose, according to Aunt Nan’s will.
-But I am glad we have some things of our own
-to bring and make it seem more like a truly
-home. Otherwise I should feel, as Mary says,
-as if we were living in a kind of museum.”</p>
-
-<p>“We can change it as much as we like, by and
-by,” her husband reassured her.</p>
-
-<p>“What a funny old lady Great-Aunt Nan
-must have been, Daddy!” said John, who had
-been examining a hooked rug representing a blue<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-cat chasing a green mouse. “Did she make this,
-do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” said Dr. Corliss. “I remember
-seeing her working at it. She hooked all these
-rugs. It was one of her favorite amusements.
-She was strange enough, I believe. I can remember
-some of the weird things she used to do
-when I was a lad. She used to put on a man’s
-coat and hat and shovel coal or snow like any
-laborer. She was always playing tricks on somebody,
-or making up a game about what she
-happened to be doing. We must expect surprises
-and mysteries about the house as we
-come to live here. It wouldn’t be Aunt Nan’s
-house without them.—Hello!”</p>
-
-<p>John had sat down on a little three-legged
-stool in the corner; and suddenly he went <i>bump!</i>
-on the floor. The legs of the stool had spread as
-if of their own accord and let him down.</p>
-
-<p>“That was one of Aunt Nan’s jokes, I remember!”
-laughed Dr. Corliss. “Oh, yes! I
-got caught myself once in the same way when
-I was a boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell about it, Father,” said Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“Well; I was about your age, John,—about
-ten; and I was terribly bashful. One day when
-I was visiting Aunt Nan the minister came to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-call. And though I tried to escape out of the
-back door, Aunt Nan spied me and made me
-come in to shake hands. As soon as I could I
-sidled away into a corner, hoping he would forget
-about me.</p>
-
-<p>“This innocent little stool stood there by the
-stuffed bird cabinet, just as it does now, and I
-sat down on it very quietly. Then <i>bump!</i> I went
-on to the floor, just as John did. Only I was not
-so lucky. I lost my balance and kicked my heels
-up almost in the minister’s face. I can tell you
-I was mortified! And Aunt Nan laughed. But
-the minister was very nice about it, I will say.
-I remember he only smiled kindly and said, ‘A
-little weak in the legs,—eh, John? I’m glad
-my stool in church isn’t like that, Miss Corliss.
-I’d never trust you to provide me with furniture,—eh,
-what?’”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think that was a bit funny joke,”
-spluttered John, who had got to his feet looking
-very red.</p>
-
-<p>“Neither do I,” said his mother. “I hate
-practical jokes. I hope we shan’t meet any more
-of this sort.”</p>
-
-<p>“You never can tell!” Dr. Corliss chuckled
-reminiscently.</p>
-
-<p>“What a horrid mirror!” exclaimed Mary,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-peering into the glass of a fine gilt frame. “See!
-It makes me look as broad as I am long, and ugly
-as a hippopotamus. The idea of putting this in
-the parlor!”</p>
-
-<p>“Probably she meant that to keep her guests
-from growing conceited,” suggested Dr. Corliss
-with a grin. “But we shall not need to have it
-here if we don’t like it. There’s plenty of room
-in the attic, if I remember rightly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we shall have to change a great many
-things,” said Mrs. Corliss, who had been moving
-about the room all by herself. “What do you suppose
-is in that pretty carved box on the mantel?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s yours, Mother. Why don’t you open it?”
-said John eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Corliss lifted the cover and started back
-with a scream. For out sprang what looked like
-a real snake, straight into her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Is it alive?” cried Mary, shuddering.</p>
-
-<p>But John had picked up the Japanese paper
-snake and was dangling it merrily to reassure
-his mother. “I’ve seen those before,” he grinned.
-“The boys had them at school once.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come!” frowned Dr. Corliss. “That
-was really too bad of Aunt Nan. She knew that
-almost everybody hates snakes, though she
-didn’t mind them herself. I’ve often seen her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-put a live one in her pocket and bring it home to
-look at.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ugh!” shuddered Mrs. Corliss. “I hope
-they don’t linger about anywhere. I see I shall
-have to clean the whole house thoroughly from
-top to bottom. And if I find any more of these
-jokes—!” Mrs. Corliss nodded her head vigorously,
-implying bad luck to any snakes that
-might be playing hide-and-seek in house or
-garden.</p>
-
-<p>Secretly John thought all this was great
-fun, and he dashed ahead of the rest of the
-family on their tour of the house, hoping to find
-still other proofs of Aunt Nan’s special kind of
-humor. But to the relief of Mary and her
-mother the rest of their first exploring expedition
-was uneventful.</p>
-
-<p>They visited dining-room and kitchen and pantry,
-and the room that was to be Dr. Corliss’s
-study. Then they climbed the stairs to the bedroom
-floor, where there were three pretty little
-chambers. They took a peep into the attic; but
-even there, in the crowded shadows and cobwebs,
-nothing mysterious happened. It was a nice old
-house where the family felt that they were going
-to be very happy and contented.</p>
-
-<p>Down the stairs they came once more, to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-door of the ell which they had not yet visited.
-It was a brown wooden door with a glass knob.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, here is your domain, Mary!” said Dr.
-Corliss, pausing and pointing to the door with a
-smile. “This is your library, my daughter. Have
-you the key ready?”</p>
-
-<p>Yes, indeed, Mary had the key ready; a great
-key tagged carefully,—as all the other keys of
-Aunt Nan’s property had been,—this one bearing
-the legend: “LIBRARY. Property of Mary
-Corliss.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here is the key, Father,” said Mary, stepping
-up proudly. “Let me put it in myself. Oh,
-I hope there are no horrid jokes in here!”
-And she hesitated a moment before fitting the
-key in the lock of her library—her very own
-library!</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br>
-
-<small>THE LIBRARY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">ACCORDING to the will left by that eccentric
-old lady, Miss Nan Corliss, her nephew,
-Dr. Corliss,—whom she had not seen for thirty
-years,—was to receive the old house at Crowfield.
-His wife inherited all the furniture of the
-old house, except what was in the library. John
-Corliss, the only grandnephew, was to have two
-thousand dollars to send him to college when he
-should be old enough to go. And to Mary, the
-unknown grandniece whom she had never seen,
-Aunt Nan had declared should belong “my library
-room at Crowfield, with everything therein
-remaining.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary was now going to see what her library
-was like, and what therein remained. She drew
-a long breath, turned the key, pushed open the
-door, and peered cautiously into the room, half
-expecting something to jump out at her. But
-nothing of the sort happened. John pushed her
-in impatiently, and they all followed, eager, as
-John said, to see “what sister had drawn.” Dr.
-Corliss himself had never been inside this room,
-Aunt Nan’s most sacred corner.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>What they saw was a plain, square room, with
-shelves from floor to ceiling packed tightly with
-rows of solemn-looking books. In one corner
-stood a tall clock, over the top of which perched
-a stuffed crow, black and stern. In the center
-of the room was a table-desk, with papers scattered
-about, just as Aunt Nan had left it weeks
-before. On the mantel above the fireplace was
-a bust of Shakespeare and some smaller ornaments,
-with an old tin lantern. Above the
-Shakespeare hung a portrait of a lady with gray
-curls, in an old-fashioned dress, holding a book
-in her hand. The other hand was laid upon her
-breast with the forefinger extended as if pointing.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello!” said Dr. Corliss when he spied the
-portrait, “this is Aunt Nan herself as she looked
-when I last saw her; and a very good likeness
-it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“She looks like a witch!” said John. “See
-what funny eyes she has!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sh! John! You mustn’t talk like that about
-your great-aunt,” corrected his mother. “She
-has been very good to us all. You must at least
-be respectful.”</p>
-
-<p>“She was eccentric, certainly,” said Dr. Corliss.
-“But she meant to be kind, I am sure. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-never knew why she refused to see any of her
-family, all of a sudden—some whim, I suppose.
-She came to be a sort of hermitess after a while.
-She loved her books more than anything in the
-world. It meant a great deal that she wanted
-you to have them, Mary.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish she had left <i>me</i> two thousand dollars!”
-said Mary, pouting. “These old books
-don’t look very interesting. I want to go to college
-more than John does. But I don’t suppose
-I ever can, now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Books are rather useful, whether one goes to
-college or not,” her father reminded her. “She
-needn’t have left you anything, Mary. She
-never even saw you—or John either, for that
-matter. She hadn’t seen me since I was married.
-I take it very kindly of her to have remembered
-us so generously. I thought her pet hospital
-would receive everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you suppose became of her jewelry,
-Owen?” asked Mrs. Corliss in an undertone.
-“I thought she might leave that to Mary,
-the only girl in the family. But there was no
-mention of it in her will.”</p>
-
-<p>“She must have sold it for the benefit of her
-hospital. She was very generous to that charity,”
-said Dr. Corliss.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>Mary and John had been poking about the library
-to see if they could find anything “queer.”
-But it all seemed disappointingly matter-of-fact.
-They stopped in front of the tall clock which
-had not been wound up for weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll have to start the clock, Father,” said
-Mary. “The old crow looks as if he expected us
-to.”</p>
-
-<p>“The key is probably inside the clock case,”
-said Dr. Corliss, opening the door.</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, there was the key hanging on a
-peg. And tied to it was the usual tag. But instead
-of saying “Clock Key,” as one would have
-expected, this tag bore these mysterious words
-in the handwriting which Mary knew was Aunt
-Nan’s: “<i>Look under the raven’s wing.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, what in the world does that mean?”
-asked Mary, staring about the room. “What
-did she mean by ‘the raven,’ do you suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess she means the old crow up there,”
-cried John, pointing at the stuffed bird over the
-clock.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you suppose she meant that, Father?”
-asked Mary again, looking rather ruefully at the
-ominous crow.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe she meant that,” said her father,
-sitting down in a library chair to await what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-would happen. “But I believe this is another
-of Aunt Nan’s little jokes. It sounds so to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh! It’s just an old April Fool, I bet!”
-jeered John.</p>
-
-<p>Mary still stared at what Aunt Nan called
-“the raven,” and wondered. “Under which
-wing am I to look?” she thought. Finally she
-gathered courage to reach up her hand toward
-the right wing, very cautiously. She half expected
-that the creature might come alive and
-nip her. But nothing happened. There was
-nothing under the right wing but moth-eaten
-feathers, some of which came off in Mary’s fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll try the other wing,” said Mary to herself.
-She poked her fingers under the old bird’s
-left wing. Yes! There was something there.
-Something dangled by a hidden string from the
-wing-bone of Aunt Nan’s raven. Mary pulled,
-and presently something came away. In her
-hand she held a little gold watch and chain.
-On the case was engraved the letter <i>C</i>, which
-was of course as truly Mary’s initial as it had
-been Aunt Nan Corliss’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it is Aunt Nan’s watch, sure enough!”
-said Dr. Corliss, beaming. “Well, Mary! I declare,
-that is something worth while. You<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-needed a watch, my dear. But I don’t know
-when I could ever have bought a gold one for
-you. This is a beauty.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a bird of a watch!” piped John, wagging
-his head at the crow.</p>
-
-<p>“I like it better than wriggly snakes,” said
-Mrs. Corliss, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, how good Aunt Nan was to leave it here
-for me!” said Mary. “I am beginning to like
-Aunt Nan, in spite of her queerness.”</p>
-
-<p>“I like this kind of joke she plays on you,”
-said John enviously. “I wish she’d play one
-like that on me, too. I say, Mary, do you suppose
-there are any more secrets hidden in your
-old library? Let’s look now.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder!” said Mary, looking curiously
-about the dingy room. “But I don’t want to
-look any further now. I am satisfied. Oh, Mumsie!
-Just look!” Mary put the chain of the new
-watch around her neck, tucked the little chronometer
-into her belt, and trotted away to see
-the effect in the crooked old mirror of the parlor.</p>
-
-<p>John wanted to take down the crow and examine
-him further.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along, John,” said his father, pushing
-the little brother toward the door. “This is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-Mary’s room, you know. We aren’t ever to
-poke around here without her leave, mind
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said John reluctantly. “But I do
-wish—!” And he cast a longing glance back
-over his shoulder as his father shut the door on
-Mary’s mysterious library.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br>
-
-<small>A VISITOR</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE very next day Dr. Corliss shut himself
-up in his new study while Mrs. Corliss and
-Mary set to work to make the old house as fresh
-as new. They brushed up the dust and cobwebs
-and scrubbed and polished everything until it
-shone. They dragged many ugly old things off
-into the attic, and pushed others back into the
-corners until there should be time to decide what
-had best be done with them. Meanwhile, John
-was helping to tidy up the little garden, snipping
-off dead leaves, cheering up the flowers,
-and punishing the greedy weeds.</p>
-
-<p>The whistles of Crowfield factories shrieked
-noon before they all stopped to take breath.
-Then Mrs. Corliss gasped and said:—</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mary! I forgot all about luncheon!
-What are we going to feed your poor father with,
-I wonder, to say nothing of our hungry selves?”</p>
-
-<p>Just at this moment John came running into
-the house with a very dirty face. “There’s some
-one coming down the street,” he called upstairs;
-“I think she’s coming in here.” He peeped out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-of the parlor window discreetly. “Yes, she’s
-opening the gate now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let Mary open the door when she rings,”
-warned his mother. “It will be the first time
-our doorbell rings for a visitor—quite an event,
-Mary! I am sure John’s face is dirty.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not very tidy myself,” said Mary, taking
-off her apron and the dusting-cap which covered
-her curls, and rolling down her sleeves.</p>
-
-<p>The latch of the little garden gate clicked while
-they were speaking, and looking out of the upstairs
-hall window Mary saw a girl of about her
-own age, thirteen or fourteen, coming up the
-path. She wore a pretty blue sailor suit and a
-broad hat, and her hair hung in two long flaxen
-braids down her back. Mary wore her own brown
-curls tied back with a ribbon. On her arm the
-visitor carried a large covered basket.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s one of the neighbors, I suppose,” said
-Mrs. Corliss, attempting a hasty toilet. “Go to
-the door, Mary, as soon as she rings, and ask her
-to come in. Even if we are not settled yet, it is
-not too soon to be hospitable.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary listened eagerly for the bell. Their first
-caller in Crowfield looked like a very nice little
-person. Perhaps she was going to be Mary’s
-friend.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>But the bell did not ring. Instead, Mary presently
-heard a little click; and then a voice in
-the hall below called, apparently through the
-keyhole of the closed door,—“Not at home.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause, and again,—“Not at
-home.” A third time the tired, monotonous
-voice declared untruthfully, “Not at home.”
-Then there was silence.</p>
-
-<p>“John!” cried Mary, horrified. For she
-thought her brother was playing some naughty
-trick. What did he mean by such treatment of
-their first caller? Mary ran down the stairs two
-steps at a time, and there she found John in the
-hall, staring with wide eyes at the front door.</p>
-
-<p>“What made you—?” began Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t!” protested John. “It was—Something,
-I don’t know What, that spoke.
-When she pushed the bell-button it didn’t ring,
-but it made <i>that</i>. And now I guess she’s gone off
-mad!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, John!” Mary threw open the door and
-ran to the porch. Sure enough, the visitor was
-retreating slowly down the path. She turned,
-however, when she heard Mary open the door,
-and hesitated, looking rather reproachful. She
-was very pretty, with red cheeks and bright
-brown eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>“Oh! I’m so sorry!” said Mary. “You didn’t
-ring, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I did,” said the girl, looking puzzled.
-“But I thought no one was at home. Somebody
-said so.” Her eyes twinkled.</p>
-
-<p>Mary liked the twinkle in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand it!” said Mary, wrinkling
-her forehead in puzzlement. Then an idea
-flashed into her head, and she showed her teeth
-in a broad smile. “Oh, it must have been one
-of Aunt Nan’s patent jokes.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl gave an answering smile. “You
-mean Miss Corliss?” she suggested. “I know
-she didn’t like callers. We never ventured to
-ring the bell in her day. But Mother thought
-you new neighbors might be different. And I
-saw you going by yesterday, so I thought I’d
-try—” She looked at Mary wistfully, with a
-little cock to her head. “My name is Katy Summers,
-and we are your nearest neighbors,” she
-added.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, do come in,” urged Mary, holding open
-the door hospitably. “It is so nice to see you! I
-am Mary Corliss.”</p>
-
-<p>Katy Summers beamed at her as she crossed
-the doorsill. And from that moment Mary hoped
-that they were going to be the best of friends.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>John appeared just then, much excited and
-forgetting his dirty face. “It must be a kind of
-graphophone,” he said, without introduction.
-“Let me punch that button.”</p>
-
-<p>Twisting himself out into the porch, John
-pushed a dirty thumb against the bell-button
-of the Corliss home. Instantly sounded the
-same monotonous response,—“Not at home— Not
-at home— Not at home.”</p>
-
-<p>“I say! Isn’t it great!” shouted John, cutting
-a caper delightedly. “Aunt Nan must have had
-that fixed so as to scare away callers. Wasn’t
-she cute?”</p>
-
-<p>Mary blushed for her brother, and for the
-reputation of the house. “It wasn’t cute!” she
-said hastily. “We shall have to get that bell
-changed. We aren’t like that, really,” she explained
-to her visitor. “We love to see people.
-You were very good to come to this inhospitable
-old house.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted to,” said Katy simply, “and
-Mother thought you’d perhaps all be busy this
-morning, getting settled. So she sent you over
-this hot luncheon.” And she held out to Mary
-the heavy basket.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, how kind of you!” cried Mary. “Let
-me tell Mother. She will be so pleased! It is so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-nice to have our nearest neighbor call on us
-right away.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t stop but a minute this time,” said
-Katy, “for my own luncheon is waiting on the
-table. But I’d like to see your mother. I’ll
-wait here in the hall.”</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the hall facing the front door
-was an armchair with a back studded with brass
-nails. Katy sat down in this chair to wait for
-Mrs. Corliss. Mary ran up the stairs feeling
-very happy, because already she had found this
-new friend in the town where she was afraid she
-was going to be lonesome.</p>
-
-<p>But hardly had she reached the top of the
-stairs when she heard a funny little cry from
-the hall below. It was Katy’s voice that called.
-“Oh!” it cried. “Help! Mary Corliss!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” called Mary, leaning over the
-banisters to see what the matter was.</p>
-
-<p>And then she saw a queer thing. The chair
-in which Katy Summers sat was moving rapidly
-of its own accord straight toward the front door.
-Katy was too startled to move, and there she sat,
-grasping the arms of the chair, until it reached
-the doorsill. When it touched the sill, the chair
-stopped and gently tilted itself forward, making
-Katy slide out, whether she would or no.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>“Well, I never!” said Katy with a gasp.
-“If that isn’t the impolitest chair I ever
-saw!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Katy!” cried Mary, flying down the
-stairs. “I am so sorry. We didn’t know it was
-that kind of chair. We hadn’t cleaned the hall
-yet, so we never suspected. It must be another
-of Aunt Nan’s jokes. She probably had this
-made so that peddlers or agents who got inside
-and insisted on waiting to see her would be discouraged.
-Please don’t blame us!”</p>
-
-<p>Then down came Mrs. Corliss, with Katy’s
-basket in her hand. “What a reception to our
-first caller!” she said with a rueful smile. “And
-you came on such a kind errand, too! But you
-must try to forget, little neighbor, that this was
-ever an inhospitable house, and come to see us
-often. We are going to change many things.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed, I shall come again,” said Katy
-Summers. “I hope that Mary and I shall be in
-the same class at High School.”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I,” said Mary. “I begin to-morrow.
-Will you call for me so that I can have some one
-to introduce me on my first day?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Katy, with a roguish look, “if
-you’ll let me wait for you in the garden.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary turned red. “You needn’t be afraid,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-she said. “We won’t let those things happen
-any more, will we, Mother?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Mrs. Corliss. “We will have the
-carpenter attend to those ‘jokes’ at once.”</p>
-
-<p>But until the carpenter came John had a beautiful
-time riding down the front hall on the inhospitable
-chair, and making the automatic
-butler cry, “Not at home.” John thought it a
-great pity to change these ingenious devices
-which made the front hall of Aunt Nan’s house
-so interesting. But he was in the minority, and
-that very afternoon the carpenter took away an
-electric device from the old armchair, which
-ended its days of wandering forever. And instead
-of the “bell” he put an old-fashioned
-knocker on the front door.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br>
-
-<small>THE BOOKS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE town of Crowfield was built on a swift-flowing
-river with a waterfall, which gave
-it strong water-power. So the houses were easily
-fitted with electricity. Even the old Corliss
-mansion was up to date in that respect, at least.
-This was why Aunt Nan had been able to carry
-out her liking for queer devices and unexpected
-mechanical effects, as Mr. Griggs, the carpenter,
-explained when he came to make more hospitable
-the front hall. He chuckled over the
-moving chair, the secret of which was a spring
-concealed under one of the brass nail-heads.
-Any one who sat down and leaned back was sure
-to press this button, whereupon the chair would
-begin to move.</p>
-
-<p>“It beats all how clever that old lady was!”
-said Mr. Griggs. “I never saw anything like
-this before. She must ’a’ got some electrician
-down from the city to fix this up for her. We
-don’t do that kind of job in Crowfield.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you suppose there are any more such
-things about the house?” inquired Mrs. Corliss
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>“I’ll take a look,” said Mr. Griggs. “But I
-mightn’t find ’em, even so.”</p>
-
-<p>And he did not find them; Aunt Nan had her
-secrets carefully concealed. But for weeks the
-family were continually discovering strange new
-surprises in their housekeeping.</p>
-
-<p>That very night at supper, just after Mr.
-Griggs had left the house with his kit of tools, a
-queer thing happened. They were sitting about
-the round dining-table, the center of which, as
-they had noticed from the first, seemed to be a
-separate inlaid circle of wood. In the middle of
-this Mary had set a pretty vase of flowers—nasturtiums,
-mignonette, marigolds, and yellow
-poppies, the last lingerers in their garden.</p>
-
-<p>They were talking about their first day in
-Crowfield, about the visit of Katy Summers,
-and the funny things that had happened to their
-first caller; and they were all laughing merrily
-over Mary’s description of how Katy had looked
-when she went riding out toward the door in the
-inhospitable chair. Dr. Corliss had just reached
-out his hand for the sugar. Suddenly the table
-center began slowly to revolve, and the sugar
-bowl retreated from his hand as if by magic.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I never!” said the Doctor. “This is a
-new kind of butler’s assistant!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>“It makes me feel like Alice in Wonderland!”
-exclaimed Mary. “It is the Mad Hatter’s
-breakfast; only instead of every one’s moving
-on one place, the place moves on by itself!”</p>
-
-<p>They found that Mary had hit her knee by
-accident against a spring concealed under the
-table.</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Nan lived here all alone,” said Mrs.
-Corliss, “and I dare say she found this an easy
-way to pass things to herself when she was eating
-her lonely meals.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s keep it like this,” said Mary. “Now
-I shan’t be needing always to ask John to
-pass the salt.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think it’s fair!” protested John.
-“Now, Mary has the seat by the button, and
-she can make the table turn when she likes. I
-wish I had a button, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d keep the table whirling all the time,
-John,” laughed his father. “No, it is better as
-it is. We chose our seats this way, before we
-knew about the lively center-piece. Let’s stick
-to what chance gave us. Aunt Nan’s house seems
-to be a kind of good-luck game, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>But in spite of the queer things that were continually
-happening there, it did not take long for
-the Corliss family to feel quite at home in this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-old house, and in Crowfield. Mary was admitted
-to the High School, and found herself in the
-same class with Katy Summers, which pleased
-them both very much. They soon became the
-closest chums. John went to the Grammar
-School, where he found some nice boys of his
-own age who lived just down the road; Ralph
-and James Perry, cousins in opposite houses,
-and Billy Barton a little farther on.</p>
-
-<p>These promptly formed the Big Four; and the
-neighborhood of the Big Four was the liveliest
-in town. The Corliss house, with its collections
-and curiosities, became their favorite meeting-place,
-and in these days could hardly recognize
-itself with the merry streams of children who
-were always running in and out, up and down
-the stairs. It was fortunate that Dr. Corliss,
-who kept himself shut up in his study with the
-book he was writing, was not of a nervous or
-easily distracted temperament.</p>
-
-<p>As for Mrs. Corliss—being a mother, she just
-smiled and loved everybody. It was her idea
-that first of all a home should be a happy place
-for the family and for every one who came
-there. The first thing she did was to send for
-the familiar furniture of the city house which
-they had left when Dr. Corliss was obliged to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-give up his professorship in college and move
-into the country. Now the queer rooms of
-Aunt Nan’s inhospitable old house were much
-less queer and much more homelike than they
-had ever been, and every corner radiated a
-merry hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>But in the library nothing was changed. Mary
-would not let anything be moved from the place
-in which Aunt Nan had put it. For she had
-grown much attached to the old lady’s memory,
-since the finding of that little watch and chain.</p>
-
-<p>You may be sure that Mary and John looked
-about the library carefully, to see if more of
-the same kind of nice joke might not be concealed
-somewhere. But they found nothing. It
-was not until nearly a week later, when there
-came a rainy Saturday, that they found time
-to look at the books themselves.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello! Here’s a funny book to find in an
-old lady’s library!” cried John. “It’s our old
-friend ‘Master Skylark,’ one of the nicest books
-I know. But how do you suppose a children’s
-book came to be here, Mary? Daddy says for
-years Aunt Nan never allowed any children in
-the house.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder!” said Mary. “And here’s another
-child’s book, right here on the desk. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-noticed it the first time I came in here, but I
-never opened it before. ‘Shakespeare the Boy’
-is the name of it. I wonder if it is interesting?
-I like Shakespeare. We read his plays in school,
-and once I wrote a composition about him, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Papa says Aunt Nan was crazy about Shakespeare,”
-said John.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, here’s a note inside the cover of the
-book, addressed to me!” said Mary wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me look!” cried John, darting to her side.
-“Yes, it’s in that same handwriting, Mary. It’s
-a letter from Aunt Nan. Do hurry and open it!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary held the envelope somewhat dubiously.
-It was not quite pleasant to be receiving letters
-from a person no longer living in this world.
-She glanced up at the portrait over the mantel
-as she cut the end of the envelope with Aunt
-Nan’s desk shears, and it seemed to her that the
-eyes under the prim gray curls gleamed at her
-knowingly. She almost expected to see the long
-forefinger of the portrait’s right hand point directly
-at her.</p>
-
-<p>It was a brief letter that Aunt Nan had written;
-and it explained why she had left her library
-of precious books to this grandniece Mary whom
-she had never seen.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>Mary Corliss (it began): I shan’t call you dear
-Mary because I don’t know whether you are dear
-or not. You may be if you like the sort of things
-I always liked. And in that case I shall be glad
-you have them for your own, when I can no longer
-enjoy them. I mean the things in this room, which
-I have given all to you, because there is no one
-else whom I can bear to think of as handling them.
-I heard your father say once that he hated poetry.
-That was enough for me! I never wanted to see
-him again. He can have my house, but not my
-precious books. Well, I read in the paper which
-your mother sent me that you had won a prize at
-school for a composition about William Shakespeare,
-the greatest poet who ever lived. You have
-begun well! If you go on, as I did, you will care
-as I have cared about everything he wrote. So
-you shall have my library and get what you can
-out of it. Be kind to the books I have loved.
-Love them, if you can, for their own sake.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="indentright">Your Great-Aunt,</span><br>
-
-<span class="smcap">Nan Corliss</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“What a queer letter!” said John. “So it
-was your composition that did it. My! Aren’t
-you lucky, Mary!”</p>
-
-<p>“I do like Shakespeare already,” said Mary,
-glancing first at Aunt Nan’s portrait, then at the
-bust of the poet below it. “And I guess I am
-going to like Aunt Nan.” She smiled up at the
-portrait, which she now thought seemed to
-smile back at her. “I must go and tell Father<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-about it,” she said eagerly, running out of the
-room; and presently she came back, dragging
-him by the hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mary!” said Dr. Corliss. “So it was
-your Shakespeare essay that won you the
-library! I remember how fond Aunt Nan used
-to be of the Poet. She was always quoting
-from him. I am glad you like poetry, my dear;
-though for myself I never could understand it.
-This is, indeed, a real poetry library. I am glad
-she gave it to you instead of to me, Mary. There
-are any number of editions of Shakespeare here,
-I have noticed, and a lot of books about him,
-too. I suppose she would have liked you to read
-every one.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean to,” said Mary firmly. “I want to;
-and I am going to begin with this one, ‘Shakespeare
-the Boy.’ I feel as if that was what she
-meant me to do.”</p>
-
-<p>As she said this Mary began to turn over the
-leaves of the book in which she had found the
-note from Aunt Nan. “The story sounds very
-nice,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Just then something fell from between the
-leaves and fluttered to the floor. Her father
-stooped to pick it up.</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Nan’s bookmark,” he said. “It would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-be nice to keep her marks when you can, Mary.
-Why!” he exclaimed suddenly, staring at what
-he held in his fingers. It was long and yellow,
-and printed on both sides.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary!” he cried, “did you ever see one of
-these before? I have never seen many of them
-myself, more’s the pity!” And he handed the
-“bookmark” to his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>It was a hundred-dollar bill.</p>
-
-<p>“Papa!” gasped Mary, “whose is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is yours, Mary, just as much as the watch
-and chain were; just as much as the library is,”
-said her father. “Everything in the room was
-to be yours; Aunt Nan said so in her will. This
-is certainly a part of your legacy. I wonder if
-Aunt Nan forgot it or put it there on purpose,
-as another of her little jokes?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think she put it there on purpose,” said
-John. “My! But she was a queer old lady!”</p>
-
-<p>“I think she was a very nice old lady,” said
-Mary. “Now I must go and tell Katy Summers
-about it.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br>
-
-<small>INSTRUCTIONS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WITH the hundred dollars which she had
-found in the book Mary started an account
-in the Crowfield Savings Bank, under her own
-name. She was very proud of her little blue
-bank-book, and she hoped that some time, in
-some unexpected way, she would save enough
-money to go to college, as John was to do.</p>
-
-<p>But the outlook was rather hopeless. The
-Corliss family were far from well off. Even in
-Crowfield, where expenses were low, they had
-a hard time to live on the small income from
-what Dr. Corliss had managed to save while he
-was Professor of Philosophy in the city college.
-Dr. Corliss was writing a book which he hoped
-would some day make his fortune. But the book
-would not be finished for many a day. Meanwhile,
-though there was very little money coming
-in, it was steadily going out; as money has
-a way of doing.</p>
-
-<p>The best thing the family could do at present
-was to save as much as possible by going without
-servants and dainties and fine clothes—just<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-as people have to do in war-time; and by
-doing things themselves, instead of having things
-done for them. Mrs. Corliss was a clever manager.
-She had learned how to cook and sew and
-do all kinds of things with her deft fingers; and
-Mary was a good assistant and pupil, while
-John did everything that a little boy could do
-to help. He ran errands and built the fires, and
-even set the table and helped wipe the dishes
-when his mother and sister were busy.</p>
-
-<p>The neighbors were very friendly, and there
-were so many pleasant new things in Crowfield
-that the family did not miss the pleasures they
-used to enjoy in the city, nor the pretty clothes
-and luxuries which were now out of the question.
-And Mary did not spend much time worrying
-about college. There would be time enough
-for that.</p>
-
-<p>After the finding of that hundred-dollar bill,
-Mary and John spent a great deal of time in
-opening and shutting the leaves of books in the
-library, hoping that they would come upon
-other bookmarks as valuable as that first one.
-But whether Aunt Nan had left the bill there
-by mistake, as Dr. Corliss imagined, or whether
-she had put it there on purpose, as Mary liked
-to think, apparently the old lady had not repeated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-herself. The only foreign things they
-found in the musty old volumes were bits of
-pressed flowers and ferns, and now and then a
-flattened bug which had been crushed in its
-pursuit of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>John soon grew tired of this fruitless search.
-But Mary came upon so many interesting things
-in the books themselves that she often forgot
-what she was looking for. Many of the books
-had queer, old-fashioned pictures; some had
-names and dates of long ago written on the fly-leaf.
-In many Mary found that Aunt Nan had
-scrawled notes and comments—sometimes
-amusing and witty; sometimes very hard to
-understand.</p>
-
-<p>Mary loved her library. She had never before
-had a corner all to herself, except her tiny bedroom.
-And to feel that this spacious room, with
-everything in it, was all hers, in which to do
-just as she pleased, was a very pleasant thing.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Mary?” asked Katy Summers one
-afternoon, running into the Corliss house without
-knocking, as she had earned the right to do.</p>
-
-<p>“I think she is in the library,” said Mrs. Corliss,
-who was busy sewing in the living-room.
-“That is a pretty likely place in which to look
-nowadays, when she isn’t anywhere else!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>“Shall I go there to find her?” asked Katy.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Dear; go right in,” said Mrs. Corliss.
-“She will be glad to see you, I am sure.”</p>
-
-<p>The door of the library was hospitably open.
-And Katy Summers, creeping up on tiptoe and
-peeping in softly, saw Mary with her thumb
-between the leaves of a book, kneeling before
-one of the bookshelves.</p>
-
-<p>“I spy!” cried Katy. “What’s the old Bookworm
-up to now? Or perhaps I ought to say,
-considering your position, what’s she <i>down</i> to
-now?”</p>
-
-<p>Mary jumped hastily to her feet. “Hello,
-Katy,” she said cordially. “I was just looking
-up something. Say, Katy, do you know what
-fun it is to look up quotations?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Katy, laughing. “I don’t see any
-fun in that. No more fun than looking up things
-in a dictionary.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it <i>is</i> fun,” returned Mary. “I think I
-must be something like Aunt Nan. She loved
-quotations. Just look at this row of ‘Gems from
-the Poets.’ They’re full of quotations, Katy.
-I’m going to read them all, some time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Goodness!” cried Katy. “What an idea! I
-think poetry is stupid stuff, sing-song and silly.”</p>
-
-<p>“So Daddy thinks,” said Mary. “But it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-isn’t, really. It is full of the most interesting
-stories and legends and beautiful things. This
-library bores Daddy almost to death, because
-all the books on these two walls are poetry. I
-believe that Aunt Nan had the works of every
-old poet who ever wrote in the English language.
-And see, these are the lives of the poets.” She
-pointed to the shelves in one corner.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh!” grunted Katy. “Well, what of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see,” said Mary, looking up at
-Aunt Nan’s portrait, “the more I stay in this
-library, the more I like Aunt Nan’s books, and
-the more I want to please Aunt Nan herself. I
-like her, Katy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t!” said Katy, eyeing the portrait sideways.
-“You never had her for a neighbor, you
-see.”</p>
-
-<p>“She never did anything to you, did she?”
-asked Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“No-o,” drawled Katy reluctantly. “She
-never did anything either good or bad to me.
-But—she was awfully queer!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course she was,” agreed Mary. “But
-that isn’t the worst thing in the world, to be
-queer. And she was awfully kind to me.— Say,
-Katy, don’t you like Shakespeare?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not very well,” confessed Katy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>“Well, I do,” Mary asserted. “I haven’t
-read much of him, but I’m going to. Every
-time I look at that head of Shakespeare on the
-mantelpiece, I remember that it was my composition
-about Shakespeare that was at the bottom
-of almost everything nice that has happened
-in Crowfield. Why, if it hadn’t been for
-him, perhaps we shouldn’t have come to live
-here at all, and then I shouldn’t ever have
-known <i>you</i>, Katy Summers!”</p>
-
-<p>“Gracious!” exclaimed Katy. “Wouldn’t
-that have been awful? Yes, I believe I do like
-him a little, since he did <i>that</i>. I wrote a composition
-about him once, too. It didn’t bring anything
-good in my direction. But then, it wasn’t
-a very good composition. I only got a <i>C</i> with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Mary, “I feel as if I owe him
-something, and Aunt Nan something. And
-sooner or later I’m going to read everything he
-ever wrote.”</p>
-
-<p>“Goodness!” said Katy. “Then you’ll never
-have time to read anything else, I guess. Look!”— She
-pointed around the walls. “Why, there
-are hundreds of Shakespeares. Hundreds and
-hundreds!”</p>
-
-<p>“They are mostly different editions of the
-same thing,” said Mary wisely. “I shan’t have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-to read every edition. There aren’t so very
-many books by him, really. Not more than
-thirty, I think. I’ve been looking at this little
-red set that’s so easy to handle and has such
-nice notes. I like the queer spelling. I’m going
-to read ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream’ first. I
-think that’s what Aunt Nan meant.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by ‘<i>what Aunt Nan
-meant</i>’?” asked Katy curiously. “Has she written
-you another letter?” Mary had told her
-about the will.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not exactly,” confessed Mary. “But
-see what I found just now when I finished reading
-‘Shakespeare the Boy,’—the book that
-was lying on her desk with that first note she
-wrote me.” And she opened the volume which
-she held in her hand at the last page. Below
-the word “Finis” were penned in a delicate,
-old-fashioned writing these words:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Mem. Read in this order, <i>with notes</i>.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>1. Midsummer Night’s Dream.<br>
-2. Julius Cæsar.<br>
-3. Twelfth Night.<br>
-4. Tempest.<br>
-5. As You Like It.<br>
-6. Merchant of Venice.<br>
-7. Hamlet, etc.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>“Pooh!” cried Katy. “I don’t believe she
-meant that for you, at all! She was just talking
-to herself. Let’s see if there was anything written
-at the end of ‘Master Skylark.’ Didn’t you
-say that was lying on her desk, too?”</p>
-
-<p>They ran to get this other child’s book, which,
-queerly enough, had also been left lying on the
-desk, as if Aunt Nan had just been reading both.
-And there, too, at the end was written exactly
-the same list, with the same instructions.</p>
-
-<p>“That settles it!” exclaimed Mary. “She
-did mean me to see that list, so she left it in
-both those children’s books, which she thought
-I would be sure to read first. I am going to read
-Shakespeare’s plays in just the order she wished.
-I’m going to read my very own books in my
-very own library. I’m going to begin this very
-afternoon!” Mary was quite excited.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! Please not this afternoon!” begged
-Katy. “I want you to come with me while I
-do an errand at the express office in Ashley. It
-is a three-mile walk. I don’t want to go alone.
-Please, Mary!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, bother!” Mary was about to say; for
-she wanted to begin her reading. But she
-thought better of it. Katy had been so kind to
-her. And, after all, it was a beautiful afternoon,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-and the walk would be very pleasant down
-a new road which she had never traveled. She
-laid down the book reluctantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” she said. “I can read my books any
-time, I suppose. Isn’t it nice to think of that?
-Yes—I’ll go with you, Katy. It will be fun.
-Just wait till I get my hat, and tell Mother.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a dear!” burst out Katy, hugging her.</p>
-
-<p>“If I go with you this time, Katy, you’ll have
-to read Shakespeare with me another time,” bargained
-Mary with good-natured guile.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Katy. “Sometime, when it
-is not so nice and crisp and walky out of doors,
-as it is to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>And off the two girls started, with comradely
-arms about one another’s shoulders.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br>
-
-<small>THE LANTERN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">MARY had no chance to begin reading her
-Shakespeare until the following day. But
-just as soon as she had finished her French and
-algebra home lessons, she laid aside those books
-and seized the list which Aunt Nan had made
-for her.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Mem. Read in this order—Midsummer
-Night’s Dream.’ That sounds good for a beginning,”
-she said to herself. “I just love the
-name of it. I wonder what it’s about?” Running
-to the bookshelves on the left side of the
-fireplace, where one whole section was devoted
-to the works of William Shakespeare, Mary began
-fumbling among the little red books. “Here
-is ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’!” said she,
-settling herself in the big leather armchair to
-read. “Why, it’s full of fairies and private
-theatricals! I know it is going to be nice!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary read for some time and found that she
-liked the play even better than she had expected.
-She always liked to read about fairies,
-of whom, indeed, the book was full. And the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-scene of the play-acting was very funny, she
-thought, especially where Bottom wanted to
-play all the parts himself.</p>
-
-<p>Presently she came to a place in the text where
-a line was heavily underscored. It was where
-Moon says, “<i>This lantern is my lantern</i>.” “I
-wonder why Aunt Nan marked that line?”
-thought Mary. She turned to see if there was
-anything about a lantern in the notes. And
-there she found this remark in the writing which
-she had come to recognize as Aunt Nan’s: “<i>See
-lantern on mantelshelf.</i> <span class="smcap">Careful!</span>”</p>
-
-<p>“That is a funny note!” thought Mary.
-“What mantelshelf? There isn’t any in the
-play. Can she mean—why, yes! There’s a
-lantern over there on <i>my</i> mantelshelf!”</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough! Mary had not noticed it especially
-until this minute. But there, not far
-from the bust of Shakespeare, was a queer old
-tin lantern, pierced with holes for a candle to
-shine through—the very kind that Moon must
-have used in the play, in Shakespeare’s day.</p>
-
-<p>Mary dropped the book and went over to the
-lantern, with a pleasant sense of possession.
-Everything in the room was hers. This would
-be just the thing to play Pyramus and Thisbe
-with! She took up the old lantern and examined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-it curiously. In the socket was the stub
-of a candle. “I wonder who lighted it last?”
-thought Mary idly. She tried to pull out the
-candle, but it stuck. She pulled harder, and
-presently—out it came! There was something
-in the socket below—something that rattled.
-Mary shook the lantern and out fell a tiny key;
-a gilt key with a green silk string tied to the top.
-That was all.</p>
-
-<p>“What a funny place for a key!” thought
-Mary. “I wonder how it got there.” Then she
-thought again of the quotation which had been
-underlined—“‘<i>This lantern is my lantern</i>.’ She
-wanted me to find it, I am sure!” thought Mary
-eagerly. “It is the key to something. Oh, if I
-could only find what that is! How in the world
-shall I know where to look?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, John!” she cried, “John!”—for just then
-she heard his whistle in the hall, and she ran
-down to show him her find.</p>
-
-<p>Up came John; up the stairs two steps at a
-time, with Mary close after him. “I bet I know
-what it is!” he cried. “It’s the key to a Secret
-Panel. I’ve read about them in books, lots of
-times. Let’s hunt till we find the keyhole.”</p>
-
-<p>The wall of the library between the bookshelves
-was, indeed, paneled in dark wood, like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-the doors. But there was little enough of this
-surface, because the built-in bookshelves took
-up so much space. With the aid of the library
-ladder it took Mary and John comparatively
-little time to go over every inch of the paneling
-very carefully, thumping the wall with the heel
-of Mary’s slipper, to see if it might be hollow.
-But no sound betrayed a secret hiding-place. No
-scratch or knot concealed a tiny keyhole. Tired
-and disgusted at last, they gave up the search.</p>
-
-<p>“I think that’s a pretty poor joke!” said
-John. “A key without anything to fit it to is
-about as silly as can be!”</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Nan made some silly jokes in other
-parts of the house,” said Mary. “But she hasn’t
-done so in the library. I don’t believe she
-meant to tease me. Let’s go and tell Father.
-Perhaps he will know what it means.” And
-forthwith they tripped to the Doctor’s study,
-with the key and the lantern and the marked
-copy of “Midsummer Night’s Dream,” to puzzle
-the Philosopher. They laid the three exhibits
-on his desk, and stood off, challenging him
-with eager eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Corliss looked at these things critically;
-then he followed them back to the library and
-glanced about the walls.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>“Well, Father?” asked Mary at last. “What
-do you think it means?”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor hummed and hawed. “Why, I
-think it means that Aunt Nan was playing a
-joke on <i>you</i> this time, Mary!” he said, laughing.
-“It would be just like her, you know. You
-can’t hope to be the only one to escape her
-humors. Besides, this key doesn’t look to me
-like a real key to anything. You mustn’t expect
-too much, my girl, nor get excited over this
-legacy of yours, or I shall be sorry you have it.
-I suspect there are no more gold watches and
-hundred-dollar bills floating around in your
-library. It wouldn’t be like Aunt Nan to do
-the same thing twice. It was the unexpected
-that always pleased her. You had better make
-the most of your books for their own sakes,
-Mary.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I am going to do that,” said Mary,
-taking the key from her father and putting the
-green string around her neck. “I am going to
-wear it as a sort of ‘Midsummer Night’s
-Dream’ charm. And I believe that some day
-I shall find out the key to the key, if I look long
-enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you read long enough, perhaps you may,”
-said her father, laughing. “I have heard that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-they find queer things in Shakespeare sometimes—ciphers
-and things like that. But I
-never had time to study them up. A cipher is
-<i>nothing</i> to me.” And he chuckled at his little
-joke.</p>
-
-<p>“If I read long enough, perhaps I may find
-out something. That’s so!” said Mary. “I’ll
-keep on reading.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh! That’s a slow way!” said John. “If
-there was anything in <i>my</i> library, I’d want to
-find it out right away!”</p>
-
-<p>“If she has put anything in my library, that
-isn’t the way Aunt Nan meant me to find it,”
-retorted Mary. “I am going to do what Aunt
-Nan wanted, if I can discover what that is.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right, Mary!” said her father. “I
-believe you are on the right track.”</p>
-
-<p>Just at this moment there was a queer
-sound, apparently in one corner of the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Hark!” said Dr. Corliss. “What was that,
-Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>“It sounded like something rapping on the
-floor!” said John, with wide eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I hear sounds like that quite often,”
-said Mary carelessly. “At first it frightened
-me, but I have got used to it. I suppose it
-must be a rat in the cellar.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>“Yes, I dare say it is a rat,” said her father.
-“Old houses like this have strange noises, often.
-But I have never seen any rats.”</p>
-
-<p>“It sounded too big for a rat,” declared
-John. “Aren’t you afraid, Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” declared Mary; “I’m not afraid,
-whether it’s a rat or not. Some way, I think
-I couldn’t be afraid in this room.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought girls were always afraid of rats,”
-murmured John.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br>
-
-<small>CALIBAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WITH rosy cheeks and sparkling eyes Mary
-returned from a walk with Katy Summers.
-It had been pleasant but uneventful.
-Just as she turned in at the little dooryard of
-home, she thought she spied a black Something
-dart like a shadow across the little strip of
-green beside the house.</p>
-
-<p>“It looks like a cat,” said Mary to herself. “I
-will see where it went to.” She followed to the
-end of the house, where the shape had seemed
-to disappear. There was nothing to be seen.
-She went around the ell, and back to the front of
-the house again. Still there was no trace of the
-little shadow that had streaked into invisibility.</p>
-
-<p>“If it was not my imagination, it must have
-gone under the house,” said Mary to herself.
-“Two or three times I have thought I spied a
-black blur in the act of disappearing; and I believe
-we are haunted by something on four legs.
-I will ask the family.”</p>
-
-<p>That night at the supper-table she broached
-the question.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>“Mother, have you ever seen a cat about the
-place—a black cat, a swift cat, a cat that never
-stays for a second in one spot—a mysterious
-cat that is gone as soon as you see it?”</p>
-
-<p>“That sounds spooky enough!” commented
-Dr. Corliss. “You make the shivers run down
-my sensitive spine!”</p>
-
-<p>“I have not seen any cat,” said Mrs. Corliss.
-“I think you must be mistaken, Mary.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’ve seen a cat!” volunteered John,—“a
-thin black cat, oh, so thin! I saw him run
-across the lawn once; and once I saw him crouching
-down by the lilac bush near the back door. I
-think he was catching mice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then there <i>is</i> a cat,” said Mary. “I thought
-I might be dreaming. He must be very wild.
-I believe he lives under our house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Under the house!” exclaimed Mrs. Corliss.
-“Surely, we should all have seen him if he lived
-so near. I can’t think he could have escaped
-my eyes. But now, I remember, I have heard
-strange noises in the cellar once or twice.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have, often,” said Mary, “under my
-library.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe it is a witch-cat!” suggested Dr.
-Corliss, pretending to look frightened. “You
-people are all so fond of poetry and ravens and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-mystery and magics—you attract strange doings,
-you see. Maybe Aunt Nan had a witch-cat
-who helped her play tricks on the ever-to-be-surprised
-world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Daddy!” cried John, “there’s no such thing
-as a witch-cat, is there, truly?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not!” laughed his mother. “Daddy
-is only joking. And now I come to think of it,
-I have wondered why the scraps I put out for
-the birds always vanished so quickly. A hungry
-cat prowling about would explain everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“It might be Aunt Nan’s cat,” said Mary
-thoughtfully. “Poor thing! He might have run
-away when he couldn’t find Aunt Nan any
-more. He might have been frightened, and
-have hid under the house.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think in that case he would have starved
-to death in all these weeks,” said Mrs. Corliss.
-“Besides, I should think the neighbors would
-have told us, or that Aunt Nan herself would
-have left some word.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to find out, if I can,” said Mary.
-“If it’s Aunt Nan’s cat I want to be good to
-him. We want to be good to him, anyway, don’t
-we?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course we do,” said Mrs. Corliss. “But
-there is nothing so hard to tame as a wild cat.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>Katy Summers knew nothing of any cat belonging
-to Miss Corliss. Neither did the other
-neighbors.</p>
-
-<p>That next day on coming home from school
-Mary again spied the cat. Just as she clicked
-the gate she saw the long, black shape scurry
-across the lawn and vanish under the ell, under
-Mary’s library. Mary tiptoed to the house and,
-stooping, called gently, “Kitty! Kitty! Kitty!”</p>
-
-<p>At first there was no response. But presently
-there came a feeble and doleful “Miaou!” And
-Mary thought she could catch the gleam of two
-green eyes glaring out of the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>“I must get him something to eat,” said Mary.
-“Perhaps I can tempt him to make friends.”
-And running into the house she returned with a
-saucer of milk and a bit of meat, which she set
-down close to the house. “Kitty! Kitty! Kitty!”
-she called, in a tone of invitation.</p>
-
-<p>“Miaou!” cried the forlorn cat again. But
-he did not come forth from his hiding-place.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall have to go away, and give him a
-chance to eat when I am not by,” thought Mary.
-And this she did. From her chamber window
-she could just manage to watch the hole under
-the ell. After a long time she was rewarded by
-seeing the cat’s head emerge from the hole. For<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-a minute he stared around with wild eyes, his
-body ready to spring. But finding himself safe,
-he hungrily seized the meat and retreated with
-it under the house. Presently he came out
-again, licking his chops eagerly, and began to
-lap the milk, retreating every now and then as
-if some fancied sound alarmed him. The poor
-creature’s sides were so thin that he resembled
-a cut-out pasteboard cat. His tail was like that
-of a long black rat. He seemed to be wearing a
-collar about his neck.</p>
-
-<p>“He must have been somebody’s pet cat,” said
-Mary to herself. “I must try to tame him.”</p>
-
-<p>But it took a great deal of time and patience
-to make friends with the poor black pussy,
-which had evidently been greatly frightened
-and almost starved. Day after day Mary set
-out the saucer of milk and a bit of meat. And
-each time she did so, she talked kindly to the cat
-hidden under the house, hoping that he would
-come out while she was still there. But it was
-many days before she got more than the mournful
-“Miaou!” in answer to her coaxing words.</p>
-
-<p>At last, one day, after waiting a long time beside
-the saucer of milk and a particularly savory
-plate of chicken-bones, Mary was rewarded by
-seeing the cat timidly thrust out his head while<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-she was talking. He drew back almost immediately.
-But finally the smell of the chicken
-tempted him beyond caution, and he got up
-courage to face this stranger who seemed to show
-no evil intentions. He snatched a chicken-bone
-and vanished. But this was the beginning of
-friendship.</p>
-
-<p>The next day the cat came out almost immediately
-when Mary called him. Presently he would
-take things from her hand, timidly at first, then
-with increasing confidence, when he found that
-nothing dreadful happened. But still Mary had
-no chance to examine the collar, on which she
-saw that there were some words engraved.</p>
-
-<p>At last came a day when the cat let Mary
-stroke his fur, now grown much sleeker and
-covering a plumper body. And from that time
-it became easier to make friends. Soon Mary
-held the creature on her lap for a triumphant
-minute. And the next day she had a chance to
-examine the engraved collar. On the silver plate
-was traced,—“<i>Caliban. Home of N. Corliss.
-Crowfield</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“He was Aunt Nan’s cat!” cried Mary in excitement.
-And she ran into the house with the
-news.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Corliss was astonished. “We must make<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-Caliban feel at home again,” she said. “He
-must have had a terrible fright. But we will
-help him to forget that before long.”</p>
-
-<p>In a little while Mary succeeded in coaxing
-Caliban into the house. And once inside he did
-not behave like a stranger. For a few moments,
-indeed, he hesitated, cringing as if in fear of
-what might happen. But presently he raised
-his head, sniffed, and, looking neither to right
-nor left, marched straight toward the library.
-Mary tiptoed after him, in great excitement.
-Caliban went directly to the big armchair beside
-the desk, sniffed a moment at the cushion,
-then jumped up and curled himself down for a
-nap, giving a great sigh of contentment. From
-that moment he accepted partnership with
-Mary in the room and all its contents.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I never!” cried Mrs. Corliss, who had
-followed softly. “The cat is certainly at home.
-I wonder how he ever happened to go away? I
-suppose we shall never know.”</p>
-
-<p>And they never did. They made inquiries of
-the neighbors. But nobody could tell them anything
-definite about Aunt Nan’s cat. Some persons
-had, indeed, seen a big black creature stalking
-about the lawn in the old lady’s time, and had
-not liked the look of him, as they said. But as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-Miss Corliss had never had anything to do with
-her neighbors, so her cat seemed to have followed
-her example. And when Aunt Nan’s day
-was over, the cat simply disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Caliban must have lived precariously by
-catching mice and birds. But he never deserted
-the neighborhood of the old house when the
-new tenants came to live there; though it took
-him some time to realize that these were relatives
-of his mistress whom he might trust.</p>
-
-<p>Once more an inmate of the house, Caliban
-never wandered again. He adopted Mary as
-his new mistress, and allowed her to take all
-kinds of liberties with him. But to the rest of
-the family he was always rather haughty and
-stand-offish. John never quite got rid of the idea
-that Caliban was a witch-cat. And sometimes
-he had a rather creepy feeling when the great
-black cat blinked at him with his green eyes.</p>
-
-<p>But Mary said it was all nonsense. “He’s just
-a dear, good, soft pussy-cat,” she cried one day,
-hugging the now plump and handsome Caliban
-in her arms.</p>
-
-<p>And Caliban, stretching out a soft paw, laid
-it lovingly against his little mistress’s cheek.</p>
-
-<p>But John vowed that at the same moment
-Caliban winked wickedly at him!</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br>
-
-<small>THE BUST</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">FOR some weeks life went on quietly for the
-Corliss family, made more interesting by
-the coming of Caliban, who resembled his late
-mistress in some unexpected qualities. But the
-family had got used to being surprised by Aunt
-Nan’s jokes, so that they were no longer jokes
-at all. And nothing further of a mysterious nature
-happened in Mary’s library, so that everybody
-had about forgotten the excitement of
-the watch, the bookmark, and the unexplained
-key.</p>
-
-<p>The more Mary read her Shakespeare, the
-better she liked the plays, which, as she said,
-were “just full of familiar quotations!” Caliban
-approved heartily of Mary’s reading. He
-liked nothing better than to curl up in her lap
-while she sat in the big easy-chair, with her book
-resting on its broad arm; and his rumbling purr
-made a pleasant accompaniment whenever she
-read aloud. For Mary liked to read aloud to
-herself and to him. It made her understand the
-story so much better.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>Probably Caliban was used to assisting Aunt
-Nan in this same way. He was truly a cat of
-fine education. Mary wondered if he knew all
-the books in the library. “He looks wise enough
-to,” she thought.</p>
-
-<p>“I think Caliban likes some plays better than
-others,” she confided to her mother. “He didn’t
-seem to care so much for ‘Midsummer
-Night’s Dream,’ But then, I had almost finished
-it before he came. He was crazy over
-‘Julius Cæsar,’—you ought to have heard him
-purr at Marc Antony’s great speech! And now
-that I have begun ‘The Tempest,’ he gets so
-excited, Mother!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” said Mrs. Corliss; “that’s where
-he comes in, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Mary. “Oh, Mumsie, I was so
-surprised when I found Caliban’s name in the
-list of characters! I just shouted it right out;
-and you ought to have seen Caliban arch his
-neck and rub his head against me, and purr like
-a little furnace. I’m sure he knew it was <i>his</i>
-play. And isn’t it a lovely play, Mother? I
-like it best of all.”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I,” said her mother.</p>
-
-<p>One day Mary coaxed Katy Summers home
-with her after school. “The time has come for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-you to keep your promise, Katy,” said Mary.
-“You’ve got to listen to Shakespeare now.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Katy resignedly. “I suppose
-I must, sooner or later.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am going to read you some of ‘The Tempest,’”
-said Mary. “I want you to like it as
-well as I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“You know I never cared for poetry,” said
-Katy doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“But you will care for <i>this</i>,” said Mary positively,
-“especially if you hear it read. That’s the
-way everybody ought to know poetry, I think.
-Why, even Caliban likes to hear me read poetry.
-See, here he comes to listen.”</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, at the sound of Mary’s voice
-Caliban had come running into the library with
-a little purr. He looked very handsome and
-fluffy these days. Waving his tail majestically,
-he jumped up into Mary’s lap and sat on her
-knee blinking his green eyes at Katy as if to say,
-“Now you are going to hear something fine!”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe John is right,” said Katy. “He
-does look like a witch-cat. He’s too knowing
-by half! I suppose I shall have to like the
-reading, if he says so.” Katy was just a bit jealous
-of Mary’s new friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course Caliban knows what is best!”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-chuckled Mary. “Now, listen, Katy.” And
-she began to read the beautiful lines. Presently
-she caught up with her own bookmark,
-and went on with scenes which she had not read
-before. Mary read very nicely, and Katy listened
-patiently, while Caliban purred more and
-more loudly, “knitting” with busy paws on
-Mary’s knees.</p>
-
-<p>After a while Katy saw Mary’s eyes grow
-wide, and she paused in the reading, ceasing to
-stroke Caliban’s glossy fur. Caliban looked up
-at her and stopped purring, as if to say, “What
-is it, little Mistress?”</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter? Go on, Mary,” cried
-Katy. “I like it!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a Song,” said Mary, in a queer voice,
-“and words of it are underlined, Katy, in the
-same way that the other place I told you of was
-underlined.”</p>
-
-<p>Katy nodded eagerly. She had heard about
-the clue to the finding of the key. “What does
-it say?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>And Mary read the lines of the Song:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“Full fathom five thy father lies;</div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Of his bones are coral made</i>;</div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Those are pearls, that were his eyes</i>;</div>
-<div class="indent">Nothing of him that doth fade,</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-<div class="verse">But doth suffer a sea-change</div>
-<div class="verse">Into <i>something rich and strange</i>.</div>
-<div class="verse">Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell;</div>
-<div class="verse">Hark! now I hear them—Ding-dong, bell!”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“It’s lovely!” cried Katy. “And which lines
-are underscored, Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘<i>Of his bones are coral made</i>,’ and ‘<i>Those are
-pearls that were his eyes</i>,’ and ‘<i>something rich
-and strange</i>.’ Oh, Katy, what do you suppose
-Aunt Nan meant this time?” said Mary with
-eager eyes.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i077.jpg" alt=""></div>
-<p class="caption">“OH, KATY, WHAT DO YOU SUPPOSE AUNT NAN MEANT<br>
-THIS TIME?”</p>
-
-<p>At this point Caliban arched his back and
-yawned prodigiously, then jumped down on
-the floor and sat at Mary’s feet, switching
-his tail.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurry and look at the notes at the end of
-the book, Mary!” cried Katy, almost as much
-excited as her friend. “I did not know that
-poetry could be so interesting.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary turned hastily to the back of the book.
-In the margin beside the printed notes were
-penned several words; references to other plays
-which evidently Aunt Nan wanted Mary to look
-up. “Bother!” said Mary in disappointment;
-“it’s only more quotations. I don’t want to
-stop for <i>them</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“You had better, Mary,” suggested Katy.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-“Perhaps if you do they will give you still another
-clue. See how queer Caliban looks!”</p>
-
-<p>The cat was looking up in Mary’s face expectantly;
-and when she stooped to pat him,
-he opened his mouth and gave a strange, soundless
-“Miaou!”</p>
-
-<p>“It looked as if he said ‘Yes!’ didn’t it,
-Katy?” said Mary. “Well, then, I suppose I
-had better do it. The first reference is to ‘As
-You Like It,’ Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, Scene i.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary went to the Shakespeare shelf, found
-the volume quickly, and looked up the proper
-place. “Yes!” she exclaimed, “there is a line
-underscored here, too,—‘<i>Wears yet a precious
-jewel in his head</i>.’ What a queer saying, Katy!
-What do you suppose it means? And this
-is the next quotation, in the ‘Sonnets’—Number
-<span class="allsmcap">CXXXV</span>, Line 1. Here it is! ‘<i>Whoever has
-her wish, you have your Will.</i>’ Now, what
-connection can there be between those two
-things, Katy?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know!” said Katy, disappointed.
-“Is that all, are you sure? It doesn’t seem to
-mean anything, does it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a minute!” added Mary. “Here in the
-Sonnet-margin she has written, ‘<i>Will S.—Yours.
-Look!</i>’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>“Look where?” wondered Katy. “What <i>Will
-S.</i> have you, Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>At the word “<i>Look!</i>” Mary had glanced up
-at the portrait of Aunt Nan, and it seemed to
-her as if the eyes in the picture were cast down
-on something below them. Mary’s own eyes
-followed the look, and fell on the bust of Shakespeare
-in the middle of the mantelshelf. “Does
-she mean—perhaps she does—that bust of
-Will Shakespeare?” said Mary. “It is mine now,
-of course. ‘<i>Whoever has her wish</i>’—‘<i>Wears yet
-a precious jewel in his head</i>’—‘<i>Something rich
-and strange</i>.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mary! It all fits together!” cried Katy,
-clapping her hands. “Do have a look at that
-bust, dear! If it is your Will.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just what I will do!” cried Mary,
-running to the mantelpiece, with Katy close behind
-her, and Caliban following them both.</p>
-
-<p>The bust was a plaster one about six inches
-high, and it stood on a black marble block like
-a little pedestal. Mary had dusted it many times
-and she knew it was not fastened to the pedestal
-and that it was hollow. But was it also empty?</p>
-
-<p>While the girls were looking at the bust, Caliban
-suddenly made two leaps, one to a chair,
-then to the mantelshelf which he reached without<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-a slip. Then he took up his pose beside the
-bust of Shakespeare, and sat blinking wisely at
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“Do look at Caliban!” cried Katy. “He certainly
-looks as if he knew secrets!”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he does,” said Mary. “Maybe
-there is a secret about this bust. I am going to
-see. If you please, Master Will S.”</p>
-
-<p>She took down the bust and shook it gently.
-Nothing rattled inside. Nothing fell out. She
-poked with her finger as far as she could reach.
-There seemed to be nothing in the interior.</p>
-
-<p>“Try again, Mary,” begged Katy, producing
-something from her pocket. “Here’s my folding
-button-hook.” Cautiously Mary thrust the
-hook up into the place where the brains of
-William S. would have been, were they not distributed
-about the library instead in the form
-of books.</p>
-
-<p>Yes! There was something up in the head;
-something that was yielding to the touch of the
-steel; something that came out at last in her
-hand. It was a piece of soft chamois-skin, folded
-and tied with green silk cord like that on which
-hung the mysterious key.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mary!” cried Katy, holding her breath.
-“What is it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>“Sh!” said Mary, with shining eyes. Cautiously
-she undid the little packet; and there
-inside was another packet, wrapped in silver
-foil, very tiny, very hard. Mary squeezed it
-gently, but the feeling gave no clue as to the
-contents.</p>
-
-<p>While Katy watched her with bulging eyes,
-Mary peeled off the silver paper, a bit at a time.
-First of all was revealed a pink bead; more
-pink beads; a whole necklace, strung on a pink
-thread, of the most beautiful coral.</p>
-
-<p>“Miaou!” cried Caliban suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh-h!” cried Katy. “I never saw anything
-so sweet!”</p>
-
-<p>“‘<i>Of his bones are coral made</i>,’” quoted Mary.
-“Oh, clever Aunt Nan!— What else?” for the
-next quotation was running in her head, and
-she was very eager. With trembling fingers she
-unwrapped the rest of the package, and brought
-to light a tiny pasteboard box of not more than
-an inch in any dimension.</p>
-
-<p>“I know what it is!” whispered Katy.</p>
-
-<p>But she gasped when she saw what really
-came out—yes, a ring, on a white velvet bed.
-But such a ring! It had two big pearls in it,
-side by side, as big as the end of Mary’s little
-finger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>“Oh!” cried Mary with delight. “What a
-beautiful ring! I do love pearls.—‘<i>Those are
-pearls which were his eyes</i>,’ Katy, do you see?
-And this is the ‘<i>something rich and strange</i>.’
-What fun it is to find a treasure all by the aid of
-lovely quotations!”</p>
-
-<p>“I think it is wonderful!” said Katy. “It is
-so poetic.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come; let’s show these to Father and
-Mother,” said Mary, giving Caliban a big hug.
-And off the two girls ran to exhibit the treasures.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Corliss was delighted with her daughter’s
-find. “I am glad you have the pretty
-necklace to wear with your best dresses,” she
-said. “It is very nice and suitable for a schoolgirl.
-But the pearl ring—I think we must put
-that away until you are older. It is too valuable
-and too conspicuous. I don’t like to see
-little girls wearing jewelry.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can wear it when I go to college—if I go;
-may I not, Mother?” asked Mary wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, <i>if</i> you go to college, Dearie,” sighed
-her mother. “At any rate, you can wear it when
-you are eighteen.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Corliss examined the ring carefully.
-“Yes, I am sure I have seen Aunt Nan wear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-it,” he said. “It must be one of the set of
-famous pearls that she was once proud of.
-Doubtless she sold the rest long ago and gave
-the money to her hospital. I am glad Mary has
-this; but Mother is right. School-girls should
-not wear jewelry. Put it away until you are
-grown-up, my daughter.”</p>
-
-<p>So Mary fastened the pretty necklace about
-her round throat, and shut the pearl ring away
-in her bureau drawer, with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>But Katy Summers said:—</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t mind, Mary, even if you can’t
-wear it yet. Just to think that you have it, and
-that you got it in such a mysterious way! Why,
-it is like a story-book!”</p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t it make you want to hear some
-more Shakespeare?” demanded Mary, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed it does!” agreed Katy. “I’ll come
-and listen whenever you will let me. Who knows
-what may happen? Yes, I’ll wager that Caliban
-knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“The same thing never happens twice,” sighed
-Mary.</p>
-
-<p>John was disgusted when he came home from
-a meeting of the Big Four to find that he had
-missed this most exciting discovery; although,
-after all, when it came to the jewelry, John<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-thought the result rather small. “My goodness,
-Mary!” he exclaimed, “I’ll bet there are
-lots more things hidden in that old library of
-yours. Don’t you go and do all the hunting
-when I’m not here.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t,” said Mary. “I didn’t mean to
-hunt. I don’t ever mean to hunt. But if things
-come—all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you’d let me have the fun of hunting
-in the library all I want, just once,” said John
-wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>Mary hesitated. She did not want anybody
-to rummage among her books. But she hated
-to be “stingy,” and she felt as if she were really
-having more than her share of fun out of Aunt
-Nan’s legacy, in spite of John’s two thousand
-dollars. So she said generously, without letting
-John see how great an effort it was: “All right,
-Johnny. To-morrow is Saturday, and I’ll give
-you free leave to hunt all you want to in my
-library. I won’t even come to bother you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bully for you!” crowed John. “Finding’s
-having?”</p>
-
-<p>But that was more than Mary bargained
-for.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, John!” she cried. “I don’t think
-Aunt Nan would like that. Do you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>“Oh, bother! I suppose not,” grumbled John.
-“She was a queer one!”</p>
-
-<p>The next Saturday morning John spent in
-hunting that library from floor to ceiling. Caliban,
-sitting on a corner of the mantelpiece,
-watched him gravely during the whole operation,
-but offered no suggestions. John poked
-behind the books, in every corner, under every
-rug. He even ripped open a bit of the cover on
-the old sofa. But nothing interesting could he
-find.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, Caliban, can’t you help me?” he said
-once, to the watching cat.</p>
-
-<p>But Caliban only blinked, and gave his tail
-a little switch.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll give it up!” growled John at last, disgustedly,
-when Mary came to call him to dinner.
-“I guess you’ve got about all you are ever going
-to get out of Aunt Nan’s legacy. If Caliban
-knows anything more about it he won’t tell <i>me</i>.
-Anyway, I’ve got my two thousand, and that’s
-best of all.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, John,” retorted Mary good-naturedly.
-“I’ve got my two thousand books, anyway,
-and Caliban. So I am not complaining.”</p>
-
-<p>She did not tell John that she still hoped to
-solve the mystery of the key on the green silk<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-cord; not to solve it by hunting or by hurrying,
-but in Aunt Nan’s own way, whatever that
-might be.</p>
-
-<p>And Caliban, looking up at her, switched his
-tail and gave a wise, solemn wink.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br>
-
-<small>THE ATTIC</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE Corliss family were sadly in need of
-funds. There were the butcher and the
-baker and the candlestick-maker politely presenting
-their bills to the family recently arrived
-in Crowfield, suggesting in print and in writing
-and by word of mouth that “bills are payable
-monthly.” Now it was the end of the month,
-and there was no money to pay these same bills;
-for the expense of moving and settling in a new
-place had been heavy, and their small income
-had already disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“How much money is it that we need for immediate
-bills, Mother?” asked Dr. Corliss wearily.
-It always tired him to talk about money.</p>
-
-<p>“Just about a hundred dollars would bridge
-us over nicely,” said his wife, with an anxious
-pucker in her forehead. “But I don’t see any
-sign of our getting that hundred dollars for a
-month to come. And then it will be needed for
-fresh bills.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course, you must take my hundred
-dollars that I found in Aunt Nan’s book,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-said Mary cheerfully, though it cost her a pang
-to think of using up her wonder-gift so soon in
-this way. “I’ll just take it out of the bank next
-Saturday morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hate to touch that money of yours, Mary,
-even if we put it back for you when we can,”
-sighed her mother. “I hoped we could save that
-for your nest-egg toward a college fund. Let
-me think it over a bit longer. Perhaps something
-will happen to help us. Or I may think
-of some way to earn the money.”</p>
-
-<p>They left discussion of the matter for that
-time. But they all took the troublesome problem
-away with them into their daily tasks.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a shame for Mary to have to give up
-her hundred dollars,” thought John. “I wish
-I could help earn some money so that she needn’t
-do it. If I was in the city I could sell
-papers or something. But what can I do here
-when I have to go to school every day? School
-takes up such a lot of time!”</p>
-
-<p>John sighed as he swung his books over his
-shoulder and started off for school. All day he
-thought about that needed money; and it was
-in his mind when he turned in at the gate that
-night.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I was clever and could think up something,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-said John to Caliban, who was sitting on
-the top step looking at him when John came in.
-“I wonder you don’t help us, Caliban. Come,
-now, can’t you think of something, old witch-cat?”</p>
-
-<p>Caliban did not seem to mind being spoken
-to in this impolite way. But he did look at John
-in a fashion that the boy thought very knowing,
-and he did unmistakably wink one eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Miaou!” said Caliban, and he turned his
-back on John, and began to walk upstairs.</p>
-
-<p>John was going upstairs too; so he followed
-Caliban, who, however, hopped three steps at
-a time, while John could only take two with his
-short legs. When they reached the top of the
-flight, Caliban looked about to see if John was
-still following him. John had not meant to do
-so, but when he saw Caliban turn and look,
-with that queer expression in his green eyes,
-John had an idea.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe he wants me to follow him,” said he
-to himself. He tossed his books on to a chair
-and tiptoed after the big black cat. Caliban
-ambled unconcernedly along the hall and suddenly
-darted up the attic stairs. “Hello!” said
-John, with a whistle under his breath. “What
-is Caliban up to now? I thought he never went<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-far from Mary’s library. But, I declare, he is
-coaxing me to follow him up into the attic! You
-bet I’ll follow you, old boy!”</p>
-
-<p>John had never paid much attention to the
-attic. He had looked into it, of course. But it
-was so dark and dusty and cobwebby that it
-was not much fun poking about up there. Since
-their first visit the family had not been there except
-to store away some of Aunt Nan’s superfluous
-old furniture and ornaments.</p>
-
-<p>If the house had seemed like a museum to the
-family when they first entered it, this attic
-looked like a junk-shop. Every corner was filled
-with furniture, boxes, bundles, strange garments
-hanging from hooks, bales bursting with
-mysterious contents. Away back in the dusty
-corners, where it was so dark that John’s eye
-could not distinguish, bulked other dim shapes.</p>
-
-<p>Caliban walked across the floor in a furtive
-fashion, then suddenly made a dive into a distant
-dark corner, where John immediately heard
-a scurrying and scratching.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s after a mouse!” thought John excitedly.
-And he, too, dived into the darkness after the
-cat, who had disappeared. But Caliban had
-scuttled into some hole too small for John to
-enter. John could hear him still scratching and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-sniffing. And an occasional squeak betrayed
-the misfortune of some long-tailed dweller in the
-garret that Caliban had taken by surprise.</p>
-
-<p>John got down on his hands and knees the
-better to investigate that corner. But still he
-could not spy the cat and his prey. He only
-bumped his nose against the low beams, and got
-his mouth full of cobwebs. But in that dark hiding-place
-he came upon an unexpected thing.
-This was something that at first he took to be
-a bicycle. But he soon found by feeling of it
-that there was but one wheel, and that it was
-made of wood. At one end was a curious bunch
-of what felt like long hair; it made John shudder.
-But presently he remembered.</p>
-
-<p>“It must be a spinning-wheel,” said John to
-himself. “I remember seeing one in the picture
-of Priscilla and John Alden.” Just then he
-bumped his head on something hard. “What
-is this great long-handled pan?” he said. “I’ve
-seen those in the curiosity shops, too. Hello!
-Here’s a cradle, the kind that rocks. I’ve seen
-those in pictures. And here’s a pair of andirons.
-My! this is a regular old curiosity shop.
-These things must be worth a lot of money.”</p>
-
-<p>Then a sudden wonderful idea popped into
-John’s head. “Why can’t we sell them, if they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-are worth a lot of money? Why, of course we
-can sell them, and save Mary’s hundred dollars!
-Maybe that is just what old Caliban knew, when
-he coaxed me to follow him up here. Say, you old
-rascal, where are you? Here, ’Ban! ’Ban! Come
-on out and let me see what you think about it!”</p>
-
-<p>But Caliban had disappeared with his mouse,
-or whatever it was, which had ceased to squeak.
-And there was nothing but darkness and silence
-in the old attic beside the little boy and that
-strange litter of ancient things.</p>
-
-<p>John looked around and shivered. “I guess
-I’ll be going,” he said. “I won’t stop to examine
-anything more. They all belong to Mother.
-I’ll let her do the looking-up. I’ll run down
-and tell her what I’ve found.”</p>
-
-<p>And hurrying as fast as he could out of the
-dark corner, where the cobwebs and the dust
-were trying to keep intruders away from the
-old things to which they clung, John made for
-the attic stairs. Two or three times he thought
-he heard strange noises behind him, and he
-couldn’t go fast enough. Probably it was Caliban
-still scratching in some dark subway under
-the rafters. But John had no wish to stop and
-investigate. He came clattering down the stairs,
-and burst into his mother’s room.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>“Mother!” he cried, “I’ve found something!”</p>
-
-<p>“Goodness, John!” she said. “What a dirty
-face you have, and your eyebrows are all cobwebby.
-Where in the world have you been, and
-what have you found?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve found things up in the attic!” exclaimed
-John triumphantly. “Caliban showed me the
-way. It was all his doings. I think he did it on
-purpose—to help Mary.”</p>
-
-<p>“To help Mary! What in the world do you
-mean?” cried Mrs. Corliss. “Have you found a
-treasure, John, or some more mysterious secrets?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, no, not exactly,” confessed John,
-somewhat crestfallen. “Unless we make it a
-secret. I’d like that. But I think it’s a nice surprise,
-Mumsie, and I <i>think</i> it will save some of
-Mary’s hundred dollars. Mother,—all the
-furniture belongs to you, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes, Johnny,” she answered, wondering.
-“Why do you ask?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because,” said John importantly, “I have
-been snooping around the attic, Mumsie, and I
-think there are a lot of things you can sell.”</p>
-
-<p>“What kind of things do you mean, John?”
-she asked, looking interested.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you know, Mother,” said John, “there’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-a lot of old truck in the corners up there that
-looks just like the stuff we used to see in the
-curiosity shops in the city. I didn’t look very
-far, Mumsie, ’cause it was so—well, so dirty
-in there. But there’s wheels and andirons and
-things that I bet are worth lots of money!”</p>
-
-<p>“Are there, John?” said Mrs. Corliss. “How
-clever of you to think of it! I never dreamed of
-looking in Aunt Nan’s attic to find the way out
-of our difficulty. Perhaps this is the solution!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Caliban’s idea,” said John, wishing to
-be fair and not to claim too much credit, but
-feeling well pleased with himself, just the same.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s go up right away and see what we can
-find; shall we, John?” said his mother. “I can’t
-wait!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” agreed John. “But you’d better
-take a candle, Mumsie. It’s terribly dark and
-spooky up there. And noises sound louder in
-the dark.”</p>
-
-<p>Back to the garret they went, Mrs. Corliss
-as eager as John. And into those dark corners
-which had been undisturbed for many, many
-years they shed the light of their blinking, inquisitive
-candle. Mrs. Corliss was more thorough
-than John had cared to be. She untied
-strings, and lifted lids of trunks, and unwrapped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-coverings. Out of chests and bundles and crates
-they dragged things that had been waiting
-through generations of Aunt Nan’s ancestors
-for some one to make them useful; things that
-had been discarded or pushed back still farther
-in order to make room for her whims and “jokes.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i097.jpg" alt=""></div>
-<p class="caption">THINGS THAT HAD BEEN WAITING THROUGH GENERATIONS<br>
-OF AUNT NAN’S ANCESTORS FOR SOME ONE TO<br>
-MAKE THEM USEFUL</p>
-
-<p>Besides the old spinning-wheel, andirons, and
-warming-pan, they found parts of a four-post
-bedstead, a tall clock, and many quaint chairs.
-They unearthed a hair trunk, foot-warmers,
-mirrors, crockery, and lamps with prisms dangling;
-shawls and bonnets and carpet-bags. All of
-these things were old and most of them were
-ugly. But Mrs. Corliss knew that they would
-look beautiful to many persons, just because
-they were old; which seemed to John a strange
-reason.</p>
-
-<p>When they had brought all this old stuff together
-in the middle of the attic floor, Mrs.
-Corliss looked about and smiled through a face-veil
-of dusty cobwebs.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, John!” she said, “I believe my part
-of the legacy is not to be laughed at, either.
-We don’t want to keep these old things, for
-they have no history for us and they are not
-beautiful in themselves—the only two excuses
-I see for cherishing useless old things. Luckily<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-there are plenty of people who think differently.
-I’ll go up to town to-morrow with a list of what
-you and I have found, and see what I can get
-for them at some reliable antique shop. Let’s
-keep it a secret, and surprise your father and
-Mary, if we have good luck with the venture.
-Shall we?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s!” cried John, clapping his hands.</p>
-
-<p>Just then out of the darkness crept Caliban,
-licking his chops, and looking very sly.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, don’t you go and tell Mary, Caliban!”
-charged John. “For this is our secret. You
-let me into it yourself, and you’ve got to be our
-partner now. Don’t you dare even to <i>purr</i> about
-it!”</p>
-
-<p>Caliban did not promise; but he trotted downstairs
-before them very discreetly. And all that
-evening no one would have guessed by the manner
-of those three conspirators what a tremendous
-secret they were concealing in their hearts.
-John did not dare to look at his mother’s face,
-however, he was so bursting with importance.</p>
-
-<p>The next day Mrs. Corliss went to town on
-an errand which she explained rather vaguely
-to the rest of the family. She returned with
-a queer little old man with round shoulders and
-a white beard, who spoke English strangely and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-whose hands were not very clean. Mrs. Corliss
-took him straight up to the attic, which was the
-only part of the house he seemed anxious to
-visit. They stayed up there some time, and
-there was a great noise of pushing and rolling of
-furniture. When they came down, the little old
-man was looking very much pleased and rubbing
-his dirty hands together. And he went away
-still rubbing.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Corliss came to the supper-table with
-something which she fluttered triumphantly
-before the eyes of her bewildered family.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah!” she cried. “I’ve got it!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Mother?” said Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“How much is it, Mumsie?” begged John at
-the same minute.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a check for a hundred dollars!” cried
-Mrs. Corliss. “It’s to pay the horrid bills. Hurrah!”</p>
-
-<p>“Where in the world did you get it?” asked
-Dr. Corliss. “Is it another of Mary’s bookmarks?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit of it!” sang Mrs. Corliss. “Mary’s
-bookmark is all her own, safe in bank. I got
-this out of the attic—out of my furniture.
-Now, perhaps you will think something of my
-despised legacy. I sold only a few of the old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-things that are of so much less use to us than
-the space they occupy. There are plenty of
-them left, and the dealer is crazy to get them,
-too. We need be in no hurry to part with them.
-Aunt Nan’s attic is a perfect storehouse of
-treasures in that man’s eyes. It was Johnny who
-found it out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me and Caliban,” said John loyally; “don’t
-forget him.” And he told the others the whole
-story of his following the cat.</p>
-
-<p>“You blessed old Caliban!” cried Mary,
-catching up the great bundle of fur and hugging
-him tightly. “You shall have an extra saucer
-of milk for your supper, so you shall!”</p>
-
-<p>Caliban did not explain to her about the nest
-of fat mice which he had discovered in the attic.
-That was his share of the “treasure.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br>
-
-<small>THE PORTRAIT POINTS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ONE winter afternoon some weeks after the
-discovery of the coral necklace and the
-pearl ring, Mary was in the library alone, reading
-“Hamlet.” It was the last play on the list
-which Aunt Nan had suggested, and Mary
-liked it best of all. Nothing further of a “mysterious”
-nature had happened in the library;
-but Mary had almost forgotten to think about
-anything of the kind. She was reading now for
-the pleasure of it.</p>
-
-<p>She had kindled a little fire in the fireplace,
-and the library was very cozy, full of flickering
-shadows and dancing lights, that played about
-the old volumes, and seemed every minute to
-change the expression on the bust of Shakespeare
-and on Aunt Nan’s picture above it.</p>
-
-<p>But Mary, cuddled up in the big armchair
-with Caliban in her lap and the little red book
-in her hand, was too much interested in the
-fate of poor Ophelia and the unlucky Prince
-to notice lights or shadows. She had come to
-the scene where Hamlet is talking sorrowfully<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-to his mother in her chamber, and every word
-was wonderful. Suddenly she came upon a
-line underscored; the last part doubly underscored:—</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Look here upon this picture</i>, <span class="allsmcap">THEN ON THIS</span>.”</p>
-
-<p>Hamlet was pointing out to his mother the
-portraits of two kings, the good one who had
-been murdered, and his wicked brother who had
-killed him. The underscored line made Mary’s
-heart beat faster. She had learned to connect
-some pleasant surprise with Aunt Nan’s choice
-of quotations. In the margin opposite this line
-was penned an exclamation point—just that
-and nothing more. Eager as she was to go on
-with the story, and to find out what Hamlet had
-to say next, Mary knew that it was time to
-turn to the notes at the back of the book, to see
-if Aunt Nan meant anything in particular by
-that exclamation. She could not help feeling
-as if Aunt Nan herself had called out, “Stop!
-Look! Listen!”—just as the signs at the railway
-crossings do to absorbed travelers.</p>
-
-<p>Yes; there was something written in the notes,
-in a blank space at the end of a paragraph:
-“<i>Look at my portrait! Then turn to the play of
-Othello.</i>—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear!” said Mary to herself. “I believe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-we are coming to another Secret!” And she
-felt her heart give a little jump of excitement.
-“‘<i>My portrait.</i>’ There is only one portrait of
-Aunt Nan.” And she glanced up at the picture
-over the fireplace. Then, indeed, she noticed
-how the firelight was making Aunt Nan’s queer
-eyes dance and glitter, and how her mouth
-seemed to be smiling in the most knowing way.
-“<i>Look here upon this picture</i>, <span class="allsmcap">THEN ON THIS</span>.”
-What did the last part of this line, doubly
-underscored, mean to Aunt Nan? Mary studied
-the picture long and earnestly. There was something
-about it that she did not quite understand.
-It was as if Aunt Nan were trying to tell her
-something, but could not make the words plain.
-Mary felt that she almost had the clue to
-something—but not quite. Caliban did not
-seem to help her. If John were only here; John
-was so good at guessing riddles!</p>
-
-<p>Mary put down Caliban, who promptly
-jumped up onto the desk. Then she ran out
-into the hall and called, “John! John!” for
-she knew that he was in the house, probably, as
-usual, ravenous for tea. “Come to the library,
-John!” she called again, in answer to his “Hello!
-What?”—“I think it’s another Secret. Quick!”
-she added, to bring him the sooner.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>Down came clattering boots, and John dashed
-into the room all excitement. “What’s up?”
-he asked eagerly. And Mary showed him the
-line. “H’m!” commented John, looking at the
-portrait curiously. “She does look sly, doesn’t
-she, Mary? But you haven’t looked up the
-other thing yet. I say, hurry! Let’s see what
-your old ‘Othello’ has to tell about it.”</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough! Mary had forgotten the reference
-to “Othello.” Hurriedly she got out the
-proper volume, and turned to the right page and
-line.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“<i>A fixéd figure for the time of scorn</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>To point his slow unmoving finger at.</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>She read slowly. “What in the world does
-that mean? I’m sure I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>John had been all this time studying the portrait
-with its queer expression. When Mary read
-the quotation he clapped his hands. “Oh, I
-say!” he cried. “It talks about a <i>finger</i>, pointing.
-That’s it! She means the hand of the portrait
-is pointing to something. It has been pointing
-all the time, and we’ve only got to find out
-<i>what at</i>! Look, Mary. Don’t you see she is
-pointing, just as plainly as can be?”</p>
-
-<p>Mary dropped “Othello” and ran to look at
-the picture. The queer eyes of Aunt Nan seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-to meet hers, and yes! she certainly seemed to
-be pointing with the long forefinger of her right
-hand which rested on her breast.</p>
-
-<p>Mary followed the direction of the pointing
-finger, as John was trying to do in the fading
-light. It seemed to point to a corner of the wall
-on which the portrait itself hung; to a shelf in
-the left-hand alcove by the fireplace. Both
-Mary and John ran eagerly to the corner and
-began to sight from finger to shelf and back
-again, to get a straight line from the pointing
-finger.</p>
-
-<p>“I think it falls <i>here</i>” said John, touching a
-fat brown book labeled “Concordance,” on the
-fourth shelf from the bottom. “But I have
-looked behind all the books on this shelf. I know
-I have!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it doesn’t fall there,” said Mary. “I
-am sure she is pointing about <i>here</i>.” And she
-laid her hand on a row of green-and-gold volumes,
-whose titles she could hardly read in the
-dim light.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Gems from the Poets,’” spelled John with
-difficulty. “Do you suppose she means these?
-And what does she want us to do, anyway? Let’s
-try this one.” He took down Volume I, which
-turned out to be “Gems from Marlowe,” a poet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-of whom neither of them had even heard. John
-looked under the book, and examined the wall
-behind where it had stood, and began to look
-through the book itself, as carefully as possible.
-But Mary was searching farther. “I don’t think
-it is that one,” she said. “I think she is pointing
-farther along in the row.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s try them all,” suggested John, seizing
-another volume,—“‘Gems from Beaumont
-and Fletcher’—whoever they are!” He flapped
-the leaves and looked in the space at the back
-where the cover was loose. But there was nothing
-unusual about that book. Meanwhile Mary
-was still drawing an imaginary line from the point
-of the portrait’s finger to the shelf in the corner.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure she is pointing <i>here</i>,” she said,
-laying her hand on the last volume in the row,
-which looked exactly like the others. “‘Gems
-from Shakespeare,’” she read the label on the
-back. “Yes, of course this ought to be the right
-one. She liked him best of all the poets, John.
-I believe this is it!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary pulled the volume from the shelf eagerly.
-But when she held it in her hands she
-uttered a cry of surprise that made John drop
-the book he was flapping strenuously, and turn
-to her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>“What is it, Mary?” he asked. “Have you
-found something?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, John!” she whispered in the greatest
-excitement, “it isn’t a book at all! It is—something
-else! I think it is the Secret!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br>
-
-<small>GEMS FROM SHAKESPEARE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was an exciting moment when Mary stood
-with the “Gems from Shakespeare” in her
-hand, declaring that this was not a book at all,
-but something else! What was it, then, which
-made her so excited? Caliban eyed her from
-the desk benevolently. “Miaou!” he cried.
-But no one noticed him.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think it is, Mary?” cried John.
-For he, too, saw in a moment that it was not a
-mere book at which his sister was gazing with
-wide eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The back, with its green-and-gold leather and
-its label, “Gems from Shakespeare,” matched the
-rest of the set, so far. And the sides were flat
-and cover-like. But the front and top and ends,
-where the edges of leaves would naturally show
-in any proper book, were enclosed in leather,
-so as to make the whole thing into a sort of
-case.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a box!” said Mary solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>John thrust his face up close to the mystery,
-and presently he gave a start. In the end where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-you would naturally open the book to read, he
-had spied something strange.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mary!” he cried; “Look! Here is a little
-keyhole! I believe we’ve found the clue to your
-key that was in the lantern. Have you got the
-key here? Quick, Mary!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary was shaking the box very gently.
-“Something rattles!” she said. “What do you
-suppose it is?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, do be careful. Maybe it is something
-breakable. Hurry and find out what it is!”
-begged John in the greatest excitement.</p>
-
-<p>Mary always wore the puzzling key about
-her neck, on the green silk cord which had come
-with it. She now pulled it out, and they carried
-the “Gems from Shakespeare” over to the
-table, so that they might see better under the
-lamp.</p>
-
-<p>Just then there came a knock at the door, and
-both children jumped as if they had been caught
-in doing something wrong. “Mary! John!”
-cried the voice of their mother, “where are you
-both? What in the world are you doing? I rang
-the bell for tea three times; and I never knew
-you both to be so late before!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, come in, Mother,” said Mary; “do
-come in, quickly!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>The door opened, and there stood Mrs. Corliss
-with the Doctor close behind her.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I heard you shouting at one
-another in here,” said Dr. Corliss. “What’s
-up? More surprises, eh? Something better than
-tea?”</p>
-
-<p>“Caliban looks as if he thought so,” said Mrs.
-Corliss. “See how his green eyes glitter!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, Father!” said Mary; “it’s the most
-exciting surprise of all, we think; because Aunt
-Nan has taken pains to make it a part of her
-portrait.”</p>
-
-<p>“Part of the portrait! What do you mean,
-Mary?” exclaimed her father, advancing into
-the room, and like the rest of them forgetting
-all about tea in the excitement of the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>Mary showed them the “Gems from Shakespeare”
-with the keyhole in the end, and explained
-how the picture had guided them to it.
-They lighted the lamp hastily, and Dr. Corliss
-had to see just how the “slow unmoving finger”
-of Aunt Nan’s portrait pointed to the shelf in
-the corner where the “Gems” lived.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes!” exclaimed the Doctor, examining
-the picture still more closely than the children
-had done. “And now that I have a clue, I
-see something more, that you haven’t discovered.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-Look, children! Do you see what this
-book is on which Aunt Nan’s left hand is resting?
-It is a picture of this very same ‘Gems
-from Shakespeare,’ I can even make out a
-‘G—S’ on the binding. But I never should have
-discovered it without your clue. I believe there
-is something in it, Mary!” And he looked as excited
-as any of them.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, do let’s find out what is in it!” urged
-Mrs. Corliss. “I can’t wait another minute!”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither can I!” cried John. “Hurry, Mary!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary took the little key and tried it in the
-keyhole. Yes, it just fitted. She turned it, and
-a lock clicked.</p>
-
-<p>“Lift the cover!” cried her father. And Mary
-opened what would have been the front cover
-of the book, if it had been a book which she
-was holding.</p>
-
-<p>Inside the hollow leathern shell which pretended
-to be a book was a box; a green wooden
-box, with brass trimmings. Mary lifted the
-cover of this with a rapidly beating heart. And
-what do you think she found?</p>
-
-<p>First of all she found a sheet of paper, at the
-top of which was written “<span class="smcap">Gems from Shakespeare</span>.”
-Below it followed a list of quotations
-from Shakespeare, of a character that made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-them all very much excited; you will readily
-guess why. These are the quotations:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The little casket bring me hither.—More jewels yet!” &#160; &#160; <i>T. of A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I</span>, ii.</p>
-
-<p>“The jewel that we find we stoop and take it.” &#160; &#160; <i>M. for M.</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, i.</p>
-
-<p>“Bid my woman search for a jewel.” &#160; &#160; <i>Cym.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, iii.</p>
-
-<p>“And what says she to my little jewel?” &#160; &#160; <i>T. G. of V.</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, vii.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Under this sheet of quotations was spread
-a tiny silken blanket of pink. With trembling
-fingers Mary lifted this covering.</p>
-
-<p>“Gems from Shakespeare,” indeed! The sight
-made them all gasp. There, lying on velvet
-cushions, in little pens, were drops and clusters
-and strings of pearls; big and little, round and
-oval, creamy and lustrous and beautiful. Piece
-by piece Mary lifted them out of their beds.
-There was a long necklace which would go twice
-around her throat; earrings; brooches; bar-pins
-and bracelets and rings. Some of the pearls
-were set with diamonds, and some with emeralds
-and sapphires and rubies; some were made
-up into rosebuds with pink coral like that of
-the necklace which Mary had found in the bust
-of Shakespeare. It was a wonderful collection.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” cried Dr. Corliss, the first one of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-family to get his breath,—“well, Mary! So
-you have Aunt Nan’s jewels, after all. She did
-not sell them for the benefit of her hospital, as I
-believed. She wanted them to go with her beloved
-library. There can be no doubt that these
-belong to you, and that she wished you to
-have them, if you were clever enough to find
-them. And a pretty little fortune they will prove,
-if I am not mistaken.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i115.jpg" alt=""></div>
-<p class="caption">“OH, THEY ARE VERY BEAUTIFUL,” SAID MARY</p>
-
-<p>“Here is a note in the bottom of the box,”
-said Mary, drawing out a sheet of folded paper.
-Nowadays she did not dread Aunt Nan’s notes
-as she had done at first, for she began to think
-of the queer great-aunt whom she had never
-seen as one of her best and kindest friends.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>To Mary Corliss</i>” the note was addressed,
-and it read:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>These are my jewels, Mary, since you have
-found them—my mere jewel stones. But by
-this time, as I hope, you will have learned the
-greater beauty of my other jewels—the real
-“Gems from Shakespeare.” You will know, if you
-have done as I wished, that books are the best
-treasure of all. And that in poetry—especially
-in Shakespeare’s poetry—are the most precious
-gems to be found in this world. These so-called
-<i>precious</i> bits of stone and pearl have never been
-of any use to me. I have never worn them. Why
-I have not sold them long ago, I do not know. Perhaps<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-because I wanted to play this one last joke
-with them, for somebody’s benefit. They have
-been waiting here in this secret place for years.
-Now I have played my last joke, and you shall do
-with the “Gems” whatever you please. I hope you
-will be a wise girl.</p>
-
-<p class="right">N. C.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“What do you suppose Aunt Nan meant by
-that last remark?” asked Mrs. Corliss wonderingly.
-“The pearls are far too splendid for our
-Mary ever to wear. I should hate to see her
-flaunting them, Owen.”</p>
-
-<p>“So should I!” said Dr. Corliss fervently.
-“They are grand enough for a princess to wear
-at a court ball. What do you say, Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they are very beautiful,” said Mary,
-“but I don’t want to wear them, any more than
-Aunt Nan did. Father, do you think it would
-be right to sell them? I’d like so much to have
-the money to help us all—and perhaps there
-would be enough so that I could go to college,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s my daughter!” cried her father,
-hugging her proudly in his arms. “That is what
-I hoped you would say. I can see no possible
-reason why you should keep the jewels. Evidently
-Aunt Nan did not care for them herself,
-and you have no association with them except<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-through her. They can do you no good, except
-in one way. So my girl will be able to go to college,
-after all, as well as my boy. I am so glad!”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks to Aunt Nan—and to Shakespeare,”
-said Mary, patting the volume of “Hamlet”
-lovingly. “If Shakespeare hadn’t given
-the clue I might not have found the gems for
-ever and ever so long.”</p>
-
-<p>“You might never have found them, Mary!”
-cried John. “Ginger! how awful! They might
-have stayed here all your life; or some old bookseller
-might have got them when you began to
-fill up with new books in place of these old ones.”</p>
-
-<p>“Like Aladdin swapping off his old lamp for a
-new one,” smiled Dr. Corliss.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Mary, “that wouldn’t have happened.
-And I should have found them, anyway,
-sooner or later. For I shall never part
-with one of Aunt Nan’s books. And sooner or
-later I mean to dip into every one, and read it
-through, if I can. I guess Aunt Nan knew that.”
-She glanced gratefully at the portrait over the
-mantelpiece, which seemed to look very happy
-in the lamplight, while the box of gems stood
-open on the table.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br>
-
-<small>THE PARTY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">FROM Aunt Nan’s pearls Mary kept out a
-brooch for her mother and two bar-pins
-for herself and Katy Summers, just alike. The
-rest of the “Gems from Shakespeare” she entrusted
-to Mr. Wilde, the family lawyer, who
-undertook to sell them for her in the city.</p>
-
-<p>It was an exciting day for Mary when he told
-her the result of his mission.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear,” said he, with a twinkle in his
-wise old eyes, “those Shakespeare ‘Gems’ of
-yours made the eyes of the jewelers pop out of
-their heads. You won’t have any trouble in going
-to college when the time comes; if you still
-wish to do so, and if you haven’t already learned
-all there is to be known from that famous library
-of yours. I hold forty thousand dollars in trust
-for you. Are you disappointed?”</p>
-
-<p>“Forty thousand dollars!” Mary could only
-gasp. And the rest of the family had to pinch
-themselves to be sure they were not dreaming.
-But it was, indeed, a fact. There need be no
-more anxiety or overwork for any of them.
-With care and economy they were provided<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-for until Mary and John should have finished
-college and be ready to earn their living. Dr.
-Corliss could go on writing his book in peace,
-without worrying about bills. Mrs. Corliss could
-have a little maid to help her in the housework.</p>
-
-<p>And Mary could have a party!</p>
-
-<p>“Mother,” said Mary, when they had recovered
-from the first excitement of the news which
-Mr. Wilde had brought them, and when they
-had seen that proud and delighted old gentleman
-off once more for the city where he lived,—“Mother,
-I want to have a party, and give
-the other children a good time. I want to celebrate
-not only our good luck, but the way we
-got it. I want to have a Shakespeare party.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes! Let’s have a party!” crowed John.
-“A dress-up party, Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a dress-up party. Everybody must be
-a Shakespeare character.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think that is a very nice idea,” said Mrs.
-Corliss. “Next month comes Shakespeare’s
-birthday, the twenty-third of April, which is
-also Saint George’s day. I think it would be
-lovely to have a party and show our Crowfield
-friends that Aunt Nan’s house is going to be
-hospitable and jolly from this time on.”</p>
-
-<p>They invited all the children in Mary’s class<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-of the High School and in John’s class of the
-Grammar School. Everybody was told that he
-or she must come in a Shakespeare costume;
-and this set them all to looking up quotations
-and reading plays more than had ever before
-been done in Crowfield.</p>
-
-<p>For days before the party Mary’s library was
-crowded every afternoon with eager children
-who came to ask questions and get suggestions
-about their costumes. Mary and Katy Summers
-helped them as best they could, and Mrs. Corliss
-pinned and draped and made sketches to
-show how things ought to look.</p>
-
-<p>During these busy days Caliban retreated to
-the attic and sulked most of the time, because
-Mary paid him so little attention. But then,
-Mary said his costume was already nearly perfect.
-So why bother about him?</p>
-
-<p>They held the party in the library, the biggest
-room in the Corliss house. And Aunt Nan’s
-portrait looked down on a strange gathering
-of folk out of her favorite books. It seemed
-as if the old lady must be pleased if she knew
-how many persons had become interested in
-Shakespeare through the things which had happened
-and were still happening in her library.</p>
-
-<p>The door was opened by John dressed as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-Puck, in brown jacket and tights, with little
-wings sprouting out of his shoulder-blades.</p>
-
-<p>In the library the guests were received by
-Mary in long, glittering, green draperies to represent
-Ariel, with a wand and a crown of stars.
-She kept Caliban close at her side, beautiful in
-a green ribbon collar which bored him greatly.</p>
-
-<p>Katy Summers stood beside Mary, and looked
-sweet as Titania, in a fairy dress of white tarlatan,
-with a crown of flowers. Dr. Corliss had
-been made to represent Prospero, with a long
-white beard and gray robes. And Mrs. Corliss
-was one of the witches from “Macbeth.” She
-wore a dress of smoky gray veiling, with a veil
-over her long hair, which concealed her face.
-Some of the children were afraid of her at first,
-for they did not know who she really was; she
-looked very bent and witch-like, and acted her
-part weirdly.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph and James Perry, two members of
-John’s “Big Four,” came as the two Dromios,
-the clowns in “A Comedy of Errors.” Their
-faces were whitened, and they acted like real
-clowns in a circus, turning somersaults and
-making grimaces. Whatever one did the other
-imitated him immediately, and it kept the other
-children in gales of laughter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>Billy Barton, the fourth member of the “Big
-Four,” made a hit as Nick Bottom, wearing
-the Ass’s head, and braying with comical effect;
-though as Billy had never heard the strange
-noise which a donkey really makes when it
-brays, he actually sounded more like a sick
-rooster. His long-eared head-piece soon grew
-so hot to wear that Billy took it off and hung
-it over his arm, which rather spoiled the illusion,
-but was much more comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was Charlie Connors, a very fat
-boy, who dressed as Falstaff, with a fierce mustache
-and impressive rubber boots, a plumed
-hat, belt full of pistols, and a sword. There was
-Lady Macbeth, in a white nightgown with her
-hair hanging loose, a dangerous dagger in one
-hand and a lighted candle in the other. But
-when she nearly set fire to the draperies of the
-Ghost of Hamlet’s father, Mrs. Corliss made the
-Lady extinguish her sleep-walking candle.</p>
-
-<p>Hamlet himself was there, too, in melancholy
-long black stockings, with a waterproof cape
-flung tragically over one shoulder. He carried
-one of Aunt Nan’s ostrich eggs in his hand to
-represent a skull. Indeed, the attic and the
-“Collections” had helped supply many necessary
-parts of this Shakespeare masquerade.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>There was Cleopatra, in a wonderful red
-sateen robe hauled out of one of the old chests;
-and Shylock, with a long beard hanging over a
-purple dressing-gown of the Early-Victorian
-period. There was Julius Cæsar in a Roman
-toga made from some of Aunt Nan’s discarded
-window-curtains, and Rosalind looking lovely
-in a blue bathing-suit and tam o’ shanter.</p>
-
-<p>There were also a number of little Grammar-School
-fairies in mosquito-netting robes, and
-many other citizens of places earthly and unearthly,
-who seemed to have wandered out of
-the books in Mary’s library. Ariel recognized
-them all, and named them to the company as
-they came in. They squatted about on the chairs
-and on the floor till everybody had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>And then they gave the play.</p>
-
-<p>Ever since reading “Midsummer Night’s
-Dream” Mary had wanted to try the delicious
-foolery of “Pyramus and Thisbe.” It required
-no scenery, no other costumes than a shawl or
-two, to cover up what the actors were already
-wearing to represent other characters. It was
-all a huge joke, as the audience soon saw; and
-throughout the scene the children laughed and
-squealed with delight, as Mary had thought
-they would. For the actors must have given the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-play as ridiculously as Shakespeare himself intended;
-which was saying a great deal.</p>
-
-<p>Billy Barton, covering himself with a mackintosh,
-acted Prologue, and introduced Mary,
-draped as Pyramus, and Katy as Thisbe; John,
-parted for a time from his wings, and tied up in
-a gray shawl, with a fringed rope fastened on
-for a tail, was the horribly roaring Lion. Ralph
-and Jimmie represented Wall and Moonshine.</p>
-
-<p>It was a very funny thing to see Wall hold up
-his fingers to make a chink through which Pyramus
-and Thisbe might kiss each other. And when
-Lion begged the audience not to be frightened
-by his roar, the children shrieked with laughter.</p>
-
-<p>But funniest of all was when Jimmy Perry as
-Moonshine came in with the old tin lantern to
-represent the Moon, and tried to make Caliban
-in his green ribbon act the part of the
-Moon Man’s dog. Caliban didn’t like theatricals.
-He would not act the part, but lay down
-in the middle of the floor, with his feet in the
-air, and his ears laid flat, ready to scratch the
-Moon Man if he persisted. The Prologue had to
-rush in again and drag him off.</p>
-
-<p>When the Lion had roared and made Pyramus
-think he had eaten poor Thisbe, so that the
-hasty fellow stabbed himself in grief; and when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-Thisbe had died, too, after sobbing about her
-lover’s “lily lips” and “cherry nose,” the little
-play was over, and everybody in a good humor.
-And the children said, “I didn’t know Shakespeare
-was so funny, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>Then Ariel and Titania, Prospero, and the
-Witch made a magic—they were a mighty
-quartet, you see. John suggested that they were
-really the “Biggest Four.” They waved their
-wands and lifted their hands, and Caliban
-helped with a mighty “Wow!” Then in came
-Puck and the other fairies bearing a huge iron
-kettle, with a ladle sticking out of the top. From
-the kettle rose a cloud of smoke and a sweet smell
-that made Caliban sneeze. The fairies put the
-kettle in the middle of the room, and the four
-magicians waved their wands over it, and moved
-slowly about it singing,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“Double, double, toil and trouble,</div>
-<div class="verse">Fire, burn, and cauldron, bubble!”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>When the spell was finished, the smoke died
-away, and the Witch stooped over and ladled
-something out, which she threw into the fireplace.
-“Now, come, everybody!” she cried in
-a cracked voice, “and dip pot-luck out of the
-magic kettle.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>One by one the guests came and helped themselves
-to a ladleful of pot-luck. The “luck”
-turned out to be a tissue-paper package tied
-with red ribbon. In each package was a little
-present. Sometimes the children did not get an
-appropriate gift; but then they could “swap.”
-Shylock, who was one of the biggest boys, drew
-a Japanese doll, which he exchanged for a jack-knife
-that had fallen to the lot of a little girl-fairy.
-Cleopatra drew a conductor’s whistle,
-and Hamlet had a beautiful bow of pink hair-ribbon;
-so they made a trade. The Ghost was
-made happy with a jews-harp, and the Ass secured
-a fan; while fat Falstaff made every one
-roar with laughter by unrolling from the great
-bundle of tissue paper, which he had carefully
-picked out, a tiny thimble.</p>
-
-<p>After this they danced and played games, and
-made the roof of Aunt Nan’s old house echo
-with such sounds as it had not heard for many
-years. Shakespeare characters flitted from room
-to room, up the stairs to the attic and down to
-the cellar, in a joyous game of hide-and-seek.
-And nobody said “Don’t!” or “Careful!” or
-“Sh!” This was a night when Dream-People
-had their way undisturbed.</p>
-
-<p>Then they all went out into the dining-room<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-and had supper—sandwiches and chocolate
-and cake and ice-cream. And they all voted that
-they liked Shakespeare very much, and that they
-ought to celebrate his birthday every year.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody wanted to go home, of course. But in
-time, mere ordinary fathers and mothers and big
-sisters and big brothers, in ugly, common clothes,
-came and dragged away the Shakespeare people,
-one by one. When they had all, as Prospero
-said, “melted into air, into thin air,” when even
-Titania had waved her wand and disappeared
-with a kiss on Ariel’s cheek, this happy Spirit
-and Prospero and the Witch, Puck and Caliban,
-were left alone in front of the library fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>“Wasn’t it a lovely party!” cried Puck.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure Aunt Nan would have been
-pleased,” said the Witch, looking up at the portrait
-over the mantel.</p>
-
-<p>“Just think what a happy time she has given
-us; dear Aunt Nan!” said Ariel.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; it was a very nice party, indeed,” acknowledged
-Prospero, stroking his long beard
-gravely. “I confess I never expected to get so
-much pleasure out of poetry. But now, to quote
-myself, ‘I’ll to my book.’ Good-night.” And
-he retired to his study.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so sleepy!” said John. “Isn’t it too<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-bad that poor Shakespeare died before they invented
-ice-cream?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Mary, “I wish he were still alive.
-I should like to see him. But when I look about
-the library now I feel as if all the books were
-alive—just full of live people!”</p>
-
-<p>“They are alive so long as we read them,”
-said Mrs. Corliss.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to keep them alive!” cried Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“Miaou!” protested Caliban, scratching wearily
-at his ribbon. He at least was tired of wearing
-his costume.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Caliban!” said Mary, untying the ribbon.
-“Now you can go to sleep comfortably.
-To-morrow I shan’t be Ariel any more. But you
-will still be Caliban, for you are the realest of
-us all!”</p>
-
-<p>Caliban switched his tail, yawned, and jumped
-up into the armchair, where he curled himself
-to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Mary had a strange dream that night. Perhaps
-she had eaten too much ice-cream. She
-thought that as soon as the house was quiet,
-Caliban rose on tiptoe and put on little wings
-like those of Puck, and flew right out of the open
-window, away to the land of fairies and shadows
-and book-folk. She dreamed that though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-she hunted and hunted, she never could find
-him again. The dream made her cry, and she
-woke up very early in the morning, still sobbing.</p>
-
-<p>The dream was still too real! She jumped out
-of bed, flung on her little blue wrapper, thrust
-her feet into her blue slippers, and hurried downstairs
-into the library. There in the middle of
-the mantelpiece, under Aunt Nan’s portrait and
-close beside the bust of Shakespeare, sat Caliban.
-He blinked in grave surprise at her unexpected
-entrance.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Caliban, dear Caliban!” cried Mary,
-running up to him and hugging him tight. “I
-was afraid you had ‘vanished into thin air,’ too.
-I couldn’t have borne that, Caliban. I don’t
-know what I should ever do without you, pussy
-dear!”</p>
-
-<p>“Miaou!” said Caliban, fondly kissing her
-cheek.</p>
-
-<p>And Aunt Nan’s portrait smiled down upon
-the pair.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><span class="antiqua">The Riverside Press</span><br>
-CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS<br>
-U . S . A</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
-</div></div>
-
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