I fop i>atal) me DEEPHAVEN. i8mo, gilt top, $1.25. Holiday Edition. With about 50 Illustrations. Attrac tively bound. Crown 8vo, $2.50. PLAY-DAYS. Stories for Children. Square i6mo, $1.50. OLD FRIENDS AND NEW. i8mo, gilt top, $1.25. COUNTRY BY-WAYS. i8mo, gilt top, $1.25. THE MATE OF THE DAYLIGHT, AND FRIENDS ASHORE. i8mo, gilt top, $1.25. A COUNTRY DOCTOR. A Novel. i6mo, $1.25. A MARSH ISLAND. A Novel. i6mo, $1.25; paper, 50 cents. A WHITE HERON, AND OTHER STORIES. i8mo, gilt top, $1.25. THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND, AND OTHER PEOPLE. i6mo, $1.25. BETTY LEICESTER. A Story for Girls. i8mo, $1.25. TALES OF NEW ENGLAND. In Riverside Aldine Series. i6mo, $1.00; in Favorite Series, $1.25 ; in Riv erside School Library, 60 cents, net. STRANGERS AND WAYFARERS. i6mo, $1.25. A NATIVE OF WINBY, AND OTHER TALES. i6mo, $1.25- THE LIFE OF NANCY. i6mo, $1.25. THE COUNTRY OF THE POINTED FIRS. i6mo, gilt top, $1.25. HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY, BOSTON AND NEW YORK. THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND AND OTHER PEOPLE BY SARAH ORNE JEWETT BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY 1899 Copyright, 1888, BY SARAH ORNE JEWETT. All rights reserved. The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.A. Electro yped and Printed by H. O. Houghton & Company. M A / THIS BOOK OF STORIES IS DEDICATED WITH GRATEFUL AFFECTION TO JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER. 953012 NOTE. Two of these stories, " Mere Pochette " and " The King of Folly Island," are reprinted from Harper s Magazine- "Law Lane" and "Miss Peck s Promo- tion" from Scribner s ; and "The Landscape Cham ber," "Miss Tempy s Watchers, "and "The Courting of Sister Wisby " from The Atlantic. "A Village Shop " is now printed for the first time. CONTENTS. PAQH THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND .... 1 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY ... 50 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER 81 LAW LANE 115 Miss PECK S PROMOTION 167 Miss TEMPY S WATCHERS ..... 208 A VILLAGE SHOP . 229 MERE POCHETTE . . . ... . 291 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. THE September afternoon was nearly spent, and the sun was already veiled in a thin cloud of haze that hinted at coming drought and dustiness rather than rain. No body could help feeling sure of just such another golden day on the morrow ; this was as good weather as heart could wish. There on the Maine coast, where it was hard to dis tinguish the islands from the irregular out line of the main-land, where the summer greenness was just beginning to change into all manner of yellow and russet and scarlet tints, the year seemed to have done its work and begun its holidays. Along one of the broad highways of the bay, in the John s Island postmaster s boat, came a stranger a man of forty-two or forty-three years, not unprosperous but hardly satisfied, and ever on the quest for enter- 2 THE KING GF FOLLY ISLAND. tainment, though he called his pleasure by the hard name of work, and liked himself the better for such a wrong translation. Fate had made him a business man of good success and reputation ; inclination, at least so he thought, would have led him another way, but his business ventures pleased him more than the best of his holidays. Some how life was more interesting if one took it by contraries ; he persuaded himself that he had been looking forward to this solitary ramble for many months, but the truth re mained that he had found it provokingly hard to break away from his city office, his clerks, and his accounts. He had grown much richer in this last twelve-month, and as he leaned back in the stern of the boat with his arm over the rudder, he was ponder ing with great perplexity the troublesome question what he ought to do with so much money, and why he should have had it put into his careless hands at all. The bulk of it must be only a sort of reservoir for the sake of a later need and ownership. He thought with scorn of some liberal gifts for which he had been aggravatingly thanked and praised, and made such an impatient gesture with his shoulder that the boat gave THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 3 a surprised flounce out of its straight course, and the old skipper, who was carefully in specting the meagre contents of the mail- bag, nearly lost his big silver spectacles overboard. It would have been a strange and awesome calamity. There were no new ones to be bought within seven miles. " Did a flaw strike her ? " asked Jabez Pennell, who looked curiously at the sky and sea and then at his passenger. " I ve known of a porpus h isting a boat, or mought be you kind o shifted the rudder ? " Whereupon they both laughed ; the pas senger with a brilliant smile and indescrib ably merry sound, and the old postmaster with a mechanical grimace of the face and a rusty chuckle ; then he turned to his letters again, and adjusted the rescued spectacles to his weather-beaten nose. He thought the stranger, though a silent young man, was a friendly sort of chap, boiling over with fun, as it were ; whereas he was really a little morose so much for Jabez s knowledge of human nature. " Feels kind o strange, t is likely ; that s better than one o your forrard kind," mused Jabez, who took the visitor for one of the rare specimens of commercial travelers who sometimes visited 4 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. John s Island to little purpose it must be confessed. The postmaster cunningly con cealed the fact that he kept the only store on John s Island ; he might as well get his pay for setting the stranger across the bay, and it was nobody s business to pry into what he wanted when he got there. So Jabez gave another chuckle, and could not help looking again at the canvas - covered gun case with its neat straps, and the well- packed portmanteau that lay alongside it in the bows. " I suppose I can find some place to stay in overnight ? " asked the stranger, presently. " Do know s you can, I m sure," replied Mr. Pennell. "There ain t no reg lar boarding places onto John s Island. Folks keep to theirselves pretty much." " I suppose money is of some object ? " gently inquired the passenger. "Waal, yes," answered Jabez, without much apparent certainty. " Yes, John s Isl and folks ain t above nippin an squeezin to get the best of a bargain. They re pretty much like the rest o the human race, an want money, whether they ve got any use for it or not. Take it in cold weather, when you ve got pork enough and potatoes and THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 5 them things in your sullar, an it blows an freezes so t ain t wuth while to go out, most all that money s good for is to set an look at. Now I need to have more means than most on em," continued the speaker, plain tively, as if to excuse himself for any ru mor of his grasping ways which might have reached his companion. " Keeping store as I do, I have to handle " But here he stopped short, conscious of having taken a wrong step. However, they were more than half across now, and the mail was overdue ; he would not be forced into going back when it was ascertained that he refused to even look at any samples. But the passenger took no notice of the news that he was sailing with the chief and only merchant of John s Island, and even turned slowly to look back at the shore they had left, far away now, and fast growing dim on the horizon. John s Island was, on the contrary, growing more distinct, and there were some smaller fragments of land near it ; on one he could already distinguish a flock of sheep that moved slowly down a barren slope. It was amazing that they found food enough all summer in that nar row pasture. The suggestion of winter in 6 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. this remote corner of the world gave Frank fort a feeling of deep pity for the sheep, as well as for all the other inhabitants. Yet it was worth a cheerless year to come occa sionally to such weather as this ; and he filled his lungs again and again with the delicious air blown to him from the inland country of bayberry and fir balsams across the sparkling salt-water. The fresh north west wind carried them straight on their course, and the postmaster s passenger could not have told himself why he was going to John s Island, except that when he had ap parently come to the end of everything on an outreaching point of the main-land, he had found that there was still a settlement beyond John s Island, twelve miles dis tant, and communication would be that day afforded. " Sheep farmers and fishermen a real old-fashioned crowd," he had been told. It was odd to go with the postmaster : perhaps he was addressed by fate to some human being who expected him. Yes, he would find out what could be done for the John s-Islanders ; then a wave of defeat seemed to chill his desire. It was better to let them work toward what they needed and wanted ; besides, " the gift without the giver THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 7 were dumb." Though after all it would be a kind of satisfaction to take a poor little neighborhood under one s wing, and make it presents of books and various enlighten ments. It would n t be a bad thing to send it a Punch and Judy show, or a panorama. " May I ask your business ? " interrupted Jabez Pennell, to whom the long silence was a little oppressive. " I am a sportsman," responded John Frankfort, the partner in a flourishing pri vate bank, and the merchant-postmaster s face drooped with disappointment. No bar gains, then, but perhaps a lucrative boarder for a week or two ; and Jabez instantly re solved that for not a cent less than a dollar a day should this man share the privileges and advantages of his own food and lodg ing. Two dollars a week being the cur rent rate among John s-Islanders, it will be easily seen that Mr. Pennell was a man of far-seeing business enterprise. II. On shore, public attention was beginning to centre upon the small white sail that was crossing the bay. At the landing there was 8 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. at first no human being to be seen, unless one had sharp eyes enough to detect the sal low, unhappy countenance of the postmas ter s wife. She sat at the front kitchen window of the low-storied farm-house that was perched nearly at the top of a long green slope. The store, of which the post- office department was a small fraction, stood nearer the water, at the head of the little harbor. It was a high, narrow, smartly painted little building, and looked as if it had strayed from some pretentious inland village, but the tumble-down shed near by had evidently been standing for many years, and was well acquainted with the fish busi ness. The landing-place looked still more weather-beaten ; its few timbers were bar nacled and overgrown with sea-weeds below high-water mark, and the stone-work was rudely put together. There was a litter of drift-wood, of dilapidated boats and empty barrels and broken lobster pots, and a little higher on the shore stood a tar kettle, and, more prominent still, a melancholy pair of high chaise wheels, with their thorough- braces drawn uncomfortably tight by ex posure to many seasonings of relentless weather. THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 9 The tide was high, and on this sheltered side of the island the low waves broke with a quick, fresh sound, and moved the pebbles gently on the narrow beach. The sun looked more and more golden red, and all the shore was glowing with color. The faint redden ing tinge of some small oaks among the hemlocks farther up the island shore, the pale green and primrose of a group of birches, were all glorified with the brilliant contrast of the sea and the shining of the autumn sky. Even the green pastures and browner fields looked as if their covering had been changed to some richer material, like velvet, so soft and splendid they looked. High on a barren pasture ridge that shel tered the landing on its seaward side the huckleberry bushes had been brightened with a touch of carmine. Coming toward John s Island one might be reminded of some dull old picture that had been cleansed and wet, all its colors were suddenly grown so clear and gay. Almost at the same moment two men ap peared from different quarters of the shore, and without apparently taking any notice of each other, even by way of greeting, they seated themselves side by side on a worm- 10 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. eaten piece of ship timber near the tar pot. In a few minutes a third resident of the island joined them, coming over the high pasture slope, and looking for one moment giant-like against the sky. " Jabez need n t grumble to-day on account o no head-wind," said one of the first com ers. "I was mendin a piece o wall that was overset, an I see him all of a sudden, most inshore. My woman has been expect ing a letter from her brother s folks in Cas- tine. I s pose ye ve heard ? They was all down with the throat distemper last we knew about em, an she was dreadful put about because she got no word by the last mail. Lor , now wa n t it just like Jabe s con- trairiness to go over in that fussin old dory o his with no sail to speak of ? " " Would n t have took him half the time in his cat-boat," grumbled the elder man of the three. "Thinks he can do as he s a mind to, an we Ve got to make the best on t. Ef I was postmaster I should look out, fust thing, for an abler boat nor any he s got. He s gittin nearer every year, Jabe is." " T ain t f a r to the citizens," said the first speaker. " Don t git no mail but twice THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 11 a week anyhow, an then he Fiters round long s he s a mind to, dickeriii an spoutin politics over to the Foreside. Folks may be layin dyin , an there s all kinds o urgent letters that ought to be in owners hands direct. Jabe need n t think we mean to put up with him f rever ; " and the irate islander, who never had any letters at all from one year s end to another s looked at both his companions for their assent. " Don t ye git riled so, Dan el," softly re sponded the last-comer, a grizzled little fish erman-farmer, who looked like a pirate, and was really the most amiable man on John s Island " don t ye git riled. I don know as, come to the scratch, ary one of us would want to make two trips back an forrard every week the year round for a hunderd an* twenty dollars. Take it in them high December seas, now, an long in Jenoary an March. Course he accommodates him self, an it comes in the way o his business, an he gits a passenger now an then. Well, it all counts up, I s pose." " There s somebody or nother aboard now," said the opponent. " They may have sent over for our folks from Castine. They was headin on to be dangerous, three 12 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. o the child n and WashVton himself. I may have to go up to-night. Dare say they ve sent a letter we ain t got. Darn that Jabe ! I ve heard before now of his looking over everything in the bag comin over sortin he calls it, to save time but t would n t be no wonder ef a letter blowed out o his fingers now an again." " There s King George a-layin off, ain t he ? " asked the peace-maker, who was whit tling a piece of dry kelp stalk that he had picked up from the pebbles, and all three men took a long look at the gray sail beyond the moorings. " What a curi s critter that is ! " ex claimed one of the group. " I suppose, now, nothin s goin to tempt him to set foot on John s Island long s he lives do you?" but nobody answered. " Don know who he a spitin but himself," said the peace-maker." I was underrunning my trawl last week, an he come by with his fare o fish, an hove to to see what I was gittin . Me and King George s al a s kind o fellowshiped a little by spells. I was off to the Banks, you know, that time he had the gran flare up an took himself off, an so he ain t counted me one o his enemies." THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 13 " I always give ray vote that he wa n t in his right mind ; t wa n t all ugliness, now. I went to school with him, an he was a clever boy as there was," said the elder man, who had hardly spoken before. " I never more n half blamed him, however t was, an it kind o rankled me that he should ha been drove off an outlawed hisself this way. T was Jabe Pennell ; he thought George was stan in in his light bout the postmas- tership, an he worked folks up, an set em agin him. George s mother s folks did have a kind of a punky spot somewhere in their heads, but he never give no sign o anything till Jabe Pennell begun to hunt him an dare him." " Well, he s done a good thing senee he bought Folly Island. I hear say King George is gittin rich," said the peaceful pirate. " T was a hard thing for his folks, his wife an the girl. I think he s been more scattery sence his wife died, anyway. Darn ! how lonesome they must be in win ter ! I should think they d be afeared a sea would break right over em. Pol tics be hanged, I say, that 11 drive a man to do such things as them never step foot on any land but his own agin ! I tell ye we ve each on us got rights." 14 THE KING OF FOLLY JSLAND. This was unusual eloquence and excite ment on the speaker s part, and his neigh bors stole a furtive look at him and then at each other. He was an own cousin to King George Quint, the recluse owner of Folly Island an isolated bit of land several miles farther seaward and one of the lis teners reflected that this relationship must be the cause of his bravery. The post-boat was nearly in now, and the three men rose and went down to the water s edge. The sail was furled, and the old dory slipped about uneasily on the low waves. The postmaster was greeted by friendly shouts from his late maligners, but he was unnecessarily busy with his sail and with his packages amidships, and took his time, as at least one spectator grumbled, about com ing in. King George had also lowered his sail and taken to his oars, but just as he would have been alongside, the postmaster caught up his own oars, and pulled smartly toward the landing. This proceeding stim ulated his pursuer to a stern-chase, and pres ently the boats were together, but Pennell pushed straight on through the low waves to the strand, and his pursuer lingered just outside, took in his oars, and dropped his THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 15 killock over the bow. He knew perfectly well that the representative of the govern ment would go ashore and take all the time he could to sort the contents of the mail-bag in his place of business. It would even be good luck if he did not go home to supper first, and keep everybody waiting all the while. Sometimes his constituents had hailed him from their fishing-boats on the high seas, and taken their weekly newspaper over the boat s side, but it was only in mo ments -of great amiability or forgetfulness that the King of Folly Island was so kindly served. This was tyranny pure and simple. But what could be done? So was winter cold, and so did the dog-fish spoil the trawls. Even the John s-Islanders needed a fearless patriot to lead them to liberty. The three men on the strand and King George from the harbor were all watching with curious eyes the stranger who had crossed in Jabez Pennell s boat. He was deeply interested in them also ; but at that moment such a dazzling glow of sunlight broke from the cloud in the west that Frank fort turned away to look at the strange, re mote landscape that surrounded him. He felt as if he had taken a step backward into 16 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. an earlier age these men had the look of pioneers or of colonists yet the little country-side showed marks of long occu pancy. He had really got to the outer boundary of civilization. " Now it s too bad o you, Jabez, to keep George Quint a-waitin ," deprecated the peace-maker. " He s got a good ways to go way over to Folly Island, an like s not he means to underrun his trawl too. We all expected ye sooner with this fair wind." At which the postmaster gave an unintelli gible growl. " This ere passenger was comin over, calc latin to stop a spell, an wants to be accommodated," he announced presently. But one of the group on the strand inter rupted him. He was considered the wag of that neighborhood. " Ever b en to Folly Island, stranger?" he asked, with great civility. " There s the King of it, layin off in his boat. George ! " he called lustily, " I want to know ef you can t put up a trav ler that wants to view these parts o the airth ? " Frankfort somehow caught the spirit of the occasion, and understood that there was a joke underlying this request. Folly Isl- THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 17 and had an enticing sound, and he listened eagerly for the answer. It was well known by everybody except himself that Jabez Pen- nell monopolized the entertainment of the traveling public, and King George roared back, delightedly, that he would do the best he could on short notice, and pulled his boat farther in. Frankfort made ready to trans fer his luggage, and laughed again with the men on the shore. He was not sorry to have a longer voyage in that lovely sunset light, and the hospitality of John s Island, already represented by these specimens of householders, was not especially alluring. Jabez Pennell was grumbling to himself, and turned to go to the store. King George reminded him innocently of some groceries which he had promised to have ready, and always fearful of losing one of his few cus tomers, he nodded and went his way. It seemed to be a strange combination of de pendence and animosity between the men. The King followed his purveyor with a blasting glance of hatred, and turned his boat, and held it so that Frankfort could step in and reach back afterward for his possessions. In a few minutes Mr. Pennell returned 18 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. with some packages and a handful of news papers. " Have ye put in the cough drops ? " asked the fisherman, gruffly, and was answered by a nod of the merchant s head. "Bring them haddick before Thu sday," he commanded the island potentate, who was already setting his small sail. The wind had freshened. They slid out of the bay, and presently the figures on the shore grew indistinct, and Frankfort found himself outward bound on a new tack toward a low island several miles away. It seemed to be at considerable distance from any other land ; the light of the sun was full upon it. Now he certainly was as far away as he could get from city life and the busy haunts of men. He wondered at the curious chain of circumstances that he had followed that day. This man looked like a hermit, and really lived in the outermost island of all. Frankfort grew more and more amused with the novel experiences of the day. He had wished for a long time to see these Maine islands for himself. A week at Mount Desert had served to make him very impatient of the imported society of that re- THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 19 nowned watering-place, so incongruous with the native simplicity and quiet. There was a serious look to the dark forests and bleak rocks that seemed to have been broken into fragments by some convulsion of nature, and scattered in islands and reefs along the coast. A strange population clung to these isolated bits of the world, and it was reward ing to Frankfort s sincere interest in such individualized existence that he should now be brought face to face with it. The boat sailed steadily. A colder air, like the very breath of the great sea, met the voyagers presently. Two or three light house lamps flashed out their first pale rays like stars, and evening had begun. Yet there was still a soft glow of color over the low seaboard. The western sky was slow to fade, and the islands looked soft and mirage-like in the growing gloom. Frank fort found himself drifting away into dreams as if he were listening to music ; there was something lulling in the motion of the boat. As for the King, he took no notice of his passenger, fcut steered with an oar and tended the sheet and hummed a few notes occasionally of some quaint minor tune, which must have been singing itself more 20 THE KING OF FOL L Y ISL ; ND . plainly to his own consciousness. The stran ger waked from hip, reverie bei ire very long, and observed vnth delight tr it the man be fore him. had a most interesting face, a nobly moulded forehead, and brave, commanding eyes. There was truly an air of distinction and dignity about this King of Folly Island, an uncommon directness and independence. He was the son and heir of the old Vikings who had sailed that stormy coast and dis covered its harborage and its vines five hundred years before Columbus was born in Italy, or was beggar to the surly lords and gentlemen of Spain. The silence was growing strange, and pro voking curiosity between the new-made host and guest, and Frankfort asked civilly some question about the distance. The King turned to look at him with surprise, as if he had forgotten his companionship. The dis covery seemed to give him pleasure, and he answered, in a good clear voice, with a true fisherman s twang and brogue : " We re more n half there. Be you cold ? " And Frankfort confessed to a stray* shiver now and then, which seemed to inspire a more friendly relationship in the boat s crew. Quick as thought, the King pulled off his THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 21 own rough coat and wrapped it about the shoulders of the paler city man. Then he stepped forward along the boat, after hand ing the oar to his companion, and busied himself ostentatiously with a rope, with the packages that he had bought from Pennell. One would have thought he had freed him self from his coat merely as a matter of con venience ; and Frankfort, who was not a little touched by the kindness, paid his new sovereign complete deference. George Quint was evidently a man whom one must be very careful about thanking, however, and there was another time of silence. " I hope my coming will not make any trouble in your family," ventured the stran ger, after a little while. " Bless ye, no ! " replied the host. " There s only Phebe, my daughter, and nothing would please her better than somebody extra to do for. She s dreadful folksy for a girl that s hed to live alone on a far island, Phebe is. T ain t every one I d pick to carry home, though," said the King, mag nificently. " T has been my plan to keep clear o humans much as could be. I had my fill o the John s-Islanders a good while ago." 22 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. " Hard to get on with ? " asked the lis tener, humoring the new tone which his ears had caught. " I could get on with em ef t was any ways wuth while," responded the island chieftain. " I did n t see why there was any need o being badgered and nagged all my days by a pack o curs like them John s-Isl- anders. They d hunt ye to death if ye was anyways their master ; and I got me a piece o land as far off from em as I could buy, and here I be. I ain t stepped foot on any man s land but my own these twenty-six years. Ef anybody wants to deal with me, he must come to the water s edge." The speaker s voice trembled with excite ment, and Frankfort was conscious of a strange sympathy and exhilaration. " But why did n t you go ashore and live on the main-land, out of the way of such neighbors altogether?" he asked, and was met by a wondering look. " I did n t belong there," replied the King, as if the idea had never occurred to him be fore. " I had my living to get. It took me more than twelve years to finish paying for my island, besides what hard money I laid down. Some years the fish is mighty shy. THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 23 I always had an eye to the island sence I was a boy ; and we ve been better off here, as I view it. I was some sorry my woman should be so fur from her folks when she was down with her last sickness." The sail was lowered suddenly, and the boat rose and fell on the long waves near the floats of a trawl, which Quint pulled over the bows, slipping the long line by with its empty hooks until he came to a small haddock, which he threw behind him to flop and beat itself about at Frankfort s feet as if imploring him not to eat it for his supper. Then the sprit-sail was hoisted again, and they voyaged toward Folly Island slowly with a failing breeze. The King stamped his feet, and even struck his arms together as if they were chilled, but took no notice of the coat which his guest had taken off again a few minutes before. To Frankfort the evening was growing mild, and his blood rushed through his veins with a delicious thrill. The island loomed high and black, as if it were covered with thick woods ; but there was a light ashore in the window of a small house, and presently the pilgrim found himself safe on land, quite stiff in his legs, but very serene in temper. A brisk little 24 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. dog leaped about him with clamorous barks, a large gray cat also appeared belligerent and curious ; then a voice came from the doorway : " Late, ain t you, father? " Without a word of reply, the King of that isle led the way to his castle, haddock in hand. Frankfort and the dog and cat followed after. Before they reached the open door, the light shone out upon a little wilderness of bright flowers, yellow and red and white. The King stepped carefully up the narrow pathway, and waited on the step for his already loyal subject to enter. " Phebe," he said, jokingly, " I Ve brought ye some company a gentleman from Lord knows where, who could n t seem to content himself without seeing Folly Island." Phebe stepped forward with great shyness, but perfect appreciation of the right thing to be done. " I give you welcome," she said, quietly, and offered a thin affectionate hand. She was very plain in her looks, with a hard-worked, New England plainness, but as Frankfort stood in the little kitchen he was immediately conscious of a peculiar del icacy and refinement in his surroundings. There was an atmosphere in this out-of-the- way corner of civilization that he missed in THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 25 all but a few of the best houses he had ever known. The ways of the Folly Island housekeep ing were too well established to be thrown out of their course by even so uncommon an event as the coming of a stranger. The simple supper was eaten, and Frankfort was ready for his share of it. He was touched at the eagerness of his hostess to serve him, at her wistful questioning of her father to learn whom he had seen and what he had heard that day. There was no actual exile in the fisherman s lot after all ; he met his old acquaintances almost daily on the fish ing grounds, and it was upon the women of the household that an unmistakable burden of isolation had fallen. Sometimes a man lived with them for a time to help cultivate the small farm, but Phebe was skilled in out-door handicrafts. She could use tools better than her father, the guest was told proudly, and that day she had been digging potatoes a great pleasure evidently, as anything would have been that kept one out- of-doors in the sunshiny field. When the supper was over, the father helped his daughter to clear away the table as simply and fondly as could be, and as if 26 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. it were as much his duty as hers. It was very evident that the cough drops were for actual need ; the poor girl coughed now and then with a sad insistence and hollowness. She looked ill already, so narrow-chested and bent-shoulderedy while a bright spot of color flickered in her thin cheeks. She had seemed even elderly to Frankfort when he first saw her, but he discovered from some thing that was said that her age was much less than his own. What a dreary lifetime ! he thought, and then reproached himself, for he had never seen a happier smile than poor Phebe gave her father at that moment. The father was evidently very anxious about the cough ; he started uneasily at every rep etition of it, with a glance at his guest s face to see if he also were alarmed by the forebod ing. The wind had risen again, and whined in the chimney. The pine-trees near the house and the wind and sea united in a solemn, deep sound which affected the new-comer strangely. Above this undertone was the les ser, sharper noise of waves striking the pebbly beach and retreating. There was a loneliness, a remoteness, a feeling of being an infinites imal point in such a great expanse of sea and stormy sky, that was almost too heavy THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 27 to be borne. Phebe knitted steadily, with an occasional smile at her own thoughts. The tea-kettle sang and whistled away ; its cover clicked now and then as if with hardly suppressed cheerfulness, and the King of Folly Island read his newspaper diligently, and doled out bits of information to his com panions. Frankfort was surprised at the tenor of these. The reader was evidently a man of uncommon depth of thought and unusual common - sense. It was both less and more surprising that he should have chosen to live alone ; one would imagine that his instinct would have led him among peo ple of his own sort. It was no wonder that he had grown impatient of such society as the postmaster s ; but at this point of his meditation the traveler s eyes began to feel strangely heavy, and he fell asleep in his high-backed rocking-chair. What peaceful- ness had circled him in ! the rush and clamor of his business life had fallen away as if he had begun another existence, without the fretful troubles of this present world. " He s a pretty man," whispered Phebe to her father, and the old fisherman nod ded a grave assent, and folded his hands upon the county newspaper while he took a 28 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. long honest look at the stranger within his gates. The next morning Frankfort made his appearance in the kitchen at a nobly early hour, to find that the master of the house had been out in his boat since four o clock, and would not be in for some time yet. Phebe was waiting to give him his break fast, and soon after he saw her going to the potato field, and joined her. The sun was bright, and the island was gay with color ; the asters were in their best pale lavender and royal purple tints ; the bay was flecked with sails of fishing-boats, because the mack erel had again struck in ; and outside the isl and, at no great distance, was the highway of the coasting vessels to and from the east ern part of the state and the more distant provinces. There were near two hundred craft in sight, great and small, and John Frankfort dug his potatoes with intermittent industry as he looked off east and west at such a lovely scene. They might have been an abbe galant and a dignified marquise, he and Phebe it did not matter what work they toyed with. They were each filled with a charming devotion to the other, THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 29 a grave reverence and humoring of the mu tual desire for quiet and meditation. Toward noon the fishing -boat which Phebe had known constantly and watched with affec tionate interest was seen returning deep laden, and she hastened to the little landing. Frankfort had already expressed his disdain of a noonday meal, and throwing down his hoe, betook himself to the highest point of the island. Here was a small company of hemlocks, twisted and bent by the northeast winds, and on the soft brown carpet of their short pins, our pilgrim to the outer bounda ries spent the middle of the day. A strange drowsiness, such as he had often felt before in such bracing air, seemed to take posses sion of him, and to a man who had been perplexing himself with hard business prob lems and erratic ventures in financiering, potato-digging on a warm September day was not exciting. The hemlocks stood alone on the summit of the island, and must have been a land mark for the King to steer home by. Be fore Frankfort stretched a half-cleared pas ture, where now and then, as he lazily opened his eyes, he could see a moving sheep s back among the small birches and 30 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. fern and juniper. Behind him were the cleared fields and the house, and a fringe of forest trees stood all round the rocky shore of the domain. From the water one could not see that there was such a well-arranged farm on Folly Island behind this barrier of cedars, but the inhabitants of that region thriftily counted upon the natural stockade to keep the winter winds away. The sun had changed its direction alto gether when he finally waked, and shone broadly down upon him from a point much nearer the western horizon. At that mo ment the owner of the island made his ap pearance, looking somewhat solicitous. " We did n t know what had become of ye, young man," he said, in a fatherly way. " T ain t nateral for ye to go without your dinner, as I view it. We 11 soon hearten ye up, Phebe an me ; though she don t eat no more than a chippin -sparrer, Phebe don t," and his face returned to its sadder lines. "No," said Frankfort; "she looks very delicate. Don t you think it might be bet ter to take her inland, or to some more shel tered place, this winter ? " The question was asked with hesitation, THE KING OF POLL Y ISLAND. 31 but the speaker s kind-heartedness was in all his words. The father turned away and snapped a dry hemlock twig with impatient fingers. " She would n t go withouten me," he an swered, in a choked voice, " an my vow is my vow. I shall never set foot on another man s land while I m alive." The day had been so uneventful, and Folly Island had appeared to be such a calm, not to say prosaic place, that its vis itor was already forgetting the thrill of in terest with which he had first heard its name. Here again, however, was the un mistakable tragic element in the life of the inhabitants ; this man, who should be armed and defended by his common-sense, was yet made weak by some prejudice or supersti tion. What could have warped him in this strange way ? for, indeed, the people of most unenlightened communities were prone to herd together, to follow each other s lead, to need a dictator, no matter how much they might rebel at his example or demands. This city gentleman was moved by a deep curiosity to know for himself the laws and charts of his new-found acquaintance s ex istence ; he had never felt a keener interest 32 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. in a first day s acquaintance with any human being. " Society would be at a stand-still," he said, with apparent lightness, u if each of us who found his neighbors unsatisfactory should strike out for himself as you have done." The King of Folly Island gave a long shrewd look at his companion, who was still watching the mackerel fleet ; then he blushed like a girl through all the sea-changed color of his cheeks. " Look out for number one, or else number two s got to look out for you," he said, with some uncertainty in the tone of his voice. " Yes," answered Frankfort, smiling. " I have repeated that to myself a great many times. The truth is, I don t belong to my neighbors any more than you do." " I expect that you have got a better chance nor me ; ef I had only been started amon st Christians, now ! " exclaimed Quint, with gathering fury at the thought of his John s-Islanders. " Human nature is the same the world over," said the guest, quietly, as if more tt> himself than his listener. " I dare say thai the fault is apt to be our own ; " but there was no response to this audacious opinion. THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 33 Frankfort had risen from the couch of hemlock pins, and the two men walked toward the house together. The cares of modern life could not weigh too heavily on such a day. The shining sea, the white sails, gleaming or gray-shadowed, and the dark green of the nearer islands made a brilliant picture, and the younger man was impatient with himself for thinking the armada of small craft a parallel to the finan cial ventures which were made day after day in city life. What a question of chance it was, after all, for either herring or dollars some of these boats were sure to go home disappointed, or worse, at night ; but at this point he shrugged his shoulders angrily be cause he could not forget some still unde cided ventures of his own. How degraded a man became who chose to be only a money maker ! The zest of the chase for wealth and the power of it suddenly seemed a very trivial and foolish thing to Frankfort, who confessed anew that he had no purpose in making his gains. " You ain t a married man ; live a bach- jlor life, don t ye ? " asked the King, as if ;.n recognition of these thoughts, and Frank fort, a little startled, nodded assent. 34 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. " Makes it a sight easier," was the unex pected response. " You don t feel as if you might be wronging other folks when you do what suits you best. Now my woman was wuth her weight in gold, an she lays there in the little yard over in the corner of the field she never fought me, nor argued the p int again after she found I was sot, but it aged her, fetchin of her away from all her folks, an out of where she was wonted. I did n t foresee it at the time." There was something martyr-like and he roic in the exile s appearance as he spoke, and his listener had almost an admiration for such heroism, until he reminded himself that this withdrawal from society had been willful, and, so far as he knew, .quite selfish. It could not be said that Quint had stood in his lot and place as a brave man should, unless he had left John s Island as the Pil grim Fathers left England, for conscientious scruples and a necessary freedom. How many pilgrims since those have falsely made the same plea for undeserved liberty ! " What was your object in coming here ? " the stranger asked, quietly, as if he had heard no reason yet that satisfied him. " I wanted to be by myself ; " and the THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 35 King rallied his powers of eloquence to make excuses. "I wa n t one that could stand them folks that overlooked an harried me, an was too mean to live. They could go their way, an I mine ; I would n t harm em, but I wanted none of em. Here, you see, I get my own livin . I raise my own hog, an the women-folks have more hens than they want, an I keep a few sheep a-runnin over the other side o the place. The fish o the sea is had for the catchin , an I owe no man anything. I should ha b en beholden if I d stopped where we come from ; " and he turned with an air of tri umph to look at Frankfort, who glanced at him in return with an air of interest. "I see that you depend upon the larger islands fo* 1 some supplies cough drops, for instance?" said the stranger, with needless clearness. " I cannot help feeling that you would have done better to choose a less ex posed island one nearer the main-land, you know, in a place better sheltered from the winds." " They do cut us most in two," said the King, meekly, and his face fell. Frankfort felt quite ashamed of himself, but he was conscious already of an antagonistic feeling. 36 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. Indeed, tins was an island of folly ; this man, who felt himself to be better than his neigh bors, was the sacrificer of his family s com fort ; he was heaping up riches, and who would gather them? Not the poor pale daughter, that was certain. In this moment they passed the corner of the house, and dis covered Phebe herself standing on the dg,or- step, watching some distant point of the sea or sky with a heavy, much battered spy-glass. She looked pleased as she lowered the glass for a moment, and greeted Frankfort with a silent welcome. " Oh, so t is ; now I forgot t was this afternoon," said Quint. " She s a-watchin the funeral ; ain t you, daughter ? Old Mis Danforth, over onto Wall Island, that has been layin sick all summer a cousin o my mother s," he confessed, in a lower tone, and turned away with feigned unconcern as Frankfort took the spy-glass which Phebe offered. He was sure that his hostess had been wishing that she could share in the family gathering. Was it possible that Quint was a tyrant, and had never let this grown woman leave his chosen isle ? Free dom, indeed! He forgot the affairs of Folly Island the THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 37 next moment, as he caught sight of the strange procession. He could see the coffin with its black pall in a boat rowed by four men, who had pushed out a little way from shore, and other boats near it. From the low gray house near the water came a little group of women stepping down across the rough beach and getting into their boats; then all fell into a rude sort of orderliness, the hearse-boat going first, and the proces sion went away across the wide bay toward the main-land. He lowered the glass for an instant, and Phebe reached for it eagerly. " They were just bringing out the coffin before you came," she said, with a little sigh ; and Frankfort, who had seen many pageants and ceremonials, rebuked himself for having stolen so much of this rare pleasure from his hostess. He could still see the floating funeral. Though it was only a far-away line of boats, there was a strange awe and fas cination in watching them follow their sin gle, steady course. " Danforth s folks bury over to the Fore- side," explained the King of Folly Island ; but his guest had taken a little book from his pocket, and seated himself on a rock that made one boundary of the gay, disorderly 38 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. garden. It was very shady and pleasant at this side of the house, and he was too warm after his walk across the unshaded pastures. It was very hot sunshine for that time of the year, and his holiday began to grow dull. Was he, after all, good for nothing but money-making ? The thought fairly haunted him ; he had lost his power of enjoyment, and there might be no remedy. The fisherman had disappeared; the fu neral was a dim speck off there where the sun glittered on the water, yet he saw it still, and his book closed over his listless fingers. Phebe sat on the door-step knitting now, with the old glass laid by her side ready for use. Frankfort looked at her presently with a smile. "Will you let me see your book ? " she asked, with a child s eagerness ; and he gave it to her. "It is an old copy of Wordsworth s shorter poems," he said. " It belonged to my mother. Her name was the same as yours." " She spelled it with the o," said Phebe, radiant with interest in this discovery, and closely examining the flyleaf. " What a pretty hand she wrote ! Is it a book you like?" THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 39 " I like it best because it was hers, I am afraid," replied Frankfort, honestly. " Yes, it does one good to read such poems ; but I find it hard to read anything in these days ; my business fills my mind. You know so little, here on your island, of the way the great world beyond pushes and fights and wrangles." " I suppose there are some pleasant folks," said Phebe, simply. " I used to like to read, but I found it made me lonesome. I used to wish I could go ashore and do all the things that folks in books did. But I don t care now ; I would n t go away from the island for anything." " No," said Frankfort, kindly ; " I would n t if I were you. Go on dreaming about the world ; that is better. And it does people good to come here and see you so comfortable and contented," he added, with a tenderness in his voice that was quite foreign to it of late years. But Phebe gave one quick look at the far horizon, her thin cheeks grew very rosy, and she looked down again at her knitting. Presently she went into the house. At tea-time that evening the guest was surprised to find the little table decked out for a festi- 40 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. val, with some flowered cliina, and a straight- backed old mahogany chair from the best room in his own place of honor. Phebe looked gay and excited, and Frankfort won dered at the feast, as well as the master of the house, when they came to take their places. " You see, you found me unawares last night, coming so unexpected," said the poor pale mistress. " I did n t want you to think that we had forgotten how to treat folks." And somehow the man whose face was usually so cold and unchanging could hardly keep back his tears while, after the supper was cleared away, he was shown a little model of a meeting-house, steeple and all, which Phebe had made from card-board and covered with small shells a winter or two before. She brought it to him with a splendid sense of its art, and Frankfort said everything that could be said except that it was beautiful. He even begged to be told exactly how it was done, and they sat by the light together and discussed the poor toy, while the King of Folly Island dozed and waked again with renewed pleas ure as he contemplated his daughter s enjoy ment. But she coughed very often, poor Phebe, and the guest wondered if the post- THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 41 master s supply of drugs were equal to this pitiful illness. Poor Phebe ! and winter would be here soon ! Day after day, in the bright weather, Frankfort lingered with his new friends, spending a morning now and then in fishing with his host, and coming into closer con tact with the inhabitants of that part of the world. Before the short visit was over, the guest was aware that he had been very tired and out of sorts when he had yielded to the de sire to hide away from civilization, and had drifted, under some pilotage that was be yond himself, into this quiet haven. He felt stronger and in much better spirits, and remembered afterward that he had been as merry as a boy on Folly Island in the long evenings when Phebe was busy with her knitting-work , and her father told long and spirited stories of his early experiences along the coast and among the fisherman. But business cares began to fret this holiday- maker, and as suddenly as he had come he went away again on a misty morning that promised rain. He was very sorry when he said good-by to Phebe ; she was crying as he left the house, and a great wave of 42 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. compassion poured itself over Frankfort s heart. He never should see her again, that was certain ; he wished that he could spirit her away to some gentler climate, and half spoke his thought as he stood hesitating that last minute on the little beach. The next moment he was fairly in the boat and push ing out from shore. George Quint looked as hardy and ruddy and weather-beaten as his daughter was pale and faded, like some frost-bitten flower that tries to lift itself when morning comes and it feels the warmth of the sun. The tough fisherman, with his pet doctrines and angry aversions, could have no idea of the loneliness of his wife and daughter all these unvarying years on his Folly Island. And yet how much they had been saved of useless rivalries and jealous ies, of petty tyranny from narrow souls ! Frankfort had a bitter sense of all that, as he leaned back against the side of the boat, and sailed slowly out into the bay, while Folly Island seemed to retreat into the gath ering fog and slowly disappear. His thoughts flew before him to his office, to his clerks and accounts ; he thought of his wealth which was buying him nothing, of his friends who were no friends at all, for THE KING OF POLL Y ISLAND. 43 he had pushed away some who might have been near, strangely impatient of famil iarity, and on the defense against either mockery or rivalry. He was the true King of Folly Island, not this work-worn fisher man ; he had been a lonelier and a more selfish man these many years. George Quint was watching Frankfort eagerly, as if he had been waiting for this chance to speak to him alone. " You seem to be a kind of solitary crea- tur ," he suggested, with his customary frankness. " I expect it never crossed your thought that t would be nateral to git mar ried?" " Yes, I thought about it once, some years ago," answered Frankfort, seriously. " Disapp inted, was you ? Well, t was better soon nor late, if it had to be," said the sage. " My mind has been dwellin on Phebe s case. She was a master pooty gal arlier on, an I was dreadful set against lettin of her go, though I call to mind there was a likely chap as found her out, an made bold to land an try to court her. I drove him, I tell you, an ducked him under when I caught him afterward out a-fishin , an he took the hint. Phebe didn t know what 44 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. was to pay, though I dare say she liked to have him follerin about." Frankfort made no answer, he was very apt to be silent when you expected him to speak, and presently the King resumed his suggestions. " I ve been thinking that Phebe ought to have some sort o brightenin up. She pines for her mother : they was a sight o* company for each other. Now I s pose you could n t take no sort o fancy for her in course o time ? I ve got more hard cash stowed away than folks expects, an you should have everything your own way. I could git a cousin o mine, a widow woman, to keep the house winters, an you an the gal need n t only summer here. I take it you ve got some means ? " Frankfort found himself smiling at this pathetic appeal, and was ashamed of himself directly, and turned to look seaward. " I m afraid I could n t think of it," he answered. " You don t suppose " " Lor no," said George Quint, sadly, shifting his sail. " She ain t give no sign, except that I never see her take to no stran ger as she has to you. I thought you might kind of have a feelin for her, an I knowed THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 45 you thought the island was a sightly place ; t would do no harm to speak, leastways." They were on their way to John s Island, where Frankfort was to take the postmas ter s boat to the main-land. Quint found his fog-bound way by some mysterious in stinct, and at their journey s ends the friends parted with little show of sentiment or emotion. Yet there was much expression in Quint s grasp of his hand, Frankfort thought, and both men turned more than once as the boats separated, to give a kindly glance backward. People are not brought together in this world for nothing, and poor Quint had no idea of the confusion that his theories and his manner of life had brought into the well-regulated affairs of John Frankfort. Jabez Pennell was brimful of curiosity about the visit, but he received little satisfaction. " Phebe Quint was the pootiest gal on these islands some ten years ago," he proclaimed, " an a born lady. Her mother s folks was ministers over to Castine." The winter was nearly gone when Frank fort received a letter in a yellow envelope, unbusiness-like in its appearance. The King 46 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. of Folly Island wrote to say that Pliebe had been hoping to get strength enough to thank him for the generous Christmas-box which Frankfort had sent. He had taxed both his imagination and memory to supply the minor wants and fancies of the islanders. But Phebe was steadily failing in health, and the elderly cousin had already been summoned to take care of her and to man age the house-keeping. The King wrote a crabbed hand, as if he had used a fish-hook instead of a pen, and he told the truth about his sad affairs with simple, unlament- ing bravery. Phebe only sent a message of thanks, and an assurance that she liked to think of Frankfort s being there in the fall. She would soon send him a small keepsake. One morning Frankfort opened a much- crushed bundle which lay upon his desk, and found this keepsake, the shell meeting-house, which looked sadly trivial and astray. He was entirely confused by its unexpected ap pearance ; he did not dare to meet the eyes of an office-boy who stood near ; there was an uncomfortable feeling in his throat, but he bravely unfastened a letter from the bat tered steeple, and read it slowly, without a very clear understanding of the words : THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 47 "DEAR FRIEND" (said poor Pliebe), " I was very thankful for all that you sent in the box I take such pleasure in the things. I find it hard to write, but I think about you every day. Father sends his best respects. We have had rough weather, and he stays right here with me. You must keep your promise, and come back to the isl and ; he will be lonesome, and you are one that takes father just right. It seems as if I had n t been any use in the world, but it rests me, laying here, to think what a sight of use you must be. And so good-by." A sudden vision of the poor girl came before his eyes as he saw her stand on the door- step the day they watched the boat funeral. She had worn a dress with a quaint pattern, like gray and yellowish willow leaves as one sees them fallen by the coun try roadsides. A vision of her thin, stoop ing shoulders and her simple, pleasant look touched him with real sorrow. " Much use in the world ! " Alas ! alas ! how had her affection made her fancy such a thing ! The day was stormy, and Frankfort turned anxiously to look out of the window beside him, as he thought how the wind 48 THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. must blow across the distant bay. He felt a strange desire to sweep away everything that might vex poor Phebe or make her less comfortable. Yet she must die, at any rate, before the summer came. The King of Folly Island would reign only over his sheep pastures and the hemlock-trees and pines. Much use in the world ! The words stung him more and more. The office-boy still stood waiting, and now Frankfort became unhappily conscious of his presence. " I used to see one o them shell-works where I come from, up in the country," the boy said, with unexpected for bearance and sympathy ; but Frankfort dis missed him with a needless question about the price of certain railroad bonds, and dropped the embarrassing gift, the poor lit tle meeting-house, into a deep lower drawer of his desk. He had hardly thought of the lad before except as a willing, half mechan ical errand-runner ; now he was suddenly conscious of the hopeful, bright young face. At that moment a whole new future of hu man interests spread out before his eyes, from which a veil had suddenly been with drawn, and Frankfort felt like another man, or as if there had been a revivifying of his THE KING OF FOLLY ISLAND. 49 old, uninterested, self-occupied nature. Was there really such a thing as taking part in the heavenly warfare against ignorance and selfishness ? Had Phebe given him in some mysterious way a legacy of all her unsatis fied hopes and dreams ? THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. ALL the morning there had been an in creasing temptation to take an out -door holiday, and early in the afternoon the temp tation outgrew my power of resistance. A far-away pasture on the long southwestern slope of a high hill was persistently present to my mind, yet there seemed to be no par ticular reason why I should think of it. I was not sure that I wanted anything from the pasture, and there was no sign, except the temptation, that the pasture wanted any thing of me. But I was on the farther side of as many as three fences before I stopped to think again where I was going, and why. There is no use in trying to tell another person about that afternoon unless he dis tinctly remembers weather exactly like it. No number of details concerning an Arctic ice-blockade will give a single shiver to a child of the tropics. This was one of those THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 51 perfect New England days in late summer, when the spirit of autumn takes a first stealthy flight, like a spy, through the ripen ing country-side, and, with feigned sym pathy for those who droop with August heat, puts her cool cloak of bracing air about leaf and flower and human shoulders. Every living thing grows suddenly cheerful and strong ; it is only when you catch sight of a horror-stricken little maple in swampy soil, a little maple that has second sight and foreknowledge of coming disaster to her race, only then does a distrust of au tumn s friendliness dim your joyful satisfac tion. In midwinter there is always a day when one has the first foretaste of spring ; in late August there is a morning when the air is for the first time autumn like. Perhaps it is a hint to the squirrels to get in their first supplies for the winter hoards, or a reminder that summer will soon end, and everybody had better make the most of it. We are always looking forward to the passing and ending of winter, but when summer is here it seems as if summer must always last. As I went across the fields that day, I found my self half lamenting that the world must fade 52 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. again, even that the best of her budding and bloom was only a preparation for another spring-time, for an awakening beyond the coming winter s sleep. The sun was slightly veiled ; there was a chattering group of birds, which had gath ered for a conference about their early mi gration. Yet, oddly enough, I heard the voice of a belated bobolink, and presently saw him rise from the grass and hover lei surely, while he sang a brief tune. He was much behind time if he were still a house keeper ; but as for the other birds, who lis tened, they cared only for their own notes. An old crow went sagging by, and gave a croak at his despised neighbor, just as a black reviewer croaked at Keats : so hard it is to be just to one s contemporaries. The bobolink was indeed singing out of season, and it was impossible to say whether he really belonged most to this summer or to the next. He might have been delayed on his northward journey ; at any rate, he had a light heart now, to judge from his song, and I wished that I could ask him a few questions, how he liked being the last man among the bobolinks, and where he had taken singing lessons in the South. THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 53 Presently I left the lower fields, and took a path that led higher, where I could look beyond the village to the northern country mountainward. Here the sweet fern grew, thick and fragrant, and I also found myself heedlessly treading on pennyroyal. Near by, in a field corner, I long ago made a most comfortable seat by putting a stray piece of board and bit of rail across the angle of the fences. I have spent many a delightful hour there, in the shade and shelter of a young pitch-pine and a wild-cherry tree, with a lovely outlook toward the village, just far enough away beyond the green slopes and tall elms of the lower meadows. But that day I still had the feeling of being outward bound, and did not turn aside nor linger. The high pasture land grew more and more enticing. I stopped to pick some blackberries that twinkled at me like beads among their dry vines, and two or three yellow-birds fluttered up from the leaves of a thistle, and then came back again, as if they had complacently discovered that I was only an overgrown yellow-bird, in strange disguise but perfectly harmless. They made me feel as if I were an intruder, though they did not offer to 54 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. peck at me, and we parted company very soon. It was good to stand at last on the great shoulder of the hill. The wind was coming in from the sea, there was a fine fra grance from the pines, and the air grew sweeter every moment. I took new pleasure in the thought that in a piece of wild pasture land like this one may get closest to Nature, and subsist upon what she gives of her own free will. There have been no drudging, heavy-shod ploughmen to overturn the soil, and vex it into yielding artificial crops. Here one has to take just what Nature is pleased to give, whether one is a yellow-bird or a human being. It is very good entertain ment for a summer wayfarer, and I am ask ing my reader now to share the winter pro vision which I harvested that day. Let us hope that the small birds are also faring well after their fashion, but I give them an anxious thought while the snow goes hurry ing in long waves across the buried fields, this windy winter night. I next went farther down the hill, and got a drink of fresh cool water from the brook, and pulled a tender sheaf of sweet flag beside it. The mossy old fence just be yond was the last barrier between me and THE COURTING OF SISTER W1SBY. 55 the pasture which had sent an invisible mes senger earlier in the day, but I saw that somebody else had come first to the ren dezvous : there was a brown gingham cape bonnet and a sprigged shoulder-shawl bob bing up and down, a little way off among the junipers. I had taken such uncommon pleasure in being alone that I instantly felt a sense of disappointment ; then a warm glow of pleasant satisfaction rebuked-my self ishness. This could be no one but dear old Mrs. Goodsoe, the friend of my childhood and fond dependence of my maturer years. I had not seen her for many weeks, but here she was, out on one of her famous campaigns for herbs, or perhaps just returning from a blueberrying expedition. I approached with care, so as not to startle the gingham bon net ; but she heard the rustle of the bushes against my dress, and looked up quickly, as she knelt, bending over the turf. In that position she was hardly taller than the lux uriant junipers themselves. " I in a-gittin in my mulleins," she said briskly, "an* I ve been thinking o you these twenty times since I come out o the house. I begun to believe you must ha forgot me at last." 56 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBT. "I have been away from home," I ex plained. " Why don t you get in your pennyroyal too ? There s a great plantation of it beyond the next fence but one." " Pennyr yal ! " repeated the dear little old woman, with an air of compassion for inferior knowledge ; " t ain t the right time, darlin . Pennyr yal s too rank now. But for mulleins this day is prime. I Ve got a dreadful graspin fit for em this year ; seems if I must be goin to need em extry. I feel like the squirrels must when they know a hard winter s cominY And Mrs. Goodsoe bent over her work again, while I stood by and watched her carefully cut the best full- grown leaves with a clumsy pair of scissors, which might have served through at least half a century of herb-gathering. They were fastened to her apron-strings by a long piece of list. " I in going to take my jack-knife and help you," I suggested, with some fear of re fusal. " I just passed a flourishing family of six or seven heads that must have been growing on purpose for you." " Now be keerful, dear heart," was the anxious response ; " choose em well. There s odds in mulleins same s there is in THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 57 angels. Take a plant that s all run up to stalk, and there ain t but little goodness in the leaves. This one I in at now must ha been stepped on by some creatur and blighted of its bloom, and the leaves is han - some ! When I was small I used to have a notion that Adam an Eve must a took mul leins fer their winter wear. Ain t they just like flannel, for all the world ? I ve had ex perience, and I know there s plenty of sick ness might be saved to folks if they d quit horse-radish and such fiery, exasperating things, and use mullein drarves in proper season. Now I shall spread these an dry em nice on my spare floor in the garrit, an come to steam em for use along in the winter there 11 be the vally of the whole summer s goodness in em, sartin." And she snipped away with the dull scissors, while I listened respectfully, and took great pains to have my part of the harvest present a good appearance. " This is most too dry a head," she added presently, a little out of breath. " There ! I can tell you there s win rows o young doctors, bilin over with book-larnin , that is truly ignorant of what to do for the sick, or how to p int out those paths that well 58 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. people foller toward sickness. Book-fools I call em, them young men, an some on em never 11 live to know much better, if they git to be Methuselahs. In my time every middle-aged woman, who had brought up a family, had some proper ideas o dealin with complaints. I won t say but there was some fools amongst them, but I d rather take my chances, unless they d forsook herbs and gone to dealin with patent stuff. Now my mother really did sense the use of herbs and roots. I never see anybody that come up to her. She was a meek-looking woman, but very understanding mother was." " Then that s where you learned so much yourself, Mrs. Goodsoe," I ventured to say. " Bless your heart, I don t hold a candle to her ; t is but little I can recall of what she used to say. No, her Farnm died with her," said my friend, in a self-depreciating tone. " Why, there was as many as twenty kinds of roots alone that she used to keep by her, that I forget the use of ; an I m sure I should n t know where to find the most of em, any. There was an herb " airb, she called it " an herb called master- wort, that she used to get way from Penn- sylvany ; and she used to think everything THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 59 of noble-liverwort, but I never could seem to get the right effects from it as she could. Though I don t know as she ever really did use masterwort where something else would n t a served. She had a cousin married out in Pennsylvany that used to take pains to get it to her every year or two, and so she felt t was important to have it. Some set more by such things as come from a distance, but I rec lect mother always used to maintain that folks was meant to be doctored with the stuff that grew right about em ; t was sufficient, an so ordered. That was before the whole population took to livin on wheels, the way they do now. T was never my idee that we was meant to know what s goin on all over the world to once. There s goin to be some sort of a set-back one o these days, with these telegraphs an things, an letters comiii every hand s turn, and folks leavin their proper work to answer em. I may not live to see it. T was al lowed to be difficult for folks to git about in old times, or to git word across the coun try, and they stood in their lot an place, and were n t all just alike, either, same as pine-spills." We were kneeling side by side now, as if 60 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. in penitence for the march of progress, but we laughed as we turned to look at each other. " Do you think it did much good when everybody brewed a cracked quart mug of herb-tea?"! asked, walking away on my knees to a new mullein. "I ve always lifted my voice against the practice, far s I could," declared Mrs. Good- soe ; " an I won t deal out none o the herbs I save for no such nonsense. There was three houses along our road, I call no names, where you could n t go into the livin room without fin din a mess o herb- tea drorin on the stove or side o the fire place, winter or summer, sick or well. One was thoroughwut, one would be camomile, and the other, like as not, yellow dock ; but they all used to put in a little new rum to git out the goodness, or keep it from spilin ." (Mrs. Goodsoe favored me with a knowing smile.) " Land, how mother used to laugh ! But, poor creaturs, they had to work hard, and I guess it never done em a mite o harm ; they was all good herbs. I wish you could hear the quawkin there used to be when they was indulged with a real case o sickness. Everybody would collect from THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 61 far an near ; you d see em coming along the road and across the pastures then ; every body clamorin that nothin would n t do no kind o good but her choice o ? teas or drarves to the feet. I wonder there was a babe lived to grow up in the whole lower part o* the town ; an if nothin else peared to ail em, word was passed about that t was likely Mis So-and-So s last young one was goin to be foolish. Land, how they d gather ! I know one day the doctor come to Widder Peck s and the house was crammed so t he could scercely git inside the door ; and he says, just as polite, Do send for some of the neighbors ! as if there wa n t a soul to turn to, right or left. You d ought to seen em begin to scatter." " But don t you think the cars and tele graphs have given people more to interest them, Mrs. Goodsoe ? Don t you believe people s lives were narrower then, and more taken up with little things ? " I asked, un wisely, being a product of modern times. " Not one mite, dear," said my companion stoutly. " There was as big thoughts then as there is now; these times was born o them. The difference is in folks themselves ; but now, instead o doin their own house- 62 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. keepin and watchin their own neighbors, though that was carried to excess, they git word that a niece s child is ailin the other side o Massachusetts, and they drop everything and git on their best clothes, and off they jiggit in the cars. Tis a bad sign when folks wears out their best clothes faster n they do their every-day ones. The other side o Massachusetts has got to look after itself by rights. An besides that, Sunday- keepin s all gone out o fashion. Some lays it to one thing an some another, but some o them old ministers that folks are all a-siffhin* O for did preach a lot o stuff that wa n t nothin but chaff ; t wa n t the word o God out o either Old Testament or New. But everybody went to meetin and heard it, and come home, and was set to fightin with their next door neighbor over it. Now I in a believer, and I try to live a Christian life, but I d as soon hear a surveyor s book read out, figgers an all, as try to get any simple truth out o most sermons. It s them as is most to blame." " What was the matter that day at Widow Peck s?" I hastened to ask, for I knew by experience that the good, clear-minded soul beside me was apt to grow unduly vexed and THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 63 distressed when she contemplated the state of religious teaching. " Why, there wa n t nothin the matter, only a gal o Miss Peck s had met with a dis pintment and had gone into screechin fits. T was a rovin creatur that had come along hayin time, and he d gone off an forsook her betwixt two days ; nobody ever knew what become of him. Them Pecks was Good Lord, anybody ! kind o gals, and took up with whoever they could get. One of em married Heron, the Irishman ; they lived in that little house that was burnt this summer, over on the edge o the plains. He was a good-hearted creatur , with a laughin eye and a clever word for everybody. He was the first Irishman that ever came this way, and we was all for gettin a look at him, when he first used to go by. Mother s folks was what they call Scotch-Irish, though ; there was an old race of em settled about here. They could foretell events, some on em, and had the second sight. I know folks used to say mother s grandmother had them gifts, but mother was never free to speak about it to us. She remembered her well, too." " I suppose that you mean old Jim Heron, who was such a famous fiddler ? " I asked 64 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. with great interest, for I am always delighted to know more about that rustic hero, paro chial Orpheus that he must have been ! " Now, dear heart, I suppose you don t re member him, do you ? " replied Mrs. oodsoe, earnestly. " Fiddle ! He d about break your heart with them tunes of his, or else set your heels flying up the floor in a jig, though you was minister o the First Parish and all wound up for a funeral prayer. I tell ye there ain t no tunes sounds like them used to. It used to seem to me summer nights when I was comin along the plains road, and he set by the window playin , as if there was a bewitched human creatur in that old red fiddle o his. He could make it sound just like a woman s voice tellin somethin over and over, as if folks could help her out o her sorrows if she could only make em understand. I ve set by the stone-wall and cried as if my heart was broke, and dear knows it wa n t in them days. How he would twirl off them jigs and dance tunes ! He used to make somethin han some out of em in fall an winter, playin at huskins and dancin parties ; but he was unstiddy by spells, as he got along in years, and never knew what it was to be forehanded. Every- TEE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 65 body felt bad when he died ; you could n t help likin the creatur . He d got the gift that s all you could say about it. " There was a Mis Jerry Foss, that lived over by the brook bridge, on the plains road, that had lost her husband early, and was left with three child n. She set the world by em, and was a real pleasant, ambitious little wo man, and was workin on as best she could with that little farm, when there come a rage o scarlet fever, and her boy and two girls was swept off and laid dead within the same week. Every one o the neighbors did what they could, but she d had no sleep since they was taken sick, and after the funeral she set there just like a piece o marble, and would only shake her head when you spoke to her. They all thought her reason would go ; and t would certain, if she could n t have shed tears. An one o the neighbors t was like mother s sense, but it might have been some body else spoke o Jim Heron. Mother an one or two o the women that knew her best was in the house with her. T was right in the edge o the woods and some of us younger ones was over by the wall on the other side of the road where there was a couple of old willows, I remember just 66 THE COURTING OF SISTER W1SBY. how the brook damp felt ; and we kept quiet s we could, and some other folks come along down the road, and stood waitin on the little bridge, hopin somebody d come out, I suppose, and they d git news. Every body was wrought up, and felt a good deal for her, you know. By an by Jim Heron come stealin right out o the shadows an set down on the doorstep, an t was a good while before we heard a sound ; then, oh, dear me ! t was what the whole neighborhood felt for that mother all spoke in the notes, an they told me afterwards that Mis Foss s face changed in a minute, and she come right over an got into my mother s lap, she was a little woman, an laid her head down, and there she cried herself into a blessed sleep. After awhile one o the other women stole out an told the folks, and we all went home. He only played that one tune. " But there ! " resumed Mrs. Goodsoe, after a silence, during which my eyes were filled with tears. " His wife always com plained that the fiddle made her nervous. She never peared to think nothin o poor Heron after she d once got him." " That s often the way," said I, with harsh cynicism, though I had no guilty person in THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 67 my mind at the moment ; and we went stray ing off, not very far apart, up through the pasture. Mrs. Goodsoe cautioned me that we must not get so far off that we could not get back the same day. The sunshine began to feel very hot on our backs, and we both turned toward the shade. We had already collected a large bundle of mullein leaves, which were carefully laid into a clean, calico apron, held together by the four corners, and proudly carried by me, though my compan ion regarded them with anxious eyes. We sat down together at the edge of the pine woods, and Mrs. Goodsoe proceeded to fan herself with her limp cape-bonnet. " I declare, how hot it is ! The east wind s all gone again," she said. " It felt so cool this forenoon that I overburdened myself with as thick a petticoat as any I ve got. I m despri t afeared of having a chill, now that I ain t so young as once. I hate to be housed up." " It s only August, after all," I assured her unnecessarily, confirming my statement by taking two peaches out of my pocket, and laying them side by side on the brown pine needles between us. 44 Dear sakes alive ! " exclaimed the old 68 THE COURTING OF SISTER W1SBY. lady, with evident pleasure. " Where did you get them, now ? Does n t anything taste twice better out-o -doors ? I ain t had such a peach for years. Do le s keep the stones, an I 11 plant em ; it only takes four year for a peach pit to come to bearing, an I guess I m good for four year, thout I meet with some accident." I could not help agreeing, or taking a fond look at the thin little figure, and her wrinkled brown face and kind, twinkling eyes. She looked as if she had properly dried herself, by mistake, with some of her mullein leaves, and was likely to keep her goodness, and to last the longer in consequence. There never was a truer, simple-hearted soul made out of the old-fashioned country dust than Mrs. Goodsoe. I thought, as I looked away from her across the wide country, that nobody was left in any of the farm-houses so original, so full of rural wisdom and reminiscence, so really able and dependable, as she. And nobody had made better use of her time in a world foolish enough to sometimes under value medicinal herbs. When we had eaten our peaches we still sat under the pines, and I was not without pride when I had poked about in the ground THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 69 with a little twig, and displayed to my crony a long fine root, bright yellow to the eye, and a wholesome bitter to the taste. "Yis, dear, goldthread," she assented in dulgently. " Seems to me there s more of it than anything except grass an hardhack. Good for canker, but no better than two or three other things I can call to mind ; but I always lay in a good wisp of it, for old times sake. Now, I want to know why you should a bit it, and took away all the taste o your nice peach? I was just thinkin what a han some entertainment we ve had. I ve got so I sociate certain things with certain folks, and goldthread was somethin Lizy Wisby could n t keep house without, no ways whatever. I believe she took so much it kind o puckered her disposition." " Lizy Wisby ? " I repeated inquiringly. " You knew her, if ever, by the name of Mis Deacon Brimblecom," answered my friend, as if this were only a brief preface to further information, so I waited with respectful expectation. Mrs. Goodsoe had grown tired out in the sun, and a good story would be an excuse for sufficient rest. It was a most lovely place where we sat, half way up the long hillside ; for my part, I was 70 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. perfectly contented and happy. " You Ve often heard of Deacon Brimblecom ? " she asked, as if a great deal depended upon his being properly introduced. " I remember him," said I. " They called him Deacon Brimfull, you know, and he used to go about with a witch-hazel branch to show people where to dig wells." " That s the one," said Mrs. Goodsoe, laughing. " I did n t know s you could go so far back. I m always divided between whether you can remember everything I can, or are only a babe in arms." " I have a dim recollection of there being something strange about their marriage," I suggested, after a pause, which began to ap pear dangerous. I was so much afraid the subject would be changed. " I can tell you all about it," I was quickly answered. " Deacon Brimblecom was very pious accordin to his lights in his early years. He lived way back in the country then, and there come a rovin preacher along, and set everybody up that way all by the ears. I ve heard the old folks talk it over, but I forget most of his doctrine, except some of his followers was persuaded they could dwell among the an- THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 71 gels while yet on airth, and this Deacon Brimfull, as you call him, felt sure he was called by the voice of a spirit bride. So he left a good, deservin wife he had, an four children, and built him a new house over to the other side of the land he d had from his father. They didn t take much pains with the buildin , because they ex pected to be translated before long, and then the spirit brides and them folks was goin to appear and divide up the airth amongst em, and the world s folks and on- believers was goin to serve em or be sent to torments. They had meetins about in the school-houses, an all sorts o goins on ; some on em went crazy, but the deacon held on to what wits he had, an by an by the spirit bride did n t turn out to be much of a housekeeper, an he had always been used to good livin , so he sneaked home ag in. One o mother s sisters married up to Ash Hill, where it all took place ; that s how I come to have the particulars." " Then how did he come to find his Eliza Wisby?" I inquired. "Do tell me the whole story ; you ve got mullein leaves enough." " There s all yisterday s at home, if I 72 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. haven t," replied Mrs. Goodsoe. "The way he come a-courtin o Sister Wisby was this : she went a-courtin o him. " There was a spell he lived to home, and then his poor wife died, and he had a spirit bride in good earnest, an the child n was placed about with his folks and hers, for they was both out o good families ; and I don t know what come over him, but he had another pious fit that looked for all the world like the real thing. He had n t no family cares, and he lived with his brother s folks, and turned his land in with theirs. He used to travel to every meetin an con ference that was within reach of his old sor rel hoss s feeble legs ; he j ined the Christian Baptists that was just in their early prime, and he was a great exhorter, and got to be called deacon, though I guess he wa n t dea con, less it was for a spare hand when dea con timber was scercer n usual. An one time there was a four days protracted meetin to the church in the lower part of the town. T was a real solemn time ; some thing more n usual was goin forward, an they collected from the whole country round. Women folks liked it, an the men too ; it give em a change, an they was quartered THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 73 round free, same as conference folks now. Some on em, for a joke, sent Silas Brim- blecom up to Lizy Wisby s, though she d give out she could n t accommodate nobody, because of expectin her cousin s folks. Everybody knew t was a lie ; she was amazin close considerin she had plenty to do with. There was a streak that wa n t just right somewheres in Lizy s wits, I al ways thought. She was very kind in case o sickness, I 11 say that for her. " You know where the house is, over there on what they call Windy Hill ? There the deacon went, all unsuspectin , and stead o Lizy s resentin of him she put in her own hoss, and they come back together to evenin meetin . She was prominent among the sect herself, an he bawled and talked, and she bawled and talked, an took up more n the time allotted in the exercises, just as if they was showin off to each other what they was able to do at expoundin . Everybody was laughin at em after the meetin broke up, and that next day an the next, an all through, they was constant, and seemed to be havin a beautiful occasion. Lizy had always give out she scorned the men, but when she got a chance at a particular one 74 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. twas altogether different, and the deacon seemed to please her somehow or nother, and There ! you don t want to listen to this old stuff that s past an gone ? " " Oh yes, I do," said I. " I run on like a clock that s onset her striking hand," said Mrs. Goodsoe mildly. " Sometimes my kitchen timepiece goes on half the forenoon, and I says to myself the day before yisterday I would let it be a warnin , and keep it in mind for a check on my own speech. The next news that was heard was that the deacon an Lizy well, opinions differed which of em had spoke first, but them fools settled it before the protracted meetin was over, and give away their hearts before he started for home. They considered t would be wise, though, considerin their short acquaintance, to take one another on trial a spell ; t was Lizy s notion, and she asked him why he would n t come over and stop with her till spring, and then, if they both continued to like, they could git married any time t was convenient. Lizy, she come and talked it over with mother, and mother disliked to offend her, but she spoke pretty plain ; and Lizy felt hurt, an thought they was showin excellent THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 75 judgment, so much harm come from hasty unions and folks comin to a realizin sense of each other s failin s when t was too late. " So one day our folks saw Deacon Brim- full a-ridin by with a gre t coopful of hens in the back o his wagon, and bundles o stuff tied on top and hitched to the exes underneath ; and he riz a hymn just as he passed the house, and was speedin the old sorrel with a wilier switch. T was most Thanksgivin time, an sooner n she ex pected him. New Year s was the time she set ; but he thought he d better come while the roads was fit for wheels. They was out to meetin together Thanksgivin Day, an that used to be a gre t season for marryin ; so the young folks nudged each other, and some on em ventured to speak to the couple as they come down the aisle. Lizy carried it off real well ; she wa n t afraid o what nobody said or thought, and so home they went. They d got out her yaller sleigh and her hoss ; she never would ride after the deacon s poor old creatiir , and I believe it died long o the winter from stiffenin up. " Yes," said Mrs. Goodsoe emphatically, after we had silently considered the situa tion for a short space of time, " yes, there 76 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISB7. was consider ble talk, now I tell you ! The raskil boys pestered em just about to death for a while. They used to collect up there an rap on the winders, and they d turn out all the deacon s hens long at nine o clock o night, and chase em all over the dingle ; an one night they even lugged the pig right out o the sty, and shoved it into the back entry, an run for their lives. They d stuffed its mouth full o something so it could n t squeal till it got there. There wa ii t a sign o nobody to be seen when Lizy hasted out with the light, and she an the deacon had to persuade the creatur back as best they could ; t was a cold night, and they said it took em till towards mornin . You see the deacon was just the kind of a man that a hog would n t budge for ; it takes a masterful man to deal with a hog. Well, there was no end to the works nor the talk, but Lizy left em pretty much alone. She did pear kind of dignified about it, I must say!" "And then, were they married in the spring? " " I was tryin to remember whether it was just before Fast Day or just after," re sponded my friend, with a careful look at THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 11 the sun, which was nearer the west than either of us had noticed. " I think likely t was along in the last o April, any way some of us looked out o the window one Monday mornin early, and says, For good ness sake ! Lizy s sent the deacon home again ! His old sorrel havin passed away, he was ridin in Ezry Welsh s hoss-cart, with his hen-coop and more bundles than he had when he come, and he looked as meechin as ever you see. Ezry was drivin , and he let a glance fly swiftly round to see if any of us was lookin out ; an then I declare if he did n t have the malice to turn right in towards the barn, where he see my oldest brother, Joshuay, an says he real nat ural, Joshuay, just step out with your wrench. I believe I hear my kingbolt rat- tlin kind o loose. Brother, he went out an took in the sitooation, an the deacon bowed kind of stiff. Joshuay was so full o laugh, and Ezry Welsh, that they could n t look one another in the face. There wa n t nothing ailed the kingbolt, you know, an when Josh riz up he says, Goin up coun try for a spell, Mr. Brimblecom ? " I be, says the deacon, lookin dreadful mortified and cast down. 78 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. " Ain t things turned out well with you an Sister Wisby? says Joshuay. You had ought to remember that the woman is the weaker vessel. " Hang her, let her carry less sail, then ! the deacon bu st out, and he stood right up an shook his fist there by the hen coop, he was so mad ; an Ezry s hoss was a young creatur , an started up an set the deacon right over backwards into the chips. We did n t know but he d broke his neck ; but when he see the women folks runnin out, he jumped up quick as a cat, an clim into the cart, an off they went. Ezry said he told him that he could n t git along with Lizy, she was so fractious in thundery weather ; if there was a rumble in the day time she must go right to bed an screech, and if t was night she must git right up an go an call him out of a sound sleep. But everybody knew he d never a gone home unless she d sent him. " Somehow they made it up agin right away, him an Lizy, and she had him back. She d been countin all along on not havin to hire nobody to work about the gardin an* so on, an she said she wa n t goin to let him have a whole winter s board for nothin . So THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. 79 the old hens was moved back, and they was married right off fair an square, an I don t know but they got along well as most folks. He brought his youngest girl down to live with em after a while, an she was a real treasure to Lizy; everybody spoke well o Phebe Brimblecom. The deacon got over his pious fit, and there was consider ble work in him if you kept right after him. He was an amazin cider-drinker, and he airnt the name you know him by in his latter days. Lizy never trusted him with nothin , but she kep him well. She left everything she owned to Phebe, when she died, cept somethin to satisfy the law. There, they re all gone now : seems to me sometimes, when I get thiiikin, as if I d lived a thousand years ! " I laughed, but I found that Mrs. Good- soe s thoughts had taken a serious turn. " There, I come by some old graves down here in the lower edge of the pasture," she said as we rose to go. " I could n t help thinking how I should like to be laid right out in the pasture ground, when my time comes ; it looked sort o comfortable, and I have ranged these slopes so many summers. Seems as if I could see right up through the 80 THE COURTING OF SISTER WISBY. turf and tell when the weather was pleasant, and get the goodness o the sweet fern. Now, dear, just hand me my apernful o mulleins out o the shade. I hope you won t come to need none this winter, but I 11 dry some special for you." " I m going home by the road," said I, " or else by the path across the meadows, so I will walk as far as the house with you. Are n t you pleased with my company?" for she demurred at my going the least bit out of the way. So we strolled toward the little gray house, with our plunder of mullein leaves slung on a stick which we carried between us. Of course I went in to make a call, as if I had not seen my hostess before ; she is the last maker of muster-gingerbread, and before I came away I was kindly measured for a pair of mittens. " You 11 be sure to come an see them two peach-trees after I get em well growin ? " Mrs. Goodsoe called after me when I had said good-by, and was almost out of hearing down the road. THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. I. I WAS tired of ordinary journeys, which involved either the loneliness and discomfort of fashionable hotels, or the responsibilities of a guest in busy houses. One is always doing the same things over and over ; I now promised myself that I would go in search of new people and new scenes, until I was again ready to turn with delight to my fa miliar occupations. So I mounted my horse one morning, without any definite plan of my journey, and rode eastward, with a business-like haversack strapped behind the saddle. I only wished that the first day s well-known length of road had been already put behind me. One drawback to a woman s enjoyment of an excursion of this sort is the fact that when she is out of the saddle she is uncomfortably dressed. But I compro mised matters as nearly as possible by wear- 82 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. ing a short corduroy habit, light both in color and weight, and putting a linen blouse and belt into my pack, to replace the stiff habit- waist. The wallet on the saddle held a flat drinking-cup, a bit of chocolate, and a few hard biscuit, for provision against improb able famine. Autumn would be the best time for such a journey, if the evenings need not be so often spent in stuffy rooms, with kerosene lamps for company. This was early summer, and I had long days in which to amuse myself. For a book I took a much - beloved small copy of " The Senti mental Journey." After I left my own neighborhood I was looked at with curious eyes. I was now and then recognized with surprise, but oftener viewed with suspicion, as if I were a crim inal escaping from justice. The keepers of the two country taverns at which I rested questioned me outright, until I gave a re assuring account of myself. Through the middle of the day I let the horse stand un saddled in the shade, by the roadside, while I sat near, leaning against the broad trunk of a tree, and ate a bit of luncheon, or slept, or read my book, or strolled away up the shore of a brook or to the top of a hill. On THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 83 the third or fourth day I left my faithful companion so long that he grew restless, and at last fearful, as .petted horses will. The silence and strangeness of the place and my disappearance frightened him. When I re turned, I found that the poor creature had twisted a forward shoe so badly that I could neither pull it off altogether, nor mount again. There was nothing to do but to lead him slowly to some farm-house, where I could get assistance ; so on went the saddle, and away we plodded together sadly along the dusty road. The horse looked at me with anxious eyes, and was made fretful by the difficulty of the projecting shoe. I should have provided myself with some pin cers, he seemed to tell me ; the foot was aching from the blows I had given it with a rough-edged stone in trying to draw the tenacious nails. It was all my fault, having left him in such a desolate place, fastened to a tree that grew against a creviced ledge of rock. We were both a little sulky at this mischance so early in the careless expedition. The sea was near, and the salt-marshes penetrated deep into the country, like aban doned beds of rivers winding inland among the pine woods and upland pastures. The 84 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. higher land separated these marshes, like a succession of low promontories trending sea ward, and the road climbed and crossed over from one low valley to another. There had been no houses for some distance behind us. I knew that there was a village with a good tavern a few miles ahead ; so far, indeed, that I had planned to reach it at sundown. I began to feel very tired, and the horse tossed his head more and more impatiently, resenting my anxious, dragging hold upon the rein close at his mouth. There was no body to be seen; the hills became steeper, the unshaded strips of marshland seemed hotter, and I determined at last to wait until some traveler appeared who could give us assistance. Perhaps the blacksmith himself might be out adventuring that afternoon. We halted by some pasture bars in the shade of an old cider-apple tree, and I threw the bridle over a leaning post in the un steady fence ; and there the horse and I waited, and looked at each other reproach fully. It was some time before I discovered a large rusty nail lying in the short grass, within reach of my hand. My pocket-knife was already broken, because I had tried to use it for a lever, and this was just what I THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 85 needed. I quickly caught up the disabled hoof again, and with careful prying the tough nails loosed their hold at last, and the bent shoe dropped with a clink. The horse gave a whinny of evident relief, and seemed to respect me again, and I was ready to mount at once ; in an instant life lost its depressing aspect. " Keep your feet out of clefts now ! " I said joyfully, with a friendly stroke of the good creature s neck and tan gled mane, and a moment afterward we were back in the stony road. Alas, the foot had been strained, and our long halt had only stiffened it. I was mounted on three feet, not four. Nothing was to be done but to go forward, step by step, to the far-away village, or to any friendly shelter this side of it. The afternoon was waning: sometimes I rode, sometimes I walked ; those three miles of marsh and hill seemed interminable. At last I saw the chimneys of a house ; the horse raised his head high, and whinnied loud and long. These chimneys were most reassuring; being high and square, they evidently be longed to a comfortable house of the last century, and my spirits rose again. The 86 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. country was still abandoned by human beings. I had seen no one since noon, but the road was little used, and was undoubt edly no longer the main highway of that region. I wondered what impression I should make in such a migratory guise. The saddle and its well-stuffed haversack and iny own dustiness amused me unexpectedly, and I understood for the first time that the rest and change of this solitary excursion had done me much good. I was no longer listless and uninterested, but ready for ad venture of any sort. It had been a most sensible thing to go wandering alone through the country. But now the horse s ankle was swollen. I grew anxious again, and looked at the chimneys with relief. Presently I came in sight of the house. It was disappointing, for the first view gave an impression of dreariness and neg lect. The barn and straggling row of out buildings were leaning this way and that, mossy and warped ; the blinds of the once handsome house were broken ; and every thing gave evidence of unhindered decline from thrift and competence to poverty and ruin. A good colonial mansion, I thought, abandoned by its former owners, and ten- THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 87 anted now by some shiftless outcasts of society, who ask but meagre comfort, and are indifferent to the decencies of life. Full of uncertainty, I went along the approach to the barn, noticing, however, with surprise that the front yard had been carefully tended ; there were some dark crimson roses in bloom, and broken lines of box which had been carefully clipped at no remote period. Nobody was in sight. I went to the side door, and gave a knock with my whip at arm s length, for the horse was eager to reach the uninviting, hungry-looking stable. Some time elapsed before my repeated sum mons were answered ; then the door slowly opened, and a woman just this side of mid dle age stood before me, waiting to hear my errand. She had a pathetic look, as if she were forced by circumstances to deny all requests, however her own impulses might lead her toward generosity. I was instantly drawn toward her, in warm sympathy : the blooming garden was hers ; she was very poor. I would plead my real fatigue, and ask for a night s lodging, and perhaps my holiday might also give her pleasure. But a curious hardness drew her face into for bidding angles, even as her sweet and wo- 88 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. manly eyes watched me with surprised curi osity. " I should be very sorry to take the horse any farther to-day," said I, after stating my appealing case. " I will give you as little trouble as possible." At this moment the haggard face of an elderly man peered at me over her shoulder. " We don t keep tavern, young lady," he announced, in an unexpectedly musical, low voice, " but since your horse is " " I am ready to pay any price you ask," I interrupted, impatiently ; and he gave me an eager look and then came to the outer step, ignoring both his daughter and me, as he touched the horse with real kindliness. " T is a pretty creature ! " he said, admiringly, and at once stooped stiffly down to examine the lifted foot. I explained the accident in de tail, grateful for such intelligent sympathy, while he stroked the lamed ankle. " There s no damage done," he assured me presently, looking up with transient self- forgetfulness. " A common liniment will do ; there s a bottle in the house, but *t will cost you something," and his face clouded again. I turned to the daughter, who gave me a THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 89 strange, appealing look. Her eyes begged me entreatingly, " Give him his own way ; " her firm-set mouth signified her assent to the idea that I had no right to demand favors. "Do what you think best," I said, " at your own price. I shall be very grateful to you ; " and having come to this understand ing, the father and I unbuckled the saddle- girths, while the daughter stood watching us. The old man led the limping horse across the green dooryard to a weather-beaten stable, talking to him in a low tone. The creature responded by unusual docility. I even saw him, though usually so suspicious and fretful with strangers, put his head close to his leader s shoulder with most affectionate im pulse. I gathered up my belongings, my needments, as somebody had called them, after Spenser s fashion, in the morning, and entered the door. II. Along the by-ways and in the elder vil lages of New England stand many houses like this, from which life and vigor have long been ebbing, until all instincts of self- preservation seem to have departed. The 90 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. commonplace, thrifty fears of increasing damage from cracks, or leaks, or falling plas ter no longer give alarm ; as age creeps through the human frame, pilfering the pleas ures of enthusiasm and activity one by one, so it is with a decaying house. The old man s shrewd eyes alone seemed unrelated to his surroundings. What sorrow or mis fortune had made him accept them ? I won dered, as I stared about the once elegant room. Nothing new had been brought to it for years; the leather-bound books in the carved secretary might have belonged to his grandfather. The floor was carpetless and deeply worn ; the faded paper on the walls and the very paint looked as old as he. The pinch of poverty could nowhere be much sharper than here, but the exquisite cleanness and order of the place made one ignore the thought of poverty in its common aspect, for all its offensive and repulsive qualities were absent. I sat down in a straight-backed ma hogany chair, feeling much relieved, and not without gratitude for this unexpected epi sode. The hostess left me alone. I was glad enough to have the long day shortened a lit tle, and to find myself in this lonely, mys terious house. I was pleased by the thought THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 91 that the price of my food and lodging would be very welcome, and I grew more and more eager to know the history of my new friends. I have never been conscious of a more in tense desire to make myself harmonious, or to win some degree of confidence. And when the silence of the old sitting-room grew tiresome I went out to the stable, whence my host had not returned, and was quite reconciled at finding that I was looked upon by him, at least, merely as an appendage to my four-footed companion. The old man regarded me with indiffer ence, and went on patiently rubbing the horse s foot. I was silent after having of fered to take his place and being contemptu ously refused. His clothes were curiously old and worn, patched bravely, and an em broidery of careful darns. The color of them was not unlike the dusty gray of long- neglected cobwebs. There was unusual deli cacy and refinement in his hands and feet, and I was sure, from the first glance at my new friends and the first sound of their voices, that they had inherited gentle blood, though such an inheritance had evidently come through more than one generation to whom had been sternly denied any approach 92 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. to luxury or social advantage. I have often noticed in country villages the descendants of those clergymen who once ruled New England sternly and well, and while they may be men and women of undeveloped minds, without authority and even of hum ble circumstances, they yet bear the mark of authority and dignified behavior, like silver and copper coins with a guinea stamp. I was more and more oppressed by the haunting sense of poverty, for I saw proofs everywhere that the inhabitants of the old house made no practical protest against its slow decay. The woman s share of work was performed best, as one might see by their mended clothes; but the master s do main was hopelessly untended, not only as to the rickety buildings, but in the land itself, which was growing wild bushes at its own sweet will, except for a rough patch near the house, which had been dug and planted that year. Was this brooding, sad old man dis couraged by life? Did he say to himself, "Let things be; they will last my time"? I found myself watching his face with in tense interest, but I did not dare to ask questions, and only stood and watched him. The sad mouth of the man might have been THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 93 a den from which stinging wild words could assail a curious stranger. I was afraid of what he might say to me, yet I longed to hear him speak. The summer day was at its close. I moved a step forward to get away from the level sunbeams which dazzled my eyes, and ven tured to give some news about myself and the lonely journey that had hitherto brought me such pleasure. The listener looked up with sincere attention, which made me grow enthusiastic at once, and I described my va rious experiences, and especially the amusing comments which I had heard upon my mode of traveling about the country. It amazed me to think that I was within sixty miles of home and yet a foreigner. At last I asked a trivial question about some portion of the scenery, which was pleasantly answered. The old man s voice was singularly sweet and varied in tone, the exact reverse of a New Englander s voice of the usual rural quality. I was half startled at seeing my horse quickly turn his head to look at the speaker, as if with human curiosity equal to my own. I felt a thrill of vague apprehension. I was unwise enough for a moment to dread taking up my residence in this dilapidated mansion; 94 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. a creeping horror, such as one feels at hear ing footsteps behind one in a dark, strange place, made me foolishly uneasy, and I stood looking off across the level country through the golden light of closing day, beyond the marshes and beyond the sand dunes to the sea. What had happened to this uncanny father and daughter, that they were con tented to let the chances of life slip by un touched, while their ancestral dwelling grad ually made itself ready to tumble about their ears ? I could see that the horse s foot was much better already, and I watched with great sym pathy the way that the compassionate, pa tient fingers touched and soothed the bruised joint. But I saw no sign of any other horse in the stable, save a few stiffened, dusty bits of harness hung 011 a high peg in the wall ; and as I looked at these, and renewed my wonder that such a person should have no horse of his own, especially at such a dis tance from any town, the old man spoke again. " Look up at that bit of dry skin over the harnesses," said he. " That was the pretty ear of the best mare that ever trod these roads. She leaped the stable-yard gate one THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 95 day, caught her foot in a rope, and broke her neck. She was like those swallows one min ute, and the next she was a heap of worthless flesh, a heavy thing to be dragged away and hidden in the earth." His voice failed him suddenly, poor old fellow ; it told me that he had suffered cruel sorrows that made this loss of a pleasure almost unbearable. So far life had often brought me successes, and I had gained a habit of expecting my own enterprises to be lucky. I stood ap palled before this glimpse of a defeated life and its long procession of griefs. Presently the master of the place went into the house, and returned with a worn wooden trencher of bits of hard bread and some meal. The hungry creature in the stall whinnied eagerly, and nestled about, while our host ascended the broken stairway to the stable loft ; and after waiting for some time, I heard the rustle of an armful of hay which came down into the crib. I looked that way, and was not surprised, when I noticed the faded, dusty dryness of it, to see my dainty beast sniff at it with disappointment, and look round at me inquiringly. The old man joined me, and I protested hastily against such treatment of my favorite. 96 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. " Cannot we get somebody to bring some better hay, and oats enough for a day or two, if you are unprovided ? " I asked. "The creature must not be overfed," he said, grudgingly, with a new harsh tone. " You will heat the foot, and we must keep the beast quiet. Anything will serve to night ; to-morrow he can graze all day, and keep the foot moving gently ; next day, he can be shod." " But there is danger in giving him green grass," I suggested. " This is too rich pas turage about the house ; surely you know enough of horses to have learned that. He will not be fit to ride, either. If I meant to give him a month of pasture, it would be another thing. No ; send somebody for at least an armful of decent hay. I will go myself. Are there houses near?" The old man had gone into the stall, and was feeding the hungry horse from the trencher. I was startled to see him snatch back two or three bits of the bread and put them into his pocket, as if, with all his fondness for the horse and a sincere desire to make him comfortable, he nevertheless grudged the food. I became convinced that the poor soul was a miser. He certainly THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 97 played the character exactly, and yet there was an appealing look in his eyes, which, joined with the tones of his voice, made me sure that he fought against his tyrannous inclinations. I wondered irreverently if I should be killed that night, after the fashion of traditional tavern robberies, for the sake of what might be found in my pocket, and sauntered toward the house. It remained to be proved whether the daughter was the vic tim or the upholder of her father s traits. I had the satisfaction of finding that the daughter was just arranging a table for sup per. As I passed the wide-open door of a closet, I was tempted to look in by the faint ancient odor of plum cakes and Madeira wine which escaped ; but I never saw a barer closet than that, or one that looked hungrier in spite of the lingering fragrance of hospitality. It gave me a strange feeling as if there were a still subtler link with the past, and some in visible presence would have me contrast the house s former opulence with its present meagreness. When we sat at table I was not surprised to find, on a cloth that was half covered with darns and patches, some pieces of superb old English silver and delicate china. The fare was less than frugal, but 98 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. was nobly eked out with a dish of field strawberries, as if kind Nature had come to the rescue. Cream there was none, nor su gar, nor even tea or butter. I had an ach ing sense of the poverty of the family, and curiously questioned in my own mind how far they found it possible to live without money. There was some thin, crisp corn bread, which had been baked in the morning, or whenever there had last been a fire. It was very good. Perhaps my entertainers even gathered their own salt from the tide- pools to flavor the native corn. Look where I would, I could see nothing for which money had been lately spent ; here was a thing to be wondered at in this lavish America, and I pushed back my chair at last, while I was still half hungry, from a dread that there would be nothing for breakfast unless I saved it then. The father and daughter were very agree able, I must confess; they talked with me about my journey now, and my plans, as if they were my personal friends, and the strange meal was full of pleasure, after all. What had brought a lady and gentleman to such a pass ? After supper the daughter disappeared for THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 99 a time, busy with her household cares ; a lit tle later the father went out of the stable and across the fields, before I could call to him or offer my company. He walked with a light, quick step, like an Indian, as if he were used to taking journeys on foot. I found myself uncommonly tired ; the half illness which had fettered me seemed to have returned, after the unusual anxiety and weariness of the afternoon, and I longed to go to bed and to sleep. I had been interested in much that my entertainers had said of the early history of that part of the country, and while we sat at the table I had begun to look forward to a later evening talk, but almost before daylight faded I was forced to go to bed. My hostess led me through a handsome empty hall, of the wide and stately colonial type, to a comfortable upper room, furnished with a gloomy-looking curtained bedstead and heavy mahogany furniture of the best old fashion. It seemed as if the room had been long unused, and also as if the lower part of the house were in a much worse state of disrepair and threadbareness than this. But the two large windows stood open to the fading sky and sweet country air, and I bade my hostess good-night cheerfully. She lin- 100 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. gered to see if I were comfortable ; it was the first time I had been alone with her. " You can see that we are not used to enter taining company, she whispered, reddening with sensitiveness, and smiling apologetically. " Father has kept everybody away for so many years that I rarely have any one to speak to, or anything to do but to keep the poor old house clean. Father means to be kind, but he " and she turned away, much embarrassed by my questioning look " he has a monomania; he inherits it from my grandfather. He fears want, yet seems to have no power to provide against it. We are poor, God knows, yet we have resources ; or had them once," she added, sorrowfully. " It was the horse that made him willing to let you in. He loves horses, yet he has long denied himself even that useful pleasure." " But surely he ought to be controlled," I urged. " You must have suffered." " I know all that you are eager to say," she replied ; " but I promised my dear mother to be patient with him. It will not be long now ; he is very feeble. I have a horror that this habit of parsimony has rooted itself too deeply in my own life to be shaken off. You will hear mockery enough of us among the farmers." THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 101 " You surely have friends ? " " Only at a distance," said she, sadly. " I fear that they are no longer friends. I have you" she added, turning to me quickly, in a pathetic way that made me wish to put my arms about her. " I have been longing for a friendly face. Yes, it is very hard," and she drearily went out of the door, and left me alone with the dim light of the sky out side, the gloomy shadows of the room within, I tried to fancy some clew to the weird mis ery of this poverty-stricken household, as I lay down ; but I fell asleep very soon, and slept all night, without even a dream., III. Daylight brought a new eagerness and a less anxious curiosity about my strange en tertainers. I opened my eyes in broad sun light. I was puzzled by the unfamiliar India-cotton hangings of the great bedstead ; then I caught sight of my dusty habit and my riding-cap and whip, near by. I instantly resolved that even if I found my horse in the restored condition there was every reason to expect, I would make this house my head quarters for as long time as its owners would 102 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. keep me, or I could content myself. I would try to show some sisterly affection to the fast-aging woman who was so enslaved by her father s delusions. I had come out in search of adventure ; it would be a difficult task to match my present surroundings. I listened for the sound of footsteps or voices from below, but it was still very early, and I looked about the long-untenaiited room with deliberate interest and scrutiny. As I changed my position a little, I caught sight of a curious old painting on the large oval panel above the empty fireplace. The colors were dull r the drawing was quaintly conven tional, and I recognized the subject, though nofr. immediately. The artist had pleased himself by making a study of the old house itself, and later, as I dressed, I examined it in detail. From the costume of the figures I saw that it must have been painted more than a hundred years before. In astonishing con trast to the present condition, it appeared like a satirical show of the house s possibilities. Servants held capering steeds for gay gentle men to mount, and ladies walked together in fine attire down the garden alleys of the pic ture. Once a hospitable family had kept THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 103 open house behind the row of elms, and once the follies of the world and the fashions of brilliant, luxurious life had belonged to this decayed and withering household. I won dered if the miserly old man, to whose strangely sweet and compelling voice I had listened the evening before, could bear to look at this picture, and acknowledge his un- likeness to his prosperous ancestors. It was well for me that the keeping of hens is comparatively inexpensive, for I break fasted comfortably, and was never so heartily rejoiced at the vicinity of a chicken -coop. My proposal to stay with my new friends for a few days met with no opposition from either host or hostess ; and again, as I looked in their pinched and hopeless faces, I planned some secret excuses for making a feast of my own, or a happy holiday. The fields and hills of the old picture were still unchanged, but what ebb and flow of purpose, of com fort, of social condition, had enriched and impoverished the household ! " Where did she sleep ? " asked the master of the house, suddenly, with a strange, sus picious glance at his daughter. " In the landscape chamber," the pale 104 TEE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. woman said, without lifting her eyes to his, though she grew whiter and thinner as she spoke. I looked at him instinctively to see his eyes blaze with anger, and expected a torrent of abuse, because he was manifestly so much displeased. Nothing was said, but with a feeling of uneasiness we left the table, and I went out to the kitchen with my new friend. " There is no reason why I should not have put you into the landscape chamber," she told me instantly. " It is a fancy of my father s. I had aired that room thoroughly in the morning, but the front guest-chambers have been closed for some time." " Who painted the strange old picture ? " I asked. " Some member of the family? " But I was answered that it was the work of a Frenchman, who was captured in war-time, and paroled under the charge of her great grandfather. " He must have had a gay visit," I sug gested, " if he has left a faithful picture of the house as he saw it." " The house used to be like that always," was the faint response, and the speaker hesi tated, as if she considered whether we did right in discussing her family history ; then THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 105 she turned quickly away. " I believe we are under some miserable doom. Father will be sure to tell you so, at any rate," she added, with an effort at gayety. " He believes that he fights against it, but I always say that he was cowardly, and accepted it," and she sighed wearily. I looked at her with fresh surprise and conjecture. I forgot for the time this great, busy, prosaic world of which we were both a part, and I felt as if I had lost a score of years for each day s journey, and had gone backward into the past. New England holds many strange households within its borders, but there could not be another which ap proached this. The very air of the house oppressed me, and I strayed out into the beautiful wide fields, and found my spirits rising again at once. I turned at last to look back at the group of gray buildings in the great level landscape. They were such a small excrescence upon the fruitful earth, those roofs which covered awful stagnation and hindrance of the processes of spiritual life and growth. What power could burst the bonds, and liberate the man and woman I had left, from a mysterious tyranny ? I was bareheaded and the morning grew 106 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. very hot. I went toward a group of oaks, to shelter myself in the shade, and found the ancient burying-place of the family. There were numerous graves, but none were marked except the oldest. There was a group of rude but stately stones, with fine inscriptions, yet curiously enough the latest of them bore a date soon after the beginning of the cen tury; all the more recent graves were low and unmarked in any way. The family for tunes had waned long ago, perhaps ; I might be wronging the present master of the house, though I remembered what had been said to me of some mysterious doom. I could not help thinking of my new acquaintances most intently, and was startled at the sound of footsteps. I saw the old man, muttering and bending his head until he could see noth ing but the ground at his feet. He only picked up some dead branches that had fallen from the oaks, and went away toward the house again ; always looking at the ground, as if he expected to find something. It came to my mind with greater distinctness that he was a miser, poor only by his own choice ; and I indignantly resolved to urge the daugh ter to break her allegiance to him for a time, to claim her own and set herself free. But THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 107 the miser had no cheerful sense of his hoards, no certainty of a munificence which was more to him than any use of it ; there was a look upon his face as of a preying conscience within, a gnawing reptile of shame and guilt and evil memory. Had he sacrificed all sweet family life and natural ties to his crav ing for wealth? I watched the bent and hungry figure out of sight. When I reached the house again, I went through the open door of the wide hall, and gained my landscape chamber without being seen by any one. I was tired and dizzy with the unusual heat, and, quickly drawing the close shutters, I threw myself on the bed to rest. All the light in the room came from the shaded hall ; there was absolute silence, except some far-off country sounds of birds high in the air or lowing cattle. The house itself was still as a tomb. I went to sleep, but it was not sound sleep. I grew heavy and tired with my own weight. I heard soft footsteps com ing up the stairs ; some one stopped as if to listen outside the wide-open door; then the gray, shadowy figure of the old man stood just within, and his eyes peered about the room. I was behind the curtains ; one had 108 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. been unfastened, and hid me from his sight at first, but as he took one step forward he saw me, lying asleep. He bent over me, until I felt my hair stir with his breath, but I did not move. His presence was not frightful, strange to say ; I felt as if I were only dreaming. I opened my eyes a little as he went away, apparently satisfied, to the closet door, and unlocked it, starting and looking at me anxiously as the key turned in the lock. Then he disappeared. I had a childish desire to shut him in and keep him prisoner, for reasons that were not clear to myself. Whether he only wished to sat isfy himself that a concealed treasure was untouched I do not know, but presently he came out, and carefully locked the door again, and went away on tiptoe. I fan cied that he lingered before the picture above the chimney-place, and wondered if his conscience pricked him as he acknowl edged the contrast between past and pres ent. Then he groaned softly, and went out. My heart began to beat very fast. I sprang up and tried to lock the door into the hall. My enthusiasm about spending a few days in this dismal place suddenly faded out, for I could not bear the thought that the THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 109 weird old man was free to prowl about at his own sad will. But as I stood undecided in my doorway, a song sparrow perched on the sill of the wide hall window, and sang his heart away in a most cheerful strain. There was something so touching and ap pealing in the contrast that I felt a wistful clutch at my throat while I smiled, as one does when tears are coming like April showers to one s eyes. Without thinking what I did, I went back into the room, threw open the shutters again, and stood before the dingy landscape. How the horses pranced up to the door, and how fine the ladies were in their hoop-petticoats and high feathers! I imagined that the picture had been a constant rebuke to the dwellers in the house through their wasting lives and failing fortunes. In every human heart, said I, there is such a picture of the ideal life, the high possibilities and successes, the semblance of duties done and of spirit ual achievements. It forever measures our incompleteness by its exact likeness to that completeness which we would not fight hard enough to win. But as I looked up at the panel, the old landscape became dim, and I knew that it was only because a cloud was 110 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. hiding the sun ; yet I was glad to leave the shadows of the room, and to hurry down the wide stairway. I saw nothing of the daughter, though I searched for her, and even called her, through the house. When I reached the side door I found her father crossing the yard, and wondered if he would show any consciousness of our having so lately met. He stood still and waited for me, and my first impulse made me ask, " What did you want just now ? I was not asleep when you were in my room ; you frightened me." " Do not be afraid," he answered with unexpected patience. "You must take us as you find us. It is a sad old house, but you need not be afraid ; we are much more afraid of you ! " and we both smiled ami ably. " But your daughter," said I ; " I have been asking her to come away for a time, to visit me or take a journey. It would be much better for you both ; and she needs a change and a little pleasuring. God does not mean that we shall make our lives ut terly dismal." I was afraid, and did not dare to meet the old man s eyes after I had spoken so plainly. THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. Ill He laughed coldly, and glanced at his mended coat-sleeve. " What do you know about happiness ? You are too young," said he. " At your age I thought I knew the world. What difference would it make if the old place here were like the gay ghost of it in our landscape chamber ? The farmers would be jealous of our luxury; reverence and re spect would be turned into idle curiosity. This quiet countryside would be disgraced by such a flaunting folly. No, we are very comfortable, my child and I ; you must not try to disturb us," and he looked at me with a kind of piteous suspicion. There was a large block of stone under one of the old elms, which had been placed there long ago for a mounting-block, and here we seated ourselves. As I looked at my companion, he seemed like a man unused to the broad light of day. I fancied that a prisoner, who had just ended many years of dungeon life, would wear exactly such a face. And yet it was such a lovely summer day of a joyful world, if he would only take or make it so. Alas, he matched the winter weather better. I could not bear to think of the old house in winter ! 112 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. " Who is to blame ? " said the old man suddenly, in a strange eager tone which startled me, and made me shrink away from him. " We are in bondage. I am a generous-hearted man, yet I can never fol low my own impulses. I longed to give what I had with a lavish hand, when I was younger, but some power restrained me. I have grown old while I tried to fight it down. We are all in prison while we are left in this world, that is the truth ; in prison for another man s sin." For the first time I understood that he was not altogether sane. "If there were an ancestor of mine, as I have been taught, who sold his soul for wealth, the awful price was this, and he lost the power of using it. He was greedy for gain, and now we can not part with what we have, even for com mon comfort. His children and his chil dren s children have suffered for his fault. He has lived in the hell of watching us from generation to generation ; seeing our happi ness spoiled, our power of usefulness wither away. Wherever he is, he knows that we are all misers because he was miserly, and stamped us with the mark of his own base spirit. He has watched his descendants THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. 113 shrivel up and disappear one by one, poor and ungenerous in God s world. We fight against the doom of it, but it wins at last. Thank God, there are only two of us left." I had sprung to my feet, frightened by the old man s vehemence. I could not help saying that God meant us to be free and unconquered by any evil power ; the gray, strange face looked blindly at me, and I could not speak again. This was the secret of the doom, then. I left the old man cry ing, while I hurried away to find the mis tress of the desolate house, and appeal to her to let me send a companion for her father, who could properly care for him here, or per suade him to go away to some place where he would forget his misery among new in terests and scenes. She herself must not be worn out by his malady of unreason. But I only dashed my sympathy against the rock of her hopelessness. " I think we shall all disappear some night in a winter storm, and the world will be rid of us, father and the house and I, all three," she said, with bitter dreariness, and turned to her work again. Early that evening, I said good-by to toy new friends, for the horse was sound, 114 THE LANDSCAPE CHAMBER. and not to be satisfied by such meagre stabling. Our host seemed sorry to let the creature go, and stood stroking him affectionately after I had mounted. " How the famous old breed holds its own ! " he said wistfully. " I should like to have seen the ancestor who has stamped his likeness so unmistakably on all his descendants." " But among human beings," I could not resist saying, " there is freedom, thank God! We can climb to our best possibil ities, and outgrow our worst inheritance." " No, no ! " cried the old man bitterly " You are young and fortunate. Forget us, if you can ; we are of those who have no hope in a world of fate." I looked back again and again, as I rode away. It was a house of shadows and strange moods, and I was glad when I had fairly left it behind me; yet I looked for ward to seeing it again. I well remember the old man s clutch at the money I offered him, and the kiss and the bunch of roses that the daughter gave to me. But late that evening I was not sorry to shut myself into my prosaic room at a village hotel, rather than try to sleep again behind the faded figured curtains of the landscape chamber. LAW LANE. I. THE thump of a flat-iron signified to an educated passer-by that this was Tuesday morning ; yesterday having been fair and the weekly washing-day unhindered by the weather. It was undoubtedly what Mrs. Powder pleased herself by calling a good orthodox week ; not one of the disjointed and imperfect sections of time which a rainy Monday forced upon methodical housekeep ers. Mrs. Powder was not a woman who could live altogether in the present, and whatever she did was done with a view to having it cleared out of the way of the next enterprise on her list. " I can t bear to see folks do their work as if every piece on t was a tread-mill," she used to say, briskly. " Life means progriss to me, and I can t dwell by the way no more n sparks can fly downwards. T ain t the way I m built, nor none of the Fisher tribe." 116 LAW LANE. The hard white bundles in the shallow splint-basket were disappearing, one by one, and taking their places on the decrepit clothes-horse, well ironed and precisely folded. The July sunshine came in at one side of Mrs. Powder s kitchen, and the cool northwest breeze blew the heat out again from the other side. Mrs. Powder grew un easy and impatient as she neared the end of her task, and the flat-iron moved more and more vigorously. She kept glancing out through the doorway and along the country road as if she were watching for somebody. "I shall just have to git ready an go an rout her out myself, an take my chances," she said at last with a resentful look at the clock, as if it were partly to blame for the delay and had ears with which to listen to proper rebuke. The round moon-face had long ago ceased its waxing and waning across the upper part of the old dial, as if it had forgotten its responsibility about the movements of a heavenly body in its pleased concern about housekeeping. " See here ! " said Mrs. Powder, taking a last hot iron from the fire. " You ain t a-keepin time like you used to ; you re get- tin lazy, I must say. Look at this ere sun- LAW LANE. 117 mark on the floor, that calls it full leven o clock, and you want six minutes to ten. I ve got to send word to the clock-man and have your in ards all took apart; you got me to meetin more n half an hour too late, Sabbath last." To which the moon-face did not change its beaming expression ; very likely, being a moon, it was not willing to mind the ways of the sun. " Lord, what an old thing you be ! " said Mrs. Powder, turning away with a chuckle. " I don t wonder your sense kind of fails you ! " And the clock clucked at her by way of answer, though presently it was go ing to strike ten at any rate. The hot iron was now put down hurriedly, and the half -ironed night-cap was left in a queer position on the ironing-board. A small figure had appeared in the road and was coming toward the house with a fleet, barefooted run which required speedy ac tion. " Here you, Joel Smith ! " shouted the old woman. " Jo el ! " But the saucy lad only doubled his pace and pretended not to see or hear her. Mrs. Powder could play at that game, too, and did not call again, but quietly went back to her ironing 118 LAW LANE. and tried as hard as she could to be pro voked. Presently the boy came panting up the slope of green turf which led from the road to the kitchen doorstep. " I did n t know but you spoke as I ran by," he remarked, in an amiable tone. Mrs. Powder took no heed of him whatever. " I ain t in no hurry ; I kind o got run ning," he explained, a moment later; and then, as his hostess stepped toward the stove, he caught up the frilled night-cap and tied it on in a twinkling. When Mrs. Pow der turned again, the sight of him was too much for her gravity. " Them frills is real becoming to ye," she announced, shaking with laughter. " I de clare for t if you don t favor your gran ma Dodge s looks. I should like to have yer folks see ye. There, take it off now ; I m most through my ironin and I want to clear it out o the way." Joel was perfectly docile and laid the night-cap within reach. He had a tempta tion to twitch it back by the end of one string, but he refrained. " Want me to go drive your old brown hen-turkey out o the wet grass, Mis Powder ? She s tolling her chicks off down to a ds the swamp," he of fered. LAW LANE. 119 " She s raised up families enough to know how by this time," said Mrs. Powder, u an the swamp s dry as a bone." " I 11 split ye up a mess o kindlin -wood whilst I m here, jest as soon s not," said Joel, in a still more pleasant tone, after a long and anxious pause. "There, I ll get ye your doughnuts, pretty quick. They ain t so fresh as they was Saturday. T s pose that s what you re driving at." The good soul shook with laughter. Joel answered as well for her amusement as the most famous of comic ac tors ; there was something in his appealing eyes, his thin cheeks and monstrous frec kles, and his long locks of sandy hair, which was very funny to Mrs. Powder. She was always interested, too, in fruitless attempts to satisfy his appetite. He listened now, for the twentieth time, to her opinion that the bottomless pit alone could be compared to the recesses of his being. " I should like to be able to say that I had filled ye up jest once ! " she ended her remarks, as she brought a tin pan full of doughnuts from her pantry. " Heard the news ? " asked small Joel, as he viewed the provisions with glistening 120 LAW LANE. eyes. He bore likeness to a little hungry woodchuck, or muskrat, as he went to work before the tin pan. " What news ? " Mrs. Powder asked, sus piciously. " I ain t seen nobody this day." "Barnet s folks has got their case in court." " They ain t ! " and while a solemn silence fell upon the kitchen, the belated old clock whirred and rumbled and struck ten with persistent effort. Mrs. Powder looked round at it impatiently ; the moon-face confronted her with the same placid smile. u Twelve o clock s the time you git your dinner, ain t it, Mis Powder ? " the boy in quired, as if he had repeated his news like a parrot and had no further interest in its meaning. u 1 don t plot for to get me no reg lar dinner this day," was the unexpected reply. " You can eat a couple or three o them nuts and step along, for all I care. An I want you to go up Lyddy Bangs s lane and carry her word that I m goin out to pick me some blueberries. They 11 be ripened up elegant, and I ve got a Ion gin for em. Tell her I say t is our day she 11 know ; we ve be n after arly blueberries together LAW LANE. 121 this forty years, and Lyddy knows where to meet with me ; there by them split rocks." The ironing was finished a few minutes afterward, and the board was taken to its place in the shed. When Mrs. Powder re turned, Joel had stealthily departed ; the tin pan was turned upside down on the seat of the kitchen chair. " Good land! " said the astonished woman, " I believe he 11 bu st himself to everlastin bliss one o these days. Them doughnuts would have lasted me till Thursday, certain." "Gimme suthin to eat, Mis Powder?" whined Joel at the window, with his plain tive countenance lifted just above the sill. But he set forth immediately down the road, with bulging pockets and the speed of a light-horseman. II. Half an hour later the little gray farm house was shut and locked, and its mistress was crossing the next pasture with a surpris ingly quick step for a person of her age and weight. An old cat was trotting after her, with tail high in the air, but it was plain to see that she still looked for danger, having 122 LA W LANE. just come down from the woodpile, where she had retreated on Joel s first approach. She kept as close to Mrs. Powder as was consistent with short excursions after crick ets or young, unwary sparrows, and opened her wide green eyes fearfully on the lookout for that evil monster, the boy. There were two pastures to cross, and Mrs. Powder was very much heated by the noonday sun and entirely out of breath when she approached the familiar rendez vous and caught sight of her friend s cape- bonnet. " Ain t there no justice left ? " was her indignant salutation. " I s pose you ve heard that Crosby s folks have lost their case? Poor Mis Crosby! twill kill her, I m sure. I ve be n calculatin to go ber- ryin all the forenoon, but I could n t git word to you till Joel came tootin by. I thought likely you d expect notice when you see what a good day t was." " I did," replied Lyddy Bangs, in a tone much more serious than her companion s. She was a thin, despairing little body, with an anxious face and a general look of dis appointment and poverty, though really the more prosperous person of the two. " Joel LAW LANE. 123 told me you said t was our day," she added. " I m wore out tryin to satisfy that boy ; he s always beggin for somethin to eat every time he comes nigh the house. I should think they d see to him to home; not let him batten on the neighbors so." "You ain t been feedin of him, too?" laughed Mrs. Powder. " Well, I declare, I don t see whar he puts it ! " and she fanned herself with her apron. " I always forget what a sightly spot this is." " Here s your pussy - cat, ain t she ? " asked Lyddy Bangs, needlessly, as they sat looking off over the valley. Behind them the hills rose one above another, with their bare upland clearings and great stretches of pine and beech forest. Beyond the wide valley was another range of hills, green and pleasant in the clear mid-day light. Some higher mountains loomed, sterile and stony, to northward. They were on the women s right as they sat looking westward. " It does seem as if folks might keep the peace when the Lord s give em so pooty a a spot to live in," said Lyddy Bangs, re gretfully. " There ain t no better farms than Barnet s and Crosby s folks have got neither, but stead o neighboring they must 124 LAW LANE. pick their mean fusses and fight from gen eration to generation. My graii ma am used to say t was just so with em when she was a girl and she was one of the first settlers up this way. She al ays would have it that Barnet s folks was the most to blame, but there s plenty sides with em, as you know." " There, t is all mixed up, so t is a real tangle," answered Mrs. Powder. " I ve been o both minds I must say I used to hold for the Crosbys in the old folks time, but I ve come round to see they ain t per fect. There ! I m b ilin over with some- thin I ve got to tell somebody. I ve kep it close long s I can." " Let s get right to pickin , then," said Lyddy Bangs, " or we sha n t budge from here the whole livin afternoon," and the small thin figure and the tall stout one moved off together toward their well-known harvest-fields. They were presently settled down within good hearing distance, and yet the discussion was not begun. The cat curled herself for a nap on the smooth top of a rock. " There, I have to eat a while first, like a young-one," said Mrs. Powder. " I always tell em that blueberries is only fit to eat LAW LANE. 125 right off of the twigs. You want em full o sun ; let em git cold and they re only fit to cook not but what I eat em any ways I can git em. Ain t they nice an spicy? Law, my poor knees is so stiff ! I begin to be afraid, nowadays, every year o berryin may be my last. I don know why t should be that my knees serves me so. I ain t rheumaticky, nor none o my folks was ; we go off with other complaints." " The mukis membrane o the knees gits dried up," explained Lyddy Bangs, " an the j ints is all powder-posted. So I ve be n told, anyways." " Then they was ignorant," retorted her companion, sharply. " I know by the feelin s I have " and the two friends picked in dustriously and discussed the vexed points of medicine no more. " I can t force them Barnets and Cros bys out o my mind," suggested Miss Bangs after a while, being eager to receive the proffered confidence which might be for gotten. " Think of em, without no other door-neighbors, fightin for three ginerations over the bounds of a lane wall. What if t was two foot one way or two foot t other, let em agree." 126 LAW LANE. " But that 7 s just what they could n t," said Mrs. Powder. " You know yourself you might be willin to give away a piece o land, but when somebody said t wa n t yours, t was theirs, t would take more Christian grace n I ve got to let em see I thought they was right. All the old Crosbys ever wanted, first, was for the Barnets to say two foot of the lane was theirs by rights, and then they was williu to turn it into the lane and to give that two foot more o the wedth than Barnets did they wa n t haggling for no pay ; t was for rights. But Barnet s folks said " - "Now, don t you go an git all flustered up a-tellin that over, Harri t Powder," said the lesser woman. "There ain t be n no words spoke so often as them along this sidelin hill, not even the Ten Command ments. The only sense there s be n about it is, they ve let each other alone altogether, and ain t spoke at all for six months to a time. I can t help hoping that the war 11 die out with the old breed and they 11 come to some sort of peace. Mis Barnet was a Sands, and they re toppin sort o folks and she s got fight in her. I think she s more to blame than Barnet, a good sight ; but LAW LANE. 127 Mis Crosby s a downright peace-making lit tle creatur , and would have ended it long ago if she d be ii able." " Barnet s stubborn, too, let me tell you ! " and Mrs. Powder s voice was full of anger. " T will never die out in his day, and he 11 spend every cent lawing, as the old folks did afore him. The lawyers must laugh at him well, mongst themselves. One an an other o the best on em has counseled them to leave it out to referees, and tried to show em they was fools. My man talked with judge himself about it, once, after he d been settin on a jury and they was comin away from court. They could n t agree ; they never could ! All the spare money o both farms has gone to pay the lawyers and carry on one fight after another. Now folks don t know it, but Crosby s farm is all mort gaged ; they ve spent even what Mis Crosby had from her folks. An there s worse be hind there s worse behind," insisted the speaker, stoutly. " I went up there this spring, as you know, when Mis Crosby was at death s door with lung-fever. I went through everything fetchin of her round, and was there five weeks, till she ot about. 4 1 feel to a ds you as an own sister, says 128 LAW LANE. Abby Crosby to me. I m a neighboring woman at heart, says she ; 4 and just you think of it, that my man had to leave me alone, sick as I was, while he went for you and the doctor, not riskin to ask Barnet s folks to send for help. I like to live pleas ant, says she to me, and bu st right out a-cryin . I knew then how she d felt things all these years. How are they ever goin to pay more court bills and all them piles o damages, if the farm s mortgaged so heavy ? " she resumed. " Crosby s farm ain t worth a good two thirds of Barnet s. They ve both neglected their lands. How many you got so fur, Lyddy ? " Lyddy proudly displayed her gains of blueberries ; the pail was filling very fast, and the friends were at their usual game of rivalry. Mrs. Powder had been the faster picker in years past, and she now doubled her diligence. " Ain t the sweet-fern thick an scented as ever you see ? " she said. " Gimme pas ture-lands rather n the best gardins that grows. If I can have a sweet-brier bush and sweet-fern patch and some clumps o bayberry, you can take all the gardin blooms. Look how folks toils with witch-grass and LAW LANE. 129 pusley and gets a starved lot o poor sprigs, slug-eat, and all dyin together in their front yards, when they might get better comfort in the first pasture along the road. I guess there s somethin wild, that s never got tutored out o me. I must ha be n made o somethin counter to town dust. I never could see why folks wanted to go off an live out o sight o the mountings, an have everything on a level." " You said there was worse to tell be hind," suggested Lyddy Bangs, as if it were only common politeness to show an appre ciation of the friendly offering. " I have it in mind to get round to that in proper course," responded Mrs. Powder, a trifle offended by the mild pertinacity. " I settled it in my mind that I was goin to tell you somethin for a kind of a treat the day we come out blueberryin . There ! " and Mrs, Powder rose with difficulty from her knees, and retreated pompously to the shade of a hemlock-tree which grew over a shelv ing rock near by. Lyddy Bangs could not resist picking a little longer in an unusually fruitful spot ; then she hastened to seat herself by her friend. It was no common occasion. 130 LAW LANE. Mrs. Powder was very warm ; and further evaded and postponed telling the secret by wishing that she were as light on foot as her companion, and deploring her increasing weight. Then she demanded a second sight of the blueberries, which were compared and decided upon as to quality and quantity. Then the cat, which had been left at some distance on her rock, came trotting toward her mistress in a disturbed way, and after a minute of security in a comfortable lap darted away again in a strange, excited man ner. " She s goin to have a fit, I do believe ! " exclaimed Lyddy Bangs, quite disheartened, for the cat was Mrs. Powder s darling and she might leave everything to go in search of her. 44 She may have seen a snake or some thing. She often gets scared and runs home when we re out a-trarvelin , said the cat s owner, complacently, arid Lyddy s spirits rose again. " I suppose you never suspected that Ezra Barnet and Ruth Crosby cared the least thing about one another ? " inquired the keeper of the secret a moment later, and the listener turned toward Mrs. Powder with a startled face. LA W LANE. 131 "Now, Harriet Powder, for mercy s sakes alive ! " was all that she could say ; but Mrs. Powder was satisfied, and confirmed the amazing news by a most emphatic nod. " My lawful sakes ! what be they goin to do about it ? " inquired Lyddy Bangs, flushing with excitement. "A Barnet an a Crosby fall in love ! Don t you rec lect how the old ones was al ays fightiii and callin names when we was all to school to gether ? Times is changed, certain." " Now, say you hope to die if ever you 11 tell a word I say," pursued Mrs. Powder. "If I was to be taken away to-morrow, you d be all the one that would know it ex cept Mis Crosby and Ezra and Ruth them selves. T was nothin but her bein nigh to death that urged her to tell me the state o things. I s pose she thought I might favor em in time to come. Abby Crosby she says to me, Mis Powder, my poor girl may need your motherin care. An I says, Mis Crosby, she shall have it ; and then she had a spasm o pain, and we harped no more that day as I remember." " How come it about ? I should n t have told anybody that asked me that a Barnet and a Crosby ever changed the time o day, 132 LAW LANE. much less kep company," protested the lis tener. " Kep company ! pore young creatur s ! " said Mrs. Powder. " They ve hid em away in the swamps an hollers, and in the edge o the growth, at nightfall, for the sake o git- tin a word ; an they ve stole out, shiverin , into that plaguey lane o winter nights. I tell ye I ve heard hifalutin folks say that love would still be lord of all, but I never was strained to believe it till I see what that boy and girl was willin to undergo. All the hate of all their folks is turned to love in them, and I couldn t help a-watchiii of em. An I ventured to send Ruth over to my house after my alpaccy aprin, and then I made an arrant out to the spring-brook to see if there was any cresses started which I knew well enough there was n t and I spoke right out bold to Ezra, that was at work on a piece of ditching over on his land. Ezra, says I, if you git time, just run over to the edge o my pasture and pick me a handful o balm o Gilead buds. I want to put em in half a pint o new rum for Mis Crosby, and there ain t a soul to send. I knew he d just meet her coming back, if I could time it right gittin of Ruth started. LAW LANE. 133 He looked at me kind of curl s, and pretty quick I see him leggin it over the fields with an axe and a couple o ends o board, like he d got to mend a fence. I had to keep her dinner warm for her till ha -past one o clock. I don t know what he men tioned to his folks, but Ruth she come an kissed me hearty when she first come inside the door. T is harder for Ezra ; he ain t got nobody to speak to, and Ruth s got her mother if she is a Mis Much-afraid." " I don t know s we can blame Crosby for not wantin to give his girl to the Bar- nets, after they ve got away all his sub stance, his means, an his cattle, like t was in the Book o Job," urged Lyddy Bangs. " Seems as if they might call it square an marry the young folks off, but they won t nohow ; t will only fan the flame." Lyddy Bangs was a sentimental person ; neighbor Powder had chosen wisely in gaining a new friend to the cause of Ezra Barnet s ap parently hopeless affection. Unknown to herself, however, she had been putting the lover s secret to great risk of untimely be trayal. The weather was most beautiful that af ternoon ; there was an almost intoxicating 134 LAW LANE. freshness and delight among the sweet odors of the hillside pasture, and the two elderly women were serene at heart and felt like girls again as they talked together. They remembered many an afternoon like this ; they grew more and more confiding as they reviewed the past and their life-long friend ship. A stranger might have gathered only the most rural and prosaic statements, and a tedious succession of questions, from what Mrs. Powder and Lyddy Bangs had to say to each other, but the old stories of true love and faithful companionship were again simply rehearsed. Those who are only excited by more complicated histories too often forget that there are no new plots to the comedies and tragedies of life. They are played sometimes by country people in homespun, sometimes by townsfolk in velvet and lace. Love and prosperity, death and loss and misfortune the stories weave themselves over and over again, never mind whether the ploughman or the wit of the clubs plays the part of hero. The two homely figures sat still so long that they seemed to become permanent points in the landscape, and the small birds, and even a wary chipmunk, went their ways LAW LANE. 135 unmindful of Mrs. Powder and Lyddy Bangs. The old hemlock-tree, under which they sat discoursing, towered high above the young pine-growth which clustered thick be hind them on the hillside. In the middle of a comfortable reflection upon the Barnet grandfather s foolishness or craftiness, Mrs. Powder gave sudden utterance to the belief that some creature up in the tree was drop ping pieces of bark and cones all over her. "A squirrel, most like," said Lyddy Bangs, looking up into the dense branches. "The tree is a-scatterin down, ain t it? As you was sayin , Grandsir Barnet must have knowed well enough what he was about " " Oh, gorry ! oh, git out ! ow o w ! " suddenly wailed a voice overhead, and a des perate scramble and rustling startled the good women half out of their wits. " Ow, Mis Powder ! " shrieked a familiar voice, while both hearts thumped fast, and Joel came, half falling, half climbing, down out of the tree. He bawled, and beat his head with his hands, and at last rolled in agony among the bayberry and lamb-kill. " Look out for em ! " he shouted. " Oh, gorry ! I thought t was only an old last-year s hornet s nest they 11 sting you, too ! " 136 LAW LANE. Mrs. Powder untied her apron and laid about her with sure aim. Only two hornets were to be seen ; but after these were beaten to the earth, and she stopped to regain her breath, Joel hardly dared to lift his head or to look about him. 44 What was you up there for, anyhow ? " asked Lyddy Bangs, with severe suspicion. " Harking to us, 1 11 be bound ! " But Mrs. Powder, who knew Joel s disposition best, elbowed her friend into silence and be gan to inquire about the condition of his wounds. There was a deep-seated hatred between Joel and Miss Bangs. " Oh, dear ! they ve bit me all over," groaned the boy. " Ain t you got somethin you can rub on, Mis Powder?" and the rural remedy of fresh earth was suggested. " T is too dry here," said the adviser. "Just you step down to that ma shy spot there by the brook, dear, and daub you with the wet mud real good, and t will ease you right away." Mrs. Powder s voice sounded compassionate, but her spirit and temper of mind gave promise of future retribution. " I 11 teach him to follow us out eaves dropping, this fashion ! " said Lyddy Bangs, when the boy had departed, weeping. " I m LAW LANE. 137 more n gratified that the hornets got hold of him! I hope twill serve him for a lesson." " Don t you r ile him up one mite, now," pleaded Mrs. Powder, while her eyes bore witness of hardly controlled anger. " He s the worst tattle-tale I ever see, and we ve put ourselves into a trap. If he tells his mother she 11 spread it all over town. But I should no more thought o his bein up in that tree than o his bein the sarpent in the garden o Eden. You leave Joel to me, and be mild with him s you can." The culprit approached, still lamenting. His ear and cheek were hugely swollen al ready, so that one eye was nearly closed. The blueberry expedition was relinquished, and with heavy sighs of dissatisfaction Lyddy Bangs took up the two half-filled pails, while Mrs. Powder kindly seized Joel by his small, thin hand, and the little group moved homeward across the pasture. " Where s your hat ? " asked Lyddy, stopping short, after they had walked a lit tle distance. " Hanging on a limb up by the wop s nest," answered Joel. " Oh, git me home, Mis Powder ! " 138 LAW LANE. III. No one would suspect, from the look of the lane itself, that it had always been such a provoker of wrath, and even a famous bat tle-ground. While petty wars had raged between the men and women of the old farms, walnut-trees had grown high in air, and apple-trees had leaned their heavy branches on the stone walls and, year after year, decked themselves in pink-and-white blossoms to arch this unlucky by-way for a triumphal procession of peace that never came. Birds built their nests in the boughs and pecked the ripe blackberries ; green brakes and wild roses and tall barberry- bushes flourished in their season on either side the wheel-ruts. It was a remarkably pleasant country lane, where children might play and lovers might linger. No one would imagine that this lane had its lawsuits and damages, its annual crop of briefs, and succes sion of surveyors and quarrelsome partisans ; or that in every generation of owners each man must be either plaintiff or defendant. The surroundings looked permanent enough. No one would suspect that a cer- LA W LANE. 139 tain piece of wall had been more than once thrown down by night and built again, an grily, by day ; or that a well-timbered corn- house had been the cause of much litigation, and even now looked, when you came to know its story, as if it stood on its long, straight legs, like an ungainly, top-heavy beast, all ready to stalk away when its posi tion became too dangerous. The Barnets had built it beyond their boundary ; it had been moved two or three times, backward and forward. The Barnet house and land stood between the Crosby farm and the high-road ; the Crosbys had never been able to reach the highway without passing their enemies under full fire of ugly looks or taunting voices. The intricacies of legal complications in the matter of right of way would be impossible to explain. They had never been very clear to any impartial investigator. Barnets and Crosbys had gone to their graves with bitter hatred and sullen desire for revenge in their hearts. Perhaps this one great interest, out side the simple matters of food and clothing and farmers work, had taken the place to them of drama and literature and art. One could not help thinking, as he looked at the 140 LA W LANE. decrepit fences and mossy, warped roofs and buckling walls, to how much better use so much money might have been put. The costs of court and the lawyers fees had taken everything, and men had drudged, in heat and frost, and women had pinched and slaved to pay the lane s bills. Both the Barnet and Crosby of the present time stood well enough in the opinion of other neigh bors. They were hard-fisted, honest men ; the fight was inherited to begin with, and they were stubborn enough to hold fast to the fight. Law Lane was as well known as the county roads in half a dozen towns. Perhaps its irreconcilable owners felt a thrill of enmity that had corne straight down from Scottish border-frays, as they glanced along its crooked length. Who could be lieve that the son and daughter of the war ring households, instead of being ready to lift the torch in their turn, had weakly and misguidedly fallen in love with each other ? Nobody liked Mrs. Barnet. She was a cross-grained, suspicious soul, who was a tyrant and terror of discomfort in her own household whenever the course of events ran counter to her preference. Her son Ezra was a complete contrast to her in disposition, LAW LANE. 141 and to his narrow-minded, prejudiced father as well. The elder Ezra was capable of better things, however, and might have been reared to friendliness and justice, if the Crosby of his youthful day had not been specially aggravating and the annals of Law Lane at their darkest page. If there had been another boy to match young Ezra, on the Crosby farm, the two might easily have fostered their natural boyish rivalries until something worse came into being ; but when one s enemy is only a sweet-faced little girl, it is very hard to impute to her all manner of discredit and serpent-like power of evil. At least, so Ezra Barnet the younger felt in his inmost heart ; and though he minded his mother for the sake of peace, and played his solitary games and built his unapplauded dams and woodchuck - traps on his own side of the fences, he always saw Ruth Crosby as she came and went, and liked her better and better as years went by. When the tide of love rose higher than the young people s steady heads, they soon laid fast hold of freedom. With all their perplexi ties, life was by no means at its worst, and rural diplomacy must bend all its energies to hinder these unexpected lovers. 142 LA W LANE. Ezra Barnet had never so much as en tered the Crosby house ; the families were severed beyond the reuniting power of even a funeral. Ezra could only try to imagine the room to which his Ruth had returned one summer evening after he had left her, reluctantly, because the time drew near for his father s return from the village. His mother had been in a peculiarly bad temper all day, and he had been glad to escape from her unwelcome insistence that he should marry any one of two or three capable girls, and so furnish some help in the housekeep ing. Ezra had often heard this suggestion of his duty, and, tired and provoked at last, he had stolen out to the garden and wan dered beyond it to the brook and out to the fields. Somewhere, somehow, he had met Ruth, and the lovers bewailed their trials with unusual sorrow and impatience. It seemed very hard to wait. Young Barnet was ready to persuade the tearful girl that they must go away together and establish a peaceful home of their own. He was heartily ashamed because the last verdict was in his father s favor, and Ruth forebore to wound him with any glimpse of the straits to which her own father had been reduced. She was LAW LANE. 143 too dutiful to leave the pinched household, where her help was needed more than ever ; she persuaded her lover that they were sure to be happy at last indeed, were not they happy now ? How much worse it would be if they could not safely seize so many op portunities, brief though they were, of being together ! If the fight had been less absorb ing and the animosity less bitter, they might have been suspected long ago. So Ruth and Ezra parted, with uncounted kisses, and Ezra went back to the dingy- walled kitchen, where his mother sat alone. It was hardly past twilight out of doors, but Mrs. Barnet had lighted a kerosene-lamp, and sat near the small open window mend ing a hot-looking old coat. She looked so needlessly uncomfortable and surly that her son was filled with pity, as he stood watch ing her, there among the moths and beetles that buffeted the lamp-chimney. " Why don t you put down your sewing and come out a little ways up the road, mother, and get cooled off ? " he asked, pleasantly ; but she only twitched herself in her chair and snapped off another needleful of linen thread. " I can t spare no time to go gallivanting 144 LAW LANE. like some folks," she answered. " I always have had to work, and I always shall. I see that Crosby girl mincin by an hour ago, as if she d be n off all the afternoon. Folks that think she s so amiable about saving her mother s strength would be surprised at the way she dawdles round, I guess " and Mrs. Barnet crushed an offending beetle with her brass thimble in a fashion that dis gusted Ezra. Somehow, his mother had a vague instinct that he did not like to hear sharp words about Ruth Crosby. Yet he rarely had been betrayed into an ill-judged defense. He had left Ruth only a minute ago; he knew exactly what she had been doing all day, and from what kind errand she had been returning ; the blood rushed quickly to his face, and he rose from his seat by the table and went out to the kitchen doorstep. The air was cool and sweet, and a sleepy bird chirped once or twice from an elm-bough overhead. The moon was near its rising, and he could see the great shapes of the mountains that lay to the eastward. He forgot his mother, and began to think about Ruth again ; he wondered if she were not thinking of him, and meant to ask her if she remembered an especial feeling of LAW LANE. 145 nearness just at this hour. Ezra turned to look at the clocks to mark the exact time. " Yes," said Mrs. Barnet, as she saw him try to discover the hour, " t is time that father was to home. I s pose, bein mail- night, everybody was out to the post-office to hear the news, and most like he s bawlin himself hoarse about fall lections or some thing. He ain t got done braggin about our gittin the case, neither. There s al ways some new one that wants to git the p ints right from headquarters. I didn t see Crosby go by, did you ? " " He d have had to foot it by the path cross-lots," replied Ezra, gravely, from the doorstep. " He s sold his hoss." " He ain t ! " exclaimed Mrs. Barnet, with a chuckle. " I s pose they re proddin him for the money up to court. Guess he won t try to fight us again for one while." Ezra said nothing ; he could not bear this sort of thing much longer. " I won t be kept like a toad under a harrow," he muttered to himself. " I think it seems kind of hard," he ventured to say aloud. " Now he s got to hire when fall work conies on, and " The hard-hearted woman within had long 146 LAW LANE. been trying to provoke her peaceable son into an argument, and now the occasion had come. Ezra restrained himself from speech with a desperate effort, and stopped his ears to the sound of his mother s accusing voice. In the middle of her harangue a wagon was driven into the yard, and his father left it quickly and came toward the door. " Come in here, you lout ! " he shouted, angrily. " I want to look at you ! I want to see what such a mean-spirited sneak has got to say for himself." Then changing his voice to a whine, he begged Ezra, who had caught him from falling as he stumbled over the step, " Come in, boy, an tell me t ain t true. I guess they was only thornin of me up ; you ain t took a shine to that Crosby miss, now, have you ? " " No son of mine no son of mine ! " burst out the mother, who had been startled by the sudden entrance of the news-bringer. Her volubility was promptly set free, and Ezra looked from his father s face to his mother s. " Father," said he, turning away from the scold, who was nearly inarticulate in her ex cess of rage " father, I d rather talk to you, if you want to hear what I ve got to say. Mother s got no reason in her." LAW LANE. 147 " Ezry," said the eleW man, " I see how tis. Let your ma am talk all she will. I m broke with shame of ye ! " his voice choked weakly in his throat. " Either you tell me t is all nonsense, or you go out o that door and shut it after you for good. An ye re all the boy I ve got." The woman had stopped at last, mastered by the terror of the moment. Her hus band s face was gray with passion ; her son s cheeks were flushed and his eyes were full of tears. Mrs. Barnet s tongue for once had lost its cunning. The two men looked at each other as long as they could ; the younger man s eyes fell first. " I wish you would n t be hasty," he said ; " to-morrow " " You ve heard," was the only answer ; and in a moment more Ezra Barnet reached to the table and took his old straw hat which lay there. " Good-by, father ! " he said, steadily. " I think you re wrong, sir ; but I never meant to carry on that old fight and live like the heathen." And then, young and strong and angry, he left the kitchen. " He might have took some notice o me, if he s goin for good," said the mother 148 LAW LANE. spitefully ; but her son did not hear this taunt, and the father only tottered where he stood. The moths struck against his face as if it were a piece of wood ; he sank feebly into a chair, muttering, and trying to fortify himself in his spent anger. Ezra went out, dazed and giddy. But he found the young horse wandering about the yard, eager for his supper and fretful at the strange delay. He unharnessed the creature and backed the wagon under the shed ; then he turned and looked at the house should he go in ? No ! The fighting instinct, which had kept firm grasp on father and grandfather, took possession of Ezra now. He crossed the yard and went out at the gate, and down the lane s end to the main road. The father and mother listened to his foot steps, and the man gave a heavy groan. "Let him go let him go! twill teach him a lesson ! " said Mrs. Barnet, with some thing of her usual spirit. She could not say more, though she tried her best ; the occa sion was far too great. How many times that summer Mrs. Pow der attempted to wreak vengeance upon Joel, the tattle-tale ; into what depths of in- LAW LANE. 149 termittent remorse the mischief-making boy was resolutely plunged, who shall describe ? No more luncheons of generous provision ; no more jovial skirmishing at the kitchen windows, or liberal payment for easy er rands. Whenever Mrs. Powder saw Lyddy Bangs, or any other intimate and sympa thetic friend, she bewailed her careless con fidences under the hemlock- tree and detailed her anxious attentions to the hornet-stung eavesdropper. " I went right home," she would say, sor rowfully ; " I filled him plumb-full with as good a supper as I could gather up, and I took all the fire out o them hornit-stings with the best o remedies. Joel, dear, says I, you won t lose by it if you keep your mouth shut about them words I spoke to Lyddy Bangs, and he was that pious I might ha known he meant mischief. They ain t boys nor men, they ro divils, when they come to that size, and so you mark my words ! But his mother never could keep nothing to herself, and I knew it from past sorrers ; and I never slept a wink that night sure s you live till the roosters crowed for day." " Perhaps t won t do nothin but good ! " 150 LAW LANE. Lyddy Bangs would say, consolingly. " Perhaps the young folks 11 git each other a sight the sooner. They d had to kep r it to theirselves till they was gray-headed, less somebody let the cat out o the bag." 44 Don t you rec lect how my cat acted that day ! " exclaimed Mrs. Powder, excit edly. " How she was good as took with a fit ! She knowed well enough what was brewin ; I only wish we d had half of her IV. The day before Christmas all the long valley was white with deep, new-fallen snow. The road which led up from the neighboring village and the railroad station stretched along the western slope a mere trail, un trodden and unbroken. The storm had just ceased ; the high mountain-peaks were clear and keen and rose-tinted with the waning light ; the hills were no longer green with their covering of pines and maples and beeches, but gray with bare branches, and a cold, dense color, almost black, where the evergreens grew thickest. On the other side of the valley the farmsteads were LAW LANE. 151 mapped out as if in etching or pen-drawing ; the far-away orchards were drawn with a cu rious exactness and regularity, the crooked boughs of the apple-trees and the longer lines of the walnuts and ashes and elms came out against the snow with clear beauty. The fences and walls were buried in snow ; the farm-houses and barns were petty shapes in their right-angled unlikeness to natural growths. You were half amused, half shocked, as the thought came to you of in different creatures called men and women, who busied themselves within those narrow walls, under so vast a sky, and fancied the whole importance of the universe was belit tled by that of their few pent acres. What a limitless world lay outside those play thing-farms, yet what beginnings of immor tal things the small gray houses had known ! The day before Christmas ! a festival which seemed in that neighborhood to be of modern origin. The observance of it was hardly popular yet among the elder people, but Christmas had been appropriated, never theless, as if everybody had felt the lack of it. New Year s Day never was sufficient for New England, even in its least mirthful 152 LAW LANE. decades. For those persons who took true joy in life, something deeper was needed than the spread-eagle self -congratulations of the Fourth of July, or the family reunions of Thanksgiving Day. There were no bells ringing which the country-folks in Law Lane might listen for on Christmas Eve ; but something more than the joy that is felt in the poorest dwelling when a little child, with all its possibilities, is born ; something hap pier still came through that snowy valley with the thought of a Christmas-Child who "was the bringer-in and founder of the reign of the higher life." This was the greater Thanksgiving Day, when the whole of Christendom is called to praise and pray and hear the good-tidings, and every heart catches something of the joyful inspirations of good-will to men. Ezra Barnet sat on a fallen tree from which he had brushed the powdery snow. It was hard work wading through the drifts, and he had made good headway up the long hill before he stopped to rest. Across the valley in the fading daylight he saw the two farms, and could even trace the course of Law Lane itself, marked by the well-known trees. LAW LANE. 153 How small his own great nut-tree looked at this distance ! The two houses, with their larger and smaller out-buildings and snow- topped woodpiles, looked as if they had crept near together for protection and companion ship. There were no other houses within a wide space. Ezra knew how remote the homes really were from each other, judged by any existing sympathy and interest. He thought of his bare, unnourished boyhood with something like resentment; then he remembered how small had been his par ents experience, what poor ambition had been fostered in them by their lives ; even his mother s impatience with the efforts he had made to bring a little more comfort and pleasantness to the old farm-house was thought of with pity for her innate lack of pleasure in pleasant things. Ezra himself was made up of inadequacies, being born and bred of the Barnets. He was at work on the railroad now, with small pay ; but he had always known that there could be some thing better than the life in their farm house, while his mother did not. A different feeling came over him as he thought whom the other farm-house sheltered; he had looked for that first, to see if it were stand- 154 LAW LANE. ing safe. Ruth s last letter had come only the day before. This Christmas holiday was to be a surprise to her. He wondered whether Ruth s father would let him in. Never mind ! he could sleep in the barn among the hay ; and Ezra dropped into the snow again from the old tree-trunk and went his way. There was a small house just past a bend in the road, and he quickened his steps toward it. Alas ! there was no smoke in Mrs. Powder s chimney. She was away on one of her visiting tours ; nursing some sick person, perhaps. She would have housed him for the night most gladly ; now he must take his chances in Law Lane. The darkness was already beginning to fall ; there was a curious brownness in the air, like summer twilight ; the cold air became sharper, and the young man shivered a little as he walked. He could not follow the left- hand road, where it led among hospitable neighbors, but turned bravely off toward his old home a long, lonely walk at any time of the year, among woods and thickets all well known to him, and as familiar as they were to the wild creatures that haunted them. Yet Ezra Barnet did not find it easy to whistle as he went along. LAW LANE. 155 Suddenly, from behind a scrub-oak that was heavily laden with dead leaves and snow, leaped a small figure, and Ezra was for the moment much startled. The boy carried a rabbit-trap with unusual care, and placed it on the snow-drift before which he stood waist-deep already. " Gorry, Ezry ! you most scared me to pieces ! " said Joel, in a perfectly calm tone. " Wish you Merry Christmas ! Folks 11 be lookin for you ; they did n t s pose you d git home before to-morrow, though." " Looking for me ? " repeated the young man, with surprise. " I did n t send no word" "Ain t you heard nothin bout your ma am s being took up for dead ? " "No, I ain t; and you ain t foolin me with your stories, Joel Smith ? You need n t play off any of your mischief onto me." " What you gittin mad with me about ? " inquired Joel, with a plaintive tone in his voice. " She got a fall out in the barn this mornin , an it liked to killed her. Most folks ain t heard nothin bout it cause its been snowin so. They come for Mis Powder and she called out to our folks, as they brought her round by the way of Asa Pack- 156 LAW LANE. er s store to git some opodildack or some- thin ." Ezra asked no more questions, but strode past the boy, who looked after him a mo ment, and then lifted the heavy box-trap and started homeward. The imprisoned rabbit had been snowed up since the day before at least, and Joel felt humane anxieties, else he would have followed Ezra at a proper dis tance and learned something of his recep tion. Mrs. Powder was reigning triumphant in the Barnet house, being nurse, housekeeper, and spiritual adviser all in one. She had been longing for an excuse to spend at least half a day under that cheerless roof for many months, but occasion had not offered. She found the responsibility of the parted lovers weighing more and more heavily on her mind, and had set her strong will at work to find some way of reuniting them, and even to restore a long-banished peace to the farms. She would not like to confess that a mild satisfaction caused her heart to feel warm and buoyant when an urgent sum mons had come at last ; but such was the simple truth. A man who had been felling LA W LANE. 157 trees on the farm brought the news, melan choly to hear under other circumstances, that Mrs. Barnet had been hunting eggs in a stray nest in the hay-mow, and had slipped to the floor and been taken up insensible. Bones were undoubtedly broken ; she was a heavy woman, and had hardly recovered her senses. The doctor must be found as soon as possible. Mrs. Powder hastily put her house to rights, and, with a good round bundle of what she called her needments, set forth on the welcome enterprise. On the way she could hardly keep herself from un due cheerfulness, and if ever there was likely to be a reassuring presence in a sick-room it was Harriet Powder s that December day. She entered the gloomy kitchen looking like a two-footed snow-drift, her big round shoulders were so heaped with the damp white flakes. Old Ezra Barnet sat by the stove in utter despair, and waved a limp hand warningly toward the bedroom door. " She s layin in a sog," he said, hope lessly. " I ought to thought to send word to pore Ezry all the boy she ever had." Mrs. Powder calmly removed her snowy outer garments, and tried to warm her hands over the fire. 158 LAW LANE. " Put in a couple o sticks of good dry wood," she suggested, in a soothing voice ; and the farmer felt his spirits brighten, he knew not why. Then the whole - souled, hearty woman walked into the bedroom. " All I could see," she related afterward, " was the end of Jane Barnet s nose, and I was just as sure then as I be now that she was likely to continner ; but I set down side of the bed and got holt of her hand, and she groaned two or three times real desperate. I wished the doctor was there, to see if any thing really ailed her ; but I someways knowed there wa n t, less t was gittin over such a jounce. I spoke to her, but she never said nothin , and I went back out into the kitchen. She s a very sick woman, says I, loud enough for her to hear me ; I knew t would please her. There was a good deal to do, and I put on my aprin and took right holt and begun to lay about me and git dinner ; the men-folks was wiltin for want o somethin , it being nigh three o clock. An then I got Jane to feel more comfort able with ondressin of her, for all she d hardly let me touch of her poor creatur , I expect she did feel sore ! and then day light was failin and I felt kind o spent, so LAW LANE. 159 I set me down in a cheer by the bed-head and was speechless, too. I knew if she was able to speak she could n t hold in no great spell longer. "After a while she stirred a little and groaned, and then says she, Ain t the doc tor comin ? And I peaced her up well s I could. Be I very bad off, Harri t? says she. " We 11 hope for the best, Jane, says I ; and that minute the notion come to me how I d work her round, an I like to laughed right out, but I did n t. " If I should lose me again, you must see to sendin for my son, says she ; his father s got no head. " I will, says I, real solemn. An you can trust me with anything you feel to say, sister Barnet. " She kind of opened her eye that was next to me and surveyed my countenance sharp, but I looked serious, and she groaned real honest. Be I like old Mis Topliff ? she whispered, and I kind o nodded an put my hand up to my eyes. She was like her, too ; some like her, but not nigh so bad, for Mis Topliff was hurt so fallin down the sullar-stairs that she never got over it an died the day after. 160 LAW LANE. " Oh, my sakes ! she bu st out whinin , I can t be took away now. I ain t a-goin to die right off, be I, Mis Powder ? " 4 1 ain t the one to give ye hope. In the midst of life we are in death. We ain t sure of the next minute, none of us, says I, meanin it general, but discoursin away like an old book o sermons. " I do feel kind o failin , now, says she. 4 Oh, can t you do nothin ? and I come over an set on the foot o the bed an looked right at her. I knew she was a dreadful notional woman, and always made a fuss when anything was the matter with her ; could n t bear no kind o pain. " Sister Barnet, says I, don t you bear nothin on your mind you d like to see righted before you go ? I know you ain t been at peace with Crosby s folks, and t ain t none o my business, but I should n t want to be called away with hard feelin s in my heart. You must overlook my speaking right out, but I should want to be so used myself. " Poor old creatur ! She had an awful fight of it, but she beat her temper for once an give in. I do forgive all them Cros bys, says she, an rolled up her eyes. I LAW LANE. 161 says to myself that wa n t all I wanted, but I let her alone a spell, and set there watchin as if I expected her to breathe her last any minute. " She asked for Bar net, and I said he was anxious and out watchin for the doctor, now the snow d stopped. I wish I could see Ezra, says she. 4 1 m all done with the lane now, and I d keep the peace if I was goin to live. Her voice got weak, and I did n t know but she was worse off than I s posed. I was scared for a minute, and then I took a grain o hope. I d watched by too many dyin -beds not to know the dif ference. " Don t ye let Barnet git old Nevins to make my coffin, will ye, Mis Powder ? says she once. " He s called a good workman, ain t he ? says I, sooth in as I could. When it come to her givin funeral orders, twas more n I could do to hold in. " 4 1 ain t goin snappin through torment in a hemlock coffin, to please that old cheat ! says she, same s if she was well, an ris right up in bed ; and then her bruises pained her an she dropped back on the pil low. 162 LAW LANE. 44 Oh, I m a-goin now ! says she. 4 1 ve been an awful hard woman. T was I put Barnet up to the worst on t. I m willin Ezra should marry Ruthy Crosby ; she s a nice, pooty gal, and I never owned it till now I m on my dyin -bed Oh, I m a-goin , I m a-goin ! Ezra can marry her, and the two farms together 11 make the best farm in town. Barnet ain t got no fight left ; he s like an old sheep since we drove off Ezra. And then she d screech ; you never saw no such a fit of narves. And the end was I had to send to Crosby s, in all the snow, for them to come over. 44 An Barnet was got in to hold her hand and hear last words enough to make a Fourth o July speech ; and I was sent out to the door to hurry up the Crosbys, and who should come right out o the dark but Ezra. I declare, when I see him you could a-knocked me down with a feather. But I got him by the sleeve 4 You hide away a spell, says I, 4 till I set the little lamp in this winder ; an don t you make the best o your ma s condition ; pear just as consarned about her as you can. I 11 let ye know why, soon s we can talk and I shoved him right out an shut the door. LAW LANE. 163 " The groans was goin on, and in come Crosby and Ruth, lookin scared about to death themselves. Neither on em had ever been in that house before, as I know of. She called em into the bedroom and said she d had hard feelin s towards them and wanted to make peace before she died, and both on em shook hands with her. " 4 Don t you want to tell Ruth what you said to me about her and Ezry? says I, whisperin over the bed. Live or dead, you know t is right and best. " 4 There ain t no half way bout me, she says, and so there wa n t. Ruth, says she, out loud, I want you to tell pore Ezra that I gave ye both my blessin , and I made two steps acrost that kitchen and set the lamp in the window, and in comes Ezra pore boy, he didn t know what was brewin , and thought his mother was dyin certain when he saw the Crosbys goin in. " He went an stood beside the bed, an his father clutched right holt of him. Thinks I to myself, if you make as edifyin an end when your time really does come, you may well be thankful, Jane Barnet ! " They was all a-weepin , an I was weepin myself, if you 11 believe it, I d got 164 LA W LANE. a-goin so. You ought to seen her take holt o Kuth s hand an Ezra s an put em to gether. TJien I d got all I wanted, I tell you. An after she d screeched two or three times more she begun to git tired ; the poor old creatur was shook up dreadful, and I felt for her consid able, though you may not think it ; so I beckoned em out into the kitchen an went in an set with her alone. She dropped off into a good easy sleep, an I told the folks her symptoms was more encouragin . " I tell you, if ever I took handsome care o any sick person t was Jane Barnet, before she got about again ; an Ruth she used to come over an help real willin . She got holt of her ma -in-law s bunnit one after noon an trimmed it up real tasty, and that pleased Mis Barnet about to death. My conscience pricked me some, but not a great sight. I m willin to take what blame come to me by rights. " The doctor come postin along, late that night, and said she was doin well, owin to the care she d had, and give me a wink. And she s alive yet," Mrs. Powder always assured her friends, triumphantly " and, what s more, is middlin peaceable disposed. LAW LANE. 165 She s said one or two p inted things to me, though, an I should n t wonder, come to think it over, if she mistrusted me just the least grain. But, dear sakes ! they never was so comfortable in their lives ; an Ezra he got a first-rate bargain for a lot o Cros by s woodland that the railroad wanted, and peace is kind o set in amon st em up in Law Lane." V. When Ezra Barnet waked on Christmas morning, in his familiar, dark little cham ber under the lean-to roof, he could hardly believe that he was at home again, and that such strange things had happened. There were cheerful voices in the kitchen below, and he dressed hurriedly and went down stairs. There was Mrs. Powder, cooking the breakfast with lavish generosity, and beam ing with good-nature. Barnet, the father, was smiling and looking on with pleased an ticipation ; the sick woman was comfortably bolstered up in the bedroom. In all his life the son had never felt so drawn to his mother ; there was a new look in her eyes as 166 LAW LANE. he went toward her ; she had lost her high color, and looked at him pleadingly, as she never had done before. " Ezry, come close here!" said she. "I believe I m goin to git about ag in, after all. Mis Powder says I be ; but them feelin s I had slippin down the mow, yesterday, was twice as bad as the thump I struck with. I may never be the same to work, but I ain t goin to fight with folks no more, sence the Lord 11 let me live a spell longer. I ain t a-goin to fight with nobody, no matter how bad I want to. Now, you go an git you a good breakfast. I ain t eat a mouthful since breakfast yester day, and you can bring me a help o any thing Sister Powder favors my havin ." " I hope t will last," muttered Sister Powder to herself, as she heaped the blue plate. " Wish you all a Merry Christmas ! " she said. " I like to forgot my manners." It was Christmas Day, whether anybody in Law Lane remembered it or not. The sun shone bright on the sparkling snow, the eaves were dropping, and the snow-birds and blue-jays came about the door. The wars of Law Lane were ended. MISS PECK S PROMOTION. Miss PECK had spent a lonely day in her old farm-house, high on a long Vermont hillside that sloped toward the west. She was able for an hour at noon to overlook the fog in the valley below, and pitied the peo ple in the village whose location she could distinguish only by means of the church steeple which pricked through the gray mist, like a buoy set over a dangerous reef. During this brief time, when the sun was apparently shining for her benefit alone, she reflected proudly upon the advantage of liv ing on high land, but in the early afternoon, when the fog began to rise slowly, and at last shut her in, as well as the rest of the world, she was conscious of uncommon de pression of spirits. " I might as well face it now as any time," she said aloud, as she lighted her clean kerosene lamp and put it on the table. " Eliza Peck ! just set down and make it 168 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. blazing clear how things stand with yon, and what you re going to do in regard to em ! T ain t no use matching your feelin s to the weather, without you ve got reason for it." And she twitched the short curtains across the windows so that their brass rings squeaked on the wires, opened the door for the impatient cat that was mewing outside, and then seated herself in the old rocking- chair at the table end. It is quite a mistake to believe that peo ple who live by themselves find every day a lonely one. Miss Peck and many other soli tary persons could assure us that it is very seldom that they feel their lack of compan ionship. As the habit of living alone grows more fixed, it becomes confusing to have other people about, and seems more or less bewildering to be interfered with by other people s plans and suggestions. Only once in a while does the feeling of solitariness be come burdensome, or a creeping dread and sense of defenselessness assail one s comfort. But when Miss Peck was aware of the ap proach of such a mood she feared it, and was prepared to fight it with her best weapon of common-sense. She was much given to talking aloud, as MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 169 many solitary persons are ; not merely talk ing to herself in the usual half-conscious way, but making her weaker self listen to severe comment and pointed instruction. Miss Peck the less was frequently brought to trial in this way by Miss Peck the greater, and when it was once announced that justice must be done, no amount of quailing or ex cuse averted the process of definite convic tion. This evening she turned the light up to its full brightness, reached for her kiiitting- work, lifted it high above her lap for a mo ment, as her favorite cat jumped up to its evening quarters ; then she began to rock to and fro with regularity and decision. " T is all nonsense," she said, as if she were addressing some one greatly her inferior " t is all nonsense for you to go on this way, Elizy Peck ! you re better off than you ve been this six year, if you only had sense to feel so." There was no audible reply, and the speaker evidently mistook the silence for un convinced stubbornness. " If ever there was a woman who was de termined to live by other folks wits, and to eat other folks dinners, t was and is your 170 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. lamented brother s widder, Harri t Peck Harri t White that was. She s claimed the town s compassion till it s good as run dry, and she s thought that you, Elizy Peck, a hard-workin and self-supportin woman, was made for nothin but her use and comfort. Ever since your father died and you ve been left alone you ve had her for a clog to your upward way. Six years you ve been at her beck an call, and now that a respectable man, able an willing to do for her, has been an fell in love with her, and shouldered her and all her whims, and promised to do for the children as if they was his own, you ve been grumpin all day, an / d like to know what there is to grump about ! " There was a lack of response even to this appeal to reason, and the knitting-needles clicked in dangerous nearness to the old cat s ears, so that they twitched now and then, and one soft paw unexpectedly re vealed its white curving claws. " Yes," said Miss Peck, presently, in a more lenient tone, " I s pose t is the chil dren you re thinking of most. I declare I should like to see that Tom s little red head, and feel it warm with my two hands this minute ! There s always somethin hopeful MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 171 in havin to do with children, less they come of too bad a stock. Grown folks well, you can make out to grin an bear em if you must ; but like s not young ones 11 turn out to be somebody, and what you do for em may count towards it. There s that Tom, he looks just as his father used to, and there ain t a day he won t say somethin real pleasant, and never sees the difference be twixt you an somebody handsome. I ex pect they 11 spile him you don t know what kind o young ones they 11 let him play with, nor how they 11 let him murder the king s English, and never think o boxin his ears. Them big factory towns is all for eatin and clothes. I m glad you was raised in a good old academy town, if twas the Lord s will to plant you in the far outskirts. Land, how Harri t did smirk at that man ! I will say she looked pretty t is hard work and worry makes folks plain like me I believe she s fared better to be left a wid- der with three child n, and everybody saying how hard it was, an takin holt, than she would if brother had lived and she d had to stir herself to keep house and do for him. You ve been the real widder that Tom left you Ve mourned him, and had your way 172 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. to go alone not she! The colonel s lady," repeated Miss Peck, scornfully " that s what sp ilt her. She never could come down to common things, Mis Colonel Peck! Well, she may have noble means now, but she s got to be spoke of as Mis Noah Pig- ley all the rest of her days. Not that I in goin to fling at any man s accident of name," said the just Eliza, in an apologetic tone. " I did want to adopt little Tom, but t was to be expected he d object a boy s goin to be useful in his business, and poor Tommy s the likeliest. I would have dopted him out an out, and he shall have the old farm anyway. But oh dear me, he s all spoilt for farming now, is little Tom, un less I can make sure of him now and then for a good long visit in summer time. "Summer an winter; I s pose you re likely to live a great many years, Elizy," sighed the good woman. " All sole alone, too ! There, I ve landed right at the start- in point," and the kitchen was very still while some dropped stitches in a belated stocking for the favorite nephew were ob scured by a mist of tears like the fog out side. There was no more talking aloud, for Miss Peck fell into a revery about old days MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 173 and the only brother who had left his little household in her care and marched to the war whence for him there was to be no re turn. She had remembered very often, with a great sense of comfort, a message in one of his very last letters. "Tell Eliza that she s more likely to be promoted than I am," he said (when he had just got his step of Major) ; " she s my superior officer, how ever high I get, and now I ve heard what luck she s had with the haying, I appoint her Brigadier-General for gallantry in the field." How poor Tom s jokes had kept their courage up even when they were most anx ious ! Yes, she had made many sacrifices of personal gain, as every good soldier must. She had meant to be a school-teacher. She had the gift for it, and had studied hard in her girlhood. One thing after another had kept her at home, and now she must stay here her ambitions were at an end. She would do what good she could among her neighbors, and stand in her lot and place. It was the first time she had found to think soberly about her life, for her sister-in-law and the children had gone to their new home within a few days, and since then she had stifled all power of proper reflection by hard 174 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. work at setting the house in order and get ting in her winter supplies. " Thank Heaven the house and place belong to me," she said in a decisive tone. " T was wise o father to leave it so and let her have the money. She d left me no peace till I moved off if I d only been half - owner ; she s always meant to get to a larger place but what I want is real promotion." The Peck farm-house was not only on a by-road that wandered among the slopes of the hills, but it was at the end of a long lane of its own. There was rarely any sound at night except from the winds of heaven or the soughing of the neighboring pine-trees. By day, there was a beautiful inspiriting outlook over the wide country from the farm-house windows, but on such a night as this the darkness made an impenetrable wall. Miss Peck was not afraid of it ; on the contrary, she had a sense of security in being shut safe into the very heart of the night. By day she might be vexed by intruders, by night they could scarcely find her her bright light could not be seen from the road. If she were to wither away in the old gray house like an implanted kernel in its shell, she would at least wither undisturbed. Her MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 175 sorrow of loneliness was not the fear of mo lestation. She was fearless enough at the thought of physical dangers. The evening did not seem so long as she expected a glance at her reliable time keeper told her at last that it was already past eight o clock, and her eyes began to feel heavy. The fire was low, the fog was making its presence felt even in the house, for the autumn night was chilly, and Miss Peck decided that when she came to the end of the stitches on a certain needle she would go to bed. To-morrow, she meant to cut her apples for drying, a duty too long delayed. She had sent away some of her best fruit that day to make the annual barrel of cider with which she provided herself, more from habit than from real need of either the wholesome beverage or its resultant vinegar. " If this fog lasts, I ve got to dry my ap ples by the stove," she thought, doubtfully, and was conscious of a desire to survey the weather from the outer doorway before she slept. How she missed Harriet and the chil dren ! though they had been living with her only for a short time before the wedding, and since the half- house they had occupied in the village had Been let. The thought of bright- 176 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. eyed, red-headed little Tom still brought the warm tears very near to falling. He had cried bitterly when he went away. So had his mother at least, she held up her pocket- handkerchief. Miss Peck never had believed in Harriet s tears. Out of the silence of the great hillslope came the dull sound of a voice, and as Miss Peck sprang from her chair to the window, dropping the sleeping cat in a solid mass on the floor, she recognized the noise of a car riage. Her heart was beating provokingly ; she was tired by the excitement of the last few days. She did not remember this, but \vas conscious of being startled in an unusual way. It must be some strange crisis in her life ; she turned and looked about the famil iar kitchen as if it were going to be alto gether swept away. " Now, you need n t be afraid that Pigley s com in to bring her back, Elizy Peck ! " she assured herself with grim humor in that minute s apprehension of disaster. A man outside spoke sternly to his horse. Eliza stepped quickly to the door and opened it wide. She was not afraid of the messen ger, only of the message. " Hold the light so s I can see to tie this MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 177 colt," said a familiar voice ; u it s as dark as a pocket, Liza. I 11 be right in. You must put on a good warm shawl ; t is as bad as rain, this fog is. The minister wants you to come down to his house ; he s at his wits end, and there was nobody we could think of that s free an able except you. His wife s gone, died at quarter to six, and left a mis able baby ; but the doctor expects t will live. The nurse they bargained with s failed em, and t is an awful state o things as you ever see. Half the women in town are there, and the minister s overcome ; he s sort of fainted away two or three times, and they don t know who else to get, till the doc tor said your name, and he groaned right out you was the one. T ain t right to re fuse, as I view it. Mis Spence and Mis Corbell is going to watch with the dead, but there* needs a head." Eliza Peck felt for once as if she lacked that useful possession herself, and sat down, with amazing appearance of calmness, in one of her splint-bottomed chairs to collect her thoughts. The messenger was a good deal excited ; so was she ; but in a few moments she rose, cutting short his inconsequent de scription of affairs at the parsonage. 178 Mf8S PECK S PROMOTION. " You just put out the fire as best you can," she said. " We 11 talk as we go along. There s plenty o ashes there, I m sure ; I let the stove cool off considerable, for I was meanin to go to bed in another five minutes. The cat 11 do well enough. I 11 leave her plenty for to-morrow, and she s got a place where she can crep in an out of the wood-shed. I 11 just slip on an other dress and put the nails over the win dows, an we 11 be right off." She was quite herself again now ; and, true to her promise, it was not many minutes before the door was locked, the house left in darkness, and Ezra Weston and Miss Peck were driving O comfortably down the lane. The fog had all blown away, suddenly the stars were out, and the air was sweet with the smell of the wet bark of black birches and cherry and apple-trees that grew by the fences. The leaves had fallen fast through the day, weighted by the dampness until their feeble stems could keep them in place no longer ; for the bright colors of the foliage there had come at night sweet odors and a richness of fragrance in the soft air. " T is an unwholesome streak o weather, ain t it ? " asked Ezra Weston. " Feels like MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 179 a dog-day evenin now, don t it ? Come this time o year we want bracin up." Miss Peck did not respond ; her sympa thetic heart was dwelling on the thought that she was going, not only to a house of mourning, but to a bereft parsonage. She would not have felt so unequal to soothing the sorrows of her every-day acquaintances, but she could hardly face the duty of consol ing the new minister. But she never once wished that she had not consented so easily to respond to his piteous summons. There was a strangely festive look in the village, for the exciting news of Mrs. El- bury s death had flown from house to house lights were bright everywhere, and in the parsonage brightest of all. It looked as if the hostess were receiving her friends, and helping them to make merry, instead of be ing white and still, and done with this world, while the busy women of the parish were pulling open her closets and bureau drawers in search of household possessions. Nobody stopped to sentimentalize over the poor soul s delicate orderliness, or the simple, loving preparations she had made for the coming of the baby which fretfully wailed in the next room. 180 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. " Here s a nice black silk that never was touched with the scissors ! " said one good dame, as if a kind Providence ought to have arranged for the use of such a treasure in setting the bounds of the dead woman s life. " Does seem too bad, don t it ? I always heard her folks was well off," replied some body in a loud whisper; "she had every thing to live for." There was great eager ness to be of service to the stricken pastor, and the kind neighbors did their best to prove the extent of their sympathy. One after another went to the room where he was, armed with various excuses, and the story of his sad looks and distress was re peated again and again to a grieved au dience. When Miss Peck came in she had to lis ten to a full description of the day s events, and was decorously slow in assuming her authority ; but at last the house was nearly empty again, and only the watchers and one patient little mother of many children, who held this motherless child in loving arms, were left with Miss Peck in the parsonage. It seemed a year since she had sat in her quiet kitchen, a solitary woman whose occu- MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 181 pations seemed too few and too trivial for her eager capacities and ambitions. The autumn days went by, winter set in early, and Miss Peck was still mistress of the parsonage housekeeping. Her own cider was brought to the parsonage, and so were the potatoes and the apples ; even the cat was transferred to a dull village existence, far removed in every way from her happy hunting-grounds among the snow-birds and plump squirrels. The minister s pale little baby loved Miss Peck and submitted to her rule already. She clung fast to the good woman with her little arms, and Miss Peck, who had always imagined that she did not care for infants, found herself watching the growth of this spark of human intelligence and affection with intense interest. After all, it was good to be spared the long winter at the farm ; it had never occurred to her to dread it, but she saw now that it was a sea son to be dreaded, and one by one forgot the duties which at first beckoned her home ward and seemed so unavoidable. The farm-house seemed cold and empty when she paid it an occasional visit. She would not have believed that she could content her- 182 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. self so well away from the dear old home. If she could have had her favorite little Tom within reach, life would have been per fectly happy. The minister proved at first very disap pointing to her imaginary estimate and knowledge of him. If it had not been for her sturdy loyalty to him as pastor and em ployer, she could sometimes have joined more or less heartily in the expressions of the disaffected faction which forms a diffi cult element in every parish. Her sense of humor was deeply gratified when the leader of the opposition remarked that the minis ter was beginning to take notice a little, and was wearing his best hat every day, like every other widower since the world was made. Miss Peck s shrewd mind had al ready made sure that Mr. Elbury s loss was not so great as she had at first sympatheti cally believed ; she knew that his romantic, ease-loving, self-absorbed, and self-admiring nature had been curbed and held in check by the literal, prosaic, faithful-in-little-things disposition of his dead wife. She was self- denying, he was self-indulgent ; she was duti ful, while he was given to indolence and the unfounded plea of ill-health made his MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 183 only excuse. Miss Peck soon fell into the way of putting her shoulder to the wheel, and unobtrusively, even secretly, led the af fairs of the parish. She never was deaf to the explanation of the wearing effect of brain-work, but accepted the weakness as well as the power of the ministerial charac ter ; and nobody listened more respectfully to his somewhat flowery and inconsequent discourses on Sunday than Miss Peck. The first Sunday they went to church together Eliza slipped into her own pew, half-way up the side aisle, and thought well of herself for her prompt decision afterward, though she regretted the act for a moment as she saw the minister stop to let her into the empty pew of the parsonage. He had been sure she was just behind him, and gained much sympathy from the congregation as he sighed and went his lonely way up the pul pit-stairs. Even Mrs. Corbell, who had been averse to settling the Rev. Mr. Elbury, was moved by this incident, but directly af terward whispered to her next neighbor that " Lizy Peck would be sitting there before the year was out if she had the business- head they had all given her credit for." It gives rise to melancholy reflections 184 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. when one sees how quickly those who have suffered most cruel and disturbing bereave ments learn to go their way alone. The great plan of our lives is never really broken nor suffers accidents. However stunning the shock, one can almost always understand gratefully that it was best for the vanished friend to vanish just when he did ; that this world held no more duties or satisfactions for him ; that his earthly life was in fact done and ended. Our relations with him must be lifted to a new plane. Miss Peck thought often of the minister s loss, and always with tender sympathy, yet she could not help see ing that he was far from being unresigned or miserable in his grief. She was ready to overlook the fact that he depended upon his calling rather than upon his own character and efforts. The only way in which she made herself uncongenial to the minister was by persistent suggestions that he should take more exercise and " stir about out-doors a little." Once, when she had gone so far as to briskly inform him that he was getting logy, Mr. Elbury showed entire displeasure ; and a little later, in the privacy of the kitchen, she voiced the opinion that Elizy Peck knew very well that she never did think ministers MISS PACK S PROMOTION. 185 were angels only human beings, like her self, in great danger of being made fools of. But the two good friends made up their little quarrel at supper-time. "I have been looking up the derivation of that severe word you applied to me this noon," said the Reverend Mr. Elbury, pleas antly. " It is a localism ; but it comes from the Dutch word log, which means heavy or unwieldy." These words were pronounced plaintively, with evident consciousness that they hardly applied to his somewhat lank figure ; and Miss Peck felt confused and rebuked, and went on pouring tea until both cup and sau cer were full, and she scalded the end of her thumb. She was very weak in the hands of such a scholar as this, but later she had a reassuring sense of not having applied the epithet unjustly. With a feminine rev erence for his profession, and for his attain ments, she had a keen sense of his human fallibility ; and neither his grief, nor his ecclesiastical halo, nor his considerate idea of his own value, could blind her sharp eyes to certain shortcomings. She forgave them readily, but she knew them all by sight and name. 186 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. If there were any gift of Mr. Elbury s which could be sincerely called perfectly delightful by many people, it was his voice. When he was in a hurry, and gave hasty di rections to his housekeeper about some mis laid possession, or called her down-stairs to stop the baby s vexatious crying, the tones were entirely different from those best known to the parish. Nature had gifted him with a power of carrying his voice into the depths of his sympathetic being and re covering it again gallantly. He had been considered the superior, in some respects, of that teacher of elocution who led the stu dents of the theological seminary toward the glorious paths of oratory. There was a mellow middle-tone, most suggestive of ten der feeling ; but though it sounded sweet to other feminine ears, Miss Peck was always annoyed by it and impatient of a certain ar tificial quality in its cadences. To hear Mr. Elbury talk to his child in this tone, and ad dress her as " my motherless babe," however affecting to other ears, was always unpleas ant to Miss Peck. But she thought very well of his preaching ; and the more he let all the decisions and responsibilities of every-day life fall to her share, the more she MISS PCK S PROMOTION. 187 enjoyed life and told her friends that Mr. Elbury was a most amiable man to live with. And when spring was come the hillside farm was let on shares to one of Miss Peck s neighbors whom she could entirely trust. It was not the best of bargains for its owner, who had the reputation of being an excellent farmer, and the agreement cost her many sighs and not a little wakefulness. She felt too much shut in by this village life ; but the minister pleaded his hapless lot, the lit tle child was even more appealing in her babyhood, and so the long visit from little Tom and his sisters, the familiar garden, the three beehives, and the glory of the sun sets in the great, unbroken, western sky were all given up together for that year. It was not so hard as it might have been. There was one most rewarding condition of life the feast of books, which was new and bewilderingly delightful to the minister s housekeeper. She had made the most of the few well-chosen volumes of the farm house, but she never had known the joy of having more books than she could read, or their exquisite power of temptation, the de light of their friendly company. She was oftenest the student, the brain-wearied mem- 188 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. ber, of the parsonage-family, but she never made it an excuse, or really recognized the new stimulus either. Life had never seemed so full to her ; she was working with both hands earnestly, and no half-heartedness. She was filled with reverence in the pres ence of the minister s books ; to her his call ing, his character, and his influence were all made positive and respectable by this foun dation of learning on his library-shelves. He was to her a man of letters, a critic, and a philosopher, besides being an experienced theologian from the very nature of his pro fession. Indeed, he had an honest liking for books, and was fond of reading aloud or being read to ; and many an evening went joyfully by in the presence of the great English writers, whose best thoughts were rolled out in Mr. Elbury s best tones, and Miss Peck listened with delight, and cast many an affectionate glance at the sleeping child in the cradle at her feet, filled with gratitude as she was for all her privileges. Mr. Elbury was most generous in his appreciation of Miss Peck s devotion, and never hesitated to give expression to sincere praise of her uncommon power of mind. He was led into paths of literature, other- MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 189 wise untrod, by her delight ; and sometimes, to rest his brain and make him ready for a good night s sleep, he asked his companion to read him a clever story. It was all a new world to the good woman whose schooling and reading had been sound, but restricted ; and if ever a mind waked up with joy to its possession of the world of books, it was hers. She became ambitious for the increase of her own little library ; and it was in reply to her outspoken plan for larger crops and more money from the farm another year, for the sake of bookbuying, that Mr. Elbury once said, earnestly, that his books were hers now. This careless expression was the spark which lit a new light for Miss Peck s imagination. For the first time a thrill of personal interest in the man made itself felt, through her devoted capacity for service and appreciation. He had ceased to be simply himself ; he stood now for a widened life, a suggestion of added good and growth, a larger circle of human interests ; in fact, his existence had made all the difference be tween her limited rural home and that con nection with the great world which even the most contracted parsonage is sure to hold. And that very night, while Mr. Elbury had 190 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. gone, somewhat ruefully and ill - prepared, to his Bible class, Miss Peck s conscience set her womanly weakness before it for a famous arraigning. It was so far successful that words failed the defendant completely, and the session was dissolved in tears. For some days Miss Peck was not only stern with herself, but even with the minister, and was entirely devoted to her domestic affairs. The very next Sunday it happened that Mr. Elbury exchanged pulpits with a brother- clergyman in the next large town, a thriving manufacturing centre, and he came home afterward in the best of spirits. He never had seemed so appreciative of his comfort able home, or Miss Peck s motherly desire to shield his weak nature from these prac tical cares of life to which he was entirely in adequate. He was unusually gay and amus ing, and described, not with the best taste, the efforts of two of his unmarried lady- parishioners to make themselves agreeable. He had met them on the short journey, and did not hesitate to speak of himself lightly as a widower ; in fact, he recognized his own popularity and attractions in a way that was not pleasing to Miss Peck, yet she was used to his way of speaking and unaffectedly MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 191 glad to have him at home again. She had been much disturbed and grieved by her own thoughts in his absence. She could not be sure whether she was wise in drifting to ward a nearer relation to the minister. She was not exactly shocked at finding herself interested in him, but, with her usual sense of propriety and justice, she insisted upon taking everybody s view of the question be fore the weaker Miss Peck was accorded a hearing. She was enraged with herself for feeling abashed and liking to avoid the direct scrutiny of her fellow -parishioners. Mrs. Corbell and she had always been the best of friends, but for the first time Miss Peck was annoyed by such freedom of com ment and opinion. And Sister Corbell had never been so forward about spending the afternoon at the parsonage, or running in for half-hours of gossip in the morning, as in these latter days. At last she began to ask the coy Eliza about her plans for the wedding, in a half -joking, half -serious tone which was hard to bear. " You re a sight too good for him," was the usual conclusion, " and so I tell every body. The whole parish has got it settled for you ; and there s as many as six think 192 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. hard of you, because you ve given em no chance, bein right here on the spot." It seemed as if a resistless torrent of fate were sweeping our independent friend to ward the brink of a great change. She in sisted to the quailing side of her nature that she did not care for the minister himself, that she was likely to age much sooner than he, with his round, boyish face and plump cheeks. " They 11 be takin you for his mother, Lizy, when you go amongst stran gers, little and dried up as you re gettin to be a ready; you re three years older any way, and look as if t was nine." Yet the capable, clear-headed woman was greatly enticed by the high position and require ments of mistress of the parsonage. She liked the new excitement and authority, and grew more and more happy in the exercise of powers which a solitary life at the farm would hardly arouse or engage. There was a vigorous growth of independence and de termination in Miss Peck s character, and she had not lived alone so many years for nothing. But there was no outward sign yet of capitulation. She was firmly con vinced that the minister could not get on without her, and that she would rather not MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 193 get on without him and the pleasure of her new activities. If possible, she grew a little more self-contained and reserved in manner and speech, while carefully anticipating his wants and putting better and better dinners on the parochial table. As for Mr. Elbury himself, he became more cheerful every day, and was almost de monstrative in his affectionate gratitude. He spoke always as if they were one in their desire to interest and benefit the parish ; he had fallen into a pleasant, home-like habit of saying " we " whenever household or par ish affairs were under discussion. Once, when somebody had been remarking the too- evident efforts of one of her sister-parish ioners to gain Mr. Elbury s affection, he had laughed leniently ; but when this gos siping caller had gone away the minister said, gently, " We know better, don t we, Miss Peck ? " and Eliza could not help feel ing that his tone meant a great deal. Yet she took no special notice of him, and grew much more taciturn than was natural. Her heart beat warmly under her prim alpacca- dress ; she already looked younger and a great deal happier than when she first came to live at the parsonage. Her executive 194 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. ability was made glad by the many duties that fell upon her, and those who knew her and Mr. Elbury best thought nothing could be wiser than their impending- marriage. Did not the little child need Miss Peek s motherly care ? did not the helpless minister need the assistance of a clear-sighted busi ness-woman and good housekeeper ? did not Eliza herself need and deserve a husband ? But even with increasing certainty she still gave no outward sign of their secret under standing. It was likely that Mr. Elbury thought best to wait a year after his wife s death, and when he spoke right out was the time to show what her answer would be. But somehow the thought of the dear old threadbare farm in the autumn weather was always a sorrowful thought ; and on the days when Mr. Elbury hired a horse and wagon, and invited her and the baby to accompany him on a series of parochial vis itations, she could not bear to look at the home-fields and the pasture-slopes. She was thankful that the house itself was not in sight from the main road. The crops that summer had been unusually good ; some thing called her thoughts back continually to the old home, and accused her of dis- MIS8 PECK S PROMOTION . 195 loyalty. Yet she consoled herself by think ing it was very natural to have such regrets, and to consider the importance of such a step at her sensible time of life. So it drew near winter again, and she grew more and more unrelenting and scornful whenever her acquaintances suggested the idea that her wedding ought to be drawing near. Mr. Elbury seemed to have taken a new lease of youthful hope and ardor. He was busy in the parish and very popular, partic ularly among his women-parishioners. Miss Peck urged him on with his good works, and it seemed as if they expressed their interest in each other by their friendliness to the parish in general. Mr. Elbury had joined a ministers club in the large town already spoken of, and spent a day there now and then, besides his regular Monday-night at tendance on the club-meeting. He was pre paring a series of sermons on the history of the Jews, and was glad to avail himself of a good free-library, the lack of which he fre quently lamented in his own village. Once he said, eagerly, that he had no idea of end ing his days here, and this gave Miss Peck a sharp pang. She could not bear to think of leaving her old home, and the tears filled 196 MJSS PECK S PROMOTION. her eyes. When she had reached the shelter of the kitchen, she retorted to the too-easily ruffled element of her character that there was no need of crossing that bridge till she came to it ; and, after an appealing glance at the academy-steeple above the maple-trees, she returned to the study to finish dusting. She saw, without apprehension, that the minister quickly pushed something under the leaves of his blotting-paper and frowned a little. It was not his usual time for writ ing she had a new proof of her admiring certainty that Mr. Elbury wrote for the papers at times under an assumed name. One Monday evening he had not returned from the ministers meeting until later than usual, and she began to be slightly anxious. The baby had not been very well all day, and she particularly wished to have an errand done before night, but did not dare to leave the child alone, while, for a wonder, nobody had been in. Mr. Elbury had shown a great deal of feeling before he went away in the morning, and as she was admiringly looking at his well-fitting clothes and neat clerical attire, a thrill of pride and affection had made her eyes shine unwontedly. She was really beginning to like him very much. MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 197 For the first and last time in his life the minister stepped quickly forward and kissed her on the forehead. "My good, kind friend ! " he exclaimed, in that deep tone which the whole parish loved ; then he hur ried away. Miss Peck felt a strange dis may, and stood by the breakfast-table like a statue. She even touched her forehead with trembling fingers. Somehow she inwardly rebelled, but kissing meant more to her than to some people. She never had been used to it, except with little Tom though the last brotherly kiss his father gave her before he went to the war had been one of the treasures of her memory. All that day she was often reminded of the responsible and darker side, the inspected and criticised side, of the high position of minister s wife. It was clearly time for proper rebuke when evening came ; and as she sat by the light, mending Mr. Elbury s stockings, she said over and over again that she had walked into this with her eyes wide open, and if the experience of forty years had n t put any sense into her it was too late to help it now. Suddenly she heard the noise of wheels in the side yard. Could anything have hap pened to Mr. Elbury ? were they bringing 198 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. him home hurt, or dead even ? He never drove up from the station unless it were bad weather. She rushed to the door with a flaring light, and was bewildered at the sight of trunks and, most of all, at the approach of Mr. Elbury, for he wore a most sentimental expression, and led a young person by the hand. "Dear friend," he said, in that mellow tone of his, " I hope you, too, will love my little wife." Almost any other woman would have dropped the kerosene lamp on the doorstep, but not Miss Eliza Peck. Luckily a gust of autumn wind blew it out, and the bride had to fumble her way into her new home. Miss Peck quickly procured one of her own crinkly lamplighters, and bent toward the open fire to kindle a new light. " You ve taken me by surprise," she man aged to say, in her usual tone of voice, though she felt herself shaking with excite ment. At that moment the ailing step-daughter gave a forlorn little wail from the wide sofa, where she had been put to sleep with difficulty. Miss Peck s kind heart felt the pathos of the situation ; she lifted the little MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 199 child and stilled it, then she held out a kindly hand to the minister s new wife, while Mr. Elbury stood beaming by. " I wish you may be very happy here, as I have been," said the good woman, ear nestly. " But Mr. Elbury, you ought to have let me know. I could have kept a secret " and satisfaction filled Eliza Peck s heart that she never, to use her own expression, had made a fool of herself before the First Parish. She had kept her own secret, and in this earthquake of a moment was clearly conscious that she was hero enough to be have as if there had never been any secret to keep. And indignation with the Rever end Mr. Elbury, who had so imprudently kept his own counsel, threw down the sham temple of Cupid which a faithless god called Propinquity had succeeded in rearing. Miss Peck made a feast, and for the last time played the part of hostess at the min ister s table. She had remorselessly in spected the conspicuous bad taste of the new Mrs. Elbury s dress, the waving, cheap- looking feather of her hat, the make-believe richness of her clothes, and saw, with dire compassion, how unused she was to young children. The brave Eliza tried to make 200 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. the best of things but one moment she found herself thinking how uncomfortable Mr. Elbury s home would be henceforth with this poor reed to lean upon, a townish, empty-faced, tiresoinely pretty girl ; the next moment she pitied the girl herself, who would have the hard task before her of being the wife of an indolent preacher in a coun try town. Miss Peck had generously al lowed her farm to supplement the limited salary of the First Parish ; in fact, she had been a silent partner in the parsonage establishment rather than a dependent. Would the First Parish laugh at her now? It was a stinging thought; but she honestly believed that the minister himself would be most commiserated when the parish opinion had found time to simmer down. The next day our heroine, whose face was singularly free from disappointment, told the minister that she would like to leave at once, for she was belated about many things, not having had notice in season of his change of plan. " I Ve been telling your wife all about the house and parish interests the best I can, and it s likely she wants to take everything into her own hands right away," added the MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 201 uncommon housekeeper, with a spice of malice ; but Mr. Elbury flushed, and looked down at the short, capable Eliza appealingly. He knew her virtues so well that this an nouncement gave him a crushing blow. "Why, I thought of course you would continue here as usual," he said, in a strange, harsh voice that would have been perfectly surprising in the pulpit. " Mrs. Elbury has never known any care. We count upon your remaining." Whereupon Miss Peck looked him dis dainfully in the face, and, for a moment, mistook him for that self o often reproved and now sunk into depths of ignominy. " If you thought that, you ought to have known better," she said. " You can t ex pect a woman who has property and relations of her own to give up her interests for yours altogether. I got a letter this morning from my brother s boy, little Tom, and he s got leave from his mother and her husband to come and stop with me a good while he says all winter. He s been sick, and they ve had to take him out o school. I never supposed that such stived-up air would agree with him," concluded Miss Peck, tri umphantly. She was full of joy and hope 202 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. at this new turn of affairs, and the minister was correspondingly hopeless. " I 11 take the baby home for a while, if t would be a convenience for you," she added, more leniently. " That is, after I get my house well warmed, and there s something in it to eat. I wish you could have spoken to me a fortnight ago ; but I saw Joe Farley to-day that boy that lived with me quite a while he s glad to come back. He only engaged to stop till after cider time where he s been this summer, and he s promised to look about for a good cow for me. I always thought well of Joe." The minister turned away ruefully, and Miss Peck went about her work. She meant to leave the house in the best of order ; but the whole congregation came trooping in that day and the next, and she hardly had time to build a fire in her own kitchen before Joe Farley followed her from the station with the beloved little Tom. He looked tall and thin and pale, and largely freckled under his topknot of red hair. Bless his heart ! how his lonely aunt hugged him and kissed him, and how thankful he was to get back to her, though she never would have suspected it if she had not known MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 203 him so well. A shy boy-fashion of reserve and stolidity had replaced his early demon strations, but he promptly went to the shelf of books to find the familiar old " Robinson Crusoe." Miss Peck s heart leaped for joy as she remembered how much more she could teach the child about books. She felt a great wave of gratitude fill her cheerful soul as she remembered the pleasure and gain of those evenings when she and Mr. Elbury had read together. There was a great deal of eager discussion in the village ; and much amused scrutiny of Eliza s countenance, as she walked up the side aisle that first Sunday after the min ister was married. She led little Tom by the hand, but he opened the pew-door and ush ered her in handsomely, and she looked smil ingly at her neighbors and nodded her head sideways at the boy in a way that made them suspect that she was much more in love with him, freckles and all, than she had ever been with Mr. Elbury. A few minutes later she frowned at Tom sternly for greeting his old acquaintances over the pew-rail in a way that did not fit the day or place. There was no chance to laugh at her disappoint ment ; for nobody could help understanding 204 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. that her experience at the parsonage had been merely incidental in her life, and that she had returned willingly to her old asso ciations. The dream of being a minister s wife had been only a dream, and she was surprised to find herself waking from it with such resignation to her lot. "I d just like to know what sort of a breakfast they had," she said to herself, as the bride s topknot went waving and bob bing up to the parsonage pew. " If ever there was a man who was fussy about his cup o coffee, t is Reverend Wilbur Elbury ! There now, Elizy Peck, don t you wish t was you a-setting there up front and feel ing the eyes of the whole parish sticking in your back ? You could have had him, you know, if you d set right about it. I never did think you had proper ideas of what get- tin promoted is ; but if you ain t discovered a new world for yourself like C lumbus, I miss my guess. If you d stayed on the farm all alone last year you d had no thoughts but hens and rutabagys, and as t is you Ve been livin amon st books. There s nothin to regret if you did just miss makin a fool o yourself." At this moment Mr. Elbury s voice gently MISS PECK S PROMOTION. 205 sounded from the pulpit, and Miss Peck sprang to her feet with the agility of a jack- in-the-box she had forgotten her surround ings in the vividness of her revery. She hardly knew what the minister said in that first prayer ; for many reasons this was an exciting day. A little later our heroine accepted the in vitation of her second cousin, Mrs. Corbell, to spend the hour or two between morning and afternoon services. They had agreed that it seemed like old times, and took pleas ure in renewing this custom of the Sunday visit. Little Tom was commented upon as to health and growth and freckles and family resemblance ; and when he strayed out-of-doors, after such an early dinner as only a growing boy can make vanish with the enchanter s wand of his appetite, the two women indulged in a good talk. " I don t know how you viewed it, this morning," began Cousin Corbell ; " but, to my eyes, the minister looked as if he felt cheap as a broom. There, I never was one o his worshipers, you well know. To speak plain, Elizy, I was really concerned at one time for fear you would be over-persuaded. I never said one word to warp your judg- 206 MISS PECK S PROMOTION. ment, but I did feel as if t would be a shame. I " But Miss Peck was not ready yet to join the opposition, and she interrupted at once in an amiable but decided tone. " We 11 let by-gones be by-gones ; it s just as well, and a good deal better. Mr. Elbury always treated me the best he knew how ; and I knew he wa n t perfect, but t was full as much his misfortune as his fault. I declare I don t know what else there was he could ha done if he had n t taken to preaching ; and he has very kind feelings, specially if any one s in trouble. Talk of 4 leading about captive silly women, there are some cases where we ve got to turn round and say it right the other way t is the silly women that do the leadin themselves. And I tell you," concluded Miss Peck, with apparent irrelevancy, " I was glad last night to have a good honest look at a yellow sunset. If ever I do go and set my mind on a minister, I m going to hunt for one that s well settled in a hill parish. I used to feel as if I was shut right in, there at the parsonage ; it s a good house enough, if it only stood where you could see anything out of the windows. I can t carry out my plans o life in any such situation." MISS FECK S PROMOTION. 207 " I expect to hear that you ve blown right off the top o your hill some o these windy days," said Mrs. Corbell, without resent ment, though she was very dependent, her self, upon seeing the passing. The church bell began to ring, and our friends rose to put on their bonnets and an swer its summons. Miss Peck s practical mind revolved the possibility of there having been a decent noonday meal at the parson age. " Maria Corbell ! " she said, with dramatic intensity, " mark what I ? m goin to say it ain t I that s goin to reap the whirlwind ; it s your pastor, the Reverend Mr. Elbury, of the First Parish ! " MISS TEMPY S WATCHERS. THE time of year was April ; the place was a small farming town in New Hampshire, remote from any railroad. One by one the lights had been blown out in the scattered houses near Miss Tempy Dent s ; but as her neighbors took a last look out-of-doors, their eyes turned with instinctive curiosity toward the old house, where a lamp burned steadily. They gave a little sigh. " Poor Miss Tem py ! " said more than one bereft acquaint ance ; for the good woman lay dead in her north chamber, and the light was a watch er s light. The funeral was set for the next day, at one o clock. The watchers were two of the oldest friends, Mrs. Crowe and Sarah Ann Binson. They were sitting in the kitchen, because it seemed less awesome than the unused best room, and they beguiled the long hours by steady conversation. One would think that MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. 209 neither topics nor opinions would hold out, at that rate, all through the long spring night ; but there was a certain degree of ex citement just then, and the two women had risen to an unusual level of expressiveness and confidence. Each had already told the other more than one fact that she had deter mined to keep secret ; they were again and again tempted into statements that either would have found impossible by daylight. Mrs. Crowe was knitting a blue yarn stock ing for her husband ; the foot was already so long that it seemed as if she must have forgotten to narrow it at the proper time. Mrs. Crowe knew exactly what she was about, however ; she was of a much cooler disposition than Sister Binson, who made futile attempts at some sewing, only to drop her work into her lap whenever the talk was most engaging. Their faces were interesting, of the dry, shrewd, quick-witted New England type, with thin hair twisted neatly back out of the way. Mrs. Crowe could look vague and be nignant, and Miss Binson was, to quote her neighbors, a little too sharp-set ; but the world knew that she had need to be, with the load she must carry of supporting an ineffi- 210 MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. cient widowed sister and six unpromising and unwilling nieces and nephews. The eld est boy was at last placed with a good man to learn the mason s trade. Sarah Ann Bin- son, for all her sharp, anxious aspect, never defended herself, when her sister whined and fretted. She was told every week of her life that the poor children never would have had to lift a finger if their father had lived, and yet she had kept her steadfast way with the little farm, and patiently taught the young people many useful things, for which, as everybody said, they would live to thank her. However pleasureless her life appeared to outward view, it was brimful of pleasure to herself. Mrs. Crowe, on the contrary, was well to do, her husband being a rich farmer and an easy-going man. She was a stingy woman, but for all that she looked kindly ; and when she gave away anything, or lifted a finger to help anybody, it was thought a great piece of beneficence, and a compliment, indeed, which the recipient accepted with twice as much gratitude as double the gift that came from a poorer and more generous acquaint ance. Everybody liked to be on good terms with Mrs. Crowe. Socially she stood much MISS TEMPTS WATCHEKS. 211 higher than Sarah Ann Binson. They were both old schoolmates and friends of Tem perance Dent, who had asked them, one day, not long before she died, if they would not corne together and look after the house, and manage everything, when she was gone. She may have had some hope that they might become closer friends in this period of inti mate partnership, and that the richer woman might better understand the burdens of the poorer. They had not kept the house the night before ; they were too weary with the care of their old friend, whom they had not left until all was over. There was a brook which ran down the hillside very near the house, and the sound of it was much louder than usual. When there was silence in the kitchen, the busy stream had a strange insistence in its wild voice, as if it tried to make the watchers un derstand something that related to the past. " I declare, I can t begin to sorrow for Tempy yet. I am so glad to have her at rest," whispered Mrs. Crowe. " It is strange to set here without her, but I can t make it clear that she has gone. I feel as if she had got easy and dropped off to sleep, and I m more scared about waking her up than know ing any other feeling." 212 MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. "Yes," -said Sarah Ann, "it s just like that, ain t it ? But I tell you we are goin to miss her worse than we expect. She s helped me through with many a trial, has Temperance. I ain t the only one who says the same, neither." These words were spoken as if there were a third person listening; somebody beside Mrs. Crowe. The watchers could not rid their minds of the feeling that they were being watched themselves. The spring wind whistled in the window crack, now and then, and buffeted the little house in a gusty way that had a sort of companionable effect. Yet, on the whole, it was a very still night, and the watchers spoke in a half-whisper. " She was the freest-handed woman that ever I knew," said Mrs. Crowe, decidedly. " According to her means, she gave away more than anybody. I used to tell her t wa n t right. I used really to be afraid that she went without too much, for we have a duty to ourselves." Sister Binson looked up in a half-amused, unconscious way, and then recollected her self. Mrs. Crowe met her look with a serious face. " It ain t so easy for me to give as it MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. 213 is for some," she said simply, but with an ef fort which was made possible only by the oc casion. " I should like to say, while Ternpy is laying here yet in her own house, that she has been a constant lesson to me. Folks are too kind, and shame me with thanks for what I do. I ain t such a generous woman as poor Tempy was, for all she had nothin to do with, as one may say." Sarah Binson was much moved at this confession, and was even pained and touched by the unexpected humility. " You have a good many calls on you " she began, and then left her kind little compliment half fin ished. " Yes, yes, but I Ve got means enough. My disposition s more of a cross to me as I grow older, and I made up my rnind this morning that Tempy s example should be my pattern henceforth." She began to knit faster than ever. " T ain t no use to get morbid : that s what Tempy used to say herself," said Sarah Ann, after a minute s silence. " Ain t it strange to say used to say ? " and her own voice choked a little. " She never did like to hear folks git goin about themselves." " T was only because they re apt to do it 214 MISS TEMPT S WATCHERS. so as other folks will say t was n t so, an praise em up," humbly replied Mrs. Crowe, " and that ain t my object. There wa n t a child but what Tempy set herself to work to see what she could do to please it. One time my brother s folks had been stopping here in the summer, from Massachusetts. The children was all little, and they broke up a sight of toys, and left em when they were going away. Tempy come right up after they rode by, to see if she could n t help me set the house to rights, and she caught me just as I was going to fling some of the clutter into the stove. I was kind of tired out, starting em off in season. Oh, give me them ! says she, real pleading ; and she wropped em up and took em home with her when she went, and she mended em up and stuck em together, and made some young one or other happy with every blessed one. You d thought I d done her the biggest favor. No thanks to me. I should ha burnt em, Tempy, says I." "Some of em came to our house, I know," said Miss Binson. " She d take a lot o trouble to please a child, stead o shoving of it out o the way, like the rest of us when we re drove." MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. 215 " I can tell you the biggest thing she ever gave, and I don t know s there s anybody left but me to tell it. I don t want it for got," Sarah Binson went on, looking up at the clock to see how the night was going. " It was that pretty-looking Trevor girl, who taught the Corners school, and married so well afterwards, out in New York State. You remember her, I dare say ? " " Certain," said Mrs. Crowe, with an air of interest. " She was a splendid scholar, folks said, and give the school a great start ; but she d overdone herself getting her education, and working to pay for it, and she all broke down one spring, and Tempy made her come and stop with her a while, you re member that ? Well, she had an uncle, her mother s brother, out in Chicago, who was well off and friendly, and used to write to Lizzie Trevor, and I dare say make her some presents ; but he was a lively, driving man, and did n t take time to stop and think about his folks. He had n t seen her since she was a little girl. Poor Lizzie was so pale and weakly that she just got through the term o school. She looked as if she was just going straight off in a decline. Tempy, she 216 MI 88 TEMPY S WATCHERS. cosseted her up a while, and then, next thing folks knew, she was tellin round how Miss Trevor had gone to see her uncle, and meant to visit Niagary Falls on the way, and stop over night. Now I happened to know, in ways I won t dwell on to explain, that the poor girl was in debt for her schoolin when she come here, and her last quarter s pay had just squared it off at last, and left her without a cent ahead, hardly ; but it had fretted her thinking of it, so she paid it all ; they might have dunned her that she owed it to. An I taxed Tempy about the girl s goin off on such a journey till she owned up, rather n have Lizzie blamed, that she d given her sixty dollars, same s if she was rolling in riches, and sent her off to have a good rest and vacation." " Sixty dollars ! " exclaimed Mrs. Crowe. " Tempy only had ninety dollars a year that came in to her ; rest of her livin she got by helpin about, with what she raised off this little piece o ground, sand one side an clay the other. An how often I ve heard her tell, years ago, that she d rather see Niagary than any other sight in the world ! " The women looked at each other in si lence ; the magnitude of the generous sacri- MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. 217 fice was almost too great for their compre hension. " She was just poor enough to do that ! " declared Mrs. Crowe at last, in an abandon ment of feeling. " Say what you may, I feel humbled to the dust," and her compan ion ventured to say nothing. She never had given away sixty dollars at once, but it was simply because she never had it to give. It came to her very lips to say in explanation, "Tempy was so situated ; " but she checked herself in time, for she would not break in upon her own loyal guarding of her depend ent household. " Folks say a great deal of generosity, and this one s being public-sperited, and that one free-handed about giving," said Mrs. Crowe, who was a little nervous in the silence. " I suppose we can t tell the sor row it would be to some folks not to give, same s t would be to me not to save. I seem kind of made for that, as if t was what I d got to do. I should feel sights better about it if I could make it evident what I was savin for. If I had a child, now, Sa rah Ann," and her voice was a little husky, - " if I had a child, I should think I was heapin of it up because he was the one 218 MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. trained by the Lord to scatter it again for good. But here s Crowe and me, we can t do anything with money, and both of us like to keep things same s they ve always been. Now Priscilla Dance was talking away like a mill-clapper, week before last. She d think I would go right off and get one o them new-fashioned gilt-and-white papers for the best room, and some new furniture, an a marble-top table. And I looked at her, all struck up. Why, says I, Pris cilla, that nice old velvet paper ain t hurt a mite. I should n t feel t was my best room without it. Dan el says t is the first thing he can remember rubbin his little baby fin gers on to it, and how splendid he thought them red roses was. I maintain," continued Mrs. Crowe stoutly, "that folks wastes sights o good money doin just such foolish things. Tearin out the in sides o meetin - houses, and fixin the pews different ; t was good enough as t was with mendin ; then times come, an they want to put it all back same s t was before." This touched upon an exciting subject to active members of that parish. Miss Bin- son and Mrs. Crowe belonged to opposite par ties, and had at one time come as near hard MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. 219 feelings as they could, and yet escape them. Each hastened to speak of other things and to show her untouched friendliness. " I do agree with you," said Sister Binson, " that few of us know what use to make of money, beyond every -clay necessities. You ve seen more o the world than I have, and know what s expected. When it comes to taste and judgment about such things, I ought to defer to others ; " and with this modest avowal the critical moment passed when there might have been an improper discussion. In the silence that followed, the fact of their presence in a house of death grew more clear than before. There was something disturbing in the noise of a mouse gnawing at the dry boards of a closet wall near by. Both the watchers looked up anxiously at the clock ; it was almost the middle of the night, and the whole world seemed to have left them alone with their solemn duty. Only the brook was awake. "Perhaps we might give a look up-stairs now," whispered Mrs. Crowe, as if she hoped to hear some reason against their go ing just then to the chamber of death ; but Sister Binson rose, with a serious and yet 220 MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. satisfied countenance, and lifted the small lamp from the table. She was much more used to watching than Mrs. Crowe, and much less affected by it. They opened the door into a small entry with a steep stair way ; they climbed the creaking stairs, and entered the cold upper room on tiptoe. Mrs. Crowe s heart began to beat very fast as the lamp was put on a high bureau, and made long, fixed shadows about the walls. She went hesitatingly toward the solemn shape under its white drapery, and felt a sense of remonstrance as Sarah Ann gently, but in a business-like way, turned back the thin sheet. 44 Seems to me she looks pleasanter and pleasanter," whispered Sarah Ann Binson impulsively, as they gazed at the white face with its wonderful smile. "To-morrow t will all have faded out. I do believe they kind of wake up a day or two after they die, and it s then they go." She replaced the light covering, and they both turned quickly away ; there was a chill in this upper room. " T is a great thing for anybody to have got through, ain t it?" said Mrs. Crowe softly, as she began to go down the stairs on tiptoe. The warm air from the kitchen MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. 221 beneath met them with a sense of welcome and shelter. 44 1 don know why it is, but I feel as near again to Tempy down here as I do up there," replied Sister Binson. " I feel as if the air was full of her, kind of. I can sense things, now and then, that she seems to say. Now I never was one to take up with no nonsense of sperits and such, but I declare I felt as if she told me just now to put some more wood into the stove." Mrs. Crowe preserved a gloomy silence. She had suspected before this that her com panion was of a weaker and more credulous disposition than herself. " T is a great thing to have got through," she repeated, ignoring definitely all that had last been said. " I suppose you know as well as I that Tempy was one that always feared death. Well, it s all put behind her now ; she knows what t is." Mrs. Crowe gave a little sigh, and Sister Binson s quick sym pathies were stirred toward this other old friend, who also dreaded the great change. " I d never like to f orgit almost those last words Tempy spoke plain to me," she said gently, like the comforter she truly was. "She looked up at me once or twice, that 222 MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. last afternoon after I come to set by her, and let Mis Owen go home ; and I says, 4 Can I do anything to ease you, Tempy ? and the tears come into my eyes so I could n t see what kind of a nod she give me. No, Sarah Ann, you can t, dear, says she ; and then she got her breath again, and says she, look ing at me real meanin , I m only a-gettin sleepier and sleepier ; that s all there is, says she, and smiled up at me kind of wish ful, and shut her eyes. I knew well enough all she meant. She d been lookin out for a chance to tell me, and I don know s she ever said much afterwards." Mrs. Crowe was not knitting ; she had been listening too eagerly. " Yes, t will be a comfort to think of that sometimes," she said, in acknowledgment. " I know that old Dr. Prince said once, in evenin meetin , that he d watched by many a dyin bed, as we well knew, and enough o his sick folks had been scared o dyin their whole lives through ; but when they come to the last, he d never seen one but was willin , and most were glad, to go. 1 T is as natural as bein born or livin on, he said. I don t know what had moved him to speak that night. You know he wa n t MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. 223 in the habit of it, and t was the monthly concert of prayer for foreign missions any ways," said Sarah Ann ; " but t was a great stay to the mind to listen to his words of ex perience." " There never was a better man," re sponded Mrs. Crowe, in a really cheerful tone. She had recovered from her feeling of nervous dread, the kitchen was so com fortable with lamplight and firelight; and just then the old clock began to tell the hour of twelve with leisurely whirring strokes. Sister Einson laid aside her work, and rose quickly and went to the cupboard. " We d better take a little to eat," she ex plained. " The night will go fast after this. I want to know if you went and made some o your nice cupcake, while you was home to-day ? " she asked, in a pleased tone ; and Mrs. Crowe acknowledged such a gratify ing piece of thoughtfulness for this humble friend who denied herself all luxuries. Sarah Ann brewed a generous cup of tea, and the watchers drew their chairs up to the table presently, and quelled their hun ger with good country appetites. Sister Bin- son put a spoon into a small, old-fashioned glass of preserved quince, and passed it to 224 MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. her friend. She was most familiar with the house, and played the part of hostess. " Spread some o this on your bread and butter," she said to Mrs. Crowe. " Tempy wanted me to use some three or four times, but I never felt to. I know she d like to have us comfortable now, and would urge us to make a good supper, poor dear." " What excellent preserves she did make ! " mourned Mrs. Crowe. " None of us has got her light hand at doin things tasty. She made the most o everything, too. Now, she only had that one old quince- tree down in the far corner of the piece, but she d go out in the spring and tend to it, and look at it so pleasant, and kind of ex pect the old thorny thing into bloomin ." " She was just the same with folks," said Sarah Ann. " And she d never git more n a little apernful o quinces, but she d have every mite o goodness out o those, and set the glasses up onto her best-room closet shelf, so pleased. T wa n t but a week ago to-morrow mornin I fetched her a little taste o jelly in a teaspoon ; and she says 4 Thank ye, and took it, an the minute she tasted it she looked up at me as worried as could be. Oh, I don t want to eat that, says she. MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. 225 I always keep that in case o sickness. 4 You re goin to have the good o one tumbler yourself, says I. 4 1 cl just like to know who s sicl^ now, if you ain t ! An she could n t help laughin , I spoke up so smart. Oh, dear me, how I shall miss talkin over things with her ! She always sensed things, and got just the p int you meant." "She didn t begin to age until two or three years ago, did she ? " asked Mrs. Crowe. " I never saw anybody keep her looks as Tempy did. She looked young long after I begun to feel like an old woman. The doctor used to say t was her young heart, and I don t know but what he was right. How she did do for other folks ! There was one spell she was n t at home a day to a fortnight. She got most of her livin so, and that made her own potatoes and things last her through. None o the young folks could get married without her, and all the old ones was disappointed if she wa n t round when they was down with sickness and had to go. An cleanin , or tailorin for boys, or rug-hookin , there was nothin but what she could do as handy as most. I do love to work, ain t you heard her say that twenty times a week ? " 226 MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. Sarah Ann Binson nodded, and began to clear away the empty plates. " We may want a taste o somethin more towards mornin ," she said. " There s plenty in the closet here ; and in case some comes from a distance to the funeral, we 11 have a little table spread after we get back to the house." " Yes, I was busy all the mornin . I ve cooked up a sight o things to bring over," said Mrs. Crowe. " I felt t was the last I could do for her." They drew their chairs near the stove again, and took up their work. Sister Bin- son s rocking-chair creaked as she rocked ; the brook sounded louder than ever. It was more lonely when nobody spoke, and pres ently Mrs. Crowe returned to her thoughts of growing old. " Yes, Tempy aged all of a sudden. I remember I asked her if she felt as well as common, one day, and she laughed at me good. There, when Dan el begun to look old, I could n t help feeling as if somethin ailed him, and like as not t was somethin he was goin to git right over, and I dosed him for it stiddy, half of one summer." " How many things we shall be wanting to ask Tempy ! " exclaimed Sarah Ann MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. 227 Binson, after a long pause. " I can t make up my mind to doin without her. I wish folks could come back just once, and tell us how tis wjiere they ve gone. Seems then we could do without em better." The brook hurried on, the wind blew about the house now and then ; the house itself was a silent place, and the supper, the warm fire, and an absence of any new topics for conversation made the watchers drowsy. Sister Binson closed her eyes first, to rest them for a minute ; and Mrs. Crowe glanced at her compassionately, with a new sympathy for the hard -worked little woman. She made up her mind to let Sarah Ann have a good rest, while she kept watch alone ; but in a few minutes her own knitting was dropped, and she, too, fell asleep. Over head, the pale shape of Tempy Dent, the outworn body of that generous, loving- hearted, simple soul, slept on also in its white raiment. Perhaps Tempy herself stood near, and saw her own life and its surroundings with new understanding. Per haps she herself was the only watcher. Later, by some hours, Sarah Ann Binson woke with a start. There was a pale light 228 MISS TEMPTS WATCHERS. of dawn outside the small windows. Inside the kitchen, the lamp burned dim. Mrs. Crowe awoke, too. " I think Tempy VI be the first to say twas just as well we both had some rest," she said, not without a guilty feeling. Her companion went to the outer door, and opened it wide. The fresh air was none too cold, and the brook s voice was not nearly so loud as it had been in the mid night darkness. She could see the shapes of the hills, and the great shadows that lay across the lower country. The east was fast growing bright. " T will be a beautiful day for the fu neral," she said, and turned again, with a sigh, to follow Mrs. Crowe up the stairs. The world seemed more and more empty without the kind face and helpful hands of Tempy Dent. A VILLAGE SHOP. I. MADAM JAFFREY in her later years always sat at one of her front parlor windows in the winter afternoons. But one day, many years ago, she was not there, and passers-by missed her kindly greeting or the smiling nod of invitation with which she was apt to favor her intimate acquaintances. One could not help being uneasy at her absence ; she was an older woman than her years and like a piece of her own frail china. She had seen much trouble, but there never was a braver heart. As you went by on the flagstoned pave ment, you could see the south parlor at a glance. The delightful old-fashioned room was flooded with sunlight. If you lingered for a moment, you could look through and be yond the room itself, and see the old garden pear-trees whose fruit all Grafton knew. Where could Madam Jaffrey be ? and where 230 A VILLAGE SHOP. was Miss Esther Jaffrey this February after- noon ? The two ladies are sitting in an upper chamber together, and suffering the first pangs of a great disappointment. All Graf- ton knows the story of their pinching econo mies, and the cheerful sacrifice of their own comfort, and that these have been reckoned as nothing in their pride and joy at further ing the interests of Leonard Jaffrey, the only son and last hope of his house and name. Perhaps if the good unworldly women had known the increased expense of a college education, as compared with the prim figures in ancient family account books, they would have lacked courage for even this darling project of their hearts, but from the time of the boy s babyhood there had never been any question of his being sent to Harvard College. The Jaffrey men had all been graduates. Famous old Marlborough Jaf frey, the first of them in the colonies, was an Oxford student who forsook his scholar s gown for a new- world enterprise, and though money grew scarcer as the last of his grand sons grew older, the brave ladies looked forward hopefully to the days when their sacrifices would be returned to them four- A VILLAGE SHOP. 231 fold. They thought of Leonard Jaffrey s ancestry as if it were a solvent bank of dis tinctions and emoluments in which he had a noble credit account. If he could not represent the actual wealth of old Marl- borough, for this, in their poverty, might have been most alluring, he could at least reembody the shade of his grandfather, the great jurist, or, failing him, there had been well-salaried and devout clergymen. His own father had chosen this career lovingly and died young, but already famous ; in the collateral branches of the family tree hung plenty of well-ripened fruit. But it ap peared sometimes as if Leonard had de scended not from these but from some less worthy infusion of sap ; some heedless al liance which had been quickly overlooked and ignored had yet left its corrupting and perverting influence in the Jaffrey blood. This young scholar was a very Jaffrey to look at ; you could make up his somewhat characterless face from the features of the family portraits a nose here, an eye-brow there, a lock of waving brown hair from his wistful-eyed father in gown and bands. Yet he had not the spirit of the Jaffreys, this Leonard who was the last of them, and it 232 A VILLAGE SHOP. was only in sad and disheartened reveries that his sister was forced to acknowledge this melancholy deficiency. If she had been the son ! she often said to herself with a sur ging thrill of pride and daring. If she had been the son how she could work and win her way, and not be the least of those who had borne the Jaffrey name unsullied ! But she was only a woman, and the Jaffreys were more provincial than they used to be a Jaf- frey of Graf ton could not lead public opin ion in unfeminine directions ; she was not a social reformer but fiercely conservative at heart. She had denied herself everything that could be denied, but treated her mother like a queen in exile, and so with sinking heart and dwindling hopes they came at last to this day when a letter had arrived from Leonard to say that he had finally forsaken any intention of exercising his profession. His general studies would more than fill his time, and he had conscientious scruples against preaching the dogmas of the faith in which he had been reared and trained. And the two women knew that there was to be no such thing as persuading him to change his mind. The Jaffreys had always won their fame by their power of decision. Leon- A VILLAGE SHOP. 233 ard had said I will not ! and could hang back with all the steadfastness with which his an cestors had said I will ! and then pushed forward to their goals. Now the acknowledgment must be made that he had disappointed all hopes from the first. From the day that Miss Jaffrey with eager, elder-sisterly forethought had looked through the list of his classmates and re joiced to find a Quincy, a Boylston, a Win- throp, or a Gardiner, and gladly planned for the resuming of old family alliances and friendship, only to find her brother uninter ested and even reluctant ; from the day when she sadly acknowledged that Leonard saw the world through strange eyes and was indifferent to the old home standards, she had been driven back inch by inch to the very stronghold of her opinions. She only held to her own instincts and the Jaffrey code all the more fiercely because there was a traitor on the very throne. Something must be allowed for the natural rebellion of a young man to petticoat government, but the fact remained that Leonard Jaffrey was indifferent to worldly honor, careless of the world s needs or its demands, in no wise public-spirited, and a strange bird altogether 234 A VILLAGE SHOP. to have been hatched in the ambitious Jaf- frey nest. Fortunately the already aged and fading mother was not forced to stay long in this world to bewail the blasting of her hopes, and make futile excuses for her wrong- headed boy. By the time he came home from his theological school with a collection of miscellaneous volumes for which he must have practiced economies only second in se verity to those which had kept him a student at all, Madam Jaffrey had but time to see him once or twice in her darkened room ; to whisper that she forgave him her disappoint ment and respected his conscientiousness. Leonard vaguely understood these expres sions, but her death touched him deeply. Let us hope that he regretted his inability to win either gain or glory to lay at her feet, and saw at last in one swift flash of light, his own torpor, and the burden he had let this patient mother carry. He was only made more silent by the loss and change in his home, and there was a more impene trable barrier than ever set up between him and his sister Esther. She was the eldest of a large family of children of whom all had died but Leonard and herself, and their A VILLAGE SHOP. 235 relationship was somehow unequal ; not that of a brother and sister who have constantly seen life from somewhere near the same angle. He was only too well aware of her noble rectitude and loyalty and her uncom mon powers of mind, even of her good looks, which seemed to increase instead of paling with the march of years but he felt her generosity like a chain of steel, and the memory of her sacrifices and her opinion of his course burnt him like living coals. Per haps he thought it wiser not to undertake a career in which he foresaw inevitable failure, perhaps it was simply that the natural in dolence and love of a book-worm s life filled his whole horizon. Pie went away directly after his mother s funeral, for he could bear neither the sight of the empty rooms, nor the weight of his sister s stately courtesy, which only covered that sullen disapproval of himself that lay beneath. But to this sister he was still a Jaffrey, and however carefully she avoided meeting his eyes, she was able to speak of him serenely to her acquaint ances, and to acknowledge without hesita tion that he intended to lead the life of a student henceforth, and instead of following his profession had decided to become a man 236 A VILLAGE SHOP. of letters. She liked to repeat the words, " a man of letters ; " yes, Leonard was a Jaffrey and had a Jaffrey s right. But those who knew the household best puzzled their brains to know by what means it was to be sustained. The Jaffrey lands had shrunk to the limits of the old pear-tree garden and a strip of decaying wharf-prop erty by the river ; the Jaffrey fortune had been spent almost to the last farthing in uncomplaining furtherance of the scholar s welfare. Here he was, stranded in the old house with as much energy as a barnacle, looking already close upon middle-age from his lack of physical activity ; the most un productive man of letters in New England, with no apparent value either social or com mercial. A step farther and he would only have become what the canny Scotsmen call " a stickit minister." II. There were enough of the old people left in Grafton twenty or thirty years ago to suffer an acute attack of pain and misgiv ing, when the news was whispered to and fro under the elms that Miss Esther Jaffrey A VILLAGE SHOP. 237 intended to keep a ladies shop. The imme diate reason for it was so aggravating that a great deal of unkind comment flew about the indignant town ; there was an unusual visiting from house to house, and some of Miss Jaffrey s own friends were heard to say sorrowfully that it would be more than they could bear to see her stand to serve them behind the counter. Her grandfather the judge s office, her granduncle s ministe rial study ; her own father s study, and the place that knew his youthful hopes, the writing of his famous and saintly sermons, and the burning of much midnight oil; what a degradation it seemed to put the old room to this new use. Besides this, had it not been the counting-room of Marlborough Jaffrey, the great colonial merchant ? Here he had kept the papers of those busy two hundred-ton ships which had earned his for tune ; here he lived his long and noted life, and defied wind and weather, time and tide, as he pushed forward his bold enterprises through half a score of distant seas. From the small-paned windows he could look far clown the broad tide-river which seemed to dutifully dispatch its lazy waters toward the ocean and draw them back again twice a day 238 A VILLAGE SHOP. in deference to his fleet of packets and gun- dalows, deep-laden with their out-bound or incoming cargoes. Those were rich and glori ous days for Grafton, but nobody had made any money since. Not only the merchant s own descendants but everybody else had lived on the remains of their ancient fortunes, except for the yearly produce of the farms and a barely sufficient local system of petty commerce. The farms, the few large houses in the village, even the high-steepled church itself, had been paid for with money that had come in the Jaffrey ships. But it is long since anybody had chosen the business of sailor there are only a few slippery old sticks of oak timber left in the river-mud, and the fortunes have all dwindled away. The embargo gave a killing blow to the prosperity of Grafton, and spendthrifts and foolish men and women and the wear of time have been undermining the once secure investments ever since. The worst punish ment fell upon the town s pride when no sooner had the news been told of a certain Mary Destin s giving up her business in small wares, than it was also known that Miss Esther Jaffrey had made definite ar rangements to become her successor. Miss A VILLAGE SHOP. 239 Esther Jaffrey, like Hawthorne s Miss Pyn- cheon, had become reduced to the keeping of a shop. The bulwarks of social safety were broken down, and public opinion was ready to reproach the former owner of the business, since it was vaguely believed that if Mary Destin had not planned to go westward to live with a married sister, this catastrophe would have been averted. Her good sense in making the change was loudly questioned ; there was a general feeling as if she had somehow involved another s ruin, that she ought to have remained in her own lot and place. III. Since we looked in at the parlor windows many things have happened, but there is no apparent difference in the room itself except that Madam Jaffrey has gone away. It is two weeks now since she died, and they have been two bitterly anxious weeks to the lonely daughter who has seen the small hours of nearly every night, and has wondered what her future could be until her brain has been fairly burning, and her eyes fixed wide open in a sleeplessness that seemed to drain her very soul of its strength. Nobody knew 240 A VILLAGE SHOP. her sorrows now, save herself ; there was 110 longer any incentive for keeping them back lest some one else might sorrow the more. She had nobody to keep cheerful for now, since her mother died. Loyal Betty, the one maid-servant, was dim and dull of wits, except in her own province, and she and Miss Jaffrey plodded their frugal way together with little conscious thought of each other. Betty s hero was Mr. Leonard, and yet she was taught by instinct to be silent about him before her younger mistress, even in the days when Madam Jaffrey took joy in telling of his poor triumphs and that noble future apparently now more remote than ever. Betty had been a great resource to the boy s mother ; Betty saw no reason why the most improbable successes might not come to pass. The house seemed very much too large now adays, and it was a poor mockery when it was set in order, as if for guests, during the early summer. Some of the furnishings were already threadbare, but the old timbers were live-hearted, and the long purses of its ear lier inhabitants had shaped it with the sound est and best wood and fabric of their day. Little need be spent on it for years to come, but this was a starved and sorry life com- A VILLAGE SHOP. 241 pared with the earlier abundance, the luxury, the cheerful company, the busy maids and men of an earlier time. Just when the need of getting into debt came now like a crouch ing tiger into Esther Jaffrey s well-trodden path, the deliverance was also there, a mel ancholy alternative, but welcomed by her with all a Jaffrey s pride in independence and self-respect. It was indeed sad to think of shop-keeping at her age, and under the shadow of her family tree, but it would be much sadder to have no shop to keep, no way to look for deliverance from her poverty. Before the good people of Graf ton had ceased gasping, and had half reviewed the resources of friends, and fitting employments which surely belonged to their leader, the goods of Mary Destin had become those of Esther Jaffrey, and the small projecting room next the sunny parlor which had been counting- house and study by turns this historic room which opened handily to the street was insulted by a stained wood counter and mea gre show-cases, with boxes of thread and needles, and whalebone and edgings and all the minor wares that home-keeping women need in their daily work of mending and making. Miss Jaffrey s shop ! would it ever 242 A VILLAGE SHOP. seem right to say it could one ever men tion its resources unconsciously, or dare to suggest better bargains ? Mary Destin was a cheerful gossip and a born tradeswoman ; she had gone away contented with the value of an ancient silver-set diamond ring safely pinned into her pocket. And yet Miss Jaf- f rey had not ceased to be a lady because she had begun to keep a shop. As one woman after another ventured in to make a neces sary purchase after the first awed week, they found her more friendly and sympathetic than ever. She was ready to talk across the counter, to take a bit off her prices when she heard a lofty hint of the article being too expensive. She only listened with wist ful eagerness when a story was told that a former resident of Grafton had given the old town a vast sum of money for a public library. The Jaffreys day was almost over, but no jealousy of any new patrons seemed to be in her generous heart. In fact Miss Jaffrey now first became really known to some of the Grafton people who had wished through envy and conscious inferiority to take pennyworths out of her high reputa tion. They could not help being pleased with her lovely bearing, and her serene ac- A VILLAGE SHOP. 243 ceptance of her altered fortunes. And so the enterprise of her later life began with the sympathy and blessing of all who knew her. The familiar white-lettered black boxes of ships papers that had belonged to rich old Marlborough Jaffrey were still perched in line on a high upper shelf that corniced the room. All his descendants had been proud to keep them there. Ship Esther, Brig Marlborough, Brig Brasenose, Ship Palatine, Ship Pactolus ; how well Miss Jaf frey knew the long row ; they were almost like funereal coffers that held the ashes of her ancestors. During the second week after the shop was opened Mr. Leonard Jaffrey came home. He had already sent some of his books, and dimly expected to find them neatly placed on the shelves ; now he brought more, and as he drew near the old house he looked with eagerness at the study windows as if there must be his true home henceforth. He had already planned the disposition of his treas ures with rare enthusiasm ; but he was sud denly aware of strange shapes and colors behind the familiar small panes. Could Esther have let the room to a stranger ? He grew dizzy for a moment with uncharac- 244 A VILLAGE SHOP. teristic wrath, then he was smitten, let us hope, with regret. When the trunks were carried into the wide hall, and he stood un certain what to do, feeling for once the weak man he was from his lack of force and strange inadequacy, Miss Jaffrey made her appearance. She was singularly gentle to ward him, indeed was not she his protector and defender, had not she solved the puz zling problem of their being clothed and fed ? And the sister and brother kissed each other with a softening remembrance of the mother who had loved them both and been patient with them, and from that day forward the shop was never discussed, or in any way berated. IV. It sometimes appeared as if nature had destined Leonard Jaffrey for a reservoir of learning. He was absolutely without any original thoughts or gifts, he was unproduc tive from the beginning, yet with unquenched appetite he devoured the wisdom and imag ination that were stored between his book covers. Unsated, unflagging, unforeseeing, he became at last a perfectly unavailable A VILLAGE SHOP. 245 treasury of other people s knowledge, like some lake that has no outlet. Yet there surely must have been an invisible exhauster of his hoards to correspond to the lake s evaporations ; not speech, for he grew silent and withdrew more and more into himself as years went by. Miss Jaffrey was much the gainer by her increased facility for inter course with all sorts and conditions of wo men, but the brother seemed to have let his individuality ooze out to the dry pages of his books as if they were a species of treacher ous blotting paper, and destined in time to completely absorb him. He never asked his sister for money, but she spared him what she could. Was not that one cause of the shop ? Sometimes he looked at her very wistfully as he put the price of her self-sacri fice slowly into his pocket, and vaguely called up a feeble ghost of his purpose to more than make things up to her by and by. But when his pockets clung together for very leanness, and some longed-for pile of dusty volumes was slipping out of his grasp with every hour, he even found himself greedily gazing at the shining silver tea-service of which he and Miss Esther were the sole heirs. Packed away in the sideboard were useless porrin- 246 A VILLAGE SHOP. gers and tankards yes, he was quite capa ble of selling the whole of the Jaffrey plate in these moments of anguish and limitation. He was a book-miser at last. It was a mercy that he lived in Grafton, for the vicinity of book-stores and ragged companies of vol umes on corner stalls of the great towns would either have made him mad or a hard ened offender against justice. As the years slipped by he gained some little reputation as a scholar, quite unworth ily, for he was too firmly grafted into his position as idle accumulator and reader to exercise his stunted powers of thought. He was only a personified memory with no gift at combination and association ; an encyclo pedia, a very rag-bag of true and worthless knowledge ; and the easy life which made no continuous demands upon him seemed to hold no inspiration in any of its lights or shadows. The library slowly grew, the man himself really dwindled, yet he was thought a much wiser and more awesome person than the resolute and gentle sister who kept her petty shop as intently as that famous grand father had managed his shipping. She was secretly glad to spend what energy she could upon the slow little business, and tried to A VILLAGE SHOP. 247 fancy that she was by nature a business wo man. Yet she at first insisted upon the old family custom of reading aloud, and so upon sharing as much of her brother s evenings as possible. Sometimes she was interrupted, but as a rule her own evening leisure was respected, and the solitary lamp on the shop counter hinted that no errands except those of urgent necessity were expected or pro vided for. If the brother was glad that their mother had not lived to be wounded by the sound of the tinkling shop-bell, Miss Jaffrey was rejoiced that she had never been forced to surrender all hope of her son s gaining dis tinction. But toleration and good breeding kept a harmonious atmosphere in the old house, and on summer Sundays, when there were strangers in the village, admiring neighbors still pointed out Mr. and Miss Jaffrey as the most interesting figures in the congregation. For a long time there was little change in the quiet old village, but there came a day when everybody acknowledged that Grafton was waking up. It has already been hinted that a large sum of money was left in trust for the building of a public library. The 248 A VILLAGE SHOP. old academy, well endowed and famous along the line of its earlier history, seemed to take a new lease of life, and as in days of the past, a successful teacher drew round him the brightest boys and girls of the neigh boring towns. There were more and more people, too, who discovered the beauties of the wide tidal river and its wooded banks ; and from the neighboring resorts on the sea shore near by, increasing numbers of sum mer idlers came inland like birds of passage to linger for a while in the shade of the great Graf ton elms. The time-honored re pose of the village seemed permanently broken, and not the least attractive figure was this stately Miss JafTrey who had achieved the dignity of self-sacrifice in will ingly supporting her learned brother. It was considered a true romance when the vil lage people discovered this aspect of the shopkeeping through the help of others. They were delightfully eager to enlarge upon the old-time majesty of the Jaffreys and the slow succession of its assailments. Lookers- on could only guess at the self-denial which made it possible for the dear lady to do her part in giving for the good of church or state, or to carry forward, even in simplest A VILLAGE SHOP. 249 fashion the old-time hospitalities and gen erosities of the house. But what she gave she gave royally, and with that cheerfulness which the Lord himself loves. The bright young people were a great pleasure to gray- haired, dignified Miss Esther, as they went flitting about the streets in their gay gowns, or lingered in her shop with sweet sympa thetic looks. Some found their way into the parlor and learned to know the rest of the fine old house, and were even graciously en tertained at tea to their hearts delight and admiration. More than one descendant of the house s old acquaintances carried away to Boston a glowing description of this fine gentlewoman, in her nobly equipped dwel ling, and the pathetic unworthy business of her life. The brother did not lose charm from the fact that he was seldom seen and was still in middle life, with the manly beauty of the painted Jaffreys on the walls. But as winter took the place of summer, and these gay guests disappeared like butterflies, the village seemed more familiar again, and as if it had turned over for another nap. The walls of the new library were rising, Miss Jaffrey liked to hear the clink of the masons hammers, and one day thought sor- 250 A VILLAGE SHOP. rowfully that she was growing old and there was no one to follow herself and Leonard in the Jaffrey house. There was one comfort, he had not gathered his books for nothing, she would urge him to decide to leave them to the town by and by when Death called him away for his sins to a bookless world. She herself had not been worthy the name of Jaffrey, there was no reason why anybody should remember her ; but she had kept her house generously and her shop honestly. " Perhaps I had to be punished for my pride," she thought, at the wistful remem brance of a proud and hopeful girlhood. The elder ladies of Grafton were fond of saying to each other with gentle emphasis, " You know, Miss Jaffrey understands what ladies care for ! " This was the gift of her ancestry then a delicate power of selecting linen, cambric, or soft ribbons ? Was there, beside, a trained capacity and usable force which some persons of less illustrious de scent found themselves without? She was the chief literary authority of the town, though it was acknowledged that her brother was more available for serious questioning. The old-fashioned book-club had its head quarters in the shop, and the best talk and A VILLAGE SHOP. 251 best influence in Grafton resided under Miss Jaffrey s roof, in truth her own ladylike, apologetic little head-dress thatched it in. Yet, alas, there were some new shops now in the new part of the town. Miss Jaffrey had a mere trifle of money for the rainy days of her fast approaching age, and yet she had been careful and wise and self-denying all the way. She was almost proud of the bookworm overhead instead of being indig nant with him; she never reproached her brother, it would have broken her heart if he had gone to shopkeeping. "Yes, Leon ard is a man of letters," she used to say with smiling indulgence. " One cannot ex pect business gifts in him with all the rest." She began to dream now of his making a proper marriage. It was partly for this that she planned her summer tea-parties. That winter brought new problems. Betty was really old, and for the first time in her life fell ill. Miss Jaffrey overworked herself and had to close the shop for many days together, and at last hired an inade quate young girl to tend it in her place in order to serve Betty, herself. But Betty was only enraged at such officiousness, and 252 A VILLAGE SHOP. the shop was quickly put into dire disorder. Miss Jaff rey was in real distress for a time ; but after a while the clouds blew over, and she was left with a miserable fear of the repetition of such dark days. Several of her best patrons and most valued friends had died ; time was fast assailing her security as a business woman. What had she to look forward to but dependent poverty, the sharp est sorrow that old age can bring to a woman of her nature. Yet Leonard did not suspect these anxieties. He ate his me thodical breakfast and took his methodical walk and made his accurate notes in a clerkly hand, catalogued and re-catalogued his books, and lived his peaceful life. Sometimes he noticed that his sister had changed in outward looks, but it never oc curred to him to ask the reason. They walked into church on Sunday with widely different feelings the woman s heart cry ing for help and, for the second time, driven to despair ; the man comfortable, unappre hensive, and ready to quibble with the cler gyman about the emphasis of a Greek word or incorrect quotation from one of the early fathers. Miss Jaff rey climbed to the garret once to look at a disused set of heavy ma- A VILLAGE SHOP. 253 hogany chairs ; if worst came to worst, she would write presently to a young summer friend who had delicately suggested her ar dent desire to buy such fine old furniture. Leonard would not miss the chairs. As they sat opposite each other at tea-time, Leonard being also a silent sufferer for more books, the tea-urn winked and blinked at first one and then the other, as if con scious of its solid worth. It was secure in the belief that its owners were capable of starving before their empty plates rather than sell it to a stranger. V. One winter day a man came driving slowly up the wide Grafton street under the leafless branches of the elms. For some time before there *had been no other passer by, and the people who sat at their windows looked out with mingled relief and curiosity at the small old-fashioned sleigh and heavy, slow-stepping horse. It was certainly very dull in Grafton in winter weather, and in a cold clear day like this when the snow on the house roofs refused to melt, as every one said, " in the eye of the sun," there was little 254 A VILLAGE SHOP. going abroad. Several house-bound women, eager for something new to think about, flattened their foreheads against the cold window panes to see where John Grant was going. He was a rich farmer from a comfortable home of his own two or three miles below on the river shore, a widower these dozen years, and well known in the village. " He s turniii up by Miss Jaffrey s shop," said one observer. " I hope he s goin to buy her out, I m sure. Time was that most all the farmer s folks used to trade with her, but they ve been tolled off to the new stores down by the factory, and she must find it dreadful poor pickin . Hard, ain t it ? but then she might make some ef fort to keep up with the times, and get some sort o fancy wares." Miss Jaffrey herself was sitting in her sunny parlor trying to busy herself with some mending ; there was little making to do now, the year round. She gladly saw John Grant stop and fasten his horse, then a shadow dimmed her eyes as she laid down her work and went toward the shop to meet him. There was no fire there ; for three days she had done almost no business, and A VILLAGE SHOP. 255 she could not waste the firewood. Brief errands could be done in spite of the cold ; she would trust to the forbearance of her customers, and she had just been almost congratulating herself that no one had yet appeared. In mild weather the place of business could easily be warmed by the par lor fire, but John Grant might be chilled after his drive. With ready hospitality she only waited until he had knocked the last lump of snow off his sturdy boots and shut the shop door behind him, before she asked him to come into the parlor to warm him self. The kindly pitying heart of the man grew very sad as he looked at his hostess ; stand ing before her half-empty shelves, he hesi tated a minute as if it might be kinder to ignore the cold, then he saw how thin and gray she looked, for the quaint, three-cor nered shawl round her thin shoulders was not preventing one shiver after another. He fol lowed her somewhat bashfully into the next room and unbuttoned his coat without speak ing, though he bowed with sober dignity as Miss Jaffrey placed a chair for him before the Franklin stove. It was quite another atmosphere in every respect from that in the 256 A VILLAGE SHOP. shop, but while the eyes of the portraits and the presence of a lady were trying at first to his composure, they quickly confirmed him in his secret purpose. " I called to see you on a little private business, Miss Jaffrey," said good, sensible John Grant, after they had decorously con sidered the weather. " I am going to ask a great favor at your hands." Miss Jaffrey looked anxious at first, then relieved. The Jaffreys liked to grant favors much better than to receive them, and she felt strangely at the world s mercy in these days. " I shall be very glad if I can do anything to serve you," she said, simply. " I hope you will not think I mean to pre sume too far," the plain man said, with grave deference, and almost courtesy, entirely differ ent from his cheerful farmer s manner. " You know that I have only one girl at home ? She was the baby when her mother died, a little child following me about, hardly above my knee, and I could n t seem to do without her for long at a time, so I have n t taken the thought I should about her education till here she is a young woman. She has taken what schooling she could get in our district, and she s a great hand for story-books, reads A VILLAGE SHOP. 257 every tiling she can get. And I see all too plain that she shows some lack of woman s care. I m well enough off to send her to some o the smart boarding schools, but I can t seem to make up my mind to it. Some young fellow 11 be picking her off," -this with a wise twinkle of his eye at Miss Jaf- frey, " but I mean to keep her while I can. Now, there s this good teacher at the acad emy and all the chance she really needs. If you could see your way to taking her and giving her a little good advice and letting her have the profit of seeing how a lady like you behaves herself, I should be well, more obliged to you than I ve got words to say." There was a moment of silence before Miss Jaffrey gave her answer. The speaker grew a little anxious, and feared that he had been, as he first suggested, presuming. There had long been cordial relations between the Jaf- freys and the farm by the river. It was his grandmother s pride to tell how the Madam Jaffrey of her day brought . gay parties to eat strawberries and cream, and had once done the gracious favor of showins: all her O O own treasures of china to the admiring farmer s wife. Courtesy and mutual regard and dependence there had always been, but 258 A VILLAGE SHOP. this sort of equality, never; and yet the shop and the unstemmed flood of poverty and anxiety remained. The petitioner had truly meant a kindness to Miss Jaffrey as well as a favor to himself ; his pretty Nelly was good enough for any household. Miss Jaffrey turned from the half-moon table where she had been fingering her sew ing work in an aimless fashion. " I should indeed be very glad to have her come, if " shyly, "you think she will be contented. We are a sober pair, my brother and I, but he will be able to aid with her studies. I will not try to conceal from you that it will be a great help to me ; I have been anxious lately about" but the sentence was never ended. " She has a sweet young face." The father s heart was quickly touched. He could hardly have told why the simple occasion affected him so much. He had al ready noticed that the fire was made of chilly bits of the old pear-trees which had been broken by winter winds, and determined to send an honest load of his own whole hearted rock-maple wood for Nelly s benefit as well as the Jaffreys . The certainty of the old house s poverty, and an empty cellar beneath made him warmly resolve to provi- A VILLAGE SHOP. 259 sion it as for a siege. All his generous lav- ishness should work its will. Miss Jaffrey s grandfather, the judge, had saved his own grandfather from ruin, and he ought to have been seeing what he could do for this poor lady in her pinched housekeeping. It was hard to come down from a delightful level of talk about Nelly s needs and prospects and insistence upon paying a good price for board in view of her rare advantages, but at last, when the interview was ended, John Grant bought Miss Jaffrey s entire stock of fine handkerchiefs byway of a gift for his daugh ter. It was such bleak weather in the shop that he tried to shorten the process of sale by stuffing them into his deep coat pocket, but Miss Jaffrey insisted upon wrapping them with proper precision and figuring their cost on a bit of paper which she would have him audit with care. Her own finders O stiffened all too easily at the least chill. Could it be possible that Miss Jaffrey went hungry now and then to make her scanty larder hold out the longer ? Oh, good John Grant, you were an angel that day, in dis guise of your worn fur cap and warm, faded old coat with its big buttons ! And Miss Jaffrey sat in the winter sunshine and cried 260 A VILLAGE SHOP. as the old sleigh bells jingled away again out of hearing. Now she had surely seen her darkest day, and things could never be so hard and trying again. In the twilight brother Leonard came down, unusually fretful, because his lamp held no oil, and he had been obliged to lay by his work. " Betty told me that we had no more, but I could not send for any," said the patient sister. "I have a little money now, however ; Mr. Grant has been a good customer." " I do not see any objection," Leonard Jaffrey gave kind assurance, after the new plan had been detailed with not a little ap prehension. " Nelly Grant has a pretty face like a spring flower," he added, with unex pected sentiment, this elderly bookworm whom nobody suspected of knowing one young parishioner from another in the old Grafton church. Betty alone was daunted at the prospect. "There s no knowing what work she and her mates will make trapesing through the house," the bent old woman grumbled. " I thought t was time to end this playin of keepin shop," she added to herself later. " We should all have starved pretty soon, A VILLAGE SHOP. 261 like a nest of frozen mice. An see if I don t hint round an spy if they ain t got some o them big pippin apples at the farm, now, that old madam used never to be with out. They do make proper dumplings and sliced pies." VI. Mr. Leonard Jaffrey stood behind a closed upper window one rainy April day, indulg ing himself in a fit of complete idleness. His sister still regarded him as a youngish man, but he had long since passed the time when one could justly call him anything but middle-aged. There was a becoming lustre of whitening locks against the original dark brown of his hair, and his complexion was like a girl s in its freshness and unmanly ab sence of any traces of exposure to wind and weather. Student life had evidently agreed with his constitution of body as well as mind. He smiled placidly as he looked out across the brown-budded pear-trees, and noted the hour on the steeple clock of the old acad emy. Everywhere in Grafton the Jaffreys might be reminded of their ancestors, for the needs of church and state had always 262 A VILLAGE SHOP. been liberally considered as long as there was any money to give. Judge Jaffrey had handsomely endowed the ancient parish, and had given the very steeple clock itself to which his great-grandson now listened as it struck three. It seemed a fitting return of such favors on the part of the family that a poor boy who had grown rich in the western country should have chosen a public library as his monument. Grafton as a town was not especially dependent upon literature, but when the last of the Jaffreys proved to be a scholar, public notice was naturally taken of it, and the old-time favors would now be suitably returned. But the last of the Jaf freys gave the question no definite thought as he cast a side wise glance at the new library s roof, arid contemptuously reminded himself that there would probably never be a collec tion of books under it which would afford him much interest. Trivial modern volumes of transient worth were all -that his fellow- townspeople might be expected to select. It did not naturally occur to this learned gen tleman that his own duty lay in the Direction of wise counsel and devoted interest ; to him the practical affairs of life or any sense of personal obligation were as foreign as the A VILLAGE SHOP. 263 problems of astronomy to a blind man. Through the recent struggles of his own family life, through years and years while Miss Jaffrey had crept painfully along the narrow path between want and tolerable comfort, he had been as unconscious of her makeshifts and anxieties as if he had been an Indian brave whose round-shouldered squaw existed for nothing but to carry tent- poles on her back, and to provide their neces sary food. Yet he was sublimely conscious of much tenderness of heart, and proper in terest in the human race. His world was a book world, not peopled with material shapes. While he stood at the window one could not help being struck by the neatness and quaint- ness of his attire, for the clothes he wore ex pressed a man who rightfully belonged to an earlier generation. He might have been the O O despair of a fashionable tailor, with that al most instantaneous process of assimilating his garments to the out-of-date spirit underneath. There was an odor of old leather books about his overcoat when he stood meekly in the Graf tor post-office, or conscientiously drifted with the crowd toward the place of voting on town meeting days. As one glanced about the room upon which his back was 264 A VILLAGE SHOP. turned that cloudy afternoon, it presented a curious appearance, and it was impossible not to be reminded of certain shell - fish whose covering thickens with age. No won der that a suggestion of brown leather bind ings followed him in his rare progresses into the outer world, for here there were hun dreds shelved in crowded lines, piled in small toppling precipices against the wainscoted walls, and stacked in sliding hillocks here and there on the uncarpeted floor. Leonard Jaffrey himself could find his way among them, even in the dark, like a soft-pawed pussy cat ; the noise of a fallen book was the only sound that roused his anger. There was apparent danger for a stray visitor, as if in time this floor and walls of experienced volumes would suddenly close in and stifle the room s occupant. The mahogany bed stead was furnished with a wooden canopy draped with faded blue damask, and armful after armful of books, for which there was no other lodging, had been stowed away on the top, next the ceiling. The apparent method of reaching them at such an incon venient height was by climbing the slender, carved mahogany posts, but it would be diffi cult to fancy the dignified owner sliding A VILLAGE SHOP. 265 carefully down to the floor after a season of reference and review of his celestial authors. A discerning eye might have shrewdly no ticed one evil - disposed work which had slipped out from its pile on the burdened tester until it seemed to be wickedly just holding itself back until it could drop fa tally upon Mr. Jaffrey s head just as he in tended to retire for the niefht. There was C5 truly something evil in the way it bravely held its dangerous weight high in air, or risked the possibility of gathering more dust. The scholar at the window leaned closer against the sash as if something attracted his attention. Those who were quick enough to look over his shoulder could have caught a glimpse of a young girl who went with flitting step along the sidewalk next the old garden. The fence was unfortunately of solid boarding, and was far from being trans parent, even after many years of necessary wear and moss growing. At the top it was cut in sharp points, and the girlish face moved quickly past in full view. The watcher drew back into the shelter of the window shutter, but his face had noticeably bright ened. As he went back to his seat beside the table which held his writing materials, 266 A VILLAGE SHOP. it was impossible to resist the suspicion that this was not the first time that he had seen Nelly Grant on her way home from her af ternoon lessons at the academy. A few moments later there was heard the familiar groaning creak of the old front door, and the noise of its decided closing. Mr. Leonard Jaffrey half rose from his wooden arm-chair, which was made altogether of serviceable slender rungs, then he regret fully sank back again with an almost bashful look upon his face. He waited listening in tently, but he was not gratified by the sound of approaching footsteps. It seemed as if the mist which had followed an earlier rain were making the old bedroom-library al most too dark and dismal to be borne, and he drummed on the table fretfully with his familiar penholder. Miss Jaffrey greeted her young house mate with a cordial smile of welcome as she came in, rosy and smiling, from the street. Nelly was very much of a little lady, and, with the help of numerous visits to the farm, had managed to be perfectly happy in the imposing Jaffrey house. She inquired now whether her father had made his ap pearance while she had been at school, and A VILLAGE SHOP. 267 heard that nothing had been seen of him with hardly a shade of disappointment. " I told him to stop for me if he came over this afternoon," she explained ;" but I don t be lieve he cares about bringing me back so early in the morning in this rainy weather." She was kneeling on the window-seat and looking eagerly up and down the deserted street. " You must go and take off your damp clothes," advised Miss Jaffrey quietly. " I don t want to send you home with a cold ; " but the healthy country-girl only laughed, and made no other reply. " What do the school -girls want with so much of that narrow tape ? " asked the elder woman timidly ; for Nelly had fallen into a deep revery, as she still knelt in the window. " Oh, it s a notion about a kind of stiff little trimming ; they sew it together in pointed patterns. I m sure I never should have patience to do it. Why, have they been here for some ? " asked the young lodger with eager interest ; for she had already learned to share in the satisfaction that followed a day of good sales. " Yes, they came like a flock of pigeons an hour or two ago," answered Miss Jaf- f rey. " I happened to have a box full o 268 A VILLAGE SHOP. narrow tapes put aside, of the very best quality too, and they pounced upon them gladly. I think I have had those little tapes ever since I kept the shop at all " she added by way of reminiscence " dear, dear ! how many years it has been now, yet I some how always think of it as a new thing, and the bell always startles me a little." " I suppose it has been a good deal of company to you," replied Nelly with a vagueness in her tone that implied her in tention of changing the subject. " I in so confused about my mental philosophy lesson Miss Jaffrey," she announced with sudden bravery. " I wonder if Mr. Leonard would explain it a little ? " " Perhaps you would do as well to wait until the evening now," the mistress an swered respectfully. " He never likes to be interrupted." " I must study my Latin then," said the girl, with something like a pout. " He always says that I may come up at any time, and if he is too busy he will say so. I don t see any sense in mental philosophy, any way. I like things that belong to out-of-doors." 44 I dare say you are right about asking him now," said Miss Jaffrey after a mo- A VILLAGE SHOP. 269 ment s pause. Her brother s learned exposi tion of the Baconian philosophy the evening before in that pleasant parlor had been to her very dull and unrewarding, but she was only a plain, uninstructed woman whose choice of reading ranged through the hum bler level of fiction rather than among the mandates of the philosophers. The young girl gathered her books with alacrity and went up the wide hall-staircase. There was one step that announced her coming by a peculiar creaking sound, and when Leonard Jaffrey heard it, he fairly ran to open his door. Miss Jaffrey was possessed by an unusual spirit of thankfulness when she was again left alone. Life had been so much easier for them all since Nelly Grant became a member of the household; they all seemed revivified by her fresh young life. She was a mannerly child, surely, and had been so considerate about making extra trouble, and forcing her own companions and personal concerns into undue prominence. It was good for Leonard to have this new interest to draw him away from his books. He really had seemed in excellent spirits of late, and lost the elderly look that he had begun 270 A VILLAGE SHOP. to wear. " What an advantage his society is to that girl who knows nothing of the world ! " thought the admiring sister as she creased down the edges of a collar. Leonard had really for once noticed that he needed a new article of raiment, and had even advised a slight modernizing change in the old collar pattern. Dear, unworldly Miss Esther Jaf- frey where were your woman s wits ! In spite of Leonard s variation and de flection from his sister s ideal of the last of the Jaffreys, she still looked forward con fidently to some less and less possible change. In one of the great camphor-wood packing chests lay a silk Geneva gown of which the folds grew sharper and the texture more limp year by year, but Miss Jaffrey touched it tenderly every spring and fall in her careful housekeeping as if the day might still come when Leonard would soberly deck himself in the ancestral garment. But the Geneva gown had long ago been too narrow for his plump back ; it was cut for a slen der, dutiful ascetic. Sometimes Miss Jaffrey folded her hands in her lap and looked at her brother with pleased wonder at his vast learning. She tried to make it real to herself that he could A VILLAGE SHOP. 271 read Greek and Hebrew and was way-wise in the most perplexing by-paths of ancient history. She was blessed with the gift of reverence, was Miss Jaffrey, like many an other woman of her generation. She would have found it convenient if Leonard could have bestirred his feeble muscles enough to drive a nail straight or grapple with a rusty screw, but she never reproached him, and learned to use a hammer herself instead. With Nelly Grant s veneration for the scholar, her own pride and pleasure bloomed afresh. She was thankful to have her brother get a glimpse of fresh young life; it was in every way desirable to give him a little change from his books and creaking pen. It was plain that Mr. Leonard Jaffrey himself was by no means averse to such re freshment. He became unwontedly agree able, and lost a good deal of the dull ex pression of countenance and heaviness of motion which were the result of a good ap petite and dangerous lack of exercise. As the spring days grew longer and brighter, and the snow disappeared and the early frogs piped loud and clear in the river marshes, Nelly besought her tutor and gov- 272 A VILLAGE SHOP. ernor to take a walk after tea down the river road. She wanted to talk about her lessons, she said, and she hated to be shut up in the house all the time, now that the pleasant weather had come. It was such tiresome work studying, but she liked to have people tell her things that one ought to know. And Mr. Jaffrey amiably ac cepted her invitation, and took a stalwart ancestral walking stick from behind the hall door, smiling all the time at Nelly s girlish opinions of life. Somebody jingled the shop door-bell im patiently for the second time and scuffed her feet about on the clean floor, and Miss Jaffrey obeyed the summons as if she were in a dream. She had watched the two fig ures depart up the street under the budding elms with a strange feeling of bewilderment, as if the air she breathed there at the par lor window held a kind of dull intoxication. She was vaguely afraid that poor little Nelly might grow over - fond of her stately companion, but the fear was driven away during an interview with a loquacious cus tomer. Leonard would gravely discourage any silly feeling that a young girl might have. Miss Jaffrey smiled ; for herself she A VILLAGE SHOP. 273 would as soon fall in love with her brother s great dictionary as with himself. With all his worth, he was not her idea of a lover and the dear soul blushed as if she were as young at heart as Nelly herself. Besides, the Jaffrey dignities sailed as high as the moon over the head of society in general, and Nelly did not even belong to Graf ton society, dear fresh-faced little country-girl ! The shop-bell jingled again and again. All feminine Grafton seemed to be in need of pins and needles. One or two of the women who lived along the street said meaningly that they had seen Miss Jaffrey s brother go by a little while before. But Miss Jaf frey responded with very little interest, as she counted out change or buttons for her curious customers. At that moment the scholar and his young admirer were strolling in the odorous dampness beside a long row of willows made shadowy by the twilight. " I get into such a hurry for the flowers to come at this time of the year," said the girl impulsively. " To my thought there is no flower so sweet as a youthful face," said Mr. Leonard Jaffrey. " You have made a con stant spring in our quiet lives." And Nelly blushed as bright as any rose of the June for which she was waiting. 274 A VILLAGE SHOP. A spirit of eager youth drove away all the shadows and haunting ghosts from the Jaf- f rey house in that bright May weather. The young girls of the academy flitted in and out of the doorway, at first awed by the at mosphere of stateliness and fading grandeur so foreign to their more prosaic modern lives. Nelly was very popular among her classmates, and had a way of asking them to the farm by twos and threes to spend the Saturdays and holidays of term time. They felt much more at their ease in such sur roundings, and secretly admired their hostess because she was so completely unawed and at home with severe Miss Jaffrey and her hermit brother. Miss Jaffrey was patient and affable in her place of business, but it was quite another matter when she rose to receive you in her parlor with that grand manner and simple welcome. The old house was always pleasant in the spring, and its mistress now found herself unusually cheer ful and hopeful. She hardly dared to look forward to the time when her young house mate must disappear, not only with her gay young train, but with her generous contri bution to the slender revenues of the house keeping. There was a delightful reminis- A VILLAGE SHOP. 275 cence of the past in all the intercourse with the farm. John Grant himself had been reared in all the ancient spirit of respect and even reverence for the Jaffreys, and never ceased to show it or to acknowledge Miss Esther s kindness and condescension to Nelly. But he had a great respect for the Grants, too, and looked upon them as people who never need be ashamed of them selves or their forefathers in any company, being people who paid their debts and did their duty in the place to which it had pleased God to call them. And John Grant the rich farmer and honest selectman of Grafton was as proud of his pretty girl as if she were a princess. He gave himself great credit for having hit on the best of all plans for bringing her social gain and pleasure in her last year at school. He was as fond of the old place as any man could be of his home, and hated the thought of leaving it for a night ; but in the early autumn, after the crops were under cover, he meant to take Nelly a journey to New York, perhaps even to Washington and Mount Vernon, that Mecca of every old-fashioned American s pilgrimage. Once he was for a moment possessed of a glowing thought that it would 276 A VILLAGE SHOP. be well to invite Miss Esther Jaffrey to make one of this adventurous party, but his good judgment rebelled. That would be taking a social liberty : with whatever ap preciation of kindness, Miss Jaffrey would be sure to instantly decline. It was not John Grant s habit to ask favors that must be refused, but he was none the less loyal to the first lady of Grafton. VII. Spring came to Grafton like an unan nounced young guest who steals into a dull dismantled house and surprises the inhabit ants with a charming gayety and laughing voice, with a disorderly litter of fresh flow ers and greenery all about the bare prosaic rooms. Nelly herself might have personi fied in advance the welcome change of season, and nobody greeted the coming of spring with more joy than the young girl, who went singing up and down the stairs, and brought in Mayflowers and anemones until Miss Jaffrey seriously announced that there was no longer an empty china mug or flower glass in the closets. New England people are never quite sure A VILLAGE SHOP. 277 that they may not have another snow-storm until a certain day of movable date when the sun shines and the dry ground settles itself with a determination not to be mis taken. This day usually comes early in May, and gives conclusive evidence that winter is f-airly gone. It is not a day when one can comfortably exert one s self, it is too much like summer. Only yesterday the east wind may have been full of shivers, but now Miss Jaffrey and Betty were busy in the upper part of the house, suffering more or less from the heat and from the cares of spring housekeeping. The fragrant air was blowing through the rooms, even Mr. Leonard had opened his window a little way, and propped it by a too thin book that was slowly bending together under the weight of the heavy sash. The unseasonable heat did not end with the close of day, but a summer-like evening followed, lighted by a full moon. Every body was out - of - doors, and though Miss Jaffrey was tired after her busy care-taking, she was kept in the shop until long after eight. The academy girls were weaving a fine romance about her of late, and liked to come to buy her wares. In June would be 278 A VILLAGE SHOP. the great exhibition day, and their hearts were already more concerned about their white gowns and their outward decoration than about the improvement of their un- scholastic minds. They hushed their chat ter and put on a more decorous and def erential manner as they came into Miss Jaffrey s presence, but they smiled at each other, and understood a great many things without speech, the elder woman and the gay girls. Miss Jaffrey was very glad when her revenues were all collected ; the long street was empty at last and silent, the young people had all gone home, and when the last garrulous neighbor had dis appeared it was a great satisfaction to step from behind the counter and close the shop door and put the strong cross-bar in the sockets. When the light was out and the two or three chairs were pushed back against the wall, Miss Jaffrey gave a deep sigh, and thought that she would just look at the evening paper and then go to bed. She was really very tired. Almost always when there was a busy evening Nelly took pleasure in coming in to help her. To be sure their nearest approach to a misunder standing had followed a gentle reminder A VILLAGE SHOP. 279 that the parlor, not the shop, was the place for Nelly to receive and entertain her friends, and there had been a subsequent day or two of cloudy weather. The shop was much less demanding in a social way than the rest of the house, one must confess. But Nelly was busy with her lessons nowadays, and quite solemn and cheerful by turns about the approaching end of her school life. Mr. Leonard was obliged to render a vast deal of assistance. Either Nelly was stupid with her book or he was beginning to squander his time. Miss Jaffrey felt a sense of uneasiness as she stepped into the parlor. There was no light there yet, though it was so late in the evening, and she stumbled against a strayed footstool. The glass door that led into the old garden was wide open, somebody had taken the trouble to force back the heavy inner shutter that was always drawn across the lower part of it in cold weather. Miss Jaffrey went to the, door-sill and looked out. It was ridic ulous in the girl to behave as if summer were already here, she would take cold in the dampness. There was wonderful beauty in the famil iar outlook, and Esther Jaffrey forgave the 280 A VILLAGE SHOP. careless young offender as she herself yielded to the temptation. The air was deliciously soft and warm, there was a caressing sweet ness in the fragrance of the old pear-trees which were standing like white ghosts of themselves all in full bloom in the moon light. The box was sending up its heavy quaint odor the lines of its winter-faded leafage led straight down the old path where the mistress of the house had walked to and fro on many nights like this. She stepped outside the house and stood under the first St. Michael s pear-tree, and drew a long breath close to its lowest branch. " How the old things keep on blooming ! " she thought, with a rush of feeling at the remembrance of her own faded youth. Two figures leaning close together came out of the shadows beyond a high syringa thicket. Miss Jaffrey s heart stood still. They were lovers, they were whispering to each other, and the man held the woman to his heart and kissed her. Leonard Jaffrey and Nelly Grant ! the moonlight made them look the same age. Leonard s late spring time was in full glory of flowering and delight. "What does this mean?" cried Esther A VILLAGE SHOP. 281 Jaffrey in a voice that seemed strange to her own ears. " Nelly, you must go in at once. Leonard! Leonard! are you beside your self?" " Somebody dearer than myself," answered Leonard with a famous burst of sentiment and valor. " Esther, you must be first to know how happy I am " but Miss Jaffrey turned away and followed Nelly into the house with stately steps. Nelly had disap peared, and the sister waited for her brother to come in. It seemed as if they could see the indignant eyes of the family portraits through the dark. " Go to your room, Leonard ; I am tired out. I leave you to think what you have been doing in your thoughtlessness. Nelly must leave us at once," said Miss Jaffrey in the same hard voice, and the convicted lis tener meekly obeyed. There seemed little use in bolting the doors of the old Jaffrey house now that its pride and honor had fallen, but the mistress patiently went her nightly round, and was careful to follow all her time-honored customs of care-taking be fore she wearily climbed the stairs. In three rooms that night were three wide awake and troubled persons. Nelly cried 282 A VILLAGE SHOP. bitterly for a whole half hour at the woeful ending of her new joy. Miss Jaffrey sat in the moonlight, still and pale as if she were made of wood. Mr. Leonard Jaffrey fell asleep long before the first hour of the vigil was past, but he was enough alive to the gravity of the occasion not to go to bed. He sat in the study chair by the table ; it might have been that the dangerously pendent vol ume on his bed s canopy could not refrain from letting itself be the instrument of cap ital punishment. It seemed very late in the night when the scholar was roused from pleasant dreams by a rap at his door. Before he could fairly open his eyes, Miss Jaffrey entered, carrying the last end of her candle in a tall silver candlestick, and she placed this on the table and stood looking at him, while he rubbed his eyes and tried to remember what was the matter and then to appear heroic. On the whole it was a gratification to find that he was disturbed enough not to go to bed, but his sister relented sufficiently to say that he might as well have been there, it was very foolish to run the risk of getting cold at his age. " We are only as old as our hearts are," A VILLAGE SHOP. 283 said Leonard, still looking upon himself as the successful lover, but his voice sounded like that of a whimpering boy. " Be still, Leonard ! " cried the over wrought woman. Her own loveless life cried out suddenly, fired as it was by a piteous jealousy that was hard to bear. She saw her brother at last without the least dis guise of sentiment. No hope was there any longer, of professorship, or pulpit ; she had abased her pride and starved and forbidden the hopes of her own life for this. " I thought that we must talk about Nelly as soon as possible," she said presently, in a, stumbling, weak way. " I feel as if we have broken the trust of having her here, and John Grant will be free to blame us both"- " Esther," said the culprit, leaving his chair somewhat stiffly, " I am engaged to marry his daughter. I do not see why you think our loving each other so disgraceful. The Jaffreys" " Don t, Leonard ! " and Miss Jaffrey steadied herself by the table. " We must put all that by. What right have you to ask that young girJ to marry you ? What have you to give her? Are you going to let 284 A VILLAGE SHOP. John Grant support you? He is a clear headed, right-minded man, and you have not a cent, unless I give it you ; we have been nearer beggary in our lives than you have ever known. It would not be like you to think what John Grant will say." " I shall stand before him as an honest man and a gentleman. I wish you would go to bed, Esther, and let things take their course. We are no poorer than we ever have been. I wonder that Nelly loves me, but she does, and she loves you. I have some work, very valuable data and that sort of thing, which I mean to prepare for pub lication. There may be duties in connection with the academy," murmured Mr. Leon ard Jaffrey with some confidence. " There is the shop," replied his sister, looking gray and old. "I have very few dollars laid aside after all these years. You must go to John Grant s to live," she said savagely, as if she meant it for a taunt. "No doubt he will remember that you are a Jaffrey." " It would be too far from the post-office," said the placid, literal man, taking a step or two toward the door, which was slowly swing ing open, released as if for a ghost s entrance A VILLAGE SHOP. 285 by its worn latch, and then Miss Jaffrey, disheartened and shivering with excitement, left the room without another word. She was powerless with all her clever energy and loyal steadfastness before this purposeless creature of indolent drifting and lifeless- ness. Ah, well ; she had often tortured her self in past years by wondering what would become of him if she died first ; his future was secure now, even Betty would take his part and rejoice in the luxury that this marriage would make permanent. VIII. The pear-trees opened their blossoms all night, the maples and lilacs and syringas swelled their buds and showed fresh tips of green by morning. There were bluebirds and robins at work in the garden and sing ing high in the elms all along the Grafton street. It was a terrible ordeal for the three members of the family to meet each other at breakfast-time, but high tragedy is impos sible by daylight, however suitable it may appear at night. Nelly Grant looked fright ened and heavy - eyed and a little sulky ; 286 A VILLAGE SHOP. Miss Jaffrey was thin and old, but most ap pealing, with a gentle stateliness that won the young girl s heart all over again. The lover looked and appeared exactly as usual. " Nelly," said Esther Jaffrey, and she held out her hand to the girl. " Nelly, I have been very much grieved and worried, but I do not mean to be unkind. You are very young, a great deal younger than my brother and me, and you must not think of this any more until your father has heard of it. My brother will talk with him as soon as possible, and you must be reasonable; there are so many things which make me think it would be unwise " and then the good woman turned to the breakfast-table, and tried to behave as if nothing had hap pened. It was not a repast which was af terward remembered as having been cheer ful or convivial, but it was brief and things were at least made no worse. Nelly helped Miss Jaffrey wash the china and silver after ward ; she noticed curiously for the first time the handsome crest that was engraved on the silver cream-pitcher, and looked up to find her companion s eyes fixed upon her with unwonted coldness. The crest did not mean half so much to Nelly as one might have A VILLAGE SHOP. 287 thought or wished, and was not in the least connected with her simple ambitions. Alas, how Miss Jaffrey s heart was aching ! She had never been ashamed before as she was ashamed now. The Jaffreys were to be John Grant s dependents, unless he was sen sible enough to cast them off and accuse them indignantly of lack of care for his daughter and her best interests. Alas, alas ! If Nelly would only go to school it would be more possible to think what should be done ; but it was a long hour from eight to nine, and Leonard would not even go to his study and take himself out of the way. If Miss Jaffrey had understood that the lov ers were hoping to have a few words alone together, I do not think that she was in a frame of mind to have granted the opportu nity. There came a loud knock at the front door just as Nelly was coming down-stairs with her school-books. She looked rueful when she saw her father, and was startled into a fear that Miss Jaffrey had already summoned him, and that Lynch-law was to be served upon her love. But the other selectmen of the town were with him, and she waited on the stairs while they solemnly 288 A VILLAGE SHOP. deposited their hats on the straight-backed mahogany chair by the parlor door and dis appeared, then she flew out to school without even a greeting to her father, who started to call her back, and then remembered the im portant business in hand. " We have come to see your brother on business this morning," said the spokesman, turning to Miss Jaffrey, though the brother was also in the room. " You are acquainted with the fact that the selection of a librarian for the new library built under our super vision, together with that of the committee, rests in our hands. We have said nothing of the time of decision, for fear that outside influence would be brought to bear. We don t feel as if we had any right to pass by such a distinguished lover of learning and a member of our most noted family, and now request Mr. Jaffrey to consider and accept. There will be arduous work in selecting the books and getting the thing going," said the selectman, relaxing from the effort of his previously composed speech, and beginning to grow red in the face and damp as to his skin, " but I can tell you there s money enough to pay the bills, and for clerk-hire too, if he wants it. The regular salary at A VILLAGE SHOP. 289 present, besides expenses, will be a thousand dollars a year." Miss Jaffrey and her brother looked at each other; he at least was triumphant. "I accept this mark of confidence with profound thanks," said Leonard, bowing handsomely to the selectmen. " I shall feel that my long years of study have been in the providence of God a special training for the position." Miss Jaffrey was dizzy and unnerved ; she bade the selectmen good-morning, for they were in haste with morning calls at that season of the year, being busy farmers. The new librarian ushered them out with great politeness and closed the hall-door gently. Then he stopped a moment to reflect, and presently hurried back on tiptoe with a pom pous smile. Miss Esther still stood where he had left her. " I am very glad and proud, brother," she said with effort, and the great man was un expectedly a little chilled. " Esther," he answered amiably, as if he had something to forgive her, "I have al ways had confidence that the time would come when I should be able to repay your kindness. You must be done with the shop now. We " 290 A VILLAGE SHOP. " Never ! " said the pale old woman, but in spite of this, her heart felt curiously light. At that moment the shop-bell tinkled impa tiently, and Miss Jaffrey went in, stately as a princess, to wait upon an early customer. MEKE POCHETTE. I. THE French Canadian village of Bona ven ture seemed to have strayed away from its companions and lost itself in the interminable wilderness that lies between the settlements of the Eastern States and the St. Lawrence country. For many years the community was self-centred and the nearest market- town too far away to be of consequence. A visionary seigneur, an aerial, castle-building Frenchman who never took the trouble to leave his own chateau except to taste the joys of Paris, had sent out a colony to this new possession, but it dwindled away and did not flourish. The factor was proved a cheat at last, and the old count shrugged his shoulders, smiled, and resigned himself. Some of the disappointed settlers retraced the trail to the great river, but a few re mained ; they had their gardens and their pigs and chickens. Life might be far worse elsewhere. 292 MERE POCHETTE. The lumbermen came by and by with their long axes ; the old seigneur s timber made rich other men than his heirs, while Bonaventure flourished for a season with new prosperity. The rough road over which the great logs were hauled to a distant stream proved a permanent thoroughfare, and now and then a stranger came and stayed. The mother-church sent a pastor to teach and pray among these neglected children, and a sharp spire, in glistening armor of tin, rose above the later growth of spruces and ma ples that had hastened to conceal the great stumps of the vanished pines. The first log huts were one by one replaced by the high- roofed houses of regulation shape and size which one may see in Beauport, in Lorette, in a hundred other villages of the French regime. This was a small town, this Bona venture, but it valued itself even more than was necessary in later years. The hereditary owners of the petty estates were apt to look with suspicion upon any new-comers, and when it was ascertained that a man called Joseph Pochette from the neighborhood of Quebec had bought the Rispe house and land, with a piece of outlying forest, there was a bitter arraignment of such proceed- MERE POCHETTE. 293 ings. Mere Poulette, who kept the village shop in her front room, was particularly angry, though one would have believed her ready to welcome a new customer. " Some crime has forced him to abandon his birth place," she exclaimed, and glared round upon the startled company. But Joseph himself, a good fellow enough, quickly pacified the neighborhood, especially as he died of fever within a year or two af ter his appearance in Bonaventure society. His funeral was a satisfactory one, but Mere Pochette had already drawn down upon her self the dislike of her associates. She was wickedly proud and independent, a black hearted schemer who cared only to grow rich ; and when she went by the houses with her fatherless baby in her arms, she won no compassion, for she asked none, and all hearts were 011 the defensive. Even the fact that old Poulette had not succeeded in making a good bargain with widow Manon for her woodland was not lost sight of, for had not this stranger the soul of an aristo crat under her peasant s clothes. At last there was another change at Bona venture ; one day the surveyors came with their chains and compasses, and before any 294 MERE POCHETTE. body could take time to fairly consider such an innovation the new railroad was pushing its way northward through the swamps and forests. Now the piece of worthless waste which Manon would not sell to Poulette the obstinate woman ! was sold to the com pany at an excellent price. It was all a piece of luck, but the indignant chorus of the little shop could not forgive such an out rage. As time went on, however, Providence seemed to repay her for her behavior. Her only child made an unfortunate match with a foreigner, though it was well known that Mere Pochette meant to buy the chit a rich husband. Then she was presently burdened with an orphan grandchild, and the chorus chattered and sing-songed their satisfaction. It took a stalwart character to keep its own way with almost an aspect of serenity; there was no light task in facing the dislike and distrust of one s townspeople, though as Mere Pochette grew richer and, if the truth must be told, prouder and more powerful year by year, her neighbors were civil enough to her face and even obsequious, the worst of them, whatever they might have said in winter evenings behind her back. She had devoted all her energies to securing a gener- MERE POCHETTE. 295 ous dowry for her daughter. The mistaken girl had disregarded this provision, had thwarted her mother s wishes, and had suf fered enough, God knows ! Now Mere Po chette s object in life was the wise ordering of the little granddaughter, and when, by and by, she was enviably settled in life, the sneering by-standers might say what they chose. This noble worldly ambition made Mere Pochette glad to work early and late and to toil and save. She would put her grandchild where all the village might not touch her. A career of pride and happiness should be put into little Manon s future. The neighbors were apt to look suspi ciously at little Manon, the granddaughter, as she went by their houses with quick, light footsteps. She was of mixed race at any rate. Her father was a young engineer from the States who had married this old Manon Pochette s handsome daughter, and they had held their heads too high, the fools ! and shaken the dust of the little village off their feet. It was the way of the world ; one April day their ribbons were flying, and they laughed aloud together and never cared to cast a look behind them at old friends ; the next spring a letter came, and the priest read 296 MERE POCHETTE. it to the widow, that her daughter Jeanne was dead. Presently the young engineer, broken and spent by chills and fever and hard for tune, came creeping back with a cough and a white scared face and an ailing motherless baby to the high-roofed cottage. Old Ma- non blessed herself, and waved her thrifty hands in dismay. She rolled her eyes and made grimaces, and became eloquent in patois sentences which her son-in-law did not even try to translate for himself. Then she mounted to her garret and came down pres ently with the dusty cradle. The wailing child was fumbled and tumbled and smoth ered in coverings that seemed to have been waiting for it, and the waning fire in the high, square stove was rekindled, though the May sun shone in benignantly. The young man coughed less often for a blissful hour ; he sank into an angular chair at the chimney corner, and hid his face in his hands and cried silently. The little house had seemed as full of romance as a scene at a play, the year be fore ; he had not concerned himself with the rest of the habitants of Bonaventure ; they were only the tawdry stage crowd that weeps and exclaims in perfunctory unison while the MERE POCHETTE. 297 hero and heroine suffer real pains and know true joys just behind the footlights. Now the sentiment and the amusement had faded out entirely. The garden of his life had sud denly been blackened by the most chilling of frosts ; it was late spring here in old Manon s plain house, she was a stout, unsympathetic old French Canadian ; and as he had come from the railway station tired to death with his long journey and finding even the baby a heavy burden, he had not been blind or deaf to the unspoken jeers and curious glances which were ready for him at almost every house. He had once been a hero in his petty fashion ; the men of the village had been obliged to obey him for a short three months ; he had disdained the women, all except the pretty creature who had become his wife. Whether he had regretted his marriage nobody would ever know. It was a dangerous experiment to carry her among young girls whose training and schooling had been of a better sort, but now there was nothing sweeter or sadder to think of than the days when they had been deep in love. Poor Jeanne ! her grave was left alone in an unsheltered western burying- ground. He could not see even that low 298 MERE POCHETTE. sandy mound again, and now that he had in despair begged and borrowed his way hither to bring little Manon to her grandmother, he felt that the great mystery of death would soon be made plain to him. The few men who remembered him on this new railroad had been very kind, and for a few hours his reinstatement to a semblance of his former position and relationship had brought back something of his old good comradeship and vi<ror. He even criticised the finish of the O work which had been done since he went away, and discussed it with an acquaintance who was now an official of the company and journeying prosperously to the terminus at Quebec. A kind-hearted woman had helped him to take care of the baby ; he had seen her eyes fill with tears at his bungling at tempt to undress it the night before, but he could not cry himself. He had sometimes looked at the little trimming of the baby s dress for a half hour at a time, he remem bered so well the tune his wife had sung as she sewed it on, and held and shaped it with her fingers, months ago. It seemed like years already, though the baby s short life almost linked that time to this. MERE POCHETTE. 299 The fire crackled in the box-stove, the little child was sound asleep in the great cra dle ; old Manon, the grandmother, stepped heavily to and fro, and now and then put a bowl or a plate on the kitchen-table. She muttered something about her poor little one, and clasped her hands ostentatiously, and seemed to consider the question of prayer, but gave a savage glance at the poor son-in-law instead, and went on her slow rounds about the room. He noticed that she looked ten years older than she had the year before, but it hardly surprised him, all the rest of the world was so changed, and then he looked wistfully at the plump bed in the corner, and longed to lie there and forget his weariness in sleep. He and Jeanne had run away to be married ; her mother would not hear to the match, because this would-be son-in-law was not a Catholic. When he looked up at the mantel shelf, however, his own letter that told the stern mistress of the house of her daughter s death was displayed beside the brass candlestick and the little picture of St. Joseph which had been blessed by the archbishop. After all, was it not something to have a literate son-in-law ? 300 MERE POCHETTE. Ill the next house and the house beyond, the neighbors were talking, and watching by turns the door which the traveler had lately entered. " It is well that Manon Po chette has made the round of the blessed stations of the cross every morning these many years," said the fierce dame who sat in her little shop across the way. " The saints warned her, she will be poor indeed and incapable, without their help, to bring up an infant of no gifts ; a perfectly deplor able occasion, my friends," and she looked from one to another, while a doleful neigh bor closed her eyes and groaned loudly. It was a great while since anything so inter esting had happened in Bonaventure. " He has been robbed of his haughty be havior," continued the first speaker. " A wicked pride indeed, but an abased man ner of return to an insulted house. He will not toss pennies now to good Justin Pou- lette, who has indeed a safe subsistence, but spends nothing for fine clothes " " She threw them at his face," said doleful old Marie Binet sharply. " She had reason. If he treated Jeanne wickedly he now has his reward. She had an amiable appearance, but Mere Pochette clothed her like a doll, M&RE POCHETTE. 301 and the devil tempted her. She had not the look of a child whom one may believe either good or beautiful," and Marie Binet gazed at her acquaintances for confirmation. This was venturing too far. Marie was known to the initiated to be a thief and a liar, and she feigned not to notice a smile of derision while she took her basket of potatoes and went her way. She had her revenge ; at the moment she closed the in hospitable door, and began to mutter a re freshing imprecation, Manon Pochette beck oned and called her eagerly from across the way. The audience within the little shop watched her from the window with envious eyes. Manon Pochette was one who kept her own secrets, she never had been one of the chosen company of gossips. But this must be a dire emergency, for presently Marie reappeared without her basket. Somebody must go for Father David ; the son-in-law had a few moments before slipped from his chair and become a dead weight of insensibility upon the floor ; they had borne him to the bed ; who could tell whether he might not be dead already ? " Marolie ! marche ! " said Marie impor tantly, stamping her foot and raising her 302 MERE POCHETTE. voice as if her betters were nothing but dilatory horses, arid while some one hurried away to find his reverence, the rest followed her over to the Pochette kitchen. In a few hours more the excitement was over and night had fallen. The young man s face was peaked and white, and his body was lying at its slender length, thin and forsaken of the poor warmth that life had lately kept. Manon was sitting by his side, rocking to and fro and keeping watch by herself. She had lighted some sacred candles which she had long been hoarding, and they were burn ing at the sleeper s head in the brass candle sticks. The priest had come in time, thank God ! the despised son-in-law had opened his eyes and looked around bewildered for a moment. He had assented to, and even welcomed the offices of the church ; they must have been to him a last and only pro vision against the evils that might be wait ing for him and his. The baby was chris tened too ; the father had already whispered, with an appealing look, that she was named Manon. Late in the night a waning moon rose solemnly above the level line of the horizon, and looked long at the few white washed houses with their high roofs. She MERE POCHETTE. 303 shone into the eastern windows all along the row. The whole flat country was lying in shadow ; this faded moon at last looked into one window that was apart from the rest, as if she had an errand there. Manon was old and tired, she would have no watchers, but she had ceased her prayers and fallen asleep, and the dead man s face wore a look of in effable peace. The candles were almost burnt out, the poor baby cried sometimes in a faint unexpectant way, and the moon hid herself under the edge of a great cloud. II. Out of this nourishing of sorrow and misfortune, like a plant that blooms best in a hard cold soil, grew little Manon. Her childhood was not a pleasant one in its sur roundings, indeed a less vigorous nature would have been stunted by the narrow life and lack of sympathy. Bonaventure was a selfish parish in spite of the lovely influence of the old priest, Father David, who, worn out with his service to a stolid flock, at length lay down his terrestrial body to rest in the tawdry burying-ground, while his spiritual 304 MERE POCHETTE. body went away to its own inheritance. The new priest had come to the parish half un wittingly ; it was a poor cure, and his house and church were plain and uninviting. They could give him no pedestal of worldly pride and power. The new part of the village grew steadily; over at the other side of the railroad there were repair shops and supplies of wood for the trains, and in that quarter Bonaventure expanded itself. The new parishioners were a somewhat lawless set and distinct from the old residents ; the little priest was not man enough to control them or to lift them up in the arms of his faith. He moved about among them con scious of the dignity of the church, bland and double, but an inoffensive creature in the main, who wished things were better, but also wished other people to take the trouble of making them so. Manon Pochette s house was still the last one at that end of the row ; she owned a good bit of land just beyond it, and if you crossed that you came to a swamp ; the house itself stood a good deal higher, and over looked the wide country that stretched away to the westward. Behind it was all the eastern country, and from the low ridge there MERE POCHETTE. 305 was also a grand view of the railroad that carried idle people to and fro on the face of the earth. To Man on Pochette s mind the railroad was quite unnecessary except for carrying her wares and her neighbors to the market- twon. As for the passengers, they always seemed the same persons who went to and fro in the hurrying trains, for some foolish reason. She never went into a car herself, the saints defend it, no ! She had duties in life, and a vocation, with a piece of land far too large for an old woman to till, and be side, there was the grandchild, who grew like a young fowl, with an unforeseen and impossible appetite into the bargain. The mother, Jeanne, had been no care at all ; she had seemed to take care of herself entirely when one compared her with this one, who was a terrible child of desires and eagernesses. All Mere Manon s grievances against the young people had vanished long ago ; it was fate that had been hard upon her, not they, and the good Lord had taken them to him self, poor children ! Old Man on had said many a prayer for them in the bleak church of a winter morning, and had appeased her conscience by the number of masses she had 306 MERE POCHETTE. caused Father David and Father Pierre to say for the good of such innocent souls. Yet occasionally, as she leaned on the heavy hoe to take a minute s rest as she worked among her cabbages, the old Adam in her nature got the better of such pious views of her affliction, and she grumbled to herself about that foolish infant, that ungrateful child, her daughter, or that worthless beggarly heretic, her son-in-law. But she kept their black wooden crosses in good order in the church-yard, and their memories came to her like pale ghosts beside the actual pres ence and constant demands of her young granddaughter. III. Little Manon was made up of puzzles and contradictions ; the old peasant woman was more and more distressed and gratified by them day by day. She was glad to have the neighbors see that her grandchild was better than theirs in fact she had always maintained a social advantage in Bonaven- ture corresponding to her residence on the highest point of the ridge. She overlooked Julie Partout and Marie Binet and Mere MERE POCHETTE. 307 Potilette disdainfully in more ways than one, but she was exasperated all the same by lit tle Manon s vagaries and differences from her own standard. The child was devoted to church-going she cried when she was very young to go with her grandmother to mass, and her eyes grew large and her face grew grave, when she sat or knelt before the altar and looked at its poor decorations of candles and gild ing and the votive offerings of faded artifi cial flowers and tinsel work that were ar ranged upon a smaller altar at the side. Poor child, it was not because she was satis fied with this cheap splendor, but rather that she caught the hint it gave of better glories, that she liked to be in church. She gave it no thought, as a bird sings in a cage and praises the bit of sunshine at the garret window, when it has never in all its life spread wings to the current of a great wind or gone swiftly through the bright noonday air to a woodland nest. The grandmother, who knew the human nature of the trans planted Frenchmen and women of her lim ited Canadian existence ; who could tell at once the value of a sheep or even a horse, and the weight of a pig ; who was shrewd 308 MERE POCHETTE. at gardening and clever at housekeeping; who knew when she was lied to, or when her dearest friend cheated her at a bargain ; old Manon, who was never stingy to the priest, or behindhand at her devotions, who thought herself entirely acquainted with things of this world and sure of a respect ably high seat in heaven beside, this same old Manon was baffled at last and confessed herself unable to understand her grand daughter. The only thing to be said was that Manon the less was made of different stuff. Sometimes it seemed to the priest, who knew the story of the child s parentage only through the medium of the romancing vil lagers, that the vigor of the young father and mother had been transferred to little Manon that their lives had been checked and blasted to enrich this one descendant. He was given to sentimentalizing a little, was Father Pierre, the parish priest, and he felt a great lack of excitement of the best sort in Bonaventure. Sometimes he told himself that he would see to it that little Manon had some schooling. She should go to the school of the Sacred Heart ; she might surely have a year or two first with the good gray nuns ; MERE POCHETTE. 309 she must not be left to her own devices in this hole of a place. Nobody seemed to know much of the child s father. He had told old Mere Pochette that he had neither brothers nor sisters, but Father Pierre soon discovered that the good woman did not like to be questioned about her son-in-law. She had felt a certain contempt for him because he came from the States ; besides, it was in deed a monstrous cowardice that he should have died so miserably and so young, and have made neither place nor fortune for himself in the world. " They should have waited for my consent," old Manon assured herself. " I could not properly hold out al ways against them if he had been a good man. He was a perfectly stupid pig not to make sure of the wardrobe and dowry he might have been certain I would give to Jeanne. What was my wealth for if not for my one daughter ? " she would scold sadly, pulling hard and fast at the weeds ; but now it would not be long before young Manon, the little aggravation, would be finding her self a man. But if all the powers of heaven would kindly aid, Manon at least should have a respectable wedding before the high altar, and should drive with her husband 310 MERE POCHETTE. and the wedding party as far across the country as the season would allow. Old Ma- non was herself reared in Quebec, and her hard brown face grew rosy and tender for one moment as she thought of the train of ca- leches that followed her on her wedding-day. The tall ungainly vehicles ; the shouts of the guests ; the red-coated soldiers who stopped in the narrow streets to see them pass ; the miles of houses and the tall poplars of the Beauport road, the thought of it all came back with a greater glory year by year. " He was a good man to me from that day," said the widow to herself ; " he might have done better than to bring me to this rat-hole and leave me here ; but it was a good bit of land and of an enormous cheapness, and he knew that well. If the Lord had pleased to let us remain together, and work in the same world and watch each other grow old, like the rest of the neighbors ! It was best so if he must have one of us ; a woman can work on the land, but a man is a simpleton in his house. Joseph and Mary aid me with these innocent cabbages that they may hold up their heads ; the Lord send us rain, for my poor bones will fail me to bring water to the crops a day longer," and Manon MERE POCHETTE. 311 stopped to carefully bless herself as she knelt at her work. Little Manon was of no great use in the garden, and she was frequently be rated because she had not been a grandson instead of a granddaughter. She was apt not to be very efficient in the house, but it was not for lack of power or of discretion. She was idle and straying, and liked the fresh air and the sunshine. She was fond of visit ing the priest s housekeeper of an afternoon, and sometimes Father Pierre himself beck oned her into his own parlor, and gave her lumps of sugar or well-dried figs from the drawer of his writing-table. She had her mother s beauty and her father s persuasive ways, but when she was in pain or her grand mother scolded her, little Manon grew pale and pinched, and looked as her father did that night he came back defeated and dying to Bonaventure. Old Manon was always particularly aggrieved when she caught this painful, surprising likeness, and began to talk about her own sorrows in a wailing pet ulant tone that sent the young girl from the house to seek elsewhere for comfort. 312 MERE POCHETTE. IV, In this village, where the days dragged so slowly, the years had a way of vanishing, un accountably. Old Manon had never suc ceeded in getting her establishment quite to rights again, after the intrusion of the young engineer and his baby. She had made up her mind that certain changes and arrange ments would be necessary, and she was an uncommonly executive person, as everybody knew. Suddenly one became aware that little Manon was grown up, and that there was danger of a lover. She was not old enough nor wise enough to think of such things, but elderly people always say that of girls, as if they themselves had waited for their husbands until the year before. Ma non was unexpected in her choice ; her grandmother was so conscious of her kinship to an unknown mass of strange, rich, willful, clever, and vagrant foreigners who belonged to the States, that she had vaguely looked forward to the appearance of a hero who should claim Manon s idle hand ; a man, however, who had wealth and power, and who would be a son-in-law, indeed ! But one MERE POCHETTE. 313 spring night the silly girl had come saunter ing home later than usual, laughing softly and chattering like a swallow with young Charles Pictou, of whom no one could say anything good. A terror to the school mistress, a rebel at home and abroad ; a youth who liked nothing but leading his dog through the world, or lounging about the railroad station to see the roaring engines and the gaping strangers. Charles Pictou, indeed! and Manon s light-heartedness was promptly quenched by a vigorous box of her pretty ears as soon as she had entered the house. " Pick these beans, quickly," said the cross old woman. "Am I to die of toil ? You would starve like the beasts if I were not here to earn the bread for your fool ish mouth." And in that moment a fierce championship arose in little Manon s heart for the lad whose whistle could even then be heard distinctly, as if he were waiting outside, longing to defend her in her distress. That summer the crops were bad, and all Canada was poor and complaining. The lumber-yards were deserted, the rain spoiled the grain, the fishermen were in distress, and aid was to be sent to them in the forlorn gulf villages. Once in a while some enter- 314 MERE POCHETTE. prising family had gone to the States, and indefinite rumors of their splendid prosper ity had journeyed back along the straight shining lines of the railroad ; but soon it became a common event, and the old wo men knitted in their doorways, and saw the younger neighbors go proudly away to seek their fortunes. The elder Manon was more contemptuous. " It is all one, here or there," she said to the priest s housekeeper ; " the good-for-nothing expect to find a country where larks go to the oven and cook them selves, and apples fall sugared from the trees." She surveyed the paltry possessions of the emigrants with pity, and wished their owners good luck with compassion. " I am one who remains behind," she said stiffly, and shook her head until her flat black hat shuddered from a sense of its insecurity. The autumn shut down dark and rainy ; every few days some pale-faced sisters of mercy or of charity, in their quaint out-of- date garb, went flitting from house to house of the Bonaventure settlement, begging alms for the love of Mary and of Jesus, for some sufferers or for the impoverished church. The remote villages were in danger of fam- MERE POCHETTE. 315 ine. It was the worst harvest ever known, and in spite of reports that work was hard to find in the States, the trains were fuller than ever of emigrants. Bonaventure was tided over any great distress, in common with most of the railway settlements, but some of its inhabitants thought they were miserable be cause other people were, and at best life was neither too rich nor too comfortable. In the Western States there were whole farms given away ; in the East there were mills where even the children could earn great wages. The little place was in a ferment, the quiet habitants had never been so excited and restless. The old women croaked, they were condemning some persons for going, and others for staying. Father Pierre laid down his mass-books and tried to calm his people, but those who remembered his pred ecessor spoke often of the benignant presence of Father David, and openly reminded each other of his value to the parish. The fiery French nature began to show itself unpleas antly, and households were divided against themselves. The gloomy weather continued, the winter drew near. Little Manon and old Manon went their separate ways, for the young girl 316 MERE POCHETTE. was disobedient and would not listen to her grandmother s objections and commands. She and Charles Pictou loved each other dearly, and were only wondering how they could manage to marry. He also was an orphan, and the aunt with whom he had lived was but a poor woman, and lately had gone away with her five thin children to the States. Of late years he had helped to sup port the household, for he earned a bit of money now and then ; but now he was grow ing older and he would work his fingers to the bones for Manon if there were anything to do. He was full of hope, he would have gone away afoot long ago if it had not been for Manon. The grandmother had talked a great deal in these last days about sending her to school at a nunnery in Quebec, and the young girl knew what it meant ; she knew, too, that while everybody else was poor there were loose bricks in their chimney that covered shining money. Sometimes she wondered if it would be wrong to steal some of it to give to Charles, so that he might go away to make a home where they could live together. Father Pierre had never liked young Pictou, the lad s shrewd eyes had seen more than was necessary, and lately Charles MERE POCHETTE. 317 had stayed away from mass. But as for the housekeeper, she was on Manon s and her lover s side, and sometimes when the priest sat with her grandmother, Manon slipped over to the great house and took revenge in confiding her dear secrets to so kind a friend as old Josephine. Josephine s little room was like a nun s with its bare boards and its worn crucifix, and pictures of various suffer ing saints. The good soul had once cherished a certainty that she had a vocation, and told Father Pierre that she must join a sister hood of great sanctity and benevolence, but the priest had persuaded himself and her that she was wrong. He could not imagine where he should supply her place ; surely this also was a vocation, and Josephine was a most careful cook. Life in Bonaventure must not become any more difficult. But in the face of disapproval at home and distress abroad, the young people fairly flaunted their contentment and happiness. They were sure that Charles would somehow get to the States, and that he would soon be come able to send for Manon or to come for her. " The old tyrant is right," Charles said magnanimously. " She knows I should be able to take care of you, and so I should 318 MERE POCHETTE. indeed. But she might show some confi dence in me," and he stamped his foot and twirled the tassel of his raveled red worsted belt. V. The sweet sad day came at length, with out note or warning. Josephine herself, after scores of prayers and misgivings, had ventured to offer Charles a liberal assistance from her slender savings, and he was off like a falcon, after a few hurried kisses and promises to his sweetheart. He ran to the next station, five miles away, to catch an express train which did not stop at Bonaven- ture, and the girl with tearful eyes went down to the village, to the place where the street crossed the track, to catch a last glimpse of her lover. She wished that Charles had been able to say a prayer in the church, but she would do that for him. Her woman s heart shrank from the strangeness and dangers which he might meet, but she longed to go with him; she would have braved sorrow and want if she could have gone with him to the States. It seemed very lonely in the old cottage, when she re- MERE POCHETTE. 319 turned ; she passed her grandmother, who sat in the doorway looking surly and dismal, without a word. The sky was covered with low-lying gray and silver-white clouds, the black spruce woods stretched away cold and thin to the level horizon. It was almost winter weather, and she was alone and felt unsheltered in that great flat landscape with its threadbare coat. She hoped that she need not go down to the station again for a long time to come. She had not seen Charles on the train, there was such a roar and dusti- ness as the train rushed by and a crowd of young men ; one of those with the red sashes must have been Charles himself ; had shouted adieu, or sung noisily. She felt as if every one of them were laughing at her own secret, and hated the strange faces that stared at her for one miserable moment before they were swept out of sight. Charles was a thousand times more skillful than the other lads of Bonaventure ; he could surely make his way, but to what temptations might he not yield, and only yesterday they had been together, and separation had seemed almost impossible ; at that hour the States had seemed as remote as Heaven. 320 MERE POCHETTE. VI. Now that Manon s heart had gone away from Canada, she seemed more a foreigner than ever. All her thoughts and hopes had gone to the States with her lover, and the short days seemed long and dreary. In the house she tried to serve her grandmother well, she hardly cared to go out-of-doors at all, and sat near the fire, sewing, or picking beans with a far-away look in her eyes that made her companion more and more angry. They had said nothing to each other about Charles since their first fierce battles earlier in the year. The provincial life was very dull at best. One has only to look at the transplanting of the French peasants, child ish, mercurial, and full of traditions and grievances, from their ancient civilization to this untamed wilderness only to think of their being carried by a sort of social inertia over the roughness of their changed condi tions, to understand the incongruities of Canadian life in the remote settlements. By the time Manon was grown there were few fetes and but little revelry and amuse ment of any description. The young men MERE POCHETTE. 321 soon hardened into stolid farmers, who dis cussed the politics of the province and scru tinized the behavior of their English rulers with more or less inapprehension. They grew stupid and heavy ; they drank gin and bad beer ; some of the wives had a hard time of it, and one would hardly recognize their relationship to the merry vine-growers and soldiers who had been their ancestors. Old Manon Pochette preserved many of the old customs ; she was more a French peasant and less a Canadian than her neighbors, but young Manon, who had been seeing life of late through a glamour and dazzle of hap piness, sat listlessly in the clean bare cottage, and wished herself away. There was a col ored print of a saint with a bleeding heart, which the grandmother had bought from a peddler. Manon had hated it once with its woebegone look, but now she looked to it often for sympathy and companionship. The brass candlesticks still decorated the high shelf above the stove. The same an gular chairs and tables which thrifty Joseph Pochette had made himself stood in order around the room. The chief thing to be hoped for was a letter, but none came from young Pictou ; 322 MERE POCHETTE. perhaps the noisy company he had joined on the train had beguiled him, and he had already forgotten Bonaventure. He had promised to send a letter to Josephine s care at the priest s house, but presently she was found one day in tears and shook her head dismally when Manon asked the often re peated question. The girl s sharp eyes dis covered that some enemy had guessed her simple plot, and went away to pray, not for patience but for vengeance,, Later, as she entered the house, she found old Marie Binet warming herself by the stove. The drifts were deep out-of-doors and the girl came in softly enough in her great snow boots, but her grandmother feigned not to hear her. "He was a good-for-nothing" she was grumbling ; " he will never return, and at last I have nothing to fear. I had already directed Father Pierre to advance the price of a ticket from me, when that trembling fool Josephine forestalled the plan." Marion stood on the threshold and the old women quailed at the sight of her angry eyes. "Come in from the snow," growled the mistress of the house, " my old bones ache already, and you will like to see me bent double." M%RE POCHETTE. 323 "Another year," and she had quite re gained her self-possession, " another year and I will go to the shrine of La Bonne Ste. Anne. It will be a pretty tour for thee, too, Man on," she added in a softer tone, but Ma- non s ears had become deaf. " Another year," she was saying to herself ; " I may be dead then, and if not, to go with a groaning proces sion of cripples ! God forbid ! " and tears filled Manon s eyes, and even fell down upon the well-scoured floor. " Where is my let ter ?" she said suddenly, and turned fiercely upon her grandmother. Old Manon was equal to so slight an oc casion. Father Pierre himself was deep in this intrigue, which gave it a certain dignity and value. " Letter ! " she repeated, " you never had a letter in your life, and why should I covet it who cannot read even my mass-book ? Ungrateful, listen to me ! Next year, you shall go to Quebec and see fine things ; to Lorette church, and to the chapel of the Seminary, where are blessed relics. That is all the world ; when one has seen Quebec, one knows everything. I have a little money saved from my poor garden," she added amiably by way of explanation to old Marie, who nodded sagely. " It is some- 324 MERE POCHETTE. thing to pray for Quebec ! " Marie re sponded devoutly, but the foolish girl would not listen, she was pressing her forehead against the cold window-pane and staring out into the starlit night. What fools she and Charles had been ! Of course Father Pierre had taken the letter from the post and given it to her grandmother. Old Ma- non fairly chuckled with satisfaction, and went on chattering with her guest. After this startling episode, they spoke a quaint dialect, clipping their thin words, and dwell ing lightly on the objectionable letters. Such language belonged to the lips and not the heart, one would say who listened and did not understand. Marie did not mean to stay any longer than she could help ; she was too anxious to give herself the pleasure of reporting such a bit of news elsewhere. Some persons would take the lovers part, and there might be a fine discussion presently, in the little shop across the way. Manon Pochette was in most things a shrewd woman; one cannot tell why she chose to make a confidant of the least reliable of her neighbors. Manon the younger grew more and more angry that night and longed more and more MERE POCHETTE. 325 to find her hoped-for letter. If she could only hold it in her hand, she believed that she could easily wait for daylight and read it aloud then over and over, until she knew it by heart. She lay in bed beside her grand mother with wide open eyes until she heard the familiar long-drawn breaths that be longed to sound sleep. Then she crept out softly, and went like a mouse about the room ; she felt in the capacious pocket, in a little box that was under a loose board in the floor. Her heart beat fast as she unwound the long cord that fastened it, but there was no letter anywhere. The old woman was growing deaf lately, and could not have heard such gentle movements, but it seemed a perilous enterprise, and proved to be a dis appointing one. If Manon only knew where to write to her lover, or if she only knew how to follow him, it would be enough, but she cried herself to sleep that night and the next night and the next. Before many weeks were spent, Father Pierre went away suddenly and a stranger came to take his place. 326 MERE POCHETTE. VII. The winter months passed by, there was sickness in the village of Bona venture, and everybody longed for the spring. Manon had grown thin and pale ; she could not eat, she would not smile, her life was spoiled at its outset, and Josephine, who had meant to be a friend to the young people, bewailed her indiscretion and wished that she had tried to keep young Pictou at home. There was plenty of work now at the station ; they had even brought some young men from elsewhere, and Charles might have been well established, if only he had gained a little patience. " We that fight for our selves make enemies of Heaven," she sighed, and tried to make amends with prayers and piteous confessions of her sins. As for the letters, they had long ago been read and laughed over and burnt in the priest s room, and Father Pierre had given old Manon a generous glass of wine. Josephine had seen it through the keyhole. She never told little Manon of that ; she would not lower the child s reverence for the priest and for sacred things. Father Pierre had always MERE POCHETTE. 327 hated Charles ; alas for that poor human nature that even his holy calling could not lift above the earth and its weaknesses. When Mere Pochette looked at her young housemate, and in spite of herself could not help pitying the dull eyes that had once been so bright, and the faded cheeks, she forgave herself her share in the sad change ; for was not she thinking always that every day added something to her possessions, and that by and by she would find a suitable young man, and would go frankly to him and announce the magnitude of little Manon s dowry. All the lads gave shy glances at her, the pretty simpleton ! There must be thriving grand sons of her old Quebec acquaintances by this time ; she would fling her money east and west at the wedding, and then work on among her vegetables until her time for de parture came. " All, yes, she shall have all," the old woman muttered once in a while and blessed herself at the thought. At last her plans began to take definite shape, since it was plain something must be done. The neighbors need not scowl at her, for was not she meaning to make the long- talked-of journey to Quebec as soon as the .first fine weather came, and her garden was 328 MERE POCHETTE. made and planted ? That would pay Manon for all her fancied grievances, and as the winter waned the glories of that expedition pictured themselves brighter and brighter. Manon should find a rich husband there for a certainty, of a description and with such amiable qualities. She herself would indeed like to see the old city again and those of her friends who were left. Manon would think no more of that foolish, handsome beggar lad who had forgotten her after all ; she had nothing else but him to think of in Bonaventure, but in Quebec she would quickly console herself. " For what have I slaved myself all these years ? " the old wo man would demand angrily of Marie. " I have a right to forbid her marriage with a worthless lad, and I only step in to keep her from her mother s fate my good Jeanne, who was thrown away to a vagabond." But when the early spring came, little Manon had lost her strength and her youth ful spirit altogether. She cared nothing for the stories about Quebec, which were at last paraded desperately. She sat all day in the doorway, watching the long trains come across the plain and go away into the dim distance of the north. The clouds of MERE POCHETTE. 329 spring hung low, and when sometimes a clear band of light was left above the western horizon, she grew hopeful and gazed at it as if some blessed vision might appear there for her reassurance. It seemed as if the child of misfortune and sorrow must have disappointment for her inheritance. The neighbors scolded to each other about old Manon Pochette s vast wealth, and repeated their conviction over and over that she would soon only have herself to hoard it for, if she did not take care. One night there came a summons to the grandmother that Father Henri, the new priest, desired her to remain at the church after early mass next morning. Mere Po chette obeyed somewhat unwillingly ; she was shy of this stranger, and angry beside that indulgent Father Pierre had been su perseded. He had carried more than one of her secrets out of harm s way, that was a comfort ; and she did not mean to take another spiritual adviser so far into her con fidence. She left her granddaughter sleeping, and sighed a little as she stood by the bedside looking at the sad face of the young creature who was after all the dearest thing in the 330 MERE POCHETTE. world. Once or twice lately the thought had crossed her mind that the first thing to be thought of in Quebec was a good doctor. More than one silly girl had pined away and faded out of this world like the April snow-drifts for nothing but love s sake ; while if only young Pictou s presence would cure little Manon, nobody knew where to find him. Perhaps Father Pierre would remember, but where was he ? Early mass was over, the sun was well above the horizon, and began to shine warm ly into the bare church, and the tarnished finery of the altar glittered and looked quite splendid. It might be that the new priest meant to beg for a great sum of money for the restoration of the church ; some one had said he had this much at heart, and Ma- non s face was black for a moment with re sentment. She was truly very anxious now about the sick girl at home. As she knelt at her prayers her thoughts kept wandering homeward instead of to a vague heaven, and a great throne to which the Bonaventure altar was a plaything. What would life be worth if little Manon should die ? Such an event would make her own prayers and good works worse than useless, for it was her own MERE POCHETTE. 331 short-sightedness that had brought this grief. There were only a few old people left in the church, who had nothing else to do and could take their time at their rosaries ; the altar boys had scuffled in the vestry and gone away, leaving their tumbled and torn eccle siastical raiment on the floor. Father Henri had flushed angrily when he caught sight of them, and quickly opened the door to call the young rascals back, but a moment after ward he gently shut it, and came out into the church tall and slender, with a grave sweet face, stopping to kneel before the altar as he passed before it to where old Manon Pochette seemed to be diligently praying. She was watching him through a narrow crack of her eyelids, but she bowed her head as he approached and pressed the small worn crucifix to her breast. The slender cord broke, the beads separated and fell with a patter like hail upon the floor. " Do not gather them now," said Father Henri hurriedly, but somehow the old woman did not dare to look higher than the frayed hem of his long black gown. It was scant and made of poor material, she observed, and the thought seemed like a reprieve that she would make him a present of a new one at 332 MERE POCHETTE. Easter. Easter was late that year, and there would still be time. Josephine would know the proper means to use and the cost of such a benevolence. She rose to her feet and followed the good man ; they made obeisance together side by side as they crossed to the vestry door. The old parishioners regarded this with interest, and wondered what was going to happen, taking counsel of each other in loud whispers as the door was shut. Mere Pochette s heart was quaking ; she watched the priest while he picked up the small vest ments and half smiled as he heard the own ers merry voices outside. Then he turned and took a letter from his pocket. " I bring good news to you and yours," he said courteously ; and Manon the elder, who had feared some dire calamity, the loss of her savings or the death of young Pictou for a certainty, found herself growing faint and dizzy. " Sit down, my child," said the priest. " You are no doubt fasting. Listen, I will read this letter." Once to hear such news would have given Manon a fancied foretaste of Heaven ; now she heard it without excitement, almost with disappointment. Her poor grandchild s MERE POCHETTE. 333 father had been one of a respectable family, and now a sum of money equal to the old Canadian s own fortune had fallen to the poor sick girl at home. The lawyer had been at some trouble to trace the heir. Father Henri volunteered to answer the communication, apd with some surprise at the manner in which it had been received he turned away. He had much business on hand that day, there was a visit to be made to a dying person miles away down one of the long muddy roads of Bonaventure par ish. But old Manon had fallen upon her knees ; she was weeping sorely and begging for a blessing. She had sinned ; she was avaricious and stony-hearted ; the good God was punishing her already with the pains of hell, and taking her one treasure to himself. Father Henri listened with dismay. " I am cursed by this wealth," she groaned, and groveled upon the floor at his feet. He knew that the young girl was ill, but in that bleak country one learns to take such dis pensations without surprise ; the tender crea tures are kindly gathered to the dear saints, and taken up from this blighting and evil world. 334 MERE POCHETTE. "Listen," said Manon Pochette, at last regaining her composure and standing be fore the priest determinedly. " Listen, you must find for me this Charles Pictou before it is too late. I cannot let this my child die with hatred in her heart toward me. I am an old woman ; I have .had my way long enough, and it brings me only sorrow and shame. I will send him money. I will treat him as my own son. I will tell him all, for I burnt the letters that he wrote to Manon long ago. If he has taken another in her place, the punishment will be mine." Was this the hard-faced woman who had looked scornfully in even Father Henri s face ? He closed his saintly eyes and said a prayer as he stood before her, and raised his hands as if to call down mercy upon the stricken gray head. " I will talk with you this evening," he promised, and they parted silently. Little Manon had waked and arisen, and presently she crept feebly to the window to watch for her grandmother. She wondered what kept her so long away. The big black hats of the neighbors had reappeared in the short street, and the day was begun as usual. The men were off to their work, and the MERE POCHETTE. 335 children were gathering around the school- house. The sun was bright and clear, and the girl felt strengthened and cheered by it. She heard the cars presently; perhaps Charles might yet come back, though she had almost ceased to look for such a happiness. She grew hungry, she became tired with the ex ertion of crossing the room, she was so weak that the tears began to flow down her thin cheeks. " My grandmother cares nothing for me, nothing," she mourned ; " she is bar gaining with old Philippe, the gardener ; every year she is less generous ; " but at that moment Mere Pochette was kneeling in pas sionate grief at Father Henri s feet in the chilly vestry. At last she approached, and little Manon was filled with wonder at her look. " You must get well in this good weather," she said ; " we will go soon to Quebec, and you shall have the one you love best for com pany. Forgive me at last, my child," but the sick girl could not comprehend the full meaning of such words, though the speaker stood there appealing, repentant, the square, sensible business woman who could be cheated by no one. And now little Manon rose and put her arms close about the weep- 336 MERE POCHETTE. ing grandmother s neck. Only yesterday faithless Marie Binet had announced that this neck should in the name of justice be encircled by a halter. The train from the States was just out of sight that very morning its long plume of smoke had hardly drifted away in the clear air before a handsome young man came lightly up the street. He did not stop at any of the drinking shops near the station, as most men did, but he hurried toward the older village on the ridge above the straight, uni form row of ancient French houses, and from several of these eager eyes followed him to the end of the settlement. Then the various housekeepers rushed out to confer with each other upon the astonishing event of young Charles Pictou s incomprehensible return. It was like unneighborly old Mre Pochette to have sent for him without giving anybody the pleasure of knowing it, but at that mo ment she was thanking blessed Mary and Joseph, her patron saints, for this miracle straight from the skies. It was seldom at any rate that an emigrant returned so soon. Charles had a prosperous air already, and the whole village was in commotion that morning, while Father Henri was called to MERE POCHETTE. 337 a noble feast the moment he returned from his errand of consolation. The young habitants, who still wore red worsted belts with tassels, looked at their for mer neighbor s fine clothes with admiration. He was earning good wages with prospect of advance, but he had become too miserable at the strange silence. He was not so very far away, and had taken his first chance to see little Manon again. He had sent let ters to prudent Father Pierre, but that wor thy had kept silence, being at any rate at a great distance from Bonaventure over seas. So Manon s strength came back again in this sunshine of happiness, and the lovers presently were married and lived their sim ple lives together. The world was a com fortable place enough without going to Que bec, but the occasion of Mere Pochette s grandchild s wedding could be marked by nothing less than such a journey, and she saw her children lead their procession of caleches, with immense complacency, living her own youthful joys over again in their behalf, as one returns in autumn to the meadows where one has gathered the flowers of spring. Old Manon bore a vast bundle when she 338 returned to Bonaventure, and took from it proudly a handsome cassock for Father Henri. The good man was at his devotions, but she gave it to Josephine and lingered for a few moments to have a friendly talk. She had brought Josephine herself a remem brance of less value. " He is a blessed saint, this father," the stayer at home said. " He speaks no harsh word, but goes before us like a holy shepherd ! " and the house keeper blessed herself as devoutly as she could have blessed the priest himself. The ancient holiday maker could not linger ; her shrewd eyes had detected a grievous neglect of her young cabbages on the part of their guardian, old Philippe. He had not ex pected her home so soon, the pig ! Pres ently the round black hat made its appear ance among the weeds, a new and imposing great black bonnet having been laid aside, and one would find it hard to believe that Mere Pochette had taken so great a journey. The neighbors came one by one without fear or reproach and leaned over the railing of the garden. They were all very good- natured, for had not one of their own Bona venture lads secured the old miser s money after all ? The high-roofed white house was MERE POCHETTE. 339 lonely that night ; the upper casements were wide open, and the color of little Ma- non s deserted red geraniums could be seen in the bright moonlight. Little Manon her self , rich and happy, had gone away to the States. 14 DAY USE RETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED LOAN DEPT. This book is due on the last date stamped below, or on the date to which renewed. Renewals only: Tel. No. 642-3405 Renewals may be made 4 days prior to date due. Renewed books are subject to immediate recall. JUL13 SEJP21 1988 MAR .. . CU. OCT 7 82 OCT 3D85 JAN 91986 A/a\x Co ISC.MIG29 BP 191 LD21A-30m-10, 73 (R3728slO)476 A-30 General Library University of California Berkeley GENERAL UBRABY-U.C. BERKELEY 9530 i 2 THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY