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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>W.A.G.'S TALE</title>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII">
+<style type="text/css">
+<!--
+body {margin:10%; text-align:justify}
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+blockquote {font-size:14pt}
+P {font-size:14pt}
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+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of W. A. G.'s Tale, by Margaret Turnbull
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: W. A. G.'s Tale
+
+Author: Margaret Turnbull
+
+Posting Date: November 3, 2011 [EBook #9844]
+Release Date: February, 2006
+First Posted: October 23, 2006
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK W. A. G.'S TALE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Rebekah Inman and the PG
+Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<center>
+
+<img alt="titlepage.jpg (27K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" height="625" width="483">
+
+
+</center>
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+<center>
+<h2>
+CONTENTS</h2></center>
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+
+<p>
+PREFACE BY AUTHOR</p>
+
+<p>
+I. <a href="#01">UNCLE BURT'S BILLY</a><br><br>
+II. <a href="#02">OUR HOUSE</a><br><br>
+III. <a href="#03">OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR</a><br><br>
+IV. <a href="#04">ON THE TOWPATH</a><br><br>
+V. <a href="#05">ON THE DELAWARE</a><br><br>
+VI. <a href="#06">GEORGE</a><br><br>
+VII. <a href="#07">LEFT ALONE</a><br><br>
+VIII. <a href="#08">AT TURNER'S</a><br><br>
+IX. <a href="#09">THE WHITE TENT</a></p>
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+<center>
+<h2>
+ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+<p>A ZOBZEE</p>
+
+<p>ON THE BRIDGE</p>
+
+<p>HE JUMPED OUT AND TOOK A ROPE AND PULLED THE BOAT CLOSE</p>
+
+<p>SHE WASHED AND I DRIED</p>
+
+<p>HE TURNED AND WENT INTO THE WHITE STONE HOUSE, AND ALL THE CATS RAN
+AFTER HIM</p>
+
+<p>HE SMOKED A PIPE, AND I PLAYED WITH ALL HIS TEDDY-CATS</p>
+
+<p>BRINGS HIM DOWN, PERSIMMONS AND ALL</p>
+
+<p>SO I TOOK MY FISHING-ROD AND FLICKED IT AT HIM</p>
+
+<p>NEVER YOU MIND, BABY DEAR, COME ON</p>
+
+<p>WHAT'S AN ABSENT-MINDED BEGGAR?</p>
+
+<p>HEY, ROBINSON CRUSOE, HERE'S YOUR MAN FRIDAY</p>
+
+<p>HE HAD TO TAKE A CAN-OPENER AND CUT AUNTY EDITH'S FOOT OUT</p>
+
+<p>WE ALL WORKED WITH HOSE AND EVERYTHING</p>
+
+<p>AUNTY MAY GOT A HATCHET AND MADE A CHOP AT THE SNAKE</p>
+
+<p>I BELIEVED THEY HAD REALLY GONE AWAY, AND LEFT ME ALL ALONE</p>
+
+<p>I TOLD HIM ALL ABOUT AUNTY MAY</p>
+
+<p>SLID DOWN WITHOUT A BIT OF NOISE</p>
+
+<p>I WOKE UP AND FOUND MYSELF LYING ON THE PORCH</p>
+
+<p>AND IT WAS UNCLE BURT</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+<center>
+<h1>
+W.A.G.'S TALE</h1></center>
+
+<br><br>
+<h2>
+PREFACE BY THE AUTHOR</h2>
+
+<p>I have been sick. Now I am better the Doctor makes me lie in bed because
+of all that Anti-toxin he put in me, which weakens the heart. Anti-toxin
+isn't a lady, it's a medicine for diphtheria. Aunty May is a lady. She
+reads me books and plays games with me. But I am tired of books written
+about nature, and animals, and Indians, and fairies, and I wished out
+loud that somebody would write a book about a boy, just like me. So
+to-day Aunty May brought me a big, thick blank book with red covers, and
+with rings at the back to let me add more paper when I want to, and she
+told me to write my own story, a little every day.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="008.jpg (5K)" src="images/008.jpg" height="275" width="146">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>So that's what I am going to do, and illustrate it with "Zobzees."
+"Zobzees" are thin dancing people&mdash;like this. I invented that name, and
+a country and a language for them, which only Aunty May and I know. But
+I am not going to write my book in that. I am going to print it, like
+other books, but draw "Zobzees" because they are easy; and if nobody
+else reads it except me and Uncle Burt when he comes home, it will be
+fun for us, anyway.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="01"></a><br><br>
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+UNCLE BURT'S BILLY</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+<p>My name is William Ainsworth Gordon, and my initials spell W.A.G. That
+is why Aunty May and I call this book "W.A.G.'S TALE." If it was about a
+dog it would be "Tail Wags." So it's true and a joke too.</p>
+
+<p>I am ten years old and my father and mother are in Heaven, and I have
+only Uncle Burt to take care of me. Uncle Burt isn't my real uncle, but
+he was my father's chum when they were at West Point, and he promised
+father to take care of me. And he does, only he had to go to the
+Philippines with his soldiers; so his sister, Aunty Edith, is taking
+care of me until he comes back. Everybody else calls me William, but he
+calls me "Billy," so I am the one this chapter is named after.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May says I can begin with the very day Aunty Edith brought me down
+here. That was the day Uncle Burt went away to join his regiment, and
+everybody was sort of quiet, and even the big people cried a little. I
+cried a good deal, when nobody was looking, and when Uncle Burt caught
+me at it in the corner of the room, he didn't say a word, but just
+picked me up and held me so tight that one of his buttons got stamped
+on my cheek like a seal. He said he'd give way and cry, too, for it was
+good for the eyes, only his Colonel had expressly ordered him not to,
+saying he would leave all red-eyed men home, which would be terrible for
+a soldier. So I begged him not to give way, and he said he wouldn't if
+I'd stop, because one fellow bawling makes it hard for the other fellow
+not to. So I stopped and we laughed a little, and then he showed the
+mark on my cheek to Aunty Edith, and said, "This shows that this young
+man belongs to me, so be careful of Uncle Burt's Billy and return him in
+good condition, for there will be a dreadful time if I find him chipped
+or broken, when I come back."</p>
+
+<p>Then the lady I call Aunty May, though she isn't any relation to me
+either, but is just Aunty Edith's friend, laughed and said she would be
+careful to treat me nicely. And she has. I like her best next to Uncle
+Burt. She didn't cry. She laughed a lot, and every time Uncle Burt got
+sad and tried to talk to her, she laughed more, and she took me on her
+lap and kept me there all the time Uncle Burt was saying good-bye
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>He looked more like crying then than any other time. He said,
+"Good-bye, May; won't you change your mind?" and she said, "Oh, no,
+Burt, I can't." Then he was going to say something else when I said,
+"Remember the Colonel, Uncle Burt, and don't get your eyes too red to
+go," and then they both laughed. Uncle Burt said, "Look after Miss Heath
+for me, Billy, while I'm gone," and I said, "Sure I will. I'm going to
+adopt her as my Aunty, too." She put her arms round me and hugged me and
+Uncle Burt said, "Lucky Billy," and then the door closed, and Aunty
+Edith began to cry and Aunty May looked queer for a minute and went to
+the door. I thought she'd run after him, but she stopped and said,
+"Come along, Sir William, and we'll pack our bags, 'cause we're all
+going to the country on the 3.10." And I took hold of her hand, and we
+went upstairs together, and packed my bag and put in my gun, my
+soldiers, my books and my paint-box. Then Aunty Edith stopped crying and
+tied a veil over her face. If she'd been a soldier she'd been left home
+all right.</p>
+
+<p>We got in a taxi with a lot of bags and things and went to the
+Pennsylvania Station, which is miles and miles long, I think, but there
+are lots of kind black men who wear red caps and run up and take your
+bags and carry them for you just as easy, One of them took my bag and
+Aunty May's suitcase, but Aunty Edith had another one&mdash;a fat one&mdash;all
+alone for her things.</p>
+
+<p>We just had time for our train, so we had to hurry right through the
+waiting-room, and I couldn't stop and see all the things there are to
+see, or watch the people coming down the stairs. People's legs are funny
+if you watch them coming down&mdash;like things made with hinges.</p>
+
+<p>Then we got into a nice big train with chairs in it that swung round.
+They call it a "Pullman" which is a good name for a car, only it's the
+engine that pulls the man and the car, too, really. Then we got all
+comfortable, with another nice colored man who showed his teeth at us,
+and put our bags up on a rack, and Aunty May gave me some sweet
+chocolate and a magazine with pictures in it, and Aunty Edith said. "I
+wish we didn't have to change at Trenton,"&mdash;and&mdash;then&mdash;I fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>The next thing I knew Aunty May was saying to me, "Wake up, Billy, dear,
+it's Trenton now." She put on my jacket and the man took our bags again
+and we stepped out on a big platform, and then another man took all our
+bags and we went up one stair, and down another, and waited on a long
+platform, where trains kept shooting up every minute.</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't understand what the man in uniform said, until at last a
+funny little train&mdash;all short, only half as long as our New York one,
+and with funny, hard straight seats&mdash;came, and we climbed in. Aunty
+Edith and Aunty May and me had to carry our own bags and fix 'em. The
+train waited a long time, but at last it moved, and Aunty May put her
+arm round me and sat me next the window, only it wasn't open, because it
+was only April and wasn't warm enough yet, and said, "Now we're off to
+East Penniwell."</p>
+
+<p>The train just crawled along, and there was a big canal on the one
+side. I saw a canal boat with two men and a dog on it, and they were
+cooking something in a big pot on the top of a stove that stood right
+out of doors, on top of the boat, with a stovepipe that didn't go into
+any chimney, but right up into the air&mdash;with smoke coming out of it!</p>
+
+<p>I showed it to Aunty May and she said, "You will see them every day when
+we get to the towpath," and I felt awful glad at that, because though
+the boat moved slow, the train moved fast, and I didn't get a good look
+at the boy who was driving the mules. I couldn't be sure whether he'd
+made a face at me or not, but I think he did.</p>
+
+<p>Then by and by on the other side of the train came a great big river,
+all fast and running along and some bubbling-up places in it where rocks
+stood up. Aunty May said those were rapids and this was the Delaware
+River, the one Washington crossed.</p>
+
+<p>I think more of him than ever, now I've seen the river, for it's good
+and wide and it must have been a cold job getting over it. I told Aunty
+May I hoped it wasn't at the rapids he tried to cross, and she said,
+"Oh, no," and "I'll show you," and presently the train stopped and the
+conductor said, "Washington's Crossing," There was a big tree, where he
+could have tied a boat if he'd wanted to. Aunty May said maybe he did;
+and a white house where I guess the soldiers got something to eat and
+drink. Anyway, I hoped so. Aunty May said she'd never asked, so she
+couldn't say, positively, as it was so long ago, but it wouldn't hurt to
+think they did. So I imagined it that way.</p>
+
+<p>Then our train stopped at a station and we got out. I hadn't been ready
+for its stopping, and I got so busy getting my things on, and getting my
+bag in my hand, that I didn't hear the name of it, and I asked Aunty May
+if it was East Penniwell, and she said, "Oh, no, this is Scrubbsville,
+New Jersey, and East Penniwell is in Pennsylvania."</p>
+
+<p>"Will we get into another train, then?" I asked, and Aunty May laughed
+and said, "Oh, no, just wait and see." Then we got off and walked down,
+carrying our bags, to a big bridge right over the Delaware.</p>
+
+<p>There was a man sitting, at the end of the bridge, in a little house
+with a window in it, and you paid him two cents apiece before you could
+get on the bridge to go to Pennsylvania. He is the Toll-Man and it is a
+Toll-Bridge, and it seemed to me very funny to have to pay to walk.
+Aunty May said it was funny, too, but Aunty Edith said it was
+a nuisance.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty Edith asked the Toll-Man if we could leave our big suitcase
+there, until Mr. Tree the grocer came over with a wagon for our trunks,
+later, and he said, "Yes." He was a nice smiling man.</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty Edith and Aunty May and I, and Aunty Edith's bag and my
+little one, which Aunty May carried because she said we had a long walk
+ahead of us, went over the bridge.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="023.jpg (15K)" src="images/023.jpg" height="196" width="519">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>The wind almost blew my cap away, but I caught it just in time, and on
+the bridge we met a big man carrying a paint-box and a folding-up
+stool, like Aunty Edith has, and he had an E-normous dog, as big as me,
+and it galumphed at me, and I got behind Aunty Edith, for she is very
+big both ways, and the man said, "Down, Pete," When the dog downed, he
+shook hands with Aunty Edith, and she introduced him to Aunty May and
+me, and he said he was glad to see us, and I could come and play with
+his children up the towpath.</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Yes, sir," but Aunty May and me kept away from Pete, because we
+didn't know him then. We know him now and like him. The man said, "Wait
+till I get back and I'll take you up in the launch." Then he went on to
+Scrubbsville, and Aunty Edith said, "Such a pleasure to meet Mr. Turner.
+Now William won't get tired walking up. Won't that be nice, William, to
+go up the canal in the launch, instead of walking?" I said, "Yes, 'm,
+Aunty Edith," to her, but to Aunty May I said, "Will that Pete be in the
+boat, too?" and Aunty May whispered back, "Ow Gracious! I hope not. But
+don't let him know we're afraid, old man." So I took her hand tight and
+we followed Aunty Edith, who is an awful fast walker and always has so
+many things to do.</p>
+
+<p>First we went to the Post-Office, which is a little wooden building,
+and the Postmaster knows everybody and looks at you over his glasses.
+Then we went up a funny street with brick pavements, awful old. There
+are houses on that very street built before the Revolution, and a big
+cannon in the square. We went to Mr. Tree's, and he's a nice, big grocer
+man, with everything in his shop, and he patted me on the head and gave
+me a chocolate candy, which Aunty Edith said I might eat, if I ate it
+slowly. He said he would bring our trunks and bags up right away. Aunty
+Edith said, "Now I've got to order oil from Tryer and coal from Quick
+and some thread from Miss Macfarland's notion store," and I said, "Why
+don't the servants do all that, Aunty Edith?" She laughed and said,
+"There are no servants for us at East Penniwell, William; we do the work
+ourselves," Aunty May said, "But it will be fun, Billy. All the artists
+like Aunty Edith live that way down here, and you and I will be the
+writer people and we'll do lots of funny things together. Only, Edith,"
+she said, "the boy and I are weary; where can we rest while you finish
+your shopping?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very well," Aunty Edith said; "come and I'll show you the launch
+and you can get in that and sit and wait for Mr. Turner."</p>
+
+<p>We walked up a funny, hilly, crooked street, with partly brick
+pavements again and partly stone, till we came to an old wooden bridge
+over a canal, and then Aunty May squeezed my hand and said, "Billy, this
+is our canal," We crossed the bridge, and went down a few steps and
+there was Mr. Turner's launch. We got in and sat and watched the water
+and made up stories to each other, till Aunty Edith and Mr. Turner came,
+all full of bundles. Mr. Turner started the launch and we went
+chug-chugging along. But Pete didn't get in. He swam part of the time
+and ran and barked on the towpath the other part.</p>
+
+<p>The canal boats came down past us, and they began to have lights on
+them, and the trees were all green and hung down by the canal banks, and
+I could see where the dogwood was beginning to come out in the woods.
+There were some ducks swimming in the canal, and a farmhouse high above
+us on the bank. Then nothing but the towpath, which is the path on one
+side of the canal where the mules walk when they drag the canal boats.</p>
+
+<p>By and by I saw two tiny white houses, with their roofs and chimneys
+sticking up over the canal bank, and one of them had a funny green door,
+and honeysuckle all growing over the fence. Mr. Turner never stopped
+till Aunty Edith called, "Oh, we're going past," Then he stopped and
+jumped out and took a rope and pulled the boat close to the bank, where
+there were some stones placed like steps. I saw the two houses plainly
+then, one a white stone one and one a white wooden one with a
+green door.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="030.jpg (31K)" src="images/030.jpg" height="368" width="600">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>We all stepped out, with our bags, and said good-bye to Mr. Turner, and
+his launch went away up the canal past us, and Aunty Edith took a key
+out of her pocket and went down a step, into the garden of the house
+with the green door, and opened it, and said to Aunty May and me, "Come
+in, children. This is OUR HOUSE."</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="031.jpg (19K)" src="images/031.jpg" height="319" width="593">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="02"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+OUR HOUSE
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>Aunty May and I went inside, and we looked at each other and laughed. It
+was small, like a doll's house, and the room we stepped into, through
+the doorway, had a window the same side as the door, which looked out on
+the towpath, and two windows at the back, and a stovepipe coming right
+out of the floor and running up through the low ceiling.</p>
+
+<p>When I went and looked out of the back windows, I called to Aunty May,
+"Oh, see, it's the Delaware." And it was.</p>
+
+<p>There, right at the foot of our back garden, under the willow trees, was
+the Delaware River, running along, very fast.</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Come on, let's go down to the river, Aunty May." But Aunty
+Edith said, "First, look at the house."</p>
+
+<p>We went through a little door into another long, narrow, low room, with
+a window on the towpath and a window on the river, and a queer
+old-fashioned bureau and two iron beds in it, and a clothes-horse, in
+one corner, covered with muslin. When you opened one flap of it, it was
+a closet. This was Aunty Edith and Aunty May's room.</p>
+
+<p>In the other room, with the stovepipe in the middle of it, was a big
+couch, and that was to be my bed at night. There was a big closet at one
+end, made out of the place where the steps went up to the attic, and
+that was where my clothes were to hang. One side of the room had
+bookshelves, and on the wall were some of Aunty Edith's paintings; and
+there was a doorway at one end without any door.</p>
+
+<p>I said to Aunty Edith, "How do we get to the river from this house? Do
+we have to go out of the front door and run down? And where's the stove
+that the pipe belongs to? Is it in a cellar?" Then both the aunties
+laughed, and they went to this doorway without any door, and there was a
+funny thing that looked like a clumsy ladder. Aunty Edith told me those
+were our best stairs, and that once they were canal boat stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Well, you climbed down them very carefully, for they tipped a little,
+and you landed on a dark little landing with a door. You opened the door
+and stepped down a step and there you were in the nicest old kitchen
+you ever saw!</p>
+
+<p>The top part of the house was wooden, but this under part was of stone
+and cement, and the walls inside were cement, and the ceiling was just
+wood with the big floor beams showing through. And there was a door with
+glass in the top, that you could look through down to the river and the
+willows; and there was a window with a deep window seat you could sit in
+and look at the river; then there was a long window at the side, where
+the outside steps came down from the towpath, and that opened in two
+halves and had narrow panes of glass. It looked out on a garden.</p>
+
+<p>A big cook-stove, with a kettle steaming on it, was at one end of the
+room; and a nice big table, and there were some comfortable chairs, and
+pots and pans hanging over and under the mantel back of the stove.</p>
+
+<p>There was a rug on the floor, and a pantry with lots of good things to
+eat in it, and a big couch that I sat down on, and looked around.</p>
+
+<p>There was a little place in the wall, too, that had once been a window,
+but was closed up and made into a little cupboard for dishes.</p>
+
+<p>I said, "My! isn't this lovely?" Aunty May squeezed my hand and said it
+was, and Aunty Edith looked around and said, "Well, Mrs. Katy Smith did
+get my postal in time, after all. I'm so glad, because if she hadn't,
+it wouldn't have been so nice and clean in here, and there would have
+been no fire. Now, I'm going to take off my things and make a supper
+for us all."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May said, "I'll help you," but Aunty Edith said, "Not this first
+time, May. You take the boy out and show him the garden and the river,"</p>
+
+<p>So Aunty May and I took hold of hands and went out, and there was a long
+flower-bed running right down to the river-bank, on both sides of a long
+grassplot; and beyond the grass and flowers was a lot of ploughed land
+for vegetables and things; and beyond that there were a lot of woods.
+There was a path between the grassplot and the flower-bed next the fence
+of our neighbor, in the white stone house, and we went down that, and
+when we came to the end of the flower-bed there was a big apple tree,
+and then we went under that and stood on the river-bank, and there was
+the Delaware!</p>
+
+<p>Under the biggest willow tree there was a seat made of an old box, and
+Aunty May and I sat down for a minute and looked at the river. It was so
+clear that I could see the little fishes swimming along, and I threw a
+stick in it, and it went by so fast that Aunty May said, "My! how swift
+the current is. You must be careful, Billy-boy, and not go near the edge
+when you are alone." I said, "Yes, 'm, but I am to go in wading when it
+gets warmer."</p>
+
+<p>We went along the bank a little farther, and there were more trees,
+cherry trees, and willow trees, and buttonwood trees, and lots of nice
+places for us to put our hammocks. Then we went back to the house, and
+there was Aunty Edith in a big gingham apron toasting bread and making
+chocolate. I laughed and said, "Oh, Aunty Edith, I never saw you look
+like that in the city." Then we all laughed, and Aunty Edith said, "You
+will see me look like this very often down here, for we all have to do
+our share of the work. You, too, Billy. You will have to help us." I
+said, "That will be bully."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May set the table, and we all sat down and ate our toast and ham
+and eggs, and drank our chocolate, and I thought it was better than
+anything I had ever eaten.</p>
+
+<p>Just when we were in the middle of it, I heard footsteps crunching along
+the walk, and down the steps at the side of the house from the towpath.
+I called, "Some one's coming." Aunty Edith went to the door.</p>
+
+<p>It was Mr. Tree with the trunks and the suitcase. He said, "Hullo,
+young fellow. Have you come to take care of these ladies?" And I said,
+"Yes, sir"; and he said, "That's right. Look after 'em. It'll be a load
+off my mind to know they've got a man on the premises. It's right lonely
+up here." And I told him we wasn't afraid. I asked him if he needed any
+help, but he said no, and he was so terrible big and strong that he
+lifted the trunks as if they were boxes.</p>
+
+<p>After he had gone, Aunty Edith said she must unpack, and Aunty May said,
+"Do, Edith; Billy and I will do the dishes."</p>
+
+<p>So Aunty May tied a big clean towel around my waist, and she washed and
+I dried. There was no running water, just a pump outside the kitchen
+shed, right out of doors.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="043.jpg (34K)" src="images/043.jpg" height="312" width="592">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I pumped for Aunty May and we had a lovely time. We played a game with
+the dishes. Plates were ladies and saucers were little girls, and cups
+were little boys, and knives and forks were policemen and spoons were
+servants. We had a lot of fun, when the knives and forks marched round
+the table, and ordered the other dishes into the cupboard.</p>
+
+<p>After that was done, Aunty May said she must go upstairs and help Aunty
+Edith, and unpack her own typewriter. Aunty May writes stories, too,
+only she uses a typewriter and I use a pencil.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May asked me whether I'd sit in the window seat and read a
+picture-book or would I explore the garden. I said I would do both; look
+at pictures a little while and go in the garden. Aunty May made me
+promise not to go too near the river, or too far down the towpath.</p>
+
+<p>Then she went upstairs and I read a little till I had enough of
+reading, and I thought I'd go to the towpath, but first, as I was
+thirsty, I thought I'd get a glass and take a drink at the pump. But
+when I tried to pump, the pump-handle just went up in the air, and
+wouldn't pump up any water!</p>
+
+<p>And just as I tried it again, I heard somebody say, "That pump handle
+oughter been left up in the air. Say, young feller, you gotter pour some
+water down first. That pump ain't been used stiddy for some little while
+back. Ease it up and she'll go all right."</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="046.jpg (56K)" src="images/046.jpg" height="586" width="588">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I turned around, and there, leaning against the fence, was an old man
+with big blue eyes and a white mustache, and a pipe, and a plaid vest
+and a soft hat, and the biggest lot of cats I ever saw. Seven of them,
+white and gray and black and mixed colors, all looking up at me.</p>
+
+<p>I was so surprised that I didn't know what to say. But the old gentleman
+said, "Wait here, and I'll fetch you a kittle of water," and he turned
+and went into the white stone house, and all the cats ran after him. But
+he shut the door tight, and the cats sat waiting and mewing on the back
+porch, and I held on to the pump-handle and waited too.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="047.jpg (7K)" src="images/047.jpg" height="93" width="412">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="03"></a><br><br>
+
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+<p>In a minute he came out with a tin pail in his hand, and all the cats
+ran after him, and he said, "Shoo, Teddy," and they ran away a little
+bit, but came back and mewed and rubbed against his feet. He handed me
+the pail across the fence, and I took it, and he said, "A little at a
+time, boy." Then he went up to his porch and got a big dish and said,
+"Here, Teddy, Teddy," and all the cats ran to him, and he fed them.</p>
+
+<p>I stood watching him, and he said, "Why don't you ease the pump?" and I
+said, "If you please, sir, which one of your cats is Teddy?" He said,
+"Sho, boy, they're all named Teddy after President Roosevelt, and
+because it saves trouble. When I calls, 'Here, Teddy,'&mdash;they all comes.
+When I calls, 'Shoo, Teddy,'&mdash;they all shoos," And I said, "That's the
+best idea I ever heard of&mdash;for cats."</p>
+
+<p>He said, "Now, boy, you lift the handle of that pump high and throw some
+water into her, and then keep a-pumping." And I did, and the water came,
+and I pumped up a glassful, but he wouldn't take any.</p>
+
+<p>Then I said I'd fill the pail and bring it round because I'd like to
+see his cats close to, and he said, "Never mind the pail, young fellow,
+jist hand it over and come round yourself,"</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="050.jpg (73K)" src="images/050.jpg" height="668" width="596">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>So I did, first calling to Aunty Edith to ask if I might, and she came
+to the door and shook hands with him, over the fence, and said, "How do
+you do, Mr. Taylor. This is William Gordon, the son of Captain Gordon, I
+told you of." Then he said, "Sho, you don't meanter say it! I served
+under his grandfather." And Aunty Edith said to me, "William, Mr. Taylor
+was a soldier in the army all through the Civil War, and he can tell you
+lots about it." So I went over to his house and we sat on his back
+porch, and he smoked a pipe, and I played with all his Teddy-cats.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="051.jpg (6K)" src="images/051.jpg" height="62" width="301">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor told me he was seventy-three years old, and I said, "My! I'd
+never guessed it, you look younger than that"; and he said, "Yes, boy,
+I'm stepping along."</p>
+
+<p>Then he told me when he was a boy he worked on one of the canal boats,
+and at that time there were many more boats, for most of the freight,
+that goes in freight trains now on railroads, came down the canal in
+boats. After that he enlisted in the army and went away out West. He
+told me when he was young the West was the West, and you could shoot
+buffaloes. He knows because he shot them. Then when the Civil War broke
+out, he stayed in the army, enlisted again and fought all through it,
+and came home with a bullet in his leg.</p>
+
+<p>His father was a cooper and built the stone house Mr. Taylor lives in
+for a cooper shop, and that was why it was built so solid and had such
+thick walls. He took me into the cellar and showed it to me, for that
+was where they set the iron hoops to cool. I asked him who lived with
+him in it, and he said he was all alone, everybody was gone, he said,
+but him. I told him about my father and mother then, and how I would be
+all alone if it wasn't for Uncle Burt, and he said Uncle Burt was a fine
+man and a good soldier.</p>
+
+<p>He said he was glad I lived next door. I told him I was glad, too. He
+asked me if I went in for any kind of sport like shooting; and I said,
+not yet, but I climbed trees, and he said, when his cherries were ripe,
+if I didn't make myself sick on Aunty Edith's, I could climb his, when
+he was around.</p>
+
+<p>Then I asked him if he would tell me a story about the Civil War, and he
+laughed and said the most of them were too full of fighting and sad
+things for a little boy like me; and I told him I didn't mind them being
+a little bloody; that I wasn't a kindergarten baby.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed some more, and said: "Speaking of climbing trees makes me
+think of how near I was to being captured by some rebels once. You know,
+boy, Quakers is agin all fighting, so at the beginning of the war, when
+we regulars was sent to drill with a lot of new men and knock them into
+shape, I was some surprised when fust thing I seen was young Jim Wilton,
+whose father I knowed to be a Quaker living on the corner of the same
+street where my uncle lived in Phillydelphy.</p>
+
+<p>"I says to him, 'Hullo, Jim, what you doing here?' and he said, 'Well,
+Tom, I come here to larn you how to fight.' 'And you a Quaker's son,'
+says I. 'Yup,' he says, 'and thee knows that my old folks is none too
+pleased; but somehow I couldn't stay home comfortable with all the other
+boys fighting to free the blacks, so here I be.'</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I was right glad to see him, and get news of all the old
+neighbors, and Jim and me gits very chummy; and when there's a piece of
+business needing the attention of one of us, it usually gits the
+attention of both. Me and him hunting in couples as it were.</p>
+
+<p>"That's how it come about that one time, there being a bit of spying to
+be done, me and Jim finds ourselves in rebel uniforms, waiting and
+listening beside a camp-fire outside the rebel Gineral's tent, using our
+ears and our eyes too. When up rides Gineral Stuart, who used to be my
+commanding officer in the old days before he turnt reb, when he was in
+the regular army.</p>
+
+<p>"My! but I was in a terrible taking, for Stuart had a gredge agin me for
+somepin I'd done. I'll tell ye about that another day. 'T warn't me was
+to blame. But if he onct caught sight of me, it would be short shrift at
+the end of the rope.</p>
+
+<p>"So Jim and me begins edging away, until we could get a gait on without
+being noticed; and get away we did, and into the woods where our own
+clothes were hid; made the change and was getting back to our own
+quarters, happy as larks to be on the home road; laughing to think how
+near we'd been to Gineral Stuart, without his knowing it; and patting
+ourselves on the back at how neatly we'd done the trick, when Jim looks
+up and says, 'Hey, Tom, look at them persimmons,' Sure enough, there was
+a tree full of the nicest ripe persimmons you ever see, right in
+our way.</p>
+
+<p>"Now our rations hadn't been any too full lately and we were pretty nigh
+hungry all the time.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tom,' he says, 'I uster be the best tree-climber in the county. I
+gotter get me some of those,'</p>
+
+<p>"'Aw, Jim,' I says, 'don't be a fool. The woods may be full of rebels.
+I'm full as hungry as you are, but I ain't going to stop for any
+persimmons.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Just a handful,' he says, 'and it won't take a minute. Will you wait?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, I won't,' I says, being so doggoned tired that I knew if I sat
+down I'd fall asleep. 'I'm for pushing back to camp, and if you ain't
+all kinds of a foolish boy, you'll do the same.'</p>
+
+<p>"So I went on, and Jim, he gives me one look, and then he gives the tree
+a squint, and sho! he was off and up it before you could say 'Jack
+Robinson.' Climb! well, rather. He was up it in no time, and eating and
+slinging the persimmons into his hat. It made me so mad that I just
+naturally turned my back and went right on.</p>
+
+<p>"Suddenly I hears a kind of whistle that was our signal&mdash;Jim's and
+mine&mdash;to look out for trouble. So I drops right down and rolls over into
+the bushes, and draws them over me, so I can't be seen. Then I lays
+quiet and listens.</p>
+
+<p>"I hears voices, and turning my head so softly that the bushes don't
+move, I peeps out and sees a party of rebs a-coming down the path.
+They'd seen Jim, just after he'd give me his warning, and they lays for
+him under the tree, and one of them rebs, who was just as handy at the
+climbing as Jim, goes up and brings him down, persimmons and all. The
+rebs laugh, and eat his persimmons and take him prisoner and march off;
+Jim allowing that he was so hungry that he'd stolen off by his lonesome
+to get something to eat. One of the men had heard the whistle Jim gave,
+but Jim explaining that he whistled in surprise at seeing them, they
+only beats up the bush a little, not coming near me.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="061.jpg (52K)" src="images/061.jpg" height="573" width="611">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>"They go off, with Jim never so much as looking my way, though they
+passed so clost to me that the lieutenant's heel scrunched my little
+finger. I had to take it without hollering or moving, for if I had
+they'd taken me along with Jim. And that's what tree climbing brings a
+man to."</p>
+
+<p>"What became of Jim?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Jim, he was kept a prisoner all through the war, so he never got no
+enjoyment out of his life, never seeing a bit of real fighting&mdash;just
+marching and drilling and prison. So that, as he said, he might just as
+well never 'a' run away,&mdash;seeing he had to bide a non-combatant, which
+is the same as Quaker, after all."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he didn't like it, did he?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No," Mr. Taylor said, laughing, "he didn't. And let this be a warning
+to you, young man. Don't you go up a tree for persimmons or cherries or
+other fruits whatsomever, agin the advice of your elders and betters."</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, Mr. Taylor," I said, "I never will."</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="04"></a><br><br>
+
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+ON THE TOWPATH
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>Our house is so nearly on the towpath, that the mules eat the
+honeysuckle from the fence, and as there is only a tiny flower-bed
+between the house and the fence, you can hear the voices, and the
+tramping of the mules, as plainly indoors as out.</p>
+
+<p>At night, when you wake up in the dark, you think they are coming in.
+That's at first. By and by you get so used to them that you don't
+think about it.</p>
+
+<p>One reason why we came down so early in the spring is that I'm not to
+be sent to school until the fall, because I'm not to use my eyes too
+much, until they get stronger. Measles made them a little weak. So I
+have one hour with Aunty May for reading and sums, and half an hour with
+Aunty Edith for French; and then I don't have to do anything else for
+the rest of the day, until nearly dark, when I water the flower-beds for
+both the aunties.</p>
+
+<p>But from eleven until four, except at lunch-time, I must not bust into
+the house and holler at Aunty May&mdash;for she is writing; and I must not
+run after and plague Aunty Edith, when she goes up the towpath&mdash;for
+she's painting.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor, being seventy-three, can be spoken to at any time, except
+when he's doing his baking. Then he doesn't want anything or anybody
+round his feet, he says. Just as if I was cats!</p>
+
+<p>This morning I'm writing about. I was out on the towpath, fishing for
+eels, so I could put one in the tub which stands by the pump to catch
+the overflow; because Aunty May is very much afraid of snakes and eels,
+and she squeals so funny when she sees them that it is what Mr. Taylor
+calls "a fair treat" to hear her.</p>
+
+<p>I thought if I got her good and scared with seeing one in the tub, she
+might be so mad that she'd not be able to write, and would chase me
+round the garden.</p>
+
+<p>It's too bad Aunty May's grown up. She likes to play as well as any boy
+I know, and she's good at it, too, if it wasn't for her writing. Uncle
+Burt used to complain of that writing, too, when he was home. He said it
+interfered a lot&mdash;when he wanted her to play with him.</p>
+
+<p>Anyway the eels didn't bite, but I thought maybe I'd get a sunfish, and
+that's nearly as good a scream-starter, if Aunty May doesn't expect it
+to be there.</p>
+
+<p>All at once, I felt my cap pushed right off, and I looked up and there
+was a boy, riding on the top of an old gray mule, that was one of two
+tired-looking mules, dragging a canal boat.</p>
+
+<p>There was nobody on the boat that I could see, 'cept one man asleep on
+the top.</p>
+
+<p>"Gimme my cap, boy," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, you and your fishin'," he says. "Git off the towpath."</p>
+
+<p>And I said: "You can't say that to me. We've got the right of way here,
+because I live in that house with the green door."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you do," says he. "Well, baby dear, go in and tell yer wimmin folks
+ye've lost your cap"; and he chucked my cap right into the canal!</p>
+
+<p>Well, I couldn't get it, without falling in, and there was the
+canal-boat coming along ready to run over it. So I took my fishing-rod
+and flicked it at him, and there&mdash;I had caught the eel after all! It
+struck him, all cold and slippery, and he yelled, and it hit the mule,
+and the mule ran away, dragging the other mule with it, right up the
+slope to Rabbit Run Bridge!</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="070.jpg (22K)" src="images/070.jpg" height="188" width="601">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>The boy had grabbed the fishing-rod, so that my rod and my eel went
+with them.</p>
+
+<p>My! but I was mad, but kind of excited, too, for a man came up from the
+inside of the canal boat and yelled, and the man on the deck woke up and
+yelled, and the boy was yelling!</p>
+
+<p>There was a farmer driving along the road and across the bridge and when
+he saw mules coming, lickity-split, where mules never come,&mdash;right up to
+the bridge,&mdash;he yelled too, and licked his horse to get out of the way.
+The boy, he licked the mules with my rod. He'd thrown my eel back into
+the water.</p>
+
+<p>He was as cool as could be, and by and by he got the mules calmed down,
+and one of the men from the boat jumped off and helped him and they got
+the ropes all straight again and started off. The boy never said a word,
+except when the man asked him what did it. Then he told him, "The mule
+didn't like the looks of that baby boy there on the canal bank." The man
+shook his fist at me, and I called, "Gimme my cap." And the boy said,
+"Wait till we come back"; and he made an awful face as they went away,
+turning round and riding backwards to do it.</p>
+
+<p>I knew then that he was the same boy that made a face at me when I was
+in the train.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I had to tell Aunty Edith, and she looked very severe, and gave
+me my second-best cap and said, "William, do be careful, this time." But
+I only told her that the boy threw my cap into the water. I didn't tell
+that he said he was coming back.</p>
+
+<p>But I talked to Mr. Taylor about it, and he agreed that when I saw the
+boy again, I'd have to have it out with him, and he'd stand referee to
+see that there was no unfair advantage took of me or him.</p>
+
+<p>"For," says he, "you can't be called baby darling free and often by them
+boat boys, and neither can you eel them boat boys and scare their mules.
+All things being equal, you ask him his intentions next time and come
+to some mew-tual feeling on the matter, which won't reach the ears of
+your Aunty Edith. The ears of your Aunty May," say she, "could be
+reached and enjyed by them fine, if took alone, and without t'other
+Aunty present."</p>
+
+<p>Well, every day I kept a watch-out for that boy, and for a whole week I
+didn't see him.</p>
+
+<p>One Monday, Aunty May asked Aunty Edith if I couldn't go down,&mdash;it was
+raining,&mdash;if I put on my raincoat and boots, with Mr. Taylor, when he
+went to the mail, and bring her some stamps and stamped envelopes. Aunty
+Edith said, "Oh, all right, May, but it seems to me you eat stamps.
+They disappear so fast." Aunty May laughed, and said,</p>
+
+<p>"Be-that-as-it-may," which is what she always says when she wants to
+stop discussing, "William goes."</p>
+
+<p>So I got ready, and Mr. Taylor and me started down. It's a mile away.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor doesn't like umbrellas, neither do I, so, as it was only
+misting, Aunty May said I needn't.</p>
+
+<p>Just as we got to Rabbit Run Bridge, who came along, with his mules, and
+the same canal boat, and the same man asleep, under an umbrella this
+time, but that BOY!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor says, that the et-i-ket of such things makes him leave me
+and go sit on the bridge while I had it out. So I went down and said to
+the boy, "Hey, you, where's my cap?" And he grinned and said, "I give it
+to your eel. He's a-wearing of it now, and it looks fine on him."</p>
+
+<p>That strikes me so funny that I began to laugh; then I remembered that
+wasn't what I wanted to do. So I says, "Come on down till I polish you
+up for what you did to my cap"; and he says, "I'll be down in a minute
+to fix you for what you done to my mule. I've gotter put him in trousers
+to-morrow, his legs is so damaged."</p>
+
+<p>Then I began to laugh again, at the thought of a mule in trousers. "Aw,
+come on down," I said. "You ain't got any trousers for him." "Have,
+too," he said; "I'm making them spare minutes out of Turkey red. And
+when I adds brass buttons and pockets I'll put 'em on, the next time he
+passes your house."</p>
+
+<p>I began to laugh again, and then he jumped down, and before I knew it
+hit me a punch on the nose. That made me so mad that I hit at him and it
+struck his leg, and he said, "Ouch," and jumped so that I looked at his
+leg, and saw it was black and blue already.</p>
+
+<p>"Who did that?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Never you mind, baby dear," he said: "come on. If my leg did get
+catched between the boat and the bank and ground agin a stone this
+morning, I can still fight an eel-catcher."</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="078.jpg (21K)" src="images/078.jpg" height="235" width="607">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>And he hopped up to me on one foot, and I saw he wasn't much bigger than
+me, maybe eleven or twelve, and he had all he could do to keep from
+crying because his leg hurt him so; but he was so quick that I just had
+to dodge to get out of the way.</p>
+
+<p>"Say," I said, after I'd gotten out of his reach, "I don't want to hit
+you when you're hurt. And anyway," I said, "I don't know that I care
+about fighting with anybody who can make eels wear caps and mules red
+trousers. Wait a minute and I'll get a clean rag and some witch-hazel
+for your leg."</p>
+
+<p>"No, you don't," he says; "I ain't going to be fussed over, but if you
+gotta pitcher-book, like the one I seen you reading one day, that, an'
+something to chew'll keep my mind off my leg, and when it's all right
+again, I'll come past and smash you into bait for eels."</p>
+
+<p>That didn't seem quite what I wanted, but I told Mr. Taylor the boy was
+hurt and I couldn't fight, and he said "Certainly not&mdash;agin
+reg-u-lations."</p>
+
+<p>Then he said he'd wait for me a minute, and I ran back home, because I
+knew I'd get there faster than any canal mule, and I bust into the room,
+and told Aunty May, and first she didn't like my busting in like that,
+and then she got interested. She gave me a picture-book and a piece of
+rag, and some witch-hazel in a bottle, and a big piece of cake. When I
+got out, the boy was just coming up to the fence, and Aunty May wanted
+to tie up his leg for him, but he wouldn't. So she explained to him
+that the stuff in the bottle and the rag was for his leg, and he said,
+"Yes, 'm, thanks," and then she went in the house quick, so's I could
+speak to him myself. I'd asked her to.</p>
+
+<p>He said, "Well, eel-catcher, this will help me some. And if I pass this
+way agin, I'll look you up."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, do," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Want yer book back?" he calls.</p>
+
+<p>"No," I said, "when you get through with it, give it to the eel."</p>
+
+<p>"No," says he, "he's not fond of reading, but I know an old mushrat
+that's fond of anything like print. I'll give it to him, so any time you
+see him reading it by moonlight, with his spectacles on, you'll know
+it's my friend."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, come back soon," I called, "and tell me more about it"; for he was
+getting slowly and slowly away from me.</p>
+
+<p>"I will," he shouted, "if I don't make a mistake and swallow the
+witch-hazel."</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="05"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+ON THE DELAWARE
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>I thought I'd never get tired of having a river at our back door, but
+one day I nearly hated the Delaware.</p>
+
+<p>This is how it happened: Aunty Edith had a rowboat with a place in the
+stern where you could fix a big sketching-umbrella, and go sketching
+without getting too sunburnt; and when I was very good, 'specially good,
+I could go with her.</p>
+
+<p>When I was just ordinary good, and Aunty Edith wasn't using the boat,
+Aunty May and I used to borrow it and play "Robinson Crusoe," and Aunty
+May made the funniest "Man Friday" you ever saw. She would pretend not
+to know any language but "glub-glub," and so I had to teach her the
+names of things and she would shake all her hair down and dance a
+war-dance, when I got her to understand. This was when we'd reached our
+Island. There was one across the river from us, and on a corner of it we
+used to picnic and play.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Turner's children all were girls, and they went to school, or had
+music-lessons, or something, so I only had them once in a while to play
+with, and then they always wanted to play fairy-tales, and make me the
+Prince. I hate Princes because they're always bothering about finding
+some Princess. I'd rather have been an Ogre or a Dwarf or a Bad Giant.
+They had some fun. But the girls always got their Indian Boy to be
+those. He was a big boy from the Carlisle Indian School, who came in the
+summer to help about the house and the grounds, and he was great fun. He
+showed me how to make bows and arrows, and taught me how to swim and
+things like that, and how to push off a canoe. But mostly Aunty May was
+the one I had to play with right on the spot, and just when you'd made
+up your mind that she was a grown-up and wouldn't do it, she'd begin
+some funny thing, and she was almost as good as a real boy.</p>
+
+<p>Well, Mr. Turner had a man visiting him, a painting-man, and he came
+down to see Aunty Edith, and they put their heads on one side and
+screwed up their eyes, and looked at paintings, and had tea, and talked
+about art so long that Aunty May and I couldn't be quiet any longer, but
+just had to go down into the garden and play Wild Men of Borneo. That
+means taking a beanpole and yelling and dancing and trying to see who
+can vault and jump the farthest with the pole, and when you win you
+say, "Glug-Glug."</p>
+
+<p>We were right in the middle of this, and Aunty May was a little
+red-faced, and her hair was kind of wild, when we heard somebody laugh,
+and there was the painter-man down by the river, laughing as hard as he
+could laugh; and Aunty Edith trying to look severe at Aunty May and not
+able to, on account of her looking so comical. She had a black smudge
+from the end of the beanpole, which had been in a bonfire, across her
+forehead. You see she had just jumped the farthest, and was hollering,
+"Glug-Glug."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May laughed pretty hard, too, and we all laughed then, and Aunty
+May went up to the house to turn into a clean-faced grown-up again, and
+Aunty Edith unlocked the boat and handed the big umbrella to the man and
+told him to use the boat as often and as long as he liked. He put his
+paint-box and sketch-block in, and got in himself, and I stood looking
+at him, wishing he'd ask me&mdash;when he did.</p>
+
+<p>"Want to come, young man?" he said, and I said, "Yes, I'll take my book
+and my fish-line and be very quiet. May I, Aunty Edith?"</p>
+
+<p>Aunty Edith said, kind of doubtful, "I'm not going, William. Maybe you'd
+better not."</p>
+
+<p>Well, I guess I looked awful sorry at that, for the man said, his name
+was Mr. Garry Louden,&mdash;"Oh, let him come, Edith, I'll look after him";
+and Aunty Edith said, "But you're such an absent-minded beggar, Garry,
+and this is Burt's most precious charge."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he'll be all right," Mr. Garry said; "I'll bring him home right as
+a trivet. Hop in, son."</p>
+
+<p>So I jumped in and waved good-bye to Aunty Edith, and we started up the
+river.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="089.jpg (60K)" src="images/089.jpg" height="447" width="614">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>"What's an absent-minded beggar?" I asked Mr. Garry, and he said, "Oh,
+a fellow like me, who's always got his head full of pictures and things,
+and forgets what he's at."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't really beg for anything, do you?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord, no," he said, "except when I'm out with talkative young sports,
+and then I beg them to keep quiet."</p>
+
+<p>So I took my fish-line and sat still as a mouse, while he looked up and
+down the river, and whistled to himself&mdash;when he got a good idea, I
+guess, for after he'd whistled some, he'd let the boat drift and make
+marks in his sketch-book. He was a nice man, but not used to little
+boys, I think, for he used awful big words, and didn't answer questions
+like Aunties and Uncles do.</p>
+
+<p>By and by I told him about the Island, and he said, "Right you are,
+young Soc-ra-tees," and we landed there, and he kept saying, "Ripping,"
+"Splendid," and things like that, and by and by he fished out some
+sandwiches and sweet chocolate from his pocket, and gave me some, and
+told me to stay there while he rowed around and explored farther up the
+side of the Island. I said, "All right," for with things to eat, and a
+nice brook, and a shady place, and a book, no boy need have any trouble
+finding things to do to keep himself amused. And I didn't.</p>
+
+<p>I made a ship, and loaded it, and I made a fort on the other side of the
+brook, and when the ship came near the fort, the men from the fort came
+out and had a fight and sank her. Then when I got tired of that I read
+my book, and I read all I wanted to, and still Mr. Garry didn't come
+back. I could hear voices on the river, and once in a while a canoe shot
+past, but none of them was Mr. Garry, or Aunty Edith's rowboat.</p>
+
+<p>By and by they stopped coming past and then I got up and went along the
+bank and looked for him. I could see, way across the river, a little
+white speck, shining through the trees, which I knew was our house.</p>
+
+<p>My! didn't I want to be there! I didn't have any matches, of course. I'm
+not allowed to carry them. I couldn't make a fire, or anything, though
+it began to get dusky, and still Mr. Garry didn't come.</p>
+
+<p>Then, suddenly, I remembered that he was an absent-minded beggar who
+forgot things, and maybe he'd forgot me. That made me feel awfully queer
+and lumpy inside me, and besides I was getting tired.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody lived on that Island, except maybe some ground-hogs and
+squirrels and snakes, and&mdash;it wasn't any place for a boy who didn't have
+any food or tent or fire.</p>
+
+<p>First thing I knew, when that struck me, I heard myself bawl&mdash;right out,
+"Oh, Aunty May&mdash;COME! Oh, Aunty May!" and then I was really frightened,
+for it sounded so loud, and so scared, and so babyish.</p>
+
+<p>I kept still for a minute, and swallowed hard and then I yelled, "Hey!
+Hey!" out loud, without crying&mdash;hoping somebody would hear me. I did it
+a great many times, but nobody answered. Then I remembered that the boys
+were always landing here and hollering and shouting in fun, and nobody
+would pay any attention to it.</p>
+
+<p>I tried to remember what Uncle Burt'd do if he was caught like this,
+and little like me. I thought maybe he'd take off his shirt and wave it,
+but then I remembered it'd be too dark to see. But anyway I guessed I'd
+better do something, so I took off my blouse, and put my sweater on, and
+tied my blouse to a tree, and it waved, quite fine, for there was a
+little breeze coming up. I tried rubbing sticks together for a light,
+but whoever made up that plan must have had stronger arms and hands than
+I had, for I rubbed till my arms ached so that I cried some, but I
+didn't get a single spark of light.</p>
+
+<p>By this time it was very dark, and I was so hoarse with hollering, and
+so aching in my arms with rubbing sticks, and my legs hurt so with
+running up and down trying to see a boat or something, that I just
+dumped myself down on the grass and cried&mdash;and&mdash;I guess I&mdash;fell asleep.
+For the next thing I knew I heard some one calling my name, kind of
+loud, and kind of scared, "Billy, Billy, darling, are you there?" It was
+Aunty May in a canoe. I tried to call to her, but I was so hoarse and
+tired, I just made a kind of noise in my throat.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="096.jpg (92K)" src="images/096.jpg" height="709" width="604">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>Then I was so afraid she'd paddle away that I let out the finest yell
+you ever heard, and Aunty May called out, "Hey, Robinson Crusoe. Here's
+your Man Friday"; and she slid the canoe up to the bank, and I fell in
+so stiff, and she hugged me so hard, that it's a wonder we didn't upset.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="097.jpg (15K)" src="images/097.jpg" height="213" width="581">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>Usually I don't like hugging, but this time it was all right.</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty May told me that she had begun to get worried and so had
+Aunty Edith, knowing that Mr. Garry was an absent-minded beggar. Aunty
+Edith had gone up to Mr. Turner's to find if he was home, but Aunty May
+had insisted on going out in the canoe, though Mr. Taylor didn't like
+her to alone, and Mr. Taylor had gone down the towpath, toward the
+village, looking for us. Well, wasn't Aunty May mad when she found out
+how long I'd been alone and how badly I'd wanted her. She just paddled
+as fast as she could, and all the time pretended that we were wild
+savages who would catch Mr. Garry and put him on a desert island, just
+to see how he'd like it.</p>
+
+<p>As we got nearer our house there were lights along the river-bank, and
+we called and a big boat came up to us, and in it was Mr. Garry, with a
+very white face, and Mr. Turner and Aunty Edith, and she was crying so
+hard that she couldn't see me at first.</p>
+
+<p>When Aunty May said, "Don't cry, Edith, he's here," and handed me over,
+she gave me such a hard squeeze that I couldn't speak for a minute.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Garry all the time kept saying, "Say, old chap, I'm sorry, but I am
+such an absent-minded beggar." Aunty May said, "Yes, but you'll never
+have a chance to get absent-minded with this boy again."</p>
+
+<p>He looked terribly sorry, and begged my pardon again, and I told him,
+"It was all right, only I didn't care to play Robinson Crusoe so
+truthfully&mdash;at night."</p>
+
+<p>They hurried me up to the house and gave me warm things to eat and
+drink, and let me stay up longer than usual.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May wouldn't let Mr. Garry touch me or help her at all, and even
+Aunty Edith wouldn't hardly speak to him, till they found I was all
+right and not hurt any, except my blouse, which was left on the Island.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Garry gave me his own silver pen-knife, before he went away, so that
+I would "nevermore defenseless be," as he said, and we were quite
+friendly. But after he had gone, I heard Aunty May say that "Never would
+that absent-minded beggar take her boy away again"; and Aunty Edith
+said, "He's Burt's boy, not yours."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May didn't say anything, so I called out, "I'm your boy, too,
+Aunty May. Uncle Burt said so, and I'll never, never go out with an
+absent-minded beggar on the river again."</p>
+
+<p>And I never have.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="06"></a><br><br>
+
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+GEORGE
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+<p>For a while, I did have a real boy to play with, right in the house. It
+happened this way:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Martha, who is Aunty Edith's colored washerwoman in the city, had a boy
+called George, who used to bring the clothes home. He was a little older
+than me&mdash;twelve years old&mdash;and he was always smiling, and his teeth were
+white and his eyes shiny. And when his mother wrote Aunty Edith that he
+was poorly, Aunty Edith had him sent down for a week&mdash;on trial, to stay
+in the attic above my room, and do the dishes for the Aunties, and run
+errands. He was to stay longer, if it was all right.</p>
+
+<p>I wish it had been, for George was awful funny. He was very obliging,
+too, and I liked him. So did Aunty May, for he remembered all the
+stories his teachers had told him in school, and he would tell them to
+Aunty May and me, when we sat down under the willow trees, and we
+just loved it.</p>
+
+<p>What Aunty Edith didn't love was what he did with the green paint. Aunty
+Edith had a lot left over in a pot after the kitchen was painted, and
+she thought it would be nice to paint the chairs and tables that we used
+out of doors.</p>
+
+<p>We used to have breakfast and lunch, and even dinner, out in the little
+grapevine-covered back porch, which had a cement floor, level with
+the ground.</p>
+
+<p>So just to keep George happy, Aunty Edith gave him that to do. He
+commenced it while Aunty May and I were doing lessons, and we could hear
+Aunty Edith explaining&mdash;Aunty Edith always does the explaining&mdash;and
+George all the time saying, "Yas, 'm, yas, 'm, Miss Edith." And by and
+by Aunty Edith came in and we could hear George whistling and singing.
+George did sing awful loud, and funny songs, so you'd have to stop
+and listen.</p>
+
+<p>This morning he kept singing something about a man named "Sylvester,"
+and he kept singing out the same thing over and over again, till Aunty
+May said, "Oh, dear, I can't hear myself speak. Edith, will you quiet
+the blackbird?" And Aunty Edith called to George not to sing so loud,
+and he said, "Yas, 'm, Miss Edith"; and the next minute it began louder
+than ever.</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty Edith went downstairs to tell him to take his work farther
+away from the house.</p>
+
+<p>She hadn't been gone a minute till we heard her say, "Oh, good
+gracious, what shall I do? Come here, George, and see if you can take it
+off." George kept saying, "Yas, 'm, Miss Edith, yas, 'm"; and Aunty
+Edith was being so very spluttery, that Aunty May and I leaned out the
+window, and then we jerked our heads in and Aunty May said, "Don't you
+dare laugh out loud, Billy."</p>
+
+<p>Then we looked again, and jerked our heads inside the window every time
+we felt the laugh coming on, which was pretty often, for you see George
+had put the paint-can, a small one, right on the doorsill, and Aunty
+Edith had put her foot in it, and it had caught.</p>
+
+<p>There was Aunty Edith holding on to the grape-arbor while George pulled
+at the can, and the paint flowing around pretty free. Well, George
+couldn't pull it off, and finally he had to take a can-opener and cut
+Aunty Edith's foot out, just as though she were salmon, or something.</p>
+
+<p>When we got to that part, Aunty May and I forgot ourselves and laughed
+out loud, and then Aunty Edith looked at us, and looked at her foot, and
+at George's black face all daubed with green paint, and his clothes,
+too, as he carefully cut her out, and she laughed, too. But it spoiled
+her shoe, and it took several days to wear the green off George.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="109.jpg (94K)" src="images/109.jpg" height="707" width="617">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>That was the too bad part of it. George was so fine for singing and
+telling stories and he just couldn't remember to do anything else.</p>
+
+<p>When he went for the mail and the groceries, unless I went with him,
+he'd forget everything, and come home just as smiling as ever.</p>
+
+<p>And he was brave, too, for he used to chase the village boys when they
+ran after him and called names, and besides that he and I built a lovely
+Filipino house up in the biggest willow tree, and had lots of fun,
+escaping from two boys at the farm across Rabbit Run Bridge, who chased
+us and tried to catch us. We got up in our tree-house and shot at them
+with bows and arrows, and they couldn't reach us. I liked having George.
+If he'd only stayed funny, without getting dangerous. But George got
+dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>It was this way: George and the two boys on the farm, Samuel and Charlie
+Crosscup, were having a talk on the middle of Rabbit Run Bridge, about
+fire engines. Samuel said the East Penniwell fire engine could get up
+steam and run to a fire, with Sol Achers's old white horse hitched to
+her, quicker than a New York fire engine could. George and me said it
+couldn't. He said, "It could, because why? The East Penniwell horse and
+engine were used to the roads and the New York horses and engine would
+have to be showed."</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't think of anything to say, but George said, "No, sah. Dat
+ain't noways so. For de New York fire engines and horses is so trained
+that they goes over any road and anywhere according as the Fire Chief
+he directs, and it doan mek no difference whether they've been up
+dataways befo' or not They jist naturally eats up all distances."</p>
+
+<p>Well, that made the Crosscup boys mad, and they kept telling all about
+the East Penniwell engine house, and my! it must be a lovely place, if
+all they say is true. George he told them then about the New York engine
+houses, and my! they must be splendid if George really knew. He said he
+did. He said his mother's cousin washed for three firemen and she'd
+oughter know. I guess she ought to, but George did remember so much
+about those things, and forgot so quick about others, that sometimes I
+really didn't know what to be sure about.</p>
+
+<p>Well, it began to rain, and George was going to take me home, when one
+of the boys said, "Aw, don't go home, yet. Come on into the old barn and
+let's play knife until the rain stops."</p>
+
+<p>I guessed we'd ought to go home right away with the bundles and change,
+but George said, "On no account can I git you wet. Miss Edith wouldn't
+stand for that nohow." So I went with him. And we played knife on the
+floor. It was a big empty barn. That is there weren't any cattle in
+it, just hay.</p>
+
+<p>It stood a long way from the house, and on a little hill. By and by the
+thunder and lightning got quieter, but the rain made it dark, and I
+said, "Oh, George, let's go. It's too dark to see in here anyway." But
+George wouldn't go until he had finished his game, and when the other
+boys said, "It's too dark to play knife any more," George said, "Let's
+play robber's cave. I got something in my pocket will make it light." He
+took out a box of matches and a candle-end, and said, "Let's stick it up
+yere, and then play robbers. This'll be the den"; and he put the candle
+into the neck of an old bottle.</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Oh, George, Aunty Edith doesn't let you have matches." George
+said, "Look yere, these matches was give me to-day, and this ain't Miss
+Edith's barn. If these young gemmun is willing to play in their father's
+barn with a candle, you ain't got no call to say anything, has yer?" And
+the boys said, "Aw, it's all right. Come on. William ain't yer boss.
+He's nothing but a kid anyway."</p>
+
+<p>Well, that made me mad, and I wouldn't play robbers with them, and I
+slid down to the barn floor, and went to the door, and looked out to see
+if it was getting any lighter. But George, he put on a terrible look,
+and began to say, "I'm the King of the Robbers, who's this yere
+a-peekin' and a-spyin' in my den?" Then Sam called out, "It's me. I'm
+the King of the Pirates, and I've come to take ye bound hand and foot to
+my ship. Stand by, men!" "Men" was his brother Charlie, and they made a
+dash at George. He danced and flew at them with a stick and called to me
+to come and be his man and help him fight 'em off.</p>
+
+<p>I was just running to do it, for it looked like pretty good fun, and the
+rain was pretty hard, when somebody knocked the bottle with their foot,
+and over it went into a heap of straw, and before the boys could race
+back and put it out, the hay was on fire.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, dear! I hope I never see anything like that again. We boys were so
+scared at first, we couldn't move, and then, with a yell, the Crosscup
+boys ran to tell their father, with me and George after them.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="117.jpg (95K)" src="images/117.jpg" height="697" width="610">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>We only ran a little ways toward the other barn, and then we found an
+old bucket, and George yelled to me to get a bit of rope, and we
+lowered it into the canal and ran back to throw the water on the fire.
+But it was too little, and the fire was too big.</p>
+
+<p>Farmer Crosscup came running with his hired man, and we all worked with
+hose and everything, but the barn burned, all but the north wall, and so
+fast that though George and I ran and ran for help, and though Mrs.
+Crosscup telephoned to town for engines, it was through burning before
+they got up.</p>
+
+<p>After this, George had to go. Aunty Edith got him sent to a place for
+colored children, where he could have fresh air, and some one to look
+after him, but he had to go away from East Penniwell. The farmers said
+he was "dangerous." I was sorry and Aunty May was sorry, too, but it
+couldn't be helped. George was sorry, too, but at the last minute he
+leaned from the wagon and whispered to me, "Anyway, I done proved dat
+dere old fire engine wuz too slow."</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="07"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+LEFT ALONE
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>After George went away, it seemed very quiet on the towpath. It grew
+warmer and warmer, and the cherries got ripe and were picked, and I
+climbed trees and played more, and had fewer lessons, because it was so
+hot, and the little Turner girls came down to play with me sometimes,
+because school was out. I went up and played with them sometimes, but
+not often unless the launch came down, because it was a long way to walk
+in the hot sun.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor and me used to sit on his back porch, where it was cool, and
+tell one another stories.</p>
+
+<p>He told me some fine ones about the war, and when he was a boy. More
+things seemed to happen to boys then than they do now, and I told him
+so, and he laughed and said that was only because he was seventy-three
+and remembered about them. He said that when I was seventy-three, "some
+little feller'll think the same thing when you tell him about the fust
+airship and things like that."</p>
+
+<p>I laughed at me ever being seventy-three, but I suppose I will some day.
+ The only fun we had before the letter came was early that very
+morning, when Aunty May was sitting reading some clippings her editor
+had sent her, with her back to the little cupboard I told about, that
+was made out of an old window.</p>
+
+<p>I came down the stairs from my room and stood looking at her, wishing
+she'd look up so I could interrupt. But she didn't and I stood there
+just as quiet for a minute, and wondering why I suddenly thought about
+the pictures in my book on India. Then I heard a little rustle, and I
+knew. Just above Aunty May's head, uncoiling itself from round a pile of
+plates in the corner, was a big black and yellow snake.</p>
+
+<p>I called out, "Hey, Aunty May! Quick! There's a snake behind you!" And
+she looked up and said, "Billy, I'm not in the mood for playing."</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="123.jpg (33K)" src="images/123.jpg" height="311" width="617">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I said, "Oh, Aunty, I'm not fooling. Quick, or it will land on your
+head"; and she turned round and looked right at the snake and it looked
+at her, and Aunty May gave a scream, and jumped away, and the snake
+dropped down on the floor and commenced to wiggle behind the couch.</p>
+
+<p>Then I tell you there was some fun. Aunty Edith came down just as Aunty
+May got a hatchet and made a chop at the snake, but she never touched
+it, and Aunty Edith wouldn't let me go behind the couch after him.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor, who was coming along the towpath from the village (he
+brought us the mail every morning), came down and asked, "What's up,
+young feller? I heerd the wimminfolk screeching. What ye been up to?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him I hadn't done anything. It was a snake. Then Mr. Taylor and
+me pulled out the couch, but he wasn't there. We poked sticks behind the
+pantry, but couldn't find him.</p>
+
+<p>There was a big hole in the cement there, and Mr. Taylor said, "Sho, the
+poor snake was more frightened than ye was, Miss May, and it's likely
+he's down the river-bank by now." Then Aunty May and me told him how big
+it was and what color, and he said, "I knew a couple of wimmin kept a
+milk snake in their dairy for a pet. Maybe this feller wants pettin'."
+Aunty May said he'd never get it from her, and she took a piece of tin
+and a hammer and tacks and went to close up the hole, but Mr. Taylor
+said, "Wait a minute, Miss May"; and he whispered to her, "Stand by a
+minute. There's a letter here from the War Department to Miss Edith, and
+I'm doubting it's being the best of news."</p>
+
+<p>Well, poor Aunty May turned so white and sat down so quickly with her
+face in her hands, that Aunty Edith, who came in the room just then from
+putting the axe away in the shed, said, "Why, May, did the snake
+frighten you as much as that?" Aunty May didn't answer. She just
+clutched Mr. Taylor and said, "Where is it?" Then Mr. Taylor looked at
+her and at Aunt Edith, and said "Sho" once or twice, and then he pulled
+out of his pocket a long envelope, and put it in Aunty Edith's hands.</p>
+
+<p>She sat down very quick, and tried to open it, but her hands shook so
+that she couldn't. Aunty May took it from her and tore it open, and they
+both leaned over and read it. Then Aunty Edith cried so for a while she
+couldn't tell us anything, but at last Aunty May took my hand and we
+went out on the porch, and she told us that Uncle Burt had got hurt in a
+little fight&mdash;not a real battle, a "skirmish" with some natives, and he
+was to be sent home on sick-leave.</p>
+
+<p>Then she and Mr. Taylor talked about what the letter said, and he shook
+his head, and told her it looked like a bad job to him. Aunty May told
+me to go over and sit with Mr. Taylor while she talked with Aunty Edith.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor and me sat there, not very happy, because I was thinking of
+Uncle Burt, and somehow I couldn't make him sick or hurt, he was so big
+and so very strong.</p>
+
+<p>I said that to Mr. Taylor, and he said, "Them there guns don't care how
+big and strong a man is, they picks 'em down. They're cruel things,
+boy, firearms is. Don't you ever go a-monkeying with them, mind that." I
+said I wouldn't.</p>
+
+<p>We sat there so quiet that we could hear the Aunties talking, and Aunty
+Edith crying every now and then, in the house. Aunty May wasn't crying,
+but she seemed quite angry about something. I could hear her say, "You
+shall take it, Edith, and you shall do as I say, or I'll throw it into
+the canal." Then again, "What is the money to me if&mdash;" And then Aunty
+May began to cry and Aunty Edith began to be soothing to her, and the
+more she soothed the harder Aunty May cried, till I heard Aunty Edith
+say, "All right, May, dear. I promise I'll do it, if you'll only
+stop crying."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May stopped right away, and presently she came out, and her eyes
+were red, but her mouth was smiling, like it always does when she gets
+what she wants.</p>
+
+<p>She came and sat down by Mr. Taylor and me, while Aunty Edith went up to
+write out telegrams and letters, and told me that Aunty Edith was going
+out to bring Uncle Burt home, and that she was going with her as far as
+San Francisco; that while they were gone I was to stay at the Turners',
+for she thought they would look after me for her, and would I be a good
+boy until she came back?</p>
+
+<p>I promised I would, but, oh, I felt awful, and I begged her to take me
+with her, but she said she couldn't because Aunty Edith was so tired and
+sorry, and she would have to look after her all the time, and I must
+stay at home and be good and wait. She would come back for me, in a
+little while, and we'd wait together for Uncle Burt.</p>
+
+<p>So as long as Mr. Taylor sat there looking at me with his winky blue
+eyes, I didn't dare howl or anything, but my! I did feel like it. So I
+just said, "Yes, 'm, Aunty May, I'll be good." She kissed me right before
+him. It was a little mean of her, but he looked the other way and said,
+"Shoo, Teddy."</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty May said, "There isn't a minute to be lost, Billy, so come in
+and pack your box, while I go across to the farmhouse and call the
+Turners up on the 'phone."</p>
+
+<p>I went into the house, where Aunty Edith was very quiet and packing very
+hard; and I packed the big suitcase with some of my things, for Aunty
+Edith said I could always get in the house and get the rest of them
+any time.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Aunty May came back and said, "It's all right. They are
+dears. They are coming down for Billy, right away, and they'll take you
+and me to the train. Do you think you can do it, Edith? We've just an
+hour." Aunty Edith said, "Of course I can."</p>
+
+<p>And then you never saw such a packing time. It made me so dizzy watching
+those two Aunties fly around, that presently I went outside, and sat
+with Mr. Taylor, who was on the front step, "Waiting orders," he said;
+and didn't we just get them, though!</p>
+
+<p>When Aunty Edith called, "Billy, the tags, please," didn't I just run!
+and when Aunty May said, "Mr. Taylor, will you please help me with this
+window?" he jumped around as though he was seventeen instead of
+seventy-three.</p>
+
+<p>By and by the launch came down, but a little late, so it was decided
+that I was to wait with Mr. Taylor until they took the Aunties to the
+train; and they'd get me on the way back.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="134.jpg (29K)" src="images/134.jpg" height="220" width="610">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>After a few minutes the trunks were in the launch, the house was locked
+and Mr. Taylor had the key. The Aunties kissed me good-bye, and Aunty
+Edith promised to tell Uncle Burt I was a good boy, and Aunty May said
+she'd come back for me as soon as she could&mdash;and they shook hands with
+Mr. Taylor and he said, "Sho, I gotter feed them Teddy-cats," and went
+down the steps. Then they got into the launch and went off, and I waved
+at them as long as I could see them; and then I sat down by the canal
+bank and felt as if I couldn't bear it, for it wasn't till then I
+believed they had really gone away and left me all alone.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="135.jpg (79K)" src="images/135.jpg" height="648" width="599">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="08"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+AT TURNERS'
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>Up at Turners' it was nice. They had a big stone house with lots of room
+in it, and the girls, Charlotte and Grace, were nice to play with, and
+Mrs. Turner always seemed to know what a boy wanted. She did pat me on
+the head and call me "pigeon" sometimes, but then, she did that to Mr.
+Turner, too, so I didn't mind.</p>
+
+<p>At first I thought it was going to be so nice, that I'd forget about
+everything till Aunty May came back, but by and by, though they were
+nice as nice can be, I began to miss Aunty May till it hurt like a
+toothache.</p>
+
+<p>I missed Aunty Edith, too, but Aunty May and I had played most together,
+and next to Uncle Burt, I loved her best.</p>
+
+<p>The Turners had an old ruined mill on their grounds, and we children
+used to hang our bathing-suits in there and use it to dress in when we
+went swimming in the creek.</p>
+
+<p>It was very old, and all the machinery, the wheels and things, were made
+of wood. Up in the top there was a nice big loft, with a wide window,
+where nobody ever went. When I found this out, I took a broom up there
+and swept it by the window, and got an old chair, and one of the old
+barrels for a table, and when I didn't want to play with Charlotte and
+Grace, or when it rained, I used to get a piece of bread or cake, or an
+apple, and go off there, all by myself. Sometimes I read, sometimes I
+wrote books and drew, and sometimes I just sat and thought about Uncle
+Burt and Aunty May, and Aunty Edith. And it got nearer and nearer the
+time for Aunty May to come back.</p>
+
+<p>The very day that she was to come home, I was doing this, thinking
+about her, I mean&mdash;a little harder than usual, because Mr. Turner had
+told me at breakfast that after all Aunty May wouldn't be back till
+to-morrow, when I heard somebody else breathing in the room. I turned
+around, and there was Henry, the Indian boy from the Carlisle School,
+sitting crouched on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>He was a great big boy, fifteen or sixteen, and he helped with the work
+in the house in the summertime. Henry was always nice to us children,
+and we liked him a great deal.</p>
+
+<p>I said "Hullo, Henry, what are you doing in my library?" And he showed
+all his teeth at me and said he was doing the same that I was doing
+there; he had come up to be sad and alone. Then I told him all about
+Aunty May, and he was sorry for me, and he told me about the school, and
+the teachers, and football, and his people, and I was sorry for him.</p>
+
+<p>Then he told me that when he got very sorry about everything, sometimes,
+he just dressed himself and got out of his bed at night and walked and
+walked until he got tired, and then came back and slept.</p>
+
+<p>He told me how lovely everything looked in the country, early in the
+morning, and I told him I'd like to do that, too, some morning, but how
+did he get up without waking people? Then he showed me how he could move
+in his stocking feet and no one could hear him. And it was true. If I
+sat with my back to Henry I would still think he was sitting back of me,
+when he was over by the door, really. So I practiced that, too. "Playing
+Indian," he called it; and he promised next time he had that feeling,
+he'd throw some gravel at my window, and I could come down.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="141.jpg (28K)" src="images/141.jpg" height="306" width="456">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I asked him how soon he thought it'd be, and he looked at me very long,
+and then, just as somebody called, "Henry, where are you? Come and take
+the canoe out," he leaned down and whispered in my ear, "To-night,
+be ready."</p>
+
+<p>Well, I could hardly eat my supper for thinking of it, and I went to bed
+so quickly and quietly that Mrs. Turner called me "pigeon" and patted my
+head, because the little girls didn't want to go and were a
+little noisy.</p>
+
+<p>After I got into bed and was just falling asleep, I did just for a
+minute think I should have asked Mrs. Turner if I could go, but
+honestly I never thought of that till then, because Aunty May wasn't
+there. I would have thought of telling her. Anyway Henry had told me not
+to tell, and I didn't know whether he meant just the children or not.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I stayed awake a long time, and got up softly and dressed again,
+and then I stayed asleep it seemed to me just a teeny while, when a bit
+of grass and gravel hit me on the nose.</p>
+
+<p>I woke up and more came flying through my open window, so I got up
+softly and kneeled on my bed, and there was Henry down on the ground,
+looking up at me.</p>
+
+<p>When he saw me he put his finger to his lips, and sent a big piece of
+clothes-rope flying through the window on to the bed, all without
+a word.</p>
+
+<p>Then he shaped with his mouth to use that and not the stairs, for the
+stairs were creaky.</p>
+
+<p>So I put the noose at the end over my bed-post and held on tight, and
+slid down, without a bit of noise, to the ground, where Henry caught me.</p>
+
+<p>I came down so fast it hurt my hands, but Henry washed them with water,
+at the well, and tied them up, all without speaking, and we went softly
+out of the yard, not toward the towpath, but up the long road over
+the hills.</p>
+
+<p>It was very early morning, about three o'clock, and everything looked
+lovely.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="145.jpg (46K)" src="images/145.jpg" height="444" width="519">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>When we got far away from the house, I asked Henry if he wasn't hungry,
+and he shook his head, no, but gave me a Uneeda biscuit out of a box,
+and I ate three or four, and all the time he was walking on in the nice
+soft light, without saying anything.</p>
+
+<p>Presently we got to the top of a hill, and Henry stood still, and so did
+I. There was the sun coming up and making all sorts of lovely colors
+on the sky.</p>
+
+<p>When we looked at it a little while, Henry said, "How does the little,
+lonely boy like walking in the morning?" and I said, "Fine."</p>
+
+<p>We walked on, and sometimes Henry didn't say anything, and sometimes he
+whistled, and sometimes he talked to me about Carlisle and football,
+and out-of-doors and things like that, and I had a lovely time and
+didn't notice how far away we were getting.</p>
+
+<p>At last the sun came up all the way, and I said, "Oh, Henry, we'd better
+get back now, for Mrs. Turner will miss us and not know where we are."</p>
+
+<p>But Henry threw himself flat on the grass,&mdash;we had sat down to rest a
+minute because I was tired, and didn't say anything at all for a
+long time.</p>
+
+<p>Then he lifted his head and his white teeth showed, and his eyes smiled
+at me, and he said quite softly, "I am not going back."</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how queer I felt when he said those words. Maybe it was as Aunty
+May said, because I hadn't enough breakfast in my insides, but
+everything went round like a clock for a minute, the sky, the trees, and
+the strange road, and the strange houses, and then I said in a funny
+voice, "Oh, Henry, you don't mean that."</p>
+
+<p>He said, "Yes, I am tired of everything there"; and he pointed down the
+road we had come along. "I am going back to my own people; back to
+the school."</p>
+
+<p>Then he offered to take me with him, and to carry me part of the way, as
+I was little and got tired too easily to keep up with him. But though
+he was kind, and I wanted very much to go with him, and not be left
+alone, I couldn't, because I remembered this was the day Aunty May was
+coming home; and now, what would she and the Turners think of me!</p>
+
+<p>I was so sorry that I was pretty near crying, except that the Indian boy
+was looking at me with his bright eyes, and I remembered that Indians do
+not cry, and would think me a poor kind of a boy if I did.</p>
+
+<p>So I just shook my head, and told him I must go back and meet Aunty May.
+He didn't like this, until I had promised him that I would only say he'd
+left me and had gone on to Carlisle, and I would not say where he'd
+left me, so that he'd get a fair start. But I didn't like to say even
+that for fear I'd have to tell what wasn't so, until he told me it was
+all right, because I didn't know where we were, and he wouldn't tell me.</p>
+
+<p>He told me he liked me very much and was sorry I wouldn't go with him,
+and he divided the crackers and told me to sit still and not look until
+I had counted 100. I did, and when I'd finished there wasn't any Henry
+to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>I ate a cracker, and started back down the road again, and now everybody
+was up and I met men on the roads and dogs barked at me, and oh, how
+long the road seemed!</p>
+
+<p>I went on and on till I thought I should fall down, and I was so thirsty
+I didn't know what to do.</p>
+
+<p>By and by, I came to a place where there was a toll-gate, and then I
+knew I was lost, for we hadn't passed any on the road coming up, and
+besides I hadn't any money.</p>
+
+<p>So I stood still and tried to think, but I felt hot and tired and my
+head went round a little. Then I thought I'd go to the back door of the
+tollhouse, and then maybe some one would tell me how to go and they
+wouldn't have to feel so badly about telling me I couldn't get through
+without any money. So I went round to the back yard and there was
+nobody in it.</p>
+
+<p>Then I went up to the kitchen door and knocked and nobody came, but I
+heard a little voice at the kitchen window say, "Hey, boy, what do
+you want?"</p>
+
+<p>I looked and there was a little boy, just about seven or eight, sitting
+in a chair by the window, and I came up to it, and called to him&mdash;"I
+want to know the road to East Penniwell, and I want a drink of water."</p>
+
+<p>At first he just shook his head, and then he opened the window, and
+said, "Hurry up. We got diphtheria here and nobody's allowed to speak
+to me. That's why the tollhouse is shut up. Ain't you 'fraid?"</p>
+
+<p>I said, "I don't know what it is, and I'm awfully hungry and thirsty and
+I want to know the road to East Penniwell."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said, "poor boy"; and handed me out a glass of milk and a
+piece of bread, and I was drinking the milk, when I heard some one yell
+at me. It was a man running up to the house, and the boy grabbed the cup
+away and said, "Here comes Pop. You'd better leg it." I ran as fast as I
+could out the gate and down the road he told me to take. The man didn't
+chase me far, and I didn't hear what he said, his dog barked so. But I
+didn't feel quite so tired, though I ached a lot still, and my feet were
+awful wet, through running right through a brook when the man called
+at me.</p>
+
+<p>I went right on. Sometimes I lay down under a tree, sometimes I sat down
+by the road.</p>
+
+<p>I don't see why a road that seems all right when you're going up it,
+seems so terrible when you are going down. But maybe it's because I made
+wrong turnings, and always when the men asked me if I'd ride with them a
+little ways, I said, "No," because I would have to tell them I belonged
+at Turners', and they might ask me about Henry, the Indian boy.</p>
+
+<p>Last I took a turning that led me farther and farther down a road I
+never remember seeing before and there were no cross-road places; no
+farmhouses, and no man came along on a wagon. I just had to keep on,
+feeling sicker and sicker, till, just as I made a short turn, I came out
+on a road that led to Crosscup's farm and Rabbit Run Bridge!</p>
+
+<p>My, wasn't I glad. But I wasn't going to Crosscup's house, not much! I
+knew what I'd do now. I'd get Mr. Taylor, and tell him, just as fast
+as I could.</p>
+
+<p>That wasn't very fast, because my feet had needles in them, and
+dragged, but by and by I got there, and knocked at the door. Mr. Taylor
+opened it, with all the cats around him. I just began to speak, and say,
+"Good-morning, Mr. Taylor," when everything got kind of black and hazy,
+and I didn't remember any more.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="09"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+THE WHITE TENT
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="157.jpg (22K)" src="images/157.jpg" height="367" width="475">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I didn't remember anything, until I woke up and found myself lying on
+the porch, and Mr. Taylor bending over me with a glass of water in his
+hand, all the Teddy-cats purring at me, and my head on somebody's lap.
+Mr. Taylor was saying, "Sho, I guess he's coming to, and ye'd better not
+let him see ye, jist at first"; but I turned quick before she could
+move, and grabbed her and said, "Oh, Aunty May."</p>
+
+<p>I thought I'd shouted it, but it sounded just like a squeak.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May didn't care. She just lifted me up in her arms and held me
+tight, and said, "Oh, Billy, how could you run away from me?"</p>
+
+<p>It took me the longest while explaining to her and to Mr. Turner and to
+Mr. Taylor, who didn't say anything but "Sho" and shoo the cats, and
+never looked at the others. But I knew he'd hear every word and remember
+it, if I didn't, so I told them exactly what happened. How sorry Henry
+was to go away, but that he had to, and that I didn't know where the
+place was that we'd parted at, and how I thought he was coming back when
+we started.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Turner said it was all right, that Henry was an honest, industrious
+boy, but he had fits of homesickness, though they had never known about
+his getting up early and walking.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May forgave me, and Mr. and Mrs. Turner forgave me too.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Turner was in the launch, and was just telling me to jump in and
+come up with Aunty May to dinner, when Mr. Taylor, who had been
+listening and not saying anything, said, "I hope that wasn't the Lateeka
+Toll-House ye stopped at, young man. I heerd say there was so much
+diphtheria and scarlet fever there that they hev closed the tollhouse."</p>
+
+<p>Then I remembered what the boy had said, and I had to say it to Aunty
+May, and Aunty held me very tightly for a minute, and said to Mrs.
+Turner, "No: it wouldn't be safe for the other children. I'll keep
+William down here, until we see if it develops."</p>
+
+<p>Then both the ladies nodded to each other very sadly, but Mr. Turner
+said, "Oh, he's a young husky. He'll be all right"; and they went away.</p>
+
+<p>But I did develop. So much, that Aunty May had a sign put on the house,
+and nobody came near us for weeks and weeks but the nurse and the
+doctor, and Mr. Taylor, who used to hand things over the fence. And oh,
+how tired I got of being in bed, and being sick. Then when I got a
+little better, Aunty May and the doctor had a big tent put up in the
+woods near us, and the nurse went away, and Aunty May and I lived in the
+tent together, and I started to get better and write this book.</p>
+
+<p>First, just a little at a time, and then by and by a good deal each day,
+and all the time Aunty May stayed with me, and never said I was naughty
+or anything. Just called me "Billy-boy" and spelled all the big words,
+and took care of me like I was a baby, because I was so weak.</p>
+
+<p>One day, when I had sat up all day, dressed, I thought Aunty May looked
+kind of excited, and I saw a letter sticking out of her pocket, and I
+asked her if Aunty Edith was coming home, and she said, "Yes, very
+soon." She smiled so that I knew it must be something nice, so I clapped
+my hands and said, "Then Uncle Burt's all well again, too." For every
+time while I was sick, when I asked about Uncle Burt, Aunty May would
+say, "He's much better, but we mustn't talk." I had to be patient and
+wait then, but this day I said, "Oh. Aunty May, he is really better,
+isn't he?"</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty May laid down her letter and came and sat down by me and
+said, "Billy, how would you like to hear about Uncle Burt to-day?" and I
+told her, "I'd like to." Aunty May told me then that Uncle Burt had been
+shot very badly in the leg, and that he had a fever beside, and had
+been so ill that they thought he would die, but that Aunty Edith had
+gone out there and taken such good care of him that he was better, and
+was coming back with Aunty Edith. I asked for how long, and Aunty May
+got a little sad and said, "That's the hard part of it for Uncle Burt,
+Billy. He won't ever be able to go back to the army again. His leg is so
+badly hurt that he will always be a little lame."</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty May burst out crying, and so did I, for it seemed hard that
+big, splendid Uncle Burt should be lame. By and by Aunty told me that
+he had got the hurt when he turned back to help one of his men who had
+been shot; that even though he was hurt himself, he brought the soldier
+back to camp; so I ought to be proud of him.</p>
+
+<p>But I was anyway, I told her. I couldn't be any more than I am. I knew
+Uncle Burt would do a thing like that. I just expected it of him. But
+I'd like to kill the man who hurt his leg.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May told me not to say that, for the poor thing had been killed,
+and she said, "War is a horrible thing," And I said, "Yes, 'm, but it
+wasn't a real war, only a skirmish"; and Aunty May said, "It was real
+enough for that poor wretch and for Burt."</p>
+
+<p>I said, "But Uncle Burt'll find something else to do, some other way to
+be splendid, won't he?" And Aunty May just nodded her head, and we
+didn't say anything more for a long time and I lay still thinking about
+Uncle Burt and wondering how it would seem to be him, and lame. I said,
+"Will he use a crutch?" but Aunty May didn't know. She hoped not. And
+now, would I please get well, and be ready for her to hand me over whole
+to Uncle Burt.</p>
+
+<p>I said I would, but she'd have to be handed over too, for Uncle Burt
+told me to take care of her for him.</p>
+
+<p>I got better, and so did Aunty May. As fast as I grew better, she got
+more cheerful, and we used to have lots of fun. But all the time we
+stayed in the tent, and never went to the house. I used to hear
+hammerings and things, but I never saw anything, because I wasn't
+allowed to walk yet on account of the anti-toxin. I don't know whether
+that word is spelled right, but I don't like to ask Aunty May, it always
+makes her pale when I say the word.</p>
+
+<p>One day, Aunty May brought a boy down the path with her. A mule boy. I
+heard the mules waiting for him outside, and it was the "cap and eel"
+boy, and he said, "How are you, young feller? Heerd you was sick!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who told you?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"The Mushrat," he said. "He came a-whooping and a-running up the canal
+one night, an' hollered to me in passing that he wasn't going to bring
+no pitcher-books back to no diphtheria sore-throaters. Kina cowardly
+fellers, them mush-rats, so I brung it myself. Say, when ye going to get
+up and paste me?"</p>
+
+<p>"When you put those turkey-red trousers on your mule," I said.</p>
+
+<p>And then we both laughed, and Aunty May give him another picture-book,
+and some fruit, and asked him to come again, and he promised, and I lay
+back and heard his mule bells jingling up the path. It seemed so nice
+and peaceful, and everybody was so kind to me, that I felt lumpy inside,
+especially when I thought of Uncle Burt coming.</p>
+
+<p>But would he be angry with me for bringing germs to his house, and right
+close to Aunty May? I asked Aunty May what she thought, and she said
+Uncle Burt would agree with her that I really couldn't help it, and that
+he wouldn't blame me, especially if she handed me over all right.</p>
+
+<p>So we went to work on jellies and things and tried to get well, as fast
+as anything before he came.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon Aunty May said to me, "Billy, I think you're strong enough
+to go back to the house now. We've got rid of all the germs and the
+sickness in this nice big white tent, and now, my little soldier, we'll
+go back to barracks and wait for our Commanding Officer."</p>
+
+<p>We packed up my books and papers and went down the path to the house,
+but it wasn't the same house any more.</p>
+
+<p>It was bigger, and all around it ran a wide piazza, and on it were big
+wicker chairs, and Aunty May put me in one of them, and asked me how I
+liked it. And I said it was lovely, and it was. Inside there were more
+rooms than before and a bathroom with a big shiny tub and running water,
+and while it was a country house still, it was much more like a
+city house.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May said, "Do you think Aunty Edith will like it?" and I said yes;
+then she said, "Do you think a sick soldier would like to get well on
+this piazza?" and I said I knew he would. It was the finest ever.</p>
+
+<p>We took hands and went around and looked at everything, and then we set
+the table together. Aunty May wouldn't let Mrs. Katy Smith, who had
+come to help, do a thing to the table. We set it for four people. So I
+said, "Is company coming to dinner?" Aunty May hugged me and said, "Yes,
+Billy, but it's a surprise. Don't ask." But I kept guessing,&mdash;Charlotte
+and Grace Turner, and Mr. and Mrs. Turner, and everybody I knew in East
+Penniwell, and Aunty May said, "You're cold. You're cold."</p>
+
+<p>Just then a carriage stopped at our door, and Aunty Edith got out, and
+then a thin pale man got out, and he carried a cane and leaned on Aunty
+Edith, and he came into the room: And IT WAS UNCLE BURT!</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="173.jpg (41K)" src="images/173.jpg" height="445" width="568">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I gave such a yell that Aunty Edith looked frightened and Aunty May
+threw her arms about me and said, "Oh, Billy dear, don't get excited.
+It's bad for&mdash;" But Uncle Burt said, "No, it isn't. It's good for me."
+And he went to hug me, but Aunty May hadn't got her arms untwisted from
+me yet, so that he hugged both of us. He didn't seem to notice it at
+all until I pointed out to him that it was me he wanted and that he was
+kissing Aunty May, and he said, "Dear me, you don't say so"&mdash;and kissed
+her again. Then he kissed me.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down, and Aunty May and me went and stood by him. That is, I
+stood by him and leaned on his well knee, and Aunty May kneeled down and
+put her head on his hurt knee, and he didn't seem to mind it at all. He
+put his hand on her head and smiled over to Aunty Edith, and she came
+and said, "Come, Billy, show me the house."</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Yes, Aunty Edith, but first I want to give Aunty May back to
+Uncle Burt. She's all right, the germs didn't hurt her, though she got
+quite thin taking care of me."</p>
+
+<p>"Did she, poor girl," said Uncle Burt.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May lifted her head up and said, "And Billy's all right. I took
+care of him,&mdash;for you."</p>
+
+<p>Then Uncle Burt smiled at us both. His old smile, though he was so
+dreadful thin and pale. He said, "Well, and now I've come home to look
+after you both."</p>
+
+<p>I showed Aunty Edith the house, and she told me all about her journey,
+and how long it took her, and how sick Uncle Burt was then, and how
+much better he was now; and that though he would always walk with a
+limp, he wouldn't need a crutch,&mdash;which made me very glad.</p>
+
+<p>Then Uncle Burt and Aunty May came in, and Aunty Edith kissed Aunty May
+and they went to take off Aunty Edith's hat.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Burt let me take him to his room, and he told me, while I fished
+out a handkerchief for him and brushed his hair, that Aunty May was
+going to marry him and be my real Aunty, and I was to live with them
+both for always.</p>
+
+<p>So this is a good place to end W.A.G.'s Tale.</p>
+
+<p>THE END</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of W. A. G.'s Tale, by Margaret Turnbull
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of W. A. G.'s Tale, by Margaret Turnbull
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: W. A. G.'s Tale
+
+Author: Margaret Turnbull
+
+Posting Date: November 3, 2011 [EBook #9844]
+Release Date: February, 2006
+First Posted: October 23, 2006
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK W. A. G.'S TALE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Rebekah Inman and the PG
+Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+W.A.G.'S TALE
+
+EDITED BY
+
+MARGARET TURNBULL
+
+WITH ZOBZEE ILLUSTRATIONS
+BY THE AUTHOR
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+PREFACE BY AUTHOR
+
+I. UNCLE BURT'S BILLY
+II. OUR HOUSE
+III. OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR
+IV. ON THE TOWPATH
+V. ON THE DELAWARE
+VI. GEORGE
+VII. LEFT ALONE
+VIII. AT TURNER'S
+IX. THE WHITE TENT
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+I STARTED TO GET BETTER AND WRITE THIS BOOK (p. 153) (colored)
+_Frontispiece_ From a drawing by M.L. Kirk
+
+A ZOBZEE
+
+ON THE BRIDGE
+
+HE JUMPED OUT AND TOOK A ROPE AND PULLED THE BOAT CLOSE
+
+SHE WASHED AND I DRIED
+
+HE TURNED AND WENT INTO THE WHITE STONE HOUSE, AND ALL THE CATS RAN
+AFTER HIM
+
+HE SMOKED A PIPE, AND I PLAYED WITH ALL HIS TEDDY-CATS
+
+BRINGS HIM DOWN, PERSIMMONS AND ALL
+
+SO I TOOK MY FISHING-ROD AND FLICKED IT AT HIM
+
+NEVER YOU MIND, BABY DEAR, COME ON
+
+WHAT'S AN ABSENT-MINDED BEGGAR?
+
+HEY, ROBINSON CRUSOE, HERE'S YOUR MAN FRIDAY
+
+HE HAD TO TAKE A CAN-OPENER AND CUT AUNTY EDITH'S FOOT OUT
+
+WE ALL WORKED WITH HOSE AND EVERYTHING
+
+AUNTY MAY GOT A HATCHET AND MADE A CHOP AT THE SNAKE
+
+I BELIEVED THEY HAD REALLY GONE AWAY, AND LEFT ME ALL ALONE
+
+I TOLD HIM ALL ABOUT AUNTY MAY
+
+SLID DOWN WITHOUT A BIT OF NOISE
+
+I WOKE UP AND FOUND MYSELF LYING ON THE PORCH
+
+AND IT WAS UNCLE BURT
+
+
+
+
+W.A.G.'S TALE
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE BY THE AUTHOR
+
+I have been sick. Now I am better the Doctor makes me lie in bed because
+of all that Anti-toxin he put in me, which weakens the heart. Anti-toxin
+isn't a lady, it's a medicine for diphtheria. Aunty May is a lady. She
+reads me books and plays games with me. But I am tired of books written
+about nature, and animals, and Indians, and fairies, and I wished out
+loud that somebody would write a book about a boy, just like me. So
+to-day Aunty May brought me a big, thick blank book with red covers, and
+with rings at the back to let me add more paper when I want to, and she
+told me to write my own story, a little every day.
+
+[Illustration: "Zobzee"]
+
+So that's what I am going to do, and illustrate it with "Zobzees."
+"Zobzees" are thin dancing people--like this. I invented that name, and
+a country and a language for them, which only Aunty May and I know. But
+I am not going to write my book in that. I am going to print it, like
+other books, but draw "Zobzees" because they are easy; and if nobody
+else reads it except me and Uncle Burt when he comes home, it will be
+fun for us, anyway.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+UNCLE BURT'S BILLY
+
+My name is William Ainsworth Gordon, and my initials spell W.A.G. That
+is why Aunty May and I call this book "W.A.G.'S TALE." If it was about a
+dog it would be "Tail Wags." So it's true and a joke too.
+
+I am ten years old and my father and mother are in Heaven, and I have
+only Uncle Burt to take care of me. Uncle Burt isn't my real uncle, but
+he was my father's chum when they were at West Point, and he promised
+father to take care of me. And he does, only he had to go to the
+Philippines with his soldiers; so his sister, Aunty Edith, is taking
+care of me until he comes back. Everybody else calls me William, but he
+calls me "Billy," so I am the one this chapter is named after.
+
+Aunty May says I can begin with the very day Aunty Edith brought me down
+here. That was the day Uncle Burt went away to join his regiment, and
+everybody was sort of quiet, and even the big people cried a little. I
+cried a good deal, when nobody was looking, and when Uncle Burt caught
+me at it in the corner of the room, he didn't say a word, but just
+picked me up and held me so tight that one of his buttons got stamped
+on my cheek like a seal. He said he'd give way and cry, too, for it was
+good for the eyes, only his Colonel had expressly ordered him not to,
+saying he would leave all red-eyed men home, which would be terrible for
+a soldier. So I begged him not to give way, and he said he wouldn't if
+I'd stop, because one fellow bawling makes it hard for the other fellow
+not to. So I stopped and we laughed a little, and then he showed the
+mark on my cheek to Aunty Edith, and said, "This shows that this young
+man belongs to me, so be careful of Uncle Burt's Billy and return him in
+good condition, for there will be a dreadful time if I find him chipped
+or broken, when I come back."
+
+Then the lady I call Aunty May, though she isn't any relation to me
+either, but is just Aunty Edith's friend, laughed and said she would be
+careful to treat me nicely. And she has. I like her best next to Uncle
+Burt. She didn't cry. She laughed a lot, and every time Uncle Burt got
+sad and tried to talk to her, she laughed more, and she took me on her
+lap and kept me there all the time Uncle Burt was saying good-bye
+to her.
+
+He looked more like crying then than any other time. He said,
+"Good-bye, May; won't you change your mind?" and she said, "Oh, no,
+Burt, I can't." Then he was going to say something else when I said,
+"Remember the Colonel, Uncle Burt, and don't get your eyes too red to
+go," and then they both laughed. Uncle Burt said, "Look after Miss Heath
+for me, Billy, while I'm gone," and I said, "Sure I will. I'm going to
+adopt her as my Aunty, too." She put her arms round me and hugged me and
+Uncle Burt said, "Lucky Billy," and then the door closed, and Aunty
+Edith began to cry and Aunty May looked queer for a minute and went to
+the door. I thought she'd run after him, but she stopped and said,
+"Come along, Sir William, and we'll pack our bags, 'cause we're all
+going to the country on the 3.10." And I took hold of her hand, and we
+went upstairs together, and packed my bag and put in my gun, my
+soldiers, my books and my paint-box. Then Aunty Edith stopped crying and
+tied a veil over her face. If she'd been a soldier she'd been left home
+all right.
+
+We got in a taxi with a lot of bags and things and went to the
+Pennsylvania Station, which is miles and miles long, I think, but there
+are lots of kind black men who wear red caps and run up and take your
+bags and carry them for you just as easy, One of them took my bag and
+Aunty May's suitcase, but Aunty Edith had another one--a fat one--all
+alone for her things.
+
+We just had time for our train, so we had to hurry right through the
+waiting-room, and I couldn't stop and see all the things there are to
+see, or watch the people coming down the stairs. People's legs are funny
+if you watch them coming down--like things made with hinges.
+
+Then we got into a nice big train with chairs in it that swung round.
+They call it a "Pullman" which is a good name for a car, only it's the
+engine that pulls the man and the car, too, really. Then we got all
+comfortable, with another nice colored man who showed his teeth at us,
+and put our bags up on a rack, and Aunty May gave me some sweet
+chocolate and a magazine with pictures in it, and Aunty Edith said. "I
+wish we didn't have to change at Trenton,"--and--then--I fell asleep.
+
+The next thing I knew Aunty May was saying to me, "Wake up, Billy, dear,
+it's Trenton now." She put on my jacket and the man took our bags again
+and we stepped out on a big platform, and then another man took all our
+bags and we went up one stair, and down another, and waited on a long
+platform, where trains kept shooting up every minute.
+
+I couldn't understand what the man in uniform said, until at last a
+funny little train--all short, only half as long as our New York one,
+and with funny, hard straight seats--came, and we climbed in. Aunty
+Edith and Aunty May and me had to carry our own bags and fix 'em. The
+train waited a long time, but at last it moved, and Aunty May put her
+arm round me and sat me next the window, only it wasn't open, because it
+was only April and wasn't warm enough yet, and said, "Now we're off to
+East Penniwell."
+
+The train just crawled along, and there was a big canal on the one
+side. I saw a canal boat with two men and a dog on it, and they were
+cooking something in a big pot on the top of a stove that stood right
+out of doors, on top of the boat, with a stovepipe that didn't go into
+any chimney, but right up into the air--with smoke coming out of it!
+
+I showed it to Aunty May and she said, "You will see them every day when
+we get to the towpath," and I felt awful glad at that, because though
+the boat moved slow, the train moved fast, and I didn't get a good look
+at the boy who was driving the mules. I couldn't be sure whether he'd
+made a face at me or not, but I think he did.
+
+Then by and by on the other side of the train came a great big river,
+all fast and running along and some bubbling-up places in it where rocks
+stood up. Aunty May said those were rapids and this was the Delaware
+River, the one Washington crossed.
+
+I think more of him than ever, now I've seen the river, for it's good
+and wide and it must have been a cold job getting over it. I told Aunty
+May I hoped it wasn't at the rapids he tried to cross, and she said,
+"Oh, no," and "I'll show you," and presently the train stopped and the
+conductor said, "Washington's Crossing," There was a big tree, where he
+could have tied a boat if he'd wanted to. Aunty May said maybe he did;
+and a white house where I guess the soldiers got something to eat and
+drink. Anyway, I hoped so. Aunty May said she'd never asked, so she
+couldn't say, positively, as it was so long ago, but it wouldn't hurt to
+think they did. So I imagined it that way.
+
+Then our train stopped at a station and we got out. I hadn't been ready
+for its stopping, and I got so busy getting my things on, and getting my
+bag in my hand, that I didn't hear the name of it, and I asked Aunty May
+if it was East Penniwell, and she said, "Oh, no, this is Scrubbsville,
+New Jersey, and East Penniwell is in Pennsylvania."
+
+"Will we get into another train, then?" I asked, and Aunty May laughed
+and said, "Oh, no, just wait and see." Then we got off and walked down,
+carrying our bags, to a big bridge right over the Delaware.
+
+There was a man sitting, at the end of the bridge, in a little house
+with a window in it, and you paid him two cents apiece before you could
+get on the bridge to go to Pennsylvania. He is the Toll-Man and it is a
+Toll-Bridge, and it seemed to me very funny to have to pay to walk.
+Aunty May said it was funny, too, but Aunty Edith said it was
+a nuisance.
+
+Aunty Edith asked the Toll-Man if we could leave our big suitcase
+there, until Mr. Tree the grocer came over with a wagon for our trunks,
+later, and he said, "Yes." He was a nice smiling man.
+
+Then Aunty Edith and Aunty May and I, and Aunty Edith's bag and my
+little one, which Aunty May carried because she said we had a long walk
+ahead of us, went over the bridge.
+
+[Illustration: On the Bridge]
+
+The wind almost blew my cap away, but I caught it just in time, and on
+the bridge we met a big man carrying a paint-box and a folding-up
+stool, like Aunty Edith has, and he had an E-normous dog, as big as me,
+and it galumphed at me, and I got behind Aunty Edith, for she is very
+big both ways, and the man said, "Down, Pete," When the dog downed, he
+shook hands with Aunty Edith, and she introduced him to Aunty May and
+me, and he said he was glad to see us, and I could come and play with
+his children up the towpath.
+
+I said, "Yes, sir," but Aunty May and me kept away from Pete, because we
+didn't know him then. We know him now and like him. The man said, "Wait
+till I get back and I'll take you up in the launch." Then he went on to
+Scrubbsville, and Aunty Edith said, "Such a pleasure to meet Mr. Turner.
+Now William won't get tired walking up. Won't that be nice, William, to
+go up the canal in the launch, instead of walking?" I said, "Yes, 'm,
+Aunty Edith," to her, but to Aunty May I said, "Will that Pete be in the
+boat, too?" and Aunty May whispered back, "Ow Gracious! I hope not. But
+don't let him know we're afraid, old man." So I took her hand tight and
+we followed Aunty Edith, who is an awful fast walker and always has so
+many things to do.
+
+First we went to the Post-Office, which is a little wooden building,
+and the Postmaster knows everybody and looks at you over his glasses.
+Then we went up a funny street with brick pavements, awful old. There
+are houses on that very street built before the Revolution, and a big
+cannon in the square. We went to Mr. Tree's, and he's a nice, big grocer
+man, with everything in his shop, and he patted me on the head and gave
+me a chocolate candy, which Aunty Edith said I might eat, if I ate it
+slowly. He said he would bring our trunks and bags up right away. Aunty
+Edith said, "Now I've got to order oil from Tryer and coal from Quick
+and some thread from Miss Macfarland's notion store," and I said, "Why
+don't the servants do all that, Aunty Edith?" She laughed and said,
+"There are no servants for us at East Penniwell, William; we do the work
+ourselves," Aunty May said, "But it will be fun, Billy. All the artists
+like Aunty Edith live that way down here, and you and I will be the
+writer people and we'll do lots of funny things together. Only, Edith,"
+she said, "the boy and I are weary; where can we rest while you finish
+your shopping?"
+
+"Oh, very well," Aunty Edith said; "come and I'll show you the launch
+and you can get in that and sit and wait for Mr. Turner."
+
+We walked up a funny, hilly, crooked street, with partly brick
+pavements again and partly stone, till we came to an old wooden bridge
+over a canal, and then Aunty May squeezed my hand and said, "Billy, this
+is our canal," We crossed the bridge, and went down a few steps and
+there was Mr. Turner's launch. We got in and sat and watched the water
+and made up stories to each other, till Aunty Edith and Mr. Turner came,
+all full of bundles. Mr. Turner started the launch and we went
+chug-chugging along. But Pete didn't get in. He swam part of the time
+and ran and barked on the towpath the other part.
+
+The canal boats came down past us, and they began to have lights on
+them, and the trees were all green and hung down by the canal banks, and
+I could see where the dogwood was beginning to come out in the woods.
+There were some ducks swimming in the canal, and a farmhouse high above
+us on the bank. Then nothing but the towpath, which is the path on one
+side of the canal where the mules walk when they drag the canal boats.
+
+By and by I saw two tiny white houses, with their roofs and chimneys
+sticking up over the canal bank, and one of them had a funny green door,
+and honeysuckle all growing over the fence. Mr. Turner never stopped
+till Aunty Edith called, "Oh, we're going past," Then he stopped and
+jumped out and took a rope and pulled the boat close to the bank, where
+there were some stones placed like steps. I saw the two houses plainly
+then, one a white stone one and one a white wooden one with a
+green door.
+
+[Illustration: He jumped out and took a rope and pulled the boat close]
+
+We all stepped out, with our bags, and said good-bye to Mr. Turner, and
+his launch went away up the canal past us, and Aunty Edith took a key
+out of her pocket and went down a step, into the garden of the house
+with the green door, and opened it, and said to Aunty May and me, "Come
+in, children. This is OUR HOUSE."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+OUR HOUSE
+
+Aunty May and I went inside, and we looked at each other and laughed. It
+was small, like a doll's house, and the room we stepped into, through
+the doorway, had a window the same side as the door, which looked out on
+the towpath, and two windows at the back, and a stovepipe coming right
+out of the floor and running up through the low ceiling.
+
+When I went and looked out of the back windows, I called to Aunty May,
+"Oh, see, it's the Delaware." And it was.
+
+There, right at the foot of our back garden, under the willow trees, was
+the Delaware River, running along, very fast.
+
+I said, "Come on, let's go down to the river, Aunty May." But Aunty
+Edith said, "First, look at the house."
+
+We went through a little door into another long, narrow, low room, with
+a window on the towpath and a window on the river, and a queer
+old-fashioned bureau and two iron beds in it, and a clothes-horse, in
+one corner, covered with muslin. When you opened one flap of it, it was
+a closet. This was Aunty Edith and Aunty May's room.
+
+In the other room, with the stovepipe in the middle of it, was a big
+couch, and that was to be my bed at night. There was a big closet at one
+end, made out of the place where the steps went up to the attic, and
+that was where my clothes were to hang. One side of the room had
+bookshelves, and on the wall were some of Aunty Edith's paintings; and
+there was a doorway at one end without any door.
+
+I said to Aunty Edith, "How do we get to the river from this house? Do
+we have to go out of the front door and run down? And where's the stove
+that the pipe belongs to? Is it in a cellar?" Then both the aunties
+laughed, and they went to this doorway without any door, and there was a
+funny thing that looked like a clumsy ladder. Aunty Edith told me those
+were our best stairs, and that once they were canal boat stairs.
+
+Well, you climbed down them very carefully, for they tipped a little,
+and you landed on a dark little landing with a door. You opened the door
+and stepped down a step and there you were in the nicest old kitchen
+you ever saw!
+
+The top part of the house was wooden, but this under part was of stone
+and cement, and the walls inside were cement, and the ceiling was just
+wood with the big floor beams showing through. And there was a door with
+glass in the top, that you could look through down to the river and the
+willows; and there was a window with a deep window seat you could sit in
+and look at the river; then there was a long window at the side, where
+the outside steps came down from the towpath, and that opened in two
+halves and had narrow panes of glass. It looked out on a garden.
+
+A big cook-stove, with a kettle steaming on it, was at one end of the
+room; and a nice big table, and there were some comfortable chairs, and
+pots and pans hanging over and under the mantel back of the stove.
+
+There was a rug on the floor, and a pantry with lots of good things to
+eat in it, and a big couch that I sat down on, and looked around.
+
+There was a little place in the wall, too, that had once been a window,
+but was closed up and made into a little cupboard for dishes.
+
+I said, "My! isn't this lovely?" Aunty May squeezed my hand and said it
+was, and Aunty Edith looked around and said, "Well, Mrs. Katy Smith did
+get my postal in time, after all. I'm so glad, because if she hadn't,
+it wouldn't have been so nice and clean in here, and there would have
+been no fire. Now, I'm going to take off my things and make a supper
+for us all."
+
+Aunty May said, "I'll help you," but Aunty Edith said, "Not this first
+time, May. You take the boy out and show him the garden and the river,"
+
+So Aunty May and I took hold of hands and went out, and there was a long
+flower-bed running right down to the river-bank, on both sides of a long
+grassplot; and beyond the grass and flowers was a lot of ploughed land
+for vegetables and things; and beyond that there were a lot of woods.
+There was a path between the grassplot and the flower-bed next the fence
+of our neighbor, in the white stone house, and we went down that, and
+when we came to the end of the flower-bed there was a big apple tree,
+and then we went under that and stood on the river-bank, and there was
+the Delaware!
+
+Under the biggest willow tree there was a seat made of an old box, and
+Aunty May and I sat down for a minute and looked at the river. It was so
+clear that I could see the little fishes swimming along, and I threw a
+stick in it, and it went by so fast that Aunty May said, "My! how swift
+the current is. You must be careful, Billy-boy, and not go near the edge
+when you are alone." I said, "Yes, 'm, but I am to go in wading when it
+gets warmer."
+
+We went along the bank a little farther, and there were more trees,
+cherry trees, and willow trees, and buttonwood trees, and lots of nice
+places for us to put our hammocks. Then we went back to the house, and
+there was Aunty Edith in a big gingham apron toasting bread and making
+chocolate. I laughed and said, "Oh, Aunty Edith, I never saw you look
+like that in the city." Then we all laughed, and Aunty Edith said, "You
+will see me look like this very often down here, for we all have to do
+our share of the work. You, too, Billy. You will have to help us." I
+said, "That will be bully."
+
+Aunty May set the table, and we all sat down and ate our toast and ham
+and eggs, and drank our chocolate, and I thought it was better than
+anything I had ever eaten.
+
+Just when we were in the middle of it, I heard footsteps crunching along
+the walk, and down the steps at the side of the house from the towpath.
+I called, "Some one's coming." Aunty Edith went to the door.
+
+It was Mr. Tree with the trunks and the suitcase. He said, "Hullo,
+young fellow. Have you come to take care of these ladies?" And I said,
+"Yes, sir"; and he said, "That's right. Look after 'em. It'll be a load
+off my mind to know they've got a man on the premises. It's right lonely
+up here." And I told him we wasn't afraid. I asked him if he needed any
+help, but he said no, and he was so terrible big and strong that he
+lifted the trunks as if they were boxes.
+
+After he had gone, Aunty Edith said she must unpack, and Aunty May said,
+"Do, Edith; Billy and I will do the dishes."
+
+So Aunty May tied a big clean towel around my waist, and she washed and
+I dried. There was no running water, just a pump outside the kitchen
+shed, right out of doors.
+
+[Illustration: She washed and I dried]
+
+I pumped for Aunty May and we had a lovely time. We played a game with
+the dishes. Plates were ladies and saucers were little girls, and cups
+were little boys, and knives and forks were policemen and spoons were
+servants. We had a lot of fun, when the knives and forks marched round
+the table, and ordered the other dishes into the cupboard.
+
+After that was done, Aunty May said she must go upstairs and help Aunty
+Edith, and unpack her own typewriter. Aunty May writes stories, too,
+only she uses a typewriter and I use a pencil.
+
+Aunty May asked me whether I'd sit in the window seat and read a
+picture-book or would I explore the garden. I said I would do both; look
+at pictures a little while and go in the garden. Aunty May made me
+promise not to go too near the river, or too far down the towpath.
+
+Then she went upstairs and I read a little till I had enough of
+reading, and I thought I'd go to the towpath, but first, as I was
+thirsty, I thought I'd get a glass and take a drink at the pump. But
+when I tried to pump, the pump-handle just went up in the air, and
+wouldn't pump up any water!
+
+And just as I tried it again, I heard somebody say, "That pump handle
+oughter been left up in the air. Say, young feller, you gotter pour some
+water down first. That pump ain't been used stiddy for some little while
+back. Ease it up and she'll go all right."
+
+[Illustration: Turned and went into the house, and all the cats ran
+after him]
+
+I turned around, and there, leaning against the fence, was an old man
+with big blue eyes and a white mustache, and a pipe, and a plaid vest
+and a soft hat, and the biggest lot of cats I ever saw. Seven of them,
+white and gray and black and mixed colors, all looking up at me.
+
+I was so surprised that I didn't know what to say. But the old gentleman
+said, "Wait here, and I'll fetch you a kittle of water," and he turned
+and went into the white stone house, and all the cats ran after him. But
+he shut the door tight, and the cats sat waiting and mewing on the back
+porch, and I held on to the pump-handle and waited too.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR
+
+In a minute he came out with a tin pail in his hand, and all the cats
+ran after him, and he said, "Shoo, Teddy," and they ran away a little
+bit, but came back and mewed and rubbed against his feet. He handed me
+the pail across the fence, and I took it, and he said, "A little at a
+time, boy." Then he went up to his porch and got a big dish and said,
+"Here, Teddy, Teddy," and all the cats ran to him, and he fed them.
+
+I stood watching him, and he said, "Why don't you ease the pump?" and I
+said, "If you please, sir, which one of your cats is Teddy?" He said,
+"Sho, boy, they're all named Teddy after President Roosevelt, and
+because it saves trouble. When I calls, 'Here, Teddy,'--they all comes.
+When I calls, 'Shoo, Teddy,'--they all shoos," And I said, "That's the
+best idea I ever heard of--for cats."
+
+He said, "Now, boy, you lift the handle of that pump high and throw some
+water into her, and then keep a-pumping." And I did, and the water came,
+and I pumped up a glassful, but he wouldn't take any.
+
+Then I said I'd fill the pail and bring it round because I'd like to
+see his cats close to, and he said, "Never mind the pail, young fellow,
+jist hand it over and come round yourself,"
+
+[Illustration: He smoked a pipe, and I played with all his Teddy-cats]
+
+So I did, first calling to Aunty Edith to ask if I might, and she came
+to the door and shook hands with him, over the fence, and said, "How do
+you do, Mr. Taylor. This is William Gordon, the son of Captain Gordon, I
+told you of." Then he said, "Sho, you don't meanter say it! I served
+under his grandfather." And Aunty Edith said to me, "William, Mr. Taylor
+was a soldier in the army all through the Civil War, and he can tell you
+lots about it." So I went over to his house and we sat on his back
+porch, and he smoked a pipe, and I played with all his Teddy-cats.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Mr. Taylor told me he was seventy-three years old, and I said, "My! I'd
+never guessed it, you look younger than that"; and he said, "Yes, boy,
+I'm stepping along."
+
+Then he told me when he was a boy he worked on one of the canal boats,
+and at that time there were many more boats, for most of the freight,
+that goes in freight trains now on railroads, came down the canal in
+boats. After that he enlisted in the army and went away out West. He
+told me when he was young the West was the West, and you could shoot
+buffaloes. He knows because he shot them. Then when the Civil War broke
+out, he stayed in the army, enlisted again and fought all through it,
+and came home with a bullet in his leg.
+
+His father was a cooper and built the stone house Mr. Taylor lives in
+for a cooper shop, and that was why it was built so solid and had such
+thick walls. He took me into the cellar and showed it to me, for that
+was where they set the iron hoops to cool. I asked him who lived with
+him in it, and he said he was all alone, everybody was gone, he said,
+but him. I told him about my father and mother then, and how I would be
+all alone if it wasn't for Uncle Burt, and he said Uncle Burt was a fine
+man and a good soldier.
+
+He said he was glad I lived next door. I told him I was glad, too. He
+asked me if I went in for any kind of sport like shooting; and I said,
+not yet, but I climbed trees, and he said, when his cherries were ripe,
+if I didn't make myself sick on Aunty Edith's, I could climb his, when
+he was around.
+
+Then I asked him if he would tell me a story about the Civil War, and he
+laughed and said the most of them were too full of fighting and sad
+things for a little boy like me; and I told him I didn't mind them being
+a little bloody; that I wasn't a kindergarten baby.
+
+He laughed some more, and said: "Speaking of climbing trees makes me
+think of how near I was to being captured by some rebels once. You know,
+boy, Quakers is agin all fighting, so at the beginning of the war, when
+we regulars was sent to drill with a lot of new men and knock them into
+shape, I was some surprised when fust thing I seen was young Jim Wilton,
+whose father I knowed to be a Quaker living on the corner of the same
+street where my uncle lived in Phillydelphy.
+
+"I says to him, 'Hullo, Jim, what you doing here?' and he said, 'Well,
+Tom, I come here to larn you how to fight.' 'And you a Quaker's son,'
+says I. 'Yup,' he says, 'and thee knows that my old folks is none too
+pleased; but somehow I couldn't stay home comfortable with all the other
+boys fighting to free the blacks, so here I be.'
+
+"Well, I was right glad to see him, and get news of all the old
+neighbors, and Jim and me gits very chummy; and when there's a piece of
+business needing the attention of one of us, it usually gits the
+attention of both. Me and him hunting in couples as it were.
+
+"That's how it come about that one time, there being a bit of spying to
+be done, me and Jim finds ourselves in rebel uniforms, waiting and
+listening beside a camp-fire outside the rebel Gineral's tent, using our
+ears and our eyes too. When up rides Gineral Stuart, who used to be my
+commanding officer in the old days before he turnt reb, when he was in
+the regular army.
+
+"My! but I was in a terrible taking, for Stuart had a gredge agin me for
+somepin I'd done. I'll tell ye about that another day. 'T warn't me was
+to blame. But if he onct caught sight of me, it would be short shrift at
+the end of the rope.
+
+"So Jim and me begins edging away, until we could get a gait on without
+being noticed; and get away we did, and into the woods where our own
+clothes were hid; made the change and was getting back to our own
+quarters, happy as larks to be on the home road; laughing to think how
+near we'd been to Gineral Stuart, without his knowing it; and patting
+ourselves on the back at how neatly we'd done the trick, when Jim looks
+up and says, 'Hey, Tom, look at them persimmons,' Sure enough, there was
+a tree full of the nicest ripe persimmons you ever see, right in
+our way.
+
+"Now our rations hadn't been any too full lately and we were pretty nigh
+hungry all the time.
+
+"'Tom,' he says, 'I uster be the best tree-climber in the county. I
+gotter get me some of those,'
+
+"'Aw, Jim,' I says, 'don't be a fool. The woods may be full of rebels.
+I'm full as hungry as you are, but I ain't going to stop for any
+persimmons.'
+
+"'Just a handful,' he says, 'and it won't take a minute. Will you wait?'
+
+"'No, I won't,' I says, being so doggoned tired that I knew if I sat
+down I'd fall asleep. 'I'm for pushing back to camp, and if you ain't
+all kinds of a foolish boy, you'll do the same.'
+
+"So I went on, and Jim, he gives me one look, and then he gives the tree
+a squint, and sho! he was off and up it before you could say 'Jack
+Robinson.' Climb! well, rather. He was up it in no time, and eating and
+slinging the persimmons into his hat. It made me so mad that I just
+naturally turned my back and went right on.
+
+"Suddenly I hears a kind of whistle that was our signal--Jim's and
+mine--to look out for trouble. So I drops right down and rolls over into
+the bushes, and draws them over me, so I can't be seen. Then I lays
+quiet and listens.
+
+"I hears voices, and turning my head so softly that the bushes don't
+move, I peeps out and sees a party of rebs a-coming down the path.
+They'd seen Jim, just after he'd give me his warning, and they lays for
+him under the tree, and one of them rebs, who was just as handy at the
+climbing as Jim, goes up and brings him down, persimmons and all. The
+rebs laugh, and eat his persimmons and take him prisoner and march off;
+Jim allowing that he was so hungry that he'd stolen off by his lonesome
+to get something to eat. One of the men had heard the whistle Jim gave,
+but Jim explaining that he whistled in surprise at seeing them, they
+only beats up the bush a little, not coming near me.
+
+[Illustration: "Brings him down, persimmons and all"]
+
+"They go off, with Jim never so much as looking my way, though they
+passed so clost to me that the lieutenant's heel scrunched my little
+finger. I had to take it without hollering or moving, for if I had
+they'd taken me along with Jim. And that's what tree climbing brings a
+man to."
+
+"What became of Jim?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, Jim, he was kept a prisoner all through the war, so he never got no
+enjoyment out of his life, never seeing a bit of real fighting--just
+marching and drilling and prison. So that, as he said, he might just as
+well never 'a' run away,--seeing he had to bide a non-combatant, which
+is the same as Quaker, after all."
+
+"Then he didn't like it, did he?" I asked.
+
+"No," Mr. Taylor said, laughing, "he didn't. And let this be a warning
+to you, young man. Don't you go up a tree for persimmons or cherries or
+other fruits whatsomever, agin the advice of your elders and betters."
+
+"No, sir, Mr. Taylor," I said, "I never will."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+ON THE TOWPATH
+
+Our house is so nearly on the towpath, that the mules eat the
+honeysuckle from the fence, and as there is only a tiny flower-bed
+between the house and the fence, you can hear the voices, and the
+tramping of the mules, as plainly indoors as out.
+
+At night, when you wake up in the dark, you think they are coming in.
+That's at first. By and by you get so used to them that you don't
+think about it.
+
+One reason why we came down so early in the spring is that I'm not to
+be sent to school until the fall, because I'm not to use my eyes too
+much, until they get stronger. Measles made them a little weak. So I
+have one hour with Aunty May for reading and sums, and half an hour with
+Aunty Edith for French; and then I don't have to do anything else for
+the rest of the day, until nearly dark, when I water the flower-beds for
+both the aunties.
+
+But from eleven until four, except at lunch-time, I must not bust into
+the house and holler at Aunty May--for she is writing; and I must not
+run after and plague Aunty Edith, when she goes up the towpath--for
+she's painting.
+
+Mr. Taylor, being seventy-three, can be spoken to at any time, except
+when he's doing his baking. Then he doesn't want anything or anybody
+round his feet, he says. Just as if I was cats!
+
+This morning I'm writing about. I was out on the towpath, fishing for
+eels, so I could put one in the tub which stands by the pump to catch
+the overflow; because Aunty May is very much afraid of snakes and eels,
+and she squeals so funny when she sees them that it is what Mr. Taylor
+calls "a fair treat" to hear her.
+
+I thought if I got her good and scared with seeing one in the tub, she
+might be so mad that she'd not be able to write, and would chase me
+round the garden.
+
+It's too bad Aunty May's grown up. She likes to play as well as any boy
+I know, and she's good at it, too, if it wasn't for her writing. Uncle
+Burt used to complain of that writing, too, when he was home. He said it
+interfered a lot--when he wanted her to play with him.
+
+Anyway the eels didn't bite, but I thought maybe I'd get a sunfish, and
+that's nearly as good a scream-starter, if Aunty May doesn't expect it
+to be there.
+
+All at once, I felt my cap pushed right off, and I looked up and there
+was a boy, riding on the top of an old gray mule, that was one of two
+tired-looking mules, dragging a canal boat.
+
+There was nobody on the boat that I could see, 'cept one man asleep on
+the top.
+
+"Gimme my cap, boy," I said.
+
+"Aw, you and your fishin'," he says. "Git off the towpath."
+
+And I said: "You can't say that to me. We've got the right of way here,
+because I live in that house with the green door."
+
+"Oh, you do," says he. "Well, baby dear, go in and tell yer wimmin folks
+ye've lost your cap"; and he chucked my cap right into the canal!
+
+Well, I couldn't get it, without falling in, and there was the
+canal-boat coming along ready to run over it. So I took my fishing-rod
+and flicked it at him, and there--I had caught the eel after all! It
+struck him, all cold and slippery, and he yelled, and it hit the mule,
+and the mule ran away, dragging the other mule with it, right up the
+slope to Rabbit Run Bridge!
+
+[Illustration: "So I took my fishing-rod and flicked it at him"]
+
+The boy had grabbed the fishing-rod, so that my rod and my eel went
+with them.
+
+My! but I was mad, but kind of excited, too, for a man came up from the
+inside of the canal boat and yelled, and the man on the deck woke up and
+yelled, and the boy was yelling!
+
+There was a farmer driving along the road and across the bridge and when
+he saw mules coming, lickity-split, where mules never come,--right up to
+the bridge,--he yelled too, and licked his horse to get out of the way.
+The boy, he licked the mules with my rod. He'd thrown my eel back into
+the water.
+
+He was as cool as could be, and by and by he got the mules calmed down,
+and one of the men from the boat jumped off and helped him and they got
+the ropes all straight again and started off. The boy never said a word,
+except when the man asked him what did it. Then he told him, "The mule
+didn't like the looks of that baby boy there on the canal bank." The man
+shook his fist at me, and I called, "Gimme my cap." And the boy said,
+"Wait till we come back"; and he made an awful face as they went away,
+turning round and riding backwards to do it.
+
+I knew then that he was the same boy that made a face at me when I was
+in the train.
+
+Well, I had to tell Aunty Edith, and she looked very severe, and gave
+me my second-best cap and said, "William, do be careful, this time." But
+I only told her that the boy threw my cap into the water. I didn't tell
+that he said he was coming back.
+
+But I talked to Mr. Taylor about it, and he agreed that when I saw the
+boy again, I'd have to have it out with him, and he'd stand referee to
+see that there was no unfair advantage took of me or him.
+
+"For," says he, "you can't be called baby darling free and often by them
+boat boys, and neither can you eel them boat boys and scare their mules.
+All things being equal, you ask him his intentions next time and come
+to some mew-tual feeling on the matter, which won't reach the ears of
+your Aunty Edith. The ears of your Aunty May," say she, "could be
+reached and enjyed by them fine, if took alone, and without t'other
+Aunty present."
+
+Well, every day I kept a watch-out for that boy, and for a whole week I
+didn't see him.
+
+One Monday, Aunty May asked Aunty Edith if I couldn't go down,--it was
+raining,--if I put on my raincoat and boots, with Mr. Taylor, when he
+went to the mail, and bring her some stamps and stamped envelopes. Aunty
+Edith said, "Oh, all right, May, but it seems to me you eat stamps.
+They disappear so fast." Aunty May laughed, and said,
+
+"Be-that-as-it-may," which is what she always says when she wants to
+stop discussing, "William goes."
+
+So I got ready, and Mr. Taylor and me started down. It's a mile away.
+
+Mr. Taylor doesn't like umbrellas, neither do I, so, as it was only
+misting, Aunty May said I needn't.
+
+Just as we got to Rabbit Run Bridge, who came along, with his mules, and
+the same canal boat, and the same man asleep, under an umbrella this
+time, but that BOY!
+
+Mr. Taylor says, that the et-i-ket of such things makes him leave me
+and go sit on the bridge while I had it out. So I went down and said to
+the boy, "Hey, you, where's my cap?" And he grinned and said, "I give it
+to your eel. He's a-wearing of it now, and it looks fine on him."
+
+That strikes me so funny that I began to laugh; then I remembered that
+wasn't what I wanted to do. So I says, "Come on down till I polish you
+up for what you did to my cap"; and he says, "I'll be down in a minute
+to fix you for what you done to my mule. I've gotter put him in trousers
+to-morrow, his legs is so damaged."
+
+Then I began to laugh again, at the thought of a mule in trousers. "Aw,
+come on down," I said. "You ain't got any trousers for him." "Have,
+too," he said; "I'm making them spare minutes out of Turkey red. And
+when I adds brass buttons and pockets I'll put 'em on, the next time he
+passes your house."
+
+I began to laugh again, and then he jumped down, and before I knew it
+hit me a punch on the nose. That made me so mad that I hit at him and it
+struck his leg, and he said, "Ouch," and jumped so that I looked at his
+leg, and saw it was black and blue already.
+
+"Who did that?" I said.
+
+"Never you mind, baby dear," he said: "come on. If my leg did get
+catched between the boat and the bank and ground agin a stone this
+morning, I can still fight an eel-catcher."
+
+[Illustration: "Never you mind, baby dear, come on"]
+
+And he hopped up to me on one foot, and I saw he wasn't much bigger than
+me, maybe eleven or twelve, and he had all he could do to keep from
+crying because his leg hurt him so; but he was so quick that I just had
+to dodge to get out of the way.
+
+"Say," I said, after I'd gotten out of his reach, "I don't want to hit
+you when you're hurt. And anyway," I said, "I don't know that I care
+about fighting with anybody who can make eels wear caps and mules red
+trousers. Wait a minute and I'll get a clean rag and some witch-hazel
+for your leg."
+
+"No, you don't," he says; "I ain't going to be fussed over, but if you
+gotta pitcher-book, like the one I seen you reading one day, that, an'
+something to chew'll keep my mind off my leg, and when it's all right
+again, I'll come past and smash you into bait for eels."
+
+That didn't seem quite what I wanted, but I told Mr. Taylor the boy was
+hurt and I couldn't fight, and he said "Certainly not--agin
+reg-u-lations."
+
+Then he said he'd wait for me a minute, and I ran back home, because I
+knew I'd get there faster than any canal mule, and I bust into the room,
+and told Aunty May, and first she didn't like my busting in like that,
+and then she got interested. She gave me a picture-book and a piece of
+rag, and some witch-hazel in a bottle, and a big piece of cake. When I
+got out, the boy was just coming up to the fence, and Aunty May wanted
+to tie up his leg for him, but he wouldn't. So she explained to him
+that the stuff in the bottle and the rag was for his leg, and he said,
+"Yes, 'm, thanks," and then she went in the house quick, so's I could
+speak to him myself. I'd asked her to.
+
+He said, "Well, eel-catcher, this will help me some. And if I pass this
+way agin, I'll look you up."
+
+"Oh, do," I said.
+
+"Want yer book back?" he calls.
+
+"No," I said, "when you get through with it, give it to the eel."
+
+"No," says he, "he's not fond of reading, but I know an old mushrat
+that's fond of anything like print. I'll give it to him, so any time you
+see him reading it by moonlight, with his spectacles on, you'll know
+it's my friend."
+
+"Oh, come back soon," I called, "and tell me more about it"; for he was
+getting slowly and slowly away from me.
+
+"I will," he shouted, "if I don't make a mistake and swallow the
+witch-hazel."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+ON THE DELAWARE
+
+I thought I'd never get tired of having a river at our back door, but
+one day I nearly hated the Delaware.
+
+This is how it happened: Aunty Edith had a rowboat with a place in the
+stern where you could fix a big sketching-umbrella, and go sketching
+without getting too sunburnt; and when I was very good, 'specially good,
+I could go with her.
+
+When I was just ordinary good, and Aunty Edith wasn't using the boat,
+Aunty May and I used to borrow it and play "Robinson Crusoe," and Aunty
+May made the funniest "Man Friday" you ever saw. She would pretend not
+to know any language but "glub-glub," and so I had to teach her the
+names of things and she would shake all her hair down and dance a
+war-dance, when I got her to understand. This was when we'd reached our
+Island. There was one across the river from us, and on a corner of it we
+used to picnic and play.
+
+Mr. Turner's children all were girls, and they went to school, or had
+music-lessons, or something, so I only had them once in a while to play
+with, and then they always wanted to play fairy-tales, and make me the
+Prince. I hate Princes because they're always bothering about finding
+some Princess. I'd rather have been an Ogre or a Dwarf or a Bad Giant.
+They had some fun. But the girls always got their Indian Boy to be
+those. He was a big boy from the Carlisle Indian School, who came in the
+summer to help about the house and the grounds, and he was great fun. He
+showed me how to make bows and arrows, and taught me how to swim and
+things like that, and how to push off a canoe. But mostly Aunty May was
+the one I had to play with right on the spot, and just when you'd made
+up your mind that she was a grown-up and wouldn't do it, she'd begin
+some funny thing, and she was almost as good as a real boy.
+
+Well, Mr. Turner had a man visiting him, a painting-man, and he came
+down to see Aunty Edith, and they put their heads on one side and
+screwed up their eyes, and looked at paintings, and had tea, and talked
+about art so long that Aunty May and I couldn't be quiet any longer, but
+just had to go down into the garden and play Wild Men of Borneo. That
+means taking a beanpole and yelling and dancing and trying to see who
+can vault and jump the farthest with the pole, and when you win you
+say, "Glug-Glug."
+
+We were right in the middle of this, and Aunty May was a little
+red-faced, and her hair was kind of wild, when we heard somebody laugh,
+and there was the painter-man down by the river, laughing as hard as he
+could laugh; and Aunty Edith trying to look severe at Aunty May and not
+able to, on account of her looking so comical. She had a black smudge
+from the end of the beanpole, which had been in a bonfire, across her
+forehead. You see she had just jumped the farthest, and was hollering,
+"Glug-Glug."
+
+Aunty May laughed pretty hard, too, and we all laughed then, and Aunty
+May went up to the house to turn into a clean-faced grown-up again, and
+Aunty Edith unlocked the boat and handed the big umbrella to the man and
+told him to use the boat as often and as long as he liked. He put his
+paint-box and sketch-block in, and got in himself, and I stood looking
+at him, wishing he'd ask me--when he did.
+
+"Want to come, young man?" he said, and I said, "Yes, I'll take my book
+and my fish-line and be very quiet. May I, Aunty Edith?"
+
+Aunty Edith said, kind of doubtful, "I'm not going, William. Maybe you'd
+better not."
+
+Well, I guess I looked awful sorry at that, for the man said, his name
+was Mr. Garry Louden,--"Oh, let him come, Edith, I'll look after him";
+and Aunty Edith said, "But you're such an absent-minded beggar, Garry,
+and this is Burt's most precious charge."
+
+"Oh, he'll be all right," Mr. Garry said; "I'll bring him home right as
+a trivet. Hop in, son."
+
+So I jumped in and waved good-bye to Aunty Edith, and we started up the
+river.
+
+[Illustration: "What's an absent-minded beggar?"]
+
+"What's an absent-minded beggar?" I asked Mr. Garry, and he said, "Oh,
+a fellow like me, who's always got his head full of pictures and things,
+and forgets what he's at."
+
+"Then you don't really beg for anything, do you?" I said.
+
+"Lord, no," he said, "except when I'm out with talkative young sports,
+and then I beg them to keep quiet."
+
+So I took my fish-line and sat still as a mouse, while he looked up and
+down the river, and whistled to himself--when he got a good idea, I
+guess, for after he'd whistled some, he'd let the boat drift and make
+marks in his sketch-book. He was a nice man, but not used to little
+boys, I think, for he used awful big words, and didn't answer questions
+like Aunties and Uncles do.
+
+By and by I told him about the Island, and he said, "Right you are,
+young Soc-ra-tees," and we landed there, and he kept saying, "Ripping,"
+"Splendid," and things like that, and by and by he fished out some
+sandwiches and sweet chocolate from his pocket, and gave me some, and
+told me to stay there while he rowed around and explored farther up the
+side of the Island. I said, "All right," for with things to eat, and a
+nice brook, and a shady place, and a book, no boy need have any trouble
+finding things to do to keep himself amused. And I didn't.
+
+I made a ship, and loaded it, and I made a fort on the other side of the
+brook, and when the ship came near the fort, the men from the fort came
+out and had a fight and sank her. Then when I got tired of that I read
+my book, and I read all I wanted to, and still Mr. Garry didn't come
+back. I could hear voices on the river, and once in a while a canoe shot
+past, but none of them was Mr. Garry, or Aunty Edith's rowboat.
+
+By and by they stopped coming past and then I got up and went along the
+bank and looked for him. I could see, way across the river, a little
+white speck, shining through the trees, which I knew was our house.
+
+My! didn't I want to be there! I didn't have any matches, of course. I'm
+not allowed to carry them. I couldn't make a fire, or anything, though
+it began to get dusky, and still Mr. Garry didn't come.
+
+Then, suddenly, I remembered that he was an absent-minded beggar who
+forgot things, and maybe he'd forgot me. That made me feel awfully queer
+and lumpy inside me, and besides I was getting tired.
+
+Nobody lived on that Island, except maybe some ground-hogs and
+squirrels and snakes, and--it wasn't any place for a boy who didn't have
+any food or tent or fire.
+
+First thing I knew, when that struck me, I heard myself bawl--right out,
+"Oh, Aunty May--COME! Oh, Aunty May!" and then I was really frightened,
+for it sounded so loud, and so scared, and so babyish.
+
+I kept still for a minute, and swallowed hard and then I yelled, "Hey!
+Hey!" out loud, without crying--hoping somebody would hear me. I did it
+a great many times, but nobody answered. Then I remembered that the boys
+were always landing here and hollering and shouting in fun, and nobody
+would pay any attention to it.
+
+I tried to remember what Uncle Burt'd do if he was caught like this,
+and little like me. I thought maybe he'd take off his shirt and wave it,
+but then I remembered it'd be too dark to see. But anyway I guessed I'd
+better do something, so I took off my blouse, and put my sweater on, and
+tied my blouse to a tree, and it waved, quite fine, for there was a
+little breeze coming up. I tried rubbing sticks together for a light,
+but whoever made up that plan must have had stronger arms and hands than
+I had, for I rubbed till my arms ached so that I cried some, but I
+didn't get a single spark of light.
+
+By this time it was very dark, and I was so hoarse with hollering, and
+so aching in my arms with rubbing sticks, and my legs hurt so with
+running up and down trying to see a boat or something, that I just
+dumped myself down on the grass and cried--and--I guess I--fell asleep.
+For the next thing I knew I heard some one calling my name, kind of
+loud, and kind of scared, "Billy, Billy, darling, are you there?" It was
+Aunty May in a canoe. I tried to call to her, but I was so hoarse and
+tired, I just made a kind of noise in my throat.
+
+[Illustration: Hey, Robinson Crusoe, here's your Man Friday]
+
+Then I was so afraid she'd paddle away that I let out the finest yell
+you ever heard, and Aunty May called out, "Hey, Robinson Crusoe. Here's
+your Man Friday"; and she slid the canoe up to the bank, and I fell in
+so stiff, and she hugged me so hard, that it's a wonder we didn't upset.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Usually I don't like hugging, but this time it was all right.
+
+Then Aunty May told me that she had begun to get worried and so had
+Aunty Edith, knowing that Mr. Garry was an absent-minded beggar. Aunty
+Edith had gone up to Mr. Turner's to find if he was home, but Aunty May
+had insisted on going out in the canoe, though Mr. Taylor didn't like
+her to alone, and Mr. Taylor had gone down the towpath, toward the
+village, looking for us. Well, wasn't Aunty May mad when she found out
+how long I'd been alone and how badly I'd wanted her. She just paddled
+as fast as she could, and all the time pretended that we were wild
+savages who would catch Mr. Garry and put him on a desert island, just
+to see how he'd like it.
+
+As we got nearer our house there were lights along the river-bank, and
+we called and a big boat came up to us, and in it was Mr. Garry, with a
+very white face, and Mr. Turner and Aunty Edith, and she was crying so
+hard that she couldn't see me at first.
+
+When Aunty May said, "Don't cry, Edith, he's here," and handed me over,
+she gave me such a hard squeeze that I couldn't speak for a minute.
+
+Mr. Garry all the time kept saying, "Say, old chap, I'm sorry, but I am
+such an absent-minded beggar." Aunty May said, "Yes, but you'll never
+have a chance to get absent-minded with this boy again."
+
+He looked terribly sorry, and begged my pardon again, and I told him,
+"It was all right, only I didn't care to play Robinson Crusoe so
+truthfully--at night."
+
+They hurried me up to the house and gave me warm things to eat and
+drink, and let me stay up longer than usual.
+
+Aunty May wouldn't let Mr. Garry touch me or help her at all, and even
+Aunty Edith wouldn't hardly speak to him, till they found I was all
+right and not hurt any, except my blouse, which was left on the Island.
+
+Mr. Garry gave me his own silver pen-knife, before he went away, so that
+I would "nevermore defenseless be," as he said, and we were quite
+friendly. But after he had gone, I heard Aunty May say that "Never would
+that absent-minded beggar take her boy away again"; and Aunty Edith
+said, "He's Burt's boy, not yours."
+
+Aunty May didn't say anything, so I called out, "I'm your boy, too,
+Aunty May. Uncle Burt said so, and I'll never, never go out with an
+absent-minded beggar on the river again."
+
+And I never have.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+GEORGE
+
+For a while, I did have a real boy to play with, right in the house. It
+happened this way:--
+
+Martha, who is Aunty Edith's colored washerwoman in the city, had a boy
+called George, who used to bring the clothes home. He was a little older
+than me--twelve years old--and he was always smiling, and his teeth were
+white and his eyes shiny. And when his mother wrote Aunty Edith that he
+was poorly, Aunty Edith had him sent down for a week--on trial, to stay
+in the attic above my room, and do the dishes for the Aunties, and run
+errands. He was to stay longer, if it was all right.
+
+I wish it had been, for George was awful funny. He was very obliging,
+too, and I liked him. So did Aunty May, for he remembered all the
+stories his teachers had told him in school, and he would tell them to
+Aunty May and me, when we sat down under the willow trees, and we
+just loved it.
+
+What Aunty Edith didn't love was what he did with the green paint. Aunty
+Edith had a lot left over in a pot after the kitchen was painted, and
+she thought it would be nice to paint the chairs and tables that we used
+out of doors.
+
+We used to have breakfast and lunch, and even dinner, out in the little
+grapevine-covered back porch, which had a cement floor, level with
+the ground.
+
+So just to keep George happy, Aunty Edith gave him that to do. He
+commenced it while Aunty May and I were doing lessons, and we could hear
+Aunty Edith explaining--Aunty Edith always does the explaining--and
+George all the time saying, "Yas, 'm, yas, 'm, Miss Edith." And by and
+by Aunty Edith came in and we could hear George whistling and singing.
+George did sing awful loud, and funny songs, so you'd have to stop
+and listen.
+
+This morning he kept singing something about a man named "Sylvester,"
+and he kept singing out the same thing over and over again, till Aunty
+May said, "Oh, dear, I can't hear myself speak. Edith, will you quiet
+the blackbird?" And Aunty Edith called to George not to sing so loud,
+and he said, "Yas, 'm, Miss Edith"; and the next minute it began louder
+than ever.
+
+Then Aunty Edith went downstairs to tell him to take his work farther
+away from the house.
+
+She hadn't been gone a minute till we heard her say, "Oh, good
+gracious, what shall I do? Come here, George, and see if you can take it
+off." George kept saying, "Yas, 'm, Miss Edith, yas, 'm"; and Aunty
+Edith was being so very spluttery, that Aunty May and I leaned out the
+window, and then we jerked our heads in and Aunty May said, "Don't you
+dare laugh out loud, Billy."
+
+Then we looked again, and jerked our heads inside the window every time
+we felt the laugh coming on, which was pretty often, for you see George
+had put the paint-can, a small one, right on the doorsill, and Aunty
+Edith had put her foot in it, and it had caught.
+
+There was Aunty Edith holding on to the grape-arbor while George pulled
+at the can, and the paint flowing around pretty free. Well, George
+couldn't pull it off, and finally he had to take a can-opener and cut
+Aunty Edith's foot out, just as though she were salmon, or something.
+
+When we got to that part, Aunty May and I forgot ourselves and laughed
+out loud, and then Aunty Edith looked at us, and looked at her foot, and
+at George's black face all daubed with green paint, and his clothes,
+too, as he carefully cut her out, and she laughed, too. But it spoiled
+her shoe, and it took several days to wear the green off George.
+
+[Illustration: He had to take a can-opener and cut Aunty Edith's foot
+out]
+
+That was the too bad part of it. George was so fine for singing and
+telling stories and he just couldn't remember to do anything else.
+
+When he went for the mail and the groceries, unless I went with him,
+he'd forget everything, and come home just as smiling as ever.
+
+And he was brave, too, for he used to chase the village boys when they
+ran after him and called names, and besides that he and I built a lovely
+Filipino house up in the biggest willow tree, and had lots of fun,
+escaping from two boys at the farm across Rabbit Run Bridge, who chased
+us and tried to catch us. We got up in our tree-house and shot at them
+with bows and arrows, and they couldn't reach us. I liked having George.
+If he'd only stayed funny, without getting dangerous. But George got
+dangerous.
+
+It was this way: George and the two boys on the farm, Samuel and Charlie
+Crosscup, were having a talk on the middle of Rabbit Run Bridge, about
+fire engines. Samuel said the East Penniwell fire engine could get up
+steam and run to a fire, with Sol Achers's old white horse hitched to
+her, quicker than a New York fire engine could. George and me said it
+couldn't. He said, "It could, because why? The East Penniwell horse and
+engine were used to the roads and the New York horses and engine would
+have to be showed."
+
+I couldn't think of anything to say, but George said, "No, sah. Dat
+ain't noways so. For de New York fire engines and horses is so trained
+that they goes over any road and anywhere according as the Fire Chief
+he directs, and it doan mek no difference whether they've been up
+dataways befo' or not They jist naturally eats up all distances."
+
+Well, that made the Crosscup boys mad, and they kept telling all about
+the East Penniwell engine house, and my! it must be a lovely place, if
+all they say is true. George he told them then about the New York engine
+houses, and my! they must be splendid if George really knew. He said he
+did. He said his mother's cousin washed for three firemen and she'd
+oughter know. I guess she ought to, but George did remember so much
+about those things, and forgot so quick about others, that sometimes I
+really didn't know what to be sure about.
+
+Well, it began to rain, and George was going to take me home, when one
+of the boys said, "Aw, don't go home, yet. Come on into the old barn and
+let's play knife until the rain stops."
+
+I guessed we'd ought to go home right away with the bundles and change,
+but George said, "On no account can I git you wet. Miss Edith wouldn't
+stand for that nohow." So I went with him. And we played knife on the
+floor. It was a big empty barn. That is there weren't any cattle in
+it, just hay.
+
+It stood a long way from the house, and on a little hill. By and by the
+thunder and lightning got quieter, but the rain made it dark, and I
+said, "Oh, George, let's go. It's too dark to see in here anyway." But
+George wouldn't go until he had finished his game, and when the other
+boys said, "It's too dark to play knife any more," George said, "Let's
+play robber's cave. I got something in my pocket will make it light." He
+took out a box of matches and a candle-end, and said, "Let's stick it up
+yere, and then play robbers. This'll be the den"; and he put the candle
+into the neck of an old bottle.
+
+I said, "Oh, George, Aunty Edith doesn't let you have matches." George
+said, "Look yere, these matches was give me to-day, and this ain't Miss
+Edith's barn. If these young gemmun is willing to play in their father's
+barn with a candle, you ain't got no call to say anything, has yer?" And
+the boys said, "Aw, it's all right. Come on. William ain't yer boss.
+He's nothing but a kid anyway."
+
+Well, that made me mad, and I wouldn't play robbers with them, and I
+slid down to the barn floor, and went to the door, and looked out to see
+if it was getting any lighter. But George, he put on a terrible look,
+and began to say, "I'm the King of the Robbers, who's this yere
+a-peekin' and a-spyin' in my den?" Then Sam called out, "It's me. I'm
+the King of the Pirates, and I've come to take ye bound hand and foot to
+my ship. Stand by, men!" "Men" was his brother Charlie, and they made a
+dash at George. He danced and flew at them with a stick and called to me
+to come and be his man and help him fight 'em off.
+
+I was just running to do it, for it looked like pretty good fun, and the
+rain was pretty hard, when somebody knocked the bottle with their foot,
+and over it went into a heap of straw, and before the boys could race
+back and put it out, the hay was on fire.
+
+Oh, dear! I hope I never see anything like that again. We boys were so
+scared at first, we couldn't move, and then, with a yell, the Crosscup
+boys ran to tell their father, with me and George after them.
+
+[Illustration: We all worked with hose and everything.]
+
+We only ran a little ways toward the other barn, and then we found an
+old bucket, and George yelled to me to get a bit of rope, and we
+lowered it into the canal and ran back to throw the water on the fire.
+But it was too little, and the fire was too big.
+
+Farmer Crosscup came running with his hired man, and we all worked with
+hose and everything, but the barn burned, all but the north wall, and so
+fast that though George and I ran and ran for help, and though Mrs.
+Crosscup telephoned to town for engines, it was through burning before
+they got up.
+
+After this, George had to go. Aunty Edith got him sent to a place for
+colored children, where he could have fresh air, and some one to look
+after him, but he had to go away from East Penniwell. The farmers said
+he was "dangerous." I was sorry and Aunty May was sorry, too, but it
+couldn't be helped. George was sorry, too, but at the last minute he
+leaned from the wagon and whispered to me, "Anyway, I done proved dat
+dere old fire engine wuz too slow."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+LEFT ALONE
+
+After George went away, it seemed very quiet on the towpath. It grew
+warmer and warmer, and the cherries got ripe and were picked, and I
+climbed trees and played more, and had fewer lessons, because it was so
+hot, and the little Turner girls came down to play with me sometimes,
+because school was out. I went up and played with them sometimes, but
+not often unless the launch came down, because it was a long way to walk
+in the hot sun.
+
+Mr. Taylor and me used to sit on his back porch, where it was cool, and
+tell one another stories.
+
+He told me some fine ones about the war, and when he was a boy. More
+things seemed to happen to boys then than they do now, and I told him
+so, and he laughed and said that was only because he was seventy-three
+and remembered about them. He said that when I was seventy-three, "some
+little feller'll think the same thing when you tell him about the fust
+airship and things like that."
+
+I laughed at me ever being seventy-three, but I suppose I will some day.
+ The only fun we had before the letter came was early that very
+morning, when Aunty May was sitting reading some clippings her editor
+had sent her, with her back to the little cupboard I told about, that
+was made out of an old window.
+
+I came down the stairs from my room and stood looking at her, wishing
+she'd look up so I could interrupt. But she didn't and I stood there
+just as quiet for a minute, and wondering why I suddenly thought about
+the pictures in my book on India. Then I heard a little rustle, and I
+knew. Just above Aunty May's head, uncoiling itself from round a pile of
+plates in the corner, was a big black and yellow snake.
+
+I called out, "Hey, Aunty May! Quick! There's a snake behind you!" And
+she looked up and said, "Billy, I'm not in the mood for playing."
+
+[Illustration: Auntie May got a hatchet and made a chop at the snake]
+
+I said, "Oh, Aunty, I'm not fooling. Quick, or it will land on your
+head"; and she turned round and looked right at the snake and it looked
+at her, and Aunty May gave a scream, and jumped away, and the snake
+dropped down on the floor and commenced to wiggle behind the couch.
+
+Then I tell you there was some fun. Aunty Edith came down just as Aunty
+May got a hatchet and made a chop at the snake, but she never touched
+it, and Aunty Edith wouldn't let me go behind the couch after him.
+
+Mr. Taylor, who was coming along the towpath from the village (he
+brought us the mail every morning), came down and asked, "What's up,
+young feller? I heerd the wimminfolk screeching. What ye been up to?"
+
+I told him I hadn't done anything. It was a snake. Then Mr. Taylor and
+me pulled out the couch, but he wasn't there. We poked sticks behind the
+pantry, but couldn't find him.
+
+There was a big hole in the cement there, and Mr. Taylor said, "Sho, the
+poor snake was more frightened than ye was, Miss May, and it's likely
+he's down the river-bank by now." Then Aunty May and me told him how big
+it was and what color, and he said, "I knew a couple of wimmin kept a
+milk snake in their dairy for a pet. Maybe this feller wants pettin'."
+Aunty May said he'd never get it from her, and she took a piece of tin
+and a hammer and tacks and went to close up the hole, but Mr. Taylor
+said, "Wait a minute, Miss May"; and he whispered to her, "Stand by a
+minute. There's a letter here from the War Department to Miss Edith, and
+I'm doubting it's being the best of news."
+
+Well, poor Aunty May turned so white and sat down so quickly with her
+face in her hands, that Aunty Edith, who came in the room just then from
+putting the axe away in the shed, said, "Why, May, did the snake
+frighten you as much as that?" Aunty May didn't answer. She just
+clutched Mr. Taylor and said, "Where is it?" Then Mr. Taylor looked at
+her and at Aunt Edith, and said "Sho" once or twice, and then he pulled
+out of his pocket a long envelope, and put it in Aunty Edith's hands.
+
+She sat down very quick, and tried to open it, but her hands shook so
+that she couldn't. Aunty May took it from her and tore it open, and they
+both leaned over and read it. Then Aunty Edith cried so for a while she
+couldn't tell us anything, but at last Aunty May took my hand and we
+went out on the porch, and she told us that Uncle Burt had got hurt in a
+little fight--not a real battle, a "skirmish" with some natives, and he
+was to be sent home on sick-leave.
+
+Then she and Mr. Taylor talked about what the letter said, and he shook
+his head, and told her it looked like a bad job to him. Aunty May told
+me to go over and sit with Mr. Taylor while she talked with Aunty Edith.
+
+Mr. Taylor and me sat there, not very happy, because I was thinking of
+Uncle Burt, and somehow I couldn't make him sick or hurt, he was so big
+and so very strong.
+
+I said that to Mr. Taylor, and he said, "Them there guns don't care how
+big and strong a man is, they picks 'em down. They're cruel things,
+boy, firearms is. Don't you ever go a-monkeying with them, mind that." I
+said I wouldn't.
+
+We sat there so quiet that we could hear the Aunties talking, and Aunty
+Edith crying every now and then, in the house. Aunty May wasn't crying,
+but she seemed quite angry about something. I could hear her say, "You
+shall take it, Edith, and you shall do as I say, or I'll throw it into
+the canal." Then again, "What is the money to me if--" And then Aunty
+May began to cry and Aunty Edith began to be soothing to her, and the
+more she soothed the harder Aunty May cried, till I heard Aunty Edith
+say, "All right, May, dear. I promise I'll do it, if you'll only
+stop crying."
+
+Aunty May stopped right away, and presently she came out, and her eyes
+were red, but her mouth was smiling, like it always does when she gets
+what she wants.
+
+She came and sat down by Mr. Taylor and me, while Aunty Edith went up to
+write out telegrams and letters, and told me that Aunty Edith was going
+out to bring Uncle Burt home, and that she was going with her as far as
+San Francisco; that while they were gone I was to stay at the Turners',
+for she thought they would look after me for her, and would I be a good
+boy until she came back?
+
+I promised I would, but, oh, I felt awful, and I begged her to take me
+with her, but she said she couldn't because Aunty Edith was so tired and
+sorry, and she would have to look after her all the time, and I must
+stay at home and be good and wait. She would come back for me, in a
+little while, and we'd wait together for Uncle Burt.
+
+So as long as Mr. Taylor sat there looking at me with his winky blue
+eyes, I didn't dare howl or anything, but my! I did feel like it. So I
+just said, "Yes, 'm, Aunty May, I'll be good." She kissed me right before
+him. It was a little mean of her, but he looked the other way and said,
+"Shoo, Teddy."
+
+Then Aunty May said, "There isn't a minute to be lost, Billy, so come in
+and pack your box, while I go across to the farmhouse and call the
+Turners up on the 'phone."
+
+I went into the house, where Aunty Edith was very quiet and packing very
+hard; and I packed the big suitcase with some of my things, for Aunty
+Edith said I could always get in the house and get the rest of them
+any time.
+
+Presently Aunty May came back and said, "It's all right. They are
+dears. They are coming down for Billy, right away, and they'll take you
+and me to the train. Do you think you can do it, Edith? We've just an
+hour." Aunty Edith said, "Of course I can."
+
+And then you never saw such a packing time. It made me so dizzy watching
+those two Aunties fly around, that presently I went outside, and sat
+with Mr. Taylor, who was on the front step, "Waiting orders," he said;
+and didn't we just get them, though!
+
+When Aunty Edith called, "Billy, the tags, please," didn't I just run!
+and when Aunty May said, "Mr. Taylor, will you please help me with this
+window?" he jumped around as though he was seventeen instead of
+seventy-three.
+
+By and by the launch came down, but a little late, so it was decided
+that I was to wait with Mr. Taylor until they took the Aunties to the
+train; and they'd get me on the way back.
+
+[Illustration: I believed they had really gone away, and left me all
+alone]
+
+After a few minutes the trunks were in the launch, the house was locked
+and Mr. Taylor had the key. The Aunties kissed me good-bye, and Aunty
+Edith promised to tell Uncle Burt I was a good boy, and Aunty May said
+she'd come back for me as soon as she could--and they shook hands with
+Mr. Taylor and he said, "Sho, I gotter feed them Teddy-cats," and went
+down the steps. Then they got into the launch and went off, and I waved
+at them as long as I could see them; and then I sat down by the canal
+bank and felt as if I couldn't bear it, for it wasn't till then I
+believed they had really gone away and left me all alone.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+AT TURNERS'
+
+Up at Turners' it was nice. They had a big stone house with lots of room
+in it, and the girls, Charlotte and Grace, were nice to play with, and
+Mrs. Turner always seemed to know what a boy wanted. She did pat me on
+the head and call me "pigeon" sometimes, but then, she did that to Mr.
+Turner, too, so I didn't mind.
+
+At first I thought it was going to be so nice, that I'd forget about
+everything till Aunty May came back, but by and by, though they were
+nice as nice can be, I began to miss Aunty May till it hurt like a
+toothache.
+
+I missed Aunty Edith, too, but Aunty May and I had played most together,
+and next to Uncle Burt, I loved her best.
+
+The Turners had an old ruined mill on their grounds, and we children
+used to hang our bathing-suits in there and use it to dress in when we
+went swimming in the creek.
+
+It was very old, and all the machinery, the wheels and things, were made
+of wood. Up in the top there was a nice big loft, with a wide window,
+where nobody ever went. When I found this out, I took a broom up there
+and swept it by the window, and got an old chair, and one of the old
+barrels for a table, and when I didn't want to play with Charlotte and
+Grace, or when it rained, I used to get a piece of bread or cake, or an
+apple, and go off there, all by myself. Sometimes I read, sometimes I
+wrote books and drew, and sometimes I just sat and thought about Uncle
+Burt and Aunty May, and Aunty Edith. And it got nearer and nearer the
+time for Aunty May to come back.
+
+The very day that she was to come home, I was doing this, thinking
+about her, I mean--a little harder than usual, because Mr. Turner had
+told me at breakfast that after all Aunty May wouldn't be back till
+to-morrow, when I heard somebody else breathing in the room. I turned
+around, and there was Henry, the Indian boy from the Carlisle School,
+sitting crouched on the floor.
+
+He was a great big boy, fifteen or sixteen, and he helped with the work
+in the house in the summertime. Henry was always nice to us children,
+and we liked him a great deal.
+
+I said "Hullo, Henry, what are you doing in my library?" And he showed
+all his teeth at me and said he was doing the same that I was doing
+there; he had come up to be sad and alone. Then I told him all about
+Aunty May, and he was sorry for me, and he told me about the school, and
+the teachers, and football, and his people, and I was sorry for him.
+
+Then he told me that when he got very sorry about everything, sometimes,
+he just dressed himself and got out of his bed at night and walked and
+walked until he got tired, and then came back and slept.
+
+He told me how lovely everything looked in the country, early in the
+morning, and I told him I'd like to do that, too, some morning, but how
+did he get up without waking people? Then he showed me how he could move
+in his stocking feet and no one could hear him. And it was true. If I
+sat with my back to Henry I would still think he was sitting back of me,
+when he was over by the door, really. So I practiced that, too. "Playing
+Indian," he called it; and he promised next time he had that feeling,
+he'd throw some gravel at my window, and I could come down.
+
+[Illustration: I told him all about Aunty May]
+
+I asked him how soon he thought it'd be, and he looked at me very long,
+and then, just as somebody called, "Henry, where are you? Come and take
+the canoe out," he leaned down and whispered in my ear, "To-night,
+be ready."
+
+Well, I could hardly eat my supper for thinking of it, and I went to bed
+so quickly and quietly that Mrs. Turner called me "pigeon" and patted my
+head, because the little girls didn't want to go and were a
+little noisy.
+
+After I got into bed and was just falling asleep, I did just for a
+minute think I should have asked Mrs. Turner if I could go, but
+honestly I never thought of that till then, because Aunty May wasn't
+there. I would have thought of telling her. Anyway Henry had told me not
+to tell, and I didn't know whether he meant just the children or not.
+
+Well, I stayed awake a long time, and got up softly and dressed again,
+and then I stayed asleep it seemed to me just a teeny while, when a bit
+of grass and gravel hit me on the nose.
+
+I woke up and more came flying through my open window, so I got up
+softly and kneeled on my bed, and there was Henry down on the ground,
+looking up at me.
+
+When he saw me he put his finger to his lips, and sent a big piece of
+clothes-rope flying through the window on to the bed, all without
+a word.
+
+Then he shaped with his mouth to use that and not the stairs, for the
+stairs were creaky.
+
+So I put the noose at the end over my bed-post and held on tight, and
+slid down, without a bit of noise, to the ground, where Henry caught me.
+
+I came down so fast it hurt my hands, but Henry washed them with water,
+at the well, and tied them up, all without speaking, and we went softly
+out of the yard, not toward the towpath, but up the long road over
+the hills.
+
+It was very early morning, about three o'clock, and everything looked
+lovely.
+
+[Illustration: Slid down without a bit of noise]
+
+When we got far away from the house, I asked Henry if he wasn't hungry,
+and he shook his head, no, but gave me a Uneeda biscuit out of a box,
+and I ate three or four, and all the time he was walking on in the nice
+soft light, without saying anything.
+
+Presently we got to the top of a hill, and Henry stood still, and so did
+I. There was the sun coming up and making all sorts of lovely colors
+on the sky.
+
+When we looked at it a little while, Henry said, "How does the little,
+lonely boy like walking in the morning?" and I said, "Fine."
+
+We walked on, and sometimes Henry didn't say anything, and sometimes he
+whistled, and sometimes he talked to me about Carlisle and football,
+and out-of-doors and things like that, and I had a lovely time and
+didn't notice how far away we were getting.
+
+At last the sun came up all the way, and I said, "Oh, Henry, we'd better
+get back now, for Mrs. Turner will miss us and not know where we are."
+
+But Henry threw himself flat on the grass,--we had sat down to rest a
+minute because I was tired, and didn't say anything at all for a
+long time.
+
+Then he lifted his head and his white teeth showed, and his eyes smiled
+at me, and he said quite softly, "I am not going back."
+
+Oh, how queer I felt when he said those words. Maybe it was as Aunty
+May said, because I hadn't enough breakfast in my insides, but
+everything went round like a clock for a minute, the sky, the trees, and
+the strange road, and the strange houses, and then I said in a funny
+voice, "Oh, Henry, you don't mean that."
+
+He said, "Yes, I am tired of everything there"; and he pointed down the
+road we had come along. "I am going back to my own people; back to
+the school."
+
+Then he offered to take me with him, and to carry me part of the way, as
+I was little and got tired too easily to keep up with him. But though
+he was kind, and I wanted very much to go with him, and not be left
+alone, I couldn't, because I remembered this was the day Aunty May was
+coming home; and now, what would she and the Turners think of me!
+
+I was so sorry that I was pretty near crying, except that the Indian boy
+was looking at me with his bright eyes, and I remembered that Indians do
+not cry, and would think me a poor kind of a boy if I did.
+
+So I just shook my head, and told him I must go back and meet Aunty May.
+He didn't like this, until I had promised him that I would only say he'd
+left me and had gone on to Carlisle, and I would not say where he'd
+left me, so that he'd get a fair start. But I didn't like to say even
+that for fear I'd have to tell what wasn't so, until he told me it was
+all right, because I didn't know where we were, and he wouldn't tell me.
+
+He told me he liked me very much and was sorry I wouldn't go with him,
+and he divided the crackers and told me to sit still and not look until
+I had counted 100. I did, and when I'd finished there wasn't any Henry
+to be seen.
+
+I ate a cracker, and started back down the road again, and now everybody
+was up and I met men on the roads and dogs barked at me, and oh, how
+long the road seemed!
+
+I went on and on till I thought I should fall down, and I was so thirsty
+I didn't know what to do.
+
+By and by, I came to a place where there was a toll-gate, and then I
+knew I was lost, for we hadn't passed any on the road coming up, and
+besides I hadn't any money.
+
+So I stood still and tried to think, but I felt hot and tired and my
+head went round a little. Then I thought I'd go to the back door of the
+tollhouse, and then maybe some one would tell me how to go and they
+wouldn't have to feel so badly about telling me I couldn't get through
+without any money. So I went round to the back yard and there was
+nobody in it.
+
+Then I went up to the kitchen door and knocked and nobody came, but I
+heard a little voice at the kitchen window say, "Hey, boy, what do
+you want?"
+
+I looked and there was a little boy, just about seven or eight, sitting
+in a chair by the window, and I came up to it, and called to him--"I
+want to know the road to East Penniwell, and I want a drink of water."
+
+At first he just shook his head, and then he opened the window, and
+said, "Hurry up. We got diphtheria here and nobody's allowed to speak
+to me. That's why the tollhouse is shut up. Ain't you 'fraid?"
+
+I said, "I don't know what it is, and I'm awfully hungry and thirsty and
+I want to know the road to East Penniwell."
+
+"Well," he said, "poor boy"; and handed me out a glass of milk and a
+piece of bread, and I was drinking the milk, when I heard some one yell
+at me. It was a man running up to the house, and the boy grabbed the cup
+away and said, "Here comes Pop. You'd better leg it." I ran as fast as I
+could out the gate and down the road he told me to take. The man didn't
+chase me far, and I didn't hear what he said, his dog barked so. But I
+didn't feel quite so tired, though I ached a lot still, and my feet were
+awful wet, through running right through a brook when the man called
+at me.
+
+I went right on. Sometimes I lay down under a tree, sometimes I sat down
+by the road.
+
+I don't see why a road that seems all right when you're going up it,
+seems so terrible when you are going down. But maybe it's because I made
+wrong turnings, and always when the men asked me if I'd ride with them a
+little ways, I said, "No," because I would have to tell them I belonged
+at Turners', and they might ask me about Henry, the Indian boy.
+
+Last I took a turning that led me farther and farther down a road I
+never remember seeing before and there were no cross-road places; no
+farmhouses, and no man came along on a wagon. I just had to keep on,
+feeling sicker and sicker, till, just as I made a short turn, I came out
+on a road that led to Crosscup's farm and Rabbit Run Bridge!
+
+My, wasn't I glad. But I wasn't going to Crosscup's house, not much! I
+knew what I'd do now. I'd get Mr. Taylor, and tell him, just as fast
+as I could.
+
+That wasn't very fast, because my feet had needles in them, and
+dragged, but by and by I got there, and knocked at the door. Mr. Taylor
+opened it, with all the cats around him. I just began to speak, and say,
+"Good-morning, Mr. Taylor," when everything got kind of black and hazy,
+and I didn't remember any more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+THE WHITE TENT
+
+[Illustration: I woke up and found myself lying on the porch]
+
+I didn't remember anything, until I woke up and found myself lying on
+the porch, and Mr. Taylor bending over me with a glass of water in his
+hand, all the Teddy-cats purring at me, and my head on somebody's lap.
+Mr. Taylor was saying, "Sho, I guess he's coming to, and ye'd better not
+let him see ye, jist at first"; but I turned quick before she could
+move, and grabbed her and said, "Oh, Aunty May."
+
+I thought I'd shouted it, but it sounded just like a squeak.
+
+Aunty May didn't care. She just lifted me up in her arms and held me
+tight, and said, "Oh, Billy, how could you run away from me?"
+
+It took me the longest while explaining to her and to Mr. Turner and to
+Mr. Taylor, who didn't say anything but "Sho" and shoo the cats, and
+never looked at the others. But I knew he'd hear every word and remember
+it, if I didn't, so I told them exactly what happened. How sorry Henry
+was to go away, but that he had to, and that I didn't know where the
+place was that we'd parted at, and how I thought he was coming back when
+we started.
+
+Mr. Turner said it was all right, that Henry was an honest, industrious
+boy, but he had fits of homesickness, though they had never known about
+his getting up early and walking.
+
+Aunty May forgave me, and Mr. and Mrs. Turner forgave me too.
+
+Mrs. Turner was in the launch, and was just telling me to jump in and
+come up with Aunty May to dinner, when Mr. Taylor, who had been
+listening and not saying anything, said, "I hope that wasn't the Lateeka
+Toll-House ye stopped at, young man. I heerd say there was so much
+diphtheria and scarlet fever there that they hev closed the tollhouse."
+
+Then I remembered what the boy had said, and I had to say it to Aunty
+May, and Aunty held me very tightly for a minute, and said to Mrs.
+Turner, "No: it wouldn't be safe for the other children. I'll keep
+William down here, until we see if it develops."
+
+Then both the ladies nodded to each other very sadly, but Mr. Turner
+said, "Oh, he's a young husky. He'll be all right"; and they went away.
+
+But I did develop. So much, that Aunty May had a sign put on the house,
+and nobody came near us for weeks and weeks but the nurse and the
+doctor, and Mr. Taylor, who used to hand things over the fence. And oh,
+how tired I got of being in bed, and being sick. Then when I got a
+little better, Aunty May and the doctor had a big tent put up in the
+woods near us, and the nurse went away, and Aunty May and I lived in the
+tent together, and I started to get better and write this book.
+
+First, just a little at a time, and then by and by a good deal each day,
+and all the time Aunty May stayed with me, and never said I was naughty
+or anything. Just called me "Billy-boy" and spelled all the big words,
+and took care of me like I was a baby, because I was so weak.
+
+One day, when I had sat up all day, dressed, I thought Aunty May looked
+kind of excited, and I saw a letter sticking out of her pocket, and I
+asked her if Aunty Edith was coming home, and she said, "Yes, very
+soon." She smiled so that I knew it must be something nice, so I clapped
+my hands and said, "Then Uncle Burt's all well again, too." For every
+time while I was sick, when I asked about Uncle Burt, Aunty May would
+say, "He's much better, but we mustn't talk." I had to be patient and
+wait then, but this day I said, "Oh. Aunty May, he is really better,
+isn't he?"
+
+Then Aunty May laid down her letter and came and sat down by me and
+said, "Billy, how would you like to hear about Uncle Burt to-day?" and I
+told her, "I'd like to." Aunty May told me then that Uncle Burt had been
+shot very badly in the leg, and that he had a fever beside, and had
+been so ill that they thought he would die, but that Aunty Edith had
+gone out there and taken such good care of him that he was better, and
+was coming back with Aunty Edith. I asked for how long, and Aunty May
+got a little sad and said, "That's the hard part of it for Uncle Burt,
+Billy. He won't ever be able to go back to the army again. His leg is so
+badly hurt that he will always be a little lame."
+
+Then Aunty May burst out crying, and so did I, for it seemed hard that
+big, splendid Uncle Burt should be lame. By and by Aunty told me that
+he had got the hurt when he turned back to help one of his men who had
+been shot; that even though he was hurt himself, he brought the soldier
+back to camp; so I ought to be proud of him.
+
+But I was anyway, I told her. I couldn't be any more than I am. I knew
+Uncle Burt would do a thing like that. I just expected it of him. But
+I'd like to kill the man who hurt his leg.
+
+Aunty May told me not to say that, for the poor thing had been killed,
+and she said, "War is a horrible thing," And I said, "Yes, 'm, but it
+wasn't a real war, only a skirmish"; and Aunty May said, "It was real
+enough for that poor wretch and for Burt."
+
+I said, "But Uncle Burt'll find something else to do, some other way to
+be splendid, won't he?" And Aunty May just nodded her head, and we
+didn't say anything more for a long time and I lay still thinking about
+Uncle Burt and wondering how it would seem to be him, and lame. I said,
+"Will he use a crutch?" but Aunty May didn't know. She hoped not. And
+now, would I please get well, and be ready for her to hand me over whole
+to Uncle Burt.
+
+I said I would, but she'd have to be handed over too, for Uncle Burt
+told me to take care of her for him.
+
+I got better, and so did Aunty May. As fast as I grew better, she got
+more cheerful, and we used to have lots of fun. But all the time we
+stayed in the tent, and never went to the house. I used to hear
+hammerings and things, but I never saw anything, because I wasn't
+allowed to walk yet on account of the anti-toxin. I don't know whether
+that word is spelled right, but I don't like to ask Aunty May, it always
+makes her pale when I say the word.
+
+One day, Aunty May brought a boy down the path with her. A mule boy. I
+heard the mules waiting for him outside, and it was the "cap and eel"
+boy, and he said, "How are you, young feller? Heerd you was sick!"
+
+"Who told you?" I said.
+
+"The Mushrat," he said. "He came a-whooping and a-running up the canal
+one night, an' hollered to me in passing that he wasn't going to bring
+no pitcher-books back to no diphtheria sore-throaters. Kina cowardly
+fellers, them mush-rats, so I brung it myself. Say, when ye going to get
+up and paste me?"
+
+"When you put those turkey-red trousers on your mule," I said.
+
+And then we both laughed, and Aunty May give him another picture-book,
+and some fruit, and asked him to come again, and he promised, and I lay
+back and heard his mule bells jingling up the path. It seemed so nice
+and peaceful, and everybody was so kind to me, that I felt lumpy inside,
+especially when I thought of Uncle Burt coming.
+
+But would he be angry with me for bringing germs to his house, and right
+close to Aunty May? I asked Aunty May what she thought, and she said
+Uncle Burt would agree with her that I really couldn't help it, and that
+he wouldn't blame me, especially if she handed me over all right.
+
+So we went to work on jellies and things and tried to get well, as fast
+as anything before he came.
+
+One afternoon Aunty May said to me, "Billy, I think you're strong enough
+to go back to the house now. We've got rid of all the germs and the
+sickness in this nice big white tent, and now, my little soldier, we'll
+go back to barracks and wait for our Commanding Officer."
+
+We packed up my books and papers and went down the path to the house,
+but it wasn't the same house any more.
+
+It was bigger, and all around it ran a wide piazza, and on it were big
+wicker chairs, and Aunty May put me in one of them, and asked me how I
+liked it. And I said it was lovely, and it was. Inside there were more
+rooms than before and a bathroom with a big shiny tub and running water,
+and while it was a country house still, it was much more like a
+city house.
+
+Aunty May said, "Do you think Aunty Edith will like it?" and I said yes;
+then she said, "Do you think a sick soldier would like to get well on
+this piazza?" and I said I knew he would. It was the finest ever.
+
+We took hands and went around and looked at everything, and then we set
+the table together. Aunty May wouldn't let Mrs. Katy Smith, who had
+come to help, do a thing to the table. We set it for four people. So I
+said, "Is company coming to dinner?" Aunty May hugged me and said, "Yes,
+Billy, but it's a surprise. Don't ask." But I kept guessing,--Charlotte
+and Grace Turner, and Mr. and Mrs. Turner, and everybody I knew in East
+Penniwell, and Aunty May said, "You're cold. You're cold."
+
+Just then a carriage stopped at our door, and Aunty Edith got out, and
+then a thin pale man got out, and he carried a cane and leaned on Aunty
+Edith, and he came into the room: And IT WAS UNCLE BURT!
+
+[Illustration: And it was Uncle Burt]
+
+I gave such a yell that Aunty Edith looked frightened and Aunty May
+threw her arms about me and said, "Oh, Billy dear, don't get excited.
+It's bad for--" But Uncle Burt said, "No, it isn't. It's good for me."
+And he went to hug me, but Aunty May hadn't got her arms untwisted from
+me yet, so that he hugged both of us. He didn't seem to notice it at
+all until I pointed out to him that it was me he wanted and that he was
+kissing Aunty May, and he said, "Dear me, you don't say so"--and kissed
+her again. Then he kissed me.
+
+He sat down, and Aunty May and me went and stood by him. That is, I
+stood by him and leaned on his well knee, and Aunty May kneeled down and
+put her head on his hurt knee, and he didn't seem to mind it at all. He
+put his hand on her head and smiled over to Aunty Edith, and she came
+and said, "Come, Billy, show me the house."
+
+I said, "Yes, Aunty Edith, but first I want to give Aunty May back to
+Uncle Burt. She's all right, the germs didn't hurt her, though she got
+quite thin taking care of me."
+
+"Did she, poor girl," said Uncle Burt.
+
+Aunty May lifted her head up and said, "And Billy's all right. I took
+care of him,--for you."
+
+Then Uncle Burt smiled at us both. His old smile, though he was so
+dreadful thin and pale. He said, "Well, and now I've come home to look
+after you both."
+
+I showed Aunty Edith the house, and she told me all about her journey,
+and how long it took her, and how sick Uncle Burt was then, and how
+much better he was now; and that though he would always walk with a
+limp, he wouldn't need a crutch,--which made me very glad.
+
+Then Uncle Burt and Aunty May came in, and Aunty Edith kissed Aunty May
+and they went to take off Aunty Edith's hat.
+
+Uncle Burt let me take him to his room, and he told me, while I fished
+out a handkerchief for him and brushed his hair, that Aunty May was
+going to marry him and be my real Aunty, and I was to live with them
+both for always.
+
+So this is a good place to end W.A.G.'s Tale.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of W. A. G.'s Tale, by Margaret Turnbull
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK W. A. G.'S TALE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 9844.txt or 9844.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/9/8/4/9844/
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diff --git a/9844.zip b/9844.zip
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+eBook #9844 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/9844)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of W. A. G.'s Tale, by Margaret Turnbull
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: W. A. G.'s Tale
+
+Author: Margaret Turnbull
+
+Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9844]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 23, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK W. A. G.'S TALE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Rebekah Inman
+and the PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+W.A.G.'S TALE
+
+EDITED BY
+
+MARGARET TURNBULL
+
+WITH ZOBZEE ILLUSTRATIONS
+BY THE AUTHOR
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+PREFACE BY AUTHOR
+
+I. UNCLE BURT'S BILLY
+II. OUR HOUSE
+III. OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR
+IV. ON THE TOWPATH
+V. ON THE DELAWARE
+VI. GEORGE
+VII. LEFT ALONE
+VIII. AT TURNER'S
+IX. THE WHITE TENT
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+I STARTED TO GET BETTER AND WRITE THIS BOOK (p. 153) (colored)
+_Frontispiece_ From a drawing by M.L. Kirk
+
+A ZOBZEE
+
+ON THE BRIDGE
+
+HE JUMPED OUT AND TOOK A ROPE AND PULLED THE BOAT CLOSE
+
+SHE WASHED AND I DRIED
+
+HE TURNED AND WENT INTO THE WHITE STONE HOUSE, AND ALL THE CATS RAN
+AFTER HIM
+
+HE SMOKED A PIPE, AND I PLAYED WITH ALL HIS TEDDY-CATS
+
+BRINGS HIM DOWN, PERSIMMONS AND ALL
+
+SO I TOOK MY FISHING-ROD AND FLICKED IT AT HIM
+
+NEVER YOU MIND, BABY DEAR, COME ON
+
+WHAT'S AN ABSENT-MINDED BEGGAR?
+
+HEY, ROBINSON CRUSOE, HERE'S YOUR MAN FRIDAY
+
+HE HAD TO TAKE A CAN-OPENER AND CUT AUNTY EDITH'S FOOT OUT
+
+WE ALL WORKED WITH HOSE AND EVERYTHING
+
+AUNTY MAY GOT A HATCHET AND MADE A CHOP AT THE SNAKE
+
+I BELIEVED THEY HAD REALLY GONE AWAY, AND LEFT ME ALL ALONE
+
+I TOLD HIM ALL ABOUT AUNTY MAY
+
+SLID DOWN WITHOUT A BIT OF NOISE
+
+I WOKE UP AND FOUND MYSELF LYING ON THE PORCH
+
+AND IT WAS UNCLE BURT
+
+
+
+
+W.A.G.'S TALE
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE BY THE AUTHOR
+
+I have been sick. Now I am better the Doctor makes me lie in bed because
+of all that Anti-toxin he put in me, which weakens the heart. Anti-toxin
+isn't a lady, it's a medicine for diphtheria. Aunty May is a lady. She
+reads me books and plays games with me. But I am tired of books written
+about nature, and animals, and Indians, and fairies, and I wished out
+loud that somebody would write a book about a boy, just like me. So
+to-day Aunty May brought me a big, thick blank book with red covers, and
+with rings at the back to let me add more paper when I want to, and she
+told me to write my own story, a little every day.
+
+[Illustration: "Zobzee"]
+
+So that's what I am going to do, and illustrate it with "Zobzees."
+"Zobzees" are thin dancing people--like this. I invented that name, and
+a country and a language for them, which only Aunty May and I know. But
+I am not going to write my book in that. I am going to print it, like
+other books, but draw "Zobzees" because they are easy; and if nobody
+else reads it except me and Uncle Burt when he comes home, it will be
+fun for us, anyway.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+UNCLE BURT'S BILLY
+
+My name is William Ainsworth Gordon, and my initials spell W.A.G. That
+is why Aunty May and I call this book "W.A.G.'S TALE." If it was about a
+dog it would be "Tail Wags." So it's true and a joke too.
+
+I am ten years old and my father and mother are in Heaven, and I have
+only Uncle Burt to take care of me. Uncle Burt isn't my real uncle, but
+he was my father's chum when they were at West Point, and he promised
+father to take care of me. And he does, only he had to go to the
+Philippines with his soldiers; so his sister, Aunty Edith, is taking
+care of me until he comes back. Everybody else calls me William, but he
+calls me "Billy," so I am the one this chapter is named after.
+
+Aunty May says I can begin with the very day Aunty Edith brought me down
+here. That was the day Uncle Burt went away to join his regiment, and
+everybody was sort of quiet, and even the big people cried a little. I
+cried a good deal, when nobody was looking, and when Uncle Burt caught
+me at it in the corner of the room, he didn't say a word, but just
+picked me up and held me so tight that one of his buttons got stamped
+on my cheek like a seal. He said he'd give way and cry, too, for it was
+good for the eyes, only his Colonel had expressly ordered him not to,
+saying he would leave all red-eyed men home, which would be terrible for
+a soldier. So I begged him not to give way, and he said he wouldn't if
+I'd stop, because one fellow bawling makes it hard for the other fellow
+not to. So I stopped and we laughed a little, and then he showed the
+mark on my cheek to Aunty Edith, and said, "This shows that this young
+man belongs to me, so be careful of Uncle Burt's Billy and return him in
+good condition, for there will be a dreadful time if I find him chipped
+or broken, when I come back."
+
+Then the lady I call Aunty May, though she isn't any relation to me
+either, but is just Aunty Edith's friend, laughed and said she would be
+careful to treat me nicely. And she has. I like her best next to Uncle
+Burt. She didn't cry. She laughed a lot, and every time Uncle Burt got
+sad and tried to talk to her, she laughed more, and she took me on her
+lap and kept me there all the time Uncle Burt was saying good-bye
+to her.
+
+He looked more like crying then than any other time. He said,
+"Good-bye, May; won't you change your mind?" and she said, "Oh, no,
+Burt, I can't." Then he was going to say something else when I said,
+"Remember the Colonel, Uncle Burt, and don't get your eyes too red to
+go," and then they both laughed. Uncle Burt said, "Look after Miss Heath
+for me, Billy, while I'm gone," and I said, "Sure I will. I'm going to
+adopt her as my Aunty, too." She put her arms round me and hugged me and
+Uncle Burt said, "Lucky Billy," and then the door closed, and Aunty
+Edith began to cry and Aunty May looked queer for a minute and went to
+the door. I thought she'd run after him, but she stopped and said,
+"Come along, Sir William, and we'll pack our bags, 'cause we're all
+going to the country on the 3.10." And I took hold of her hand, and we
+went upstairs together, and packed my bag and put in my gun, my
+soldiers, my books and my paint-box. Then Aunty Edith stopped crying and
+tied a veil over her face. If she'd been a soldier she'd been left home
+all right.
+
+We got in a taxi with a lot of bags and things and went to the
+Pennsylvania Station, which is miles and miles long, I think, but there
+are lots of kind black men who wear red caps and run up and take your
+bags and carry them for you just as easy, One of them took my bag and
+Aunty May's suitcase, but Aunty Edith had another one--a fat one--all
+alone for her things.
+
+We just had time for our train, so we had to hurry right through the
+waiting-room, and I couldn't stop and see all the things there are to
+see, or watch the people coming down the stairs. People's legs are funny
+if you watch them coming down--like things made with hinges.
+
+Then we got into a nice big train with chairs in it that swung round.
+They call it a "Pullman" which is a good name for a car, only it's the
+engine that pulls the man and the car, too, really. Then we got all
+comfortable, with another nice colored man who showed his teeth at us,
+and put our bags up on a rack, and Aunty May gave me some sweet
+chocolate and a magazine with pictures in it, and Aunty Edith said. "I
+wish we didn't have to change at Trenton,"--and--then--I fell asleep.
+
+The next thing I knew Aunty May was saying to me, "Wake up, Billy, dear,
+it's Trenton now." She put on my jacket and the man took our bags again
+and we stepped out on a big platform, and then another man took all our
+bags and we went up one stair, and down another, and waited on a long
+platform, where trains kept shooting up every minute.
+
+I couldn't understand what the man in uniform said, until at last a
+funny little train--all short, only half as long as our New York one,
+and with funny, hard straight seats--came, and we climbed in. Aunty
+Edith and Aunty May and me had to carry our own bags and fix 'em. The
+train waited a long time, but at last it moved, and Aunty May put her
+arm round me and sat me next the window, only it wasn't open, because it
+was only April and wasn't warm enough yet, and said, "Now we're off to
+East Penniwell."
+
+The train just crawled along, and there was a big canal on the one
+side. I saw a canal boat with two men and a dog on it, and they were
+cooking something in a big pot on the top of a stove that stood right
+out of doors, on top of the boat, with a stovepipe that didn't go into
+any chimney, but right up into the air--with smoke coming out of it!
+
+I showed it to Aunty May and she said, "You will see them every day when
+we get to the towpath," and I felt awful glad at that, because though
+the boat moved slow, the train moved fast, and I didn't get a good look
+at the boy who was driving the mules. I couldn't be sure whether he'd
+made a face at me or not, but I think he did.
+
+Then by and by on the other side of the train came a great big river,
+all fast and running along and some bubbling-up places in it where rocks
+stood up. Aunty May said those were rapids and this was the Delaware
+River, the one Washington crossed.
+
+I think more of him than ever, now I've seen the river, for it's good
+and wide and it must have been a cold job getting over it. I told Aunty
+May I hoped it wasn't at the rapids he tried to cross, and she said,
+"Oh, no," and "I'll show you," and presently the train stopped and the
+conductor said, "Washington's Crossing," There was a big tree, where he
+could have tied a boat if he'd wanted to. Aunty May said maybe he did;
+and a white house where I guess the soldiers got something to eat and
+drink. Anyway, I hoped so. Aunty May said she'd never asked, so she
+couldn't say, positively, as it was so long ago, but it wouldn't hurt to
+think they did. So I imagined it that way.
+
+Then our train stopped at a station and we got out. I hadn't been ready
+for its stopping, and I got so busy getting my things on, and getting my
+bag in my hand, that I didn't hear the name of it, and I asked Aunty May
+if it was East Penniwell, and she said, "Oh, no, this is Scrubbsville,
+New Jersey, and East Penniwell is in Pennsylvania."
+
+"Will we get into another train, then?" I asked, and Aunty May laughed
+and said, "Oh, no, just wait and see." Then we got off and walked down,
+carrying our bags, to a big bridge right over the Delaware.
+
+There was a man sitting, at the end of the bridge, in a little house
+with a window in it, and you paid him two cents apiece before you could
+get on the bridge to go to Pennsylvania. He is the Toll-Man and it is a
+Toll-Bridge, and it seemed to me very funny to have to pay to walk.
+Aunty May said it was funny, too, but Aunty Edith said it was
+a nuisance.
+
+Aunty Edith asked the Toll-Man if we could leave our big suitcase
+there, until Mr. Tree the grocer came over with a wagon for our trunks,
+later, and he said, "Yes." He was a nice smiling man.
+
+Then Aunty Edith and Aunty May and I, and Aunty Edith's bag and my
+little one, which Aunty May carried because she said we had a long walk
+ahead of us, went over the bridge.
+
+[Illustration: On the Bridge]
+
+The wind almost blew my cap away, but I caught it just in time, and on
+the bridge we met a big man carrying a paint-box and a folding-up
+stool, like Aunty Edith has, and he had an E-normous dog, as big as me,
+and it galumphed at me, and I got behind Aunty Edith, for she is very
+big both ways, and the man said, "Down, Pete," When the dog downed, he
+shook hands with Aunty Edith, and she introduced him to Aunty May and
+me, and he said he was glad to see us, and I could come and play with
+his children up the towpath.
+
+I said, "Yes, sir," but Aunty May and me kept away from Pete, because we
+didn't know him then. We know him now and like him. The man said, "Wait
+till I get back and I'll take you up in the launch." Then he went on to
+Scrubbsville, and Aunty Edith said, "Such a pleasure to meet Mr. Turner.
+Now William won't get tired walking up. Won't that be nice, William, to
+go up the canal in the launch, instead of walking?" I said, "Yes, 'm,
+Aunty Edith," to her, but to Aunty May I said, "Will that Pete be in the
+boat, too?" and Aunty May whispered back, "Ow Gracious! I hope not. But
+don't let him know we're afraid, old man." So I took her hand tight and
+we followed Aunty Edith, who is an awful fast walker and always has so
+many things to do.
+
+First we went to the Post-Office, which is a little wooden building,
+and the Postmaster knows everybody and looks at you over his glasses.
+Then we went up a funny street with brick pavements, awful old. There
+are houses on that very street built before the Revolution, and a big
+cannon in the square. We went to Mr. Tree's, and he's a nice, big grocer
+man, with everything in his shop, and he patted me on the head and gave
+me a chocolate candy, which Aunty Edith said I might eat, if I ate it
+slowly. He said he would bring our trunks and bags up right away. Aunty
+Edith said, "Now I've got to order oil from Tryer and coal from Quick
+and some thread from Miss Macfarland's notion store," and I said, "Why
+don't the servants do all that, Aunty Edith?" She laughed and said,
+"There are no servants for us at East Penniwell, William; we do the work
+ourselves," Aunty May said, "But it will be fun, Billy. All the artists
+like Aunty Edith live that way down here, and you and I will be the
+writer people and we'll do lots of funny things together. Only, Edith,"
+she said, "the boy and I are weary; where can we rest while you finish
+your shopping?"
+
+"Oh, very well," Aunty Edith said; "come and I'll show you the launch
+and you can get in that and sit and wait for Mr. Turner."
+
+We walked up a funny, hilly, crooked street, with partly brick
+pavements again and partly stone, till we came to an old wooden bridge
+over a canal, and then Aunty May squeezed my hand and said, "Billy, this
+is our canal," We crossed the bridge, and went down a few steps and
+there was Mr. Turner's launch. We got in and sat and watched the water
+and made up stories to each other, till Aunty Edith and Mr. Turner came,
+all full of bundles. Mr. Turner started the launch and we went
+chug-chugging along. But Pete didn't get in. He swam part of the time
+and ran and barked on the towpath the other part.
+
+The canal boats came down past us, and they began to have lights on
+them, and the trees were all green and hung down by the canal banks, and
+I could see where the dogwood was beginning to come out in the woods.
+There were some ducks swimming in the canal, and a farmhouse high above
+us on the bank. Then nothing but the towpath, which is the path on one
+side of the canal where the mules walk when they drag the canal boats.
+
+By and by I saw two tiny white houses, with their roofs and chimneys
+sticking up over the canal bank, and one of them had a funny green door,
+and honeysuckle all growing over the fence. Mr. Turner never stopped
+till Aunty Edith called, "Oh, we're going past," Then he stopped and
+jumped out and took a rope and pulled the boat close to the bank, where
+there were some stones placed like steps. I saw the two houses plainly
+then, one a white stone one and one a white wooden one with a
+green door.
+
+[Illustration: He jumped out and took a rope and pulled the boat close]
+
+We all stepped out, with our bags, and said good-bye to Mr. Turner, and
+his launch went away up the canal past us, and Aunty Edith took a key
+out of her pocket and went down a step, into the garden of the house
+with the green door, and opened it, and said to Aunty May and me, "Come
+in, children. This is OUR HOUSE."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+OUR HOUSE
+
+Aunty May and I went inside, and we looked at each other and laughed. It
+was small, like a doll's house, and the room we stepped into, through
+the doorway, had a window the same side as the door, which looked out on
+the towpath, and two windows at the back, and a stovepipe coming right
+out of the floor and running up through the low ceiling.
+
+When I went and looked out of the back windows, I called to Aunty May,
+"Oh, see, it's the Delaware." And it was.
+
+There, right at the foot of our back garden, under the willow trees, was
+the Delaware River, running along, very fast.
+
+I said, "Come on, let's go down to the river, Aunty May." But Aunty
+Edith said, "First, look at the house."
+
+We went through a little door into another long, narrow, low room, with
+a window on the towpath and a window on the river, and a queer
+old-fashioned bureau and two iron beds in it, and a clothes-horse, in
+one corner, covered with muslin. When you opened one flap of it, it was
+a closet. This was Aunty Edith and Aunty May's room.
+
+In the other room, with the stovepipe in the middle of it, was a big
+couch, and that was to be my bed at night. There was a big closet at one
+end, made out of the place where the steps went up to the attic, and
+that was where my clothes were to hang. One side of the room had
+bookshelves, and on the wall were some of Aunty Edith's paintings; and
+there was a doorway at one end without any door.
+
+I said to Aunty Edith, "How do we get to the river from this house? Do
+we have to go out of the front door and run down? And where's the stove
+that the pipe belongs to? Is it in a cellar?" Then both the aunties
+laughed, and they went to this doorway without any door, and there was a
+funny thing that looked like a clumsy ladder. Aunty Edith told me those
+were our best stairs, and that once they were canal boat stairs.
+
+Well, you climbed down them very carefully, for they tipped a little,
+and you landed on a dark little landing with a door. You opened the door
+and stepped down a step and there you were in the nicest old kitchen
+you ever saw!
+
+The top part of the house was wooden, but this under part was of stone
+and cement, and the walls inside were cement, and the ceiling was just
+wood with the big floor beams showing through. And there was a door with
+glass in the top, that you could look through down to the river and the
+willows; and there was a window with a deep window seat you could sit in
+and look at the river; then there was a long window at the side, where
+the outside steps came down from the towpath, and that opened in two
+halves and had narrow panes of glass. It looked out on a garden.
+
+A big cook-stove, with a kettle steaming on it, was at one end of the
+room; and a nice big table, and there were some comfortable chairs, and
+pots and pans hanging over and under the mantel back of the stove.
+
+There was a rug on the floor, and a pantry with lots of good things to
+eat in it, and a big couch that I sat down on, and looked around.
+
+There was a little place in the wall, too, that had once been a window,
+but was closed up and made into a little cupboard for dishes.
+
+I said, "My! isn't this lovely?" Aunty May squeezed my hand and said it
+was, and Aunty Edith looked around and said, "Well, Mrs. Katy Smith did
+get my postal in time, after all. I'm so glad, because if she hadn't,
+it wouldn't have been so nice and clean in here, and there would have
+been no fire. Now, I'm going to take off my things and make a supper
+for us all."
+
+Aunty May said, "I'll help you," but Aunty Edith said, "Not this first
+time, May. You take the boy out and show him the garden and the river,"
+
+So Aunty May and I took hold of hands and went out, and there was a long
+flower-bed running right down to the river-bank, on both sides of a long
+grassplot; and beyond the grass and flowers was a lot of ploughed land
+for vegetables and things; and beyond that there were a lot of woods.
+There was a path between the grassplot and the flower-bed next the fence
+of our neighbor, in the white stone house, and we went down that, and
+when we came to the end of the flower-bed there was a big apple tree,
+and then we went under that and stood on the river-bank, and there was
+the Delaware!
+
+Under the biggest willow tree there was a seat made of an old box, and
+Aunty May and I sat down for a minute and looked at the river. It was so
+clear that I could see the little fishes swimming along, and I threw a
+stick in it, and it went by so fast that Aunty May said, "My! how swift
+the current is. You must be careful, Billy-boy, and not go near the edge
+when you are alone." I said, "Yes, 'm, but I am to go in wading when it
+gets warmer."
+
+We went along the bank a little farther, and there were more trees,
+cherry trees, and willow trees, and buttonwood trees, and lots of nice
+places for us to put our hammocks. Then we went back to the house, and
+there was Aunty Edith in a big gingham apron toasting bread and making
+chocolate. I laughed and said, "Oh, Aunty Edith, I never saw you look
+like that in the city." Then we all laughed, and Aunty Edith said, "You
+will see me look like this very often down here, for we all have to do
+our share of the work. You, too, Billy. You will have to help us." I
+said, "That will be bully."
+
+Aunty May set the table, and we all sat down and ate our toast and ham
+and eggs, and drank our chocolate, and I thought it was better than
+anything I had ever eaten.
+
+Just when we were in the middle of it, I heard footsteps crunching along
+the walk, and down the steps at the side of the house from the towpath.
+I called, "Some one's coming." Aunty Edith went to the door.
+
+It was Mr. Tree with the trunks and the suitcase. He said, "Hullo,
+young fellow. Have you come to take care of these ladies?" And I said,
+"Yes, sir"; and he said, "That's right. Look after 'em. It'll be a load
+off my mind to know they've got a man on the premises. It's right lonely
+up here." And I told him we wasn't afraid. I asked him if he needed any
+help, but he said no, and he was so terrible big and strong that he
+lifted the trunks as if they were boxes.
+
+After he had gone, Aunty Edith said she must unpack, and Aunty May said,
+"Do, Edith; Billy and I will do the dishes."
+
+So Aunty May tied a big clean towel around my waist, and she washed and
+I dried. There was no running water, just a pump outside the kitchen
+shed, right out of doors.
+
+[Illustration: She washed and I dried]
+
+I pumped for Aunty May and we had a lovely time. We played a game with
+the dishes. Plates were ladies and saucers were little girls, and cups
+were little boys, and knives and forks were policemen and spoons were
+servants. We had a lot of fun, when the knives and forks marched round
+the table, and ordered the other dishes into the cupboard.
+
+After that was done, Aunty May said she must go upstairs and help Aunty
+Edith, and unpack her own typewriter. Aunty May writes stories, too,
+only she uses a typewriter and I use a pencil.
+
+Aunty May asked me whether I'd sit in the window seat and read a
+picture-book or would I explore the garden. I said I would do both; look
+at pictures a little while and go in the garden. Aunty May made me
+promise not to go too near the river, or too far down the towpath.
+
+Then she went upstairs and I read a little till I had enough of
+reading, and I thought I'd go to the towpath, but first, as I was
+thirsty, I thought I'd get a glass and take a drink at the pump. But
+when I tried to pump, the pump-handle just went up in the air, and
+wouldn't pump up any water!
+
+And just as I tried it again, I heard somebody say, "That pump handle
+oughter been left up in the air. Say, young feller, you gotter pour some
+water down first. That pump ain't been used stiddy for some little while
+back. Ease it up and she'll go all right."
+
+[Illustration: Turned and went into the house, and all the cats ran
+after him]
+
+I turned around, and there, leaning against the fence, was an old man
+with big blue eyes and a white mustache, and a pipe, and a plaid vest
+and a soft hat, and the biggest lot of cats I ever saw. Seven of them,
+white and gray and black and mixed colors, all looking up at me.
+
+I was so surprised that I didn't know what to say. But the old gentleman
+said, "Wait here, and I'll fetch you a kittle of water," and he turned
+and went into the white stone house, and all the cats ran after him. But
+he shut the door tight, and the cats sat waiting and mewing on the back
+porch, and I held on to the pump-handle and waited too.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR
+
+In a minute he came out with a tin pail in his hand, and all the cats
+ran after him, and he said, "Shoo, Teddy," and they ran away a little
+bit, but came back and mewed and rubbed against his feet. He handed me
+the pail across the fence, and I took it, and he said, "A little at a
+time, boy." Then he went up to his porch and got a big dish and said,
+"Here, Teddy, Teddy," and all the cats ran to him, and he fed them.
+
+I stood watching him, and he said, "Why don't you ease the pump?" and I
+said, "If you please, sir, which one of your cats is Teddy?" He said,
+"Sho, boy, they're all named Teddy after President Roosevelt, and
+because it saves trouble. When I calls, 'Here, Teddy,'--they all comes.
+When I calls, 'Shoo, Teddy,'--they all shoos," And I said, "That's the
+best idea I ever heard of--for cats."
+
+He said, "Now, boy, you lift the handle of that pump high and throw some
+water into her, and then keep a-pumping." And I did, and the water came,
+and I pumped up a glassful, but he wouldn't take any.
+
+Then I said I'd fill the pail and bring it round because I'd like to
+see his cats close to, and he said, "Never mind the pail, young fellow,
+jist hand it over and come round yourself,"
+
+[Illustration: He smoked a pipe, and I played with all his Teddy-cats]
+
+So I did, first calling to Aunty Edith to ask if I might, and she came
+to the door and shook hands with him, over the fence, and said, "How do
+you do, Mr. Taylor. This is William Gordon, the son of Captain Gordon, I
+told you of." Then he said, "Sho, you don't meanter say it! I served
+under his grandfather." And Aunty Edith said to me, "William, Mr. Taylor
+was a soldier in the army all through the Civil War, and he can tell you
+lots about it." So I went over to his house and we sat on his back
+porch, and he smoked a pipe, and I played with all his Teddy-cats.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Mr. Taylor told me he was seventy-three years old, and I said, "My! I'd
+never guessed it, you look younger than that"; and he said, "Yes, boy,
+I'm stepping along."
+
+Then he told me when he was a boy he worked on one of the canal boats,
+and at that time there were many more boats, for most of the freight,
+that goes in freight trains now on railroads, came down the canal in
+boats. After that he enlisted in the army and went away out West. He
+told me when he was young the West was the West, and you could shoot
+buffaloes. He knows because he shot them. Then when the Civil War broke
+out, he stayed in the army, enlisted again and fought all through it,
+and came home with a bullet in his leg.
+
+His father was a cooper and built the stone house Mr. Taylor lives in
+for a cooper shop, and that was why it was built so solid and had such
+thick walls. He took me into the cellar and showed it to me, for that
+was where they set the iron hoops to cool. I asked him who lived with
+him in it, and he said he was all alone, everybody was gone, he said,
+but him. I told him about my father and mother then, and how I would be
+all alone if it wasn't for Uncle Burt, and he said Uncle Burt was a fine
+man and a good soldier.
+
+He said he was glad I lived next door. I told him I was glad, too. He
+asked me if I went in for any kind of sport like shooting; and I said,
+not yet, but I climbed trees, and he said, when his cherries were ripe,
+if I didn't make myself sick on Aunty Edith's, I could climb his, when
+he was around.
+
+Then I asked him if he would tell me a story about the Civil War, and he
+laughed and said the most of them were too full of fighting and sad
+things for a little boy like me; and I told him I didn't mind them being
+a little bloody; that I wasn't a kindergarten baby.
+
+He laughed some more, and said: "Speaking of climbing trees makes me
+think of how near I was to being captured by some rebels once. You know,
+boy, Quakers is agin all fighting, so at the beginning of the war, when
+we regulars was sent to drill with a lot of new men and knock them into
+shape, I was some surprised when fust thing I seen was young Jim Wilton,
+whose father I knowed to be a Quaker living on the corner of the same
+street where my uncle lived in Phillydelphy.
+
+"I says to him, 'Hullo, Jim, what you doing here?' and he said, 'Well,
+Tom, I come here to larn you how to fight.' 'And you a Quaker's son,'
+says I. 'Yup,' he says, 'and thee knows that my old folks is none too
+pleased; but somehow I couldn't stay home comfortable with all the other
+boys fighting to free the blacks, so here I be.'
+
+"Well, I was right glad to see him, and get news of all the old
+neighbors, and Jim and me gits very chummy; and when there's a piece of
+business needing the attention of one of us, it usually gits the
+attention of both. Me and him hunting in couples as it were.
+
+"That's how it come about that one time, there being a bit of spying to
+be done, me and Jim finds ourselves in rebel uniforms, waiting and
+listening beside a camp-fire outside the rebel Gineral's tent, using our
+ears and our eyes too. When up rides Gineral Stuart, who used to be my
+commanding officer in the old days before he turnt reb, when he was in
+the regular army.
+
+"My! but I was in a terrible taking, for Stuart had a gredge agin me for
+somepin I'd done. I'll tell ye about that another day. 'T warn't me was
+to blame. But if he onct caught sight of me, it would be short shrift at
+the end of the rope.
+
+"So Jim and me begins edging away, until we could get a gait on without
+being noticed; and get away we did, and into the woods where our own
+clothes were hid; made the change and was getting back to our own
+quarters, happy as larks to be on the home road; laughing to think how
+near we'd been to Gineral Stuart, without his knowing it; and patting
+ourselves on the back at how neatly we'd done the trick, when Jim looks
+up and says, 'Hey, Tom, look at them persimmons,' Sure enough, there was
+a tree full of the nicest ripe persimmons you ever see, right in
+our way.
+
+"Now our rations hadn't been any too full lately and we were pretty nigh
+hungry all the time.
+
+"'Tom,' he says, 'I uster be the best tree-climber in the county. I
+gotter get me some of those,'
+
+"'Aw, Jim,' I says, 'don't be a fool. The woods may be full of rebels.
+I'm full as hungry as you are, but I ain't going to stop for any
+persimmons.'
+
+"'Just a handful,' he says, 'and it won't take a minute. Will you wait?'
+
+"'No, I won't,' I says, being so doggoned tired that I knew if I sat
+down I'd fall asleep. 'I'm for pushing back to camp, and if you ain't
+all kinds of a foolish boy, you'll do the same.'
+
+"So I went on, and Jim, he gives me one look, and then he gives the tree
+a squint, and sho! he was off and up it before you could say 'Jack
+Robinson.' Climb! well, rather. He was up it in no time, and eating and
+slinging the persimmons into his hat. It made me so mad that I just
+naturally turned my back and went right on.
+
+"Suddenly I hears a kind of whistle that was our signal--Jim's and
+mine--to look out for trouble. So I drops right down and rolls over into
+the bushes, and draws them over me, so I can't be seen. Then I lays
+quiet and listens.
+
+"I hears voices, and turning my head so softly that the bushes don't
+move, I peeps out and sees a party of rebs a-coming down the path.
+They'd seen Jim, just after he'd give me his warning, and they lays for
+him under the tree, and one of them rebs, who was just as handy at the
+climbing as Jim, goes up and brings him down, persimmons and all. The
+rebs laugh, and eat his persimmons and take him prisoner and march off;
+Jim allowing that he was so hungry that he'd stolen off by his lonesome
+to get something to eat. One of the men had heard the whistle Jim gave,
+but Jim explaining that he whistled in surprise at seeing them, they
+only beats up the bush a little, not coming near me.
+
+[Illustration: "Brings him down, persimmons and all"]
+
+"They go off, with Jim never so much as looking my way, though they
+passed so clost to me that the lieutenant's heel scrunched my little
+finger. I had to take it without hollering or moving, for if I had
+they'd taken me along with Jim. And that's what tree climbing brings a
+man to."
+
+"What became of Jim?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, Jim, he was kept a prisoner all through the war, so he never got no
+enjoyment out of his life, never seeing a bit of real fighting--just
+marching and drilling and prison. So that, as he said, he might just as
+well never 'a' run away,--seeing he had to bide a non-combatant, which
+is the same as Quaker, after all."
+
+"Then he didn't like it, did he?" I asked.
+
+"No," Mr. Taylor said, laughing, "he didn't. And let this be a warning
+to you, young man. Don't you go up a tree for persimmons or cherries or
+other fruits whatsomever, agin the advice of your elders and betters."
+
+"No, sir, Mr. Taylor," I said, "I never will."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+ON THE TOWPATH
+
+Our house is so nearly on the towpath, that the mules eat the
+honeysuckle from the fence, and as there is only a tiny flower-bed
+between the house and the fence, you can hear the voices, and the
+tramping of the mules, as plainly indoors as out.
+
+At night, when you wake up in the dark, you think they are coming in.
+That's at first. By and by you get so used to them that you don't
+think about it.
+
+One reason why we came down so early in the spring is that I'm not to
+be sent to school until the fall, because I'm not to use my eyes too
+much, until they get stronger. Measles made them a little weak. So I
+have one hour with Aunty May for reading and sums, and half an hour with
+Aunty Edith for French; and then I don't have to do anything else for
+the rest of the day, until nearly dark, when I water the flower-beds for
+both the aunties.
+
+But from eleven until four, except at lunch-time, I must not bust into
+the house and holler at Aunty May--for she is writing; and I must not
+run after and plague Aunty Edith, when she goes up the towpath--for
+she's painting.
+
+Mr. Taylor, being seventy-three, can be spoken to at any time, except
+when he's doing his baking. Then he doesn't want anything or anybody
+round his feet, he says. Just as if I was cats!
+
+This morning I'm writing about. I was out on the towpath, fishing for
+eels, so I could put one in the tub which stands by the pump to catch
+the overflow; because Aunty May is very much afraid of snakes and eels,
+and she squeals so funny when she sees them that it is what Mr. Taylor
+calls "a fair treat" to hear her.
+
+I thought if I got her good and scared with seeing one in the tub, she
+might be so mad that she'd not be able to write, and would chase me
+round the garden.
+
+It's too bad Aunty May's grown up. She likes to play as well as any boy
+I know, and she's good at it, too, if it wasn't for her writing. Uncle
+Burt used to complain of that writing, too, when he was home. He said it
+interfered a lot--when he wanted her to play with him.
+
+Anyway the eels didn't bite, but I thought maybe I'd get a sunfish, and
+that's nearly as good a scream-starter, if Aunty May doesn't expect it
+to be there.
+
+All at once, I felt my cap pushed right off, and I looked up and there
+was a boy, riding on the top of an old gray mule, that was one of two
+tired-looking mules, dragging a canal boat.
+
+There was nobody on the boat that I could see, 'cept one man asleep on
+the top.
+
+"Gimme my cap, boy," I said.
+
+"Aw, you and your fishin'," he says. "Git off the towpath."
+
+And I said: "You can't say that to me. We've got the right of way here,
+because I live in that house with the green door."
+
+"Oh, you do," says he. "Well, baby dear, go in and tell yer wimmin folks
+ye've lost your cap"; and he chucked my cap right into the canal!
+
+Well, I couldn't get it, without falling in, and there was the
+canal-boat coming along ready to run over it. So I took my fishing-rod
+and flicked it at him, and there--I had caught the eel after all! It
+struck him, all cold and slippery, and he yelled, and it hit the mule,
+and the mule ran away, dragging the other mule with it, right up the
+slope to Rabbit Run Bridge!
+
+[Illustration: "So I took my fishing-rod and flicked it at him"]
+
+The boy had grabbed the fishing-rod, so that my rod and my eel went
+with them.
+
+My! but I was mad, but kind of excited, too, for a man came up from the
+inside of the canal boat and yelled, and the man on the deck woke up and
+yelled, and the boy was yelling!
+
+There was a farmer driving along the road and across the bridge and when
+he saw mules coming, lickity-split, where mules never come,--right up to
+the bridge,--he yelled too, and licked his horse to get out of the way.
+The boy, he licked the mules with my rod. He'd thrown my eel back into
+the water.
+
+He was as cool as could be, and by and by he got the mules calmed down,
+and one of the men from the boat jumped off and helped him and they got
+the ropes all straight again and started off. The boy never said a word,
+except when the man asked him what did it. Then he told him, "The mule
+didn't like the looks of that baby boy there on the canal bank." The man
+shook his fist at me, and I called, "Gimme my cap." And the boy said,
+"Wait till we come back"; and he made an awful face as they went away,
+turning round and riding backwards to do it.
+
+I knew then that he was the same boy that made a face at me when I was
+in the train.
+
+Well, I had to tell Aunty Edith, and she looked very severe, and gave
+me my second-best cap and said, "William, do be careful, this time." But
+I only told her that the boy threw my cap into the water. I didn't tell
+that he said he was coming back.
+
+But I talked to Mr. Taylor about it, and he agreed that when I saw the
+boy again, I'd have to have it out with him, and he'd stand referee to
+see that there was no unfair advantage took of me or him.
+
+"For," says he, "you can't be called baby darling free and often by them
+boat boys, and neither can you eel them boat boys and scare their mules.
+All things being equal, you ask him his intentions next time and come
+to some mew-tual feeling on the matter, which won't reach the ears of
+your Aunty Edith. The ears of your Aunty May," say she, "could be
+reached and enjyed by them fine, if took alone, and without t'other
+Aunty present."
+
+Well, every day I kept a watch-out for that boy, and for a whole week I
+didn't see him.
+
+One Monday, Aunty May asked Aunty Edith if I couldn't go down,--it was
+raining,--if I put on my raincoat and boots, with Mr. Taylor, when he
+went to the mail, and bring her some stamps and stamped envelopes. Aunty
+Edith said, "Oh, all right, May, but it seems to me you eat stamps.
+They disappear so fast." Aunty May laughed, and said,
+
+"Be-that-as-it-may," which is what she always says when she wants to
+stop discussing, "William goes."
+
+So I got ready, and Mr. Taylor and me started down. It's a mile away.
+
+Mr. Taylor doesn't like umbrellas, neither do I, so, as it was only
+misting, Aunty May said I needn't.
+
+Just as we got to Rabbit Run Bridge, who came along, with his mules, and
+the same canal boat, and the same man asleep, under an umbrella this
+time, but that BOY!
+
+Mr. Taylor says, that the et-i-ket of such things makes him leave me
+and go sit on the bridge while I had it out. So I went down and said to
+the boy, "Hey, you, where's my cap?" And he grinned and said, "I give it
+to your eel. He's a-wearing of it now, and it looks fine on him."
+
+That strikes me so funny that I began to laugh; then I remembered that
+wasn't what I wanted to do. So I says, "Come on down till I polish you
+up for what you did to my cap"; and he says, "I'll be down in a minute
+to fix you for what you done to my mule. I've gotter put him in trousers
+to-morrow, his legs is so damaged."
+
+Then I began to laugh again, at the thought of a mule in trousers. "Aw,
+come on down," I said. "You ain't got any trousers for him." "Have,
+too," he said; "I'm making them spare minutes out of Turkey red. And
+when I adds brass buttons and pockets I'll put 'em on, the next time he
+passes your house."
+
+I began to laugh again, and then he jumped down, and before I knew it
+hit me a punch on the nose. That made me so mad that I hit at him and it
+struck his leg, and he said, "Ouch," and jumped so that I looked at his
+leg, and saw it was black and blue already.
+
+"Who did that?" I said.
+
+"Never you mind, baby dear," he said: "come on. If my leg did get
+catched between the boat and the bank and ground agin a stone this
+morning, I can still fight an eel-catcher."
+
+[Illustration: "Never you mind, baby dear, come on"]
+
+And he hopped up to me on one foot, and I saw he wasn't much bigger than
+me, maybe eleven or twelve, and he had all he could do to keep from
+crying because his leg hurt him so; but he was so quick that I just had
+to dodge to get out of the way.
+
+"Say," I said, after I'd gotten out of his reach, "I don't want to hit
+you when you're hurt. And anyway," I said, "I don't know that I care
+about fighting with anybody who can make eels wear caps and mules red
+trousers. Wait a minute and I'll get a clean rag and some witch-hazel
+for your leg."
+
+"No, you don't," he says; "I ain't going to be fussed over, but if you
+gotta pitcher-book, like the one I seen you reading one day, that, an'
+something to chew'll keep my mind off my leg, and when it's all right
+again, I'll come past and smash you into bait for eels."
+
+That didn't seem quite what I wanted, but I told Mr. Taylor the boy was
+hurt and I couldn't fight, and he said "Certainly not--agin
+reg-u-lations."
+
+Then he said he'd wait for me a minute, and I ran back home, because I
+knew I'd get there faster than any canal mule, and I bust into the room,
+and told Aunty May, and first she didn't like my busting in like that,
+and then she got interested. She gave me a picture-book and a piece of
+rag, and some witch-hazel in a bottle, and a big piece of cake. When I
+got out, the boy was just coming up to the fence, and Aunty May wanted
+to tie up his leg for him, but he wouldn't. So she explained to him
+that the stuff in the bottle and the rag was for his leg, and he said,
+"Yes, 'm, thanks," and then she went in the house quick, so's I could
+speak to him myself. I'd asked her to.
+
+He said, "Well, eel-catcher, this will help me some. And if I pass this
+way agin, I'll look you up."
+
+"Oh, do," I said.
+
+"Want yer book back?" he calls.
+
+"No," I said, "when you get through with it, give it to the eel."
+
+"No," says he, "he's not fond of reading, but I know an old mushrat
+that's fond of anything like print. I'll give it to him, so any time you
+see him reading it by moonlight, with his spectacles on, you'll know
+it's my friend."
+
+"Oh, come back soon," I called, "and tell me more about it"; for he was
+getting slowly and slowly away from me.
+
+"I will," he shouted, "if I don't make a mistake and swallow the
+witch-hazel."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+ON THE DELAWARE
+
+I thought I'd never get tired of having a river at our back door, but
+one day I nearly hated the Delaware.
+
+This is how it happened: Aunty Edith had a rowboat with a place in the
+stern where you could fix a big sketching-umbrella, and go sketching
+without getting too sunburnt; and when I was very good, 'specially good,
+I could go with her.
+
+When I was just ordinary good, and Aunty Edith wasn't using the boat,
+Aunty May and I used to borrow it and play "Robinson Crusoe," and Aunty
+May made the funniest "Man Friday" you ever saw. She would pretend not
+to know any language but "glub-glub," and so I had to teach her the
+names of things and she would shake all her hair down and dance a
+war-dance, when I got her to understand. This was when we'd reached our
+Island. There was one across the river from us, and on a corner of it we
+used to picnic and play.
+
+Mr. Turner's children all were girls, and they went to school, or had
+music-lessons, or something, so I only had them once in a while to play
+with, and then they always wanted to play fairy-tales, and make me the
+Prince. I hate Princes because they're always bothering about finding
+some Princess. I'd rather have been an Ogre or a Dwarf or a Bad Giant.
+They had some fun. But the girls always got their Indian Boy to be
+those. He was a big boy from the Carlisle Indian School, who came in the
+summer to help about the house and the grounds, and he was great fun. He
+showed me how to make bows and arrows, and taught me how to swim and
+things like that, and how to push off a canoe. But mostly Aunty May was
+the one I had to play with right on the spot, and just when you'd made
+up your mind that she was a grown-up and wouldn't do it, she'd begin
+some funny thing, and she was almost as good as a real boy.
+
+Well, Mr. Turner had a man visiting him, a painting-man, and he came
+down to see Aunty Edith, and they put their heads on one side and
+screwed up their eyes, and looked at paintings, and had tea, and talked
+about art so long that Aunty May and I couldn't be quiet any longer, but
+just had to go down into the garden and play Wild Men of Borneo. That
+means taking a beanpole and yelling and dancing and trying to see who
+can vault and jump the farthest with the pole, and when you win you
+say, "Glug-Glug."
+
+We were right in the middle of this, and Aunty May was a little
+red-faced, and her hair was kind of wild, when we heard somebody laugh,
+and there was the painter-man down by the river, laughing as hard as he
+could laugh; and Aunty Edith trying to look severe at Aunty May and not
+able to, on account of her looking so comical. She had a black smudge
+from the end of the beanpole, which had been in a bonfire, across her
+forehead. You see she had just jumped the farthest, and was hollering,
+"Glug-Glug."
+
+Aunty May laughed pretty hard, too, and we all laughed then, and Aunty
+May went up to the house to turn into a clean-faced grown-up again, and
+Aunty Edith unlocked the boat and handed the big umbrella to the man and
+told him to use the boat as often and as long as he liked. He put his
+paint-box and sketch-block in, and got in himself, and I stood looking
+at him, wishing he'd ask me--when he did.
+
+"Want to come, young man?" he said, and I said, "Yes, I'll take my book
+and my fish-line and be very quiet. May I, Aunty Edith?"
+
+Aunty Edith said, kind of doubtful, "I'm not going, William. Maybe you'd
+better not."
+
+Well, I guess I looked awful sorry at that, for the man said, his name
+was Mr. Garry Louden,--"Oh, let him come, Edith, I'll look after him";
+and Aunty Edith said, "But you're such an absent-minded beggar, Garry,
+and this is Burt's most precious charge."
+
+"Oh, he'll be all right," Mr. Garry said; "I'll bring him home right as
+a trivet. Hop in, son."
+
+So I jumped in and waved good-bye to Aunty Edith, and we started up the
+river.
+
+[Illustration: "What's an absent-minded beggar?"]
+
+"What's an absent-minded beggar?" I asked Mr. Garry, and he said, "Oh,
+a fellow like me, who's always got his head full of pictures and things,
+and forgets what he's at."
+
+"Then you don't really beg for anything, do you?" I said.
+
+"Lord, no," he said, "except when I'm out with talkative young sports,
+and then I beg them to keep quiet."
+
+So I took my fish-line and sat still as a mouse, while he looked up and
+down the river, and whistled to himself--when he got a good idea, I
+guess, for after he'd whistled some, he'd let the boat drift and make
+marks in his sketch-book. He was a nice man, but not used to little
+boys, I think, for he used awful big words, and didn't answer questions
+like Aunties and Uncles do.
+
+By and by I told him about the Island, and he said, "Right you are,
+young Soc-ra-tees," and we landed there, and he kept saying, "Ripping,"
+"Splendid," and things like that, and by and by he fished out some
+sandwiches and sweet chocolate from his pocket, and gave me some, and
+told me to stay there while he rowed around and explored farther up the
+side of the Island. I said, "All right," for with things to eat, and a
+nice brook, and a shady place, and a book, no boy need have any trouble
+finding things to do to keep himself amused. And I didn't.
+
+I made a ship, and loaded it, and I made a fort on the other side of the
+brook, and when the ship came near the fort, the men from the fort came
+out and had a fight and sank her. Then when I got tired of that I read
+my book, and I read all I wanted to, and still Mr. Garry didn't come
+back. I could hear voices on the river, and once in a while a canoe shot
+past, but none of them was Mr. Garry, or Aunty Edith's rowboat.
+
+By and by they stopped coming past and then I got up and went along the
+bank and looked for him. I could see, way across the river, a little
+white speck, shining through the trees, which I knew was our house.
+
+My! didn't I want to be there! I didn't have any matches, of course. I'm
+not allowed to carry them. I couldn't make a fire, or anything, though
+it began to get dusky, and still Mr. Garry didn't come.
+
+Then, suddenly, I remembered that he was an absent-minded beggar who
+forgot things, and maybe he'd forgot me. That made me feel awfully queer
+and lumpy inside me, and besides I was getting tired.
+
+Nobody lived on that Island, except maybe some ground-hogs and
+squirrels and snakes, and--it wasn't any place for a boy who didn't have
+any food or tent or fire.
+
+First thing I knew, when that struck me, I heard myself bawl--right out,
+"Oh, Aunty May--COME! Oh, Aunty May!" and then I was really frightened,
+for it sounded so loud, and so scared, and so babyish.
+
+I kept still for a minute, and swallowed hard and then I yelled, "Hey!
+Hey!" out loud, without crying--hoping somebody would hear me. I did it
+a great many times, but nobody answered. Then I remembered that the boys
+were always landing here and hollering and shouting in fun, and nobody
+would pay any attention to it.
+
+I tried to remember what Uncle Burt'd do if he was caught like this,
+and little like me. I thought maybe he'd take off his shirt and wave it,
+but then I remembered it'd be too dark to see. But anyway I guessed I'd
+better do something, so I took off my blouse, and put my sweater on, and
+tied my blouse to a tree, and it waved, quite fine, for there was a
+little breeze coming up. I tried rubbing sticks together for a light,
+but whoever made up that plan must have had stronger arms and hands than
+I had, for I rubbed till my arms ached so that I cried some, but I
+didn't get a single spark of light.
+
+By this time it was very dark, and I was so hoarse with hollering, and
+so aching in my arms with rubbing sticks, and my legs hurt so with
+running up and down trying to see a boat or something, that I just
+dumped myself down on the grass and cried--and--I guess I--fell asleep.
+For the next thing I knew I heard some one calling my name, kind of
+loud, and kind of scared, "Billy, Billy, darling, are you there?" It was
+Aunty May in a canoe. I tried to call to her, but I was so hoarse and
+tired, I just made a kind of noise in my throat.
+
+[Illustration: Hey, Robinson Crusoe, here's your Man Friday]
+
+Then I was so afraid she'd paddle away that I let out the finest yell
+you ever heard, and Aunty May called out, "Hey, Robinson Crusoe. Here's
+your Man Friday"; and she slid the canoe up to the bank, and I fell in
+so stiff, and she hugged me so hard, that it's a wonder we didn't upset.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Usually I don't like hugging, but this time it was all right.
+
+Then Aunty May told me that she had begun to get worried and so had
+Aunty Edith, knowing that Mr. Garry was an absent-minded beggar. Aunty
+Edith had gone up to Mr. Turner's to find if he was home, but Aunty May
+had insisted on going out in the canoe, though Mr. Taylor didn't like
+her to alone, and Mr. Taylor had gone down the towpath, toward the
+village, looking for us. Well, wasn't Aunty May mad when she found out
+how long I'd been alone and how badly I'd wanted her. She just paddled
+as fast as she could, and all the time pretended that we were wild
+savages who would catch Mr. Garry and put him on a desert island, just
+to see how he'd like it.
+
+As we got nearer our house there were lights along the river-bank, and
+we called and a big boat came up to us, and in it was Mr. Garry, with a
+very white face, and Mr. Turner and Aunty Edith, and she was crying so
+hard that she couldn't see me at first.
+
+When Aunty May said, "Don't cry, Edith, he's here," and handed me over,
+she gave me such a hard squeeze that I couldn't speak for a minute.
+
+Mr. Garry all the time kept saying, "Say, old chap, I'm sorry, but I am
+such an absent-minded beggar." Aunty May said, "Yes, but you'll never
+have a chance to get absent-minded with this boy again."
+
+He looked terribly sorry, and begged my pardon again, and I told him,
+"It was all right, only I didn't care to play Robinson Crusoe so
+truthfully--at night."
+
+They hurried me up to the house and gave me warm things to eat and
+drink, and let me stay up longer than usual.
+
+Aunty May wouldn't let Mr. Garry touch me or help her at all, and even
+Aunty Edith wouldn't hardly speak to him, till they found I was all
+right and not hurt any, except my blouse, which was left on the Island.
+
+Mr. Garry gave me his own silver pen-knife, before he went away, so that
+I would "nevermore defenseless be," as he said, and we were quite
+friendly. But after he had gone, I heard Aunty May say that "Never would
+that absent-minded beggar take her boy away again"; and Aunty Edith
+said, "He's Burt's boy, not yours."
+
+Aunty May didn't say anything, so I called out, "I'm your boy, too,
+Aunty May. Uncle Burt said so, and I'll never, never go out with an
+absent-minded beggar on the river again."
+
+And I never have.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+GEORGE
+
+For a while, I did have a real boy to play with, right in the house. It
+happened this way:--
+
+Martha, who is Aunty Edith's colored washerwoman in the city, had a boy
+called George, who used to bring the clothes home. He was a little older
+than me--twelve years old--and he was always smiling, and his teeth were
+white and his eyes shiny. And when his mother wrote Aunty Edith that he
+was poorly, Aunty Edith had him sent down for a week--on trial, to stay
+in the attic above my room, and do the dishes for the Aunties, and run
+errands. He was to stay longer, if it was all right.
+
+I wish it had been, for George was awful funny. He was very obliging,
+too, and I liked him. So did Aunty May, for he remembered all the
+stories his teachers had told him in school, and he would tell them to
+Aunty May and me, when we sat down under the willow trees, and we
+just loved it.
+
+What Aunty Edith didn't love was what he did with the green paint. Aunty
+Edith had a lot left over in a pot after the kitchen was painted, and
+she thought it would be nice to paint the chairs and tables that we used
+out of doors.
+
+We used to have breakfast and lunch, and even dinner, out in the little
+grapevine-covered back porch, which had a cement floor, level with
+the ground.
+
+So just to keep George happy, Aunty Edith gave him that to do. He
+commenced it while Aunty May and I were doing lessons, and we could hear
+Aunty Edith explaining--Aunty Edith always does the explaining--and
+George all the time saying, "Yas, 'm, yas, 'm, Miss Edith." And by and
+by Aunty Edith came in and we could hear George whistling and singing.
+George did sing awful loud, and funny songs, so you'd have to stop
+and listen.
+
+This morning he kept singing something about a man named "Sylvester,"
+and he kept singing out the same thing over and over again, till Aunty
+May said, "Oh, dear, I can't hear myself speak. Edith, will you quiet
+the blackbird?" And Aunty Edith called to George not to sing so loud,
+and he said, "Yas, 'm, Miss Edith"; and the next minute it began louder
+than ever.
+
+Then Aunty Edith went downstairs to tell him to take his work farther
+away from the house.
+
+She hadn't been gone a minute till we heard her say, "Oh, good
+gracious, what shall I do? Come here, George, and see if you can take it
+off." George kept saying, "Yas, 'm, Miss Edith, yas, 'm"; and Aunty
+Edith was being so very spluttery, that Aunty May and I leaned out the
+window, and then we jerked our heads in and Aunty May said, "Don't you
+dare laugh out loud, Billy."
+
+Then we looked again, and jerked our heads inside the window every time
+we felt the laugh coming on, which was pretty often, for you see George
+had put the paint-can, a small one, right on the doorsill, and Aunty
+Edith had put her foot in it, and it had caught.
+
+There was Aunty Edith holding on to the grape-arbor while George pulled
+at the can, and the paint flowing around pretty free. Well, George
+couldn't pull it off, and finally he had to take a can-opener and cut
+Aunty Edith's foot out, just as though she were salmon, or something.
+
+When we got to that part, Aunty May and I forgot ourselves and laughed
+out loud, and then Aunty Edith looked at us, and looked at her foot, and
+at George's black face all daubed with green paint, and his clothes,
+too, as he carefully cut her out, and she laughed, too. But it spoiled
+her shoe, and it took several days to wear the green off George.
+
+[Illustration: He had to take a can-opener and cut Aunty Edith's foot
+out]
+
+That was the too bad part of it. George was so fine for singing and
+telling stories and he just couldn't remember to do anything else.
+
+When he went for the mail and the groceries, unless I went with him,
+he'd forget everything, and come home just as smiling as ever.
+
+And he was brave, too, for he used to chase the village boys when they
+ran after him and called names, and besides that he and I built a lovely
+Filipino house up in the biggest willow tree, and had lots of fun,
+escaping from two boys at the farm across Rabbit Run Bridge, who chased
+us and tried to catch us. We got up in our tree-house and shot at them
+with bows and arrows, and they couldn't reach us. I liked having George.
+If he'd only stayed funny, without getting dangerous. But George got
+dangerous.
+
+It was this way: George and the two boys on the farm, Samuel and Charlie
+Crosscup, were having a talk on the middle of Rabbit Run Bridge, about
+fire engines. Samuel said the East Penniwell fire engine could get up
+steam and run to a fire, with Sol Achers's old white horse hitched to
+her, quicker than a New York fire engine could. George and me said it
+couldn't. He said, "It could, because why? The East Penniwell horse and
+engine were used to the roads and the New York horses and engine would
+have to be showed."
+
+I couldn't think of anything to say, but George said, "No, sah. Dat
+ain't noways so. For de New York fire engines and horses is so trained
+that they goes over any road and anywhere according as the Fire Chief
+he directs, and it doan mek no difference whether they've been up
+dataways befo' or not They jist naturally eats up all distances."
+
+Well, that made the Crosscup boys mad, and they kept telling all about
+the East Penniwell engine house, and my! it must be a lovely place, if
+all they say is true. George he told them then about the New York engine
+houses, and my! they must be splendid if George really knew. He said he
+did. He said his mother's cousin washed for three firemen and she'd
+oughter know. I guess she ought to, but George did remember so much
+about those things, and forgot so quick about others, that sometimes I
+really didn't know what to be sure about.
+
+Well, it began to rain, and George was going to take me home, when one
+of the boys said, "Aw, don't go home, yet. Come on into the old barn and
+let's play knife until the rain stops."
+
+I guessed we'd ought to go home right away with the bundles and change,
+but George said, "On no account can I git you wet. Miss Edith wouldn't
+stand for that nohow." So I went with him. And we played knife on the
+floor. It was a big empty barn. That is there weren't any cattle in
+it, just hay.
+
+It stood a long way from the house, and on a little hill. By and by the
+thunder and lightning got quieter, but the rain made it dark, and I
+said, "Oh, George, let's go. It's too dark to see in here anyway." But
+George wouldn't go until he had finished his game, and when the other
+boys said, "It's too dark to play knife any more," George said, "Let's
+play robber's cave. I got something in my pocket will make it light." He
+took out a box of matches and a candle-end, and said, "Let's stick it up
+yere, and then play robbers. This'll be the den"; and he put the candle
+into the neck of an old bottle.
+
+I said, "Oh, George, Aunty Edith doesn't let you have matches." George
+said, "Look yere, these matches was give me to-day, and this ain't Miss
+Edith's barn. If these young gemmun is willing to play in their father's
+barn with a candle, you ain't got no call to say anything, has yer?" And
+the boys said, "Aw, it's all right. Come on. William ain't yer boss.
+He's nothing but a kid anyway."
+
+Well, that made me mad, and I wouldn't play robbers with them, and I
+slid down to the barn floor, and went to the door, and looked out to see
+if it was getting any lighter. But George, he put on a terrible look,
+and began to say, "I'm the King of the Robbers, who's this yere
+a-peekin' and a-spyin' in my den?" Then Sam called out, "It's me. I'm
+the King of the Pirates, and I've come to take ye bound hand and foot to
+my ship. Stand by, men!" "Men" was his brother Charlie, and they made a
+dash at George. He danced and flew at them with a stick and called to me
+to come and be his man and help him fight 'em off.
+
+I was just running to do it, for it looked like pretty good fun, and the
+rain was pretty hard, when somebody knocked the bottle with their foot,
+and over it went into a heap of straw, and before the boys could race
+back and put it out, the hay was on fire.
+
+Oh, dear! I hope I never see anything like that again. We boys were so
+scared at first, we couldn't move, and then, with a yell, the Crosscup
+boys ran to tell their father, with me and George after them.
+
+[Illustration: We all worked with hose and everything.]
+
+We only ran a little ways toward the other barn, and then we found an
+old bucket, and George yelled to me to get a bit of rope, and we
+lowered it into the canal and ran back to throw the water on the fire.
+But it was too little, and the fire was too big.
+
+Farmer Crosscup came running with his hired man, and we all worked with
+hose and everything, but the barn burned, all but the north wall, and so
+fast that though George and I ran and ran for help, and though Mrs.
+Crosscup telephoned to town for engines, it was through burning before
+they got up.
+
+After this, George had to go. Aunty Edith got him sent to a place for
+colored children, where he could have fresh air, and some one to look
+after him, but he had to go away from East Penniwell. The farmers said
+he was "dangerous." I was sorry and Aunty May was sorry, too, but it
+couldn't be helped. George was sorry, too, but at the last minute he
+leaned from the wagon and whispered to me, "Anyway, I done proved dat
+dere old fire engine wuz too slow."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+LEFT ALONE
+
+After George went away, it seemed very quiet on the towpath. It grew
+warmer and warmer, and the cherries got ripe and were picked, and I
+climbed trees and played more, and had fewer lessons, because it was so
+hot, and the little Turner girls came down to play with me sometimes,
+because school was out. I went up and played with them sometimes, but
+not often unless the launch came down, because it was a long way to walk
+in the hot sun.
+
+Mr. Taylor and me used to sit on his back porch, where it was cool, and
+tell one another stories.
+
+He told me some fine ones about the war, and when he was a boy. More
+things seemed to happen to boys then than they do now, and I told him
+so, and he laughed and said that was only because he was seventy-three
+and remembered about them. He said that when I was seventy-three, "some
+little feller'll think the same thing when you tell him about the fust
+airship and things like that."
+
+I laughed at me ever being seventy-three, but I suppose I will some day.
+ The only fun we had before the letter came was early that very
+morning, when Aunty May was sitting reading some clippings her editor
+had sent her, with her back to the little cupboard I told about, that
+was made out of an old window.
+
+I came down the stairs from my room and stood looking at her, wishing
+she'd look up so I could interrupt. But she didn't and I stood there
+just as quiet for a minute, and wondering why I suddenly thought about
+the pictures in my book on India. Then I heard a little rustle, and I
+knew. Just above Aunty May's head, uncoiling itself from round a pile of
+plates in the corner, was a big black and yellow snake.
+
+I called out, "Hey, Aunty May! Quick! There's a snake behind you!" And
+she looked up and said, "Billy, I'm not in the mood for playing."
+
+[Illustration: Auntie May got a hatchet and made a chop at the snake]
+
+I said, "Oh, Aunty, I'm not fooling. Quick, or it will land on your
+head"; and she turned round and looked right at the snake and it looked
+at her, and Aunty May gave a scream, and jumped away, and the snake
+dropped down on the floor and commenced to wiggle behind the couch.
+
+Then I tell you there was some fun. Aunty Edith came down just as Aunty
+May got a hatchet and made a chop at the snake, but she never touched
+it, and Aunty Edith wouldn't let me go behind the couch after him.
+
+Mr. Taylor, who was coming along the towpath from the village (he
+brought us the mail every morning), came down and asked, "What's up,
+young feller? I heerd the wimminfolk screeching. What ye been up to?"
+
+I told him I hadn't done anything. It was a snake. Then Mr. Taylor and
+me pulled out the couch, but he wasn't there. We poked sticks behind the
+pantry, but couldn't find him.
+
+There was a big hole in the cement there, and Mr. Taylor said, "Sho, the
+poor snake was more frightened than ye was, Miss May, and it's likely
+he's down the river-bank by now." Then Aunty May and me told him how big
+it was and what color, and he said, "I knew a couple of wimmin kept a
+milk snake in their dairy for a pet. Maybe this feller wants pettin'."
+Aunty May said he'd never get it from her, and she took a piece of tin
+and a hammer and tacks and went to close up the hole, but Mr. Taylor
+said, "Wait a minute, Miss May"; and he whispered to her, "Stand by a
+minute. There's a letter here from the War Department to Miss Edith, and
+I'm doubting it's being the best of news."
+
+Well, poor Aunty May turned so white and sat down so quickly with her
+face in her hands, that Aunty Edith, who came in the room just then from
+putting the axe away in the shed, said, "Why, May, did the snake
+frighten you as much as that?" Aunty May didn't answer. She just
+clutched Mr. Taylor and said, "Where is it?" Then Mr. Taylor looked at
+her and at Aunt Edith, and said "Sho" once or twice, and then he pulled
+out of his pocket a long envelope, and put it in Aunty Edith's hands.
+
+She sat down very quick, and tried to open it, but her hands shook so
+that she couldn't. Aunty May took it from her and tore it open, and they
+both leaned over and read it. Then Aunty Edith cried so for a while she
+couldn't tell us anything, but at last Aunty May took my hand and we
+went out on the porch, and she told us that Uncle Burt had got hurt in a
+little fight--not a real battle, a "skirmish" with some natives, and he
+was to be sent home on sick-leave.
+
+Then she and Mr. Taylor talked about what the letter said, and he shook
+his head, and told her it looked like a bad job to him. Aunty May told
+me to go over and sit with Mr. Taylor while she talked with Aunty Edith.
+
+Mr. Taylor and me sat there, not very happy, because I was thinking of
+Uncle Burt, and somehow I couldn't make him sick or hurt, he was so big
+and so very strong.
+
+I said that to Mr. Taylor, and he said, "Them there guns don't care how
+big and strong a man is, they picks 'em down. They're cruel things,
+boy, firearms is. Don't you ever go a-monkeying with them, mind that." I
+said I wouldn't.
+
+We sat there so quiet that we could hear the Aunties talking, and Aunty
+Edith crying every now and then, in the house. Aunty May wasn't crying,
+but she seemed quite angry about something. I could hear her say, "You
+shall take it, Edith, and you shall do as I say, or I'll throw it into
+the canal." Then again, "What is the money to me if--" And then Aunty
+May began to cry and Aunty Edith began to be soothing to her, and the
+more she soothed the harder Aunty May cried, till I heard Aunty Edith
+say, "All right, May, dear. I promise I'll do it, if you'll only
+stop crying."
+
+Aunty May stopped right away, and presently she came out, and her eyes
+were red, but her mouth was smiling, like it always does when she gets
+what she wants.
+
+She came and sat down by Mr. Taylor and me, while Aunty Edith went up to
+write out telegrams and letters, and told me that Aunty Edith was going
+out to bring Uncle Burt home, and that she was going with her as far as
+San Francisco; that while they were gone I was to stay at the Turners',
+for she thought they would look after me for her, and would I be a good
+boy until she came back?
+
+I promised I would, but, oh, I felt awful, and I begged her to take me
+with her, but she said she couldn't because Aunty Edith was so tired and
+sorry, and she would have to look after her all the time, and I must
+stay at home and be good and wait. She would come back for me, in a
+little while, and we'd wait together for Uncle Burt.
+
+So as long as Mr. Taylor sat there looking at me with his winky blue
+eyes, I didn't dare howl or anything, but my! I did feel like it. So I
+just said, "Yes, 'm, Aunty May, I'll be good." She kissed me right before
+him. It was a little mean of her, but he looked the other way and said,
+"Shoo, Teddy."
+
+Then Aunty May said, "There isn't a minute to be lost, Billy, so come in
+and pack your box, while I go across to the farmhouse and call the
+Turners up on the 'phone."
+
+I went into the house, where Aunty Edith was very quiet and packing very
+hard; and I packed the big suitcase with some of my things, for Aunty
+Edith said I could always get in the house and get the rest of them
+any time.
+
+Presently Aunty May came back and said, "It's all right. They are
+dears. They are coming down for Billy, right away, and they'll take you
+and me to the train. Do you think you can do it, Edith? We've just an
+hour." Aunty Edith said, "Of course I can."
+
+And then you never saw such a packing time. It made me so dizzy watching
+those two Aunties fly around, that presently I went outside, and sat
+with Mr. Taylor, who was on the front step, "Waiting orders," he said;
+and didn't we just get them, though!
+
+When Aunty Edith called, "Billy, the tags, please," didn't I just run!
+and when Aunty May said, "Mr. Taylor, will you please help me with this
+window?" he jumped around as though he was seventeen instead of
+seventy-three.
+
+By and by the launch came down, but a little late, so it was decided
+that I was to wait with Mr. Taylor until they took the Aunties to the
+train; and they'd get me on the way back.
+
+[Illustration: I believed they had really gone away, and left me all
+alone]
+
+After a few minutes the trunks were in the launch, the house was locked
+and Mr. Taylor had the key. The Aunties kissed me good-bye, and Aunty
+Edith promised to tell Uncle Burt I was a good boy, and Aunty May said
+she'd come back for me as soon as she could--and they shook hands with
+Mr. Taylor and he said, "Sho, I gotter feed them Teddy-cats," and went
+down the steps. Then they got into the launch and went off, and I waved
+at them as long as I could see them; and then I sat down by the canal
+bank and felt as if I couldn't bear it, for it wasn't till then I
+believed they had really gone away and left me all alone.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+AT TURNERS'
+
+Up at Turners' it was nice. They had a big stone house with lots of room
+in it, and the girls, Charlotte and Grace, were nice to play with, and
+Mrs. Turner always seemed to know what a boy wanted. She did pat me on
+the head and call me "pigeon" sometimes, but then, she did that to Mr.
+Turner, too, so I didn't mind.
+
+At first I thought it was going to be so nice, that I'd forget about
+everything till Aunty May came back, but by and by, though they were
+nice as nice can be, I began to miss Aunty May till it hurt like a
+toothache.
+
+I missed Aunty Edith, too, but Aunty May and I had played most together,
+and next to Uncle Burt, I loved her best.
+
+The Turners had an old ruined mill on their grounds, and we children
+used to hang our bathing-suits in there and use it to dress in when we
+went swimming in the creek.
+
+It was very old, and all the machinery, the wheels and things, were made
+of wood. Up in the top there was a nice big loft, with a wide window,
+where nobody ever went. When I found this out, I took a broom up there
+and swept it by the window, and got an old chair, and one of the old
+barrels for a table, and when I didn't want to play with Charlotte and
+Grace, or when it rained, I used to get a piece of bread or cake, or an
+apple, and go off there, all by myself. Sometimes I read, sometimes I
+wrote books and drew, and sometimes I just sat and thought about Uncle
+Burt and Aunty May, and Aunty Edith. And it got nearer and nearer the
+time for Aunty May to come back.
+
+The very day that she was to come home, I was doing this, thinking
+about her, I mean--a little harder than usual, because Mr. Turner had
+told me at breakfast that after all Aunty May wouldn't be back till
+to-morrow, when I heard somebody else breathing in the room. I turned
+around, and there was Henry, the Indian boy from the Carlisle School,
+sitting crouched on the floor.
+
+He was a great big boy, fifteen or sixteen, and he helped with the work
+in the house in the summertime. Henry was always nice to us children,
+and we liked him a great deal.
+
+I said "Hullo, Henry, what are you doing in my library?" And he showed
+all his teeth at me and said he was doing the same that I was doing
+there; he had come up to be sad and alone. Then I told him all about
+Aunty May, and he was sorry for me, and he told me about the school, and
+the teachers, and football, and his people, and I was sorry for him.
+
+Then he told me that when he got very sorry about everything, sometimes,
+he just dressed himself and got out of his bed at night and walked and
+walked until he got tired, and then came back and slept.
+
+He told me how lovely everything looked in the country, early in the
+morning, and I told him I'd like to do that, too, some morning, but how
+did he get up without waking people? Then he showed me how he could move
+in his stocking feet and no one could hear him. And it was true. If I
+sat with my back to Henry I would still think he was sitting back of me,
+when he was over by the door, really. So I practiced that, too. "Playing
+Indian," he called it; and he promised next time he had that feeling,
+he'd throw some gravel at my window, and I could come down.
+
+[Illustration: I told him all about Aunty May]
+
+I asked him how soon he thought it'd be, and he looked at me very long,
+and then, just as somebody called, "Henry, where are you? Come and take
+the canoe out," he leaned down and whispered in my ear, "To-night,
+be ready."
+
+Well, I could hardly eat my supper for thinking of it, and I went to bed
+so quickly and quietly that Mrs. Turner called me "pigeon" and patted my
+head, because the little girls didn't want to go and were a
+little noisy.
+
+After I got into bed and was just falling asleep, I did just for a
+minute think I should have asked Mrs. Turner if I could go, but
+honestly I never thought of that till then, because Aunty May wasn't
+there. I would have thought of telling her. Anyway Henry had told me not
+to tell, and I didn't know whether he meant just the children or not.
+
+Well, I stayed awake a long time, and got up softly and dressed again,
+and then I stayed asleep it seemed to me just a teeny while, when a bit
+of grass and gravel hit me on the nose.
+
+I woke up and more came flying through my open window, so I got up
+softly and kneeled on my bed, and there was Henry down on the ground,
+looking up at me.
+
+When he saw me he put his finger to his lips, and sent a big piece of
+clothes-rope flying through the window on to the bed, all without
+a word.
+
+Then he shaped with his mouth to use that and not the stairs, for the
+stairs were creaky.
+
+So I put the noose at the end over my bed-post and held on tight, and
+slid down, without a bit of noise, to the ground, where Henry caught me.
+
+I came down so fast it hurt my hands, but Henry washed them with water,
+at the well, and tied them up, all without speaking, and we went softly
+out of the yard, not toward the towpath, but up the long road over
+the hills.
+
+It was very early morning, about three o'clock, and everything looked
+lovely.
+
+[Illustration: Slid down without a bit of noise]
+
+When we got far away from the house, I asked Henry if he wasn't hungry,
+and he shook his head, no, but gave me a Uneeda biscuit out of a box,
+and I ate three or four, and all the time he was walking on in the nice
+soft light, without saying anything.
+
+Presently we got to the top of a hill, and Henry stood still, and so did
+I. There was the sun coming up and making all sorts of lovely colors
+on the sky.
+
+When we looked at it a little while, Henry said, "How does the little,
+lonely boy like walking in the morning?" and I said, "Fine."
+
+We walked on, and sometimes Henry didn't say anything, and sometimes he
+whistled, and sometimes he talked to me about Carlisle and football,
+and out-of-doors and things like that, and I had a lovely time and
+didn't notice how far away we were getting.
+
+At last the sun came up all the way, and I said, "Oh, Henry, we'd better
+get back now, for Mrs. Turner will miss us and not know where we are."
+
+But Henry threw himself flat on the grass,--we had sat down to rest a
+minute because I was tired, and didn't say anything at all for a
+long time.
+
+Then he lifted his head and his white teeth showed, and his eyes smiled
+at me, and he said quite softly, "I am not going back."
+
+Oh, how queer I felt when he said those words. Maybe it was as Aunty
+May said, because I hadn't enough breakfast in my insides, but
+everything went round like a clock for a minute, the sky, the trees, and
+the strange road, and the strange houses, and then I said in a funny
+voice, "Oh, Henry, you don't mean that."
+
+He said, "Yes, I am tired of everything there"; and he pointed down the
+road we had come along. "I am going back to my own people; back to
+the school."
+
+Then he offered to take me with him, and to carry me part of the way, as
+I was little and got tired too easily to keep up with him. But though
+he was kind, and I wanted very much to go with him, and not be left
+alone, I couldn't, because I remembered this was the day Aunty May was
+coming home; and now, what would she and the Turners think of me!
+
+I was so sorry that I was pretty near crying, except that the Indian boy
+was looking at me with his bright eyes, and I remembered that Indians do
+not cry, and would think me a poor kind of a boy if I did.
+
+So I just shook my head, and told him I must go back and meet Aunty May.
+He didn't like this, until I had promised him that I would only say he'd
+left me and had gone on to Carlisle, and I would not say where he'd
+left me, so that he'd get a fair start. But I didn't like to say even
+that for fear I'd have to tell what wasn't so, until he told me it was
+all right, because I didn't know where we were, and he wouldn't tell me.
+
+He told me he liked me very much and was sorry I wouldn't go with him,
+and he divided the crackers and told me to sit still and not look until
+I had counted 100. I did, and when I'd finished there wasn't any Henry
+to be seen.
+
+I ate a cracker, and started back down the road again, and now everybody
+was up and I met men on the roads and dogs barked at me, and oh, how
+long the road seemed!
+
+I went on and on till I thought I should fall down, and I was so thirsty
+I didn't know what to do.
+
+By and by, I came to a place where there was a toll-gate, and then I
+knew I was lost, for we hadn't passed any on the road coming up, and
+besides I hadn't any money.
+
+So I stood still and tried to think, but I felt hot and tired and my
+head went round a little. Then I thought I'd go to the back door of the
+tollhouse, and then maybe some one would tell me how to go and they
+wouldn't have to feel so badly about telling me I couldn't get through
+without any money. So I went round to the back yard and there was
+nobody in it.
+
+Then I went up to the kitchen door and knocked and nobody came, but I
+heard a little voice at the kitchen window say, "Hey, boy, what do
+you want?"
+
+I looked and there was a little boy, just about seven or eight, sitting
+in a chair by the window, and I came up to it, and called to him--"I
+want to know the road to East Penniwell, and I want a drink of water."
+
+At first he just shook his head, and then he opened the window, and
+said, "Hurry up. We got diphtheria here and nobody's allowed to speak
+to me. That's why the tollhouse is shut up. Ain't you 'fraid?"
+
+I said, "I don't know what it is, and I'm awfully hungry and thirsty and
+I want to know the road to East Penniwell."
+
+"Well," he said, "poor boy"; and handed me out a glass of milk and a
+piece of bread, and I was drinking the milk, when I heard some one yell
+at me. It was a man running up to the house, and the boy grabbed the cup
+away and said, "Here comes Pop. You'd better leg it." I ran as fast as I
+could out the gate and down the road he told me to take. The man didn't
+chase me far, and I didn't hear what he said, his dog barked so. But I
+didn't feel quite so tired, though I ached a lot still, and my feet were
+awful wet, through running right through a brook when the man called
+at me.
+
+I went right on. Sometimes I lay down under a tree, sometimes I sat down
+by the road.
+
+I don't see why a road that seems all right when you're going up it,
+seems so terrible when you are going down. But maybe it's because I made
+wrong turnings, and always when the men asked me if I'd ride with them a
+little ways, I said, "No," because I would have to tell them I belonged
+at Turners', and they might ask me about Henry, the Indian boy.
+
+Last I took a turning that led me farther and farther down a road I
+never remember seeing before and there were no cross-road places; no
+farmhouses, and no man came along on a wagon. I just had to keep on,
+feeling sicker and sicker, till, just as I made a short turn, I came out
+on a road that led to Crosscup's farm and Rabbit Run Bridge!
+
+My, wasn't I glad. But I wasn't going to Crosscup's house, not much! I
+knew what I'd do now. I'd get Mr. Taylor, and tell him, just as fast
+as I could.
+
+That wasn't very fast, because my feet had needles in them, and
+dragged, but by and by I got there, and knocked at the door. Mr. Taylor
+opened it, with all the cats around him. I just began to speak, and say,
+"Good-morning, Mr. Taylor," when everything got kind of black and hazy,
+and I didn't remember any more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+THE WHITE TENT
+
+[Illustration: I woke up and found myself lying on the porch]
+
+I didn't remember anything, until I woke up and found myself lying on
+the porch, and Mr. Taylor bending over me with a glass of water in his
+hand, all the Teddy-cats purring at me, and my head on somebody's lap.
+Mr. Taylor was saying, "Sho, I guess he's coming to, and ye'd better not
+let him see ye, jist at first"; but I turned quick before she could
+move, and grabbed her and said, "Oh, Aunty May."
+
+I thought I'd shouted it, but it sounded just like a squeak.
+
+Aunty May didn't care. She just lifted me up in her arms and held me
+tight, and said, "Oh, Billy, how could you run away from me?"
+
+It took me the longest while explaining to her and to Mr. Turner and to
+Mr. Taylor, who didn't say anything but "Sho" and shoo the cats, and
+never looked at the others. But I knew he'd hear every word and remember
+it, if I didn't, so I told them exactly what happened. How sorry Henry
+was to go away, but that he had to, and that I didn't know where the
+place was that we'd parted at, and how I thought he was coming back when
+we started.
+
+Mr. Turner said it was all right, that Henry was an honest, industrious
+boy, but he had fits of homesickness, though they had never known about
+his getting up early and walking.
+
+Aunty May forgave me, and Mr. and Mrs. Turner forgave me too.
+
+Mrs. Turner was in the launch, and was just telling me to jump in and
+come up with Aunty May to dinner, when Mr. Taylor, who had been
+listening and not saying anything, said, "I hope that wasn't the Lateeka
+Toll-House ye stopped at, young man. I heerd say there was so much
+diphtheria and scarlet fever there that they hev closed the tollhouse."
+
+Then I remembered what the boy had said, and I had to say it to Aunty
+May, and Aunty held me very tightly for a minute, and said to Mrs.
+Turner, "No: it wouldn't be safe for the other children. I'll keep
+William down here, until we see if it develops."
+
+Then both the ladies nodded to each other very sadly, but Mr. Turner
+said, "Oh, he's a young husky. He'll be all right"; and they went away.
+
+But I did develop. So much, that Aunty May had a sign put on the house,
+and nobody came near us for weeks and weeks but the nurse and the
+doctor, and Mr. Taylor, who used to hand things over the fence. And oh,
+how tired I got of being in bed, and being sick. Then when I got a
+little better, Aunty May and the doctor had a big tent put up in the
+woods near us, and the nurse went away, and Aunty May and I lived in the
+tent together, and I started to get better and write this book.
+
+First, just a little at a time, and then by and by a good deal each day,
+and all the time Aunty May stayed with me, and never said I was naughty
+or anything. Just called me "Billy-boy" and spelled all the big words,
+and took care of me like I was a baby, because I was so weak.
+
+One day, when I had sat up all day, dressed, I thought Aunty May looked
+kind of excited, and I saw a letter sticking out of her pocket, and I
+asked her if Aunty Edith was coming home, and she said, "Yes, very
+soon." She smiled so that I knew it must be something nice, so I clapped
+my hands and said, "Then Uncle Burt's all well again, too." For every
+time while I was sick, when I asked about Uncle Burt, Aunty May would
+say, "He's much better, but we mustn't talk." I had to be patient and
+wait then, but this day I said, "Oh. Aunty May, he is really better,
+isn't he?"
+
+Then Aunty May laid down her letter and came and sat down by me and
+said, "Billy, how would you like to hear about Uncle Burt to-day?" and I
+told her, "I'd like to." Aunty May told me then that Uncle Burt had been
+shot very badly in the leg, and that he had a fever beside, and had
+been so ill that they thought he would die, but that Aunty Edith had
+gone out there and taken such good care of him that he was better, and
+was coming back with Aunty Edith. I asked for how long, and Aunty May
+got a little sad and said, "That's the hard part of it for Uncle Burt,
+Billy. He won't ever be able to go back to the army again. His leg is so
+badly hurt that he will always be a little lame."
+
+Then Aunty May burst out crying, and so did I, for it seemed hard that
+big, splendid Uncle Burt should be lame. By and by Aunty told me that
+he had got the hurt when he turned back to help one of his men who had
+been shot; that even though he was hurt himself, he brought the soldier
+back to camp; so I ought to be proud of him.
+
+But I was anyway, I told her. I couldn't be any more than I am. I knew
+Uncle Burt would do a thing like that. I just expected it of him. But
+I'd like to kill the man who hurt his leg.
+
+Aunty May told me not to say that, for the poor thing had been killed,
+and she said, "War is a horrible thing," And I said, "Yes, 'm, but it
+wasn't a real war, only a skirmish"; and Aunty May said, "It was real
+enough for that poor wretch and for Burt."
+
+I said, "But Uncle Burt'll find something else to do, some other way to
+be splendid, won't he?" And Aunty May just nodded her head, and we
+didn't say anything more for a long time and I lay still thinking about
+Uncle Burt and wondering how it would seem to be him, and lame. I said,
+"Will he use a crutch?" but Aunty May didn't know. She hoped not. And
+now, would I please get well, and be ready for her to hand me over whole
+to Uncle Burt.
+
+I said I would, but she'd have to be handed over too, for Uncle Burt
+told me to take care of her for him.
+
+I got better, and so did Aunty May. As fast as I grew better, she got
+more cheerful, and we used to have lots of fun. But all the time we
+stayed in the tent, and never went to the house. I used to hear
+hammerings and things, but I never saw anything, because I wasn't
+allowed to walk yet on account of the anti-toxin. I don't know whether
+that word is spelled right, but I don't like to ask Aunty May, it always
+makes her pale when I say the word.
+
+One day, Aunty May brought a boy down the path with her. A mule boy. I
+heard the mules waiting for him outside, and it was the "cap and eel"
+boy, and he said, "How are you, young feller? Heerd you was sick!"
+
+"Who told you?" I said.
+
+"The Mushrat," he said. "He came a-whooping and a-running up the canal
+one night, an' hollered to me in passing that he wasn't going to bring
+no pitcher-books back to no diphtheria sore-throaters. Kina cowardly
+fellers, them mush-rats, so I brung it myself. Say, when ye going to get
+up and paste me?"
+
+"When you put those turkey-red trousers on your mule," I said.
+
+And then we both laughed, and Aunty May give him another picture-book,
+and some fruit, and asked him to come again, and he promised, and I lay
+back and heard his mule bells jingling up the path. It seemed so nice
+and peaceful, and everybody was so kind to me, that I felt lumpy inside,
+especially when I thought of Uncle Burt coming.
+
+But would he be angry with me for bringing germs to his house, and right
+close to Aunty May? I asked Aunty May what she thought, and she said
+Uncle Burt would agree with her that I really couldn't help it, and that
+he wouldn't blame me, especially if she handed me over all right.
+
+So we went to work on jellies and things and tried to get well, as fast
+as anything before he came.
+
+One afternoon Aunty May said to me, "Billy, I think you're strong enough
+to go back to the house now. We've got rid of all the germs and the
+sickness in this nice big white tent, and now, my little soldier, we'll
+go back to barracks and wait for our Commanding Officer."
+
+We packed up my books and papers and went down the path to the house,
+but it wasn't the same house any more.
+
+It was bigger, and all around it ran a wide piazza, and on it were big
+wicker chairs, and Aunty May put me in one of them, and asked me how I
+liked it. And I said it was lovely, and it was. Inside there were more
+rooms than before and a bathroom with a big shiny tub and running water,
+and while it was a country house still, it was much more like a
+city house.
+
+Aunty May said, "Do you think Aunty Edith will like it?" and I said yes;
+then she said, "Do you think a sick soldier would like to get well on
+this piazza?" and I said I knew he would. It was the finest ever.
+
+We took hands and went around and looked at everything, and then we set
+the table together. Aunty May wouldn't let Mrs. Katy Smith, who had
+come to help, do a thing to the table. We set it for four people. So I
+said, "Is company coming to dinner?" Aunty May hugged me and said, "Yes,
+Billy, but it's a surprise. Don't ask." But I kept guessing,--Charlotte
+and Grace Turner, and Mr. and Mrs. Turner, and everybody I knew in East
+Penniwell, and Aunty May said, "You're cold. You're cold."
+
+Just then a carriage stopped at our door, and Aunty Edith got out, and
+then a thin pale man got out, and he carried a cane and leaned on Aunty
+Edith, and he came into the room: And IT WAS UNCLE BURT!
+
+[Illustration: And it was Uncle Burt]
+
+I gave such a yell that Aunty Edith looked frightened and Aunty May
+threw her arms about me and said, "Oh, Billy dear, don't get excited.
+It's bad for--" But Uncle Burt said, "No, it isn't. It's good for me."
+And he went to hug me, but Aunty May hadn't got her arms untwisted from
+me yet, so that he hugged both of us. He didn't seem to notice it at
+all until I pointed out to him that it was me he wanted and that he was
+kissing Aunty May, and he said, "Dear me, you don't say so"--and kissed
+her again. Then he kissed me.
+
+He sat down, and Aunty May and me went and stood by him. That is, I
+stood by him and leaned on his well knee, and Aunty May kneeled down and
+put her head on his hurt knee, and he didn't seem to mind it at all. He
+put his hand on her head and smiled over to Aunty Edith, and she came
+and said, "Come, Billy, show me the house."
+
+I said, "Yes, Aunty Edith, but first I want to give Aunty May back to
+Uncle Burt. She's all right, the germs didn't hurt her, though she got
+quite thin taking care of me."
+
+"Did she, poor girl," said Uncle Burt.
+
+Aunty May lifted her head up and said, "And Billy's all right. I took
+care of him,--for you."
+
+Then Uncle Burt smiled at us both. His old smile, though he was so
+dreadful thin and pale. He said, "Well, and now I've come home to look
+after you both."
+
+I showed Aunty Edith the house, and she told me all about her journey,
+and how long it took her, and how sick Uncle Burt was then, and how
+much better he was now; and that though he would always walk with a
+limp, he wouldn't need a crutch,--which made me very glad.
+
+Then Uncle Burt and Aunty May came in, and Aunty Edith kissed Aunty May
+and they went to take off Aunty Edith's hat.
+
+Uncle Burt let me take him to his room, and he told me, while I fished
+out a handkerchief for him and brushed his hair, that Aunty May was
+going to marry him and be my real Aunty, and I was to live with them
+both for always.
+
+So this is a good place to end W.A.G.'s Tale.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of W. A. G.'s Tale,
+by Margaret Turnbull
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of W. A. G.'s Tale, by Margaret Turnbull
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+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Rebekah Inman
+and the PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<center>
+
+<img alt="titlepage.jpg (27K)" src="titlepage.jpg" height="625" width="483">
+
+
+</center>
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+<center>
+<h2>
+CONTENTS</h2></center>
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+
+<p>
+PREFACE BY AUTHOR</p>
+
+<p>
+I. <a href="#01">UNCLE BURT'S BILLY</a><br><br>
+II. <a href="#02">OUR HOUSE</a><br><br>
+III. <a href="#03">OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR</a><br><br>
+IV. <a href="#04">ON THE TOWPATH</a><br><br>
+V. <a href="#05">ON THE DELAWARE</a><br><br>
+VI. <a href="#06">GEORGE</a><br><br>
+VII. <a href="#07">LEFT ALONE</a><br><br>
+VIII. <a href="#08">AT TURNER'S</a><br><br>
+IX. <a href="#09">THE WHITE TENT</a></p>
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+<center>
+<h2>
+ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+<p>A ZOBZEE</p>
+
+<p>ON THE BRIDGE</p>
+
+<p>HE JUMPED OUT AND TOOK A ROPE AND PULLED THE BOAT CLOSE</p>
+
+<p>SHE WASHED AND I DRIED</p>
+
+<p>HE TURNED AND WENT INTO THE WHITE STONE HOUSE, AND ALL THE CATS RAN
+AFTER HIM</p>
+
+<p>HE SMOKED A PIPE, AND I PLAYED WITH ALL HIS TEDDY-CATS</p>
+
+<p>BRINGS HIM DOWN, PERSIMMONS AND ALL</p>
+
+<p>SO I TOOK MY FISHING-ROD AND FLICKED IT AT HIM</p>
+
+<p>NEVER YOU MIND, BABY DEAR, COME ON</p>
+
+<p>WHAT'S AN ABSENT-MINDED BEGGAR?</p>
+
+<p>HEY, ROBINSON CRUSOE, HERE'S YOUR MAN FRIDAY</p>
+
+<p>HE HAD TO TAKE A CAN-OPENER AND CUT AUNTY EDITH'S FOOT OUT</p>
+
+<p>WE ALL WORKED WITH HOSE AND EVERYTHING</p>
+
+<p>AUNTY MAY GOT A HATCHET AND MADE A CHOP AT THE SNAKE</p>
+
+<p>I BELIEVED THEY HAD REALLY GONE AWAY, AND LEFT ME ALL ALONE</p>
+
+<p>I TOLD HIM ALL ABOUT AUNTY MAY</p>
+
+<p>SLID DOWN WITHOUT A BIT OF NOISE</p>
+
+<p>I WOKE UP AND FOUND MYSELF LYING ON THE PORCH</p>
+
+<p>AND IT WAS UNCLE BURT</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+<center>
+<h1>
+W.A.G.'S TALE</h1></center>
+
+<br><br>
+<h2>
+PREFACE BY THE AUTHOR</h2>
+
+<p>I have been sick. Now I am better the Doctor makes me lie in bed because
+of all that Anti-toxin he put in me, which weakens the heart. Anti-toxin
+isn't a lady, it's a medicine for diphtheria. Aunty May is a lady. She
+reads me books and plays games with me. But I am tired of books written
+about nature, and animals, and Indians, and fairies, and I wished out
+loud that somebody would write a book about a boy, just like me. So
+to-day Aunty May brought me a big, thick blank book with red covers, and
+with rings at the back to let me add more paper when I want to, and she
+told me to write my own story, a little every day.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="008.jpg (5K)" src="008.jpg" height="275" width="146">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>So that's what I am going to do, and illustrate it with "Zobzees."
+"Zobzees" are thin dancing people&mdash;like this. I invented that name, and
+a country and a language for them, which only Aunty May and I know. But
+I am not going to write my book in that. I am going to print it, like
+other books, but draw "Zobzees" because they are easy; and if nobody
+else reads it except me and Uncle Burt when he comes home, it will be
+fun for us, anyway.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="01"></a><br><br>
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+UNCLE BURT'S BILLY</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+<p>My name is William Ainsworth Gordon, and my initials spell W.A.G. That
+is why Aunty May and I call this book "W.A.G.'S TALE." If it was about a
+dog it would be "Tail Wags." So it's true and a joke too.</p>
+
+<p>I am ten years old and my father and mother are in Heaven, and I have
+only Uncle Burt to take care of me. Uncle Burt isn't my real uncle, but
+he was my father's chum when they were at West Point, and he promised
+father to take care of me. And he does, only he had to go to the
+Philippines with his soldiers; so his sister, Aunty Edith, is taking
+care of me until he comes back. Everybody else calls me William, but he
+calls me "Billy," so I am the one this chapter is named after.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May says I can begin with the very day Aunty Edith brought me down
+here. That was the day Uncle Burt went away to join his regiment, and
+everybody was sort of quiet, and even the big people cried a little. I
+cried a good deal, when nobody was looking, and when Uncle Burt caught
+me at it in the corner of the room, he didn't say a word, but just
+picked me up and held me so tight that one of his buttons got stamped
+on my cheek like a seal. He said he'd give way and cry, too, for it was
+good for the eyes, only his Colonel had expressly ordered him not to,
+saying he would leave all red-eyed men home, which would be terrible for
+a soldier. So I begged him not to give way, and he said he wouldn't if
+I'd stop, because one fellow bawling makes it hard for the other fellow
+not to. So I stopped and we laughed a little, and then he showed the
+mark on my cheek to Aunty Edith, and said, "This shows that this young
+man belongs to me, so be careful of Uncle Burt's Billy and return him in
+good condition, for there will be a dreadful time if I find him chipped
+or broken, when I come back."</p>
+
+<p>Then the lady I call Aunty May, though she isn't any relation to me
+either, but is just Aunty Edith's friend, laughed and said she would be
+careful to treat me nicely. And she has. I like her best next to Uncle
+Burt. She didn't cry. She laughed a lot, and every time Uncle Burt got
+sad and tried to talk to her, she laughed more, and she took me on her
+lap and kept me there all the time Uncle Burt was saying good-bye
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>He looked more like crying then than any other time. He said,
+"Good-bye, May; won't you change your mind?" and she said, "Oh, no,
+Burt, I can't." Then he was going to say something else when I said,
+"Remember the Colonel, Uncle Burt, and don't get your eyes too red to
+go," and then they both laughed. Uncle Burt said, "Look after Miss Heath
+for me, Billy, while I'm gone," and I said, "Sure I will. I'm going to
+adopt her as my Aunty, too." She put her arms round me and hugged me and
+Uncle Burt said, "Lucky Billy," and then the door closed, and Aunty
+Edith began to cry and Aunty May looked queer for a minute and went to
+the door. I thought she'd run after him, but she stopped and said,
+"Come along, Sir William, and we'll pack our bags, 'cause we're all
+going to the country on the 3.10." And I took hold of her hand, and we
+went upstairs together, and packed my bag and put in my gun, my
+soldiers, my books and my paint-box. Then Aunty Edith stopped crying and
+tied a veil over her face. If she'd been a soldier she'd been left home
+all right.</p>
+
+<p>We got in a taxi with a lot of bags and things and went to the
+Pennsylvania Station, which is miles and miles long, I think, but there
+are lots of kind black men who wear red caps and run up and take your
+bags and carry them for you just as easy, One of them took my bag and
+Aunty May's suitcase, but Aunty Edith had another one&mdash;a fat one&mdash;all
+alone for her things.</p>
+
+<p>We just had time for our train, so we had to hurry right through the
+waiting-room, and I couldn't stop and see all the things there are to
+see, or watch the people coming down the stairs. People's legs are funny
+if you watch them coming down&mdash;like things made with hinges.</p>
+
+<p>Then we got into a nice big train with chairs in it that swung round.
+They call it a "Pullman" which is a good name for a car, only it's the
+engine that pulls the man and the car, too, really. Then we got all
+comfortable, with another nice colored man who showed his teeth at us,
+and put our bags up on a rack, and Aunty May gave me some sweet
+chocolate and a magazine with pictures in it, and Aunty Edith said. "I
+wish we didn't have to change at Trenton,"&mdash;and&mdash;then&mdash;I fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>The next thing I knew Aunty May was saying to me, "Wake up, Billy, dear,
+it's Trenton now." She put on my jacket and the man took our bags again
+and we stepped out on a big platform, and then another man took all our
+bags and we went up one stair, and down another, and waited on a long
+platform, where trains kept shooting up every minute.</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't understand what the man in uniform said, until at last a
+funny little train&mdash;all short, only half as long as our New York one,
+and with funny, hard straight seats&mdash;came, and we climbed in. Aunty
+Edith and Aunty May and me had to carry our own bags and fix 'em. The
+train waited a long time, but at last it moved, and Aunty May put her
+arm round me and sat me next the window, only it wasn't open, because it
+was only April and wasn't warm enough yet, and said, "Now we're off to
+East Penniwell."</p>
+
+<p>The train just crawled along, and there was a big canal on the one
+side. I saw a canal boat with two men and a dog on it, and they were
+cooking something in a big pot on the top of a stove that stood right
+out of doors, on top of the boat, with a stovepipe that didn't go into
+any chimney, but right up into the air&mdash;with smoke coming out of it!</p>
+
+<p>I showed it to Aunty May and she said, "You will see them every day when
+we get to the towpath," and I felt awful glad at that, because though
+the boat moved slow, the train moved fast, and I didn't get a good look
+at the boy who was driving the mules. I couldn't be sure whether he'd
+made a face at me or not, but I think he did.</p>
+
+<p>Then by and by on the other side of the train came a great big river,
+all fast and running along and some bubbling-up places in it where rocks
+stood up. Aunty May said those were rapids and this was the Delaware
+River, the one Washington crossed.</p>
+
+<p>I think more of him than ever, now I've seen the river, for it's good
+and wide and it must have been a cold job getting over it. I told Aunty
+May I hoped it wasn't at the rapids he tried to cross, and she said,
+"Oh, no," and "I'll show you," and presently the train stopped and the
+conductor said, "Washington's Crossing," There was a big tree, where he
+could have tied a boat if he'd wanted to. Aunty May said maybe he did;
+and a white house where I guess the soldiers got something to eat and
+drink. Anyway, I hoped so. Aunty May said she'd never asked, so she
+couldn't say, positively, as it was so long ago, but it wouldn't hurt to
+think they did. So I imagined it that way.</p>
+
+<p>Then our train stopped at a station and we got out. I hadn't been ready
+for its stopping, and I got so busy getting my things on, and getting my
+bag in my hand, that I didn't hear the name of it, and I asked Aunty May
+if it was East Penniwell, and she said, "Oh, no, this is Scrubbsville,
+New Jersey, and East Penniwell is in Pennsylvania."</p>
+
+<p>"Will we get into another train, then?" I asked, and Aunty May laughed
+and said, "Oh, no, just wait and see." Then we got off and walked down,
+carrying our bags, to a big bridge right over the Delaware.</p>
+
+<p>There was a man sitting, at the end of the bridge, in a little house
+with a window in it, and you paid him two cents apiece before you could
+get on the bridge to go to Pennsylvania. He is the Toll-Man and it is a
+Toll-Bridge, and it seemed to me very funny to have to pay to walk.
+Aunty May said it was funny, too, but Aunty Edith said it was
+a nuisance.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty Edith asked the Toll-Man if we could leave our big suitcase
+there, until Mr. Tree the grocer came over with a wagon for our trunks,
+later, and he said, "Yes." He was a nice smiling man.</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty Edith and Aunty May and I, and Aunty Edith's bag and my
+little one, which Aunty May carried because she said we had a long walk
+ahead of us, went over the bridge.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="023.jpg (15K)" src="023.jpg" height="196" width="519">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>The wind almost blew my cap away, but I caught it just in time, and on
+the bridge we met a big man carrying a paint-box and a folding-up
+stool, like Aunty Edith has, and he had an E-normous dog, as big as me,
+and it galumphed at me, and I got behind Aunty Edith, for she is very
+big both ways, and the man said, "Down, Pete," When the dog downed, he
+shook hands with Aunty Edith, and she introduced him to Aunty May and
+me, and he said he was glad to see us, and I could come and play with
+his children up the towpath.</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Yes, sir," but Aunty May and me kept away from Pete, because we
+didn't know him then. We know him now and like him. The man said, "Wait
+till I get back and I'll take you up in the launch." Then he went on to
+Scrubbsville, and Aunty Edith said, "Such a pleasure to meet Mr. Turner.
+Now William won't get tired walking up. Won't that be nice, William, to
+go up the canal in the launch, instead of walking?" I said, "Yes, 'm,
+Aunty Edith," to her, but to Aunty May I said, "Will that Pete be in the
+boat, too?" and Aunty May whispered back, "Ow Gracious! I hope not. But
+don't let him know we're afraid, old man." So I took her hand tight and
+we followed Aunty Edith, who is an awful fast walker and always has so
+many things to do.</p>
+
+<p>First we went to the Post-Office, which is a little wooden building,
+and the Postmaster knows everybody and looks at you over his glasses.
+Then we went up a funny street with brick pavements, awful old. There
+are houses on that very street built before the Revolution, and a big
+cannon in the square. We went to Mr. Tree's, and he's a nice, big grocer
+man, with everything in his shop, and he patted me on the head and gave
+me a chocolate candy, which Aunty Edith said I might eat, if I ate it
+slowly. He said he would bring our trunks and bags up right away. Aunty
+Edith said, "Now I've got to order oil from Tryer and coal from Quick
+and some thread from Miss Macfarland's notion store," and I said, "Why
+don't the servants do all that, Aunty Edith?" She laughed and said,
+"There are no servants for us at East Penniwell, William; we do the work
+ourselves," Aunty May said, "But it will be fun, Billy. All the artists
+like Aunty Edith live that way down here, and you and I will be the
+writer people and we'll do lots of funny things together. Only, Edith,"
+she said, "the boy and I are weary; where can we rest while you finish
+your shopping?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very well," Aunty Edith said; "come and I'll show you the launch
+and you can get in that and sit and wait for Mr. Turner."</p>
+
+<p>We walked up a funny, hilly, crooked street, with partly brick
+pavements again and partly stone, till we came to an old wooden bridge
+over a canal, and then Aunty May squeezed my hand and said, "Billy, this
+is our canal," We crossed the bridge, and went down a few steps and
+there was Mr. Turner's launch. We got in and sat and watched the water
+and made up stories to each other, till Aunty Edith and Mr. Turner came,
+all full of bundles. Mr. Turner started the launch and we went
+chug-chugging along. But Pete didn't get in. He swam part of the time
+and ran and barked on the towpath the other part.</p>
+
+<p>The canal boats came down past us, and they began to have lights on
+them, and the trees were all green and hung down by the canal banks, and
+I could see where the dogwood was beginning to come out in the woods.
+There were some ducks swimming in the canal, and a farmhouse high above
+us on the bank. Then nothing but the towpath, which is the path on one
+side of the canal where the mules walk when they drag the canal boats.</p>
+
+<p>By and by I saw two tiny white houses, with their roofs and chimneys
+sticking up over the canal bank, and one of them had a funny green door,
+and honeysuckle all growing over the fence. Mr. Turner never stopped
+till Aunty Edith called, "Oh, we're going past," Then he stopped and
+jumped out and took a rope and pulled the boat close to the bank, where
+there were some stones placed like steps. I saw the two houses plainly
+then, one a white stone one and one a white wooden one with a
+green door.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="030.jpg (31K)" src="030.jpg" height="368" width="600">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>We all stepped out, with our bags, and said good-bye to Mr. Turner, and
+his launch went away up the canal past us, and Aunty Edith took a key
+out of her pocket and went down a step, into the garden of the house
+with the green door, and opened it, and said to Aunty May and me, "Come
+in, children. This is OUR HOUSE."</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="031.jpg (19K)" src="031.jpg" height="319" width="593">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="02"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+OUR HOUSE
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>Aunty May and I went inside, and we looked at each other and laughed. It
+was small, like a doll's house, and the room we stepped into, through
+the doorway, had a window the same side as the door, which looked out on
+the towpath, and two windows at the back, and a stovepipe coming right
+out of the floor and running up through the low ceiling.</p>
+
+<p>When I went and looked out of the back windows, I called to Aunty May,
+"Oh, see, it's the Delaware." And it was.</p>
+
+<p>There, right at the foot of our back garden, under the willow trees, was
+the Delaware River, running along, very fast.</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Come on, let's go down to the river, Aunty May." But Aunty
+Edith said, "First, look at the house."</p>
+
+<p>We went through a little door into another long, narrow, low room, with
+a window on the towpath and a window on the river, and a queer
+old-fashioned bureau and two iron beds in it, and a clothes-horse, in
+one corner, covered with muslin. When you opened one flap of it, it was
+a closet. This was Aunty Edith and Aunty May's room.</p>
+
+<p>In the other room, with the stovepipe in the middle of it, was a big
+couch, and that was to be my bed at night. There was a big closet at one
+end, made out of the place where the steps went up to the attic, and
+that was where my clothes were to hang. One side of the room had
+bookshelves, and on the wall were some of Aunty Edith's paintings; and
+there was a doorway at one end without any door.</p>
+
+<p>I said to Aunty Edith, "How do we get to the river from this house? Do
+we have to go out of the front door and run down? And where's the stove
+that the pipe belongs to? Is it in a cellar?" Then both the aunties
+laughed, and they went to this doorway without any door, and there was a
+funny thing that looked like a clumsy ladder. Aunty Edith told me those
+were our best stairs, and that once they were canal boat stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Well, you climbed down them very carefully, for they tipped a little,
+and you landed on a dark little landing with a door. You opened the door
+and stepped down a step and there you were in the nicest old kitchen
+you ever saw!</p>
+
+<p>The top part of the house was wooden, but this under part was of stone
+and cement, and the walls inside were cement, and the ceiling was just
+wood with the big floor beams showing through. And there was a door with
+glass in the top, that you could look through down to the river and the
+willows; and there was a window with a deep window seat you could sit in
+and look at the river; then there was a long window at the side, where
+the outside steps came down from the towpath, and that opened in two
+halves and had narrow panes of glass. It looked out on a garden.</p>
+
+<p>A big cook-stove, with a kettle steaming on it, was at one end of the
+room; and a nice big table, and there were some comfortable chairs, and
+pots and pans hanging over and under the mantel back of the stove.</p>
+
+<p>There was a rug on the floor, and a pantry with lots of good things to
+eat in it, and a big couch that I sat down on, and looked around.</p>
+
+<p>There was a little place in the wall, too, that had once been a window,
+but was closed up and made into a little cupboard for dishes.</p>
+
+<p>I said, "My! isn't this lovely?" Aunty May squeezed my hand and said it
+was, and Aunty Edith looked around and said, "Well, Mrs. Katy Smith did
+get my postal in time, after all. I'm so glad, because if she hadn't,
+it wouldn't have been so nice and clean in here, and there would have
+been no fire. Now, I'm going to take off my things and make a supper
+for us all."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May said, "I'll help you," but Aunty Edith said, "Not this first
+time, May. You take the boy out and show him the garden and the river,"</p>
+
+<p>So Aunty May and I took hold of hands and went out, and there was a long
+flower-bed running right down to the river-bank, on both sides of a long
+grassplot; and beyond the grass and flowers was a lot of ploughed land
+for vegetables and things; and beyond that there were a lot of woods.
+There was a path between the grassplot and the flower-bed next the fence
+of our neighbor, in the white stone house, and we went down that, and
+when we came to the end of the flower-bed there was a big apple tree,
+and then we went under that and stood on the river-bank, and there was
+the Delaware!</p>
+
+<p>Under the biggest willow tree there was a seat made of an old box, and
+Aunty May and I sat down for a minute and looked at the river. It was so
+clear that I could see the little fishes swimming along, and I threw a
+stick in it, and it went by so fast that Aunty May said, "My! how swift
+the current is. You must be careful, Billy-boy, and not go near the edge
+when you are alone." I said, "Yes, 'm, but I am to go in wading when it
+gets warmer."</p>
+
+<p>We went along the bank a little farther, and there were more trees,
+cherry trees, and willow trees, and buttonwood trees, and lots of nice
+places for us to put our hammocks. Then we went back to the house, and
+there was Aunty Edith in a big gingham apron toasting bread and making
+chocolate. I laughed and said, "Oh, Aunty Edith, I never saw you look
+like that in the city." Then we all laughed, and Aunty Edith said, "You
+will see me look like this very often down here, for we all have to do
+our share of the work. You, too, Billy. You will have to help us." I
+said, "That will be bully."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May set the table, and we all sat down and ate our toast and ham
+and eggs, and drank our chocolate, and I thought it was better than
+anything I had ever eaten.</p>
+
+<p>Just when we were in the middle of it, I heard footsteps crunching along
+the walk, and down the steps at the side of the house from the towpath.
+I called, "Some one's coming." Aunty Edith went to the door.</p>
+
+<p>It was Mr. Tree with the trunks and the suitcase. He said, "Hullo,
+young fellow. Have you come to take care of these ladies?" And I said,
+"Yes, sir"; and he said, "That's right. Look after 'em. It'll be a load
+off my mind to know they've got a man on the premises. It's right lonely
+up here." And I told him we wasn't afraid. I asked him if he needed any
+help, but he said no, and he was so terrible big and strong that he
+lifted the trunks as if they were boxes.</p>
+
+<p>After he had gone, Aunty Edith said she must unpack, and Aunty May said,
+"Do, Edith; Billy and I will do the dishes."</p>
+
+<p>So Aunty May tied a big clean towel around my waist, and she washed and
+I dried. There was no running water, just a pump outside the kitchen
+shed, right out of doors.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="043.jpg (34K)" src="043.jpg" height="312" width="592">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I pumped for Aunty May and we had a lovely time. We played a game with
+the dishes. Plates were ladies and saucers were little girls, and cups
+were little boys, and knives and forks were policemen and spoons were
+servants. We had a lot of fun, when the knives and forks marched round
+the table, and ordered the other dishes into the cupboard.</p>
+
+<p>After that was done, Aunty May said she must go upstairs and help Aunty
+Edith, and unpack her own typewriter. Aunty May writes stories, too,
+only she uses a typewriter and I use a pencil.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May asked me whether I'd sit in the window seat and read a
+picture-book or would I explore the garden. I said I would do both; look
+at pictures a little while and go in the garden. Aunty May made me
+promise not to go too near the river, or too far down the towpath.</p>
+
+<p>Then she went upstairs and I read a little till I had enough of
+reading, and I thought I'd go to the towpath, but first, as I was
+thirsty, I thought I'd get a glass and take a drink at the pump. But
+when I tried to pump, the pump-handle just went up in the air, and
+wouldn't pump up any water!</p>
+
+<p>And just as I tried it again, I heard somebody say, "That pump handle
+oughter been left up in the air. Say, young feller, you gotter pour some
+water down first. That pump ain't been used stiddy for some little while
+back. Ease it up and she'll go all right."</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="046.jpg (56K)" src="046.jpg" height="586" width="588">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I turned around, and there, leaning against the fence, was an old man
+with big blue eyes and a white mustache, and a pipe, and a plaid vest
+and a soft hat, and the biggest lot of cats I ever saw. Seven of them,
+white and gray and black and mixed colors, all looking up at me.</p>
+
+<p>I was so surprised that I didn't know what to say. But the old gentleman
+said, "Wait here, and I'll fetch you a kittle of water," and he turned
+and went into the white stone house, and all the cats ran after him. But
+he shut the door tight, and the cats sat waiting and mewing on the back
+porch, and I held on to the pump-handle and waited too.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="047.jpg (7K)" src="047.jpg" height="93" width="412">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="03"></a><br><br>
+
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+<p>In a minute he came out with a tin pail in his hand, and all the cats
+ran after him, and he said, "Shoo, Teddy," and they ran away a little
+bit, but came back and mewed and rubbed against his feet. He handed me
+the pail across the fence, and I took it, and he said, "A little at a
+time, boy." Then he went up to his porch and got a big dish and said,
+"Here, Teddy, Teddy," and all the cats ran to him, and he fed them.</p>
+
+<p>I stood watching him, and he said, "Why don't you ease the pump?" and I
+said, "If you please, sir, which one of your cats is Teddy?" He said,
+"Sho, boy, they're all named Teddy after President Roosevelt, and
+because it saves trouble. When I calls, 'Here, Teddy,'&mdash;they all comes.
+When I calls, 'Shoo, Teddy,'&mdash;they all shoos," And I said, "That's the
+best idea I ever heard of&mdash;for cats."</p>
+
+<p>He said, "Now, boy, you lift the handle of that pump high and throw some
+water into her, and then keep a-pumping." And I did, and the water came,
+and I pumped up a glassful, but he wouldn't take any.</p>
+
+<p>Then I said I'd fill the pail and bring it round because I'd like to
+see his cats close to, and he said, "Never mind the pail, young fellow,
+jist hand it over and come round yourself,"</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="050.jpg (73K)" src="050.jpg" height="668" width="596">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>So I did, first calling to Aunty Edith to ask if I might, and she came
+to the door and shook hands with him, over the fence, and said, "How do
+you do, Mr. Taylor. This is William Gordon, the son of Captain Gordon, I
+told you of." Then he said, "Sho, you don't meanter say it! I served
+under his grandfather." And Aunty Edith said to me, "William, Mr. Taylor
+was a soldier in the army all through the Civil War, and he can tell you
+lots about it." So I went over to his house and we sat on his back
+porch, and he smoked a pipe, and I played with all his Teddy-cats.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="051.jpg (6K)" src="051.jpg" height="62" width="301">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor told me he was seventy-three years old, and I said, "My! I'd
+never guessed it, you look younger than that"; and he said, "Yes, boy,
+I'm stepping along."</p>
+
+<p>Then he told me when he was a boy he worked on one of the canal boats,
+and at that time there were many more boats, for most of the freight,
+that goes in freight trains now on railroads, came down the canal in
+boats. After that he enlisted in the army and went away out West. He
+told me when he was young the West was the West, and you could shoot
+buffaloes. He knows because he shot them. Then when the Civil War broke
+out, he stayed in the army, enlisted again and fought all through it,
+and came home with a bullet in his leg.</p>
+
+<p>His father was a cooper and built the stone house Mr. Taylor lives in
+for a cooper shop, and that was why it was built so solid and had such
+thick walls. He took me into the cellar and showed it to me, for that
+was where they set the iron hoops to cool. I asked him who lived with
+him in it, and he said he was all alone, everybody was gone, he said,
+but him. I told him about my father and mother then, and how I would be
+all alone if it wasn't for Uncle Burt, and he said Uncle Burt was a fine
+man and a good soldier.</p>
+
+<p>He said he was glad I lived next door. I told him I was glad, too. He
+asked me if I went in for any kind of sport like shooting; and I said,
+not yet, but I climbed trees, and he said, when his cherries were ripe,
+if I didn't make myself sick on Aunty Edith's, I could climb his, when
+he was around.</p>
+
+<p>Then I asked him if he would tell me a story about the Civil War, and he
+laughed and said the most of them were too full of fighting and sad
+things for a little boy like me; and I told him I didn't mind them being
+a little bloody; that I wasn't a kindergarten baby.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed some more, and said: "Speaking of climbing trees makes me
+think of how near I was to being captured by some rebels once. You know,
+boy, Quakers is agin all fighting, so at the beginning of the war, when
+we regulars was sent to drill with a lot of new men and knock them into
+shape, I was some surprised when fust thing I seen was young Jim Wilton,
+whose father I knowed to be a Quaker living on the corner of the same
+street where my uncle lived in Phillydelphy.</p>
+
+<p>"I says to him, 'Hullo, Jim, what you doing here?' and he said, 'Well,
+Tom, I come here to larn you how to fight.' 'And you a Quaker's son,'
+says I. 'Yup,' he says, 'and thee knows that my old folks is none too
+pleased; but somehow I couldn't stay home comfortable with all the other
+boys fighting to free the blacks, so here I be.'</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I was right glad to see him, and get news of all the old
+neighbors, and Jim and me gits very chummy; and when there's a piece of
+business needing the attention of one of us, it usually gits the
+attention of both. Me and him hunting in couples as it were.</p>
+
+<p>"That's how it come about that one time, there being a bit of spying to
+be done, me and Jim finds ourselves in rebel uniforms, waiting and
+listening beside a camp-fire outside the rebel Gineral's tent, using our
+ears and our eyes too. When up rides Gineral Stuart, who used to be my
+commanding officer in the old days before he turnt reb, when he was in
+the regular army.</p>
+
+<p>"My! but I was in a terrible taking, for Stuart had a gredge agin me for
+somepin I'd done. I'll tell ye about that another day. 'T warn't me was
+to blame. But if he onct caught sight of me, it would be short shrift at
+the end of the rope.</p>
+
+<p>"So Jim and me begins edging away, until we could get a gait on without
+being noticed; and get away we did, and into the woods where our own
+clothes were hid; made the change and was getting back to our own
+quarters, happy as larks to be on the home road; laughing to think how
+near we'd been to Gineral Stuart, without his knowing it; and patting
+ourselves on the back at how neatly we'd done the trick, when Jim looks
+up and says, 'Hey, Tom, look at them persimmons,' Sure enough, there was
+a tree full of the nicest ripe persimmons you ever see, right in
+our way.</p>
+
+<p>"Now our rations hadn't been any too full lately and we were pretty nigh
+hungry all the time.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tom,' he says, 'I uster be the best tree-climber in the county. I
+gotter get me some of those,'</p>
+
+<p>"'Aw, Jim,' I says, 'don't be a fool. The woods may be full of rebels.
+I'm full as hungry as you are, but I ain't going to stop for any
+persimmons.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Just a handful,' he says, 'and it won't take a minute. Will you wait?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, I won't,' I says, being so doggoned tired that I knew if I sat
+down I'd fall asleep. 'I'm for pushing back to camp, and if you ain't
+all kinds of a foolish boy, you'll do the same.'</p>
+
+<p>"So I went on, and Jim, he gives me one look, and then he gives the tree
+a squint, and sho! he was off and up it before you could say 'Jack
+Robinson.' Climb! well, rather. He was up it in no time, and eating and
+slinging the persimmons into his hat. It made me so mad that I just
+naturally turned my back and went right on.</p>
+
+<p>"Suddenly I hears a kind of whistle that was our signal&mdash;Jim's and
+mine&mdash;to look out for trouble. So I drops right down and rolls over into
+the bushes, and draws them over me, so I can't be seen. Then I lays
+quiet and listens.</p>
+
+<p>"I hears voices, and turning my head so softly that the bushes don't
+move, I peeps out and sees a party of rebs a-coming down the path.
+They'd seen Jim, just after he'd give me his warning, and they lays for
+him under the tree, and one of them rebs, who was just as handy at the
+climbing as Jim, goes up and brings him down, persimmons and all. The
+rebs laugh, and eat his persimmons and take him prisoner and march off;
+Jim allowing that he was so hungry that he'd stolen off by his lonesome
+to get something to eat. One of the men had heard the whistle Jim gave,
+but Jim explaining that he whistled in surprise at seeing them, they
+only beats up the bush a little, not coming near me.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="061.jpg (52K)" src="061.jpg" height="573" width="611">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>"They go off, with Jim never so much as looking my way, though they
+passed so clost to me that the lieutenant's heel scrunched my little
+finger. I had to take it without hollering or moving, for if I had
+they'd taken me along with Jim. And that's what tree climbing brings a
+man to."</p>
+
+<p>"What became of Jim?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Jim, he was kept a prisoner all through the war, so he never got no
+enjoyment out of his life, never seeing a bit of real fighting&mdash;just
+marching and drilling and prison. So that, as he said, he might just as
+well never 'a' run away,&mdash;seeing he had to bide a non-combatant, which
+is the same as Quaker, after all."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he didn't like it, did he?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No," Mr. Taylor said, laughing, "he didn't. And let this be a warning
+to you, young man. Don't you go up a tree for persimmons or cherries or
+other fruits whatsomever, agin the advice of your elders and betters."</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, Mr. Taylor," I said, "I never will."</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="04"></a><br><br>
+
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+ON THE TOWPATH
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>Our house is so nearly on the towpath, that the mules eat the
+honeysuckle from the fence, and as there is only a tiny flower-bed
+between the house and the fence, you can hear the voices, and the
+tramping of the mules, as plainly indoors as out.</p>
+
+<p>At night, when you wake up in the dark, you think they are coming in.
+That's at first. By and by you get so used to them that you don't
+think about it.</p>
+
+<p>One reason why we came down so early in the spring is that I'm not to
+be sent to school until the fall, because I'm not to use my eyes too
+much, until they get stronger. Measles made them a little weak. So I
+have one hour with Aunty May for reading and sums, and half an hour with
+Aunty Edith for French; and then I don't have to do anything else for
+the rest of the day, until nearly dark, when I water the flower-beds for
+both the aunties.</p>
+
+<p>But from eleven until four, except at lunch-time, I must not bust into
+the house and holler at Aunty May&mdash;for she is writing; and I must not
+run after and plague Aunty Edith, when she goes up the towpath&mdash;for
+she's painting.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor, being seventy-three, can be spoken to at any time, except
+when he's doing his baking. Then he doesn't want anything or anybody
+round his feet, he says. Just as if I was cats!</p>
+
+<p>This morning I'm writing about. I was out on the towpath, fishing for
+eels, so I could put one in the tub which stands by the pump to catch
+the overflow; because Aunty May is very much afraid of snakes and eels,
+and she squeals so funny when she sees them that it is what Mr. Taylor
+calls "a fair treat" to hear her.</p>
+
+<p>I thought if I got her good and scared with seeing one in the tub, she
+might be so mad that she'd not be able to write, and would chase me
+round the garden.</p>
+
+<p>It's too bad Aunty May's grown up. She likes to play as well as any boy
+I know, and she's good at it, too, if it wasn't for her writing. Uncle
+Burt used to complain of that writing, too, when he was home. He said it
+interfered a lot&mdash;when he wanted her to play with him.</p>
+
+<p>Anyway the eels didn't bite, but I thought maybe I'd get a sunfish, and
+that's nearly as good a scream-starter, if Aunty May doesn't expect it
+to be there.</p>
+
+<p>All at once, I felt my cap pushed right off, and I looked up and there
+was a boy, riding on the top of an old gray mule, that was one of two
+tired-looking mules, dragging a canal boat.</p>
+
+<p>There was nobody on the boat that I could see, 'cept one man asleep on
+the top.</p>
+
+<p>"Gimme my cap, boy," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, you and your fishin'," he says. "Git off the towpath."</p>
+
+<p>And I said: "You can't say that to me. We've got the right of way here,
+because I live in that house with the green door."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you do," says he. "Well, baby dear, go in and tell yer wimmin folks
+ye've lost your cap"; and he chucked my cap right into the canal!</p>
+
+<p>Well, I couldn't get it, without falling in, and there was the
+canal-boat coming along ready to run over it. So I took my fishing-rod
+and flicked it at him, and there&mdash;I had caught the eel after all! It
+struck him, all cold and slippery, and he yelled, and it hit the mule,
+and the mule ran away, dragging the other mule with it, right up the
+slope to Rabbit Run Bridge!</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="070.jpg (22K)" src="070.jpg" height="188" width="601">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>The boy had grabbed the fishing-rod, so that my rod and my eel went
+with them.</p>
+
+<p>My! but I was mad, but kind of excited, too, for a man came up from the
+inside of the canal boat and yelled, and the man on the deck woke up and
+yelled, and the boy was yelling!</p>
+
+<p>There was a farmer driving along the road and across the bridge and when
+he saw mules coming, lickity-split, where mules never come,&mdash;right up to
+the bridge,&mdash;he yelled too, and licked his horse to get out of the way.
+The boy, he licked the mules with my rod. He'd thrown my eel back into
+the water.</p>
+
+<p>He was as cool as could be, and by and by he got the mules calmed down,
+and one of the men from the boat jumped off and helped him and they got
+the ropes all straight again and started off. The boy never said a word,
+except when the man asked him what did it. Then he told him, "The mule
+didn't like the looks of that baby boy there on the canal bank." The man
+shook his fist at me, and I called, "Gimme my cap." And the boy said,
+"Wait till we come back"; and he made an awful face as they went away,
+turning round and riding backwards to do it.</p>
+
+<p>I knew then that he was the same boy that made a face at me when I was
+in the train.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I had to tell Aunty Edith, and she looked very severe, and gave
+me my second-best cap and said, "William, do be careful, this time." But
+I only told her that the boy threw my cap into the water. I didn't tell
+that he said he was coming back.</p>
+
+<p>But I talked to Mr. Taylor about it, and he agreed that when I saw the
+boy again, I'd have to have it out with him, and he'd stand referee to
+see that there was no unfair advantage took of me or him.</p>
+
+<p>"For," says he, "you can't be called baby darling free and often by them
+boat boys, and neither can you eel them boat boys and scare their mules.
+All things being equal, you ask him his intentions next time and come
+to some mew-tual feeling on the matter, which won't reach the ears of
+your Aunty Edith. The ears of your Aunty May," say she, "could be
+reached and enjyed by them fine, if took alone, and without t'other
+Aunty present."</p>
+
+<p>Well, every day I kept a watch-out for that boy, and for a whole week I
+didn't see him.</p>
+
+<p>One Monday, Aunty May asked Aunty Edith if I couldn't go down,&mdash;it was
+raining,&mdash;if I put on my raincoat and boots, with Mr. Taylor, when he
+went to the mail, and bring her some stamps and stamped envelopes. Aunty
+Edith said, "Oh, all right, May, but it seems to me you eat stamps.
+They disappear so fast." Aunty May laughed, and said,</p>
+
+<p>"Be-that-as-it-may," which is what she always says when she wants to
+stop discussing, "William goes."</p>
+
+<p>So I got ready, and Mr. Taylor and me started down. It's a mile away.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor doesn't like umbrellas, neither do I, so, as it was only
+misting, Aunty May said I needn't.</p>
+
+<p>Just as we got to Rabbit Run Bridge, who came along, with his mules, and
+the same canal boat, and the same man asleep, under an umbrella this
+time, but that BOY!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor says, that the et-i-ket of such things makes him leave me
+and go sit on the bridge while I had it out. So I went down and said to
+the boy, "Hey, you, where's my cap?" And he grinned and said, "I give it
+to your eel. He's a-wearing of it now, and it looks fine on him."</p>
+
+<p>That strikes me so funny that I began to laugh; then I remembered that
+wasn't what I wanted to do. So I says, "Come on down till I polish you
+up for what you did to my cap"; and he says, "I'll be down in a minute
+to fix you for what you done to my mule. I've gotter put him in trousers
+to-morrow, his legs is so damaged."</p>
+
+<p>Then I began to laugh again, at the thought of a mule in trousers. "Aw,
+come on down," I said. "You ain't got any trousers for him." "Have,
+too," he said; "I'm making them spare minutes out of Turkey red. And
+when I adds brass buttons and pockets I'll put 'em on, the next time he
+passes your house."</p>
+
+<p>I began to laugh again, and then he jumped down, and before I knew it
+hit me a punch on the nose. That made me so mad that I hit at him and it
+struck his leg, and he said, "Ouch," and jumped so that I looked at his
+leg, and saw it was black and blue already.</p>
+
+<p>"Who did that?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Never you mind, baby dear," he said: "come on. If my leg did get
+catched between the boat and the bank and ground agin a stone this
+morning, I can still fight an eel-catcher."</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="078.jpg (21K)" src="078.jpg" height="235" width="607">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>And he hopped up to me on one foot, and I saw he wasn't much bigger than
+me, maybe eleven or twelve, and he had all he could do to keep from
+crying because his leg hurt him so; but he was so quick that I just had
+to dodge to get out of the way.</p>
+
+<p>"Say," I said, after I'd gotten out of his reach, "I don't want to hit
+you when you're hurt. And anyway," I said, "I don't know that I care
+about fighting with anybody who can make eels wear caps and mules red
+trousers. Wait a minute and I'll get a clean rag and some witch-hazel
+for your leg."</p>
+
+<p>"No, you don't," he says; "I ain't going to be fussed over, but if you
+gotta pitcher-book, like the one I seen you reading one day, that, an'
+something to chew'll keep my mind off my leg, and when it's all right
+again, I'll come past and smash you into bait for eels."</p>
+
+<p>That didn't seem quite what I wanted, but I told Mr. Taylor the boy was
+hurt and I couldn't fight, and he said "Certainly not&mdash;agin
+reg-u-lations."</p>
+
+<p>Then he said he'd wait for me a minute, and I ran back home, because I
+knew I'd get there faster than any canal mule, and I bust into the room,
+and told Aunty May, and first she didn't like my busting in like that,
+and then she got interested. She gave me a picture-book and a piece of
+rag, and some witch-hazel in a bottle, and a big piece of cake. When I
+got out, the boy was just coming up to the fence, and Aunty May wanted
+to tie up his leg for him, but he wouldn't. So she explained to him
+that the stuff in the bottle and the rag was for his leg, and he said,
+"Yes, 'm, thanks," and then she went in the house quick, so's I could
+speak to him myself. I'd asked her to.</p>
+
+<p>He said, "Well, eel-catcher, this will help me some. And if I pass this
+way agin, I'll look you up."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, do," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Want yer book back?" he calls.</p>
+
+<p>"No," I said, "when you get through with it, give it to the eel."</p>
+
+<p>"No," says he, "he's not fond of reading, but I know an old mushrat
+that's fond of anything like print. I'll give it to him, so any time you
+see him reading it by moonlight, with his spectacles on, you'll know
+it's my friend."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, come back soon," I called, "and tell me more about it"; for he was
+getting slowly and slowly away from me.</p>
+
+<p>"I will," he shouted, "if I don't make a mistake and swallow the
+witch-hazel."</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="05"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+ON THE DELAWARE
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>I thought I'd never get tired of having a river at our back door, but
+one day I nearly hated the Delaware.</p>
+
+<p>This is how it happened: Aunty Edith had a rowboat with a place in the
+stern where you could fix a big sketching-umbrella, and go sketching
+without getting too sunburnt; and when I was very good, 'specially good,
+I could go with her.</p>
+
+<p>When I was just ordinary good, and Aunty Edith wasn't using the boat,
+Aunty May and I used to borrow it and play "Robinson Crusoe," and Aunty
+May made the funniest "Man Friday" you ever saw. She would pretend not
+to know any language but "glub-glub," and so I had to teach her the
+names of things and she would shake all her hair down and dance a
+war-dance, when I got her to understand. This was when we'd reached our
+Island. There was one across the river from us, and on a corner of it we
+used to picnic and play.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Turner's children all were girls, and they went to school, or had
+music-lessons, or something, so I only had them once in a while to play
+with, and then they always wanted to play fairy-tales, and make me the
+Prince. I hate Princes because they're always bothering about finding
+some Princess. I'd rather have been an Ogre or a Dwarf or a Bad Giant.
+They had some fun. But the girls always got their Indian Boy to be
+those. He was a big boy from the Carlisle Indian School, who came in the
+summer to help about the house and the grounds, and he was great fun. He
+showed me how to make bows and arrows, and taught me how to swim and
+things like that, and how to push off a canoe. But mostly Aunty May was
+the one I had to play with right on the spot, and just when you'd made
+up your mind that she was a grown-up and wouldn't do it, she'd begin
+some funny thing, and she was almost as good as a real boy.</p>
+
+<p>Well, Mr. Turner had a man visiting him, a painting-man, and he came
+down to see Aunty Edith, and they put their heads on one side and
+screwed up their eyes, and looked at paintings, and had tea, and talked
+about art so long that Aunty May and I couldn't be quiet any longer, but
+just had to go down into the garden and play Wild Men of Borneo. That
+means taking a beanpole and yelling and dancing and trying to see who
+can vault and jump the farthest with the pole, and when you win you
+say, "Glug-Glug."</p>
+
+<p>We were right in the middle of this, and Aunty May was a little
+red-faced, and her hair was kind of wild, when we heard somebody laugh,
+and there was the painter-man down by the river, laughing as hard as he
+could laugh; and Aunty Edith trying to look severe at Aunty May and not
+able to, on account of her looking so comical. She had a black smudge
+from the end of the beanpole, which had been in a bonfire, across her
+forehead. You see she had just jumped the farthest, and was hollering,
+"Glug-Glug."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May laughed pretty hard, too, and we all laughed then, and Aunty
+May went up to the house to turn into a clean-faced grown-up again, and
+Aunty Edith unlocked the boat and handed the big umbrella to the man and
+told him to use the boat as often and as long as he liked. He put his
+paint-box and sketch-block in, and got in himself, and I stood looking
+at him, wishing he'd ask me&mdash;when he did.</p>
+
+<p>"Want to come, young man?" he said, and I said, "Yes, I'll take my book
+and my fish-line and be very quiet. May I, Aunty Edith?"</p>
+
+<p>Aunty Edith said, kind of doubtful, "I'm not going, William. Maybe you'd
+better not."</p>
+
+<p>Well, I guess I looked awful sorry at that, for the man said, his name
+was Mr. Garry Louden,&mdash;"Oh, let him come, Edith, I'll look after him";
+and Aunty Edith said, "But you're such an absent-minded beggar, Garry,
+and this is Burt's most precious charge."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he'll be all right," Mr. Garry said; "I'll bring him home right as
+a trivet. Hop in, son."</p>
+
+<p>So I jumped in and waved good-bye to Aunty Edith, and we started up the
+river.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="089.jpg (60K)" src="089.jpg" height="447" width="614">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>"What's an absent-minded beggar?" I asked Mr. Garry, and he said, "Oh,
+a fellow like me, who's always got his head full of pictures and things,
+and forgets what he's at."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't really beg for anything, do you?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord, no," he said, "except when I'm out with talkative young sports,
+and then I beg them to keep quiet."</p>
+
+<p>So I took my fish-line and sat still as a mouse, while he looked up and
+down the river, and whistled to himself&mdash;when he got a good idea, I
+guess, for after he'd whistled some, he'd let the boat drift and make
+marks in his sketch-book. He was a nice man, but not used to little
+boys, I think, for he used awful big words, and didn't answer questions
+like Aunties and Uncles do.</p>
+
+<p>By and by I told him about the Island, and he said, "Right you are,
+young Soc-ra-tees," and we landed there, and he kept saying, "Ripping,"
+"Splendid," and things like that, and by and by he fished out some
+sandwiches and sweet chocolate from his pocket, and gave me some, and
+told me to stay there while he rowed around and explored farther up the
+side of the Island. I said, "All right," for with things to eat, and a
+nice brook, and a shady place, and a book, no boy need have any trouble
+finding things to do to keep himself amused. And I didn't.</p>
+
+<p>I made a ship, and loaded it, and I made a fort on the other side of the
+brook, and when the ship came near the fort, the men from the fort came
+out and had a fight and sank her. Then when I got tired of that I read
+my book, and I read all I wanted to, and still Mr. Garry didn't come
+back. I could hear voices on the river, and once in a while a canoe shot
+past, but none of them was Mr. Garry, or Aunty Edith's rowboat.</p>
+
+<p>By and by they stopped coming past and then I got up and went along the
+bank and looked for him. I could see, way across the river, a little
+white speck, shining through the trees, which I knew was our house.</p>
+
+<p>My! didn't I want to be there! I didn't have any matches, of course. I'm
+not allowed to carry them. I couldn't make a fire, or anything, though
+it began to get dusky, and still Mr. Garry didn't come.</p>
+
+<p>Then, suddenly, I remembered that he was an absent-minded beggar who
+forgot things, and maybe he'd forgot me. That made me feel awfully queer
+and lumpy inside me, and besides I was getting tired.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody lived on that Island, except maybe some ground-hogs and
+squirrels and snakes, and&mdash;it wasn't any place for a boy who didn't have
+any food or tent or fire.</p>
+
+<p>First thing I knew, when that struck me, I heard myself bawl&mdash;right out,
+"Oh, Aunty May&mdash;COME! Oh, Aunty May!" and then I was really frightened,
+for it sounded so loud, and so scared, and so babyish.</p>
+
+<p>I kept still for a minute, and swallowed hard and then I yelled, "Hey!
+Hey!" out loud, without crying&mdash;hoping somebody would hear me. I did it
+a great many times, but nobody answered. Then I remembered that the boys
+were always landing here and hollering and shouting in fun, and nobody
+would pay any attention to it.</p>
+
+<p>I tried to remember what Uncle Burt'd do if he was caught like this,
+and little like me. I thought maybe he'd take off his shirt and wave it,
+but then I remembered it'd be too dark to see. But anyway I guessed I'd
+better do something, so I took off my blouse, and put my sweater on, and
+tied my blouse to a tree, and it waved, quite fine, for there was a
+little breeze coming up. I tried rubbing sticks together for a light,
+but whoever made up that plan must have had stronger arms and hands than
+I had, for I rubbed till my arms ached so that I cried some, but I
+didn't get a single spark of light.</p>
+
+<p>By this time it was very dark, and I was so hoarse with hollering, and
+so aching in my arms with rubbing sticks, and my legs hurt so with
+running up and down trying to see a boat or something, that I just
+dumped myself down on the grass and cried&mdash;and&mdash;I guess I&mdash;fell asleep.
+For the next thing I knew I heard some one calling my name, kind of
+loud, and kind of scared, "Billy, Billy, darling, are you there?" It was
+Aunty May in a canoe. I tried to call to her, but I was so hoarse and
+tired, I just made a kind of noise in my throat.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="096.jpg (92K)" src="096.jpg" height="709" width="604">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>Then I was so afraid she'd paddle away that I let out the finest yell
+you ever heard, and Aunty May called out, "Hey, Robinson Crusoe. Here's
+your Man Friday"; and she slid the canoe up to the bank, and I fell in
+so stiff, and she hugged me so hard, that it's a wonder we didn't upset.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="097.jpg (15K)" src="097.jpg" height="213" width="581">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>Usually I don't like hugging, but this time it was all right.</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty May told me that she had begun to get worried and so had
+Aunty Edith, knowing that Mr. Garry was an absent-minded beggar. Aunty
+Edith had gone up to Mr. Turner's to find if he was home, but Aunty May
+had insisted on going out in the canoe, though Mr. Taylor didn't like
+her to alone, and Mr. Taylor had gone down the towpath, toward the
+village, looking for us. Well, wasn't Aunty May mad when she found out
+how long I'd been alone and how badly I'd wanted her. She just paddled
+as fast as she could, and all the time pretended that we were wild
+savages who would catch Mr. Garry and put him on a desert island, just
+to see how he'd like it.</p>
+
+<p>As we got nearer our house there were lights along the river-bank, and
+we called and a big boat came up to us, and in it was Mr. Garry, with a
+very white face, and Mr. Turner and Aunty Edith, and she was crying so
+hard that she couldn't see me at first.</p>
+
+<p>When Aunty May said, "Don't cry, Edith, he's here," and handed me over,
+she gave me such a hard squeeze that I couldn't speak for a minute.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Garry all the time kept saying, "Say, old chap, I'm sorry, but I am
+such an absent-minded beggar." Aunty May said, "Yes, but you'll never
+have a chance to get absent-minded with this boy again."</p>
+
+<p>He looked terribly sorry, and begged my pardon again, and I told him,
+"It was all right, only I didn't care to play Robinson Crusoe so
+truthfully&mdash;at night."</p>
+
+<p>They hurried me up to the house and gave me warm things to eat and
+drink, and let me stay up longer than usual.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May wouldn't let Mr. Garry touch me or help her at all, and even
+Aunty Edith wouldn't hardly speak to him, till they found I was all
+right and not hurt any, except my blouse, which was left on the Island.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Garry gave me his own silver pen-knife, before he went away, so that
+I would "nevermore defenseless be," as he said, and we were quite
+friendly. But after he had gone, I heard Aunty May say that "Never would
+that absent-minded beggar take her boy away again"; and Aunty Edith
+said, "He's Burt's boy, not yours."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May didn't say anything, so I called out, "I'm your boy, too,
+Aunty May. Uncle Burt said so, and I'll never, never go out with an
+absent-minded beggar on the river again."</p>
+
+<p>And I never have.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="06"></a><br><br>
+
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+GEORGE
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+<p>For a while, I did have a real boy to play with, right in the house. It
+happened this way:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Martha, who is Aunty Edith's colored washerwoman in the city, had a boy
+called George, who used to bring the clothes home. He was a little older
+than me&mdash;twelve years old&mdash;and he was always smiling, and his teeth were
+white and his eyes shiny. And when his mother wrote Aunty Edith that he
+was poorly, Aunty Edith had him sent down for a week&mdash;on trial, to stay
+in the attic above my room, and do the dishes for the Aunties, and run
+errands. He was to stay longer, if it was all right.</p>
+
+<p>I wish it had been, for George was awful funny. He was very obliging,
+too, and I liked him. So did Aunty May, for he remembered all the
+stories his teachers had told him in school, and he would tell them to
+Aunty May and me, when we sat down under the willow trees, and we
+just loved it.</p>
+
+<p>What Aunty Edith didn't love was what he did with the green paint. Aunty
+Edith had a lot left over in a pot after the kitchen was painted, and
+she thought it would be nice to paint the chairs and tables that we used
+out of doors.</p>
+
+<p>We used to have breakfast and lunch, and even dinner, out in the little
+grapevine-covered back porch, which had a cement floor, level with
+the ground.</p>
+
+<p>So just to keep George happy, Aunty Edith gave him that to do. He
+commenced it while Aunty May and I were doing lessons, and we could hear
+Aunty Edith explaining&mdash;Aunty Edith always does the explaining&mdash;and
+George all the time saying, "Yas, 'm, yas, 'm, Miss Edith." And by and
+by Aunty Edith came in and we could hear George whistling and singing.
+George did sing awful loud, and funny songs, so you'd have to stop
+and listen.</p>
+
+<p>This morning he kept singing something about a man named "Sylvester,"
+and he kept singing out the same thing over and over again, till Aunty
+May said, "Oh, dear, I can't hear myself speak. Edith, will you quiet
+the blackbird?" And Aunty Edith called to George not to sing so loud,
+and he said, "Yas, 'm, Miss Edith"; and the next minute it began louder
+than ever.</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty Edith went downstairs to tell him to take his work farther
+away from the house.</p>
+
+<p>She hadn't been gone a minute till we heard her say, "Oh, good
+gracious, what shall I do? Come here, George, and see if you can take it
+off." George kept saying, "Yas, 'm, Miss Edith, yas, 'm"; and Aunty
+Edith was being so very spluttery, that Aunty May and I leaned out the
+window, and then we jerked our heads in and Aunty May said, "Don't you
+dare laugh out loud, Billy."</p>
+
+<p>Then we looked again, and jerked our heads inside the window every time
+we felt the laugh coming on, which was pretty often, for you see George
+had put the paint-can, a small one, right on the doorsill, and Aunty
+Edith had put her foot in it, and it had caught.</p>
+
+<p>There was Aunty Edith holding on to the grape-arbor while George pulled
+at the can, and the paint flowing around pretty free. Well, George
+couldn't pull it off, and finally he had to take a can-opener and cut
+Aunty Edith's foot out, just as though she were salmon, or something.</p>
+
+<p>When we got to that part, Aunty May and I forgot ourselves and laughed
+out loud, and then Aunty Edith looked at us, and looked at her foot, and
+at George's black face all daubed with green paint, and his clothes,
+too, as he carefully cut her out, and she laughed, too. But it spoiled
+her shoe, and it took several days to wear the green off George.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="109.jpg (94K)" src="109.jpg" height="707" width="617">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>That was the too bad part of it. George was so fine for singing and
+telling stories and he just couldn't remember to do anything else.</p>
+
+<p>When he went for the mail and the groceries, unless I went with him,
+he'd forget everything, and come home just as smiling as ever.</p>
+
+<p>And he was brave, too, for he used to chase the village boys when they
+ran after him and called names, and besides that he and I built a lovely
+Filipino house up in the biggest willow tree, and had lots of fun,
+escaping from two boys at the farm across Rabbit Run Bridge, who chased
+us and tried to catch us. We got up in our tree-house and shot at them
+with bows and arrows, and they couldn't reach us. I liked having George.
+If he'd only stayed funny, without getting dangerous. But George got
+dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>It was this way: George and the two boys on the farm, Samuel and Charlie
+Crosscup, were having a talk on the middle of Rabbit Run Bridge, about
+fire engines. Samuel said the East Penniwell fire engine could get up
+steam and run to a fire, with Sol Achers's old white horse hitched to
+her, quicker than a New York fire engine could. George and me said it
+couldn't. He said, "It could, because why? The East Penniwell horse and
+engine were used to the roads and the New York horses and engine would
+have to be showed."</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't think of anything to say, but George said, "No, sah. Dat
+ain't noways so. For de New York fire engines and horses is so trained
+that they goes over any road and anywhere according as the Fire Chief
+he directs, and it doan mek no difference whether they've been up
+dataways befo' or not They jist naturally eats up all distances."</p>
+
+<p>Well, that made the Crosscup boys mad, and they kept telling all about
+the East Penniwell engine house, and my! it must be a lovely place, if
+all they say is true. George he told them then about the New York engine
+houses, and my! they must be splendid if George really knew. He said he
+did. He said his mother's cousin washed for three firemen and she'd
+oughter know. I guess she ought to, but George did remember so much
+about those things, and forgot so quick about others, that sometimes I
+really didn't know what to be sure about.</p>
+
+<p>Well, it began to rain, and George was going to take me home, when one
+of the boys said, "Aw, don't go home, yet. Come on into the old barn and
+let's play knife until the rain stops."</p>
+
+<p>I guessed we'd ought to go home right away with the bundles and change,
+but George said, "On no account can I git you wet. Miss Edith wouldn't
+stand for that nohow." So I went with him. And we played knife on the
+floor. It was a big empty barn. That is there weren't any cattle in
+it, just hay.</p>
+
+<p>It stood a long way from the house, and on a little hill. By and by the
+thunder and lightning got quieter, but the rain made it dark, and I
+said, "Oh, George, let's go. It's too dark to see in here anyway." But
+George wouldn't go until he had finished his game, and when the other
+boys said, "It's too dark to play knife any more," George said, "Let's
+play robber's cave. I got something in my pocket will make it light." He
+took out a box of matches and a candle-end, and said, "Let's stick it up
+yere, and then play robbers. This'll be the den"; and he put the candle
+into the neck of an old bottle.</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Oh, George, Aunty Edith doesn't let you have matches." George
+said, "Look yere, these matches was give me to-day, and this ain't Miss
+Edith's barn. If these young gemmun is willing to play in their father's
+barn with a candle, you ain't got no call to say anything, has yer?" And
+the boys said, "Aw, it's all right. Come on. William ain't yer boss.
+He's nothing but a kid anyway."</p>
+
+<p>Well, that made me mad, and I wouldn't play robbers with them, and I
+slid down to the barn floor, and went to the door, and looked out to see
+if it was getting any lighter. But George, he put on a terrible look,
+and began to say, "I'm the King of the Robbers, who's this yere
+a-peekin' and a-spyin' in my den?" Then Sam called out, "It's me. I'm
+the King of the Pirates, and I've come to take ye bound hand and foot to
+my ship. Stand by, men!" "Men" was his brother Charlie, and they made a
+dash at George. He danced and flew at them with a stick and called to me
+to come and be his man and help him fight 'em off.</p>
+
+<p>I was just running to do it, for it looked like pretty good fun, and the
+rain was pretty hard, when somebody knocked the bottle with their foot,
+and over it went into a heap of straw, and before the boys could race
+back and put it out, the hay was on fire.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, dear! I hope I never see anything like that again. We boys were so
+scared at first, we couldn't move, and then, with a yell, the Crosscup
+boys ran to tell their father, with me and George after them.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="117.jpg (95K)" src="117.jpg" height="697" width="610">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>We only ran a little ways toward the other barn, and then we found an
+old bucket, and George yelled to me to get a bit of rope, and we
+lowered it into the canal and ran back to throw the water on the fire.
+But it was too little, and the fire was too big.</p>
+
+<p>Farmer Crosscup came running with his hired man, and we all worked with
+hose and everything, but the barn burned, all but the north wall, and so
+fast that though George and I ran and ran for help, and though Mrs.
+Crosscup telephoned to town for engines, it was through burning before
+they got up.</p>
+
+<p>After this, George had to go. Aunty Edith got him sent to a place for
+colored children, where he could have fresh air, and some one to look
+after him, but he had to go away from East Penniwell. The farmers said
+he was "dangerous." I was sorry and Aunty May was sorry, too, but it
+couldn't be helped. George was sorry, too, but at the last minute he
+leaned from the wagon and whispered to me, "Anyway, I done proved dat
+dere old fire engine wuz too slow."</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="07"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+LEFT ALONE
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>After George went away, it seemed very quiet on the towpath. It grew
+warmer and warmer, and the cherries got ripe and were picked, and I
+climbed trees and played more, and had fewer lessons, because it was so
+hot, and the little Turner girls came down to play with me sometimes,
+because school was out. I went up and played with them sometimes, but
+not often unless the launch came down, because it was a long way to walk
+in the hot sun.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor and me used to sit on his back porch, where it was cool, and
+tell one another stories.</p>
+
+<p>He told me some fine ones about the war, and when he was a boy. More
+things seemed to happen to boys then than they do now, and I told him
+so, and he laughed and said that was only because he was seventy-three
+and remembered about them. He said that when I was seventy-three, "some
+little feller'll think the same thing when you tell him about the fust
+airship and things like that."</p>
+
+<p>I laughed at me ever being seventy-three, but I suppose I will some day.
+ The only fun we had before the letter came was early that very
+morning, when Aunty May was sitting reading some clippings her editor
+had sent her, with her back to the little cupboard I told about, that
+was made out of an old window.</p>
+
+<p>I came down the stairs from my room and stood looking at her, wishing
+she'd look up so I could interrupt. But she didn't and I stood there
+just as quiet for a minute, and wondering why I suddenly thought about
+the pictures in my book on India. Then I heard a little rustle, and I
+knew. Just above Aunty May's head, uncoiling itself from round a pile of
+plates in the corner, was a big black and yellow snake.</p>
+
+<p>I called out, "Hey, Aunty May! Quick! There's a snake behind you!" And
+she looked up and said, "Billy, I'm not in the mood for playing."</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="123.jpg (33K)" src="123.jpg" height="311" width="617">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I said, "Oh, Aunty, I'm not fooling. Quick, or it will land on your
+head"; and she turned round and looked right at the snake and it looked
+at her, and Aunty May gave a scream, and jumped away, and the snake
+dropped down on the floor and commenced to wiggle behind the couch.</p>
+
+<p>Then I tell you there was some fun. Aunty Edith came down just as Aunty
+May got a hatchet and made a chop at the snake, but she never touched
+it, and Aunty Edith wouldn't let me go behind the couch after him.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor, who was coming along the towpath from the village (he
+brought us the mail every morning), came down and asked, "What's up,
+young feller? I heerd the wimminfolk screeching. What ye been up to?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him I hadn't done anything. It was a snake. Then Mr. Taylor and
+me pulled out the couch, but he wasn't there. We poked sticks behind the
+pantry, but couldn't find him.</p>
+
+<p>There was a big hole in the cement there, and Mr. Taylor said, "Sho, the
+poor snake was more frightened than ye was, Miss May, and it's likely
+he's down the river-bank by now." Then Aunty May and me told him how big
+it was and what color, and he said, "I knew a couple of wimmin kept a
+milk snake in their dairy for a pet. Maybe this feller wants pettin'."
+Aunty May said he'd never get it from her, and she took a piece of tin
+and a hammer and tacks and went to close up the hole, but Mr. Taylor
+said, "Wait a minute, Miss May"; and he whispered to her, "Stand by a
+minute. There's a letter here from the War Department to Miss Edith, and
+I'm doubting it's being the best of news."</p>
+
+<p>Well, poor Aunty May turned so white and sat down so quickly with her
+face in her hands, that Aunty Edith, who came in the room just then from
+putting the axe away in the shed, said, "Why, May, did the snake
+frighten you as much as that?" Aunty May didn't answer. She just
+clutched Mr. Taylor and said, "Where is it?" Then Mr. Taylor looked at
+her and at Aunt Edith, and said "Sho" once or twice, and then he pulled
+out of his pocket a long envelope, and put it in Aunty Edith's hands.</p>
+
+<p>She sat down very quick, and tried to open it, but her hands shook so
+that she couldn't. Aunty May took it from her and tore it open, and they
+both leaned over and read it. Then Aunty Edith cried so for a while she
+couldn't tell us anything, but at last Aunty May took my hand and we
+went out on the porch, and she told us that Uncle Burt had got hurt in a
+little fight&mdash;not a real battle, a "skirmish" with some natives, and he
+was to be sent home on sick-leave.</p>
+
+<p>Then she and Mr. Taylor talked about what the letter said, and he shook
+his head, and told her it looked like a bad job to him. Aunty May told
+me to go over and sit with Mr. Taylor while she talked with Aunty Edith.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Taylor and me sat there, not very happy, because I was thinking of
+Uncle Burt, and somehow I couldn't make him sick or hurt, he was so big
+and so very strong.</p>
+
+<p>I said that to Mr. Taylor, and he said, "Them there guns don't care how
+big and strong a man is, they picks 'em down. They're cruel things,
+boy, firearms is. Don't you ever go a-monkeying with them, mind that." I
+said I wouldn't.</p>
+
+<p>We sat there so quiet that we could hear the Aunties talking, and Aunty
+Edith crying every now and then, in the house. Aunty May wasn't crying,
+but she seemed quite angry about something. I could hear her say, "You
+shall take it, Edith, and you shall do as I say, or I'll throw it into
+the canal." Then again, "What is the money to me if&mdash;" And then Aunty
+May began to cry and Aunty Edith began to be soothing to her, and the
+more she soothed the harder Aunty May cried, till I heard Aunty Edith
+say, "All right, May, dear. I promise I'll do it, if you'll only
+stop crying."</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May stopped right away, and presently she came out, and her eyes
+were red, but her mouth was smiling, like it always does when she gets
+what she wants.</p>
+
+<p>She came and sat down by Mr. Taylor and me, while Aunty Edith went up to
+write out telegrams and letters, and told me that Aunty Edith was going
+out to bring Uncle Burt home, and that she was going with her as far as
+San Francisco; that while they were gone I was to stay at the Turners',
+for she thought they would look after me for her, and would I be a good
+boy until she came back?</p>
+
+<p>I promised I would, but, oh, I felt awful, and I begged her to take me
+with her, but she said she couldn't because Aunty Edith was so tired and
+sorry, and she would have to look after her all the time, and I must
+stay at home and be good and wait. She would come back for me, in a
+little while, and we'd wait together for Uncle Burt.</p>
+
+<p>So as long as Mr. Taylor sat there looking at me with his winky blue
+eyes, I didn't dare howl or anything, but my! I did feel like it. So I
+just said, "Yes, 'm, Aunty May, I'll be good." She kissed me right before
+him. It was a little mean of her, but he looked the other way and said,
+"Shoo, Teddy."</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty May said, "There isn't a minute to be lost, Billy, so come in
+and pack your box, while I go across to the farmhouse and call the
+Turners up on the 'phone."</p>
+
+<p>I went into the house, where Aunty Edith was very quiet and packing very
+hard; and I packed the big suitcase with some of my things, for Aunty
+Edith said I could always get in the house and get the rest of them
+any time.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Aunty May came back and said, "It's all right. They are
+dears. They are coming down for Billy, right away, and they'll take you
+and me to the train. Do you think you can do it, Edith? We've just an
+hour." Aunty Edith said, "Of course I can."</p>
+
+<p>And then you never saw such a packing time. It made me so dizzy watching
+those two Aunties fly around, that presently I went outside, and sat
+with Mr. Taylor, who was on the front step, "Waiting orders," he said;
+and didn't we just get them, though!</p>
+
+<p>When Aunty Edith called, "Billy, the tags, please," didn't I just run!
+and when Aunty May said, "Mr. Taylor, will you please help me with this
+window?" he jumped around as though he was seventeen instead of
+seventy-three.</p>
+
+<p>By and by the launch came down, but a little late, so it was decided
+that I was to wait with Mr. Taylor until they took the Aunties to the
+train; and they'd get me on the way back.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="134.jpg (29K)" src="134.jpg" height="220" width="610">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>After a few minutes the trunks were in the launch, the house was locked
+and Mr. Taylor had the key. The Aunties kissed me good-bye, and Aunty
+Edith promised to tell Uncle Burt I was a good boy, and Aunty May said
+she'd come back for me as soon as she could&mdash;and they shook hands with
+Mr. Taylor and he said, "Sho, I gotter feed them Teddy-cats," and went
+down the steps. Then they got into the launch and went off, and I waved
+at them as long as I could see them; and then I sat down by the canal
+bank and felt as if I couldn't bear it, for it wasn't till then I
+believed they had really gone away and left me all alone.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="135.jpg (79K)" src="135.jpg" height="648" width="599">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="08"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+AT TURNERS'
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+<p>Up at Turners' it was nice. They had a big stone house with lots of room
+in it, and the girls, Charlotte and Grace, were nice to play with, and
+Mrs. Turner always seemed to know what a boy wanted. She did pat me on
+the head and call me "pigeon" sometimes, but then, she did that to Mr.
+Turner, too, so I didn't mind.</p>
+
+<p>At first I thought it was going to be so nice, that I'd forget about
+everything till Aunty May came back, but by and by, though they were
+nice as nice can be, I began to miss Aunty May till it hurt like a
+toothache.</p>
+
+<p>I missed Aunty Edith, too, but Aunty May and I had played most together,
+and next to Uncle Burt, I loved her best.</p>
+
+<p>The Turners had an old ruined mill on their grounds, and we children
+used to hang our bathing-suits in there and use it to dress in when we
+went swimming in the creek.</p>
+
+<p>It was very old, and all the machinery, the wheels and things, were made
+of wood. Up in the top there was a nice big loft, with a wide window,
+where nobody ever went. When I found this out, I took a broom up there
+and swept it by the window, and got an old chair, and one of the old
+barrels for a table, and when I didn't want to play with Charlotte and
+Grace, or when it rained, I used to get a piece of bread or cake, or an
+apple, and go off there, all by myself. Sometimes I read, sometimes I
+wrote books and drew, and sometimes I just sat and thought about Uncle
+Burt and Aunty May, and Aunty Edith. And it got nearer and nearer the
+time for Aunty May to come back.</p>
+
+<p>The very day that she was to come home, I was doing this, thinking
+about her, I mean&mdash;a little harder than usual, because Mr. Turner had
+told me at breakfast that after all Aunty May wouldn't be back till
+to-morrow, when I heard somebody else breathing in the room. I turned
+around, and there was Henry, the Indian boy from the Carlisle School,
+sitting crouched on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>He was a great big boy, fifteen or sixteen, and he helped with the work
+in the house in the summertime. Henry was always nice to us children,
+and we liked him a great deal.</p>
+
+<p>I said "Hullo, Henry, what are you doing in my library?" And he showed
+all his teeth at me and said he was doing the same that I was doing
+there; he had come up to be sad and alone. Then I told him all about
+Aunty May, and he was sorry for me, and he told me about the school, and
+the teachers, and football, and his people, and I was sorry for him.</p>
+
+<p>Then he told me that when he got very sorry about everything, sometimes,
+he just dressed himself and got out of his bed at night and walked and
+walked until he got tired, and then came back and slept.</p>
+
+<p>He told me how lovely everything looked in the country, early in the
+morning, and I told him I'd like to do that, too, some morning, but how
+did he get up without waking people? Then he showed me how he could move
+in his stocking feet and no one could hear him. And it was true. If I
+sat with my back to Henry I would still think he was sitting back of me,
+when he was over by the door, really. So I practiced that, too. "Playing
+Indian," he called it; and he promised next time he had that feeling,
+he'd throw some gravel at my window, and I could come down.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="141.jpg (28K)" src="141.jpg" height="306" width="456">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I asked him how soon he thought it'd be, and he looked at me very long,
+and then, just as somebody called, "Henry, where are you? Come and take
+the canoe out," he leaned down and whispered in my ear, "To-night,
+be ready."</p>
+
+<p>Well, I could hardly eat my supper for thinking of it, and I went to bed
+so quickly and quietly that Mrs. Turner called me "pigeon" and patted my
+head, because the little girls didn't want to go and were a
+little noisy.</p>
+
+<p>After I got into bed and was just falling asleep, I did just for a
+minute think I should have asked Mrs. Turner if I could go, but
+honestly I never thought of that till then, because Aunty May wasn't
+there. I would have thought of telling her. Anyway Henry had told me not
+to tell, and I didn't know whether he meant just the children or not.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I stayed awake a long time, and got up softly and dressed again,
+and then I stayed asleep it seemed to me just a teeny while, when a bit
+of grass and gravel hit me on the nose.</p>
+
+<p>I woke up and more came flying through my open window, so I got up
+softly and kneeled on my bed, and there was Henry down on the ground,
+looking up at me.</p>
+
+<p>When he saw me he put his finger to his lips, and sent a big piece of
+clothes-rope flying through the window on to the bed, all without
+a word.</p>
+
+<p>Then he shaped with his mouth to use that and not the stairs, for the
+stairs were creaky.</p>
+
+<p>So I put the noose at the end over my bed-post and held on tight, and
+slid down, without a bit of noise, to the ground, where Henry caught me.</p>
+
+<p>I came down so fast it hurt my hands, but Henry washed them with water,
+at the well, and tied them up, all without speaking, and we went softly
+out of the yard, not toward the towpath, but up the long road over
+the hills.</p>
+
+<p>It was very early morning, about three o'clock, and everything looked
+lovely.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="145.jpg (46K)" src="145.jpg" height="444" width="519">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>When we got far away from the house, I asked Henry if he wasn't hungry,
+and he shook his head, no, but gave me a Uneeda biscuit out of a box,
+and I ate three or four, and all the time he was walking on in the nice
+soft light, without saying anything.</p>
+
+<p>Presently we got to the top of a hill, and Henry stood still, and so did
+I. There was the sun coming up and making all sorts of lovely colors
+on the sky.</p>
+
+<p>When we looked at it a little while, Henry said, "How does the little,
+lonely boy like walking in the morning?" and I said, "Fine."</p>
+
+<p>We walked on, and sometimes Henry didn't say anything, and sometimes he
+whistled, and sometimes he talked to me about Carlisle and football,
+and out-of-doors and things like that, and I had a lovely time and
+didn't notice how far away we were getting.</p>
+
+<p>At last the sun came up all the way, and I said, "Oh, Henry, we'd better
+get back now, for Mrs. Turner will miss us and not know where we are."</p>
+
+<p>But Henry threw himself flat on the grass,&mdash;we had sat down to rest a
+minute because I was tired, and didn't say anything at all for a
+long time.</p>
+
+<p>Then he lifted his head and his white teeth showed, and his eyes smiled
+at me, and he said quite softly, "I am not going back."</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how queer I felt when he said those words. Maybe it was as Aunty
+May said, because I hadn't enough breakfast in my insides, but
+everything went round like a clock for a minute, the sky, the trees, and
+the strange road, and the strange houses, and then I said in a funny
+voice, "Oh, Henry, you don't mean that."</p>
+
+<p>He said, "Yes, I am tired of everything there"; and he pointed down the
+road we had come along. "I am going back to my own people; back to
+the school."</p>
+
+<p>Then he offered to take me with him, and to carry me part of the way, as
+I was little and got tired too easily to keep up with him. But though
+he was kind, and I wanted very much to go with him, and not be left
+alone, I couldn't, because I remembered this was the day Aunty May was
+coming home; and now, what would she and the Turners think of me!</p>
+
+<p>I was so sorry that I was pretty near crying, except that the Indian boy
+was looking at me with his bright eyes, and I remembered that Indians do
+not cry, and would think me a poor kind of a boy if I did.</p>
+
+<p>So I just shook my head, and told him I must go back and meet Aunty May.
+He didn't like this, until I had promised him that I would only say he'd
+left me and had gone on to Carlisle, and I would not say where he'd
+left me, so that he'd get a fair start. But I didn't like to say even
+that for fear I'd have to tell what wasn't so, until he told me it was
+all right, because I didn't know where we were, and he wouldn't tell me.</p>
+
+<p>He told me he liked me very much and was sorry I wouldn't go with him,
+and he divided the crackers and told me to sit still and not look until
+I had counted 100. I did, and when I'd finished there wasn't any Henry
+to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>I ate a cracker, and started back down the road again, and now everybody
+was up and I met men on the roads and dogs barked at me, and oh, how
+long the road seemed!</p>
+
+<p>I went on and on till I thought I should fall down, and I was so thirsty
+I didn't know what to do.</p>
+
+<p>By and by, I came to a place where there was a toll-gate, and then I
+knew I was lost, for we hadn't passed any on the road coming up, and
+besides I hadn't any money.</p>
+
+<p>So I stood still and tried to think, but I felt hot and tired and my
+head went round a little. Then I thought I'd go to the back door of the
+tollhouse, and then maybe some one would tell me how to go and they
+wouldn't have to feel so badly about telling me I couldn't get through
+without any money. So I went round to the back yard and there was
+nobody in it.</p>
+
+<p>Then I went up to the kitchen door and knocked and nobody came, but I
+heard a little voice at the kitchen window say, "Hey, boy, what do
+you want?"</p>
+
+<p>I looked and there was a little boy, just about seven or eight, sitting
+in a chair by the window, and I came up to it, and called to him&mdash;"I
+want to know the road to East Penniwell, and I want a drink of water."</p>
+
+<p>At first he just shook his head, and then he opened the window, and
+said, "Hurry up. We got diphtheria here and nobody's allowed to speak
+to me. That's why the tollhouse is shut up. Ain't you 'fraid?"</p>
+
+<p>I said, "I don't know what it is, and I'm awfully hungry and thirsty and
+I want to know the road to East Penniwell."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said, "poor boy"; and handed me out a glass of milk and a
+piece of bread, and I was drinking the milk, when I heard some one yell
+at me. It was a man running up to the house, and the boy grabbed the cup
+away and said, "Here comes Pop. You'd better leg it." I ran as fast as I
+could out the gate and down the road he told me to take. The man didn't
+chase me far, and I didn't hear what he said, his dog barked so. But I
+didn't feel quite so tired, though I ached a lot still, and my feet were
+awful wet, through running right through a brook when the man called
+at me.</p>
+
+<p>I went right on. Sometimes I lay down under a tree, sometimes I sat down
+by the road.</p>
+
+<p>I don't see why a road that seems all right when you're going up it,
+seems so terrible when you are going down. But maybe it's because I made
+wrong turnings, and always when the men asked me if I'd ride with them a
+little ways, I said, "No," because I would have to tell them I belonged
+at Turners', and they might ask me about Henry, the Indian boy.</p>
+
+<p>Last I took a turning that led me farther and farther down a road I
+never remember seeing before and there were no cross-road places; no
+farmhouses, and no man came along on a wagon. I just had to keep on,
+feeling sicker and sicker, till, just as I made a short turn, I came out
+on a road that led to Crosscup's farm and Rabbit Run Bridge!</p>
+
+<p>My, wasn't I glad. But I wasn't going to Crosscup's house, not much! I
+knew what I'd do now. I'd get Mr. Taylor, and tell him, just as fast
+as I could.</p>
+
+<p>That wasn't very fast, because my feet had needles in them, and
+dragged, but by and by I got there, and knocked at the door. Mr. Taylor
+opened it, with all the cats around him. I just began to speak, and say,
+"Good-morning, Mr. Taylor," when everything got kind of black and hazy,
+and I didn't remember any more.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><a name="09"></a><br><br>
+
+
+<center>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>
+THE WHITE TENT
+</h3>
+</center>
+<br>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="157.jpg (22K)" src="157.jpg" height="367" width="475">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I didn't remember anything, until I woke up and found myself lying on
+the porch, and Mr. Taylor bending over me with a glass of water in his
+hand, all the Teddy-cats purring at me, and my head on somebody's lap.
+Mr. Taylor was saying, "Sho, I guess he's coming to, and ye'd better not
+let him see ye, jist at first"; but I turned quick before she could
+move, and grabbed her and said, "Oh, Aunty May."</p>
+
+<p>I thought I'd shouted it, but it sounded just like a squeak.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May didn't care. She just lifted me up in her arms and held me
+tight, and said, "Oh, Billy, how could you run away from me?"</p>
+
+<p>It took me the longest while explaining to her and to Mr. Turner and to
+Mr. Taylor, who didn't say anything but "Sho" and shoo the cats, and
+never looked at the others. But I knew he'd hear every word and remember
+it, if I didn't, so I told them exactly what happened. How sorry Henry
+was to go away, but that he had to, and that I didn't know where the
+place was that we'd parted at, and how I thought he was coming back when
+we started.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Turner said it was all right, that Henry was an honest, industrious
+boy, but he had fits of homesickness, though they had never known about
+his getting up early and walking.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May forgave me, and Mr. and Mrs. Turner forgave me too.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Turner was in the launch, and was just telling me to jump in and
+come up with Aunty May to dinner, when Mr. Taylor, who had been
+listening and not saying anything, said, "I hope that wasn't the Lateeka
+Toll-House ye stopped at, young man. I heerd say there was so much
+diphtheria and scarlet fever there that they hev closed the tollhouse."</p>
+
+<p>Then I remembered what the boy had said, and I had to say it to Aunty
+May, and Aunty held me very tightly for a minute, and said to Mrs.
+Turner, "No: it wouldn't be safe for the other children. I'll keep
+William down here, until we see if it develops."</p>
+
+<p>Then both the ladies nodded to each other very sadly, but Mr. Turner
+said, "Oh, he's a young husky. He'll be all right"; and they went away.</p>
+
+<p>But I did develop. So much, that Aunty May had a sign put on the house,
+and nobody came near us for weeks and weeks but the nurse and the
+doctor, and Mr. Taylor, who used to hand things over the fence. And oh,
+how tired I got of being in bed, and being sick. Then when I got a
+little better, Aunty May and the doctor had a big tent put up in the
+woods near us, and the nurse went away, and Aunty May and I lived in the
+tent together, and I started to get better and write this book.</p>
+
+<p>First, just a little at a time, and then by and by a good deal each day,
+and all the time Aunty May stayed with me, and never said I was naughty
+or anything. Just called me "Billy-boy" and spelled all the big words,
+and took care of me like I was a baby, because I was so weak.</p>
+
+<p>One day, when I had sat up all day, dressed, I thought Aunty May looked
+kind of excited, and I saw a letter sticking out of her pocket, and I
+asked her if Aunty Edith was coming home, and she said, "Yes, very
+soon." She smiled so that I knew it must be something nice, so I clapped
+my hands and said, "Then Uncle Burt's all well again, too." For every
+time while I was sick, when I asked about Uncle Burt, Aunty May would
+say, "He's much better, but we mustn't talk." I had to be patient and
+wait then, but this day I said, "Oh. Aunty May, he is really better,
+isn't he?"</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty May laid down her letter and came and sat down by me and
+said, "Billy, how would you like to hear about Uncle Burt to-day?" and I
+told her, "I'd like to." Aunty May told me then that Uncle Burt had been
+shot very badly in the leg, and that he had a fever beside, and had
+been so ill that they thought he would die, but that Aunty Edith had
+gone out there and taken such good care of him that he was better, and
+was coming back with Aunty Edith. I asked for how long, and Aunty May
+got a little sad and said, "That's the hard part of it for Uncle Burt,
+Billy. He won't ever be able to go back to the army again. His leg is so
+badly hurt that he will always be a little lame."</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunty May burst out crying, and so did I, for it seemed hard that
+big, splendid Uncle Burt should be lame. By and by Aunty told me that
+he had got the hurt when he turned back to help one of his men who had
+been shot; that even though he was hurt himself, he brought the soldier
+back to camp; so I ought to be proud of him.</p>
+
+<p>But I was anyway, I told her. I couldn't be any more than I am. I knew
+Uncle Burt would do a thing like that. I just expected it of him. But
+I'd like to kill the man who hurt his leg.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May told me not to say that, for the poor thing had been killed,
+and she said, "War is a horrible thing," And I said, "Yes, 'm, but it
+wasn't a real war, only a skirmish"; and Aunty May said, "It was real
+enough for that poor wretch and for Burt."</p>
+
+<p>I said, "But Uncle Burt'll find something else to do, some other way to
+be splendid, won't he?" And Aunty May just nodded her head, and we
+didn't say anything more for a long time and I lay still thinking about
+Uncle Burt and wondering how it would seem to be him, and lame. I said,
+"Will he use a crutch?" but Aunty May didn't know. She hoped not. And
+now, would I please get well, and be ready for her to hand me over whole
+to Uncle Burt.</p>
+
+<p>I said I would, but she'd have to be handed over too, for Uncle Burt
+told me to take care of her for him.</p>
+
+<p>I got better, and so did Aunty May. As fast as I grew better, she got
+more cheerful, and we used to have lots of fun. But all the time we
+stayed in the tent, and never went to the house. I used to hear
+hammerings and things, but I never saw anything, because I wasn't
+allowed to walk yet on account of the anti-toxin. I don't know whether
+that word is spelled right, but I don't like to ask Aunty May, it always
+makes her pale when I say the word.</p>
+
+<p>One day, Aunty May brought a boy down the path with her. A mule boy. I
+heard the mules waiting for him outside, and it was the "cap and eel"
+boy, and he said, "How are you, young feller? Heerd you was sick!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who told you?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"The Mushrat," he said. "He came a-whooping and a-running up the canal
+one night, an' hollered to me in passing that he wasn't going to bring
+no pitcher-books back to no diphtheria sore-throaters. Kina cowardly
+fellers, them mush-rats, so I brung it myself. Say, when ye going to get
+up and paste me?"</p>
+
+<p>"When you put those turkey-red trousers on your mule," I said.</p>
+
+<p>And then we both laughed, and Aunty May give him another picture-book,
+and some fruit, and asked him to come again, and he promised, and I lay
+back and heard his mule bells jingling up the path. It seemed so nice
+and peaceful, and everybody was so kind to me, that I felt lumpy inside,
+especially when I thought of Uncle Burt coming.</p>
+
+<p>But would he be angry with me for bringing germs to his house, and right
+close to Aunty May? I asked Aunty May what she thought, and she said
+Uncle Burt would agree with her that I really couldn't help it, and that
+he wouldn't blame me, especially if she handed me over all right.</p>
+
+<p>So we went to work on jellies and things and tried to get well, as fast
+as anything before he came.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon Aunty May said to me, "Billy, I think you're strong enough
+to go back to the house now. We've got rid of all the germs and the
+sickness in this nice big white tent, and now, my little soldier, we'll
+go back to barracks and wait for our Commanding Officer."</p>
+
+<p>We packed up my books and papers and went down the path to the house,
+but it wasn't the same house any more.</p>
+
+<p>It was bigger, and all around it ran a wide piazza, and on it were big
+wicker chairs, and Aunty May put me in one of them, and asked me how I
+liked it. And I said it was lovely, and it was. Inside there were more
+rooms than before and a bathroom with a big shiny tub and running water,
+and while it was a country house still, it was much more like a
+city house.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May said, "Do you think Aunty Edith will like it?" and I said yes;
+then she said, "Do you think a sick soldier would like to get well on
+this piazza?" and I said I knew he would. It was the finest ever.</p>
+
+<p>We took hands and went around and looked at everything, and then we set
+the table together. Aunty May wouldn't let Mrs. Katy Smith, who had
+come to help, do a thing to the table. We set it for four people. So I
+said, "Is company coming to dinner?" Aunty May hugged me and said, "Yes,
+Billy, but it's a surprise. Don't ask." But I kept guessing,&mdash;Charlotte
+and Grace Turner, and Mr. and Mrs. Turner, and everybody I knew in East
+Penniwell, and Aunty May said, "You're cold. You're cold."</p>
+
+<p>Just then a carriage stopped at our door, and Aunty Edith got out, and
+then a thin pale man got out, and he carried a cane and leaned on Aunty
+Edith, and he came into the room: And IT WAS UNCLE BURT!</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="173.jpg (41K)" src="173.jpg" height="445" width="568">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>I gave such a yell that Aunty Edith looked frightened and Aunty May
+threw her arms about me and said, "Oh, Billy dear, don't get excited.
+It's bad for&mdash;" But Uncle Burt said, "No, it isn't. It's good for me."
+And he went to hug me, but Aunty May hadn't got her arms untwisted from
+me yet, so that he hugged both of us. He didn't seem to notice it at
+all until I pointed out to him that it was me he wanted and that he was
+kissing Aunty May, and he said, "Dear me, you don't say so"&mdash;and kissed
+her again. Then he kissed me.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down, and Aunty May and me went and stood by him. That is, I
+stood by him and leaned on his well knee, and Aunty May kneeled down and
+put her head on his hurt knee, and he didn't seem to mind it at all. He
+put his hand on her head and smiled over to Aunty Edith, and she came
+and said, "Come, Billy, show me the house."</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Yes, Aunty Edith, but first I want to give Aunty May back to
+Uncle Burt. She's all right, the germs didn't hurt her, though she got
+quite thin taking care of me."</p>
+
+<p>"Did she, poor girl," said Uncle Burt.</p>
+
+<p>Aunty May lifted her head up and said, "And Billy's all right. I took
+care of him,&mdash;for you."</p>
+
+<p>Then Uncle Burt smiled at us both. His old smile, though he was so
+dreadful thin and pale. He said, "Well, and now I've come home to look
+after you both."</p>
+
+<p>I showed Aunty Edith the house, and she told me all about her journey,
+and how long it took her, and how sick Uncle Burt was then, and how
+much better he was now; and that though he would always walk with a
+limp, he wouldn't need a crutch,&mdash;which made me very glad.</p>
+
+<p>Then Uncle Burt and Aunty May came in, and Aunty Edith kissed Aunty May
+and they went to take off Aunty Edith's hat.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Burt let me take him to his room, and he told me, while I fished
+out a handkerchief for him and brushed his hair, that Aunty May was
+going to marry him and be my real Aunty, and I was to live with them
+both for always.</p>
+
+<p>So this is a good place to end W.A.G.'s Tale.</p>
+
+<p>THE END</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of W. A. G.'s Tale, by Margaret Turnbull
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+</body>
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