Miss BELLE PETERSON, 2-- BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME, OR, A TRUE KENTUCKY GIRL. BY I MISS BELLE I? ETERSON, AUTHOR OF " ROSE SHERWOOD; OR, THE STAR is SHINING STILL;" "ONE WORD AND A TEAR; OR, THE WOUNDED DOVE; " "THE STORY OF LEONORIA PAROLEE," AND POETICAL WORKS, LOUISVILLE : p PUBLISHED FOR THE AU T HO R . m . **" "N 1886. TO THE STATE OF TEXAS AND HER MUCH-LOVED AND HONORED PEOPLE THIS Book IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHORESS, AS A SLIGHT TOKEN OF HER Hir.H APPRECIATION OF THE UNLIMITED KINDNESS AND HOSPITALITY WHICH SHE RECEIVED WHILE MAKING HER TOUR THROUGH THE LONE STAR STATE. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1883, by BELLE PETERSON, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. PREFACE. Miss BELLE PETERSON, the Authoress of this work, and whose name is familiar to us all, is a native of North Carolina, but for several years has been a resident of Kentucky, where the plot of her story is laid, and where she now resides upon one of the most popular streets of Louisville. She is a descend- ant of Daniel Boone, the great pioneer of the West, and of Mary Slocum, distinguished in the Revolutionary struggle of the colonies with the mother country. She is also a grandniece ot the celebrated William Rufus King, once governor of the State of Alabama and afterward vice-president of the United States. Miss PETERSON deserves the success she has attained in the literary world, this being her fourth production, all of which have received the high commendations of the press. The style of the present story is pleasing and graceful, also stirring and vivid; being a touching tribute to woman's con- stancy and devotion, and man's gallantry and bravery, and which we hope will grow rapidly into public favor. And now, with our best wishes for the success of this inter- esting work of the fair Authoress of Kentucky, we commend it to the public. MRS. B. KENNEDY. CONTENTS. I. A leap from the midnight train A mother's wild despair A sad funeral 5 II. A wail of grief in the city of the dead 29 III. The phantom of the night ; or, a mysterious letter .... 45 IV. The letter translated 58 V. I can not bury my father in Potter's field ; or, the doom of a drtinkard's wife 67 VI. Veary Carlisle has found a friend ; or, the cloud is passing away 79 VII. A deathbed gift A mother's blessing 88 VIII. Birdie's trials ; or, out in the cold world alone 91 IX. Dr. St. George and the little beggar girl 97. j X. The bird has flown from its thorny nest; or, a narrow escape zf-jT*' XI. Veary Carlisle mourns over the loss of his little Birdie ... I. ^ XII. Found in the snow; or, an old man's story 154 XIII. The orphan's prayer ; or, the angel of the house 164 XIV. The dying child in the lone house in the mountains .... 175 XV. Birdie's adventure; or, the meeting at the spring 183 XVI. Has she been named in heaven ? or, do the angels call her Birdie still? 198 XVII. A row by moonlight ; or, saved from a watery grave . . . 209 XVIII. Birdie's surprise ; or, the miniature in the woods 220 XIX. The chamber of death The fourth time an orphan .... 240 XX. The confession of a dying man 246 XXI. Not dead, but living A happy surprise Engagement . . 256 XXII. Found at last in the city of the dead ; or, the baby in the eagle's nest 276 XXIII. Lines to little Ida Belle Peterson 295 XXIV. Essay on the men and women of the present day 297 Doubt and despair 325 CHAPTER I. A LEAP FROM THE MIDNIGHT TRAIN A MOTHER'S WILD DE- SPAIR A SAD FUNERAL. White-winged peace sits enthroned on yon fleecy cloud, and the day-god, clothed in majesty sublime, shoots forth his golden arrows, spreading bright effulgence through my nppling hair, and playing hide-and-seek around my pen as *Eendeavor to gather up a few scattered links of memory's broken chain. Had my pen been plucked from some beautiful bird of paradise and dipped in the dyes of the rainbow, as it steeps its lovely form in the rays of a mid- day sun that turns the dewdrops into sparkling diamonds, and makes rainbow bridges of the seven precious stones, and builds castles of ruby with gates of pearl, I might attempt to paint in glowing colors the story of one whose life I am about to narrate ; and should these written pages rest beneath the critic's eye, deal gently with the one who traced them there, for my pen is but a steel one, and is dipped in blue ink; and my reader will have to accept the plain truth from my simple and unsophisticated pen. It is a calm, hazy October morning. Soft, golden-edged clouds float peacefully over the blue vault of heaven and (5) 6 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. cast their shadows upon my table as I write. A fragrant breeze, so fresh and pure that one feels sure its original home must have been in some far-away paradisical island in a southern sea, is holding sweet communion with the dying leaves as they breathe a sad farewell to the parent oak that stands like a sentinel in triumphal security, twining its leaf-clad arms in close embrace. A pure stillness is floating through the air, while the silver gleam of the reaper's blade flashes mid autumn's generous sheaves, and all nature seems to sink into one grand repose, wherein strife and misery and death appear to have no part. The ocean of life may present a calm, unbroken surface to the eye the very picture of repose while beneath, the dark and turbid current is surging to and fro, black and angry. The sky may smile without a cloud, as its blue depths are bathed in a flood of sunshine ; and yet the storm be brewing and the lightning be heating its red bolts and the storm troops marshaling for the onset. The human countenance may be as calm as that ocean, while bitter waters are welling up in the heart as bright with sunshine as that sky unclouded, and yet the fierce tempest be sweep- ing across the soul, or the echoes of sorrow's wail linger mid ruins of hopes which have been destroyed. As we bury the past and write its epitaph we turn a new leaf in the volume of time and enter upon the future with re- kindled hopes and aspirations. Perhaps it is well for us that an impenetrable veil of A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 7 mystery hangs over our future that is unsolvable by human reason. "What a world of chance! Fortune may make us her idol to-day and her foot-ball to-morrow." Nothing in this world ever turns out just as we expect it. You can go on and plan and contrive and say you will do thus and so, and when the time comes around you will be thunder-struck at the odd turn everything has taken, totally different from your plans, no matter how care- fully laid and arranged. We must go through the world not knowing, taking everything on trust. And the per- son is wise, indeed, who has courage enough to take the world just as he finds it, without any absurd expectations. "Blessed is he who expects nothing," says the old proverb, " for then he will never be disappointed." Life, however, has some sunny spots, but they who seek happiness only from this world find but few of them. The gifted Byron, possessed of rank and talent by which he swayed at will the human heart, and the waking of whose harp nations heard entranced, was most unhappy. Ambition is a demon ; and Fame has eagle's wings, and she mounts not as high as we desire. When all is gained, how little then is won ! And yet to gain that little, how much is lost! Let us once aspire, and madness follows. Could we but drag the purple from the hero's heart; could we but tear the laurel from the poet's throbbing brow, and read their doubts, their dangers, their despair, we might learn a greater lesson than we shall ever acquire by 8 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. musing over their exploits or their aspirations. Think of unrecognized Caesar, with his wasting youth, weeping over the Macedonian's young career! Could Pharsalia com- pensate for those withering pangs? View the obscure Napoleon starving in the streets of Paris! What was St. Helena to the bitterness of such existence ! The visions of past glory might illume even that dark imprisonment, but to be conscious that his supernatural energies might die away without creating their miracles can the wheel or the Bastile rival the torture of such a thought? Be- hold Byron bending over his shattered lyre, with inspira- tion in his very rage! And the pert taunt could sting even this child of light! To doubt the truth of the creed in which you have been nurtured is not so terrific as to doubt respecting the intellectual vigor, on the strength of which you have staked your happiness. The glorious king of day had finished his grand parade, and his flaming banner of bronze and gold was waving triumphantly in the western sky, when he tipped his royal cap, and \vith a low bow bid good-night to the nocturnal queen as she arose in her chariot of silver, surrounded by her maids of honor, trembling lest they should offend her majesty. The distant hills blushed under the good-night kiss of the setting sun ; and as if for shame twilight shut her curtain down and pinned it with a star ; and the lim- pid, silvery waters, as if offended, hurriedly left their mountain home, gurgling and foaming and moaning as A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 9 they threw themselves upon the rocks below, breaking into snowy spray, and then gathering themselves together again, leaped into the deep, quiet waters of the Ohio. Away in the west a few golden-edged clouds lay along the horizon, illuminated by the rays of the setting sun which had just sunk to rest behind the treetops as if loth to leave to the shadows of night the beautiful scene it so lately had clad in a sheen of gold, until the waters of the Ohio seemed turned into a sea like unto that which the wise king added to the glories of the temple. Dr. St. George had been standing at his office window for some time watching the beautiful scene. Though his face bore traces of sadness, his eyes were bright with the fire of youth, and hope was strong in his manly breast. Though young, he had aspired to the topmost round of his profession, and stood among the first physicians of the day. No man was more loved in the community where he was reared ; and no physician was more honored and respected in the field where he labored. He had married quite young, and eighteen months of perfect happiness had passed over his head. Nothing had come to disturb the quietude of his short but peaceful wedded life, until one day he found the canker-worm eating into the heart of his flower, and the hectic flush burning like rubies upon her cheek. While in this deep reverie, a hand was gently laid upon his shoulder, and turning around he beheld one of the disciples of Blackstone, who said: IO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. ''I have been standing at your elbow at least a half hour, and must say that I have never seen any one so com- pletely lost in thought. Why, doctor, what is the matter? You would impress one with the idea that you were con- templating suicide. " The doctor smiled as he gave the lawyer a warm grasp of the hand, but it was anything but a mirthful flash ; there was something lacking in that smile, and something, too, was there which told of a sorrow deep down in the hidden chambers of his soul that had never been resur- rected. "You take me rather by surprise," said he; "I thought you had left the city." " I have been away from the city several days/' said the lawyer, "and have just returned. I saw your and your wife's departure for the White Sulphur in the socials this morning, and though!: that I would drop around and see you. I suppose you leave to-morrow morning.'" ''Yes," replied the doctor; "all preparations have been made to start on the 26th. " " By the way, have you obtained a nurse? "said the lawyer. " I saw your advertisement for one ; if you have not, I think I can send you a most excellent one, and one, too, who has had considerable experience." "Yes; I was fortunate enough to get one this morn- ing," said the doctor; "and I think my wife will be pleased with her. She is an old Spanish woman, and has. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. I I spent her whole life in the nursery. She says she is formerly of Cincinnati." " I am sorry to see you leave just at this time," said the lawyer ; ' ' for I think that it would be very essential that you should be at court when that case comes off." "I saw your partner, Mr. Calhone, this morning, and he told me that it was not necessary that I should be there," said Dr. St. George, looking very much disap- pointed. "I know," said the lawyer, "we did think so at first; but something has caused us to change our minds, and we think it is very essential that you should be there in per- son. I am sorry to disappoint you," he continued, "but one should look after his own interest." "I must first look after the interest of my wife," said the doctor; " I can not see her dying right under my nose and not make an effort to save her, for the sake of a few dollars; no, not for millions. She has been neglected too long already, " and he turned and gazed out of the window for several minutes. "You must excuse me," said the lawyer; "this is the first of my knowing about her illness ; I thought you were merely going on a pleasure trip." ' ' My wife is not confined to her bed, and never has been, but any one can see that she is dying by degrees ; that cough is wearing her life away, and unless she has a change I am afraid there is not much hope. And I never 12 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. can forgive myself for not sending her sooner, for it was only selfishness in me ; I could not bear the thought of her leaving me for even a week." Then there was silence, when the lawyer said, "I am sorry for you, my friend, and hope it is not as bad as you think, and perhaps this trip will be beneficial to her. Judge Holliday and family are going to start to-morrow evening," he continued, "and I know the old judge will take great pleasure in doing anything for your wife that lies in his power; besides he has a most excellent one himself, and I don't think you would have any cause to be uneasy should she go in company with them." "I know the judge quite well," said the doctor, " and I am glad that he and his wife are going; I think I will go around and see him after tea, and see what arrangement we can make." "I have no doubt but that your wife will consent to your remaining until after court, when you explain every- thing to her," the lawyer replied. ' ' She will consent to anything that will promote my welfare, " said the doctor ; "for if any man was ever blessed with a good wife I am." The two men walked out of the office, and after bidding each other good-night each sought his respective home ; one pondering over perplexing questions and tangled problems of law, the other trying to decide whether or not to permit his wife to go alone to the springs. But he A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 13 could not decide, and said to himself, ' ' Well, I will leave it to her, and whatever her decision is I will abide by it, let it be whatever it may." ifcjjs^if:^^^^^^ At the window of a beautiful mansion stood an exquis- itely beautiful, high-bred woman, whose every motion was replete with grace and harmony. Long she gazed upon the fading loveliness ; and when at last the glorious clouds had lost their splendor, and lay dense and somber, as if in grief that the glorious king had departed, and the lakes and rivers also seemed to join in the same aspect of regret, the full moon rose up into the sky, and both clouds and lake caught up her smiles, and lay like islands of silver in earth and heaven. " We will soon see papa," said she, as she knelt down beside the crib and kissed her babe that was cooing and smiling and throwing up its little dimpled arms and tiny hands, with one little foot peeping out from beneath the white spread. Long the beautiful mother gazed upon her smiling baby from out of the inner sanctuary of her soul. Then she kissed its little face and hands and feet ; now and then pressing it to her throbbing heart with an eager- ness that seemed as though she expected every minute something would tear it from her embrace; and then she uttered a prayer, that He who holds the world as water in the hollow of His hand would watch over her precious dar- ling, and protect it from the storms of life, and from the 14 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. temptations of this cold, fallacious world, and guide its tender footsteps over the rugged and stony paths as it ascended the steeps of Time ; for erelong she would im- press the parting kiss upon its white brow, and seek a home in that land from whence no traveler returns, and its tiny feet would have to travel the thorny labyrinths of life without a mother's tender care and loving counsel. As these truths flashed before her she buried her face in her hands, and slow, scalding tears trickled through her slen- der fingers and dropped upon the white spread. What a ray of sunshine connected that mother and child, for holy as heaven is a mother's tender love ! It is the love of many prayers and tears; time but strengthens it. It is pure, un- alloyed, unselfish. It is the only love which in this teeming earth asks no more. Dr. St. George walked with hasty steps toward his dwelling. When he reached the front steps he paused for a moment, and then walked around to the back of the house and ascended the back steps to his wife's chamber and en- tered unnoticed. What a spectacle presented itself to his sight. The mother of his child kneeling over her baby, bathing its face in her tears, and that baby laughing and frolicking as hilariously as if it was taking a warm shower bath, and had never known an hour of baby-grief. This was too much for him. A man can stand anything but a woman's tears. He knelt down beside her and gently A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 15 raised her head and said, in a low, measured tone, indica- tive of suppressed emotion : ' ' What is the matter with my darling ? What are all these tears for, mamma?" " Nothing, dear," said she, drying her eyes with baby's dress. "I was only feeling sad." "Only feeling sad ? " "Yes." " What made you feel sad, darling? Is there anything troubling you?" "No, dear; nothing. Perhaps it is foolish of me, but I have felt all day that some great sorrow was going to befall us in some way. I have a presentiment of it, and I never felt as I now do never ! I can not account for it, unless it is my bad health, for nothing can happen to us, surely, Robert. Nothing that is very bad, do you think?" "No, darling," said he, drawing her closer to his bosom. " Nothing shall ever come to mar one single hour of your happiness if I can help it, and you must not make any more mountains to climb, for I am afraid you will never be able to climb them by your little self, and have baby to carry, too. Now promise me that you won't be foolish again, nor shed any more tears. Will you promise, dear?" "Yes," was the faint reply. "But why did you come up the back steps?" " Why, just to catch you crying, and baby laughing at 1 6 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. you. You have no idea what a spectacle you two made ; " and he stooped down and imprinted a kiss upon the lips of the laughing baby as two little hands made an attempt to grasp his whiskers. "That is right, baby," said he, "always laugh at rnamma when she makes mountains and cries over them." "Our nurse has come, Robert," said she, as they walked out upon the veranda. "And do you think you will like her?" asked he, look- ing down inquiringly into her face. " I don't like her much, Robert, " said she ; " but I sup- pose it's only another silly whim, and perhaps I may like her after all. She seems to love the baby very much." "I am very sorry you are disappointed, but perhaps you will like her after you become better acquainted ; but I have argued that first impressions are always best. If you don't like her, dear," he continued, " Mr. Wellington, my lawyer, says he knows of one he is sure that we can get, and he recommended her very highly to me." "Perhaps we had better take this one," she said, after a few minutes' deliberation. " I think I will try to like her, because she loves the baby, and the little thing seemed to take to her immediately," she continued, smiling. "And you think you will keep her?" "Yes." "Well, I hope you won't have cause to regret it," said he; and he related to her the conversation he had had A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. I/ with his lawyer that evening with regard to her going in company with Judge Holliday, that he might remain until after court. "Only one week, dear," he continued, "and then I will start immediately." To this proposition she consented, but in her heart she felt sadly disappointed at not having her husband with her as she anticipated ; but for fear of making him feel badly (and woman like) she concealed her real feelings from him with the shadow of a smile. A good wife is to a man wisdom, strength, and courage. A bad one is confusion, weakness, and despair. No con- dition is hopeless to a man that possesses a good wife one that is possessed with firmness, decision, and economy. Man is strong, but his heart is not adamant. He needs a tranquil home, and especially if he is an intelligent man, with whole head, he needs its moral force in the conflict of life. To recover his composure, home must be a place of peace and comfort. There his soul renews its strength and goes forth with renewed vigor to encounter the labors and troubles of life. But if at home he finds no rest, and there is met with bad temper, jealously, and gloom, or assailed with complaints or censure, hope vanishes and he sinks into despair. %%%.%%%.%;%.%:> It was ten o'clock when the great iron steed thundered up to the railway depot, puffing and blowing as if the mon- ster was tired out, and there it stood still panting. 2 1 8 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. " But now unheard, I saw afar His cloud of windy mane ; Now, level as a blazing star, He thunders thro' the plain. " The life he needs, the food he loves, This cold earth bears no more ; He fodders on the eternal groves That heard the dragons roar. " Strong with the feasl, he roars and runs, And in his maw unfurled Evolves the folded fire of suns That lit a grander world. " Disdainful from his fiery jaws He snorts his vital heat ; And easy as his shadow draws, Longdrawn, the living street." The train that evening was an hour late, and the little party for the springs had grown impatient, all save two, and to them time was like the locomotive which would soon separate them. After securing a sleeping car for his little family, and assuring his wife that he would be with them as soon as business would permit him, he kissed her and baby good- bye. For a moment her arms clung around his neck and her head rested upon his bosom, which had been its rest- ing-place for eighteen months, little dreaming that it would be the last time her head would rest there in life. Only a A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 19 moment, and the signal-bell sounded ! Another moment, and the train was lost to view, dashing through the midnight blackness. The travelers were soon tucked away, each in his berth, and oblivion closed their eyes to the headlong career of the iron steed that seemed to lead them to destruction. But there were two, at least, that refused this sweet nectar. One, the schemer and plotter of a hideous crime ; the other, the victim. For a long time Mrs. St. George lay tossing upon her sleepless couch, trying in vain to banish the sad and gloomy forebodings that assailed her pillow, and to find rest in a haven of sleep ; but she could not sleep, and she arose and drew back the curtain and sat gazing out va- cantly into the shadows with fixed and fascinated eyes, watching the gloomy hills and the black, mysterious woods that seemed to her as if their density shrouded nameless horrors. Then watching the tall, dark, motionless trees that seemed to stand like specter-sentinels stretching out their long arms beside the line, watching the wayside sta- tions where the men waited to wave aloft the light that was the signal of safety, and where, with a shrill shriek cutting the pall of smoke, and without a pause or an instant's slackening, the iron monster tore past in a storm of thunder and fire the red sparks flying and flashing up in showers from the glowing wheels. It was now twelve o'clock, but sleep refused to comfort this weary traveler 2O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. until overcome by exhaustion she dropped into a feverish, troubled slumber. The light from the lamp shone upon her pale, white face, and the long, silken lashes lay heavily upon her tear-stained cheeks. Now and then a deep, heavy sigh escaped her lips, and once a dry sob shook her frame as if she were again passing through the painful ordeal of separation. But gradually the traces of emotion disappeared, and that marvelous peace which is found only in the countenances of children or on the faces of the dead settled like a benediction over her features. Once she was aroused by the cry of her baby, which the nurse had in charge, and who occupied a berth opposite hers, but it was only for a moment, and both mother and infant were again sleeping the sleep of innocence. It was two o'clock when the train stopped for water and fuel, and a woman, with a fiendish smile playing around her mouth, stealthily drew aside the curtain, and with a cat-like thread walked out upon the platform at the rear of the car. She looked cautiously around her. No one observed her now, and the baby was sleeping quietly in her arms. " My time now," said she, with a chuckle, and with this she leaped with the bound of a tiger and disap- peared in the dark woods, hugging close to her breast the sleeping infant. Again the signal-bell sounded and the train sped on, unmindful of the distance it was putting between mother and child. And that mother, all unconscious of that fearful leap of A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 21 her wandering babe, slept on, though her spirit was with her darling; for in her wild, feverish dreams she stretched out her arms to catch it as she saw it fall from a high precipice and dashed upon the rocks below. In her exertions she awoke, bathed in a cold perspiration, and for some moments was too weak and exhausted to speak. Presently she drew aside the curtain and called the nurse, but no answer came, and thinking both nurse and baby were asleep she fell back upon her pillow and moaned. "That was a dreadful dream," she murmured; "but it is so foolish of me to worry over dreams when I know that my darling is so near me and is sleeping so sweetly." And she imagined she could hear its peaceful, low breath- ing, and hear it laughing in its sleep, and cooing to the angels as they hovered around it arid let their fingers wander through its shining hair. All was quiet and peaceful within save the gentle foot- steps of the night-watch and the heavy breathing of the weary travelers. Without, the roaring cf the train, and the keen whistle of the engine as it plowed through the darkened woods and wound around the rugged mountain sides. Now and then a far-off roll of thunder faintly shook the hills until the heavens, riven by sheets of flame, thrilled with ominous echoes, and zigzag lightning whirled down the murky sky. A storm was threatening darkly, but the storm-king had compassion upon the little wander- ing babe and hung out his flag of peace, and the stars 22 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. stepped forth at the command of their gentle qireen, and burned like altar candles around the throne of God, until the sweet red light of Aurora relieved the shining host of their faithful vigil, and placed her flaming banner in the east, as a signal for the coming of the day-god. Its rosy light fell into the rapidly-moving car and cast a glow over the drapery and upon the carpet. It was now six o'clock, and the travelers were still sleeping, and the morning sun was streaming through the glass doors, its golden rays striking, in discordant brill- iancy, between the closely-drawn curtains, and dancing in dazzling gleams on the floor as gayly as though no tragedy had been enacted between its setting and its rising. Mrs. St. George arose and went feebly to the nurse's bed in order to imprint a morning kiss upon her sleeping babe, but to her horror the bed was empty and the nurse and infant nowhere to be found. She called, but no answer came; she searched for them, but in vain. Her babe was gone ; no loving blue eyes looked up into her own ; no cooing laughter fell upon her ear ; her darling, her life was gone. Then the fearful vision flashed before her; she was warned in her dreams, but too late; and as one stricken by a heavy blow she threw up her hands and fell to the floor. A stifled moan and a ring of blood told where the dagger had pierced the same dagger, grief, which has pierced the hearts of thousands, and which seldom kills, unless it strikes the vital chord. It rankles and burns in A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 2$ the heart until it ceases to beat, and cuts and festers, little by little, until the victim cries for mercy in the sweet arms of death. The same sunlight that stole in through the closed curtains and kissed her sleeping brow now fell upon her prostrate form and touched, as if in cruel mockery, with one bright ray the stained and matted hair it used to gild so gayly. She was carried by gentle hands to a country inn, where she was cared for until her husband arrived. Dr. St. George brought with him two of the best physicians in the city, and every effort was made to save her life, but to no avail. A blood-vessel had been broken, and the grim angel of death bore away victory's crown, and the fond husband of eighteen months had to yield up his treasure to be the bride of Death. "I am dying; kiss me, darling," were the feeble words that came from her trembling lips. I am dying ; kiss me, darling ; Kiss me once before we part ; Let your arms entwine me fondly ; Lay your head upon my heart. I am dying ; kiss me, darling, While my eyes are free from tears ; Let your arms entwine me fondly, Gently as in other years. I am dying ; kiss me, darling ; It will soothe my fevered brow ; Kiss me once before we part, For my Saviour calls me now. 24 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. I am dying, darling, dying ; Though to-day I'm fever-flushed, Pale will be my cheeks to-morrow, And my pleadings will be hushed. I am dying ; kiss me, darling, Ere my lips in death doth freeze ; For the angels now are coming ; I see their pinions ride the breeze. I am dying, darling, dying ; Move me nearer to the door, Raise the window, ope the shutter, And let me see the sun once more. Now kiss me, darling, once again, Quickly; it will soon be o'er; Press my hand ; I can not see ; One more pang, and all is o'er. "I am dying," she said, "and will never see my baby again in this world; but if mothers in heaven are per- mitted to look down upon their children on earth, my mis- sion will ever be to watch over our lost darling. And before I go, Robert, promise me that you will never cease to look for our child as long as there is life. And if you ever find her, talk to her of me when she grows older, and tell her how I died, and guard her as you would your life. And, Robert," said she in a hoarse voice, "let me die in your arms, darling." She laid her head upon his breast and looked up at him with the sweet content of a little child. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 25 " It is hard to die so young, Robert," said she, gently ; " to die, to leave you and baby. I have been so happy with you, Robert, so happy with you, darling ; and now I must leave you. " O, my darling wife, my angel, how am I to bear this?" The white hands softly clasped his own. "You must bear it," she said, "for baby's sake. I know you will miss me ; but you will find our darling, and you will have something to live for. But, I know you will love me always, Robert. Now kiss me, darling ; I am dying." He raised her gently in his arms and pressed his lips to hers, her head with its pretty gold coil fell back upon his shoulder, and beneath his own he felt her lips grow cold and still. Presently he heard one long, deep-drawn sigh. Her pure spirit had fled, and her last words were, "Kiss me, darling." Some one raised the beautiful head from his breast and laid it back upon the pillow. The snowy eyelids drooped over the azure orbs, and the long, dark, curling lashes rested on the pale cheeks. He knew she was his no more. "Heaven help me ! " he cried. He tried to bear it. The words of his dying wife rang in his ears. "Bear it for baby's sake." He tried to rise, but his strength was gone; and with a cry never to be forgotten by those who heard it, Dr. St. George fell with his face to the floor. 26 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. The sun of another day had risen, waking the earth to its toils, and the children to their plays, lifting the drooped bells of the flowers, and rousing the butterflies to flutter in its golden light, giving back to the birds their song, to the waters their sparkle, to the blue seas their laughing; bringing to all the world its resurrection from the silence and gloom of night. It fell in shining showers upon the floor ; its golden beams touched the beautiful white face so still and solemn in death, and crept among her glossy ring- lets. But though its light touched her cheeks to warmth and her hair to gold, it had no spell to awake. "O, death where is thy sting? O, grave where is thy victory?" Kind strangers closed the violet eyes and brushed back the golden ringlets. Some one gathered some beautiful white hyacinths and laid them around her pillow so that she looked like a marble bride on a bed of flowers. Death wore no stern aspect there; the agony and the torture,, the dread and fears were all gone all forgotten. There was nothing but the sweet smile of one at perfect rest. Dr. St. George, still crushed by his great grief, lay upon a couch in the next room ; not a tear fell from his burning eyes; he could not weep; his eyes were dry and burning. Could he have wept, tears would have brought some relief to his aching heart. "I can not believe it," he said; "or believing can not A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 2/ realize it. That she, who only a few short hours ago walked smilingly by my side, life of my life, soul of my soul, has gone from me forever, and that I shall see her no more ! I can not, I will not, believe it! I shall hear her calling for me directly, or she will come smiling into the room with baby in her arms, and lay it in my lap. Baby?" he said, with a startled cry, as he arose from the lounge with a wild expression upon his face, as if he had just realized the sad truth of his lost baby. So poignant was his grief for his dying wife it seemed impossible to add another drop to his cup of woe ; but when he mentioned his baby, it seemed to arouse him to a sense of his duty, and the words of his dying wife rang in his ears. "Where is my child?" he said, rising and walking the room. "Heaven help me to find it!" he continued; " help me to fulfill my promise to that angel mother who is now watching over it!" The kind doctor was too wise to make any endeavor to stem such a torrent of grief. He knew it must have its sway. He sat patiently listening, speaking when he thought a word would be useful. Presently St. George arose and went up to look at his wife, and kneeling by her side, Nature's great comforter came to him. He wept tears that eased the burning brain and lightened the heavy heart. The physician permitted them to flow and made no effort to stop them. He looked with infinite pity on the tired face. What a storm ; what a tempest of grief had this man passed through. The bereaved man was 28 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. frantic in his grief, mad with the sense of his loss. The doctor, knowing how one great sorrow counteracts another, spoke of his stolen child ; reminded him that if he wished to find his baby he must take some care of himself. ' ' Your grief is poignant, ' ' said he ; " but I believe you are a strong man, a brave man, and in grief of this kind the first great thing is to regain self-control." Mrs. St. George was taken back to her beautiful home and laid to rest beneath the shadows of the elm trees, and the tall gray spire of the church arose in the distance like a finger pointing to heaven. And thus They left her silent and alone, Snatched ruthlessly away from her beautiful home, To sleep the grand sleep, so solemn, so still, In her little clay house by the side of the hill. CHAPTER II. A WAIL OF GRIEF IN THE CITY OF THE DEAD. Twilight was winging her noiseless way from heaven to wrap the temple of the dead in her soft, transparent dra- pery when I wandered into the cemetery of Cave Hill to muse upon the fading loveliness of the setting sun and upon the holy memories of the departed. It was one of those sweet days in May, when it seems impossible to be- lieve in anything but what is good and true and beautiful, when the dewdrops and flowers and the sunset take our hearts and thoughts to heaven, where all is light, all is beauty, all is love a region of mellowed bliss. The sun had sunk to rest behind the distant hills, and the gentle queen had unfurled her silvery banner and it was floating gently and solemnly over the moss-covered graves, making luminous the white sculptured marble, and the stars looked down in holy tranquillity upon the silent scene. Silence prevailed in this great city of the dead. It was decoration day, and the people of L had spared neither money nor labor in bestowing memorial gifts upon the graves of the dead. From every slab hung wreaths and festoons of the most exquisite flowers, and the dark-green (29) 3O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. ivy trailed itself along upon the gently-curved mound and seemed to whisper in its silent language to the gallant dead below. I was fond of symbolizing. Every inanimate thing had its type in some ideal or oriental fancy. This evening I felt particularly poetical. My imagination was as fertile yes, I thought as fertile, as Milton's, if my thoughts were not so grand or my images so sublime. I sauntered care- lessly along, stopping now and then to read an inscription or inhale the perfume of a favorite flower. Suddenly I paused before a beautiful lot, its tiny silver fountain bub- bling up and breaking into white sprays that glittered like hoar frost in the gentle twilight. I sat me down beneath a beautiful spreading beech and took out my note-book and pencil, and there in the peaceful solitude of the dead I traced upon its pages the thoughts that were uppermost in my mind ; for the sweet, tranquil, lonesome, voiceless resting-place of the silent dead and its surroundings had stirred my enthusiasm, for this peaceful abode of quietude and rest caused me to meditate, wondering where my little mansion of clay would be erected. As I was a citizen of the world, with no permanent home of my own, I felt uncertain in what quarter of the globe I would be laid. I knew that I was entitled to a spot, six by four, somewhere in the broad domain of our beautiful land, where I would be laid as peacefully and gently to rest as those who then were sleeping their last sleep beneath roses and moss- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 31 covered mounds. But was there one of this vast creation that would shed a tear or plant one single flower upon my lonely grave? So in this state of mind I wrote the follow- ing lines : There is a spot somewhere for me, And I've often wondered where 'twill be A little spot, just six by four; I mean a grave, and nothing more. Perhaps beneath some woodland shade My lonely bed will there be made, Where the wounded deer will stop and sigh, Fall on my grave, and bleed and die. Perhaps I'll in some graveyard sleep With a marble slab at my head and feet ; A little rosebush may near me stand, And a flower may drop from a stranger's hand. Perhaps I'll in some church-yard lie With spire reaching to the sky, Or in some beautiful garden fair ; Perhaps, O, perhaps it will be there. Though it matters not where'er I'm laid, Let the willow be my only shade, That its silver branches may o'er me wave And weep in silence o'er my grave. I know for me it will breathe a sigh, And weep when others' tears are dry Weep when the morning sun is bright, Weep in the folding glooms of night. 32 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Weep when blushing flowers bloom, Filling earth with their sweet perfume ; Weep when the laughing waters meet To ripple at their rosy feet. Weep when the shades of evening fall Like to the folding of a pall ; Weep when the dew is on the rose, And never sleep while I repose. Distant thunder, or the rustling of the leaves, or the whistle of the whippoorwill, Every sound that breaks the silence Only makes it more profound, Like a crash of deaf 'ning thunder In the sweet, blue stillness round. Let the soul walk softly in thee As a saint in Heaven unshod ; For to be alone with silence Is to be alone with God. "Voice of silence, thou art speaking From the places of the past On whose old memoric windows Faces full of life are cast, Where the King of Thought, enthroned Like a star on midnight's peak, Rules the world with silent spirits Who, though being dead, yet speak." The walks were shaded by dark-green arbor-vitae and low, whispering cedars, and the tall elm trees stretched out their gnarled arms and leafy hands, hushing the world A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 33 down for the sweet, still benediction of the soft, stealing winds sweeping among the graceful ferns and nestling violets and over the velvet moss with noiseless tread. Presently I looked around me, and for the first time perceived that it was night. The fair queen, with her maids of honor, was sitting upon her silver throne, ruling the world with her bright scepter, making luminous the nocturnal clouds and changing them into a bed of silver. The sweet olive blossoms lay scattered upon the green grass, and were like little tracts from heaven, dropped by the fingers of the fairies. The gentle dews were falling, and the flowers that had been plucked by gentle hands to die beneath the scorching rays of the sun raised their drooping heads in grateful acknowledgment of the rich blessing ; and as it" in return for Vesper's gracious gift, they sent forth their fragrant perfume broadcast over the land, wave after wave, until the very air was fragrant with their dying breath. The birds were nestling in the tree- tops, and as each one tucked his tiny head beneath his wing he seemed to say, Buenos noches, Senorita. So absorbed was I in my poetical thoughts, I heeded not the fleeting hours, nor the deepening shades of night, until a low, smothering sob fell upon my ear. "Every heart has its sorrows," said I, rising to take my departure. It was my intention to leave as quietly as possible, that I might not disturb the mourner, who had evidently sought this hour that he might be free from all watching 3 34 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. eyes ; where he could fling himself upon the grave of his loved one, and moan and cry aloud against his fate, unseen and unheard, with only the friendly twilight, and the stars of heaven, and the birds of the air to overhear him. I turned my head and directed my eyes to the spot whence the sound came, but not through idle curiosity to see a fellow-creature suffer; but to suffer with him, to feel and to sympathize, for there floated back upon the tide of my memory scenes of by-gone years. A face, a form, that was as dear to me, and that I had seen laid as low as the one for whom he was pouring out his grief. I too had wept as he was weeping, I too had felt what he was feeling. I saw before me a new-made grave over which the autumn leaves had never fallen nor the spring flowers bloomed. Somebody's darling had wandered away, Beneath the cold sod she was buried that day ; Somebody's darling was sweetly sleeping As somebody o'er her grave was weeping. Upon the grave were two beautiful wreaths of pure white lilies; in the center was an exquisite cross of tube roses, which were breaking their rich, sweet hearts upon the dewy air. Kneeling by the grave was a young man with clenched hands and bowed form, and bosom heaving with choking sobs as if his soul were taking its departure. A I5F.AUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 35 "O, my darling!" he exclaimed, "if mothers in heaven are permitted to look down upon their children on earth, I know you will watch over our lost, lost baby." Then as if some heavy weight were pressing his spirit and crushing out his very life, he stretched out his hands as if to grasp something for support and fell senseless upon the grave. The strength of his manhood was gone. He had fainted and lay as cold and as rigid as the one over whom he had been weeping. I ran over to the next lot and picked up a large shell and filled it with water from the fountain that I had watched with so much interest, and hastened to him. I raised his head, and with my 'ker- chief bathed his face and temples in the cool water, which soon restored him to consciousness. . "Did I faint?" said he, raising his grateful eyes to my own. "Yes,'" said I, "you fainted; you seem to be very weak. I saw you fall," I continued, "and came to your assistance ; I hope you are feeling much better now." "You are very kind," said he, "but it would have been far better for me if you had let me die." "Perhaps it is not God's will that you should die," I replied ; " perhaps He has some mission for you to perform before it would please Him to take you ; besides, we are not put into this world to remain until it should please us to leave it ; we do not hold our destinies in our own hands, if we did the world would soon be demolished, and our 36 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. beautiful world would be transformed into a pandemo- nium." "Ah," said he, shaking his head mournfully, "I have no desire to live any longer. I have nothing in this world to live for now, and to me, at least, the world is not beau- tiful; it has lost its charms, and my whole life seems a blank, for my spirit is broken, and my heart is crushed and bleeding, and beneath this mound of clay lies buried all my joys, my hopes, and my aspirations. When I laid the darling of my bosom to rest beneath this sod too cold for a soul so warm and true there I buried my heart also. There is nothing left but its dead, white ashes, en- cased in a shattered frame. If I could weep perhaps it would be some relief, but I can not ; my grief is too deep for tears." " I am sorry for you," said I, " and wish it were in my power to alleviate your distress. Is there nothing that I can do for you?" I asked, laying my hand gently upon his shoulder ; " if there is, do not hesitate to tell me. I know that I am a stranger to you, but not to sorrow. I have been rocked in that cradle from my infancy, and have traversed every foot-path, and well can I sympathize with you, for it is only those who have drunk deeply of the cup that can melt at the sight of another's sorrow. Besides, I have often seen the stranger pour balm upon the wound inflicted by friendship's hand." I said this, little dreaming that the poisonous arrow A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 37 which had pierced the heart of this sorrow-stricken man, and had left it torn and bleeding, had come direct from the hand of friendship. Philosophers have preached and vowed that human life is the simplest compound except clear water, and I have been very desirous of discovering the mysteries of our being and our will ; but alas ! what have I gained ? A clouded genius and an aching brain. And to-night as I sit alone in my chamber pondering perplexing questions and tangled problems that mother Nature has set before her truant children that weep upon her indulgent and ma- ternal breast, there arise thoughts, like nymphs from their caves when sets the sun, that I endeavor to crush out from my mind, and I raise my eyes to heaven, the throne of truth, and ask these questions : Tell me, O fair queen of night, With your glittering, twinkling train, Is it true, as Goldsmith says, That Friendship's " but a name ? " Know ye one that has never Loved and believed ? Know ye one that has never Trusted and been deceived ? Do hearts on earth e'er love With feeling that will last? Do passions ever come That are not swiftly passed ? 38 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. O, tell me, gentle breezes, As you kiss the smitten cheek, Do you not detect with sadness, Some traces of deceit ? As if in answer to my appeal the glorious queen hid her face for shame behind a cloud, and the bright constel- lations, one by one, stepped from their silvery thrones, and the wind moaned, and the clouds shed tears of sorrow for poor fallen humanity. Then my eyes fell to earth, and I appealed to the terrestrial : O, tell me, lofty mountains, Are joys not all as fleet As sparkling gems of sunshine That play around thy feet ? O, tell me, surging billows, That rock the mighty deep, Did e'er a heart, tried and true, Upon thy bosom sleep ? Tell me, maiden, has there e'er A sunbeam round thee played, That did not take a darker hue And creep into the shade ? And when you join the mad'ning throng, And yield to passion's power, Would you not be happier still In some quiet, peaceful bower ? A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 39 Tell me, O loving hearts, Doth not the mind oft see The love that is thy life Turn silently from thee? O, tell me, queen of flowers, Is yours a happy band ? Do you ever have contention To mar your fairyland ? Do you ever hear them gossip ; And tell their idle tales Upon some sister flower Who tried to bloom and failed? Does not the haughty dahlia, Look down with jealous eye 'Pon the little blue-eyed daisy, As she modestly nestles by ? And the aristocratic fuchsia With anger shake her bell To see the yellow daffodil Sprout near her little dell ? O, tell me, king of the forest, With your happy feathery tribe, Do you ever catch them flirting With their next-door neighbor's bride? O, tell me, warbling songsters, As you sing from spray to spray, Do you ever have discord, To spoil your pretty lay? 4O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. O, tell me, priests and parsons, Who bow for us in prayer, Did you ever in your closet find A skeleton hidden there? Excuse my interrogations, And pardon my dubious lay, For misery seeks for company, I've often heard them say. "You are very kind," said the young man, "and you must excuse me for forgetting to thank you ; I am but a stranger, as you say, and yet a sister could not have done more than you have done." "Please don't thank me," said I, "for I have only done my duty, and I have done nothing more than you would have done for me had I been in your place, and I only wish I could do more to alleviate your distress." "That is out of the power of human," said he, mourn- fully. " In my short life a great sorrow has fallen upon me, greater than falls to the lot of most people, and there are only two ways to meet it; one to bow my head in low submission, and the other to spend the remainder of my wretched life in hunting down the abductor of my child, and the murderer of my wife ; I say murderer, for had it not been for that she would now be living." "Then you are Dr. St. George, the father of the ab- ducted child of whom I read in the Courier-Journal this morning," said I. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 4! He nodded his head in assent, and for the first time I saw a tear tremble upon his lids. "I suppose you have detectives at work?" I asked, after there had been silence for some minutes. "Yes," he answered; "men of indomitable pluck and courage, but I have no hopes of ever recovering her." "What a pity it is a girl," said I, all unaware of the effect my words would produce, until the pent-up tears that had been struggling for liberation no longer concealed themselves, but streamed down his cheeks in torrents. I bowed my head in my hands, and my own tears, that had been standing like sentinels, leaped forth, and I cried as I had not done since I was a child. But they were only a woman's tears, and I had shed thousands of them before, and I had been accustomed to them from the first hour I came into the world up to the present moment. But to see tears streaming from the eyes of a man was something I had not been accustomed to, and it touched my heart as it had not been for years. What bitter grief, what un- utterable sorrow it must have been to wring such tears from his heart ! I let them flow, and I did not try to stop them ; for words, like tears, will bring relief, and I had no consolation to offer; but after his grief had somewhat sub- sided, I said, "Dr. St. George, I believe that you will one day find your child, but it will depend upon your exertions and patience, but mostly upon the state of your mind ; and if you don't try to brace yourself up to go 42 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. through this trying ordeal, and not give way to your feel- ings, your mind will become impaired, and then you will not be adequate to the task before you, and all traces of your child will be lost; and should she live you don't know what vile hands she may fall into, nor what her lot may be, for this is a vile world. Now, for the sake of your little one, and for the pleasure of that one in heaven who is now smiling upon her lost baby, and is ever watching over it, forget your own sorrows and bear up bravely, and trust in Him who 'watches every sparrow that falleth to the ground.' You will one day find your child. Who- ever has abducted it has evidently adopted this plan to obtain money from you." When he raised his face it was so changed I hardly knew it. The white pallor had all disappeared, and the hot blood was coursing wildly through his veins, and his face seemed to acquire a new expression. I saw lines of firm endurance, of patient gravity, self-control, and self- restraint deepening thereon. "I thank you, my friend,'' said he, extending his hand, "I thank you for uttering your sentiments so frankly, for you have spoken truthfully, and every word that you have said has already been in my serious thoughts; but you have aroused me to a sense of my duty as no one else ever has. I will take your advice, and if I never find my child it shall not be for the lack of manhood, energy, and perseverance. I will not leave one stone unturned." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 43 "May God crown your efforts with success!" I said, "and may your child and your happiness be restored. This will ever be my prayer; and if I can be of any service to you in any way, I hope you will not hesitate to tell me so." "Thank you," said he, "and I assure you that I will not hesitate one moment, for I believe that I have found in you a warm and valuable friend." We had been walking slowly along, for he was too weak to walk fast, and had just reached the cemetery gate when a cab passed, and he motioned for it to stop ; then turning to me, he said, "Allow me to take you home, as it is too dark for a lady to go so far alone at this hour. Your sym- pathetic heart has been the cause of your delay, and I feel that you were sent to me as a blessing; but you have not told me your name yet." "I am only a stranger in the city," said I, "and ' ' But you have a name ? " "My name is Lilian Ainsley, " said I, blushing, for I always had an aversion to telling my name, and, as it hap- pened, I had no cards with me at that time. We entered the cab after giving the order, and it was not long before we were reined up in front of the hotel where I was stopping. Dr. St. George made a motion to assist me, but I laid my hand upon his arm and said : "You will please remain in the cab; the driver will assist me." 44 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. He seemed to understand me, and remained in the cab. In my short life I have learned, perhaps, more of the ways of the world than most persons of my age. I have seen that hideous monster every one is familiar with, in all shapes, size, and color old green-eyed gossip, with forked tongue, cloven feet, standing at every corner, stalk- ing up and down upon the highway, from the halls of the wealthy to the hovels of the lowly, and even into the aisles of the churches and through the adamantine walls of the prisons ; and I knew he was not far off, and if he saw Dr. St. George riding with a young lady on the same day his wife was buried he would smile the same smile that old Satan did behind the tree when Eve partook of the apple. But I cheated him by not permitting that gentle- man to hand me out of the carriage. And I shall always feel more kindly toward Madam Eve for having presence of mind enough to take a good bite of the apple before Adam gobbled it all up, and thereby transmitting a small portion of knowledge to her fair descendants. CHAPTER III. THE PHANTOM OF THE NIGHT, OR THE MYSTERIOUS LETTER. After bidding Dr. St. George good-by I went to my room and made a hasty toilet for supper and then descended to the dining-room ; not that I wanted anything to eat, for I was not hungry, but simply to pass off the time that hung heavily upon my hands. I could not read, I could not sleep, I could do nothing but wonder and wonder and wonder, and finally I found myself in a wonderful stew. I took my accustomed seat at the table and looked around the well filled salon bajo, and, as I did so, thought I to my- self, if every one feels as little like eating as I do the landlord would not have to incur the expenses of another bill of fare for breakfast the next morning, but my con- jecture in behalf of the landlord was to no purpose ; every one seemed to enjoy the full benefit of his dinero, and laughed and jested with as much hilarity as if a fellow- creature's heart was not bursting with grief only a few rods off. After taking my un tay de cafe I again sought my mi cuarto, which seemed almost too small to hold me. I felt depressed and restless, and, after promenading my room for several minutes, I threw myself in an easy chair (45) 46 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. and tried to compose my feelings and collect my scattered thoughts, all unaware that Morpheus was hovering over me until he had me securely in his embrace. Again I was wandering in the city of the dead. Again I stood by the newly-made grave, but a different spectacle presented itself to my visionary sight. Instead of the bowed form of a mourner, there was a beautiful infant cradled upon the yellow mound, smiling and cooing. I hastened to take it in my arms, but before I reached the spot a large eagle swooped down and gathered it in his claws and flew away. I screamed as loud as my vocal chords would permit which awoke me, and I arose and staggered to the door, for at that instant I heard a low tap upon it. "Is there anything I can do for you?" asked the chambermaid, staring at me as though she had suddenly- come in contact with a ghost. "You may bring me a pitcher of aquafrio." " Es muytarde? " " Es temprana to davia. I dropped off to sleep just now," said I, "and I had a fearful dream ; and I was afraid that I had alarmed the house ; for I hallooed loud enough to awake the seven sleepers." "Laus massy, honey," said the old chambermaid, " we see enough and hear enough these days to make one dream bad dreams, see ghosts, and have nightmare." "Yes, Aunt Jennie," said I, "you speak truly; for I have had some experience in the ways of the world my- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 47 self; and to-day I have heard enough to make me doubt the world, and believe there is nothing true this side the sod." "You have heard about the conduction of Dr. St. George's child, then?" said she. ' ' I have heard about the abduction of Dr. St. George's child," said I, smiling at Aunt Jennie's error, "and I sup- pose that is why I had. that fearful dream." "No wonder you dream," she replied, "when you are in the very same room that old, mean woman slept in the night before she stole the child." "Then you have seen her! " I replied. " Do sit down and tell me all about her ; and what was she like ? " The conversation had become intere'sting now, and I was as much absorbed in Aunt Jennie's tete-a-tete as I ever was in Major Penn's sermons. " Laus, honey, I jest tell you if she didn't jest look like old Satan himself." "Well, well, Aunt Jennie," said I, laughing, " as I have never had the pleasure of meeting ese caballero I can not have the faintest idea of what kind of a looking creat- ure she is." ' ' Have you ever seen old John Nailer ? " said she, ' ' the man who was put in the penitentiary for murder, and broke out a few weeks ago. If you have, then you have seen her image, for she is the very spirit of him. All the dif- ference is, he had short hair that hung like black, greasy 48 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. strings around his neck, and she had it screwed up in a little knot at the back of her head, and wore a gourded calico dress." " How long did she remain, Aunt Jennie ? " said I. " Only one night," she replied. "She got here on the nine o'clock train, arid left the next morning, saying she was going to nurse for Mrs. St. George, and the next thing we heard was that she had run off with the baby." " Are you sure she was a woman, Aunt Jennie ? " said I, feeling somewhat dubious in regard to the sex. (i How do you know but what it was a man dressed in woman's clothes ? " I added. "Laus massie, honey, I'm sure it was a woman; for if it wan't.a woman I'm not." " Why are you so positive, Aunt Jennie ? " I replied ; " a man can disguise himself very easily." "Because she just talked and talked the whole time I was in here, telling me how many dresses she had, and how they were made, and what they cost, and how many ladies she had nursed for; and then she tried to put on so many airs, too ; but the funniest thing of all was she had on one of those hoop things what do you call 'um? those things that stick out behind ; I have forgotten the name of 'um." " I suppose it was a tilter, " said I. ' ' That's it, honey ; but she did not know how to sit down in it, for she would pick it up and drop it in the A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 49 chair, and then sit down ; I know it was the first she ever had." " Do you remember what day she came?" said I, try- ing to divert her mind if possible from the tilter question, and thinking perhaps that she would tell me something which would lead to the recovery of the child. ' ' Let me see ! " said Aunt Jennie, squinting up one eye, and trying to look wise. "I think it was the 25th; yes, I'm sho' uv it, for I 'member she wrote a letter dat same mornin' an' sont me to de offis to 'quire de day uv de muni, an' dey tole me it wuz de twenty-fit." " Did you take the letter to mail ? " I asked. " No, ma'am, she mailed it hersef, I s'pose. " " You did not see the directions, then?" " No, no, honey ; for I'se one o' dem kind o' people who nebber tends to udder people's bizness, and dat is why I nebber gits in trouble ; an' when the judgment day comes, an' de dry bones rises, no nigger can stan' up an' bring dat sin aginst ole Jinny. But I 'spec you are sleepy, so I will go an' bring yo' water and let you go to bed, po' chile, fur you looks tired." Aunt Jennie pretty soon returned with a pitcher of ice water and placed it upon the table, saying, as she left the room, "I hope you won't hab enny mo' uv dem bad dreams." " I hope so, too, Aunt Jennie," said I, as I closed the door. 4 5O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. After looking under the bed, in the wardrobe, behind the washstand (which every woman knows is a custom peculiar to her sex), I made preparations for retiring. I took off my watch and wound it, and was about to lay it in the drawer when my eyes fell upon an envelope sealed, directed, and stamped. My first impression was that the letter had been written by some stranger, and that he had gone off and forgotten to mail it, as it was already stamped, so I laid it back in the drawer with the intention of drop- ping it in the office the next morning, thinking it would be an accommodation to the writer, whoever he might be. Perhaps it was a letter of importance. I looked at the directions upon the back which read as follows : "Mr. H. S. Q., " Cincinnati, Ohio." Nothing but the initials were given. I retired, how- ever, but the goddess of sleep refused to seal my eyelids with her blessed dews, and I arose and opened my port- manteau and took out my writing implements with the intention of answering a letter that had long been delayed, but my brain was not a vassal to my will, and would not obey its mandates, and with disgust I laid down my pen and picked up a cook-book that had been accidentally left in the room, and which acted like a charm upon my sleep- ing faculties; for in the midst of chicken-salad, sponge cakes, and mince pies I passed through the mystic gate A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 51 and was soon wandering in flowery meads and pastures green. I had not enjoyed this blessed elysium a great while when my spirit was driven from this enchanted land by an intruder whose abode must have been the infernal regions. He was bending over me with his glittering snake-eyes, staring down upon me like a streak of fire, and I felt his long, bony fingers grasping me around the throat. I tried to scream, but could not. I tried to pray, but my tongue cleaved to the roof of my mouth. "The letter, or your life!" he growled, as his skinny fingers tightened around my throat. "What letter?" I asked, as he slackened his grasp. "The letter you found in the drawer," he exclaimed; " for that letter contains a secret which, if found out, would carry me to the gallows." "You shall have it with all my heart," I cried, "if you will only let me go." He loosened the grasp around my throat, and I arose and groped my way in the dark until I reached the bureau, expecting every minute to be the last. With eager hands I pulled open the drawer ; but to my horror the letter was not there. What was I to do? I knew he would not believe me if I told him that I could not find it ; and unless I did, I had but a slim chance for my life. I stood for some moments trembling from head to foot, and my tem- ples were made tributary by the perspiration that flowed from every pore. 52 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. " I have but a few minutes to wait," he growled, "and you may depend upon it, that it is either the letter or your life." "I can not find it," said I, trembling with terror, and crouching down by the bureau and shutting my eyes in order to meet my fate which I knew was close at hand. Now and then a blaze of lightning would reveal its hide- ous form as he approached me. If I could only halloo, some one in this great hotel would hear me and come to my aid ; but to die alone in the dark by the bloody hands of an assassin, when surrounded by good people on every side, was worse than death itself. But there is an end to all things, and there was one to this. So exhausted was I there was but precious little strength left for me to make a noise; but finally I succeeded, and gave a yell loud enough to awaken the seven sleepers, and which brought me to my senses. When I awoke I found myself crouched in one corner of the room rubbing my head, which I had nearly pulverized against the bureau. But no Aunt Jennie came this time to chase away the disagreeable feelings that always succeed one of these unpleasant mystic revelries ; but the most profound happiness stole over my much ex- hausted spirit when I awoke and found it but a dream. Dreams are but eddies in the current of the mind, which, cut off from reflection's gentle stream, sometimes play strange fantastic tricks. Some of the happiest moments of my life have been spent within this mystic gate, walking A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 53 the shady avenues of dreamland's shadowy land, and some- times transported beyond the shores of time, and hold sweet communion with the dear ones who have long since trod the journey of life and taken up their abode with the blessed. ' Tis sad to awake from pleasant dreams, Into a world of pain. O, let my spirit wander back To that peaceful land again. My heart is sad, my eyes are dim, And tears are falling while I write, The friends I loved are cold in death, And I am sad to-night. I am lonely, sadly lonely, While the memories thick and fast, Shadowy-like, they cling around me Telling stories of the past. I am weary, I am weary, While my feeble fingers show Long-forgotten thoughts and feelings Of the faded long ago. Eager my fainting spirit waits, Rest from toil and pain to win, Open to me the dreamland's gate, And let the weary soul pass in. To the weary pity show, W r ho seek for rest but find despair; 54 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Lift up your head, ye magic gate, And let the weary soul pass there. In this mystic, shadowy land, Let my weary spirit roam ; For oft in this enchanted land I catch a glimpse of childhood's home. Although it is in ruins laid, Its fairest blossoms now are dead, Yet still their deep and solemn shade Upon the waving grass is shed. And often there in dreams I pluck Flowers bright and gay ; And often there my spirit dwells When my frame is far away. My Father and I sweet communion hold, Though the dark rolling river between us roll, There I receive a mother's kiss While passing through this gate of bliss. There my mother fondly gazes Upon me as in childhood's days ; There my schoolmates crowd around me With their long-forgotten plays. The multiflora vine in the corner, Which embraced the sycamore tree ; The rose that blushed in the corner, Are all familiar to me. As o'er this mystic land I tread, The dear old orchard again I greet ; A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 55 No apples, sure, were ever so red, Or tasted half so sweet. Then open to me, ye dreamland's gate, On shadowy wings let me fly, To my dear native home, where I long to roam, As I did in the days gone by. I turned on the gas" in order to dispel some of the gloom which seemed to pervade my chamber, and walked to the window 7 and looked out upon the streets which were almost deserted ; for there was a battle in the clouds. The king of terror had waged war with the fair queen of night, and she had retreated with her shining host leaving the world in utter darkness, while grape and canister were pelting down from the dark, angry clouds as they marshaled themselves for battle. The thunders pealed, and the lightning was as one blinding sheet of flame. The wind was blowing furiously, hurrying through the streets moaning and sobbing mournfully, as if spirits of evil were disturbing its boisterous retreat. Now shrieking as if in mad despair, dashing the rain in slanting lines against the window-panes and threatening with utter destruction the ' gilded signs in front of the stores, which creaked dismally as it swept by them. I stood for some moments gazing upon the scene, and for a time forgot my unpleasant dream until I heard a heavy, slow footstep on the pavement below, and looked down just as a man passed and looked up at my window. I sprang back behind the curtain as a 56 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. frightened bird would have crouched from the eyes of a hawk. It was the counterpart of the man that I had seen in my dreams, and which reminded me of the letter in the drawer. Thinks I to myself, if I have never had any curiosity to break the seal of that letter I certainly have now, and will devolve that indispensable duty upon myself, for there is some mystery about it. Then the words of my unwel- come visitor seemed to repeat themselves in my ears: "That letter contains a secret which, if found out, would send me to the gallows." After fully deciding the ques- tion in my mind whether or not I should open the mysteri- ous letter, I walked deliberately to the bureau to carry my thoughts into execution, for the transparent waters of my soul were stirred and troubled never again to know their perfect peace until I was in possession of the contents of that letter. I opened the drawer and there it lay all un- conscious of what I had suffered for its sake, and I felt that I, through tribulation, had purchased the right and privilege to question its secrecy. So, with this conviction, I tore open the letter with a conscience as clear as the paper on which I write. I seated myself in the rocking-chair and laid my hand upon my heart to keep it in its right place, for it felt very much like it was dancing the german after its own music. My eyes ran over the letter with an eagerness that any of my readers would have felt under the circumstances ; but to my disgust I could not read one A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 57 word of it, and I had to lay it away unread ; but my dis- appointment was beyond description. It was written in Spanish, and badly written, too. Again I sought my couch, and tried to banish the letter from my mind by reflecting that perhaps my train of thought before sleeping had been such as to induce the dream. So, while under this reflection, the blessed angel of sleep spread her peace- ful wings over my thorny pillow, and I sank into oblivion, and this time I slept soundly. No glittering-eyed monster stared down on me, and I could not feel any long fingers choking the breath out of my boc'y. I was wandering in a beautiful sunbeam meadow, hedged with flowers of every hue, while birds of fairest plumage sang their ministerial songs, and golden-winged butterflies danced to the music of bumble-bees, and played hide-and-seek with fairies around glimmering violets and smiling blue-bells. CHAPTER IV. THE LETTER TRANSLATED. The next morning I awoke with nerves somewhat unstrung and a severe pain in my head, caused by my midnight rehearsal, and for the want of that perfect sleep and composure which nature requires of her children, and who will surely suffer if they deviate from her stringent laws and government. Well, the battle was over, and Phoebus, clothed in majesty sublime, arose in all his splendor and smiled like a conquering king, and caused everything else to smile, whether it wanted to or not. No traces of the aerial bat- tle were left except a few broken branches and a cranky- old sign-post that had to lay its gilded head against a tree for support ; though it, too, seemed to smile as it caught up the rays of the sun and flashed back the light, and the gilded letters stood out boldly to be read by the passers- by "Cash Store." I had gazed upon that sign-board the day previous with little interest; in fact, with no interest at all. It was simply a sign-board, and nothing more ; but this morning I felt as if I could go up to it and shake hands with it on the spot. There were only two words, (58) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 59 but they had a deep meaning, and the letters seemed more indelible. I read it over and over again. That is very simple, said I to myself; yet it means a great deal. I suppose it means "no trust," which may be regarded as equivalent to not to be trusted. We infer that although it may not be complimentary to the man's customers, it indicates that he is doing business on a safe plan. What if every untrustworthy person should be labeled with the words "not to be trusted," just as we see the sign " No trust" on sign-boards or behind counters. And suppose every untrustworthy thing about us were to be thus labeled in conspicuous letters, how many surprises we would have. No one can distinguish with the naked eye the electrotype article from the solid gold, and in Paris every jeweler is obliged by law to placard his goods according to their intrinsic value. What a relief it would be if some such statute could be made universal. Here is a ship equipped for sea; everything looks well about it; she is freshly painted and newly furnished; the cabin is exquisitely adorned, the colors that stream from the mast-head are bright and fair, but if we could see just above the water-mark the phosphoric' words gleaming out, "Not to be trusted," warning us that the timbers are unsound, or the engine imperfect, or that the vessel is not properly manned, the captain incompetent, or the crew rebellious, we should be very thankful for the caution. Here is a man about to cross a bridge, driving a heavy 6O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. team. To all appearances it is a well-built structure. It has borne the weight of many heavy loads in days gone by. It has securely resisted the most terrible freshets and ice packs. It still seems to be in sufficiently good repair, but it is, in fact, worn out and unsafe, and there are inspectors who know, or ought to know, that it is so ; and until it is rebuilt they should have out a sign "Not to be trusted." Neglecting to do this, the next thing we hear is that the bridge has gone down, and man and beast have gone down with it, crushed to death. And turning from the works of man to man himself, ought not many among our own species to be labeled with the words ' ' Not to be trusted?" The inmates of our prisons, as might be ex- pected, wear some such badge. Their dress and manner and countenance betray them. But in other quarters there are those who deserve to be thus branded who do not bear about them any visible mark of reproach. There comes among us a great philanthropist and re- former who has devoted his life to the service of human- ity. Whatever the cause may be which he has happened to take in hand, he represents it as the greatest of all causes the one thing which is needful to do in order to save the world. He has sacrificed everything that he might put himself at the head of this mighty movement, and all that he asks in return is a liberal supply of money to support him, and your suffrage to give him position. Look care- fully just under the skin and you may read the words, "Not to be trusted." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 6 1 As these illustrations presented themselves to my mind, I was impressed with the idea that if Dr. St. George had been blessed with one of these unsophisticated sign -boards in front of his chamber window, and had studied its silent language as diligently as I had that morning, he would have been more careful in selecting a nurse for his baby. After taking un taya de cafe I went down to the parlor and rang for the porter, who came in smiling and bowing. "Order me a carriage," said I, "and bring down my wraps." The thunder shower had certainly had a most beneficial effect upon the weather, and the morning was cool and sharp. "The carriage is waiting at the ladies' entrance," said the porter as he came in with my hat and wraps. "Take me to Dr. St. George's residence," said I to the driver as I entered the carriage, and it was not long before the carnage rolled up before the beautiful grass plot in front of his handsome dwelling. I alighted from the car- riage and walked up the flight of marble steps and rang the door bell, which was answered by an old colored woman. I handed her my card, saying, "Tell the doctor that I wish to see him on important business." The servant soon returned, saying that Dr. St. George would be in in a few minutes, and drew up an easy chair to the fire and bade me to be seated. The parlor was exquisitely furnished. The carpet, which was of crimson velvet, was like fairy moss beneath one's feet, and gave no 62 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. sound as the foot fell upon it. The chandelier \\ as of frosted gold. A cheery fire sparkled behind the heavy silver bars of the polished grate and cast a rosy glow over the rich and dainty adornments of the room. Profound silence prevailed through the great house. The occasional dropping of the coal in the grate, and the tick, tick of the French clock upon the mantel alone broke the silence. Presently the door opened softly, and Dr. St. George entered, looking pale and haggard. "I am happy to see you, Miss Ainsly," said he, giving me a hearty shake of the hand, "and I am sorry to have kept you waiting so long." "Please do not offer an apology," I replied; "those handsome paintings have well entertained me. I think they are exquisite." "Yes," he replied, quietly, "and I appreciate them because they were painted by my wife. That one," he continued, turning to a beautiful portrait, "is my wife. I had it painted for her while we were in Italy." "It is the most exquisite painting I ever saw ; it is beautiful ; I have never seen such a face or form," I replied. "And she was as good and noble as she was beautiful," was his earnest reply. And then he arose and opened the folding doors and said, "This was her room, Miss Ainsly," and going up to a dainty little crib, he laid a trembling hand upon it, and said, "This was our darling's A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAMK. 63 little crib, and it is just as she left it; " and the scalding- tears trickled down his cheeks and dropped on his white bosom. The room was lovely indeed, with its delicately-tinted walls, and beautiful lace curtains trailing like bridal-veils upon the rich carpet of bronze and gold. In one corner of the room sat the baby-crib, with a dainty little pillow all trimmed with snowy lace ; and only a few short hours before the baby had lain with its little head upon that pil- low looking up into its mother's face cooing and laughing, and that mother bending over her darling with a feeling, unknown save only to herself and Maker, to whom she committed it;' and little did that mother know that before forty-eight hours her darling, her idol, would be cradled in an eagle's nest. Its golden curls dyed with the blood of the eagle's prey. Its little fingers trembling and quivering 'mid eagle's feathers, as the gentle wind swayed the bough that held its blood-stained bed ; while its destroyer was perched but a short distance whetting his bill ready to tear it in pieces at the awakening of her young ones should they cry for food. O ! how good of the wise One above to fling destiny's veil over the flight of our years. And could I but tear one single leaf from memory's gilded pages, the memories of that day I would bury in oblivion, for they crowd thick and fast upon my brain, and compel me to lay down my pen to dry the tears that so often dim my eyes. And should there be traced upon these pages one 64 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. single tear, go with me, kind reader, and walk side by side with those whose lives I am about to relate, and you will pardon my weakness, if such it be, for now and then I find a tear-drop trembling upon my lids, from which bright beams of silver are dancing to the dying embers in the grate. But I am wandering from my subject. "Dr. St. George," said I, stopping suddenly and con- fronting him, "I am ashamed to tell you my business now that I have come ; I fear you will think that I am weak and superstitious." "Do not be afraid or ashamed to tell me anything," said he, kindly, "and remember that I am always your friend, and at all times ready and happy to do anything for you that lies in my power. Now, what can I do for you, MissAinsly?" "I would like for you to relieve me of my suspense," said I, drawing out the letter. "What have you?" said he, reaching out his hand. I put the letter in his hands, and said, "There is a letter that I would like you to read ; I think it is in the Spanish language. Do you speak Spanish ? I think I heard you speak of your travels through Spain, or of being in Spain." " Yes," said he, " I was two years there, and the Span- ish language is my favorite study." ' ' I am glad to be so fortunate, " I said, for I am more than anxious to know the contents of that letter ; and A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 6$ before you proceed let me give you an explanation, and perhaps you will pardon my superstition." He listened very attentively as I related to him my dream, and when I was through he said, "It is a very strange dream, Miss Ainsly, and that reminds me of my own." ' ' And you have been dreaming, too ? " said I, smilingly. " Yes," he replied, " I thought you called to see me and gave me a letter to read, but before I read it I awoke, and never had the pleasure of reading it ; so I see my dream is fulfilled." " Well ! \Yell ! " said I, drawing a long breath. " I am rather inclined to believe that while we are asleep, our spirits desert the body, and traverse the unknown paths of the future, and rehearse what our bodies will perform while awake. " "Something like a newspaper reporter," said he, try- ing to force a smile; "going around gathering up facts; and sometimes the spirit is like the reporter, it gathers a great deal that is not fact." He opened the letter and began to read to himself. I watched his countenance as he read, and could tell by the coming and going of the blood in his face and temples that the contents interested him beyond a doubt. "You must excuse me for reading it to myself first," said he, " as I do not know the language perfectly, and I did not wish to make a blunder ; but must say, that your 5 66 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. superstition is well founded, for this is certainly a myste- rious letter, and I join you in the belief that this letter was written by the abductor of my child ; and it is in a man's handwriting. I will now translate it to you in English." " I will be in possession of the object we are in pursuit of in forty- eight hours. Meet me at the foot of Sugar Loaf mountain, on the morning of the 27th, at six o'clock ; and do not fail to bring with you the $1,000 you promised me should I be successful, as I shall not return to the city again, for this country will be too small to hold me after this ; and if you fail to bring the money, I am thinking it will be too warm for yourself, as I shall return the to its and expose all. You know what I mean. "I. N." CHAPTER V. I CAN NOT BURY MY FATHER IN THE POTTER'S FIELD; OR THE DOOM OF A DRUNKARD'S WIFE. Kind and gentle reader, permit me to accompany you to the city of L , where the scene of our story is laid, though it will not be a pleasure trip ; neither can I prom- ise to take you through the fashionable streets and ave- nues of this beautiful and delightful city, for fear they will contrast too widely with dark, black alleys, where I will have to conduct you for the purpose of introducing you to the hero of our narrative. We will now go down a narrow alley, and thence up a five-story tenement house. It may be laborious, as well as sickening to your sight, to climb those dingy, creaking flights of stairs, with the snow and ice beating into your face as you ascend, and the wind whistling and whirling over the roof and shaking the crazy old structure to its foundation. And, perhaps, when you get to the fifth landing and stand upon a narrow platform, and peep down with a dizzy brain into the impenetrable darkness, you will become disgusted with your journey and involuntarily retrace your steps downward. But I trust, kind reader, that you will not close your eyes to the (67) 68 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. scene, though silent desolation, starvation, gaunt, pinched, and spectral, stalks before you and mingles a footfall \\ith your panting breath. Go on, and as you ascend, step by step, utter a prayer that your aversion might be changed to pity and compas- sion for the once bright, but now fallen, star that lies therein ; and that charity may be the ruling passion in your heart. When you reach the third story, turn a little to your left and you will enter a room, dark, cold, and dreary, where poverty and want grin in their ghastly lone- liness and solitude. The silence of desolation brooding over all, and the faint lamp-light flickering to its wane, is like the beam which creeps up from the exhalations of the grave. As you look with awe and wonder upon the beast that was once a brave and noble man, you will drop a tear of pity for the pale and haggard form of her whom he had sworn to love, honor, and protect and had dragged down from the pinnacle of hope, love, and confidence, to the lowest depths of despair. She had often climbed those rickety stairs to carry the food and fuel which she had earned with her needle by a dim-burning lamp to keep her little ones from starving and freezing as they huddled around her with pinched cheeks and purple hands crying for bread, while the one who had sworn before his God to cherish and protect her was lying in the gutters, his breath polluted with the smell of whisky, with blood-shot eyes and bloated face, though he was once a high-minded A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 69 and honored man, a kind and affectionate husband, and de- voted father. Go with me, reader, and behold the pale cheeks and scalding tears of that crushed wife and mother, and they will attest the truth of what I write ; eloquent it may not be, but perhaps it will be a warning to whoever may read these lines to shun a course which had so trodden as proud a spirit and aspiring ambition as ever throbbed in the breast of man. The oft-repeated assertion that the sword has slain its thousands, and liquor its tens of thousands, is a truth that the world can not deny. It is the greatest evil that has ever been felt among the sons of men. Temperance lecturers have gone throughout the land lifting up their voices in warning to stop the growing evil. Success seems to crown their efforts for awhile, and again it breaks out with increasing violence, filling bright homes and happy hearts with sadness, gloom, and desolation. The young man fails to perceive the dangers when he sips the poison and is led on, step by step, until the fatal spell is thrown around him, and sinks deeper and deeper into the vortex of wretchedness and misery, until the last lamp which sheds its brightness upon his path is extinguished, the star of hope sinks in darkness, and the moderate, fashion- able drinker has become the reeling, bloated, degraded drunkard, and the once happy youth, the delight of his mother and the pride of his father, is a wanderer 7O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. from his paradisaical home, to rough a devious and dark pilgrimage to a dishonored grave, the home idol shattered and broken, the altar cast down, and Eden transformed into a hell, childhood and innocence thrust out from the love-light of a mother's eye, to wallow in all that is low and vile. Tragedies more fearfully dark and hideous than Avon's bard ever sketched are thickly traced on the record of rum's history; scenes which would mock the artist's pen are of daily occurrence ; the desolate home, with its heart-broken wife and mother, with pale cheeks, channeled with tears of unutterable woe, as she bends weeping over the drunken wreck of her youthful idol, and the child-group, shivering in the blast, clinging to that mother as they cry for bread; the orphans turned out, with no friend but God, into the wide world ; youth, wrecked manhood, reeling amid the ruins of mind and morals; beauty, the sepulcher of a thousand hopes; genius crumbling to ruin ; the virtuous and noble-minded, turning away from truth and honor, plunging into foul and festering vice, with sickly and bloated features ; mad- ness, with fiery eyes and haggard mien, weeping and wail- ing and cursing in rayless night of intellectual chaos; crime, with its infernal ha ! ha ! as it staggers forth from its work of death, with its red hands dripping with the hot and smoking life-tide of its victim. Where fiction even has called up its weird creation, they have been but copies of the facts already transpired. The moral is A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "] \ always there. The hovels, the dram-shops, the subter- ranean dens, and the mansions of fashion and wealth have all furnished the material for tales of startling interest. We will now return to our narrative, and trust, kind reader, that we have not wearied your patience. Methinks I left you standing upon the fifth landing of a tenement house in one of the back streets in L It is a long time to wait in such a place, but, however, we will enter now. Do not knock for admittance, but turn the door-knob cautiously and step lightly, for an old man is wrestling with death. Delirium is upon him, and he raves, in his madness, of a strange name who first held the tempting glass to his lips, and first led his tottering feet to the gambling den, and there robbed him of all he had labored so hard to obtain, leaving his wife and helpless children to suffer. A woman is standing by his couch in a listening atti- tude, but, O God! how thin and haggard! She takes her seat mechanically upon a goods box by the side of his couch. How fearfully tearless and calm she seems to be ! Every feature the foot-print of unutterable agony! Her eyes are sunken and inflamed, but are as tearless as her cheeks and lips are bloodless. Save a startling wildness about the eye, it would not seem that those features had ever been stirred by a human passion. She hears a cau- tious footstep, and as she turns her head to look, two arms are wound around her neck in a loving embrace; the faint- 72 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. st flush passes over her cheek as she looks up and beholds her boy. " You stayed away so late to-night, darling," said she, imprinting a kiss upon his cheeks. " I could not help it, mother," he replied, bending low and looking in her tired eyes. " I had to wait so long be- fore I could get my money, and then I came by the store to get you some tea. I heard you say this morning that you would be glad to have a little," and he laid a little package of tea and another of white sugar in her lap. She looked up with a glad light in her eyes, and whis- pered, " God bless you, my boy ; what I would do without you heaven only knows. You are the only comfort your poor mother has in this life." ' ' Is father no better, mamma ? " he asked. "No, child; and I don't think he can stand it much longer. He has been raving since six this morning, and, by the way I feel, I judge that I will soon follow; and I hope the time is not far distant when I will be laid to rest, though it would be hard to leave you, my boy, you and little Birdie, who is as dear to me as though she were my own child." '* I do not want you to talk that way any more, mamma," said he, patting her cheeks. " I can not bear to hear you speak as though you had no one to love you and care for you, when I love you so much, and will always take care of you when I get to be a man. These poor little fingers A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 73 shall never have to sew any more for bread, nor do any other kind of work, " and he raised the pale, thin hand to his lips, and, as he did so, a tear dropped from his eyes and fell upon her hand, and that tear-drop was sacred in that mother's eye, for she wiped it away with her tresses, that she might carry it with her to the tomb. As Veary Carlisle is to be the hero of our story, we will give him the benefit of a personal description. He was a lad of fourteen years, and was truly a hand- some boy, with skin pure and healthful and features strong and classic. His eyes were large and bright, of a dark, luminous brown in color; his hair very fine and silky, with the raven's cast, and wavy enough to give it that poetry of form which delights the artistic eye. He was of me- dium stature for one of his age, the only marked pecul- iarity being a sort of precocious maturity of form, a degree of manliness not often found in one of that age ; and what was true of his form of body was also true of the shape and development of face and features. There was an intellectual look, a ripeness of mind, and a depth of understanding manifest in the contour and expression of the face, as well as in the remarkable light and language, so to speak, of the full, brown eyes a growth and strength of character, in short, which was certainly remark- able in one reared 'mid such surroundings as his. In his movements he was quick and sure, never hurried, and never hesitating after his mind had been once made up. 74 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. In one corner of the room was a little trundle-bed upon which a little girl of seven years lay sleeping. Veary walked over and knelt down by the bed, and turned back the coverlet and imprinted a kiss upon the lips of the little sleeper. As he did so it stirred in its sleep and a dry sob escaped its lips that trembled as if the finger of grief had touched the tender heart-strings and set them to vibrating. "What is the matter with little Birdie?" said he, turn- ing to his mother, " she is sobbing as if her little heart would break." "The little thing was crying for something to eat, and I had nothing in the house she could eat, and the poor child had to go to sleep hungry," said his mother, sorrow- fully. "I can not bear that, mother," said he, rising. "I could not sleep one wink to-night if I knew that little Birdie was hungry in her sleep. She must have some- thing to eat if the rent is never paid. I will go down and get some crackers and a little fresh butter, and will draw a nice cup of tea, for you look as though you needed some- thing yourself, mother. And perhaps a cup of tea will do father good ; how sound he sleeps ! " he continued, going up to the bed. "Don't wake him, child!" said his mother, "he has just dropped off to sleep, and I have been afraid to move for fear of waking him." "Mother," said Veary, going around on his tiptoes to A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 75 where his mother sat, ' ' I want you to go and feel how cold pa is, and he don't seem to breathe at all." She arose and went around to the back of the bed. His face was to the wall. She stooped down and placed her ear to his mouth, but she could not hear him breathe. Then she laid her hand upon his heart, but it was still. It had beaten its last stroke, for Death, the arbitrator of all claims, had laid his hands upon the harassed man, and the sorrows of life were ended. But the world cared not for one whose career had ended so ignominiously, and none but she who had been most deeply injured stands by his side. No one but she wipes the death-damp from his brow, as she clings with a devotion to the shattered idol which no destiny, however dark, can wrench away. The kind family beneath came up and closed his eyes, and kept watch through the night. Long Mrs. Carlisle tossed upon her sleepless couch, trying in vain to sleep, while Veary was planning and scheming how to prevent his father from being buried in "Potter's Field." "Mother," said he, coming up to her the next morn- ing and laying his arms around her neck, ' ' I can not bear for father to be buried in ' Potter's Field ; ' it is almost breaking my heart." "How are we to help it, my child? We have no money or friends ; the city will have to bury your father. It is very, very hard, dear, but it is our lot ; let us try to bear it." 76 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "But, mother," he continued, "I have been thinking of a plan, and I think with a little help we will be able to get a half lot down on the north side ; it won't cost much. I mean a spot just large enough to bury him, and when I get to be a man, if I ever do, I can buy a family lot." As he said this he looked up earnestly into his mother's face. "My child," said she, laying her hand upon his curly head, "where is our help to come from? We have not a friendly hand to stretch out to us. Even those who have robbed your father of his good name, of the hard earnings of years, and of our rights, would not now give him a spot in which to lay his body. But, my child, tell me what your plans are ;. there is no time to waste in idle words." "Well, mamma, I thought of going to my employer and asking him to let me have money enough to bury my father, and let me work it out, and I think he will do it, for I have always tried to please him, and have always been so punctual ; in fact, I am the first boy every morning at the store, and never know what it is to sit down from the hour I get there until I leave at night." " Veary, my darling," said she, " I do not want to frus- trate your plans; but let me tell you that this same man of whom you are speaking is the one who ruined your father. I kept it from you because you were in his em- ploy, and it was I who obtained the position for you. It was I who went to him with prayers and tears, and begged A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 77 him to give you work, and he drove me from his door with curses. It was after that he sent for you to come and go to work. I suppose his conscience lashed him. Now, do you think that he would let you have a dollar toward burying your father?" ' ' I am sorry you put me there to work for that man, mother," said Veary, with flashing eyes. ' ' I did the best I could, my child ; I tried to get work for you at other places, but I could not, and I knew he was the one above all others to give you something to do." Veary turned and looked out upon the streets for some moments, as if meditating; then he turned again to his mother, who had not moved nor taken her eyes off him, and said in a tremulous voice, with his hand raised to heaven, "Here, in the presence of you and my father's lifeless form, I swear to revenge you and him. That man shall one day feel my avenging hand, but I will not put my hands upon his polluted carcass. No, I will not touch him for fear they would never be cleansed, but yet he shall feel my avenging power, and shall be informed of the fact. But this," he continued, "is not going to be an obstacle in my way, nor keep me from performing my duty. I shall go to him this very minute, and if he don't choose to help bury his victim, I will fall upon some other plan, for I can not and will not see my father buried in ' Potter's Field,' if I can help it." " My child," said she, "it is of no use, he will not do it, 78 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. I am sure, and it will not do for you to vex him, for he is a dangerous man, and if he turns you off, you will have no place to go, besides, he will turn us out of this house; we owe him one month's rent already, and that will have to be paid. I don't know what we are to do," she cried, in a voice of despair, and ringing her poor, pale hands. "It seems that God has forsaken us; I have prayed day and night, and He seems not to hear my prayers." Then she reproached herself for having spoken thus of her only true Friend and Comforter, and she burst into weeping. "O mother! mother! " said Veary, throwing his arms around her neck ; " I do wish you would not cry! If you only knew how bad it made me feel what effect your tears have upon me I know you would never cry any more. It seems that every tear that falls from your eyes is wrung from my heart. Besides, you never give me any encouragement. You think because I am a little boy that I have not the ability to do things as they ought to be done. Now, if you will only let me, I will show you that you might depend upon me a little. If you can not en- courage me, my little mamma," said he, patting her on the cheek, "for gracious sake don't discourage me." She did not speak, but looked into his face with a fasci- nation that seemed to chain her eyes to the spot. "My brave boy, not another word from your mother's lips, or one single tear from her eyes, shall ever again cast a shadow upon your young and trusting heart." CHAPTER VI. VEARY CARLISLE HAS FOUND A FRIEND; OR, THE CLOUD IS PASSING AWAY. There were very likely boys of Veary Carlisle's age possessing more bodily strength than himself; but the search would be long and tedious that should find one who could accomplish more with the strength given him, and this much his employer had found out, for he had strained every nerve in his body, and had tried him to the utmost extent of his strength. He was a selfish and overbearing man, and every one who was unfortunate enough to be in his employ stood in fear and trembling. And on this par- ticular morning he was in no pleasant mood. Everything had gone wrong, and he had lost money heavily, and he was determined to take his revenge out of those who came under his jurisdiction, and poor Veary was the first victim. It was nine o'clock when Veary Carlisle walked into the store of his employer, who was sitting at the desk writing, with a frown the size of his pen-staff lying between his eyes; but it seemed to multiply as he looked up and saw Veary Carlisle approaching. "Isn't this a pretty (79) 8O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. time of day for you to come to the store to work?" said he, not even looking up, or laying down his pen. "I could not help it, sir," said Veary, "I came to tell" "Tell me nothing, you little reprobate, and take your- self away; I have hired another boy just for half the wages that I gave you." "My father is" "Your father is a drunken old sot, just what you will come to, and I don't want to hear any more from you ; so get out instantly, or I will give you a flogging." Veary. turned and walked to the door, hurt and morti- fied beyond description, with the cruel words ringing in his ears, "Your father is a drunken sot, just what you will come to!' Then the blood commenced boiling in his veins, and his eyes flashed fire. It seemed as if a tor- nado of passion had passed over him. He turned and looked his employer full in the face, and almost made him quail beneath his piercing gaze. "Mr. Scullcutter, " said he, in a hoarse, tremulous voice, "you have insulted my father's corpse; you have abused his child, and driven him from his employment which bought bread for his sick mother and helpless child, simply because he remained at home to bury his father. You also threw in my face the sins of my father, who lies cold and stiff in the arms of death, and whose sins now lie at your own door. You, who first held the tempting A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 8 1 glass to his lips; you, who first conducted his tottering feet to the gambling den, and there took from him his years of honest labor and left his helpless wife and children to suffer, and drove him to a drunkard's grave and now heap insults upon his helpless child ; but you will remember this some day, mark my words ; I am but a boy now, but I trust some day to be a man." Fen Scullcutter seemed as though he was petrified at first. It was more than he expected. Then he raised his clinched fist, and coming toward him, exclaimed, "How dare you to speak to me in that way ; how dare you insult me in this manner, in my own house, you dirty pup?" "I dare to do it!" said Veary, "because I am brave enough to speak the truth and not cowardly enough to swallow an insult if I am but a boy, and especially from one who has been the downfall of my father, and whose shoes you are not worthy to unlace." And with this he walked away leaving his employer foaming with rage. " Must I give it up at last?" said Veary, as he walked along with downcast eyes, and the great tear-drops rolling down his cheeks. " Must my poor father be buried in the 'Potter's Field ? ' Must I go home and tell my broken-hearted mother that her brave boy, as she called me, has failed in his undertaking, after his begging her to trust to him, and have confidence in him ? No, I can not, I can not. I will get a paper and look over the ' Wants. ' ' 6 82 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. At that moment a little newsboy passed with the morn- ing paper. "Jimmie," said Veary to the little newsboy, "will you be kind enough to loan me the Courier-Journal a few moments? I want to look over the 'wants.' ' "Certainly," said the boy, and handed him the paper. Veary's heart bounded with delight as his eyes fell upon an advertisement which read as follows : "Wanted! a good office boy. Must have reference. Will pay good wages. Call at No. street, at half past ten o'clock." "Thank you, Jimmie, " said Veary as he handed back the paper and hastened away. :;;:;: jjcjfc^^:*:^^ Judge Elmore was sitting alone in his office; a cheery fire was burning and snapping in the grate and casting a rosy glow over the handsome Brussels carpet and the rich and beautiful furniture with which the office was furnished. He had been busy writing all the morning, and had just laid down his pen and taken a seat by the fire when a low tap was heard upon the door. "Come in," was the response. The door opened, and a curly head and a pair of brown eyes greeted him. " Have I the honor of seeing Judge Elmore?" said the intruder, bowing low, with hat in hand. " Yes, sir," said the old judge, smiling and bowing ; " I am Judge Elmore; what can I do for you, my little man?" A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 83 "I came in answer to your advertisement," said he bowing again, as a faint flush mounted to his temples, and then stole behind his ears. " What is your name, my little man ?" " My name is Veary Carlisle." "And you want a situation as office boy!" "Yes, sir. I am out of a situation at present and would be glad to get anything to do." " Whom have you been working for ? " " Mr. Scullcutter & Co., but he has discharged me." ' ' Discharged you ? ' ' "Yes, sir; he has discharged me, and I am compelled to get employment in some way, for I have a sick mother and helpless little sister depending upon me for their daily bread." " What did he discharge you for?" "Because I did not go to work this morning. I re- mained at home to see my father buried." "To see your father buried !" said the old judge, look- ing over his glasses, and wondering if he had heard aright. " Yes, sir." "Is it possible! Did you tell him why you staid away ? ' ' " No, sir. He would not let me tell him, nor give him any explanation." " A brute," cried the judge, as he gave the fire a punch and leaned his head upon his hand, and for a moment there 84 - A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. was silence. Then he raised his head again and said, "When was your father buried? " " My father is not buried yet." "Your father is not buried yet," said the judge in as- tonishment, "and you out looking for employment?" "Yes, sir," said Veary, "though my father lies dead in the house I can not allow my poor sick mother to suffer. And unless I get work she will surely suffer." Then he told him how he had gone to his employer, to beg his assistance in burying his father, that he might not be buried in the " Potter's Field." And he also told him what a high-minded and honorable man his father had been in former days, and how he had fallen from his integrity in an unguarded moment how he had been tempted to the bar-room by those whom he took to be his friends and in one single night lost his entire fortune while sitting at the gaming-table. "And Mr. Scullcutter, " he continued, "is the one that ruined my father. He has in his posses- sion all my father's hard earnings." "And then refuse to give his child employment?" said the old judge, with a nod. "It is true, sir," said Veary. " Did you say your father was named Carlisle?" "Yes, sir. Julius Carlisle was my father's name, and he was born and raised in West Virginia. Was a lawyer by profession, and 'twas said that he was a bright star in his profession." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 85 ' ' Well, bless my life, boy, you don't mean to tell me that you are Julius Carlisle's son ! Can it be possible ? Get up and come to the light and let me see if there is any resemblance." "Yes, yes," said the judge, looking over his glasses, "there is Jule's eyes and forehead. The very image of him when he was a boy ; bless my life, if this don't beat all ; sit down, my boy, sit down. Well, well, well ; how long since your father left Virginia? " "Seven years," said Veary. "We first went to Cin- cinnati to live, and it was there father met with Mr. Scull- cutter, and after he lost his property he moved to this place. Did you know my father, Judge Elmore? " "Did I know your father, child? Why, he was the dearest friend I ever had. To him I owe my success in life. And it grieves me," he continued, wiping a tear from his honest old eyes. ' ' it pains me to think that Julius Carlisle, my own tried and true friend, should be living right here under my nose and suffering for the want of a friendly hand, and I with plenty of money, more than I know what to do with, and could not help him. Ah ! well, such is life," and he arose and gathered up his hat and cane in an excited manner, but he fell back in his chair again and groaned. "Ah ! well," he exclaimed. "I thought that I would walk home with you, but I believe my rheumatism is going to prevent me." " You had better not try it, judge," said Veary. "I 86 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. don't think you can climb those steps, for we live in the fifth story of a tenement house." " God help us," said the judge, falling back in his chair. " Is it possible that your poor old father and mother had to climb those flights of stairs ? Well, take this, my child ; it is one hundred dollars, and all I have about me. It will bury your father decently. Poor man, I wish it had been in my power to have helped him while he lived. Ah, well, he don't need it now! " Veary was so happy he scarcely knew what to say or how to act. "I can not sufficiently thank you," said Veary, hold- ing the money between his fingers, which trembled with excitement; "and I hope you will permit me to repay you some day." "That is all right," said the judge, "but you had bet- ter hasten, for you will have no time to wait. Tell your mother that she has my heartfelt sympathy, and that I trust the dark clouds of adversity will soon pass away. Come to me to-morrow morning at eleven o'clock. Now go, and God bless you, my boy." ^^^^.^^.^^.^^ For two hours Mrs. Carlisle walked the floor impa- tiently, waiting for the return of her son. Now and then she would go to the window and look out. The snow was fast falling, covering up the footsteps of the passers-by, and wrapping all creation in one great winding-sheet. Pres- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 8f ently she heard his footsteps, and in another second his arms were around her neck. "O mother," said he, "I have learned one thing this morning that I did not know before." " What is it, my boy? I know that experience is a dear school, and that your young and unsophisticated heart will have to learn some bitter lessons in life ; but I trust your teacher has not been a hard one this morning, my child." "No; it is not a bitter lesson, my mother, but the sweetest lesson I ever learned. One that teaches me that there are some good people in this world, and not all bad ones," and as he said this he slipped the bill of money into her hands and exclaimed, " Now, father won't be buried in 'Potter's Field.'" Neither was he buried in " Potter's Field," but was laid away upon a beautiful slope, beneath the shadows of the elm trees ; and the violets and buttercups which Veary and little golden-haired Birdie have planted have almost hidden it from view. CHAPTER VII. THE DEATH-BED GIFT A MOTHER'S BLESSING. Winter unbound her icy chains, and summer came and ruled over the land with her red-hot rod until the term of her sovereignty was gone, and the grim old monarch has again taken possession of the throne, and his pale banner floats across the snow-laden sky, and his breath traces fanci- ful hieroglyphics of his decrees on the window-panes in figures of frosted crystal. There have been many changes during the old year that now lies buried in the past changes for the better, and changes for the worse. But I trust, dear reader, that the change that has been wrought in the home of our hero is for the better. Or, at least, I think so now, and think that you will acknowledge the same at the conclusion of our story. Just twelve months have passed over Veary Carlisle's head since that dark and gloomy day he heard the solemn sound of the frozen clods falling upon his father's cofrin- lid. Just twelve months to a day he was called upon to stand by the death-bed of his idolized mother, to hear her blessing, and receive the parting kiss. (88) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 89 " Come near me, my son," said she, faintly, " I am too feeble to speak loud." He came near and knelt down by the bed and took one of her cold, pale hands in his own and pressed it to his lips. " Veary, is this you, my darling? I can not see," said his dying mother. "Yes, dear mother, it is Veary," he replied, as the tears trickled down his cheeks and dropped upon the hand that he held tightly in his own. "God bless you, my darling," said she, "my brave and noble boy, and may He preserve you from the temp- tations that will crowd thick and fast upon your pathway, and guide your young footsteps into paths of wisdom, virtue, and truth. And God grant that you may be as good a man as you have been to me a son. Now kiss your mother, and bring me little Birdie." Veary did just as she requested him. When little Birdie was laid in her arms she imprinted the farewell kiss upon her cheeks, and said, "God bless you, my darling, and be your Guide and Protector through life. In the arms of your preserver I entrust you, and may you be a blessing and a comfort to him when I am no more." " Now, my son," said she, turning to Veary, " to your tender care I entrust my adopted child, and your adopted sister. Take her and promise me that you will love her and protect her as long as you both live. She will help 9<3 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. to strengthen your energy, and you will feel that you have something to live for and to work for. And God grant that she may prove a blessing to you, and that your future lives may be full of sunshine and happiness." And, as she laid her in his arms, she said, " Do you promise me, Veary?" " I do, mother," said Veary, choking back a sob ; and next moment he had thrown himself upon her breast and wept in bitter anguish. "O, mother, mother," he cried in tones of unutterable woe ; "I can not give you up. Speak to me once more once again, mother dear." She opened her eyes and a smile passed over her coun- tenance, but she never spoke again. Her weary spirit had passed the golden gates, and had soared to that city on high, where she would be free from the petty wants of this poor life. The last few days of her life, as well as the days of her young married life, had been spent in peace and happiness. Judge Elmore had given her a beautiful cottage in the suburbs of the city, and provided her with a nurse and all the comforts of life. Veary still remained with him, and each day of his life he became more and more endeared to him. CHAPTER VIII. BIRDIE'S TRIALS. In a snug little cottage in the suburbs of the city sits an old crone, whose name we will give to the reader as Granny Nailar. We call her Granny Nailar because she is known by no other name, or at least the only one we are familiar with. She is nodding in the corner, and her breath is polluted with the smell of whisky. At her feet sits a little girl, with deep blue eyes, and hair like threads of gold from the fairy's loom, curled upon the hearth-rug. The rug is a shabby one ; so threadbare that little of its original pattern is distinguishable. The room is small, and there is but little fire in the grate ; though the earth is carpeted with snow and ice, and the sharp, cutting wind delights to whistle playfully through the chinks of the windows and doors, and through the key-hole, and down the chimney, and stirs the golden locks of the little girl, as she dresses up the fire-poker with Granny Nailar's new bandanna handkerchief. " What are you doing, you little devil, you," exclaimed the old hag, as she snatched the handkerchief from the little girl, and gave her a slap which set the poor child's 92 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. ears almost on fire. "How dare you take my handker- chief and dress up that dirty fire-poker with it, when you know it is all that I have. Just look how it is soiled. Now take that, and that, and that," said she, boxing poor Birdie's ears, first on one side and then on the other, until her head fairly ached from the blows. " Now get up this minute, and take yourself out doors and pick up some wood and put on the fire ; and then get your old ragged dress and bonnet and come to me. You're crying, are you? Now look here, my lady gay, if you don't stop them snubs, and wipe up them tears, and do as I bid you, I will take that hickory to you, and when I do get to work on you all the demons from the lower regions can't pull me off. And now let me give you a piece of advice, that will be a benefit to you after you are dead and rotten, and that is this, let me hear of you repeating to Veary Carlisle what I say or do, I will kill you and throw you out to that big hog, and he will eat you up. Veary does not care for you, no way. He is not your brother, either." "Buddie Veary is my buddie, " said poor little Birdie, choking back a sob, "and he loves me, too." "Well, he won't love you any more," she continued, drawing the filthy-looking bonnet down over her face. "And he told me that if you did not mind me, to whip you and make you mind. Now you have ruined my new handkerchief, and you must go out and beg money enough to-day to buy me a new one. Do you hear?" A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 93 "Yes, ma'am," said the little innocent, sobbing. "And another thing, don't you go near old Elmore's office for Veary to see you. If you do, I will beat you soundly. Do you hear?" "Yes, ma'am." " Besides, Veary will whip you himself if he sees you, and I will tell him what I had to send you out for." ' ' Veary never whip me in his life, and you never whip me when he is at home, neither. I wish he would stay home all the time," said Birdie. " It is because you behave yourself when he is home, That is why you never get any whippings ; but I am not going to have you stand up there and sass me, when I am old enough for your great-grandmother. I will shut you up in the dark garret, and not give you one mouthful to eat, like I did the other day. Will you go now, without another word? And don't you come back empty-handed, neither. Let me see; go round to that good doctor's office who gave you that big handful of money you remember, don't you?" " Yes, ma'am." " Well, when you see a heap of fine gentlemen stand- ing on the corner, you must go up to them and sing, ' Out in this cold world alone. 1 And don't forget to say that your mother is sick in bed, and has no money to buy any- thing to eat. If you tell them that, you will get a heap of money. And if you are smart and get lots of money, I 94 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. will buy you a doll one of these days a real doll, with hair and eyes just like your own." At these words, the face of little Birdie brightened up, for if there is anything that will bring happiness to a little girl's heart, it comes in the shape of a doll. From the cradle to the grave, there is one bright spot in a woman's life around which memory loves to cling. It comes with the presentation of the first doll, and the mem- ory of that doll is never obliterated. Though years of care and the stern realities of life ma)' cause her to forget things of greater consequence, and real dolls with bright eyes and flaxen hair hang over the back of her chair, and sit in groups at the fireside, she will never forget her first doll. I can not forget the unspeakable happiness that filled my childish heart, when I awoke one Christmas morning and peeped over to the fire-place where I had hung my stocking for Santa Clans, and spied a pair of doll-feet sticking out at the top. And when I am old, and my head is gray, and the things of the past are but a dream that has been told, those doll-feet will ever be fresh in my memory. Birdie received her instructions and started on her mis- sion of begging, as she had done ever since her mother's death, when she was unfortunate enough to fall in the clutches of this old hag, who was her mother's nurse, and whom Veary had allowed to remain after his mother's death A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 95 to take care of his little sister. She was one of those nu- merous hypocrites with which we so often come in con- tact, who carry God in their mouths and the devil in their hearts. She had so completely beguiled Veary Carlisle that he had unbounded confidence in her faith and sincer- ity, and would say to his little sister, " You must be a good girl and mind granny, and do just as she bids you," little dreaming that his little sister, whom his dying mother had entrusted to his tender care, was sent out every morn- ing on a mission of beggary, and should she not be suc- cessful a whipping or a prison in a dark garret, without food or fire, was her reward. And the money which he left her to buy food and fuel was spent for whisky. Never in his life had he dreamed of little Birdie's cruel treat- ment, and she was too much afraid of the old woman to reveal her cruelty to Veary. But the scars upon her back, which had only felt the pressure of a mother's gentle hand, told too plainly the tale the lips were forbidden to reveal. O, woman! born to be a mother! that thou shouldst ever be bereft of a mother, and thy infancy be thus left alone with want and poverty ; with nerves most delicately attuned, to feel and to suffer most excruciatingly, sensi- tively affected by any rude touch of pleasure or of pain ; capable of the most self-sacrificing love, and always yearn- ing for its smiles ; with perceptions keen and quick to feel and understand. No wonder the wails and cries of the infantile throng are heard in our land. 96 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Woe be unto him who shall dare to lay fingers on one of these little ones, of whom God hath said, " Suffer little chil- dren to come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven." How sweet is the poet's appeal in behalf of these little ones Deal gently with these homeless ones, Though lowly they may be, For they have much to tempt and test That you can never see. And when within your happy homes You hear the voice of mirth, And smiling faces gather 'round Your warm and cheerful hearth, Let charitable thoughts go forth, For these sad, homeless ones, And your own lot more blest will be, From ev'ry kind deed you've done. CHAPTER IX. DR. ST. GEORGE AND THE LITTLE BEGGAR GIRL, It was a cold, bitter day in December a day which would almost tempt a judge from his tribunal, a physician from his patient, or a man from seeking the smiles of his fiancee. All day the snow and rain had been falling and freezing upon the pavement, making silver daggers hang from the eaves of the houses, and bending the trees and shrubbery, that looked as though they were bowed with grief mourn- ing for the departing year. "What has come over me this morning?" soliloquized Dr. St. George, leaning his head against the mantel-piece, and gazing down into the grate where a bright fire was glowing. " I feel so depressed in spirit ; I suppose it is the miserable weather, for it is enough to kill any one with the ' blues.' ' And, sure enough, he did look like a statue of sadness and solitude in a wilderness of voluptuous luxuries. It seemed impossible for one to feel gloomy or sad 'mid such surroundings. His office, where we will now conduct our readers, is exquisitely fitted up. Everything seems to 7 (97) 98 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. blend in harmony. In one corner of the room is a beauti- ful book-case filled with the choicest of reading; and upon the opposite side is another, which contains his medical works. His desk is of walnut, and is beautiful in shape, and covered with crimson velvet; while the carpet, chairs, and divans all match in color. In the center of the room is a marble-slab table, upon which sits a vase of hot-house flowers, and which have perfumed the room with their sweet odor, and over the whole a mocking-bird is splitting its throat in ecstacies, and seems to rejoice over the death- bed^of the dying year and the approaching of the Christ- mas-bells, and trying, if possible, to delight the ears of its devoted master and companion. A low tap upon the door. "Come in," was the quick response. The knob turned but did not unbolt. "It must be a child," said Dr. St. George, and he hastened to open the door, and, in spite of his unpleasant feelings, a smile spread over his countenance as he looked down upon the little waif at his feet; and had it not been for two little violets peeping from beneath a dirty hood, it would have been difficult for him to ascertain whether it was a human being, or a bundle of rags that had escaped from the paper-mill. "Well, well, well," said the doctor, "if here is not my little beggar-girl again. Come in, child, it is a fearful day for a little girl like you to be out. Come to the fire A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 99 and warm ; for you look as if you were half frozen. It is a pity," said he, closing the door much harder than he intended, "that childhood and innocence should be thrust out to suffer for the sins of their parents." "Mr. Doctor, I don't like for anybody to call me a beggar," said she, spreading out her little purple fingers to the glowing fire. " Why don't you want to be called a beggar? " said he, drawing her close to his chair. "'Cause I don't, that's all." " Well, I won't call you so any more then, if you will tell me your name." "My name is Birdie." " Have you no other name beside Birdie? " "No. That's all." " Well, what is your mamma's name? " "I ain't got no mamma. She's gone up to heaven, and I ain't nobody's child now." "Poor child," said he, as he thought of his own little one lying so cold and still in the bosom of the earth, snatched away from the arms of fond parents, away from a home of luxury where she would never know a want or aught of grief that wealth could shield her from, while this one was left to wander alone and uncared for, without parents, without friends, or even the comforts of life. " Mr. Doctor, what are you thinking about? " said she, taking one of his hands to play with. IOO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. " I was thinking of my little girl," said the doctor. " Have you dot a little girl ?" said Birdie, looking in- terested. " I had one," said he, " but she is now in heaven, and I have no little girl now." "Is her mamma there, too?" "Yes, her mamma is there, too." "Well, she won't be afraid then," said she, patting his hand. A faint smile passed over his countenance as he gazed in silent amazement upon the little beggar, who did not want to be called a beggar. Presently he raised his hand to her head and pulled back the hood that had almost concealed her face from view. O, he almost lost his breath. It seemed to him that he had been suddenly brought face to face with a dead past with the dreadful reality of some terrible tragedy. He felt as if he had witnessed a rash hand draw the white sheet from off the face of his dead wife, and leave it exposed to view. \Yhat eyes of heaven's undimmed blue ! What shining showers of sunny ringlets concealed beneath that dirty hood. " I never saw a more perfect likeness in my life," said he to himself, as he gazed upon the child. "Her eyes and hair and forehead, and even the little brown mole upon her left cheek. If I did not know that my own little one was safe in the arms of its mother, I would claim her for my own." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. IOI "I have dot something for you," said she, looking at him coquettishly. " Got something for me ? " " Yes, and I bet you can't guess what it is." " Let's see," said the doctor, closing his eyes, " candy ?" "No." "Some nuts? " "No." "Some pretty flowers?" f 'O, you saw it," said she, unrolling a piece of soiled paper, which she had just taken out of her bosom. "No, I did not," said he, laughing. " Honor bright?" "Yes, honor bright." "Well, here it is," said she, holding up a beautiful button-hole bouquet. "It is just as fresh as it can be, and not a leaf is withered. \Yill you put it in your coat?" "Certainly," said the doctor, reaching out his hand to take it. " Where did you get this pretty bouquet?" "O, I found it just at the top of the steps." "Well, I will have to thank you, little missie, " said he, " for I have not received such a nice present in a long time. But tell me, little one, how came you to give it to me ? " " Because I likes you," was the frank reply. "Why do you like me better than any other man? I am afraid you are a little flirt. " IO2 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. ' ' I loves you because you are such an awful good man," said she, looking up into his face with perfect trust and confidence. " Why do you think that I am a good man? " said he, patting her on the cheek. "Because you never stamp your foot at me, and drive me out when I come in your office, like some of these bad men do." "Perhaps you plague them too much. You know gentlemen don't like to be troubled when they are busy." "Well, I am glad you are never busy then," said she, drawing a long breath. "O, you are mistaken," said he, holding up a large book. "I have to read and study all these books, and when I am not doing that I am attending the sick." ''Can you cure sick people?" said she, looking more interested than ever. ''I do sometimes," said he laughing, "and sometimes I do. not. It depends on whether they are curable or not" "Well, I wish you would cure my granny," she re- plied, drawing another long breath; "then F wouldn't have to beg any more, and you would not call me a little beggar, neither, would you?" "But I am not going to call you a little beggar any more if you don't want me to," said he. "Now tell me where you live, and I will go and give her some medicine." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 1 03 " I can't tell you," said she; "it is a long ways." " What is the matter with your granny ? " "I don't know; she takes something that she calls medicine, and then she gets sick right away, and can't walk at all. Is not that awful ? " "Yes, it is awful," said the doctor, for he had taken the hint, when it was not intended for one ; for Birdie did not understand the malady with which her granny was af- flicted. He had now become interested in the child, and was determined to find out as much as he could about the little waif. A bond of sympathy had sprung up between them, and he felt an interest in her that he had not felt in any one before. He would sit for hours thinking of her, and then he would try and cast her out of his thoughts ; but it seemed that her image was chained to his memory by some mysterious power. " Have you no one but your granny? " said he, picking her up and setting her upon his knee. " O, yes ; I have a buddy Veary, " she replied, smiling up in the doctor's face. "But he is being made a lawyer down at Judge Elmore's office ; and what do you think, he says if I be a good girl and mind granny, who ain't my granny, when he gets to be a big man he will buy me a big, fine house, and I shall have it all to myself. Won't I be a grand lady then ? Granny won't be there to make me beg. I don't love to beg," she continued; " mamma never made me beg! she was a good mamma." IO4 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "Is it possible," said Dr. St. George to himself, "that Veary Carlisle allows his little sister to go out begging in the streets? I can't believe that he is aware of it; if he is, he is not the boy I took him to be." "O, my buddy Veary don't know that I beg, 'cause granny won't let me tell him. She says if I tell him she will kill me." "And she sends you out on the streets begging, un- known to your brother?" "Yes, sir; and I 'spect I will have to go out and beg some money now, for I ain't got none yet, and if I don't get some she will " "She will do what?" "Well, if I tell you, you won't tell buddy Veary, will you?" "If you say not." "Well, she will beat me." "Beat you!" "Yes, sir." "Does she always beat you when you go home with- out money?" "Yes, sir. She beats me and then she won't give me anything to eat." " How often does your brother come home?" "He comes every Wednesday and every Sunday." "Did he ever see your granny drunk?" "Drunk! What's that?" A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 1 05 "Being under the influence of liquor." " Liquor? Granny don't drink liquor; I drink the liquor and granny eats the meat." "Well, well," said the doctor, laughing; "did he ever see her when she was sick, after she had taken some of that medicine you were speaking of just now?" " No, sir; she never takes medicine when buddy Veary is at home ; she never beats me either. I wish he would stay all the time." " Why don't he come home every night?" "Because he is being made a lawyer, down at Judge Elmore's, and he makes him study every night. Do you know Judge Elmore?" "Yes." ' ' Well, he's an awful good man. Don't you think so ? " "Yes, Birdie, he is a good man, and I am glad that your brother Veary has fallen into his hands ; but I expect you had better run along home or your granny will whip you again, poor child." " But I haven't got any money yet." "Well, here is some money," said he, slipping some money in her hand. "Now I want you to come to my office to-morrow morning at ten o'clock, and I promise you that you shall not beg any more." "Are you going to tell buddy Veary ? " "Yes, I shall go around to Judge Elmore's office and see Veary Carlisle, and will have him here when you IO6 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. come, that he may see with his own eyes his little beggar sister. And then," said he, bending low and whispering in her ear, " I am going to ask him to let you be my little girl, and if he will, why I am going to adopt you, and take you home with me, and there you will be queen of my house, and you won't have any granny to beat you then. And your brother can come every night if he wants to. Do you want to be my little girl? " She did not speak, but caught his hand and laid her cheek upon it, and her lips trembled and presently she burst out weeping, and she wept as though her little heart was breaking. The doctor was surprised at her emotion. He expected that she would rejoice. She did rejoice, but not in the way he had expected. He had never seen a child weep for joy, though he had often seen grown people do so. "Well, well," said he, "I didn't think you would cry because I wanted you to be my little girl. Very well, if you don't want to, I won't have you then." " O, do, Mr. Doctor, let me go and be your little girl. I won't cry any more. I could not help from crying, I was so glad. You aren't made with Birdie now, are you ? " "No, my poor child, I am not mad with you; I love you too well for that ; I didn't know you were cry- ing for joy, I thought you were crying because you did not want to go home with me. Now, here is some more money, and you must run along home. I will A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. IO/ have to go out to see some patients." And he kissed her and she hastened away, tnrowing a kiss at him as she van- ished through the door. "I will go and see Veary Carlisle early in the morn- ing," said the doctor, as he put on his gloves. " He must know it. And if he will let me have her, which I have no doubt but he will (for Veary is a sensible boy), she shall be all that money and influence can make her. It is strange that I should take to that child so. I love her now as tenderly as if she were my own." "O, is not that a nice, pretty doll?" said Birdie, gazing- in at the window of a large toy establishment. " O, it is so pretty, I wish I had one. Say, mister, what will you let me have one of these dolls for?" " Well, it depends upon what kind you want," said the clerk, and he took her in, smiling all the while at the little bundle of rags. "Here is one," said he, "that has been cracked. I will give it to you ; now take it and run along and you must not trouble us any more, the boss won't like it." She took her doll and started for home, and a happier heart never beat in the bosom of any child, for it was the first doll she had ever had with real hair and blue eyes. She had not gone far when she spied a gentleman with a traveling bag advancing toward her. " Now, if he will let me carry his satchel for him, I will IO8 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. make some more money. Buddy Veary used to make lots of money carrying gentlemen's satchels," said she to herself. "Say, Mr. Gentleman, let me carry your satchel. I am strong." "You carry my satchel," said the man, indignantly; "you look more fit for the paper-mill. Clear out." He gave her a push and she fell into the gutter. "You bad, ugly man, you," said she, crying and look- ing heart-broken at her doll now covered with mud. "That was a cowardly trick, sir," said Dr. St. George, as he picked her up out of the gutter. He was passing just in time to see Fen Scullcutter's brutal, cowardly act. "What did you do that he should knock you in the gutter?" said the kind doctor. "Nothing," said little Birdie, choking back a sob, and wiping the mud from her doll. . "You must have said something, surely." ' ' I only asked him to let me carry his satchel, that's all." "Well, you must not ask gentlemen to carry their satchels any more." " He ain't no gentleman, or he would not throw a little girl in the gutter." "No, he is no gentleman, it is true; but you must never do the like again. Little girls must not carry gentlemen's traveling bags. That is boy's work." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 1 09 ' Well, I wish that I was a boy, then." ' ' What do you want to be a boy for ? What would you do if you were a boy ? " " Why, I'd make lots of money." " It is not every boy that makes money," said the doc- tor. " But you must go home now. If you don't, you will displease me. Now run along, child, or you will freeze." Poor little Birdie made her way toward home. Now and then she would look at her doll, all soiled with mud, and the tears would come into her eyes. " Ha! O! little Rag-tag," said a voice right in her ear, " what have you got there ? " " I've got nothing but my doll," said Birdie, " and you go away and leave me alone." The urchin gave a nod at his companion, who grabbed the doll and tossed it up several times and let it fall to the ground, and then tied a string around its neck and whirled it round and round, while poor little Birdie was screaming as loud as her vocal chords would permit her, "Give me my doll ; don't break it ; please don't ! " " Do you want it very bad, little Rag- tag? " said one. " Yes, I do, it is mine. Please let me have my doll." " Well, if you will give us both a kiss, we will let you have it. What says you ? " "I shan't, I won't, you mean, ugly, old boys, you," said she, trying to get away from them, for they had hold of her hands and were trying to kiss her. I IO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Presently they screamed and ran away, rubbing their shoulders and looking back every step ; and I guess it was the last time they were ever caught trying to kiss a girl on the highway. " Never mind, Birdie," said a gentle voice behind her ; ' ' I would not cry any more. I paid those bad boys for their rudeness; I came near cutting them in two with my whip." It was Dr. St. George who spoke. He had -started to see a patient, and happened to come along just in time to rescue her from the claws of those bad boys who took a delight in teasing every little girl that passed them. " Now jump up in my buggy and tell me which way, and I will take you home." "Is that old woman standing in the door your granny? " said the doctor, as he helped Birdie out of the buggy. "Yes, that is granny," said she, shuddering, "and I believe she has been taking some more of that bad medi- cine, for she is awful shaky." "I know that old woman," said the doctor, "and she is one of the grandest old hags in the world. She has been a professional beggar for years. I had lost sight of her, and did not know where she had gone to. How on earth your brother happened to get her I can not tell." "What fine gentleman was that you were riding with?" said the old woman, as Birdie came up the steps of the cottage. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. I I I "It was Mr. Doctor," said Birdie, shaking from head to foot. "What were you riding with him for? and what was he saying to you ? " Birdie had never told a lie, and she did not know how to commence one ; and she stood looking at the old hag without speaking. " Don't you hear me," said the old woman, stamping her feet. ' ' I say, what was he saying to you ? Now if you don't tell me I will kill you; " and she took Birdie by the hand and jerked her into the room, and she fell headlong upon the floor. " Now will you tell? " said she, at the same time giving her a slap. " I will tell you, granny," said Birdie, choking back a sob, and rubbing her arm, which was almost jerked out of place. "Tell it, then." " He said you were a mean old hag." "What else?" "And he said that you was a profistical beggar, that's all." "And you have been talking to him about me, have you ; I suppose he will go to Veary Carlisle and tell him what you were doing." "He gave me some money," said Birdie, thinking it would tone her down to see some of the shining ore. 112 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "Where is it?" Birdie took the money out of her bosom and gave it to her, saying, " That good Mr. Doctor gave it all to me." "Good Mr. Doctor," said she, mockingly; "I will make you smart for this day's work. You shall not have one mouthful to eat this day. What is that you've got under your arm?" she continued, snatching the little bundle of dirty paper from her. "It is nothing but my doll. Please let me have it, granny," said she, sobbing. " How dare you take the money and buy dolls with it, you little witch, you ! " " I did not give money for it," said Birdie, " it was a good gentleman who gave it to me." " Instead of you begging money, you were out all day begging dolls. Now, take that, and that," said she, boxing her poor little ears ; but she did not feel it much, for they were frozen stiff. " Now, take yourself to the garret," she continued, " and stay there until I call you." Poor little Birdie crept up to the dark garret, cold and hungry, and there huddled down upon some straw and wrapped herself up in an old blanket, and cried herself to sleep ; and was soon dreaming of the good doctor who had been so kind to her. He came for and took her away from the old, woman who had been so cruel, and took her to his own beautiful home a perfect paradise, and she was so happy. Presently a shrill voice pierced her ear, and she A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 113 awoke cold and hungry, and found herself in the dark, dreary garret, and the shrill, sharp voice of her tormentor still ringing in her ears. What a contrast to that beautiful home in dreamland. " Go out and pick up some chips," said the woman, as Birdie came down benumbed with cold and faint with hunger. Birdie went out and very soon returned with a lapful of chips. " Put it down and bring more, and don't you stop until you get enough to last," said she; and again she laid her head back and commenced nodding. Again and again Birdie returned with her lap full of chips ; it was all they had to burn, for the money that Veary had given her to buy coal had been spent for whisky, and it all had gone down the old woman's throat. Veary only went home twice a week, as he lived so far from the office, and Judge Elmore requested him to remain at his house, that he might assist him with his studies through the long winter nights. So Veary consented to his proposal, not for his own special benefit alone, but to gratify the desire of his only true friend and benefactor, and he felt it his duty to obey him as he would a father ; for he had been to him more than his father ever had ; but he never forgot his little adopted sister, no, never ; and he always left money with granny to buy such things as she needed, and which Birdie never received. I 14 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. " What is the matter, Birdie ? " said a low voice close to where she was crouched upon the ground, with her hands rolled in her apron. She had picked up chips until her hands were nearly frozen, and she could no longer keep back the tears, in spite of all her granny's threats. Birdie looked around and spied a pair of eyes shining through the crack of the fence. "Is that you, Jack?" "Yes, Birdie, it is me," said the little crippled boy. ' ' What is the matter ? Has that old woman been beating you again ? " " Yes, Jack, and I am so cold and hungry." " Poor little Birdie," said Jack, with a tear coming into his honest eyes ; " here is a potato, eat it ; it will keep you from being so hungry." Birdie took the potato and soon devoured it; for she had not eaten anything all day but a piece of stale bread and some black molasses. "Birdie," said Jack, "why don't you run away and leave that mean old woman ? I would not let her beat me any more." "Where must I go, Jack?" "Why, go to your buddy Veary, and tell him how she treats you. and he will run her off." "She will kill me, Jack, if I do.'' "No, indeed, she won't. She only tells you that to scare you." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 115 " O, Jack," said she, clapping her hands together, "I've dot something to tell you. You know that good Mr. Doctor, they call St. George?" "Yes." ' ' Well, he said that he is going to come and take me away from granny, and let me be his own little girl, and have a big, fine house all to myself, and that I shall not beg anymore. Won't that be grand?" "I am so glad," said Jack. "When is he going to take you ? I hope it won't be long first." "Just as soon as he ean see buddy Veary to-morrow, I 'spect." Poor little Birdie had unconsciously spoken these words in an audible whisper, all unaware that through the key- hole a sharp eye was watching, and a quick ear caught her every whispered word. "Ah, my young one," said the old woman, with a chuckle, " your plans will be frustrated for once. You will never see Veary Carlisle or Dr. St. George again, I will bet my life on that. This night I will set fire to the house, after selling everything, and Veary will think that both Birdie and I are burnt up in it, Then I will take her and go to New Orleans, where I will buy an organ, and she shall support me by begging on the streets. I suppose I will have some trouble in getting her off with me ; but never mind, I'll fix her. I will tell her that Veary is dead, and that she will have to go with me or she will be left alone in Il6 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. this old house to starve ; and that she will see ghosts every night, with long, bony fingers and red eyes ; and then she will be glad enough to go. I know this would be the last night that I would remain in this house if Veary Carlisle was to find out all which he will for I heard her say that Dr. St. George was to go to see him to-morrow ; and he will do it, for he is a man of his word. And then ! and then I am ruined ! I will have to starve in my old age ; and to do without my liquor would be almost sudden death, and that I must have ! I must have ! " CHAPTER X. THE BIRD HAS FLOWN FROM ITS THORNY NEST, OR A NARROW ESCAPE. " Sit down, child, and warm your ringers," said Granny Nailar, as Birdie came into the room with the fifth lapful of chips, which were covered with snow and ice. Her face and hands were purple with cold, and the tears that trickled down her cheeks were freezing on their downward course, and making crystal paths through the coal-dust and smut. "Birdie," she continued, " I have something very sad to tell you, and you must not take it hard, child ; you know we all have trouble, and I feel just as bad about it as you do." "To tell me, granny?" said little Birdie, looking up in surprise, and wondering what had come over the old hag. " Yes, to tell you, child, for you are the one to know it, that you may make up your mind to what course to take ; as far as mine is concerned, it is already made up. I shall leave this place to-night." " You going to leave, granny?" ' ' Yes, going to leave, for your brother Veary is dead, and if we stay here we will starve ; and I am afraid to stay Il8 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. here any way, for I saw a ghost last night standing right in that corner, and I was frightened almost to death." "O! granny! is my poor buddy Veary dead?" said Birdie, clasping her little hands together, while her lips trem- bled like an aspen leaf. "Yes, he is dead," said the old fiend, pretending to wipe a tear from her eyes. "How come him dead?" said Birdie, with her hands still clasped in each other, and her eyes fixed upon the face of her would-be destroyer. "Why, he got drowned in the river this morning, while trying to save some little children from drowning," and she put up her hands again, as if wiping a tear from her eyes. "Will I never see him no more, granny? Will he never come back to Birdie again ? " "No, child, he will never come back again. Your poor brother is dead and gone ; his dear body is now lying beneath the deep, dark waters of the Ohio, and you are now my little girl. No hand can take you from me." " O ! granny ! " said she, locking her little hands at the back of her head, and writhing in agony; "let me go to my buddy Veary ; let me go and speak to him, and then he won't be dead. I know he won't, granny, because he loves Birdie so. I will put my arms around him, and kiss him, and then he will live again. Can I go, granny, can I go?" A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. IIQ "No, you can not go, child. Now listen to me; your brother is cold and dead, and is lying at the bottom of yonder river; and he will never live again." "But if I call him, he will hear his little Birdie and come to her; I know he will, granny, I know he will," cried the grief-stricken child, trying to choke back her grief, for it swelled up in her throat and seemed as if it would burst her very heart-strings asunder. Could she have poured out her grief in a flood of tears; could she have laid her little head upon some friendly breast and wept out those scalding tears that blistered and burned, and yet dared not find egress, it would have relieved her aching heart. But she was afraid to cry, for she had never been permitted the blessed privilege of crying like other children, when her little heart was well-nigh broken ; and she felt to-night that she would not be granted that blessed privilege, as she had not been heretofore not since the last time she laid her head upon her mother's knee and wept herself to sleep. She stood for some mo- ments with her hands clasped over the top of her head, swaying to and fro. Her eyes had a strange, wild look in them, and her face was purple, while her lips were of an ashy hue, and trembled violently. It would seem impossible that a child of her age should suffer such excruciating grief, such unutterable anguish without a wail. Finally, she could bear it no longer; she gave one agonizing scream, and then, as if she expected to I2O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. be felled to the floor, she threw up her hands and ex- claimed, "O! granny. I could not help it, please let me cry. I will go out of doors so you can't hear me; may I, granny?" The she-devil, fearing that the child would lose her reason, hastened to her and said, "Yes, child, cry if you want to, I won't stop you from crying this time, because your brother is dead ; and everybody cries at such a time, and I can't help from crying myself," and she put up her handkerchief to her face and pretended to wipe the tears from her eyes. With this permission, nature took its course, and the poor child wept out her grief, alone, with no tender hand to wipe the tear, nor a gentle voice to whis- per a word of comfort to her young, sorrowing heart. Her little white kitten sat mewing by her side ; now and then it would rise up on its hind feet, and rub its soft, white head against her wet cheeks and lick her tear-stained hands. "There, now, go to bed, young one, and try to get a little sleep, for we will have to be at the boat at seven in the morning, and if you don't go to sleep you won't feel like getting up." "Where am we going, granny? Am I going to that good Mr. Doctor, who said I should go home to his house and be his little girl?" "No, you are not going to no good Mr. Doctor's, as you call him. He don't want you ; he has found his own A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 121 little girl, and she is as much as he can take care of. You are going with me to a big, fine city, just like this one, and then we will make a plenty of money. I am going to buy you an organ, and you won't have anything to do but to sit on the streets and play, and then take around your cup, which will be a big, red one, with big, black letters on it, and will read this way: 'Help the little blind girl.' ' "Will I be blind, granny?" said Birdie, sobbing. "You will be if you don't quit crying. I've heard of little girls going blind from crying," she replied. " Well, I won't cry any more, then ; 'cause I don't want to be blind. I want to see buddy Veary when I goes to heaven." "What if I did have a little blind girl," said the old fiend, nervously. " Why she would be a fortune to me! She would arouse the sympathies of the public, and they would bestow their charity in abundance. Could I fix her so she could not see ? Yes ; and I will this very night. It will help to get me through to New Orleans. The passen- gers on the boat will throw in to her, and by these means I can work my way through." "You can sleep down here with me to-night," said she to Birdie, who had arisen and was creeping up the garret steps trembling with cold. This was not welcome news to poor, little Birdie, for she preferred being alone in the cold, dark garret to sleeping in the same room with her. So she insisted that she should 122 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. sleep in the garret, to which granny consented, and the little cast-away crept up in the loft and laid herself down upon her little, straw bed not to sleep, but to plan how she should escape the old woman, and not go to New Orleans. " I wish I could see Jack to-night," said she, "I know he would take me where buddy Veary is, and then I would make him live again ; and then I would not have to go with granny. O, I can not go ! 1 can not go if she kills me ! I will run away this night, and she shall never find me. ' With this resolution she arose and went to the window and looked out upon the snow-laden ground, and she shuddered with cold and fear as she looked with a longing eye toward the river that held her only treasure on earth. What was she to do without him? Should she always spend her days with that mean, old woman? Was she to be made a beggar, and sit upon the streets to grind an or- gan to get money for the old woman to buy whisky with, and never go to school nor to church like other little girls? Buddy Veary had promised to send her to school the next session, and she was so delighted ; and now she was never to see inside of a school -house, or to go to church again. With these thoughts burning in her breast, she made her way down stairs ; and when she reached the bottom she trembled for fear the old woman would awake and dis- cover her ; but to her delight and astonishment no one was in the house, and everything had been packed up and taken away to the second-hand store to sell, even Birdie's A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 123 best dresses; and the bed upon which the old woman slept had been taken away, and a pile of straw lay in its stead. "She is all packed up," said Birdie to herself, "and she will take me away just as soon as day comes, and I will never see my buddy Veary again, nor that good Mr. Doctor, nor Jack." She opened the door and looked out. A chill crept over her, and her teeth chattered together, for the wind was cold and piercing, and howled dismally as it swept along, carrying with it sheets of drifting snow. " I will go now," said she ; "I will go and find buddy Veary this very night." And she turned and looked her last upon the dark, cold, dreary room, where she had known nothing but want and suffering and sorrow; and to-night it looked more dismal to her than the white-robed trees and snow-laden earth over which she would have to travel; and the winds whistling around the corners and rattling the windows sounded more hideous than the tales of the Arabian Nights. The winding waters murmured in tranquil measure on their way, and the star of Bethlehem shone down in holy, solemn peace, for it was Christmas eve, and Santa Claus was going from house to house, making joyous hearts and smiling faces. But, alas ! no Santa Claus came to make glad the heart of this lonely little pedestrian. There were no little stockings hanging by the fire place, and no bright eyes were peeping from beneath the coverlet to see him come down the chimney. 124 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. As Birdie stood upon the lonely doorsteps, she thought of the thousands of little hearts that would be made happy in the morning ; but she did not envy them, and only said with a smile, " I know if buddy Veary was here old Santa Claus would bring Birdie something, too." Then she thought of her doll that she had left in the garret, and she felt that she had left a part of herself, so she hastened to get it, and before she reached the door again, she heard the unsteady footsteps of the old woman tramping up the steps. Lucky for Birdie that the fire had died out, and the candle had expired, and there was no light in the room, for she crouched down by the door, and Granny Nailar passed her as she came in and made her way to a little brown jug that was sitting in the corner of the room, and which had been her companion for years. Birdie snatched her opportunity, and as the old woman turned the jug to her lips she opened the door, and in another moment she was speeding like a wild deer through the streets, with the snow flying into her face, and filling up her tracks as fast as she made them. Upon her lips was a smile of joy sweeter than lies in words. There was a light in her deep, spiritual eyes that had never been there before ; and her thoughts were sweeter than any poet's song or romancist's story could have told her. She was free as a wild bird in the forest. She would go and find her brother, and she knew when she put her arms around his neck and called him, he would answer her, and A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 125 he would live again ; and they would go together to the good doctor who had been so kind to her, and who had promised to take her for his own little girl, and there they would be happy, and granny would not be there to beat her and make her beg. Finally she reached the river, and for hours she walked up and down its banks crying, and moaning pitifully as she cried aloud, " O, my buddy Veary, come to me, come to your Birdie, and then you won't be dead. O, come to me now ; I ain't got no home, nobody to love me. I will always be a good girl." But Veary Carlisle did not hear his little sister; he was fast asleep, and dreaming of a little girl crossing a dark and turbulent river, and he was endeavoring to save her from falling into the water. As Birdie stood cold and trembling upon the banks of the Ohio, on that dark and dreary night, little did she know what a terrible fate she had escaped. As the poisonous snake steals dark and noiselessly through the gentle night, where none beholds its pestilen- tial trail, Granny Nailar stole up the dark stairway, while, like the death hiss of the snake gliding to destroy, the whisper hissed from her set lips, ' ' You shall never behold the light of another day ! Veary Carlisle shall never see you again ! never ! never ! for when you are blind you can not leave me, and you can beg enough to support us both ; besides, I can always have my dram." 126 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. She went up to the pile of straw where Birdie had been lying, and put her fingers in the cup and took out a portion of the pulverized glass, which she had prepared to put in little Birdie's eyes, and set the cup down carefully that she might not disturb the sleeper, for Birdie was sleeping soundly, she thought. It seemed that she could hear her loud breathing, as she stealthily laid her hand upon the cover and found only the sleeping cat Birdie's little white cat, which had been her bedfellow from its kittenhood. The old woman hissed a curse as she gathered the sleeping cat by the neck and threw it down the steps. She was foiled in her devilish plan, for the bird had flown from its thorny nest, and the hawk was cheated of its prey. She called loudly to her, but no sound stirred the silence, save the hollow echoes of her own hideous voice. ' ' Where are you, Birdie? Come to me this minute, do you hear? Birdie! Birdie!" "Curse her! " she hissed, as she descended the dark stairway. "She has run away, and if I ever find her I will pay her up. Ah, my lady," said she, turning up the jug, her only comforter, " if I ever get my hands on you, you will never have the opportunity of running off again. She has gone up to Jack's mother's, I expect; for I heard him tell her to come to him and he would take her to Veary Carlisle, and I must be up early in the morning and go after her, the little witch ; and I will give that Jack Ham- bleton a sound beating the first time I catch him off." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. I2/ With this she rolled herself in an old blanket and stretched herself before the fire, for she had nothing to sleep on, as she had sold her bed. It was one o'clock when the fire alarm was sounded from box . The fire company arrived as soon as possi- ble, but too late. It was a great distance out, and before they reached the spot, the cottage that held the form of Granny Nailar was melting into coals, and the white bones of the drunken beast lay bleached and crisp, but her little brown jug remained at her side, and seemed to smile down upon her hideous form and whisper, "Not drunk, but dead." Retribution had come at last. "Vengeance is mine," saith the Lord. CHAPTER XL VEARY CARLISLE MOURNS OVER THE LOSS OF HIS LITTLE BIRDIE. It was twelve o'clock on the night of Birdie's escape from the cottage when Veary retired with a wearied brain to his couch. He had studied very hard that night, unusu- ally hard, for the rapid progress he was making with his studies pleased the old judge, and he did not hesitate to tell him so ; for he slapped him on the shoulder that same morning, saying, "I hope I shall be proud of you one day, my boy, for I see you have no ordinary mind, and if you will apply yourself and make the best use of your time, you will one day be an honor to your profession. I am now going to give you an opportunity of showing what kind of grit you are made of. I have hired an office boy, and you no longer hold that position, but will go up to my study and prepare yourself for college ; for I expect to send you to the law school in Philadelphia next session, where you will remain until you graduate." Veary Carlisle's eyes opened wide, and his lips sprang apart, while his heart beat rapidly. He arose from his seat trembling with joy and excitement, and with a glad light (128) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. I 29 blazing in his eyes ; a light that reflected itself upon the eye-glasses that stuck upon the tip of Judge Elmore's nose, and which carried him back to the days of yore. Veary grasped the old judge's hand and tried to tell him how grateful he was, and how he would try to make himself worthy of this honor, and one day he hoped to be able to repay the hospitality received at his hands ; but he could not utter one word if his life depended upon it, and the pent-up tears of gratitude streamed down his cheeks and dropped upon the hand of his benefactor as he stooped and pressed it to his lips ; and the grateful look in his honest, open eyes spoke out what the lips refused to utter. This much the judge saw and knew. " I feel amply rewarded," said the old judge, wiping a tear from his own eye, as he grasped Veary's hand more firmly. "The grateful look in those honest eyes of yours has repaid me already ; besides it is a duty that I owe to your father; and if you will sit down, my boy, I will tell you a little story which will probably be beneficial to you, and you will see that you are not the only boy that has had a hard time. Perhaps you think that the hard times which you experience are the hardest times that have ever come to any one ; and so they are, for you. But you only need to read the biographies of thousands who have lived, and died, and passed away, to learn that it is not only you or two or three out of the teeming millions who have a hard time. Hard times have been perpetually 9 I3O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. coming to all nations, in all periods of their existence. And so have good times, and so have chances for honest people to better their conditions. There never was a night that was not followed by a day. nor a storm that was not followed by a calm. The sun is forever shining in the heavens, and the clouds which sometimes obscure his rays are sure to break and disperse, no matter how dark and threatening they may be for a time. The brave- hearted, that hope on and work on, need never despair. It is for the want of bravery and courage that every day sends to their graves hundreds of men obscure men, who have only remained in obscurity because timidity has prevented them from making a first effort, and who, if they could have been induced to begin, would in all probability have gone great lengths in the career of fame. The fact is, that to do anything in this world worth doing, we must not stand back shivering and thinking of the cold and danger, but jump in and scramble through as well as we can. It will not do to be perpetually calculating risks and adjusting good chances, and waiting for something to turn up; it did very well before the flood, wlien a man could consult his friends upon an intended publication for a hundred years, and then live to see its success afterward ; but at present a man w r aits and doubts and consults his brother and his particular friends, till one day he finds that he is fifty years of age ; that he has lost so much time in consulting his first-cousins and particular friends that he A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "13! has no more time to follow their advice. We are all born to some purpose in life, and if every one would consult his own taste and inclination, and follow the dictates of his heart he will soon find out what his vocation is. This much I know by experience. I was once a poor boy just like yourself," the old judge added, resting his chin upon his gold-headed cane. "Yes, poor and friendless I won't say friendless, either, for I had some very dear friends, and they were friends indeed, firm and substantial. My par- ents were poor but honorable people, and lived in the State of Virginia. My father was a small planter, and had three or four old negroes, and with their help tilled his farm, which was principally in tobacco, and from which he supported his little family, which consisted of only three persons my father and mother and myself, a boy of ten years when my father died, leaving his wife and child without a farthing, for he had mortgaged his little farm to go into some enterprise with a partner who ran away with . the money, leaving my poor father a wiser but a sadder man. For two years my mother and I struggled together alone in a little log cabin ; sometimes we would have some- thing to eat, and sometimes we would not, but we man- aged to get along somehow ; I can't tell you exactly how, until one cold, bitter day I came home and found my poor mother prostrate with pneumonia, which carried her to her last resting-place, leaving her only child without home or friends. So I was taken by the officials of the law and 132 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. bound out until I became twenty-one years of age. Well, I was bound to a man who was by trade a carpenter, and who, by every strategy, tried to instill it into my brains, but he failed to do it and would often get vexed at me, and finally gave up the job, and called me a clog-headed fool. You see," said the old judge, smiling, u that I was not made for an architect. So he tried me on farming, which proved as unsatisfactory as the carpenter's trade, for he never could teach me to plow a straight furrow, and to my dying day I shall never forget the sound thrashing he gave me upon his return home after six weeks' absence and found the corn and potatoes choked to death with the grass and weeds, while I was perched upon my plow- handles reading an old law book that I had found in the garret ; how it came there is a mystery to me ; I suppose it got lodged there in the flood ; at any rate, it could not have brought rne a more congenial companion, for I tell you," he exclaimed, bringing his fist do\vn upon the table with a crash, ' ' it was my thought by day, and my dream by night. And many were the hours I whiled away with that old centurion, as I lay upon a hay-stack, with my heels elevated above the level of my nose, or perched upon an over-hanging rock, which looked into the old mill- pond, and from which many a foot had leaped into the water, and dived to its very depths. Ah, I can never for- get that old mill," he said, half mournfully ; "it is there still, but many of the bare feet have long since ended the A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 133 journey of life. It seems that I can see the old mill now, with its deep, dark flume, and the mysterious old wheel covered with moss; and its arms swinging around, making a wreath of gold in the sunlight. Ah, it would be worth worlds to sport again in that cool stream with the light of childhood in my heart, and its vigor in my limbs ; but I am wandering far from my story now, Veary, as I gener- ally do when I speak of my boyhood days, although they were far from being happy ones, for like you, Veary, I had hard times to deal with. I had very few companions ; in fact, there was only one boy of my age in the neighbor- hood that I cared the snap of my finger for, and that was your father, Julius Carlisle." "My father! " said Veary, and a light seemed to spread over his whole countenance. "Yes, your father," said the judge, smiling at the sud- den lighting up of Veary's face when his father's name was mentioned. " Your father and I were great friends," he continued. ' ' Whatever Tom Elmore did was all right in the eyes of Julius Carlisle, and what Julius Carlisle did was perfection in the eyes of Tom Elmore. His father was a very large planter, and lived in one of the most fer- tile valleys of Virginia, and his neat stone cottage and well- tilled farm were the pride of the people of that section. And Farmer Carlisle, your grandfather, was one of the most generous-hearted men that ever lived ; for no tramp was ever known to be turned away from his door hungry, 134 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. and in preparing her meals the good old wife was always wont to put in a liberal allowance, saying, in her quiet way, ' It won't be lost somebody will be sure to come along hungry, poor soul.' And she told the truth, for every tramp within fifty miles knew just where Farmer Carlisle lived, and they always made it convenient to call just at meal-time, for they knew they would get a nice, warm meal, wipe their mouths, tip their hats, and disappear. One night Farmer Carlisle and his good old wife were sitting around their happy fireside, listening to their only son, Julius Car- lisle, reading a catalogue of the Philadelphia Law School, when they heard a knock upon the door without ; though it was hardly heard by those within, for the wind was howl- ing dismally around the house, and the snow was drifting heavily against the windows. Presently a low growl from Hero told them that it was no delusion, and the old gen- tleman arose and went to the door. " ' Good evening, Mr. Carlisle,' said a gosling-like voice, as he opened the door, and the wind and snow came sweep- ing into the house. "'Well, well, Tommy,' said Farmer Carlisle, as he hurriedly closed the door, ' come in, my boy. Aren't you nearly frozen ? ' " 'It's pretty cold,' exclaimed the boy, shaking off the snow. 'Is Julius at home? I heard that he was going to start to Philadelphia to school in a few days, and I wanted to see him before he left.' A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 135 "'Yes, yes, he is at home,' said the old gentleman. ' Come, Julius, here is your friend Tom.' ' ' The two boys shook hands, and Tom was given a good, warm seat by the fire, as he exclaimed, ' I was afraid you would get off, Julius, before 1 could see you, and to-night was my only opportunity to come. When will you leave for Philadelphia ? ' " ' I shall leave on the i8th,' said Julius, as he looked straight into the fire. He was afraid to look in poor Tom's eyes, for he saw that Tom was trying to choke something back, and a tear was struggling for egression, although he tried to look brave. " There was silence for some minutes, when Julius arose and said, ' Come, Tom, let us go up to my room. I want to show you my new outfit father bought me the other day. I know you will like it, for it is the best fit I ever had.' ' ' Tom arose and followed his companion up to his room, and felt thankful that Julius had taken him off to them- selves, where he would not be ashamed of his tears. Tom took a seat upon the bed while Julius spread out his new suit before him ; almost any other boy would have envied Julius, but Tom did not, although his own coat was out at the elbow, and had been darned with homespun thread which had been dyed with gallberries and sumac by the hands of old Mrs. Belgrove. " After everything had been shown, and Tom's criticism 136 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. had been passed, Julius slapped him on the shoulder and exclaimed, ' Well, old fell, I hate to leave you ; I wish you could go, Tom, for I know if you had an opportunity you would make a smart man ; much smarter than I ever will, for my head is as thick as a pumpkin. Beside, I know that you have a talent for law. What have you done with that old law-book, Tom, you used to read so much? I believe that was what put me in the notion to study law."' " ' Why, that old Belgrove threw it in the fire and burnt it up,' said Tom, and the tears gushed out afresh. ' And what do you think, Julius,' he continued, rubbing his rough coat-sleeve across his eyes, "he has hired me out to that old General Crumpton, to blow the bellows in the blacksmith shop for three years, and so I am not to go to school any more, but to be a drudge and a slave, until I am twenty-one, but I had rather die, yes, I had rather die, Julius,' and the tears came in torrents down his cheeks. " ' Poor Tom,' said Julius, sorrowfully, 'I feel so sorry for you, old fell,' and he laid his arm around his shoulder. ' I'm going to try and see if father can't help you ; and I know he can, for if any man can do anything with Bel- grove it is he, for he thinks that the sun rises and sets in father. ' "*O! I'm going to run away, Julius! I have every- thing fixed up, and I am going to leave to-morrow night.' A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 137 ' 'Where are you going, Tom?' " ' I am going to Kentucky. I shall walk from here to Huntington; there I will take a boat and make my way through to Cincinnati ; then I shall take a boat from there to Louisville where I shall get work, and I am going to take care of every cent I can make, and when I get enough ahead to pay my board for one year's schooling, I am go- ing to school ; besides, I shall study at night. You know they have night schools for young men, Julius. I am going to have an education if it takes a whole lifetime,' he added, excitedly; 'other boys have worked their way up, and so can I. I can not, and I will not, be a drudge and a slave for any man. ' "'That is right, Thomas,' exclaimed a voice, as the door opened and Farmer Carlisle walked into the room. ' I did not mean to eavesdrop, boys, ' said he, ' but never- theless I did it; and I am glad I did, for I always knew you were made of good grit, Tom, just like your father, but, poor man, he had bad luck on all sides. Now I am going to give you a bit of advice, as I am older than you are a few years. Don't run away from Belgrove and I will see what I can do for you. Do you understand me?' "'Yes, sir,' said Tom, 'I will obey you,' wondering what it was that Farmer Carlisle was going to do for him. ' ' Tom was very much surprised the next day, when he came home to dinner, to find Belgrove and his wife in 138 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. such high spirits ; for they laughed and chatted all through the meal, which was something unusual for them to do, as the old man was always very grum and hardly spoke through his meals, unless there was too much soda in the biscuit, or the bread was not brown enough. " 'I don't know what I shall wear, Jake,' said the old lady, ' for they are such high-toned folks, and I hate to go there looking shabby. ' " ' High-toned ! The devil and Tom Walker ! ' exclaimed her husband, gruffly. 'They are as plain as we are; only old Carlisle has got plenty of money and lives in a fine house; but I would not give his big toe for one-half of the cracked-up fools in the neighborhood. He is a sensible man, and a man, too, that I like.' " ' I wotrder if there will be many there ? ' soliloquized the wife as she poured out the third cup of coffee for her hus- band. " 'Many! the dog's foot; why, Mary, didn't you read the ticket? Where is it?' '" Here it is, " said the good wife, going down into a t\vo- foot pocket, and bringing out an envelope. " ' Now listen,' said Belgrove, 'you women are so hard to understand things, it's a wonder to me how Adam ever got Eve to understand that he was boss.' " FRIEND BEI.GROVE : \Ve would be pleased to have you and your bet- ter half to come and spend the evening with us. Julius has set his heart on having a little party before leaving for Philadelphia, and I have gone A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 139 against the rules of the church and consented to let them dance. You can join in also, if you wish. As for myself, I expect to open the ball with the prettiest girl in the house. Don't forget to bring Tom, for you know he is Julius' shadow. " WILLIAM CARLISLE.' " 'He writes like a sensible man,' exclaimed Belgrove, folding up the paper and placing it in his pocket-book. He has none of your all-fired tomfoolery about it with compliments of So-and-so to Mr. and Mrs. So-and-so.' ' " ' But it doesn't say whether there will be many or few,' put in his wife. " *O, fiddlesticks, Mary, didn't it say a little party; and I'm sure little means few. Now, I'm not goin' to any ex- pense, for your bombazine dress is plenty good enough, and you have not had it more than three years ; look at me, I haven't had a new suit for over five. ' "The evening of the party came on, and the family, all rigged out in their Sunday clothes, seated themselves in the spring wagon, and old Belgrove and his wife, with Tom, set out for the first time in thirty years to attend a party. It was Tom's first party, too, and all the day he was think- ing what it would be like ; while Belgrove was wondering if Farmer Carlisle would have apple or peach brandy, for the latter he was particulary fond of. Then he would commence whistling a little familiar tune, and his mind would wander back to his boyhood days, when he and Mary used to dance the old Virginia reel together. I4O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "'Well, here we are,' exclaimed Belgrove, jumping from the wagon in front of Farmer Carlisle's residence ; 'and, by jingo! if the house ain't full and running over; and yonder comes old Carlisle dressed in an inch of his life. This looks like a little party, don't it? I'm sorry I come. Well, we are here now and can't back out jump out, old woman,' and he glanced down at himself and then at his wife's faded bombazine. 'You look all right,' he exclaimed, trying to make his better half feel more com- fortable in her bombazine. ' ' ' Did I say anything about my looks ? ' she exclaimed, pettishly. ' I guess that I am just as good as anybody here, if I aren't dressed so fine ; and I don't care the snap of my finger for them frizzle-headed fools that is standing yon- der giggling at me. As for me, I shall go in the dining- room and help poor Mrs. Carlisle, for I know she must be tired.' " Well, everything passed off smoothly. The supper was fine, and the brandies and wines were delicious, and the dancing was kept up until ten o'clock the next morn- ing, and Belgrove and his good old lady, who was made superintendent of the dining-room, declared they had never spent such a pleasant time in all their lives. And amid all the happy faces, Tom's was the happiest and his heart was the lightest; for Mr. Carlisle had taken him to one side and whispered in his ear that all was right. ' Belgrove has given you entirely into my charge,' said he, 'and I am A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 14! going to send you off to school with Julius, where you will remain until you graduate. ' " I shall not attempt to describe Tom's feelings," said the old judge, leaning back in his chair, " for you know ex- actly how he felt, as you have passed through the very same ordeal. But, at any rate, the two boys came back gradu- ates just three years from that day. Julius and Tom re- mained home for a short vacation, and then they separated. Julius went to Richmond, Va. , to practice law, and I wan- dered down here to Louisville, Ky. , where I have spent the most of my time, when I was not traveling in other quarters of the world." "You!" exclaimed Veary, in astonishment. "Are you and Tom the same person, Judge Elmore?" "Yes, Veary, I am that same Tom. And you see I am under obligations to your father and your grandfather, for the good old man would not receive a cent from me, though I sent him a check for two thousand dollars, which he sent back with the words, ' Hurry and get you a wife, and come and spend the summer with us, for we are very lonely ; ' and I intended doing as he requested, but some- how time passed on, and found me still in my bachelor- hood. Well, the old people died pretty soon after that, and I never heard from your father any more, until I saw his only child homeless and friendless, and I thank God for directing the child of my benefactor to my protecting care." 142 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 1 ' Cast your bread upon the waters, and it will return after many days." Veary was up very early the next morning, and made his way to the study, although he had not slept much that night. For hours he lay awake thinking of the new life that was opening before him ; and thinking of little Birdie, and what he should do with her during his absence the little Birdie whose life he had risked his own to save and who his dying mother had lain in his young arms to love, shield, and protect. It seemed that the old judge had en- tirely forgotten Veary's little charge, for he had not men- tioned her while planning for Veary's future career. But Veary had never for a moment forgotten his little foster sister, and many were the sleepless hours he passed toss- ing from side to side, as he tried to think of some way of providing for his little Birdie. " She must have an educa- tion," said he, "and if I were making money I could do it ; but she will have to be taken care of while I am at school. She will have to go to the orphan asylum," he exclaimed, and the tears came into his eyes and dropped upon his pillovv; for he could see her little sad face when he would have to tell her of their parting, and could almost feel her little arms around his neck begging him not to leave her ; and he lay there trying, if possible, to lose himself in oblivion and shut out the thoughts from his mind. And when he did drop off to sleep, it was only to dream of all kinds of horrible things. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 143 While Veary was bending over his studies the next morning, a gentle tap came upon the door. He arose and opened the door, and was surprised to see Dr. St. George standing before him. " Good morning, doctor," said he ; "come in and have a seat. The judge has not yet arisen ; I will send for him." "I did not call to see the judge," said the doctor, grave- ly, "but to see you." " To see me? " exclaimed Veary in surprise. "Yes," replied the doctor, "to see you on some very important business, important to one soul at least ; and I hope you will not think that I am meddling with your affairs, or troubling myself where it does not concern me, for I feel a deep interest in your welfare, Veary, and in the welfare of your little sister." "My little sister?" exclaimed Veary, excitedly; "is she sick, doctor?" ' ' Not unless she has been taken ill since I saw her in my office last evening ; but I would not be surprised if you were to hear of her death at any time, for she is liable to be knocked down and killed at any moment by vehicles and street-cars." " I do not understand you, doctor," said Veary, turning red in the face, and then white, as his fingers worked nervously with the door-knob. " I know you do not, my boy," said the doctor, ten- derly, " and I will be more explicit. Did you know that 144 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. the old woman in whose keeping you have placed your little sister compels her to go out in the streets every day, and in all kinds of weather, to beg money to buy whisky to pour down her throat?" "No, I did not," said Veary; "this is the first I have heard about it. Surely it can not be true, you must have been misinformed, doctor. It can not be true, for she seems to love Birdie as dearly as if she were her own child. I never saw her under the influence of liquor but once in my life, and then I threatened to send her away if I ever caught her so again, and she promised me she would never touch it again." "To my certain knowledge it is true," said Dr. St. George, " for Birdie has been a constant visitor at my of- fice, and it was from her own lips that I heard her story. I did not know who the child was, though I had taken a great fancy to her, and was always glad to see the little thing come ; she seemed to be such an intelligent child, and so unlike other children I have seen on the streets beg- ging. There was something about her that attracted me to her, and my heart went out to the child ; so one day I took her upon my lap and questioned her. She at first hesitated to tell me anything, but finally I won her confi- dence, and then she told me that Veary Carlisle was her brother, and when I asked her why she did not tell you, she replied, ' Because granny will kill me. ' She also told me that the old woman beat her severely if she went home A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 145 without any money, and this she confirmed by showing me the scars upon her little back which I examined." This was too much for poor Veary, and he exclaimed, ' My God, can it be true ? " "It is true," said Dr. St. George, "and I have taken it upon myself to come and tell you, and I feel that I have performed a duty in doing so." "You have done me a great kindness, doctor," said Veary, ' ' and I feel so grateful to you. I can not tell you how much I thank you." And he arose from his seat, with the blood boiling in his veins, and his eyes flashing fire, as he grasped his hat and was about to rush from the room, when Dr. St. George laid his hand upon his shoulder, and said, "Where are you going, Veary?" "I am going to kill that old hag," he exclaimed, "I am going to choke the very life out of her infernal old body," "You must not, Veary," said the doctor; "you must remain here until your excitement somewhat subsides, for if you were to kill her your life would be ruined forever, even should you escape the penalty of the law. Now sit down and listen to me, and act like a sensible boy, which I know you are, and all things will come out right." Veary took a seat by Dr. St. George as he bade him do, and said, "Well, doctor, I am willing to follow your advice, for I know that you will advise me for the best. ' v 10 146 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "Well," said the doctor, "in the first place, do not touch that old woman, notwithstanding she deserves to be choked ; retribution will come upon her and she will be justly punished for her wickedness. Judge Elmore tells me that he intends to send you off to school, and if he does, I will take care of your little sister. It will not do to leave her with that old woman." " O, doctor, you are so kind, how can I ever thank' you. Only last night I could not sleep for thinking of her. Now, she will not have to go to the orphan asylum," ex- claimed Veary, and a happy expression came over his countenance, which only a moment ago was distorted with passion. ' ' Do not thank me, " said he, ' ' for it will be a pleasure to me to have her in my house ; besides, if you are will- ing, I will adopt her for my own, and I will educate her and will raise her up right. She shall never want for any- thing that money can buy, and whenever you may wish to visit her, come and make your home with her as long as you may desire." "You have my full consent, and my gratitude for your kind offer. Take her, Dr. St. George, but teach her to love me, and do not let her forget me. I know you can do better by her than I can ; and she will be just the same to me, but when I am gone tell her of me, and don't let her forget me." " I will," said the doctor, rising, "and I would like to A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 147 go and get her immediately; I want to deprive that old hag of her morning dram." "We will go at once," said Veary, "I will be back be- fore the judge arises; he never gets up until nine o'clock, and always takes his breakfast in his room." So they took their seats in the doctor's barouche and were soon making their way in the direction of the cottage that Veary called his home. "It seems that a house was burned there last night," said Dr. St. George, as he came in sight of a pile of smok- ing coals. " And there is a strange smell about the prem- ises; surely there was no one burned in the house." He felt something heavy against him and looking around was surprised to see Veary Carlisle lying white and stiff against his shoulder. "What could have made him faint?" exclaimed the doctor, as he bore him in his arms to the first cottage he came to. "It must have been the scent of that burning flesh; it is terrible; I wonder what it is?" "It is terrible, it is perfectly awful! " exclaimed an old lady, as she placed a cold towel around Veary's head. " Poor boy, poor boy, it is enough to make him faint. I have been looking out for him all the morning, and would have sent for him but my little crippled boy was sick, and I had no one to send." "Do you know this boy, madam? " said the doctor. "Yes," replied the old lady, "I have seen him pass 148 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. my house very often, and he was so good to my little crip- pled boy, and he loved his little sister so dearly. Poor lit- tle fellow, it is a great blow to him." 'What do you mean, madam?" exclaimed the doctor, "I don't understand you; has anything serious hap- pened?" " O, I thought you knew all about it," said she. " Why, old Granny Nailar, as they call her, and little Birdie, Veary's sister, were burned up in a cottage last night, and that is what you smell. Isn't it just terrible?" "Merciful Heaven!" exclaimed Dr. St. George; "can it be possible?" The conversation seemed to arouse Veary and he began to realize what had happened, and he sprang from the sofa where the good doctor had laid him cold and lifeless a few minutes before, and exclaimed in a hoarse, unnatural voice, "Mrs. Wilson, have I been dreaming? am I mad, or is it true that my poor little Birdie was burned up in that cottage last night? O, tell me quick! let me know all." The kind-hearted old lady laid her trembling hand upon his shoulder, as the tears trickled down her old withered cheeks, and said, gently, "My poor boy, it is true. Your little sister is in heaven, where neither fire nor snow can enter." "O, God!" said the sorrow-stricken Veary, and again he was lying a lifeless mass in Dr. St. George's arms. The doctor took him home to his kind benefactor, A BEAUTIFUL BIRD .WITHOUT A NAME. 149 where he lay for many weeks, with the fever burning his brain, and raving like a maniac, calling all the while for his darling little Birdie ; his lost, lost Birdie. Dr. St. George attended him faithfully, and many were the days and nights he sat by the bedside of this sorrow- stricken boy, and listened to his pitiful moans ; and many were the silent tears that were wrung from his own bleed- ing heart, whose wounds had been opened afresh. After many weeks of painful illness, he was able to go out of the house and sit beneath the shade of the large elm tree, that seemed to stand like a protecting angel be- tween him and the sun's scorching rays ; for winter had laid aside its white robe of snow and ice, and spring had come again with all its radiance. But what was spring to him now? or what was the beautiful world to him, when he had nothing to live or work for ? and no memories save the sweet young face which had passed from him forever, and the flowers that hung over his mother's grave, and the words that fell from that dying mother's lips on that cold, wintry day: "Take her. She will be a comfort to you, my son. You will have something to live for and to work for." "What have I to live for or to work for now? " said he, mournfully. " Why was she given to me to be so ruthlessly snatched away, and after I had learned to love her so dearly ? And why was it her fate to die such a horrible death she so pure and so innocent? O, Justice! where art thou? Where is thy dwelling place? I5O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Surely not on this earth. This lower world does not come under thy jurisdiction." He bowed his head upon his hands and the hot tears trickled down his pale, thin cheeks, and fell like raindrops upon the grass beneath his feet. " Veary, my boy, you must not give up to your feel- ings in this way," said a gentle voice at his side, and an arm was laid around his shoulder. "You say you have nothing to live for. You are mistaken ; you have every- thing to live for. You have a bright future before you, although the dark clouds of adversity may for a time ob- scure the rays of your bright anticipations ; but do not give up, my boy, for a bright and glorious sun is rising for you, and those bitter tears you shed now will be as sealed fountains in bottles of gold. Yes, Veary, you have a great deal to live for. You have a poor old father, upon whose furrowed brow the finger of time has left its impression, and in his declining years his feeble limbs will need your protecting care. I am your father now, Veary, and you are my child, given to me by the laws of the United States. I have adopted you as my own, and you will bear my name, and when I am no more, you will take my place in the world, and I want you to be an honor to my name. Your name is now Veary Elmore. I will call you Veary still, because I do not want to rob you of the name your mother gave you." This sudden revolving of the wheel made a great change A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 151 in Veary's life, but not his feelings. Instead of a poor office-boy, he was now the honored son and heir of the wealthy Judge Elmore, and could he have thought the grave would give up its dead, he would have been a happy boy. Or could he forget the dead white ashes that lay mouldering beneath the ruins of that old cottage, he could forget his sorrow. But he could not; and I fear it will be many, many years ere he will cease to mourn for that dear, sweet face he thinks is mouldering there. It was many days after that before Veary was able to go out upon the streets ; but as soon as his feeble strength would permit him, he sought the spot where he knew the ashes of his darling lay, white and beaten hard by the April showers. ' Can it be possible," said he, mournfully, leaning him- self against a scorched and withered tree, with a helpless, subdued expression, touching to witness, "can it be possi- ble that my poor little darling, my little baby Birdie, lies beneath that ruin? that her precious ashes are mingling and mouldering together with that infamous old woman, who has been the whole cause of all this sorrow, of all this anguish?" He did not weep, but his eyes, fastened al- ways upon the spot, told of sealed fountains where the hot tears were constantly welling up, and failing to find egress without fell upon the bruised heart which blistered and burned beneath their touch, but felt no relief. " O, my darling!" he continued, "you were too inno- 152 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. cent, too good, to meet with such a fate. It would have been better had you died by the eagle's claws from which I saved you, than to have lived and suffered, and at last perish in such a manner. O, God, help me bear it, and teach me how to forgive the one who has blighted my whole life ! " And the floodgates of grief seemed to open, and he wept as he had never done before. "It would be some comfort to me," he murmured, "could I but go and kneel beside her little resting-place, and let my tears fall upon her little grave ; but even that is denied me. There is a grave somewhere, but I know not where ; but she, alas ! does not rest there. Her precious ashes are mingling with those of her destroyer. Purity and sin lie entombed in one sepul- cher. " He drew his hand across his inflamed and swollen eyes to wipe away the scalding tears, and turned his face toward his home, a changed boy. With his sparkling eyes and exquisite coloring of youth was mingled a wearied, indescribable expression of stern hopelessness of solemn repose as if he had deliberately bidden farewell to all that makes life bright and happy, and the magnetic warmth and energy of his shifting countenance were changed into a marble-like expression. Would the light ever come back to his eyes? the laugh- ter to his lips? the peace and youthful hope to his heart? Only the sequel can tell. And now, for a time, we will leave him alone with his grief; knowing that time is the only healing balm for bruised A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 153 and bleeding hearts, and we trust that erelong the aspira- tion that has kindled and blazed and died in his young heart will be resurrected from its grave ; and that when we meet again we may greet him upon the pinnacle of fame with the returned sparkle in his eye, the ripple upon his cheeks, and the glad laughter in his heart. And now to the tender care of his God and benefactor we will leave this brave yet tender and true-hearted boy. CHAPTER XII. FOUND IN 7 THE SNOW, OR AN OLD MAN*S STORY. Dark and tempestuous was the night, and deep was the snow that lay white and ghost-like over the frozen land. Around the throne on high not a single star quivered, and the gentle queen had yielder her scepter to the king of storm, and the boisterous winds unanimously howled and wailed as they came forth from their mystic homes, as if to enchant by their aid the wildness of the scene. Whistling through the broken window-panes, it stirred the white hairs of an old man who lay dying in a dreary, desolate-looking, and miserably-furnished room in a tene- ment house, with no watcher near his couch save a little girl some seven or eight years old. The loud, solemn strokes from the city clock made him stir and gaze vacant- ly around him. The snow and ice were penetrating through the broken windows, and made the child's teeth chatter, and shivering, she crouched down near the fireless stove, as if vainly expecting to derive some warmth from it. In one corner of the room stood an old piano covered with dust, and some sheets of music were scattered upon it. The old man had been a music teacher, and by his profes- (154) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 155 sion had managed to make a scanty support. For ten years he had lived in this room alone, teaching when he could get pupils, which was extremely seldom. Had it not been for the kind Providence that directed his steps to the river side, where he found this little sunbeam, one cold, black night, wandering alone, like a lost lamb from its fold, and crying for some kind shepherd to shelter it in his arms, he would have died alone and uncared for. But he took to his heart this little wandering, homeless child, and carried it home in his arms, where it brightened up his gloomy home and cheered his last hours on earth. A lamp was burning dimly upon one corner of the piano, casting flickering shadows on the fair young child, and on the pale face of the dying man, whose labored breathing resounded through the gloomy apartment. He was very tall and straight, though time and hardship had laid hands heavily upon his splendid form, and his head was silvered with the frosts of many winters. Time's crimping-iron had left deep impressions upon his once handsome face, though it was a grand old face, with such a high, intellectual forehead, and features that expressed so much of firmness and power that one might have won- dered to find its owner in such a place. The little girl was very beautiful, although a trifle wan and pale, and wise beyond her years. "Birdie, my child, come here," he called in a feeble voice scarcely loud enough to reach the child's ears. 156 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. The little girl arose and went up to the bedside and laid her head upon his pillow. He reached out his hands and by a desperate effort the old man lifted her to a place beside him, and devoured her face with eyes in which was that awful, indescribable look that tells of approaching dis- solution. " My little Birdie," he began, gazing in her liquid blue eyes, "my poor little wing-clipped bird, must I leave you alone? Must the nest that has warmed and sheltered you these few months be torn away, and leave you alone and unprotected? You so young, so innocent, and the world so cold, so vile. How I wish that I could take you with me to that beautiful homestead where I shall shortly go." "Won't you take me with you, papa," said Birdie, choking back a sob. "You will take Birdie with you, won't you? " " No, my darling, not now ; but you will come bye-and- bye, and I want you to listen, for I am going to tell you a little story, Birdie. ' ' For ten long years I had lived in this lonely little room, with no aim, no purpose, no hope, weary of life, weary of the world, weary of everything under the sun, and in my weariness I was even beginning to question the justice of my Creator for having dealt so harshly with me, when one dark and stormy night I was kneeling upon the banks of the river, asking God to forgive me for a crime I A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 1 57 was about to commit. In my blindness God forgive me ! I was going to commit suicide. I arose from my knees, and was about to make the fatal plunge, when a little bird fluttered down at my feet, tired like myself, and foot-sore even with the short distance it had come on life's rough journey. I gathered it in my arms and smoothed its rum- pled feathers, and in its ear whispered the name of father. It caught the accent and nestled on my bosom, not tim- idly, for such was not its nature, but as if it had found a resting-place. I turned my back upon the dark, deep wa- ters of the Ohio, and returned to my lonely and once des- olate home ; but I was a changed man. The spring-time of my youth had passed and gone, but my autumn had brought with it a treasure, brighter than any jewel that ever glistened in the sun's golden rays ; and the music of her voice sounded sweeter to me than the music of the nightingale, which has filled the world with wonder. And as I pressed it to my throbbing heart, and its tiny head nestled in my bosom, the murmuring brooks and the whis- pering leaves spoke of a time when she would be queen of birds that she would one day bring to my lonely, deso- late home a ray of golden sunlight. But I hear another voice speaking to me now it is the voice of the grave ; it is calling me and I must go yes, go and leave you in this great cold city, with no friend but God. O, Heavenly Father, watch over this lonely, friendless child, and pro- vide for her a friend who will fill a father's place. Keep 158 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. her in Thy protecting care, and shield her from the temp- tations that await her just outside these black and dingy walls." Something in his face alarmed the little girl, and she dropped her fair curly head on the pillow beside him, and cried softly, "O, papa, take me with you ! do, please, papa, don't go away and leave Birdie ! I'm so awful afraid to be alone in this dark house so very afraid, papa, and I'm so cold, too," she sobbed, her childish brain failing to grasp the dread meaning of his words. Gently as possible he tried to make her understand the change that was approaching, until at last she appeared to realize what the going away implied, and her piteous sobs echoed through the gloomy and cheerless apartment, and died away amid the howling winds and pelting snow- storm. ' ' Now, I want you to sing that sweet little song I taught you to sing," said the dying man ; " it will help to soothe my fleeting breath, and my spirit will not feel so lonely in its flight." The little child sang the words in a sweet, tremulous voice : It is finished ! blessed Jesus, Thou hast breathed thy latest sigh. Teach us, the sons of Adam, How the Son of God can die. Jesus, Lord of dead and living, Let Thy mercy rest on me ! A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 159 Grant me, too, when life is finished, Rest in Paradise with Thee. " Grant it, merciful Father," said the dying man, as he closed his eyes to all of earth, and his weary spirit went in search of that beautiful resting-place beneath the shad- ows of the palm trees of the city on high. The clocks in the high church-towers throughout the ' city were ringing out their twelve long strokes when little Birdie, to whom the reader has already been introduced as the heroine of our story, was made the third time an or- phan, and only seven years had passed over her young and unsophisticated head. Though young in years, she had grown old with suffering. Like a wild thing the poor child fled through the dark hallways of the gloomy tenement, and knocked with all her feeble strength upon the door of a room which was occupied by a poor sewing-woman, who toiled early and late as a means of providing food for her five little ones, while a worthless husband, who was not worthy of that appellation, spent the most of his time in a neighboring grogshop. Late as was the hour, she was still bending over her needle when little Birdie's summons startled her. She opened the door hurriedly, and the lit- tle creature almost fell into her arms, her tiny face white with a terrible fear, and the nervous sobs which she could not restrain almost prevented her utterance. "O, please, please come, Mrs. Green, and see my papa! He is so cold and white, and won't speak to me I6O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. any more, and I am so awful afraid," she wailed, unable to find a word that would express her feelings. Mrs. Green took Birdie's little cold hand in her own, and together they entered the cheerless room where the old man lay cold and rigid in the dread arms of death. Mrs. Green glanced around her with an involuntary shud- der. The dreary, bare room, the empty cupboard, the fireless stove, the broken windows through which the snow was drifting, the rigid form on the bed, and the beau- tiful, lonely child clinging to her skirts in terror at the si- lent hour of midnight, all combined to form a picture well calculated to inspire one with awe, and live long in the memory. The wide-open, glassy eyes of the dead man seemed to be mutely imploring her to take pity on the lonely little creature clinging to her skirts, and as if in obe- dience to the dumb glance she raised little Birdie in her arms and imprinted a kiss upon her trembling lips, and then carried her down stairs and laid her in the bed with her own little ones, and Birdie, nestling under the scanty cov- ering, sobbed herself to sleep in the grateful warmth. An inquest was held upon the remains of the old man, and as no money could be found upon the premises, he was taken away and buried in " Potter's Field." The next question was, how to dispose of little Birdie ? Mrs. Green would gladly have kept the beautiful, intelli- gent child, and shared with her the poor food she labored so hard to provide for her own little ones, but her husband A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. l6l in a fit of drunken frenzy, threw little Birdie out on the pavement and terrified her beyond measure. Nothing could be done but to notify the authorities, and it was decided that on a certain day she was to be taken to some charitable institution or home for the friendless. On the night previous to that which she was to have been taken away, Green returned home drunk, as usual, and com- menced abusing his wife shamefully, using language that filled Birdie's young heart with terror and made her shiver and crouch low in a dark corner of the room, from whence her suppressed sobs reached the ears of the maddened drunkard, whose attention, diverted for a time from his unfortunate wife, turned on the trembling and frightened child with the fury of a tiger. He sprang toward her and caught her by the loose, flowing curls of her hair and threw her violently upon the floor. With a terrified shriek that rang through the house, she tore from his grasp and darted like some little wild thing out at the door, down the steps, and out in the cold, black night, not knowing, not thinking, and not caring whither her flying footsteps took her anxious only to put a long distance between herself and the terrible man whom she feared more than the black darkness of the night, or the busy whirl of the city streets. Panting and breathless, she was compelled to pause at last, and for the first time ventured to look back. Long she wandered, up one street and down another, trying, 1 1 1 62 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. if possible, to find a friendly hand, but no one noticed the poor little homeless outcast. She was too young to realize the full horror of her position, and erelong sleep overtook her, and she sank down by a pump and laid her head against it and fell asleep, the silken, tangled curls of her hair blowing about her pretty face, and her little hands purple with the cold clasped, as if in prayer, upon her breast. The gay and fashionable passed her by on their way to scenes of festive enjoyment, or returned from church, where they had dropped a nickel for foreign mis- sions, while beneath their feet a worthy object of -charity lay, uncared for and unnoticed, save with contemptuous glance and a curl of the lip as they hurried by. The audiences from the theater, from the lecture-room, from the churches, all passed her, but still she slept on un- disturbed, until a burly policeman by chance came out of a saloon, and gaped, and spying the little outcast, struck the pump with his club, and she sprang up' in affright, thinking it was the drunken man she was so much afraid of. "What are you doing out here this time of night, you little scamp, you?" he exclaimed, stamping his foot upon the frozen pavement. "Scat along home this minute ! " Home ! home ! ah, could that poor child have been blessed with a spot she could call her home, how grateful her little heart would have been. The wild beasts have holes to crawl into, but she had no place to lay her head A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 163 a poor, friendless outcast, shut out from home, love, and mercy, to wander alone in the streets. With none to pity, none to bless, . None to soothe the troubled breast ; Lonely, wandering through the snow, Knowing not which way to go. Nobody's love, nobody's care, None to smooth the tangled hair, Wandering hungry through the street, Treading the snow with cold, bare feet. O, strange, unequal portioner called life! Unjust are its awards, and inscrutable its decrees. CHAPTER XIII. THE ORPHAN'S PRAYER, OR THE ANGEL OF THE HOUSE. "This is a fearful night! " exclaimed Dr. Sinclare, draw- ing his cloak more closely around him and giving his horse a spear in the side, which the spiteful animal resented by pitching the rider headlong in the gutter. Luckily for the doctor the water was frozen, for it saved him from soil- ing his best clothes. After giving his horse several cuts with his switch to teach him better manners, he placed his foot in the stirrup and was about to mount when his attention was attracted by a noise in the alley. " Hark! that sounds like a child's voice," he exclaimed. "Surely, no child could be out in a night like this, and at such a late hour ; some little boot- black I suppose ; but whoever it is seems to be in trouble ; I will go and see what it is, for this is a fearful night for a child to be out." "O, God, it is true? or do my eyes deceive me?" he exclaimed, gazing down upon a little golden-haired girl kneeling in a bank of snow, bare-headed, barefooted, all alone in the black hours of night, with eyes uplifted, and her little purple hands, stiff with cold, reverently pressed (164) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 165 together, in humble supplication to that merciful Father in heaven, who alone watched over the little homeless outcast. The little suppliant was too devout in her devotions to heed anything that was going on around her, and Dr. Sin- clare remained unobserved until she was through. Kind reader, these are the identical words that fell from the lips of this faithful child. I will give them to you just as they were given to me. You may smile if you will, but could the whole universe possess the faith of this little midnight pleader, this terrestrial globe would be trans- formed into a paradise. " Dear good Mr. Lord, I am a little girl with no papa and no mamma and nobody to give me any shoes and dresses like other little girls. I had a buddy Veary once, but granny says he is dead and 's gone up to heaven with some little children in a boat, and now I've got nobody to love me. I had a papa, too; but he's gone up there to rest, he says. I wish I could go, too ; for I'm awful tired and hungry and sleepy, and I don't know what else. Dear good Mr. Lord, please give me another buddy Veary, and another papa, just like the one that is already dead ; and please give me my daily bread, and some shoes and some dresses, and a pretty hat and a doll, and lead me not into temptation. Amen." Dr. Sinclare's heart was touched as it never had been before, and as he gazed upon the little homeless outcast 1 66 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. his mind wandered to Cave Hill, where his own little sun- ny-haired child was sleeping beneath the buttercups and violets ; then the touching words of the poet rushed to his mind, and had it not been for the darkness, a pearly drop might have been seen trembling upon his eyelids. Alas ! I am an orphan now, With naught on earth to cheer my heart ; No father's love, no mother's joy, No kin, no kind to take my part. My lodging is the cold, cold ground, I eat the bread of charity ; And when the kiss of love goes 'round, There is, alas ! no kiss for me. He stooped down and gathered the child in his arms and imprinted a kiss upon its cold brow. "Your faith shall not be shaken, little one," said he; "the good Lord has answered your prayer, and has sent you a papa." "Are you going to be my papa?" said the little girl, nestling in his bosom, and laying her little cold cheek in his great whiskers. ' ' Yes, " said the doctor, ' ' I am going to take you home with me, and you shall be my little girl, and I am going to buy you shoes, dresses, dolls, and everything you want." " Did God send you? " "Yes, God sent me, little one; He heard your prayer and has answered it." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 1 67 "He is a very good Lord, and I'd like to see him," she exclaimed; "because he is so good to little girls who ain't got no papa and mamma.*' "Now," said the doctor, as he placed her in the saddle in front of him, and almost smothered her in his great, warm cloak, "you must tell me who you are, and what you were doing out in the streets so late at night." "I ain't nobody but a little girl, and my name is Birdie. But I'm going to be your little girl, ain't I ? " "Yes, you are going to be my little girl," said the doctor, drawing the cloak around her. "Do you ever get retoxicated ? " said she, looking up into his face. "No, dear, I never get intoxicated," said he, with a smile "why?" 'Well, I'm awful glad," she replied, drawing a long breath, "because you won't try to pull all the hair out of my head." "No, darling," said Dr. Sinclare, "I would riot hurt a hair upon your head, and no one else shall if I can help it ; but tell me, who has been trying to pull your hair out ? They did not succeed, whoever it was, for you have plenty left now.'' " Why, it was when I was staying with Mrs. Green, an awful bad man came home one night retoxicated and tried to tear all the hair out of my head, and said that I should not stay there any more, because I eat up all the bread." 1 68 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. " My poor child, " said he, "you look as if you had not seen a mouthful for a month." "I am awful hungry," she replied, "but I asked that good Mr. Lord to give me some bread, and he will, won't he?" "Yes, darling," said the doctor, smiling; "but you must not say Mr., because it is not right; He is your Father in heaven, and you must address Him as such." Several hours' ride brought Dr. Sinclare to his beautiful home, where he gave his horse in charge of his valet. He took Birdie in his arms and carried her into the house, and placed her in a rocking-chair before the glowing fire that snapped and blazed in the wide brass-rimmed grate, which shed its flickering brightness over a room brilliant and lux- uriant as any palace chamber in the Arabian Nights. It enchanted and dazzled the eyes that had only seen art and luxury through the shop-windows, while standing weary and sick at heart on the muddy pavements outside. "Ain't this nice," she exclaimed, clapping her little frozen hands and looking around the beautiful room. " It looks like heaven ; O, I wish Mrs. Green could see it. Am I always to stay here as long as I live ? " "Yes, always," replied the doctor, gently, "for you are my little girl now." "This fire is awful nice," said she, spreading her little purple fingers out to the glowing coals. " Do you have a great big fire like this all the time? " A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 169 " Yes, when it is very cool," the doctor replied. " Well, I'm awful glad I'm going to be your little girl, " she said, patting the head of a large Newfoundland dog that lay upon the rich carpet at her feet, and whose black, shaggy mane fairly glistened in the warm firelight. When they entered the room he had raised his massive, black head and seemed to say in his silent, dumb language, ' ' Wel- come, little mistress, to your new home, for I know you are kind and gentle." The portraits that hung in gilt frames upon the wall seemed also to smile down upon the lonely little stranger and exclaim, " We are glad to see you, little fairy, for we know things will go on differently now, and there will be many changes in this grand old place." "We would like to make a change," said George Wash- ington, " for we have hung in one place so long staring at each other that we are tired." "I would like to be removed near the door," said Henry Clay, "where I can watch the waving bluegrass when the springtime comes, and see the flashing of the reapers' blades gleaming amid Kentucky's golden sheaves." "And place me opposite the window," said Robert E. Lee, "and open the shutters, that I may behold the beau- ties of God's fair creation, where I can see the sun rise every morning and watch the flowers burst into life and beauty, and see the busy bees trim their shining wings in the golden sunlight." I/O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "I, too, would like to make a change," said the old French clock on the mantel. "I would like to have my face washed, for I have been ticking away for twenty years and haven't had my face and hands washed a half dozen times since my old mistress died. My master is always gone, and the house-maid takes no notice of me save when she wants to consult me about the hour when her beau is expected, and I had concluded to stop this very night, but I've changed my mind now, and, thinks I to myself, I will tick on, for I see some bright little eyes watching me, and I know there will be a change." Little Birdie's eyes brightened up when Dr. Sinclare came into the room and said, " Come, little one, and let us see if we can't find some supper; " and he took her in the dining-room where the table was bountifully filled and was tempting enough to satisfy the most fastidious. "Ain't this nice." said she, as he placed before her a nice, hot, buttered roll and a piece of tempting roast, together with fried chicken and smoking coffee flavored with delicious cream. "Are you very hungry, child?" said the doctor, as he enjoyed watching her devour the food as fast as he put it on her plate. "Yes, sir, I am awful hungry," she replied; "I wish Mrs. Green had some of this, and Bobby and Kate and all the children, for I know they are hungry, too." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. I/ 1 "Christmas-gift! Mars Joe," said a voice, as Dr. Sin- dare stepped from his room the next morning into the passage. " I'll be bound for you, Aunt Lucy," said he, smiling; "you are always looking out for number one when Christmas comes around." "Yes, Mars Joe, I'se bound to have a present when Christ comes, and you know dis old darkey has been mighty faithful dis whole year, bless the Lord." " Well, come along, Aunt Lucy," said the doctor, "for I expect you have earned a present this morning. I know you have been on the lookout for me for at least two hours." "Thank you, thank you, Mars Joe," said the old cook, courtesying low, as the doctor placed a bundle in her hand. "I know'd I'd get one," she continued, opening the package. ' ' Well, well, help my life, if it ain't a nice black bombazine. I know all the niggers is gwine to look at dis darkey with a jealous eye. Look ! look ! Mars Joe ! what is dat ? O, Lord, it's a ghost! " "What is what?" exclaimed the doctor, in surprise, thinking the old negro had lost her senses. "Why, I saw something standing right in that door, and it looked just like an angel, and when I spoke it flew, yes, Mars Joe, it flew. Uncle Jack said there was things to be seen in this house, and now I believe it." 1/2 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "Don't act the fool," said the doctor, "but tell me what you saw." " O, I don't know, Mars Joe ; it looked just like a ghost, and I believe it was the spirit of our little Jessie, for it looked just like her, and had on the same little gown she used to wear, all ruffled around the tail. O, Lord, I know something is gwine to happen, kase dey say it's a sign of death to see a ghost, and I know I am gwine to die, and my new dress won't do me no good after all ; some other nigger will get it." "Are you sure it flew, Aunt Lucy?" said the doctor, amused at Aunt Lucy's exaggerations. " Yes, Mars Joe, Fse sure of it, as sure as I'm living." " Well, you are not afraid of an angel, Aunt Lucy, are you?" said he. " Yes, Mars Joe, when I think they've come for me." " Well, if that angel were to appear before you now, would you be frightened?" "Law, Mars Joe, I'd die." "Well, you had better prepare to die, then," said he, smiling, "for I am going to catch it and bring it in to see you." The doctor had, by this time, guessed who the angel was that had given the old negro such a fright. "Ah, you can't fool me," said old Aunt Lucy, mak- ing her way to the kitchen. "You white folks pretends like you don't believe in such things, but I'se too old, and A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 1/3 I'se seen too many sights to hab wool pulled over my eyes." "Well, Aunt Lucy, are you ready to die?" said Dr. Sinclare, coming into the kitchen with little Birdie upon his shoulder, her long hair flowing in ringlets over her shoulders, and the long, snowy gown of the little dead Jessie hanging over her feet. She really looked more like an angel than anything else she could have been com- pared to. "Here is your angel; does she look dangerous?" "De good Lord!" said old Aunt Lucy, throwing up her hands, "if dat don't beat all. Mars Joe, where did you find dat dear little thing?" "This is my Christmas present," said he, kissing the little girl. "You are not afraid of her now, are you?" " No, Mars Joe, not now; but dis old darkey aren't got such a scare in a long time." ' ' I have been looking for her wings, but have not been able to find any," said he, laughing. "Are you sure she flew just now, Aunt Lucy." "Now, Mars Joe, I know I nebber will hear de last of dat, and I spect de next thing I hear, de white folks will hab it in de papers, and everybody will laugh at dis old fool nigger." "No, no, Aunt Lucy," the doctor replied, "I will promise never to tell it on you, if you will be good to the little angel, and take good care of her." 1/4 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. So it was Christmas-day, one year from the dreadful night she made her escape from Granny Nailar, the hero- ine of our story was installed in her new and happy home. Dr. Sinclare has often assured his friends that it was the happiest Christmas he ever spent. Old Aunt Lucy lived to wear the bombazine dress, and to bless the day the lit- tle angel came into the house ; but the old darkey is dead now, and when the angel of death came sure enough, she said, "Honey, de real angel has come at last, and I am gwine wid him, bless de Lord! " CHAPTER XIV. THE DYING CHILD IN THE LONE HOUSE IN THE MOUNTAINS. Seven years have been laid away in the vault of time since that sweet May evening when first I saw Dr. St. George a prostrate figure upon the grave of his wife. Seven long years weary and unhappy years since he left her silent and alone in the quiet, peaceful city of the dead. The violets and buttercups have almost hidden her grave from view, and the dark-green ivy trails gracefully from the beautiful monument that stands like a finger pointing to her resting-place beyond the clouds. Seven long years that young husband has carried in his heart the memory of that sad, sweet face that lies beneath that mossy grave upon the brow of the hill. Seven years of undying energy and perseverance, and Dr. St. George has labored in vain for the recovery of his stolen child. The detectives with all their shrewdness and strategy have given up the chase. It was the twenty-fifth of May. Winter had stepped from his frozen throne and yielded his scepter to Queen May. The snow and the ice were as a dream that had been told, and all nature had arisen from its slumbers. (175) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Yes, it was the twenty-fifth of May fair, sweet May. Dr. St. George sat alone in his office with his head bowed in his hands. He had grown old with suffering, and, though only thirty, his black, glossy hair is considerably sprinkled with gray. As he sat there, perhaps he was thinking of that day, seven years ago, when he stood at his office window and watched the glorious sunset. That same sun was setting to-day, and he saw it as he did on the evening our story opened, sinking into a bed of flame, leaving in its stead snowflakes edged with fire. But the sunset and the flowers held no charm for him now. There were no sweet smiles to greet him when he returned at night, weary and worn, and no loving eyes to look up into his own, no sweet words of encouragement to fall upon his ear, and no baby arms to cling around his neck, and no baby lips to murmur the name of " father." Ah, well, no wonder he looked sad to-day ! No wonder that bruised heart is bleeding afresh, and the tears again have found a channel down his cheeks, for a letter is lying open upon his table. Peruse it, kind reader, that your sympa- thetic heart may go out in sympathy for this sorrow- stricken man ; but "it is only those who have drunk deeply of the cup of affliction that can melt at the sight of another's sorrows." " MAY 24TH. "Dr. R. S. St. George: " DEAR SIR : I know you will be surprised at the reception of this letter, and trust, kind sir, that you may be prepared to receive it. I am sorry it A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. I// has fallen to my lot to pen these sad lines to you, and being a stranger, I hardly know how to express myself under such painful and peculiar cir- cumstances. Your child, which was stolen from you seven years ago, is now in my possession, and is expected to die. If you wish to see her alive, you will have to hasten as quickly as possible. She was left here by a man unknown to me, saying that it was your child, and that he had taken it through revenge, but had repented of the crime, and to assure you that he had treated it well from its infancy up. " This is all the information I can give you. The child was in a dying condition when he brought her to my house, and I hasten to write as soon as possible. Come to Glendale Station, and there take a cab to Castle Grove, which is twenty miles from the railroad, and directly west of Glendale Station. " I remain, very truly yours, " JAMES HARDAMORE." "If it is true," said he, folding up the letter, " I thank heaven for my child, even should she come to me in the sable robes of death. I will lay her by her sainted mother,, who, I expect, has already taken her in her arms." ife'^e^^c^^c^p^c^c^c^t: It was late in the evening when he arrived at Glendale Station, where he hired a hack and started on his lonely, dreary journey, with a thousand conflicting emotions throbbing through his brain, and a thousand undefined fears in his heart. A long drive through a dreary, hilly country, with nothing to greet his ear but the dismal hoot- ing of the owl, and the unearthly screams of the night- hawk, brought him, weary and worn, to the spot where he was directed-. It was late at night, and drizzling rain., 12 1/8 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. when he reached the spot. He looked around as he descended. What a dreary, wild, lonely spot for his dar- ling to die in ! All around him lay the broken, hilly country, and the tall, shaggy cedars stood like sentinels of grief through the deep, misty fog. A moment more and he stood at the threshold of the very house the place where his darling lay dying, or perhaps dead. A dreary, solitary dwelling, with no other human habitation near, with no sweet music of children's voices, no songs of birds, no spreading trees or flowers to enliven the spot. The house was built of old gray stone, irregular in design. It belonged to no particular order of architecture ; it was old and quaint, and the green moss that grew out of the crev- ices gave it an odd, picturesque appearance. As he walked up the old weather-beaten steps, he wondered how any one who loved this fair, bright world could have chosen a spot so desolate upon which to build a house. The splash- ing of a waterfall, the hooting of an owl, and the barking of a fox were the only sounds that broke the perfect and indescribable silence that reigned around. He paused for a moment and put his ear to the key- hole, but no sound came. A light was faintly glimmering through the broken windows. He raised his hand to knock, and then strange thoughts came into his mind. What if there were robbers in that house, and they had written this letter to entrap him ? If so, he had nothing to defend himself with. But he soon dispelled such thoughts, A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 179 and gave a tap upon the door. After some minutes he heard footsteps, and presently the door was opened by an elderly, weatherbeaten looking man. "I have been summoned to this house," said the doc- tor, "to see my dying child. Am I at the right place?" The man bowed low and said, "If you are Dr. St. George, you are the right man." "I am Dr. St. George, and if what you have written to me is true, let me see my child without delay," said the doctor, firmly. "It is true," said the man, closing the door and beg- ging the doctor to follow him. "Is she still living?" "Yes, but she is very low; don't think she can stand it much longer, and we have done all we could do for her, poor child." Dr. St. George did not speak any more, but his heart throbbed wildly as he followed him through a long, dark passage, and then into a comfortable-looking room where a candle was flickering dimly upon the mantel-piece. In one corner of the room was a little bed upon which lay a beautiful, dying child, and an old woman sitting by the bed bathing its temples. "You will please leave the room," said the doctor, and they immediately obeyed his command. Then he knelt down and kissed the white lips of the little sufferer. As he did so the tears streamed down his cheeks and ISO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. dropped upon the coverlet. He knew that she was dying, and that no earthly power could stay the cold hand of death. And he felt, too, that it was more than he could bear, to be deprived of her; that she should be taken away from him just as she was restored. Yet he thanked his heavenly Father that she was restored to him even in death, that he might hold her in his arms once more and hear her murmur the name of father. And he thought, too, how there would be rejoicing in heaven, for the gates of heaven were left ajar, and that sainted mother was watching and waiting for her loved one ; and that no ruth- less hands could snatch it from her embrace. He gave her some stimulant which seemed to revive her ; then he took her in his arms and pressed his lips to hers, so cold and white. She raised her eyes to his, full of love and gratitude, and said : ' ' What makes you cry, good man? Are you sorry that me is going to die? Don't cry any more, 'cause there is lots of little children up in heaven, and mamma is there, you know, and when I get there I am going to tell her what a good man you are, and how good you was to her little Mamie." "My darling," said he, pressing her to his heart, "I am your father, and you are my own little girl. Now call me papa once, darling, let me hear you say it." She laid her little arms around his neck, and smiling, said: "Are you my papa, sure enough? I did not know I had a papa." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. l8l "Yes, darling, I am your papa, " said he. bending down and kissing her cheek. " I am glad you came, papa," said she, smiling; "you just got here to see me before I died, didn't you ? " "Papa don't want his little girl to die," said the doctor, choking back the lump that came up in his throat. "He won't have a little girl to love him then," "But I can love you when I am in heaven, papa, just as well; and won't it be funny," said she, with a far-away look, "for a little girl no bigger than I to be so far up in the sky, and looking right down on everybody?" and she closed her eyes and laid her head back upon his shoul- der. Presently she opened them again, but death was in them ; the fire had gone out, and they looked ghastly and sunken. " I love you, papa," faintly came from her lips. And those were the last words she spoke. The great Healer had come and had taken her in His arms, and bore her pure spirit to that merciful Father in heaven, who said, "Suffer little children to come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven." He laid her gently back upon the pillow and knelt down by the bed and prayed long and fervently, asking God to give him strength to bear this great sorrow. "I love you, papa." Those sweet words were whis- pered in his ears just as her spirit passed into the sanctum sanctorum of rest ; and long after the grass and the flow- I 82 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. ers had covered her little grave, these words lingered around his heart. He can hear them in the sighing of the wind, in the music of the birds, in the rippling of the waters. It is whispered to him even upon the busy streets. He hears the words above all the jostle and noise of a great city ; but comes more distinct when he bends over the bed of a suffering patient. He carried her home and laid her to rest in a little nar- row bed by the side of his wife, and planted flowers over her grave. And there was another nine days' wonder! Many were rejoiced that he had recovered his child, even though he had to lose her ; while others shook their heads doubtfully. Dr. St. George went abroad for two years, which time he spent in traveling through Italy and France. When he returned he seemed much improved by the sea- breezes, for his health had become very much impaired. His friends again advised him to marry the second time, but he would say, "I can not marry a woman unless I have a heart to give, and that I have not ; mine lies buried in Cave Hill Cemetery, " and with this his friends would have to be contented ; for the memory of his dead wife still remained uneffaced, and her dying words still echoed in his ear, "You will always love me best, Robert?" We will now leave him alone with his grief, trusting that time may pour her healing balm upon his bruised and bleeding heart, and he may yet be happy in the love of some good woman. CHAPTER XV. BIRDIE'S ADVENTURE THE MEETING AT THE SPRING. Not many miles from Louisville, Kentucky, in a roman tic and picturesque spot, is to be seen a beautiful village whose feet are daily washed by the waters of the Ohio, and the steamers glide by like spirits of the deep. Their fluttering wheels, fringed with gold, are playing with the jeweled fingers of the sun, shooting its gleams in sapphire depth. A beautiful mountain crest rises in the distance, dotted here and there with white cottages, almost hidden by the heavy foliage. At the base a mountain torrent thunders along, foaming and dancing and leaping, as it pours over a huge rock and mingles with the waters of the Ohio. For miles around the clink of the reaper's blade is heard, as it gleams amid autumn's golden sheaves, and the gentle zephyrs bathe their mystic pinions in the deli- cious perfume of the clover and fan the heated brow of the merry reapers, while the poppies and periwinkles play hide and seek in the tall, rich bluegrass, finishing a master- piece of nature that would put the best effort of Salvator Rosa to shame. Upon a beautiful grassy slope, near the (183) 184 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. banks of the river, rests an elegant mansion, almost hidden by dense foliage of sugar-maples and cottonwood. The clean gravel walks wind deviously among the shrubs from the threshold to the gate, through a rich carpeting of waving grass, dotted here and there with pyramids of arbor vitae and fir cones. Back of the house a huge sycamore, whose mammoth trunk is green with the moss of many years, reaches its long arms far up toward the heavens, as if imploring a blessing upon the youthful head that rested beneath its shade. A little further, and the grape had climbed into a wide- spreading hawthorn with a scraggy trunk and lance-like weapons hid in its leaves ; but it bore a gorgeous wealth of white blossoms, and the bees mingled melody with the welcome fragrance. An impenetrable canopy of cool, green network hung gracefully above the seat at the root. Sloping back was a meadow reaching down until the turf dipped itself in the cool, gurgling waters of the brook, that mourned sweetly, plaintively perhaps for some lost nymph. There in that grand old place, where love is as pure as the tuberoses that break their rich, sweet hearts upon the balmy air; music that charms artist ears and adds to the celestial fire of the poet's day-dreams, in which the hours unfold, beautiful and uncounted, like the leaves of the multiflora ; nights that are hushed in sweet repose by the soft-stealing winds that tap with magic fingers the chords A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 185 of the ALolian harp ; gay laughter here and there ; glad charity with all things ; meditation now and then to deepen the well-springs of the mind ; the open air always ; baths of warm, golden sunshine; the opal sky of evening with fancies of the poet, and everywhere perpetual scenes of a delicious rest, hallowed by the melting strains of a thousand birds that launch out every morning upon the radiance of Aurora from the house-top, from the fields, from the forest edges, from the orchard and garden, from the fences running into each other, clasping, overlapping, and surging together, like a thousand strayed notes from the quivering chords of the archangel's harp, all singing at the very top of their voices, as if inflamed by an ecstacy of gladness and joy there, in that terrestrial paradise, rests the home of our " Beautiful Bird Without a Name " though ten years have been laid away in the vault of time since last we saw her tiny feet treading the winding paths and graveled walks ten years since that dark and stormy night that Dr. Sin- clare found her a poor, helpless outcast, shut out from pity, love, and mercy, into the cold, cold world, without home, without friends, without food, with only the snow for her bed, the canopy of heaven for her covering, and the star of Beth- lehem for her lamp nobody's love, nobody's darling. Ten times the star of Bethlehem has twinkled and blazed in adoring reverence, and the church bells proclaimed an old year dead and a new one born. Ten times the meek-eyed - daisies struggled through the April snow, and bloomed, 1 86 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. and faded, and died. Ten times has summer's steam engine belched out its fiery stream o'er the land, and win- ter's icy chains fettered the singing brooks and hushed their glad music into silence. Ten years since Birdie Nobody was changed into Birdie Sinclare. And those ten years of delicate nurture, tender care, and perfect health, have ripened this fair child into a maiden of wondrous beauty, the pride and joy of her adopted father, who spared neither pains nor money, nor yet severe discipline, to enrich her mind, and give her all the accomplishments that could be bestowed upon her. Her intellect and manners expanded and improved beneath his gentle influence, and each day she became dearer to him, until she occupied every chamber in his old heart, and he had not only a play- thing and pet in the little wild bird without a name, but also a companion and equal, capable of entering with him the mazy labyrinths of science, and astonishing him with the wealth of her richly-stored mind. Still, in everything pertaining to her womanhood, she was wholly feminine, and simple as a child. Now, as of old, she bounds through the spacious grounds, and trips over the grassy lawns and up the stairs, and fills the old house with a world of melody and sunshine. It was now vacation, and she was home on a visit ; but she was never idle, for when she was not walking, or riding, or employed in beautifying her home, or working her flowers, she would devote her time to her studies, for A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. l8/ she was as much of a student at home as when at school. She was to graduate next session, and she must make the best use of her time, she said, ' ' for I want papa to be proud of me one of these days, for gracious knows I have been trouble enough to him." As she said this she sighed and dropped mechanically upon the seat at the foot of the old hawthorn, and laid her open book upon her knee; and any one could tell by the expression upon her face that she was a school-girl trying to untangle some mathe- matical problem. As she sat there beneath the rustic canopy in the glo- rious summer noon, watching the shadows creep through the network and fall like fairy's feet upon the velvet grass, and the white blossoms of the hawthorn showering down upon her golden hair and fair white arms, like a perfumed shower of snow, she presented a picture "fairer than a thought of Lancret's, more tranquil than a dream of Claud's, and a loveliness ethereal, poetic, such as Dante might have pictured amid the angel shadows of Paradise Guido Reni have beheld flit through the heaven of his visionary thoughts." If Titian or Velasquez had seen her as she sat there, the world would have been the richer by an immortal work of art. Titian alone could have reproduced those rich, marvel- ous colors, that perfect, queenly beauty. He would have painted the picture, and the world would have raved about beauty. The heavy masses of golden ringlets, the fair, 1 88 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. white face with the rose tint, the perfect mouth, with its proud, sweet, imperial yet tender lips ; the white, dimpled chin ; the liquid blue eyes, deep and thoughtful ; the head and face unrivaled in their glorious contour ; the heavy, dark brows that fringed her violet eyes ; the white neck, half hidden, half revealed, by the coquettish dress; the white, round arms, and beautiful hands all would have struck the master of art. Both poet and painter would have loved that face, for it was a loveliness like that of the delicate tropic flower which blooms but to perish in all its early beauty too frail for the storms and darkness of night, too soilless to wither on earth. She was alone, but her reverie was sweeter than any poet's song or romancist's story could have told her. But the clear, ringing voice of a chanticleer breaks through the thread of her thoughts, and she raised her head and smiled, for the spring chickens, with yellow-velvet jackets and blue, glassy eyes, fluttered over her very feet, and the motherly old hen, who distrusted every other creature, clucked close to the very folds of her dress. Xot far off lay her Newfoundland dog, with his black, shaggy head resting upon one paw, dozing with one eye open, watching a couple of kittens that were making havoc with his mistress' hat-strings, while a venerable turkey gobbler was watching, with a jealous eye, a dandy peacock that \vas sunning his gorgeous plumage and making eyes at his lady-love. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 189 In the distance a Shetland pony was grazing upon the delicious bluegrass. Now and then he would raise his head and neigh, as he saw other horses pass his sancto- rum. " You dear old darling," said Birdie, going up and pat- ting him on his sleek, fat neck, and running her white, jeweled fingers through his long, silken mane, "I know you are lonely and would like to go out a little to stretch your limbs, and you shall go this very minute; " and she slipped the bridle over his head and led him up to the stile to be saddled, and then ran up to her room to put on her riding-habit. She had been gone only a few minutes when she returned dressed in a neat, plain riding-habit, fit- ting close to the perfect figure, showing every graceful line and curve. Birdie possessed that rare accomplishment among women a graceful seat on horseback and Dr. Sinclare could not help" noticing with vain pride the admir- ing glances cast upon his beautiful, accomplished daugh- ter as they rode out together. He saw how completely she was queen of society. Unusual homage followed her. She was the observed of all observers ; every one seemed to pause and look at her. Dr. Sinclare heard repeatedly, as they rode along, the question, ' ' Who is that beautiful girl?" Every one of note or distinction contrived to speak to her. Dr. Sinclare arrived just in time to assist Birdie in the saddle, and before she had time to give the signal, Lightning stuck his hoofs in the ground and was igO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. soon flying through the air, bearing his young mistress like a queen through the rich meadows and tangled woods, leaving the doctor gazing over the tops of his glasses to catch the last glimpse of his flying heels. "That girl rides entirely too fast," said he, as he entered the house. " I expect nothing but that she will be brought home some day with her limbs broken." Birdie was a good rider, and had no fear of such a catas- trophe, and in five minutes she was out of sight. It was one of those exquisite evenings when to live and breathe the sweetness of the air is rapture ; when the old feel young, and the young can scarce tread soberly upon the ecstacy of mere existence. The soft, warm breezes crept around Birdie like a caress, as she rode slowly along. She had now checked her pony and was riding leisurely along under the wide-spreading boughs of a line of cotton- wood, the turf white with the fallen blossoms of the haw- thorn, and still the trees were bright with lingering bloom. Further on in the green heart of the chase came a little wood of maples with leafy towers, their summit aspiring to the blue vault of heaven. Beyond, there stretched an un- dulating expanse of open sward, with here a beech and there an oak standing up against the summer's sky in soli- tary grandeur monarchs of the woodland. It was the paradise of squirrels, rabbits, and wild flowers. Lightning knew every inch of those woods, for he and his mistress had roamed about in them at all hours and in all weather ; A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 19 1 sometimes when the snow lay deep in the hollows, and the first of the wild snowdrops showed pale on the topmost ridges where the sun had touched them. Lightning was accustomed to take his ease in these woods ; the halter was thrown over a limb, while Birdie gathered wild flowers or sat beneath the shade of the trees, botanizing, entomologizing, sketching, or musing, as her fancy prompted. Her childhood and girlhood had been passed lonely, save in the companionship of her governess, who possessed every amiable quality except the power to amuse, and Birdie had learned to find her own amusements and her own occupations, more especially when Dr. Sin- clare was away from home. In these woods she had learned her lesson, day after day, from early spring to latest autumn. Here she had read her favorite poets ; here she had become familiar with all that is practical and interesting in the history of flowers and insects. The woods had been her playroom and study ever since she had become queen of that new home. To-day she let Lightning travel his slowest pace, stumbling a little now and then in a sleepy way, and recovering himself with a jerk. Presently he paused to take a drink from a cool, clear stream that, bubbling and dancing over the snowy pebbles, gushed from a rock at the foot of a large oak tree. "How I envy you, Lightning!" said she; "for I am awful thirsty, and that water is so tempting I think I shall participate, for it is not often one is blessed with such cool 192 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. spring-water as this; '' and she threw her bridle loose upon his neck and sprang to the ground. Going up to the tree she gathered some leaves and pinned them together with thorns, forming a cup, which she held to catch some of the sparkling water that was falling upon a rock beneath, break- ing into a thousand snowy sprays, when her attention was attracted by a noise just behind her ; and before she had time to look around, a little black pointer sprang out of the bushes, and startled her so she dropped her rustic cup and it floated down the stream. " I am sorry my dog frightened you, " said a young man, stepping from a cliff on the opposite side. "Allow me to assist you ; " and he took from his pocket a small silver cup and placed it under the stream and caught some of the sparkling water, and, with a graceful bow, handed the cup to Birdie. She raised her beautiful eyes to his, and with a sweet smile said, "Thank you." "Such eyes! " said he to himself; " I wish she would look at me again just that way." " Whom am I to thank for this unexpected kindness ? " said she, as she handed back the cup. ' ' Pardon me, " said he, "I should have at first introduced myself before I assumed the honor of offering your lady- ship my humble services. My name is Elmore, the adopt- ed scapegoat of Judge Elmore, of Louisville, Kentucky." "And I am the adopted wild bird of Dr. Sinclare, who A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 193 ventured too early from its feathery nest, and being too young to fly, Avas captured by a bird of different plumage, who was generous enough to furnish me with an appella- tion, " said she, laughing, "and one, too, I am proud of," she added, with a blush. The young man opened his large, brown eyes, and a flush came upon his face as he exclaimed: "And this is Miss Sinclare, of whom I have heard so much since my return to the city." "Indeed," said she, somewhat abashed; "I was not aware of being such a notorious character. I am sure it is.- not my intention or desire to be the eighth wonder of the world, and I don't see in what way I have committed my- self, Mr. Elmore, for I am only a school-girl, and my ac- quaintance has been extremely limited outside the school- room and my father's house?" "Young ladies are never aware of such things," said": he, smiling down into her face; "but is it possible, Miss, Sinclare, that you have never been informed of the uncom- mon homage that follows you from the school-room to your father's house?" "You have been the first to convey to my unsophisticat- ed ears the unfortunate intelligence," said she, somewhat stiffly, with a slight curl of her pretty lips. "Why do you call it unfortunate, Miss Sinclare?" said- he. " I thought young ladies were fond of homage." " And so they are," exclaimed Birdie, firmly. "Some: 13 194 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. of them may bask in the sunshine of flattery, for the tongue of man well utters its language. As for myself, I deny the accusation, for I detest it. Flatterers are like bees ; they carry both honey and a sting with their sweets upon their wing. But they are unlike the bee in one respect: they poison the flower on which they alight, and leave it to wither and die, as they seek new victims in fresh pastures." "But you should not condemn all, Miss Sinclare ; you should not call a man's true sentiments flattery, for when one speaks from the impulse of the heart, and speaks what he honestly believes is true, we can not call it flattery." To this Birdie made no reply, but said, "I will have to go, Mr. Elmore ; will you assist me on my pony?" To this the young man replied, ' ' Certainly, Miss Sin- clare, with great pleasure ; but I do not see him, I fear he has run off and left you. How stupid of me to stand here and let your pony get away, right under my eyes ! I am so sorry, Miss Sinclare; will you forgive my stupidity?" But he was not sorry one bit, and felt guilty all the while, for he saw the pony when he walked off, and could have caught him very easily ; but he thought how nice it would be to walk home with Miss Sinclare, for it would not do to let her go alone through the woods two miles ; besides it was growing late. "Do not blame yourself, Mr. Elmore," said Birdie, "it was all my fault. I have been accustomed to leaving A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 195 him unfastened, and he has never left me before. I sup- pose he got tired of waiting; but it does not matter, the roads are good, and I do not mind the walk." "But you must not think of going alone," said the young man. " If you will allow me, I will accompany you home." "I am sorry to put you to the trouble," said she, "and perhaps it is throwing you out of your way home." " Trouble ! " said he, half vexed at her for the remark ; " if this is trouble, I ask not for pleasure, Miss Sinclare, and only pray that they may come thicker and faster, and each day be crowned with troubles just like this. These are my true sentiments, Miss Sinclare, so don't place me on that abominable list of yours, you call flatterers; but you will have to lead the way, I am afraid I would not make a good pilot through these woods." "I will be pilot!" said she, "for I know every pig path, and have traversed them in my childish rambles from one end to the other." Veary Elmore had seen a great many faces in his life, both in real life and in art, but neither nature nor art had hitherto shown him one so fair as that which was presented to him on that summer evening. Birdie took his arm, and they started for her home, each one with a new joy in the heart that had never dwelt there before, and a dreamy, ethereal content stole like sad music on a south wind over their souls. The world never 196 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. seemed so beautiful, the sky so bright, the flowers so lovely, or the birds to sing more sweetly all previous life seemed but as a trance, sad-colored and heavy with monot- ony. All that were hueless dreams before took form and color, and the vaguest ideals all at once grew real. In an hour the flower of love had sprouted, grown, and bloomed as a tree of life. Birdie had been kept beneath her father's wing ; he watched over her as a hen watches over her only chicken. He was very particular in selecting such companions for her as he thought would be befitting her society, and always selected the course of literature he wished her to read, and taught her French and Latin in his own study ; for he had mastered them both and spoke them fluently. And instead of rushing her into society to catch a hus- band before she could make a cup of tea or know anything of the responsibilities that would rest upon her shoulders, he kept her in the nursery, and at eighteen she was as innocent and as unsophisticated as other girls would be at twelve, thanks to her wise father. The breath of passing love-fancies which dulls the mirror of most girls' souls had never passed over her. She had been reared in the sunshine of her father's affections, and with that love she was as content and happy as a mountain flower that bloomed where no steps of man had ever wandered. Her heart was like a deep, unruffled lake. Ah, well ! every one has his troubles, his disap- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 197 pointments, and heartaches, which Cupid poisons his arrow with before he pulls the trigger, and Birdie must have her share, for Cupid has already made a dead shot, and his arrow has lodged somewhere in the vicinity of the heart. She does not know it yet, but one day she will feel a pang which will tell her where the arrow rankles. CHAPTER XVI. HAS SHE KEEN NAMED IN HEAVEN, OR DO THE ANGELS CALL HER BIRDIE STILL? Twilight's mystic veil was hanging low, and the bright constellations, one by one, were taking their stations in the heavens, when Birdie Sinclare and her companion walked leisurely up the graveled terrace of her home. The statues shone white and ghost-like between the dark, whispering trees, and the snowball bushes gleamed faintly through the dusk, and nodded their downy heads in the breezes, and seemed to hold silent and solemn com- munication with each other as they passed by them. It was just at that time when the light was divided from the darkness, and mystery seemed to wrap the whole face of the earth in one endless, dusky winding-sheet. The lamps had not been lighted yet, and love lives best in this soft, mysterious twilight, where it only hears its own heart and one other's beat in solitude. Birdie and her companion did not enter the house, but took a seat beneath the old hawthorn, whose white blossoms were dropping like snowflakes upon his black coat, and lodging amid Birdie's sunny ringlets. (198) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 199 "Mr. Elmore, you did not tell me how you came to be at the spring," said Birdie, as they seated themselves beneath the rustic canopy. " I was carried there upon the wings of Fate," said the young man, smiling down into her sweet face as the blushes chased each other down her cheeks and played hide-and-seek among the little ringlets behind her ears. "Nothing mortal could have been, nor would have been, so kind," he added, with a twinkle in his honest brown eyes. " Why do you say that? " said she. " Do you think it was very kind of Fate to make you walk five miles out of your way home? " ' ' I would be willing to walk ten miles out of my way, Miss Birdie, just to have the blessed opportunity of walk- ing one mile with my fair companion," he replied. "Do they teach young men to flatter at your school, Mr. Elmore?" she replied. "I think you told me that you had just returned from school." "A man need not attend a law school to learn the les- son at first " "Now stop right there," said she, shaking her fore- finger at him. " I told you that I detested coxcombs and flatterers, and I thought better of you, Mr. Elmore. You look like a man, and not a fop." "I will not allow you to call my true sentiments flat- tery, for I really mean every word I say, whether you 2OO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. believe it or not, and when you come to know me better you will think differently of me. Perhaps I have been too familiar on first acquaintance," said he, sorrowfully; "but I could not help it, Miss Birdie, upon my word I could not, and I don't want you to think any the less of me for it, for you have strangely impressed me in some way that I can not express. Your face is as familiar to me as my right hand, and yet I never saw you before ; your voice is as familiar as my own, and yet I never heard it before. There is something in your whole bearing and manner that impresses me deeply, strangely something that car- ries me back to my boyhood days. In meeting you I feel that I have met a long-lost friend some kindred spirit from whom I have long been separated." "Mr. Elmore, " said Birdie, looking at him with a searching, inquiring look in her thoughtful eyes, "it is very strange, for I must admit that I have been impressed in the same manner in regard to you. It seems that we have met before, but I can not tell when or where." " I am glad of that," said he, smiling, " for I know you won't think me such a bad fellow after all ; knowing how to sympathize with me. Now will you take back those bad words you spoke just now, and let me be your friend ? " "I can not take them back now," said she, laughing, "for Eurus has borne them away on her shadowy wings to some of the far-away hills, and you may always hear the echo ; but you shall henceforth be my friend." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 2OI "Thank you," said he, " and I shall try to retain that friendship, by trying to make myself worthy of the treas- ure." "Have you a sister, Mr. Elmore ? " said Birdie, looking up into his eyes that had a vacant, far-away look in them. ' ' No, Miss Birdie, I have, unfortunately, no sister, though I had one once, but " ' She was too pure for sinful earth, To wander here below, Where every rose conceals a thorn, And every joy brings woe.' "And she is now in heaven; and it is she," he added, with a sad smile, " that you remind me of. Your face and hair and eyes and voice all remind me of that dear, sweet child, and carry me back to my mountain home, with its green pastures and murmuring brooks and flowery slopes. It seems that I can see the old mill-pond now with its moss-covered wheels, and the old school-house just on the top of the hill. But it is very selfish of me to converse upon topics that can not be interesting to you, or any one else but myself." ' ' O, you are mistaken, " said she ; "it does interest me very much, and I want you to talk to me just as you would to a sister ; for you know we are to be the best of friends, and I can sympathize with you ; for I too have 2O2 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. neither brother nor sister ; and have often thought how happy I would be if I only had a sister or a brother like other girls who have them ; and I know I never would be cross and ugly to them like some I have seen. I once had a brother," she added, "whom I loved and worshiped; though I was very young when he died, yet his image is ever before me, and his voice in my ear, and to my dying day I shall never cease to mourn his loss. He was drowned, poor boy, trying to save the lives of some little children who were capsized in a boat near the falls." "That is strange," said he, "it seems that our lives run in the same channel. We both claim our appellation by adoption, both made brotherless and sisterless by the hand of fate, and both writing a book, each taking his title from the feathery tribe." "Why do you call your book 'A Beautiful Bird with- out a Name?' " said Birdie. "It is named in honor of my little dead sister, whose nickname was Birdie, and who died without a name," said the young man, gravely. "She had never been named, and I have often wondered if she has been named in heaven, or do the angels call her Birdie still?'' For some time they sat without speaking; each one seemed too full for words, for a tear was trembling on the lids of each, as they sat in profound silence. Presently they heard a footstep, and the next moment Birdie was in her father's arms. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 2O3 " You little runaway ! Where have you been ? " said he, imprinting a kiss upon her cheek. "I have been nearly crazy, for the pony came home without you, and I was sure he had thrown you, and you were perhaps lying in the woods, dead, or very near the thing, and I have been looking for you for two hours, and came to raise the neighbors to go in search of you." "Well, father," said she, laughing, "there is nothing like dying when you can have a grand funeral, and some- body to cry for you ; but come, let me introduce you to my new-found friend. Mr. Elmore, this is my father, Dr. Sinclare." The young man advanced toward the doctor and ex- tended his hand, which Dr. Sinclare grasped firmly. "I am happy to meet you, Mr. Elmore ! " said he, shak- ing his hand heartily. ' ' I believe you are the son of Judge Elmore, of L , are you not?" To this question the young man replied in the affirm- ative. "I am well acquainted with the old judge, "he replied; "but I have not seen him for some time. How is your father's health ? I heard he was failing rapidly, and I am sorry to hear it, for the State will lose one of its pillars." "It is too true, I fear," said Veary Elmore. "My father's health is declining rapidly. He works entirely too much ; it seems that the public can not give him up. I have not seen him for several days," he added. " I have 2O4 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. been rusticating with friends in the country. My father was desirous that I should take a little fresh air after being confined so closely at college, and as I was under that im- pression myself, it did not take much persuasion to make me a denizen of the forest. To-day I had been out trying my hand at hunting, when I had the pleasure of meeting Miss Sinclare, and was happy to be of some service to her." Dr. Sinclare thanked him greatly for his kindness, and begged that he would not only take tea with them, but that he should remain until morning, and he would send him home in the carriage. To this proposition the young man consented, and was soon feeling himself perfectly at home. An hour had passed since supper, and the young people were sitting alone upon the veranda discussing literature and the drama, Macbeth and the weird sisters, and Shakes- peare in general, when Birdie gave the conversation a turn by saying, "What a glorious night ! " "Yes, look at that great, bright star," said her com- panion; " I never saw it so brilliant as it is to-night." They were leaning over the balustrade and looking toward the star-lit river, which was lovely in its clear dark- ness and its deep stillness. Its black, sleeping depth seemed not to stir in its ripple. Here and there a star trembled upon its dark bosom, and along its shadowy shore the white skiffs nestled, gleaming faintly ; now and A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 2O5 then a mellow whistle from a passing steamer broke upon the air, as it glided by like a great spread-eagle, its head- lights streaming across the dark water, making a golden path, as if handfuls of topaz jewels were scattered there. The trees were silent specters against the deep, dark sky ; the hills upon the opposite shore rose like amber ghosts, and over all the stars shone pure and distant, like gleams of the light of heaven breaking through the black veil of night. Birdie and her companion stood looking on the peace and beauty of the scene, literally intoxicated with its glory. A skiff was passing in the distance, and faint and light the plash of the oars came over the water to them, and clear and sweet the sound of voices singing as the oarsmen rowed slowly and almost languidly on. "That is a picnic party," said Veary Elmore. " I saw them this morning, and they are now on their way home." " O, how perfectly delightful !" said Birdie. "There is nothing that I delight in more than a moonlight row upon the water." "There are the boats moored yonder," said her com- panion; " I wonder if they are secured." "Yes," said Birdie, "they always secure them for fear they will be taken away ; but I have a beautiful boat of my own, the prettiest on the river. Father bought it for me the other day, and I go out rowing nearly every after- 2O6 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. noon ; but it is not half so delightful to me as the moon- light rows." "Suppose we go and join the excursionists," said he; " they haven't passed yet, and it is quite early." " Well, let me run and ask father," said she. " I never do anything without first consulting him." "You are quite right, Miss Birdie," said he, as she walked away. Going up to her father's study, she tapped on the door. "Come in, child," said Dr. Sinclare, quietly and ten- derly, but without looking up. He was sitting in his usual arm-chair, and near him was an ottoman, the same which Birdie used to sit upon when she was a little child. By one of those gentle, womanly instincts that are generally safe to adopt as guides, she goes softly up to him and takes her place at his feet, just as she has often done before when she wanted to coax him to consent to some plan laid out by herself. The doctor smiled and laid his hand upon her head and smoothed her hair gently. "What is it, Birdie?" said he. "I know you are after something, for I have a good sign to go by." "What do you tell by, papa?" said she, looking up into his face. "Never mind what it is ; I know you have come for something, or you would never have left Mr. Elmore to come up here to sit with a dry old man like me." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 2O/ "You should not speak that way, papa," said she, pouting her pretty lips, " when you know that I love you better than anybody in this whole world." "I know that, my child," said he, patting her head, "but I can't help from feeling a little jealous of Mr. Elmore ; but I would rather be jealous of him than any one I know of at this time, for I think he is a splendid young man, and will one day make a brilliant star in his profes- sion. But why have you left him alone? Surely, you have not fallen out with him already?" ' ' O, no, " said Birdie ; ' ' we are the best of friends ; and I am so glad you like him, papa, because I know you will then trust me with him " "To trust you with him, child? to trust you with him why, have you come to get my consent to the mar- riage?" said the doctor, nervously. " Now just listen to you, papa. What are you talking about? Just as if I would leave you to marry anybody. Besides, Mr. Elmore don't want to marry me, he only wants to take me rowing. Can I go, papa ? " ''Ah! that's it," said the old doctor, smiling; " I began to think I was going to lose my little bird," and he took up his pen and commenced writing, without giving her an answer to her question. "Say, papa, Mr. Elmore is waiting for me, and I am waiting for your answer. Can I go, dear? One two if you don't answer me before I say three, papa, I shall 2O8 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. do something desperate;" and she arose and placed her arms around his neck. "Birdie," said the doctor, "I am almost afraid to let you go ; there have been so many accidents lately. Only a few days ago two young ladies were drowned while row- ing, and I am afraid to trust you with any one else except myself." ' ' O, papa, there can be no danger with Mr. Elmore with me," pleaded Birdie; "besides, the wind is fine and the night is as bright as day, and so many are out rowing. We have been out upon the veranda watching them for ever so long. Hark ! do you hear them singing ? It is the excursionists; O, I do want to go so bad, papa." "There is no use in arguing with a woman,"' exclaimed her father, "she is going to have her way, and you are like the balance of them. I will have to give up, I guess ; but be careful, child, and don't stay out too long." "That is a good, sweet, dear old darling," said she, giving him a hug, and the next minute she was flying down stairs and out upon the veranda, where she had left Veary a few minutes before. CHAPTER XVII. A ROW BY MOONLIGHT SAVED FROM A WATERY GRAVE. ' ' What a terrestrial paradise ! Surely, it is a home for the fairies!" exclaimed Veary Elmore, as he and Birdie passed through the conservatory that was filled with flow- ers fragrant mignonette, lemon-scented verbenas, purple heliotropes into the beautiful fernery, where the lamp- lights fell in shining showers upon the rich, green foliage, and the rippling, sparkling water of the fountain danced with musical rhythm in the deep basin below. The stars had stolen out, one by one, until the heavens were all aglow with them from horizon to horizon. Silence had sunk down softly over the land, and even the trees scarcely whispered in their sleep. The pale rays of the moon began to creep through the still branches, and trace bright lines across the marble terrace, and twine her silvery fingers among the petals of the slumbering flowers. It was a time when love, if it lay in a man's heart, would spring up into sudden, sweet life. The flowers of love had already bloomed in Veary Elmore's heart, and as the beautiful Birdie walked by his side, he looked down the vista of possibilities of the future, and saw her fair 14 (209) 2IO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. sweet brow crowned with orange flowers and a bridal veil standing at his side, and her little white hand clasped in his. All the force and strength, the hope and aim, the faith and passion of his soul were poured out in the one deep channel of an exhaustless love. The more he saw of her, the more he desired to be with her; and he saw the net of destiny closing around him, and knew there would be no way of escape unless by breaking a cord, and at the snapping of that cord he would suffer a pang. "Love is a magnetism, drawing eye to eye, and soul to soul, and the potentiality of all heroism and of all crime. When it enters into a human heart it possesses it with all divine possibilities; yet in the celestial light of its halo sleeps the fire that if evil influence should kindle it, it burns and brands deep as the mark on the brow of Cain. There is no hell to the depths of which love, maddened and misguided, may not hurl itself down no heaven whose pure heights it may not scale." On the moonlit shore two or three skiffs were pulled up. Under their keels the water was lapping in tiny, transpar- ent ripples on the rounded, shining pebbles. A red flag drooped at the rear of one of the boats, faintly fluttering in the light breeze that blowed down from the hill. "This is my boat," said Birdie, going up to the one with the red flag. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 211 "It looks like a man-of-war," said Veary, laughing, " I suppose you will have me for your commander-in-chief, Miss Birdie, won't you? " ' ' Yes, " said Birdie, ' ' and we'll press all the yellow jack- ets, bees, and wasps into service to fight the mosquitoes, for they are just terrible to-night. Let us hurry and push off from the shore, then they will not trouble us any more. Here is the key, and there is Thomas with the paddles ; I took them up to the house for safe-keeping." They took their seats in the skiff, and pushed off at last. As they left the shore they could hear the sounds of distant music and ringing laughter across the water, from the merry excursionists. Veary Elmore, who was not exempt from the besetting weakness of the nineteenth century, took out his fuse-box and lit a cigar. He was very fond of rowing ; indeed, it was the only athletic exercise he cared much about, or at any rate much indulged in. Being a good oarsman, their little boat soon caught up with the excursionists, and shot past them so quickly they only caught a glance of them ; but every one turned his head to look at the beautiful picture as they passed ; for Birdie was drooping languidly, gracefully as the dew laden cup of the garden lily against the red cushions piled at the side of the boat, with one hand trailing in the water, her eyes fixed with a half-reluctant look upon the paddles that rippled through the silvery waves. 212 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "I wish you would not look so lovely to-night," said Veary, and his eyes filled with a soft, tender light as he looked wistfully into her face. "Why?" she responded, and her large, dreamy eyes were upturned to his in a gentle, grave attention. " Because it is dangerous," he replied, with a mischiev- ous twinkle in his eyes. " If I look at you much longer I shall be tempted to make love to you, and if you refuse to listen to me I should be prompted to capsize the boat." " Well, what good would that do?" said Birdie, reluc- tantly. " I should take you along to heaven with me! '' he ex- claimed, " for I could not bear the thought of going alone, and leaving you behind for a more successful rival." ' ' It would be very doubtful whether you would accom- pany me there after committing such a deed as that, Mr. Elmore, " said Birdie. " Indeed, I would be afraid to vent- ure far with such a companion." "Excuse me, Miss Birdie, I do believe I could be happy in pandemonium if I had you always to look at. I can now believe in the sirens of old," he added; "they must have had just such eyes, such rich voices, and just such faces as yours. I should pity the man who hope- lessly loved you, for he had just as well be in pandemo- nium or some other horrible place." "I should imagine the man who would be stupid enough to fall in loVe with me would need to be pitied," A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 213 she replied, dreamily, as her fingers trailed through the water. "If she loves any one, it will be easy for her to win," he thought. How little he dreamed that the whole passionate love of her heart was given to himself! And the more she knew of him the more he was endeared to her his single- mindedness, his chivalry, his faith in women, and his re- spect for them were greater than she had seen in any other man, and she loved him for those qualities. The more she contrasted him with others the greater, deeper, and wider grew her love. And that love, so deep, so pure, and holy, sprang up and grew into maturity in only a few short hours. He filled the scope of her life so completely that it was strange and almost impossible for her to realize that only a few hours ago she had not known him that a few hours ago he was nothing to her. Her heart had lain still as a dark, sealed fountain, until under his gentle influ- ence the seal had melted and broken, and the imprisoned power burst forth in an undying, passionate love. He thought her perfect on that evening in her white and amber silk, yet, if possible, she looked even better in her boating-dress, with no jewels, no ribbons, or flowers, save a scarlet geranium at her throat. The masses of her golden hair were unfastened and hung in ringlets around her white neck; there was a warm, bright flush on her cheeks, with the least touch of languor in her manner. 214 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Her dress looked brilliant in the mellow moonlight, being of a silvery texture ; the trimming was composed of small fern-leaves ; the effect of the dress was striking, and Birdie herself had never looked more lovely. " Look at that smoke! How gracefully it curls ! " said she, gazing upon a steamer that was coming around a bend, leaving a blue-black mist in its train ; the lamp-lights from the pilot-house streamed down upon the water, throwing a glittering halo from shore to shore. On one side a string of big, heavy, bulky-looking barges glided by, black and ugly, like a trail of blots across the bright, quiet beauty of the river. "I don't like those ugly-looking things," said Birdie. "What a pity that everything is not lovely and beau- tiful!" "It would not do." said Veary, "for a world without contrast is a world without joy. If we had no night we would not appreciate the glory of the sun. Look at that steamer ! How beautiful she looks by the side of that ugly- barge! Contrast makes her appear more lovely." "Look, Mr. Elmore, " said Birdie, nervously, "we're not on the side for the steamer to pass us. Hadn't we better pull across to the Kentucky side?" "We shall strike those barges then if we don't look sharp," said he, excitedly. "But I think we will have time to fall in below the barge if you will pull away hard," said Birdie. "Let me A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 21$ help you," and she grasped one of the paddles and rowed with all her strength, in spite of his opposition. The love of life is a master passion, and makes the feeble strong, the coward daring, the meekness of woman- hood cope with the force of man. They pulled hard, but the steamer was shooting along more rapidly and the barges were drifting out of their way slower than Veary Elmore thought. Instead of getting clear of the steamer they were actually crossing its path ; but they would have cleared it safely enough if Birdie, in her alarm at seeing the steamer so close upon them, had not seized the rope and jerked it the wrong way. The boat swung around in the swell of the steamer ; it seemed that the steamer barely touched it, but in an instant it capsized and tossed its occupants into the river, close to the revolving paddle-wheel. All eyes were fastened on the spot where they went down and disappeared. There was the dull moan of severed waters the troubled lilies trembled on the river's breast then, with a sighing sound, the wind swept over them and all was still ; and the waters flowed on upon their changeless course, with a melancholy murmur, as peaceful as if two living souls were not strug- gling for life in its deep, dark, liquid depth. The ladies on board the steamer were screaming and wringing their hands in terror, and the men were flinging ropes over the steamer's sides. The groups on the side of the steamer were momentarily increasing as they sprang 2l6 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. from their berths in terror on hearing the screams of those on deck. "They must have been hit by the steamer," shouted one man. "They went down like a ball of lead, all in a minute," called out another. The excited group on the bank were watching, breath- lessly, and calling out injunctions to the boatmen, who shouted instructions in turn. "Hush! there is something coming up by that boat! There is the young man there he is and alone ! " They stretched out their hands to help him into the boat, but he rejected the help, and in a hoarse voice exclaimed : " Is she saved?" ' ' No, " came from a hundred voices, ' ' she has not risen. " "God help me! " he cried, with a ring of despair in his voice, and which all on board could never forget ; and he turned loose from the boat and the water smoothed over him. They waited and watched it seemed hours, though it was only minutes that they waited. There was wild dis- order, delirious panic ; the agony of hope conflicting with the horrors of despair. At last, at last there was a shout. " Here he is ! here he is ! " from one of the boats. Something white cornes to the surface ; there is one moment's breathless watching and then a ringing shout of " Hurrah! Hurrah ! " goes up and A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 2 1/ pierces the heavens. "Thank God, he has got her safe! " they cried, while eager hands were held out to help them into the nearest boat ; one a lifeless corpse, hanging a limp, heavy, helpless mass over their arms, as they managed to lift her over the side of the boat ; the other almost breath- less, not able to speak, and the water running in little rivulets from his hair and ears and nose. He was the cen- ter of an admiring, eager, congratulatory group, though he took no notice of the friendly offers and inquiries and compliments that surrounded him, but rushed to the side of the helpless, lifeless form of his darling, and clasped the cold, white hands in his trembling fingers and ex- claimed, ' ' Doctor, is she dead ? " " I fear there is not much hope," said the gentle voice of Dr. St. George. "O! God!" said poor Veary, throwing up his hands and falling prostrate upon the floor. Fortunately, Dr. St. George, as it appeared, was a pas- senger on the steamer, and was the only physician on board, and did not recognize Veary Elmore until he had fallen senseless at his feet. "It is Veary Elmore!" exclaimed Dr. St. George. ' ' Remove him to one of the berths, and wrap him in blankets, and rub him with brandy. I can not leave the young lady, we might possibly save her yet." "I think it is only transitory faintness," exclaimed an 2l8 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. old lady, looking over her spectacles, "and it will soon pass away. We had better try and bring the lady to. I wonder who she is? It strikes me that I have seen her be- fore. What a pity that lovely dress is spoiled." The kind doctor could not help smiling in the presence of death at the old lady's remarks, but he knew more about the young man than she did, for he had seen him fall senseless at his feet before, and he had nursed him through a long and dangerous spell of brain fever. An hour of almost breathless watching and waiting had elapsed, when Dr. St. George exclaimed, "Thank God ! she lives she breathes ; bring some brandy." And he put a little in her mouth, and chafed her face and hands and feet until she was restored to life. She opened her eyes and gazed around her. She could not speak. Finally, with an effort, she whispered in a hoarse voice, " Is he is he ?" The doctor comprehended her meaning, and said in a gentle tone of voice, "Your friend, Mr. Elmore, is safe. We have him in the next room. Don't be alarmed ; you have had a narrow escape, but if you will just be quiet and compose yourself, you will be all right in a few days." As the steamer was on her way to Louisville, they were taken to that city, and a dispatch was sent to her father, who came for her in a close carriage. He was almost fran- tic with grief, for they had not returned home, and he A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 219 could hear no tidings from them. Some one had passed that way and had spread the news all through the country around that a young couple had been capsized in the river and drowned, and that was the only information he could obtain. CHAPTER XVIII. BIRDIE'S SURPRISE, OR THE MINIATURE IN THE WOODS. Three months had passed in quick succession since the night Veary Elmore had saved Birdie Sinclare from a wa- tery grave, and those three months wrought a great change in this fair young girl. From that hour, her whole heart had gone out to him. At first she did not understand the change that had come over her. She only knew that his presence made Elysium to her his absence, desolation ; that the sound of his voice made her heart beat wildly, her hands tremble, her face burn ; that if he touched her hand, that touch seemed to thrill her whole soul ; that when he entered a room it was as though all sunshine and all glad- ness came into it ; that when he left it, darkness and deso- lation reigned ; that in all the music of nature, she only heard his voice, and that earth appeared fairer. Every- thing was changed for her. And then it dawned upon her that this meant love nothing else but love, about which she had dreamed, and puzzled, and wondered. He was the hero of her dreams the ideal had come at last. And he was the one love of her heart and soul ; she knew no other ; no other man had ever had the power to charm her. (220) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 221 Her ideal was realized ; beyond that realization she never went. She was happy, and yet miserable. She enjoyed the magnificence and the wealth that surrounded her; she enjoyed the homage laid at her feet ; but she enjoyed the vague, dreamy happiness of her inner life better than alL Her heart and soul thrilled with the vague, sweet poetry of life. The crown of womanhood was won, and the diadem placed upon her fair brow. Any man would have been proud of that love. Any man would have been proud to have claimed her for his wife, had she been as poor as "Job's turkey," but she was the sole heiress of the wealthy and honorable Dr. Sinclare. Stately as a duchess, as beautiful as a poet's dream, gifted and intellectual, and as pure in heart as a little child full of beautiful thoughts her mother's only legacy wondering with a grave, solemn, child-like won- der what was to be her ultimate fate, what grand destiny awaited her; a girl of the rarest type, noble in soul, lofty,, but proud to a degree ; not vain, for vanity was never one of her faults ; not vain of her beauty nor her wealth, but proud in the highest, broadest, noblest sense, detesting everything mean and dishonorable. Veary Elmore had been a constant visitor at her father's house ever since that never-to-be-forgotten night, but he had never made an open declaration of his love to her, though he had shown her in every way that she was his idol. It was love at first sight ; he worshiped at her shrine.. 222 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. From that first moment when her violet eyes, with their dreamy look of wonder, were turned up to him, he loved her with a love that was his doom. She was the one love of his heart and soul. He thought no beauty in the world equaled hers. He laughed at the idea that people had ever hinted at him to marry that Miss Fuss-and- Feathers, with her sharp nose, and pitch eyes, and greasy, black hair. "I will marry Birdie Sinclare, or I will never marry any one, for there is no use in talking, I never can, nor ever will, love any one else, and I will ask her to be my wife before another week passes, and if she refuses me well, I will start for Europe the next day, " and he threw up his head with a quick effort, to conquer the morbid feelings that pressed upon him heavily. ' ' I wonder what that old Scullcutter is after," he mused as he rode along. "This makes the third time he has been there. I wonder what his motive is ; surely it can't be to see Birdie ; he is old enough for her father ; besides, his wife has not been dead six months yet. I must speak to Birdie about him the next time I see her. I suppose he will try to put her against me by telling her my father was a drunkard, but I guess he will not tell her he was the cause of it ; that he has in his possession to-day that which should be my own right and property. I shall tell her all when I see her. She shall first hear from my own lips that my father filled a drunkard's grave, and not from the lips of a foe. A BEAUTIFUL H1RI) WITHOUT A NAME. 223 She must not allow him to visit her, for he is too vile to enter her presence, although his money covers up his meanness, and to some people the shining ore covers the black spots in his character. But Birdie is different from most of people, thank God! and his money will have no more effect on her than so much trash. She is getting so reserved of late," he mused. "She used to be so frank and confiding, and now she is getting as shy as a wild bird, and blushes every time I go near her. I wonder what is the matter? " Yes, there was a change in Birdie that could be seen by any one who did not profess to be a close observer. Shyly, timidly, she would look at him. He was a man to be proud of a man to love. But he must never know that she had given her heart all unasked. She was so fearful that he should think her unwomanly ; so afraid that he should imagine she wanted his love, that she took ref- uge in cold, shy, proud avoidance, which increased the distance between them, and each moment fanned the flame that was consuming her heart and soul. No one guessed what a storm of unrequited love and pain warred under the calm, proud exterior. One evening in the latter part of October, Dr. Sinclare was sitting alone in his study ; the sky was bright and the wind was as sweet as in summer, for the summer weather still lingered and seemed unwilling to go. Flowers that should have __died before were still living ; birds that 224 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. should long since have sought a summer clime were still singing. ' ' Papa, can I come in a little while, if you are not too busy?" said a sweet voice. "Yes, child, I am never too busy to talk to you," he replied, as Birdie came in and laid her arm around his neck. "Why, it is quite an age since I last saw you not since dinner. Where have you been ? You are getting to be almost a stranger." " And you a regular pet," said she, stooping down and kissing him on the cheek. " I have been over to see the Hinkeyfords and take them some nourishment, "she added. "Poor Mrs. Hinkeyford, I don't think she will live long, papa, do you think she will?" " She may live a couple of months, or she may die to- night; there is no telling; consumption is a very flattering disease." "O, I do hope she may live until after " " After what?" said her father, a little puzzled at seeing her pause in her sentence and turn red in the face. "O, nothing, papa," said she, seating herself in his lap. "That was awful cruel of me to have such thoughts, but I did not mean any disrespect to poor Mrs. Hinkey- ford, but I do so much want Grace to come to the ball." " What ball, child? You are always talking in proverbs to me." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 22$ ' ' Well, that was just what I came to tell you. I mean that I have come to ask you to let me give a ball in honor of Mr. Elmore's departure for Europe. Now, I have said it ; can I, papa, can I ? " ' ' So that was the weighty matter you wanted to discuss, eh ? and you don't want Mrs. Hinkeyford to die until after the ball, is that it? Well, I guess we will have to send up a special message to have her death postponed until after the ball, shall we not ? " " O, you naughty papa, you," pinching him on the cheek, ' ' you take a delight in teasing me. You know she will have to die some time," said she, innocently, "and if she could live until after the ball, why Grace could come ; if she does not, she can't. That's all there is about it. Besides, she is anxious for Grace to come if we have one, that is, if she is living." "You are a regular genius," said he, smiling down into her face. ' ' You can fix up things just to suit yourself. When is your ball to take place? " "That depends upon your decision," said she. " You have not told me whether I could have it or not." "A special pleader, indeed. Diplomacy is your forte. You should keep to it." "I mean to. But should I plead in vain with you, should I ? " She had grown somewhat earnest. "O! with me!" said Dr. Sinclare, with much self- contempt; " I have given up all that sort of thing long 15 226 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. ago. I know how much too strong you are for me, and I am too wise to even try to swim against the tide. Only I would entreat you to be merciful as you are strong." "I will," said she, " if you won't talk any more non- sensical chat, you silly boy, you," said Birdie, who was now standing at the back of his chair combing his hair, and declared it had not been combed since the last time she combed it. "When is Mr. Elmore going to leave for Europe?" exclaimed her father, after there had been silence for sev- eral moments. "He is going next month," said Birdie, as she drew a long sigh. "And you have really run him off?" "Now, just listen to you, papa; how have I run him off? I don't know what has caused him to change his mind. He told me that he was going next summer, and he was here a few days ago and said that he was going to start on the first." "I am sorry he is going to leave us so soon, for I really liked the young man, and was in hopes I should have him for my son-in-law one of these days. I wonder who his father was? Some of Judge Elmore's relations, I guess. It is strange he never married. I suppose Veary will be his heir." At that instant the doorbell rang, and before Birdie had time to escape a gentleman was ushered into the pres- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. ence of Dr. Sinclare. Birdie bowed very gracefully and walked out of her father's study, and started up to her room ; then she paused and turned to the open door, as though the house was too small to contain all the thoughts that thronged her breast. She walked out into the garden where autumn, though kindly and slowly in its advances, was touching everything with the hand of death. Birdie passed by it all, unmindful of its beauty. With a sigh she quit her beloved garden and wandered still further abroad into the deep woods that had already put their glory on and looked lovely in their dress of tender russets and sad green and fading tints that met and melted into each other. The daylight was fading softly, imperceptibly, but surely. There was yet a glow from the departing sunlight that was sinking lazily beyond the distant hills, and tinged with gold the earth lying in her shroud of leaves. Masses of crimson clouds, edged with purple and gold, appeared to be making a bed for the sun to lie on ; the roseate light seemed to linger among the trees and flowers. Silence reigned unbroken. All the feathery tribe of the aerial regions were pruning their downy plumage and murmur- ing sleepy lullabies ere sinking to their rest. Scarce a sound could be heard save the distant lowing of cattle and the drowsy drone of a slumbrous bee as it floated idly by. There was such a deep silence among the trees, as she went along, that it seemed to Birdie's excited fancy as 228 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. though this were a mystical evening, holding strange secrets and strange meaning, and seemed to oppress her with many discordant thoughts. She felt so sad, so lonely, so desolate, as she wandered along, now and then stopping to pluck a favorite flower, or listen to the whistle of some lone bird that had lost its mate. The echo of her father's words was still ringing in her ears, "I wonder who his father was." " What would I give to know who my father is?" she exclaimed, vehemently. "To know who I am and what I am ! Am I always to live in a shroud of mystery, and must my future ever lie behind a cloud ? If poor Veary was living, perhaps there would be some hopes of my knowing; but he is dead, and I shall never know until I meet my dear parents at the bar of God. Hark! I thought I heard a noise." She looked down and right under her feet was a hen's nest. Madam was sur- rounded by a battalion of young chickens, and she seemed to say, "Now see what a treat I have in store for you, Miss Birdie, just because I stole my nest off where that miserable peacock could not trouble me." ''Well done, thou good and faithful servant," said Birdie, stooping down to gather up some of the young chickens in her hands, for it was a treat sure enough at that time of the year. Presently her eyes fell upon some glittering object that was half concealed by the wings of Madam Hen. She reached forth her hands and drew it out. She turned deathly white, and her lips grew purple A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 22Q as she exclaimed, "A locket, and my locket, too! the very same that I had when I was a child." She pressed upon the spring and it flew open, revealing the miniature of her long-lost brother, Veary Carlisle. " O, Veary, Veary!" she exclaimed, clasping the min- iature to her breast. ' ' I never thought to see your dear face again in this world. Surely, kind Providence directed my wandering footsteps to this spot. Who could have lost it here?" said she, kissing it again and again. "It is so strange, so mysterious; it must be all a dear, sweet dream, and I shall awake directly and find your dear image turned to nothing in my hand." An hour had passed, and twilight had shut down and darkened all the land as Birdie went back to her home. On reaching the library, she looked in to find her father sit- ting there engrossed as usual in some book, which he laid upon the table the moment Birdie entered the room, and an indescribable sadness rested upon his face which Birdie had never seen there before. "Why, papa, darling, you look as dull as a grave-dig- ger," said she, going up and laying her arms around his neck. "It seems so very strange," she added, "that every time Mr. Scullcutter comes here he seems to throw a gloom over you, papa. I wish he would never come here again." "If you knew what he came for, perhaps you would not speak in that way. You would not speak disrespect- 23O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. fully of a man because he conferred an honor upon you the highest honor a gentleman could confer upon a lady. " "What do you mean, papa," said Birdie, " by saying that Mr. Scullcutter had conferred an honor upon m'e ? I firmly believe that your mind is wandering." "Can't you guess, Birdie?" "No, papa, I can't guess; I just supposed there was another stag party on hand, or a deer hunt." "You have guessed right," he said, laughing with an effort; "it is a dear hunt, sure enough, and he trailed it right to this house." "Well, did he catch it, papa?" said Birdie. "Catch it," exclaimed her father, "no, he has not caught it yet, and it will depend upon you whether he catches it or not." "What do you mean, papa?" said Birdie, sinking down in a chair, and laying her head upon the table and looking into his face like a tired child. " You are always talking in proverbs to me ; I wish you would be more ex- plicit; if you don't, I shall have a nervous chill." "Are you prepared for a shock from a powerful bat- tery?" exclaimed her father, stroking her glossy hair with a trembling hand. "Now, I am not going to have any more of that non- sensical chat," said she, pinching his cheeks. "I shall give you until I can count three to tell me one two do you hear, papa?" A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 23! "Well," said he, " I guess I had just as well out with it he has asked for your hand in marriage. That is the honor which he has conferred upon you. And now the dreadful announcement is made the words that have been so hard to utter have at last gone out into the air; and now what answer am I to give him, Birdie ? Do you care anything for him ? He is a good chance I mean, he is wealthy, and you will always have plenty, and will never know a want that wealth can shield you from." For a moment silence reigned, and then Birdie arose and laid her arms around his neck. He was looking straight before him, his expression troubled and grave, his mouth compressed. "Father," said she, firmly, "could you be happy to see Fen Scullcutter lead your daughter to the marriage altar? Speak the truth, papa; tell me if it will be essen- tial to your happiness ; if so, I will marry him I mean that I am willing to make the sacrifice to promote your happiness." "Sacrifice, child; I do not want you to make any sacrifice of your pure, innocent life," said the old doctor, pressing her to his heart ; " but, darling", why do you speak thus? what have you against Mr. Scullcutter, Birdie? I am sure he is handsome, wealthy, and courteous, and loves you." ' ' My objections are very grave, " she replied. ' ' In the first place, he is old enough for my father ; and second, I A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. do not love him, and would not if I could, for he has not one spark of true manhood in his veins ; and third, he is a coward, and the man that I could love and respect and honor as a husband would have to be a brave man." "Pray, where did you get your information?" said her father, looking at her in surprise. ' ' Experience taught me a part, and the balance came from the lips of truth. The night I came so near being drowned, he was in a skiff, and so near me I could have touched him with my paddle, and he would not raise his hand to try to save my life. Now, do you think I could even have respect for that man, papa, much less love for him?" "Perhaps he did not recognize you, my child. If he had, I am quite sure he would have done all in his power to save your life." " If he had been a brave man, he would not have waited to see who it was. He knew two souls were on the brink of eternity, and struggling for life, and he would not raise a hand to save us, and I have had a perfect contempt for him ever since. Besides, he turned poor Mrs. Williams out into the street, "with her five orphan children, without a morsel to eat, because she was sick and could not pay the rent, while he had thousands of dollars in his pocket. I don't suppose he ever gave a dollar for benevolent pur- poses in his life ; and if he did, I guess he made it up by cheating his laborers out of their honest wages/' A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 233 "You are too hard, Birdie," said her father. "Upon my word, if you women don't remind me of fire-crackers all that is required is to strike a match, and if they don't go off I'm a Dutchman." Birdie made no reply to this perhaps because she had not one ready. " I shall not live long, my child, and I want you to marry some good man who will be able to bestow the same tender care upon you that I have done," he added, stroking her hair. ' ' I shall never leave you, papa never, never, so long as we both live," and a tear came into her eyes and trem- bled upon the lids. She is sitting on his knee now, with her arms around his neck, and her cheek against his ; and he is holding her sweet, lissome figure close to his heart. She is the one thing he has to love on earth, and just now she seems unspeakably, almost painfully, dear to him. "Always, my dear?" he reiterated, with somewhat of unsteadiness. "Yes, always; and I love you, papa, better than any one living ; I don't want you to ask me to marry that Fen Scullcutter any more, because I don't want to disobey you in anything. I said just now that I would marry him to please you, but that would not be right, and if you insist upon my marrying him I shall have to run away and leave you, and that will kill me ; and then you will have no one * to love you." 234 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "My darling," said he, "do not fear, I will never ask you to marry him or any one else. You are as free as the wild birds in the forest ; choose for yourself but, darling, make a good choice." " Thank you, papa," said she; "I thank you for those blessed words, and I .am glad from my heart that you feel that way ; for one-half the sin, the anguish, and the heart- aches caused by unhappy marriages may be laid at the threshold of parents. Before a girl is old enough to think for herself, or to know her own mind, her parents are plan- ning and surmising and contriving in every possible way to get her a husband, just as if marriage was the only aim of a woman's life, or her only vocation. Instead of teach- ing girls the duties and responsibilities of life the duties they owe to their parents and themselves, how to beautify and make their homes happy, should they ever be fortu- nate enough to have one they are taught to sit back in idleness, waiting for husbands to support them; and the first man that comes along the girl thinks is able to indulge her in laziness and extravagance, she marries. And should the time ever come when he fails to furnish her with money and servants, she hasn't sense enough to fill her position as a true wife should, and, consequently, they both become tired and disgusted with each other, and quarrels and con- tentions and discords follow, with a divorce suit to cap the climax, and disgrace comes down upon the heads of their innocent offspring." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 235 "That sin can never be laid at my door,'' said her father, "for you have been raised differently from what most girls have been in your position. I have tried to raise you right, and bring you up in a manner that should fit you for any position that might fall to your lot, and I am not at all anxious for you to marry. I am selfish enough not to want you to leave me even for one day; but I know my time is short in this world, and when I am gone you will be left alone without a friend, and, perhaps, without a dollar. I may not be able to leave you even a home. It is a hard thing for me to say, daughter, and my poor heart is well-nigh broken, but it is true yes, it is true, and the only thing for you to do is to try and marry well. I can not bear the thought of my little Birdie being torn from her feathery nest to perch upon some leaf- less branch, to be beaten by the storms of this tempest- uous world." As he spoke the tears streamed down his withered cheek and fell upon Birdie's white hand resting upon her father's bosom. "My poor, dear darling!" said she, kissing his tear- stained cheeks, "how you are wearing and fretting your dear life out for my sake, when poor, simple I am not worth it. You have already done more than I could ever repay were I to live to be a hundred ; with that I am sat- isfied and grateful. Now, don't worry any more about your little Birdie, for I am well competent to take care of 236 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. myself, should it please God to take you from me, which I trust He will not until I am ready to accompany you to yours and my last resting-place. Now, I want you to un- lock your dear old heart and let me look right into it don't keep anything concealed, but throw open every chamber, parlor, bed-room, dining-room, and even the kitchen, and let me know everything that is going on. Do you hear me, papa? Can you not let me share your sorrows, when I have shared all your pleasures ? Tell me now, is it not that Scullcutter that has caused you all this trouble? Do you owe him money, papa?" " Yes, my child," said her father, "he is in possession of all I have; he has a mortgage on everything I possess, but said he would not close the mortgage, and would give me time to pay up my debts. To-day, when he was here, he confessed his love for you, and asked for your hand in marriage, saying that if you consented to become his wife he would not call on me for the money, and that I might retain my property. That is why I consented, should you care enough for him to marry him, though I knew he was not a suitable companion for you, Birdie, but it was all for your sake, my darling, all for your sake." " I would not marry him if he were worth ten millions ! " said Birdie, turning almost purple in the face ; " and should I ever become so low as to sell myself for money I will not be purchased by my grandfather ; that sin, how- ever, shall not rest upon my head so long as there is one A UEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 237 spark of true womanhood in my veins. Any woman who- will marry a man merely for his money is devoid of prin- ciple, and would be equal to almost any crime should her morals be tested." "You must not be too hard-on your own sex, my child," said the old doctor, laying his hand upon her head, for he looked upon woman as being a little lower than angels, and just above the head of man. " Woman's situation is a very perilous one," he added, with much gravity ; "if she be blessed with husband or father to protect her from the abuses of the world, the world smiles upon her and makes her an idol, but if she has neither, and no money to purchase friends, and be compelled to go out and work for her living, that moment the damnable finger of suspicion is pointed at her, it matters not how good and pure her life has been, and society is ready to cast her out. This is very hard for a proud, high-minded, and honorable woman to endure; and rather than bear the scorn and contempt of the world she will sell herself to some old man for his money that she may retain herself in society. I mean that numerous class of narrow-minded, little-souled people who can cover up a black deed with a gold dollar and go on smiling, and the world will smile back. At the same time, they would turn up their noses at a pocr but honorable woman, one who, perhaps, never knew how to do a mean act, and whose shoes they are not worthy to unlace." 238 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. "I suppose, then," said Birdie, " that when I go out to work for my living I will not be respectable." "You will not hold your same position in society," said her father. "Those, perhaps, that smile upon you now will only give you a slur." "Well," said she, with a sigh, "I shall never want any one to smile upon me again. I can never have any more confidence in any one save you and Veary, papa." "I did not mean to chill your heart against humanity, my child," said he, "for there are some good people in the world if you could only pick them out firm and sub- stantial without them the world would be of little con- sequence. Separate the wheat from the chaff and put it in separate piles upon the ground, in a few days the chaff will be dispersed, blown away by every passing breeze, while the wheat will remain firm, and should there come storms sufficient to scatter it to the four quarters of the world it will sprout up and bring forth good grain, while the chaff flies hither and thither, doing no good in the world, and finally rots and leaves no footprints behind to tell that it ever existed. Just so with the people of the world ; if you were to pick out all the good and sensible people and leave all the fools I doubt whether there would be enough left to tell the tale ; and should it ever fall to your lot to have to work for your living, bear this in mind : that it is the good and sensible people who will cry out God speed you ; they are the wheat, and those who look upon A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 239 you with scorn are the chaff, and will soon blow away. But it was not my intention to deliver a lecture this even- ing, and as you are pretty well posted upon the subject I will desist, with your permission." CHAPTER XIX. THE CHAMBER OF DEATH. Night had drawn its sable curtain, stained with gold, over the sleeping world ; the stars looked down in holy, solemn peace ; and the somber trees towering upward and lying heavily against the sky seemed to hold mystical converse with each other, and looked down upon the silent, mournful scene. The gurgling brooks murmured in tranquil measures on their way. There was a whispering of the leaves on which the breath of heaven played music to the birds that slumbered. The far-off sound of the katydids could be heard ; the crickets' notes, incessant and unmusical, tired the night. All nature seemed to sink in one grand repose, and misery and death took their part. "Time builds on the ruins itself has made. It destroys to renew, and desolates to improve. A wise and benevo- lent Providence has thus marked its progress in the moral as well as in the physical world. The tide which has borne past generations to the ocean of eternity is hasten- ing to the same doom the living mass now gliding down- ward to the shoreless and unfathomed reservoir." Change and decay are ever at work, and to-night have laid fin- (240) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 24! gers heavily upon the beautiful home of Birdie Sinclare. In one single night a heavy cloud, black and murky, has shut down, closing out all the sunshine and crushing a pure and tender heart. In the darkened room, through the closed blinds of which the pale rays of the moon are vainly striving to enter, lies Dr. Sinclare, cold and rigid. The sheet is reverently drawn across the motionless limbs ; the once handsome, quiet face is hidden ; all around is wrapped in solemn, unutterable silence the silence that belongs to death alone. A sense of oppressive calm is upon everything a feeling of loneliness, vague and shadowy. The clock has ticked its last an hour ago, and now stands motionless in its place. The world" without moves on unheeding; the world within knows time no more ; death reigns triumph- ant ; life sinks into insignificance. Once a little silver ray, born of the moon, fell in through some unknown chink, and cast itself gleefully upon th'e fair, white linen of the bed. It trembled vivaciously, now here, now there, in uncontrollable joyousness, as though seeking in its gayety to mock the grandeur of the King of Terrors. " Take them, O Death, and bear away Whatever thou canst call thine own; Thine image stamped upon this day Doth give thee that, and that alone. " Take them, O Grave! and let them lie Folded upon thy narrow shelves, 16 242 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. As garments by the soul laid by, And precious only to ourselves. " Take them, O Great Eternity, Our little life, 'tis but a gust That bends the branches of the trees, And trails its blossoms in the dust.'' When Fen Scullcutter received Birdie's refusal, he became so enraged that he closed the mortgage instantly, and without reservation. Everything was advertised to be sold at sheriffs sale, even the beautiful, peaceful home where Dr. Sinclare had spent the happy years of his boy- hood, the glory of his manhood, and the quiet, peaceful days of his old age. Like the sturdy oak that had withstood the storms of many years, and at last felled to the earth by the wood- man's ax, so he was stricken down by the heavy blow, crushed and broken. It was not for himself'he mourned his loss, but for the friendless child he had reared and had learned to love as his own; and all these years he had lived, and thought, and hoped but for her; and now, all is at an end. Never, until now, this moment, when hope has flown, and mon- ster death stares him in the face, did he know how freely, how altogether, he has lavished the entire affections of his heart upon her. From day to day faithful Birdie sat by her father's bedside, anticipating his every wish, and ad- ministering to his every want. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 243 "Birdie," said he, a few minutes before his death "come and sit where I can see you, my darling, where I can see your face ; I have something to say to you before I go, and I must say it quick; I can not die with this heavy weight upon my heart." Birdie took a seat upon the bed where he could look upon her face, stained by the traces of tears still wet upon her cheeks, and, like some dew-spangled flower, she looked more lovely in her tears. He raised his eyes and gazed tenderly upon her as she took his cold, white hand in hers, and said, "What weight can you have, papa, darling? You who are so good, so noble, so true the best of all men. Your mind is wan- dering, dear; it is only the fever that causes you to have those bad feelings. Now banish such thoughts, and try to sleep; you will feel better when you awake." " No, darling, I am in my right mind, but the uncertainty about your future life is the only weight that presses upon me," said the dying man with some excitement. " If you were provided for, I could die happy ; but it is hard to die and leave you, my darling, to fight this cruel world alone and unprotected you on whom I have lavished all the love and affection of my lonely heart you, Birdie, you ; " and he held out his arms as though he expected every moment he would be snatched away from her ere he could tell her all. She threw her arms around him, and laid her head upon 244 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. the pillow close to him, pressing her lips to his the soft, warm lips contrasted so painfully with those pale, cold ones they touched. So she remained for some minutes kissing him softly every now and again, and thinking hope- lessly of the end. She neither sighed nor wept nor made any outward sign of anguish. Unlike most people, she had realized to its full extent the awfulness of this thing that was about to befall her ; and the knowledge paralyzed her senses, ren- dering her dull with misery. "Papa, darling, do not think of me," said Birdie, in a voice so unnaturally calm as to betray the fact that she was making a supreme effort to steel herself against the betrayal of emotion of any kind; but in her heart she was weeping and moaning and giving herself up wholly to that grim monster despair. " Do not think of you, darling? " said the dying man, pressing her closer to his almost pulseless heart ; " it would be impossible, my little orphan ; the memory of your dear, sweet face will go with me to the better land, and I shall know you one day, from all the shining hosts of God." As the clock struck two, he solved or ceased to heed the engrossing question of life. The glorious mind, and the tried and faithful heart were nothing or immortal. In death, as in life, the face of Dr. Sinclare bore the impres- sion of that intellect which placed him in the rank with those great minds, the movers of the nation in the years gone by. The countenance wore a calm and peaceful ex- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 245 pression. The massive forehead, broad and smooth, betrayed no sign of the sufferings through which the body had passed. His death, so unexpected, created a feeling of sorrow throughout the country. The press of his own and other cities paid heartfelt, full, and lofty tribute to his memory. The funeral was the largest ever seen in the city. The remains were deposited in the family vault in Cave Hill ; a few remarks were made by the man of God, a prayer was offered, and the iron doors closed upon the cold, rigid form, to await the last summons which is to call him before the great Judge of the universe. Birdie lonely and sorrowfully returned to her desolate but once happy home though hers no longer ; but I trust that the glorious rays of the setting sun and the silvery gleam of the evening stars, which have so often witnessed the many happy days she has spent beneath that paternal roof, may still fall in streams of softest splendor upon her lonely pathway, and that white winged peace may hover around her while other scenes and other pursuits await her upon the journey of life. The blackest clouds but hide the sunshine; Look beyond and see the light, There's future pleasure in glad sometime ; Live on, and hope for days more bright. CHAPTER XX. THE CONFESSION OF A DYING MAN. The web of our story has now been woven, the piece nearly finished, and it is only necessary that the loose threads should be collected, so that there may be no un- raveling. In such chronicles as this, something no doubt might be left to imagination without serious injury to the narrative, but the reader, I think, feels a deficiency when, through tedium or coldness, the writer omits to give all the information which she or he possesses. To do this, we will have to take a leap backward of eighteen years, and not only in time but in distance. Eighteen years have been buried in the vault of time since we saw Dr. St. George on that sweet May evening lying a helpless mass upon his wife's grave. Eighteen years since his little crowing infant was snatched ruthlessly away from his protecting care and loving embrace, leaving him a heart-broken and desolate man. Eighteen years since the tragedy of sorrow fell between him and the dawning happiness of his life, though prosperity sits upon the house-top and proclaims the glory of his success, not only as an eminent physician, but in all his business rela- (246) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 247 tions, and to-day finds him one among the wealthy citizens of Kentucky. Yet all this does not bring contentment to his restless soul. There is only one thing alone that will bring joy to his heart, peace to his soul, and the glad light in his eyes, and that is, the restoration of his lost darling to see her face, to hear her voice, and feel her arms around his neck ; but he knows that will never be that he will never behold her face again, or hear her lips utter that blessed word, ''father." He had offered large sums of money for her recovery, but in spite of all that was said and done, she remained undiscovered. Months grew into years, and the same mystery prevailed. He was desperate at first his anguish and sorrow were pitiful to witness ; but after a time he grew passive in his despair, though he never relaxed in his efforts. Every six months the advertisement with the offer of reward was renewed ; every six months the story was retold in the papers. It had become one of the common topics of the day ; people talked of her strange disappear- ance, of the mysterious silence that had fallen over her. Then, as years passed on, it was agreed that she was dead. After years of bitter disappointment, of anguish and suspense, .of unutterable sorrow and despair, he resigned himself to the entire loss of his child. Then there came a letter to him one day, requesting him to come to his dying child. He went as quickly as possible, and before him lay a beautiful little girl, who was already embraced in the 248 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. arms of death, and erelong her little cold hands were fold- ed peacefully across her pulseless heart. He was told by the keeper of the house that it was his child, and how could he dispute it, when the little gold chain and locket with his wife's miniature was around its neck? He knew there was no disputing that, and he knew, too, that it was the same that had been placed around its neck upon the eve of their departure for the springs. After paying the man a large sum of money, he took the child to his own beautiful home and laid it to rest by the side of his wife, and planted flowers over her little grave; and the dark green ivy that trailed so gracefully around his wife's tomb soon embraced the marble slab of the little unknown. And all these years he believed that his little darling was sleeping beneath that little green mound beneath the roses; and often his friends would find him there in the still, quiet hours of the night pouring out his grief upon her little grave. One evening in May he was sitting alone in his office and thinking sadly of the past, the past that had brought him so much sorrow and had given him so little joy. It seems impossible, while looking on the surging cata- ract dashing itself in thunder on the rocks below, to real- ize that a few miles further it runs a smooth and rapid, rippling river between fair, green banks. So it is impos- sible at the time of a tragedy of life and death to realize that the currents of the surviving lives will but a brief A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 249 while hence run smooth and waveless again. Yet look, how from the whirlpool of the cataract the stream strug- gles free at last from the circling eddies, and bursts over and through the rocks until it gains the channel, where it flows on swiftly and smoothly a gurgling meadow-stream again. Dr. St. George's life had been like the struggling stream in the circling eddies; but he has weathered the storm, and ere many days he will clear the breakers and be safe from sunken rocks, and his life will flow on in an unruffled current to its utter peace. Before him lies a letter with no postmark, and written in an unknown hand. It had been left upon his table and the bearer had gone. He opened it and found there a few scrawls, which read as follows: "Dr. St. George: "DEAR SIR: At the request of John Nailar, who is now dying, I have written to you to come to his room immediately, which you will find at No. , in the fourth story of the building on street. He also requested me to say to you that he wished to make a dying confession to you. I would advise you to come immediately, as it may be concerning your lost child. Do not delay as he is passing away rapidly. I am the rector of Trinity Church, and his spiritual adviser. "M. W. WARWIN." Dr. St. George hastily folded the letter and placed it in his vest-pocket, and sprang into his buggy which was already at the door and drove through the streets like a madman, while a thousand conflicting emotions were throbbing and surging through his brain. 25O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. On a narrow, noisy, dirty street, up four flights of steps, in a gritty, gray, barren abode, where the rays of the glorious sun never streamed, or the songs of the birds were never heard, Dr. St. George found the dying man. He tapped gently upon the door, which was opened by the minister who said, ' ' I was very much afraid that you would be too late, doctor. He is nearly gone." Dr. St. George went up to the bed ; a thrill of horror ran through his frame as the dying man turned his blood- shot eyes up to him and held out his hand, which the doctor took in his own and said, ' ' What can I do for you, my man?" He motioned for him to sit down, which he did after giving him some stimulant which seemed to revive him and bring his departing spirit back to the world again. ' ' Now, " said Dr. St. George, ' ' I am ready to hear what you have to tell me, and you must tell me quick, for you are not long for this world. Take this pen," he con- tinued, turning to the minister, "and be kind enough to take note of every word. Write it plain and distinctly." "Raise my head a little higher," gasped the dying man, "and give me a little more of that wine." They did as he requested them, and took their seats near the bed ; he was very weak, and his breathing was loud and heavy. He began thus : " My name is John Nailar, and I am in my right mind. In the presence of Rev. M. \V. Warwin and Dr. St. George I make a full confession of the crime committed A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. .251 against Dr. St. George, eighteen years ago, by Fen Scull- cutter, of No. street, and myself. Eighteen years ago I came to this city an escaped convict from the peniten- tiary at Frankfort. I came with the intention of obtain- ing employment, but failed to get work, and just as I was leaving the city I was recognized by Fen Scullcutter, who knew me, and was aware that I was an escaped convict. I begged him not to betray me and I would try and live a better life. He promised me he would not if I would befriend him. ' I will do anything for you that lies in my power,' I replied. "'It is a neat little job," said he, 'but I don't want you to do it for nothing ; I will pay you well. Now, can I trust you ? ' " 'You can,' said I, for I was only too glad to find some means of making a few dollars, as I was nearly starved and bare of clothes. " 'Well,' said he, drawing a long breath and looking as if he was suffocating, ' I want you to steal Dr. St. George's child and place it in my hands, and the moment you do it I will give you one thousand dollars.' ' ' ' What in the name of all that is good and peaceable are you going to do with a baby? " said I, laughing; 'are you going to start a nursery, and run it on your own hook ? ' "'Ask no questions,' he answered, 'but do as I bid you, if you want the money.' 252 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. " ' I do want it! ' said I, 'and I know that I am a rascal, but blame me if I can see foul play used against an innocent child ! If you mean to put it out of the way, you will have to get some one else to do your dirty work, but if you are not going to harm the little thing, I am your man.' " ' The infant shall not be harmed; not a hair upon its head shall be hurt!' he replied. 'You see,' said he, ' Dr. St. George's child stands between me and a half mill- ion dollars. There was an old fool of an aunt who made her will and gave her entire fortune to this child And should this child die, then my child, who is a cousin to the former, would inherit the property.' " ' What do you intend doing with the baby ? ' said I. " 'I shall take it to some orphan asylum, out of this State, where it will be taken care of,' he replied. " ' I hate to do it,' said I, 'but I must have money ! ' " ' Don't act the fool ! ' said he, 'and you will get as much money as you want ; and I promise you the child shall not be hurt.' " ' I will do it ! ' I replied, ' but how am I to get it ? ' " ' I will put you in a way to get it,' said he, pulling out a Courier-Journal, and he read this advertisement : " ' WANTED A good, competent woman, to accompany a family to the springs, as nurse. Must come well recommended. Apply at the office of EUGENE ST. GEORGE.' "'Now,' said he, 'this is your time. Go and dress A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 253 yourself as a woman and apply for the situation. I will write you a recommendation and sign the fictitious name of some woman in Cincinnati. You understand ; and if you are successful in obtaining the situation, jump from the train at night, while the mother is asleep. I will find out what time she will leave, and the day before I will leave for Cincinnati, and will remain for several weeks on business you understand until the fuss blows over. No one will suspect me, of course, but I had rather not be here. The day before you leave you must write me where to meet you, and I will take you some men's clothes and the money.' " I did just as he told me to do, and I obtained the situ- ation and set out with Mrs. St. George to the White Sul- phur Springs, and just at the hour of two I leaped from the train with the infant in my arms. I did it so quickly I was not discovered, and at daybreak I reached the spot where I had written for him to meet me, but I failed to send the letter, and consequently he was not there. I remained until nine o'clock, when the little thing that I had taken from its mother's breast began crying for food. I laid it down upon a pile of straw, and went to a house not far off in search of something for it to eat, and when I returned the baby was gone. I heard a noise in the air, and looked up in time to see a large eagle bearing it above the trees in his claws. I closed my eyes and fell upon my knees and asked God to forgive me for the wrong I had 254 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. done the poor mother of that innocent babe, and I wept tears of sorrow and repentance, a thing I had not done since I was a babe upon my mother's knee ; for I had learned to love the little thing, it nestled its little head so lovingly and trustingly upon my breast, and smiled so sweetly up into my face. My conscience lashed me, and I would have given the thousand dollars, freely, to have laid it in its mother's arms. I heard of her death after that, and of its father's grief, and I could not remain where I had caused so much sorrow and anguish. I received the money from Scullcutter, and left the city; but it did not do me any good, for I got into a scrape, and it took every cent to get me out of it, and again I was out of money and out of work ; but the devil, who was always planning some way for me to make my living dishonorably, put a plan into my head. My dead sister's child, a little girl of seven years old, died while she was with me. I wrote for you to come, that your child was in my charge and was dying, and had been left in my charge by an unknown man who said he had taken it for revenge. Then I took the chain and locket that I had taken from your child's neck on the eve of your wife's departure for the springs, and placed it around the dying child's neck, for I knew you would not dispute that, for your wife's miniature was in it. You came and paid me liberally for my trouble, and carried the child home, buried it by the side of your wife. Your baby died by the eagle's claws." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 255 " O, God ! " cried Dr. St. George in a voice of despair, as he clasped his hand to his forehead and rushed from the room, leaving the dying man, who was stretching out his white, withered hands, imploring forgiveness ; but he neither heard nor heeded him, but rushed out in the open air, pale and ghost-like, leaving him to die without hearing that blessed word, "forgiveness." It is needless to add what followed. Dr. St. George knew his prayers were answered that the avenging angel had come at last. Before the sun had hid itself behind the church-spires, Fen Scullcutter knew his doom, and the dying man had gone to receive his verdict from the great Judge of the universe. That same evening Fen Scullcut- ter was arrested for the abduction of Dr. St. George's child, and lodged in prison to await his trial, which would send him to the State prison, where he now lies, serving his term of twenty-five years. Veary Carlisle, the little boy who was spurned from his door with curses and in- sults, was the attorney for the plaintiff; and never did a lawyer plead with more zeal and eloquence for the convic- tion of the man who had been the ruin and downfall of his father, sending him to a drunkard's grave, and leaving his destitute and suffering mother to die with a broken heart. "I will avenge," saith the Lord. CHAPTER XXL NOT DEAD, BUT LIVING A HAPPY SURPRISE ENGAGEMENT. In the bay window of the beautiful chamber that once called her mistress sits Birdie Sinclare all alone, with downcast eyes and face grave and sorrowful. She is dressed in deep mourning now, which is very becoming to her fair complexion and sunny hair. Three weeks have passed since that lonely girl followed in the sad procession that bore the form of her beloved father to Cave Hill Cemetery, and stood by the open grave, and heard the solemn sound of the clods as they fell upon his coffin-lid. Three weeks have passed, yet she still hears the echo of that hollow sound, and hears the grinding sound of the carriage, wheels as she looked her last upon the little mound that marks her father's lonely resting-place ; and with a sickening dread she looks forward to the future that still lies before her. It seems to her that she can view, lying stretched out in the far distance, a lonely, cheerless road, over which she must travel, whether she will or not a road bare, desolate, dusty, and companionless ; devoid of shade, or rest, or joy. " He that loses hope," says Con- gree, "may part with anything." To Birdie it seemed (256) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 257 as though hope and she had parted company forever. The past had been so dear, with all its vague beliefs and uncer- tain dreamings all too sweet for realization that the present appeared unbearable. The veryair seemed dark, the sky leaden, the clouds sad and lowering. The young soldier endures the fatigues and privations of the march gallantly, and looks eagerly forward to the crash of the meeting armies, but not until the storm of shot sweeps the plains and the death-dealing fire blazes through the pall of smoke can he know how he will actu- ally bear himself in the hour of battle. Let no human creature, until his or her death, be called happy. Let no human creature, till his or her death, be accounted strong. " Thank God, it is finished ! " said she, as she put the last stroke of her pen upon a manuscript that lay on the table before her, and which she had bent over all night and written with untiring energy. At times she would be oppressed with vague, lonely feelings perhaps, after all, her book would be unsuccessful and a sense of utter des- olation would come over her, and for a time overpower her ; and with a brain on fire and a heart half broken she would push from her the half-finished sentence and bury her face in her hands and break into low but heavy weeping. " Papa, papa ! " was the common refrain of all her sor- rowful dirges the sadder that no response ever came to the lonely cry. 17 v BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Of our dead, if we would believe them happy, we must also believe tfiat they have forgotten us, else how, when they think of our bleeding hearts, could they keep their bliss so perfect? Mournful as Mariana in her moated grange, the poor child lamented, while sobs shook her slender frame. Then hope, the friend of the sorrowful, would come with its healing balm, and she would instinctively feel that no matter what obstacles might be thrown in her way she would overcome them no obstruction should hinder her in the course she had undertaken to pursue. Nay, diffi- culties would but increase her steadfastness and make her more energetic and more persevering; and, as if aroused from some ugly dream, she would raise her head with a startled look upon her face, and take up her pen again and write eagerly and without premeditation. She tells herself that she will be a brave little Amazon, and will bear the brunts and bluffs of the world, and battle with the attacks of poverty, starvation, toil, and disap- pointments courageously with her frail little hands; that she is strong enough to face the whole world, and that she will not become disheartened anymore. "I am now a citizen of the world," she said, "and have no place I can call my home, but I care not for this world's cold charity; I will laugh in its face! " .Grief and misery had already embittered and generated distrust in her young bosom ; she is tired, too ; all day she A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 259 has gone through wearying, household labor, trying to get everything in order for the sale that was to come off the next week, and which would rob her of her beautiful home which had ever been her special pride and admi- ration. We often pity the poor because they have not leisure to mourn their departed relatives, and necessity obliges them to labor through their severest afflictions ; but is not active employment the best remedy for overwhelming sor- row the surest antidote for despair? It may be a rough ccmforter; it may seem hard to be harassed with the cares of life when we have no relish for its enjoyment to be goaded to labor when the heart is ready to break and the vexed spirit implores for rest only to weep in silence. But is not labor better than the rest we covet? and are not those petty, tormenting cares less hurtful than a con- tinual brooding over the great afflictions that oppress us? Besides, we can not have cares and anxieties and toils without hope, if it be but the hope of fulfilling our joyless task, accomplishing some needful project or escaping some further annoyance. In most cases trouble, when it comes, is easier to bear than we anticipate. After being tormented for a long time with dread and apprehensions, after the crisis is past and the blow has fallen, we resign ourselves to it with wonderlul p:itience. This is particularly true in respect to pecuniary losses. The man who tossed lor many a weary 26O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. month on an uneasy and sleepless couch may lie down in pleasant dreams after the crash is over. There is no agony like that of suspense. Again, there is nothing gained by meeting trouble half way. Every person is certain that sooner or later certain things must happen to them, which they have cause to dread, but it would be very unwise to allow these fore- shadowings of the future to envelop our daily walks with gloom. We know that within a limited number of years we must either have closed our eyes upon all that is fair and beautiful here, or else live on beyond the allotted span of life. Live for the present as far as possible; trouble may lie in the future, but wait until it comes before you fret. What is life when stripped of all its disguises ? A thing to be desired it can not be. With Birdie it seemed almost at an end. An unsatisfactory thing, too, at its best a mere glimpse into the world of "might have been." The windows leading from Birdie's room into the green veranda are thrown open ; the dew is glittering still like a shower of diamonds on the white blossoms of the syringa that climbs around the window-frame; the early sun glints into the room and twines his golden fingers lov- ingly amid the petals of the white flowers which Birdie had just gathered and laid upon the table, and which will soon be woven into wreaths and festoons, to be laid with gentle hands upon the grave of that beloved father who had pre- ceded her to the better land ; for sweet May had come A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 26l again with its songs of birds, and sparkling fountains, and to-day is decoration-day. And as she sits there twining the tender flowers with her tiny fingers, a spiritual fire seems to blaze in her eyes, which wear so divine a look that it seems as though the soul were so far stronger than the body that it was but tarrying for a day before it spread its eternal wings a captive too strong for the frail bars of life to imprison. All around her seemed hallowed by the ineffable shadow and glory of that parental love that has no more to say to earth a love that would last while memory lasted a memory that would endure during life. Now and then a pearly drop would trickle down her cheeks and mingle with the dewdrops upon the petals of the flowers, as she wove them artistically into a wreath. She had finished her manuscript long before the clock struck five, but the thoughts of the coming morrow crowded the sleep from her weary brain, and she sought her beloved garden and plucked the dew-spangled flowers, just as Aurora's rosy light was making dim the mild, mel- low ray of the moon and stars, that had kept their vigil so faithfully as she traced upon the white pages in letters of fire the memory of happier days. After completing her work, she arose and went down to the dining-room where a fragrant steam curled from the silver spout of the tall coffee-pot ; the covered dishes look- ing temptingly suggestive, and the crisp, hot toast so beau- tifully brown ; but Birdie had no taste for anything. She 262 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. stirs her coffee, and breaks up some pieces of toast in her plate but touches nothing herself, though she pours milk into the saucer and sets it down for the cat, and flings crumbs on the veranda for the birds. "Why don't you eat something yourself, Miss Bir- die?" said her maid, looking pityingly upon her mistress. "You can not live without eating," she continued, " and I do hate to see dem roses leave your cheeks ; you don't know how it hurts my heart," and the poor negro sighed as she took the food from the table untouched, and carried it to the kitchen to be devoured by the hungry servants. "I am glad some one cares for me, Sallie, if it is only a humble servant," said Birdie, rising, "I shall not feel quite so desolate now." "Ah, Miss Birdie," said Sallie, with a shake of her head, "there is plenty who would be glad enough to care for you if you would only let them." "You are better informed of the fact than I am, "said Birdie, smiling; "pray where did you get your informa- tion?" Sallie hesitated awhile, thinking perhaps she was going too far, but Birdie's eyes were fixed upon her with such a searching gaze she had to say something. "Joe told me," she said; "but, Miss Birdie, I would not have you to say anything about it for Joe's sake, be- cause his young master would be displeased if he knew he was carryin' news." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 263 "You are talking problems," said Birdie; "pray express yourself. Who are Joe and his young master?" "Why, don't you know, Miss Birdie," said Sallie, " Mr. Elmore, and Joe is his waiting boy, who goes wid me sometimes." "Well, what about Mr. Elmore?" exclaimed Birdie, questioningly. " Why, Joe told me if it had not been for Miss Birdie Sinclare, his young master would not leave so soon for the foreign countries, and said that you were going to marry that Mr. Scullcutter, and he could not bear to be so near you and see you the wife of another, and so he leaves to-day, and he says the old judge's heart is well nigh broken." ' ' I wonder who told him I was going to marry Fen Scullcutter?" said Birdie, more to herself than to the servant. "Why, Mr. Scullcutter told Mr. Elmore himself, and said that the doctor had given his full consent to the mar- riage, for Joe heard Mr. Elmore tell his father so one day when they were riding out together." ' ' I know now why Veary Elmore spoke to me as he did the other morning when he told me good-bye ; I did not understand it then, 'I hope the day will never come that you will be compelled to look back with regret on one single act of your life, and should the time ever come when you will stand in need of a friend, look to me as you would 264 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. a brother, ' " said she, as she left the house for her usual morn- ing walk before she went to the cemetery. "A brother," said Birdie, her lips trembling, "when all these months I have loved him with all the strength of my heart," and she blushed at the confession, when only the birds and the flowers were her confessors; and the only answer that came to her was the dull echo of her own sad thoughts. On she walked, not knowing or caring where she went; heeding not the flight of time or the loveliness of the morning, for it was a glorious day, and was worth a whole lifetime of common life. The trees were all in leaf, the great, swaying boughs seemed to thrill with life, the leaves were of the loveliest green, so fresh, so tender, and delicate in hue, as they clapped their tiny hands in honor of the glorious queen of the season, for the stern old monarch had yielded his scepter, and the snow and ice were as a dream that had been told. The honey-bees were floating from flower to flower, their golden belts glittering and flashing in the glorious sunlight that the god of day had flung broadcast upon the loving earth. High and clear and exquisite rose the notes of the birds, one above the other, each vying in beauteous harmony with the last until one's very heart ached for love and ad- miration of this sweetness. All nature had arisen from its long slumbers, and beauty walked in bravest dress. There was the hawthorn in robes of white ; the laburnum A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 265 dropping their golden tresses ; the lilac tossing its fragrant plumes ; and over the whole the knightly chestnuts were brooding like protecting angels. Under the trees the green moss grew thick and rich ; the yellow cowslip, the pale sweet primrose, and delicate bluebells made a carpet such as the hand of man could not weave. As Birdie was just hiding herself from view by the heavy foliage as she tripped through this flowery meadow, a young man was seen riding gracefully up the gravel walk that led to her home. A strange, wild, but sweet expression rested upon his face as he placed his hand upon the door-knob and gave an impatient jerk at the bell. 11 Is Miss Birdie at home?" he asked, excitedly. To which question the butler replied that Miss Birdie was at home, but was out taking a walk, he believed, but would send for her. To this the young man objected, saying that he would go in search of her himself if he would direct him, which the butler did, and he set out in the direction Birdie had gone, whistling well, he did not know what, for the troubled waters of his soul were stirred, never to know their perfect peace until fate should again bring him face to face with the girl whom fate had given him a right to claim, and whom fate had taken away. His own little Birdie, the fair-haired baby whom he had risked his own life to save from the eagle's bloody fangs, and xvhose baby head had rested upon his boy shoulder ; and with untiring 266 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. energy rocked it to sleep in his own arms, and by the bed- side of his dying mother knelt together and poured out their grief upon each other's breast. On he went, thinking how she would receive him, what would she say, how would she act, when he told her who he was? His face was flushed, and a glad light was in his eyes ; he never looked so handsome in his life. "I have a better right to her than any man living," he exclaimed, as he hurried along. "I will claim that right, I will be her protector if she will let me. I will be to her as I once was father, mother, brother, and sister. Noth- ing but her own sweet will shall separate her from me." On he went unmindful of the glory around him, know- ing nothing, heeding nothing save the footprints of her he was tracing until he glided into a region wherein only fairies should have a right to dwell. Far as the eye could reach myriads of bluebells spread themselves, and as the wanton wind stooped to caress them they shook their tiny bells with coquettish grace, and flung forth their perfume to him with a lavish will. " Is it even possible to find her here in such an obscure place as this, where positively everything seems to be playing hurly burly, making a perfect hurrah's nest, so one could not see farther than one's nose ? Perhaps after all she is not here, but has returned to the house by another direction and is now . " The sentence was never finished, for suddenly across A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 267 the flowers and ferns, there came to him a fresh, sweet voice that thrilled him to his very heart. "It is she," and there in the distance he could see her sitting with her golden, coquettish locks playing hide-and- seek with Euros round a sun-kissed corner of a hanging rock. She was leaning forward, having taken her knees well into her embrace. Her hat was lying upon the grass at her feet. She was dressed in deep mourning, with a ruche of white crepe at her neck and sleeves. Clear and sweet her voice rose on the wind, and reached his ear and moved him as no other voice ever had or will ever again have power to move. We have met, we have loved, we have parted, To forget thee, my darling, I can never, For the love our childhood hath cherished The cold hand of death can not sever. The kind wind brought the tender, passionate song to him and repeated it in his ears as it hurried onward. How exactly the words suit her ! He says them over and over again to himself, almost losing the rest of the music which she is still breathing forth to the morning air, and which is caught up by the birds and echoed as they stop their own songs to listen. He is quite close to her now, so close that he can see a pearly drop trembling in her violet eyes that tear had come from a fountain that had been stirred by Memory's 268 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. finger, touching the heart-strings which had been set to music by sorrow's tuning-fork. On this morning she had been thinking of Veary El- more, of his departure to Europe, of the months and years that would roll between ere they met again, and perhaps, never. She knew now that he loved her, that his heart was wholly hers, and that Fen Scullcutter was the cause of his not telling her of his love ; and there arose a bitterness in her heart for the man who had caused all her sorrow. She thought, too, of Veary Carlisle, her little foster-brother whose bravery had made for him a death-bed beneath the dark, deep waters of the Ohio. "If he had lived, I now would have a friend and brother," she said, mournfully. " O, how I would love him ! Dear, dear Veary, how I begrudge you your heav- enly home ! " " Do not begrudge to heaven what it does not claim," said a gentle and subdued voice in her ear. She raised her head, and her large, sorrowful eyes fell upon Veary Elmore's splendid form. She sprang to her feet, but be- fore she could speak he had her enfolded in his arms. She tried to release herself, but he held her with an iron grasp, as he exclaimed, "Thank God; found at last, found at last! My lost Birdie has at last fluttered down upon my bosom. " Poor Birdie was frightened. She thought Veary El- more had gone mad, and expected every moment to be A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 269 crushed to pieces. She disengaged herself, however, amid many blushes, and the pallor of her cheeks showed her repressed agitation. "What do you mean, Mr. Elmore?" said she, indig- nantly ; " how dare you take me in your arms, just as if I were a little child?" And she turned to fly from him. He had quite regained his self-control by this time, and, having conquered his emotion, spoke dispassionately : "Darling, don't leave me; speak to me; forgive me; I should have told you in a different manner from what I did, but I could not help it ; I was so happy. When you know all, you will not be angry with me." " What have you to tell me ? " said she, gently, for she saw how deeply he was hurt, and her blue eyes looked up mournfully into his so mild, so sweet, so impressive, and once so proud and tender with such deep sadness in their rich depths. " Sit down, and I will tell you," said he ; " it is a long story, and will take me some time to get to the sequel." As one who, seeing her destiny wrapping itself about her, fold by fold, sits down stunned and powerless, so Birdie sat just where he bade her sit. There was silence for a moment ; he did not know how, nor where, to begin, fearing that she would doubt his being her long-lost brother. He wanted to convince her, however, in the beginning. " Do you know this miniature? " he asked, holding up 27O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. before her bewildered gaze a miniature which he had taken from his breast-pocket. "Yes," Birdie replied, a flood of crimson spreading over her face, and then fading away, leaving it an ashy whiteness ; " it is Veary Carlisle, my little adopted broth- er, who was drowned in the Ohio river, when he was a little boy, trying to save some little children from drown- ing," and she pressed the miniature to her lips and kissed it again. "It is so strange," she continued; "I was thinking of him this evening. Did you know him, Mr. Elmore ? have you ever seen him ? where did you get this picture ? O, it is so much like him ; dear, dear Veary, how I long for your love and protection ! It seems that I can see him now, just as he looked on that cold, bitter morning, when he took me in his arms, and kissed me good-bye. It was the last time I ever saw him, but his face has been with me all these years, and, though it pre- ceded me to the spirit land, I shall surely know it from all the shining throng." " Have you believed all these years that your brother Veary was dead ? " asked Veary Elmore, with a tremor in his voice, while his lips trembled like an aspen-leaf. ' ' Yes, " said Birdie ; ' ' why do you ask that question ? " ' ' Because your brother is not dead ; he still lives, and loves you with all a brother's love." " You say he still lives ! do you know where he is, Mr. Elmore? tell me, quick, or I shall go mad." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 2/1 " He is sitting by your side, my dear girl. I am Veary Carlisle, your long-lost brother." "O, Veary! my brother! not dead, but living, " and the next moment she lay prostrate in her brother's arms. She was trembling like a frightened child ; her white lips sprung apart, the blue eyes had a strange, wild look as she raised her face, so white and beautiful, to his, and laughed a strange, unnatural laugh, and said : " I thought you had gone mad, but it is I. Can it be possible that I have brooded over my sorrows until they have driven me mad? There are strange turns in life, I know fortune plays us hard tricks fate has unexpected things in store, but this can not be, that you, Veary Elmore, are that brother I worshiped so fondly," and she sprang out of his arms, and stood gazing for a moment in his lace. " O, Birdie, darling, it is true; it is neither a dream nor a fancy, but truth. I am that Veary who climbed the rugged mountain to save you from the eagle's bloody claws. It was in my arms my dying mother laid you, and, with the tears streaming down her sunken cheeks, said: 'To your tender care I intrust my adopted child, and your adopted sister. Take her, and promise that you will love her and protect her so long as you both live. She will help to strengthen your energies, and you will have something to live for and \vork for. And God grant that she may prove a blessing to you, and that your future lives may be full of sunshine and happiness." 272 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Birdie did not dispute it now. Though young at the time, she remembered that dying mother's face, and her words have often repeated themselves again and again when Veary's image would rise up before her. She was now convinced, and, with a wild cry of joy, she stretched out her arms, and exclaimed : " It is Veary 1 it is Veary! O, my brother, my friend and preserver! why have you stayed away from me all these years ? I who needed you so much." And the poor girl buried her face in her hands and wept tears of joy, such as she never shed before. 41 Lay your head upon my breast, little darling," said he, "for it is your rightful place;" and, with a brother's tender emotion, he drew her curly head upon his bosom, where it had so often rested in years gone by, as her baby arms clung lovingly around his neck. "Dear Veary," she murmured, winding her arms more closely around his neck. " I feel that I don't deserve all this happiness, but God is good, and He has sent you to me just at the time I most need you ; " and, looking up with the sweet content of a little child, she continued : "And you will be my brother still, and will let me call you brother? " "My darling," he exclaimed, passionately, and, pressing her more closely to his heart, and gazing down in her puf e sweet face, ' ' as long as there is one spark of true manhood in my heart, or as long as life's crimson A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 273 current throbs through my veins, I will shield and protect you ; will watch over you with more than a brother's ten- der care nothing shall separate us again, nothing but death or your own free will and, if need be, go forth and fight for you as did the knights of old for those they loved, until just and mighty Death, whom none can advise or stay, enfolds me in his icy arms. I claim that right. And that angel mother in heaven, could she speak, would tes- tify to what I now say, and who this moment must surely be looking down with tender solicitude upon two hearts that have lived and met to bless her dear memory." He leaned his head a little, and looked into her eyes the beautiful star-like eyes that smiled back so calmly into his own, so mild and yet so full of fire eyes that had power to charm him as no other had ever been able to do. He stooped down and pressed his lips to her own. For one brief moment he held her in his arms. This em- brace was but the sealing of a fresh, new love between them a linking more firmly of the old, sweet tie that love endured so long. " It will seem so funny to call you brother," said she, smiling up into his face ; " so strange to me at first, but I shall be so happy to hear you call me sister; call me it now, so I can hear how it sounds." "My darling," said he, and his voice trembled, "can you not give me a warmer place in your heart than that of a sister? I can not be satisfied, I can not be contented, 18 274 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. with a sister's love. The pure, trusting love of a wife is the only love that will reconcile me. I love you, Birdie, and from the first moment I met you, I have lived with your image in my heart. Every beat of my pulse, every thought of my mind, is for you. I have learned to love you with all the strength of my sou}, and for your dear sake I would lay down my life." " But you are my brother, Veary." ''In name only, my darling, " said he, "for you have not one drop of my blood in your veins. Remember, you are my sister by adoption only." ' ' Well, who am I, Veary ? and what am I ? For all these years I have been a mystery to myself. I want to know so much who my parents were. If they are living, perhaps, I may find them, and, if they are dead, I will want to know them in heaven, and I won't know whom to ask for," she said, smiling. " My darling," said he, " I am afraid that is a mystery that will never be solved. But it matters not with me who you are, nor what you are; it is enough for me to love you, and to know that I am loved in return. There is one thing I am confident of, you have pure and noble blood running through your veins, for blood will show, always. But, darling, we will discuss that some other time, to-morrow, perhaps. Now tell me if you will be my wife. Do not keep me in suspense, for every moment is an hour of cruel torture to me." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 2/5 She looked at him for a moment, and then with perfect trust and confidence she slipped her little white hand into his, and said: " Dear, dear Veary! so noble! so brave ! and so true ! I am yours ; take me and I will try to be worthy of your love. You have a better right to me than any one living, and I shall endeavor to spend the remainder of my poor life in the promotion of your happiness. I give you my hand my heart you have already for you are my first and only love." With tender emotion he drew her to him, and there in nature's gallery of art there in that sweet, green, silent kingdom, where the voice of God is heard in the ripple of the water, the rustle of the leaves, the song of the birds, the music of the wind he pressed the seal of their en- gagement upon her lips, with a kiss as pure and holy as heaven itself. CHAPTER XXII. FOUND AT LAST IN THE CITY OF THE DEAD ; OR THE BABY IN THE EAGLE'S NEST. The baby morn has thrown aside its dew-spangled robe and has grown to perfect strength, and is making rapid strides toward rest and evening. A tender stillness reigns over everything ; bright flashes from Titian's fiery crown come and go ere one catch them dart through the open windows of the carriage, and tremble with delight upon the betrothal ring which glitters upon Birdie's finger, and falls in shining showers around the happy couple whose hearts are already overflowing with its bright effulgence. The beautiful bays, which carry with so much pride this happy couple, are full of life and spirit, and the sound of their well shod hoofs echoes through the cliffs and o'er the dales, as they play upon the smooth, hard turnpike which leads to the cemetery* at Cave Hill, where they are bear- ing their young mistress, for the purpose of bestowing her floral offerings upon the grave of her beloved father. They were late, too, for time with its rapid wheel does not pause in its flight to listen to the vows of two loving hearts, though in their happiness they had forgotten the whirl of this great revolving wheel until the clock in the (276) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 277 steeple rang out twelve long strokes, which reminded Birdie of her duty to the dead. " My carriage is already waiting," said she, " and if we hurry we shall get there in time." Long before they reached the cemetery the long lines of carriages could fee seen, and the perfume of the dying flowers was wafted to them as they passed through the gate and moved slowly up the gravel walks that wound de- viously through the beautiful city of the dead. Present- ly the carriage stopped near Dr. Sinclare's lot, and Veary assisted Birdie from the carriage and opened the little iron gate which inclosed the lot, and Birdie was about to enter, when her eyes fell upon a beautiful wreath of flowers lying upon her father's grave. She paused for a moment, and looked up into Veary's face, then she entered and sank upon her knees by the grave and burst into tears. "They thought I had forgotten him." she said, trying to stifle her emotion ; "I am sorry I was so late. It was some true friend I know, who has laid his offering upon his dear resting-place! I wonder who it was!" and she stooped down and pressed the flowers to her lips. " Look Veary, how beautiful," she continued, kissing them again and again, "and they are so much prettier than mine." Birdie had no idea that Veary's hands were the ones that had placed the flowers there, for he had been with her all the morning, and she looked astonished when the truth was revealed to her. 278 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. After they had finished their sacred duty to the dead, they took their seats upon the grass beneath a spreading tree, and Veary explained to Birdie why it was that he had placed his floral offering there so early that morning. "I knew you would be here," he began, "and I did not want to meet you ; and besides I expected to leave on the eleven o'clock train for Europe, and I had no idea of ever seeing you again in this life, my little darling; for I thought you were going to marry that Scullcutter, and 1 had much rather have seen you laid away in all your maiden purity than to have seen you the wife of that man. I thought once that I would go to you and give you his history, then I persuaded myself to believe that we were all in the hands of fate ; that she bore us around upon her gilded wings, and whenever we reached our destination she would drop us, whether on dry land or in a duck pond." " Who told you that I was going to marry him? " said Birdie, thinking all the while of what the servant had told her that morning. ."Whyhe told me himself," replied Veary, "besides he gave me to understand that Dr. Sinclare had given his full consent to your marriage, and that is why I never asked you to be my wife ; but after I found out that you were my own little Birdie, I felt that I had a right to pro- tect you, and if possible break up that miserable match, for he was not worthy of you ; but I found my darling as free as a wild bird in the forest." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 279 " But, Veary, you never did tell me how you came to find me out," exclaimed Birdie, '' it seems such a mystery to me, and that photograph ; where did you get it? for it was the very same that I had in my locket." "Well, tell me first," said he, " how you came by the locket, for it has been in my possession ever since the day I heard that you were dead. I had given it to the jewelry man to fix, and that same morning I stopped in and got it to take to you, and I have worn it near my heart ever since because it was yours, and I have so often wished it was your own photograph instead of mine ; that I could have looked in your dear eyes instead of gazing at my own horrid shadow. But now 1 feel thankful that it was my photograph instead of yours, .for it has been instru- mental in finding you ; perhaps, had it been your own, you would not have thought of having it painted. And I feel very grateful to that good father of mine, Judge Elmore, to whom I am in. debt for my appellation, for thinking enough of me to send me around to Rue's gallery to have my photograph taken before leaving for Europe." ' ' Ah, yes ! " exclaimed Birdie, " I know now, the mys- tery is unraveled; you recognized the painting at Rue's." "The mystery may be unraveled for you," exclaimed Veary, laughing, " but not for me, for you have not told me how you came by that locket yet." "Well, I can very easily do that," she said. "You lost it and I found it." 28O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. " Where did you find it, Birdie, darling? I knew that I had lost it somewhere." "I found it in a hen's nest," exclaimed Birdie, laugh- ing, ' ' and it seems very suspicious, Veary, dear ; I had no idea that you were robbing my hen's nest all the while, though I knew you were fond of eggs." " Well, well, that is a good joke,' said he, smiling and pinching her cheeks. ' ' I remember that old hen's nest now," he continued, "I was passing there one morning and heard a noise in the bushes and stooped down to see what it was, and 1 suppose that I dropped it then." " Well, do tell me something about the painting," ex- claimed Birdie, "it all seems so romantic, it is as good as a novel ; and, by the way, it will just give a nice finishing touch to my new novel which I finished last night." "Better wait until we get married before you com- plete it," said Veary, smiling down into her face. " O, I will leave that much for the reader to imagine." "Well," said he, "I will tell you about the painting. In the first place it is perfect ; the painting is exquisite. I would have known it amid ten thousand faces. At first I could not believe my own eyes, or at least I tried not to believe them, and tried to persuade myself to believe that it was only a delusion, when the photographer came up and said, ' You seem to admire that painting, Mr. Elmore, and well you may, for it belongs to the prettiest girl in the county.' A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 28 1 "'Who does it belong to?' said I, and in my heart I blessed him for those words, for I knew there would be an opportunity for me to find out who the owner was. " 'It belongs to Miss Birdie Sinclare,' he replied, turn- ing it so the light could fall upon it; 'it is her adopted brother who was drowned in the Ohio when quite a boy.' "'Did she tell you his name?' I asked; 'I think I know the boy. ' " ' His name is on the back,' said he, turning it over; and, with an eagerness I had never experienced before, I read my own name Veary Carlisle. This was enough ; I knew then that the beautiful and gifted Miss Sinclare, whom I had worshiped, and whom I was then running away from, never to see again, was my own little Birdie; that the grave had given up its dead for all the while I thought that you were dead that you had been consumed by the flames." "The flames! " exclaimed Birdie, "what flames?" "Why, darling, is it possible that you never knew what a narrow escape you had with your life ? Were you not there when the cottage was burned ? " "Why, no!" exclaimed Birdie, excitedly, "I ran away from that old woman one night, and went to the river to try and find you ; for she told me, that same day, that you were drowned in the Ohio, and that she was going to take me to New Orleans, and buy an organ, and make me play on the streets for money ; and she had every- 282 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. thing packed up, and was going to take me away the next morning, and that is why I ran away." "Well, well!" said Veary, shuddering, "you had a narrow escape, my darling ; for on that same night the cot- tage was burned, and she was consumed in the flames, and the neighbors told me that you were burned up in the house, and " "Were you very sorry, Veary?" said Birdie, stopping him in the middle of his sentence. "Sorry!" he exclaimed, half vexed at her question. " It came very near being the death of me ; and if it had not been for that man yonder, I now would have been in my grave. And, by the way, if things had not turned out as they did, you now would have been his adopted daughter." "Who is that, Veary?" said she, "his face is so familiar to me ; I have seen it either asleep or awake ! " "It ought to be familiar to you," he said, teasingly, " when you used to go in his office so much to beg, when that old hag sent you out on that mission." "Is it possible?" said Birdie, turning white in the face, for every event in her past life seemed to come up before her. "What is his name, Veary? for I have forgotten it; I know I used to call him Mr. Doctor." " Dr. St. George," said Veary, "and he is one of the best men that ever lived, except my own father, Judge Elmore." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 283 "Yes," said Birdie, "he is a dear, good man, and I feel just like going up and giving him a good hug." "You shall have that pleasure," said Veary, laughing; "for he is coming now, and I am going to introduce you to him." "Not as the little beggar girl, Veary," cried Birdie, ' ' surely you will not tell hirn about that, Veary. Why, he would not even respect me, and " But before she could finish her sentence Dr. St. George o was shaking hands with Veary. "The judge and I have been in search of you all the morning," said^ the doctor, "and as we were unsuccessful in our labors, we came to the conclusion that you had been abducted. And I see," he added, with a twinkle in his eye, "that our surmises were right." "Yes," replied Veary, laughing, "and by a bird of the fairest plumage. Was father very uneasy ?" he added. "Yes," said the doctor, "he was very uneasy, as he expected you back to take your leave for Europe on the eleven o'clock train. And, by the way, I am glad that you have postponed your trip, for I have some very impor- tant business with you, Veary something, too, that will surprise you very much. I can't tell you now, but come to my office as soon as you have an opportunity." "And I have a surprise for you, too, doctor," said Veary, turning to Birdie, who was blushing from the edge of her hair to the tip of her chin. " Let me present you 284 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. to Miss Birdie Sinclare, who is soon to be Mrs. Veary El- more!" exclaimed Veary, bowing low, and laughing at poor Birdie's discomfiture, as the blushes chased each other down her cheeks and behind her ears. But she soon recov- ered herself, and grasped Dr. St. George's hand firmly, as he exclaimed, " I am glad to have the honor of your ac- quaintance, Miss Sinclare ! I have had the pleasure of meeting you once, though it was under very painful cir- cumstances. I think you are the young lady who came so near being drowned some time ago," he added. "Yes, sir," said Birdie; "are you the physician who was on board the steamer that night ? " " It was I who had the honor and pleasure of restoring you to life, Miss Sinclare," Dr. St. George replied, and turning to Veary, he said, mischievously, "She came very near being the bride of Death, and your rival would have been a stern old monster. It is natural that she should feel very dear to you after having such a struggle with such a deadly foe, to win her. You will allow me to con- gratulate you, Miss Sinclare," he added, turning to Birdie. " I believe every girl has a hero in her imagination, but it is very few who have a real, genuine hero, such as you ha,ve one that will scale the heavens or divide the waters of the mighty deep for her sake." " I think that he has doubly paid for me! " Birdie ex- claimed. "That was not the first time that he saved my life!" Then she blushed; for she thought of the little A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 285 beggar girl, who had sat upon his knee and called him Mr. Doctor, and had received alms more than once from his hands. She did not want him to know that she Birdie Sinclare had ever received alms at his hands ; that she had ever been a little street beggar, and now she knew that the way was open for Veary to let the cat out of the wallet, and he would do it, too, in spite of all her entrea- ties ; the secret which she had kept so long would now be divulged. "Is it possible?" said the doctor, with a look of sur- prise, and eyeing her from head to foot ; perhaps he was thinking of his own little one ; we can't tell ; he might have been thinking of his dead wife, for her image was stamped upon the face of the fair young girl before him. Turning to Veary, he added, with a smile, "Mr. El- more, you certainly need promotion. Why have you kept your gallantry and bravery such a profound secret? Most of the young men would have taken great pleasure in re- lating it to newspaper reporters." "I had two reasons," said Veary; "first, I did not think that any one would believe me, and, second, I was afraid some one would believe me and claim her ; and I was selfish enough to want to keep her, after risking my own life to save her. I was but a small boy then, and did not know how to make a sacrifice of my feelings. But before I relate my little narrative, which is founded on facts, let me take a leap a few years back, and I will give you 286 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. that little surprise I promised you awhile ago," and he looked at Birdie, who was blushing and shaking her head, for she knew what was coming. " Do you remember the little girl who used to come to your office to beg, and took so much pleasure in calling you Mr. Doctor?" "Yes." said the doctor, and a shadow seemed to fall across his face, for he thought very strange of Veary speaking so lightly of his little dead sister, when even the memory of her would bring tears to his eyes. "Poor child, she met a terrible fate, and I never have gotten over the blow it gave me when I heard of her cruel death. She was a dear, sweet, little girl; Miss Sinclare, did he ever tell you about his little sister?" " Miss Sinclaire is the dear, sweet, little girl herself," exclaimed Veary, laughing, "that is the surprise I have for you. She stole a march on the old lady, and left before the cottage caught on fire. Does she look like that little beggar girl in days of yore?" "Is it possible ! " exclaimed Dr. St. George, going up and grasping her hand. "Can it be possible that you, Miss Sinclare, are the little girl who used to come to my office so long ago, and who came near being my adopted daughter? That you escaped the fangs of those horrid flames, and all these years have lived right under our nose and we were none the wiser? I agree with that illustrious author when he said that 'truth was stranger than fiction.' But how in the world came you to find her out?" he ex- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 287 claimed, turning to Veary. "It all seems like a dream to me, and I expect that I shall wake up directly and find that I have been indulging in a ramble in dreamland's fairy- land." Veary gave him a minute description of all Birdie's ad- ventures since the night she escaped from the cottage. He listened attentively. Now and then his thoughts would wander back to his own little blue-eyed baby, and he prayed that fate had been as kind to her as it had been to Birdie ; that she had been rescued from the eagle's claws, as Birdie had been snatched from the burning flames. And that kind Providence might yet place her in his arms. " God moves in a mysterious way, His wonders to perform." After Veary had concluded, the doctor turned and said to Birdie, ' ' Miss Sinclare, may I ask what your name was, before you were adopted by Mrs. Carlisle? do you remember your parents ? " " I never knew my parents," she replied; " my whole life has been a mystery and I would be willing to give a fortune, if I had it, to know who I am, and what I am; but if I never know who my parents were, I am confident that good blood courses through my veins ; but I feel that I shall know some day ; that this blessed boon will not for- ever be withheld from me." "That is very strange," said the doctor, " I suppose 288 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. Mrs. Carlisle adopted you from the orphan asylum, and it seems strange, too, that your name was not on the records; for they are very particular about such things." "She was never in an orphan asylum," exclaimed Veary, smiling at Dr. St. George's puzzled look, "and if you will permit me I will give you her history as far back as I am familiar with it. First, I will give you a short sketch of my own life. " My father lived in the mountains of Virginia, and not a great distance from the Kentucky line. He was a law- yer by profession, and for fifteen years practiced law in the city of Richmond, where his health failed him, and he was compelled to seek the mountain air for his dilapidated and broken constitution. I was quite a small boy when he moved to West Virginia, but I shall never forget my first experience among the hills. I felt all the while that I was smothering, not for the want of air, but for the want of space ; for our house was completely surrounded by hills, and many a time I have thrown rocks down the chimney, and before I had been there two days I could tell my mother that I could climb to the very peak of the highest mountain. My father's health did not improve, however, and the doctors advised him to travel ; so he took it in his head to go to Europe, and my mother, poor woman, was not aware of his intentions until a few hours before he left, and when she tried to persuade him not to go, his answer was that the doctor had advised him to go, and that noth- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 289 ing but salt water would save his life. After my father left I became lonely and restless, and would often say to my mother, ' Mother, I am so lonely, I wish that I had some one to play with me,' and I could see the tears come into her dear eyes. I suppose it was sympathy for her lonely boy. I soon found that it gave her pain, and I kept my troubles to myself. One morning I went out to play, and hearing a noise overhead, I looked up, and right over my head was a large eagle, which was flying toward the mountain. It had something in its claws; a pig, I thought at first ; presently I could perceive that whatever it was it had on clothes, and all at once it struck me that it was a baby, and with this happy thought I set out to capture it if possible. 'A baby, a baby,' I repeated over and over again, as I ran along. ' Would it not be a treat, a baby in the house, and it would be mine, all mine ; mother could play with it, of course, and make its clothes, but she could not claim it.' "These were the thoughts that ran through my brain as I followed the eagle's course. Presently it took a turn up the mountain, and to my delight I saw it light upon the top of the mountain in a cluster of shrubby trees. I threw off my coat and vest as quick as lightning and com- menced to climb the steep, rugged side of the mountain. It was hard work, I tell you, but the thoughts of that baby strengthened me and I soon reached the top where the eagle had built her nest, and where my expectations were 19 2pO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. realized. And the sight which presented itself to my view will never be obliterated from my mind, " There in that bloody den, surrounded with bones and feathers, lay the sweetest little baby I ever saw ; and when I came up to where it was lying, it looked up in my face and smiled as happily as if it had been lying upon a bed of down in a fairy's cradle. With a delight my boy heart had never experienced before, I sprang to it and caught it in my arms. There was not a scratch upon it ; at first the eagle made fight at me, but I broke its wing with a stick, and it screamed and flew away. So I took my baby and tied it around my waist with my suspenders, and descend- ed safely, and " Did the baby live ? "exclaimed Dr. St. George, excit- edly, who had been listening to this startling revelation in speechless amazement and anxiety, and keeping his gaze fixed first upon one and then the other, with the fixedness and intensity of a living statue. His face wore a deathly whiteness, and his lips were as colorless as marble. Both Veary and Birdie did not fail to perceive it, but did not understand the cause. He did not wait, however, until Veary was through, but exclaimed, " Did the baby live?" "Yes," replied Veary, "the baby lived, and is no other than Miss Birdie Sinclare, who is now sitting at your side." This was enough. Dr. St. George knew that she was his child. That she was his own little baby whom he had A BEAUTIFUL BIRD V/ITHOUT A NAME. 2QI mourned as dead, and who he had believed was lying in the little green grave by the side of his wife. " Thank God ! my child is found at last," were the words that were echoed over the cemetery of Cave Hill. "You are my child! my own little baby which was stolen from me eighteen years ago," he exclaimed. "A man jumped from the train with you in his arms at night, while your mother was on her way to the springs, and I have never seen you frcm that evening. I kissed you good bye in your mother's arms, and it was the last time I ever saw her alive ; the shock was so severe it killed her, and she lies yonder beneath that little mound. Per- haps you think I am talking at random, but I am not ; here is the dying confession of the man who stole you, and only this morning I left his dying bed. Take and read for yourself, Veary, and then you will be convinced of what I tell you." Veary took the paper and read aloud, while Birdie, pale and trembling, listened to every word. Dr. St. George was motionless zs a statue. It was impossible to tell which of the three was the whitest, but when Fen Scullcutter's name was mentioned Birdie wculd have fallen had her father not caught her in his arms; but the two men were firm and only exchanged looks, and that look spoke volumes. "Just to think," said Veary, turning to Birdie, "that he wanted to marry you." A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. But she only shuddered, and a sigh escaped her lips. A sigh, alas ! for depraved and poor, fallen humanity. After Veary had finished he handed the paper back to Dr. St. George, saying, as he grasped the doctor's hand, 4 ' Let me congratulate you, my dear friend, upon the re- covery of your daughter," and turning to Birdie, he said, "Darling, your prayers have been granted. You now know who you are, and what you are, as you expressed it; Dr. St. George is your father, and yonder beneath the roses lies your mother ; and let us thank God for giving you such parents. You spoke the truth when you said that good blood coursed through your veins. " The next moment Birdie was sobbing in her father's arms. "Papa, papa," was all the poor girl could say, while heavy sobs shook her frame. " O, my darling; my long-lost baby! " he exclaimed, as he folded his arms around her and kissed her again and again, while her curly head nestled upon his bosom where a shower of tear-drops was falling. "How it wrings my heart!" he murmured, "when I think of my little wandering babe, my sunny-haired darling, being shut out alone in the streets ; to be denied the love- light of a happy home; to be denied a father's tender care, while he lived in the lap of luxury, surrounded with all the blandishments of life. To think that your dear little hands should be held out to my own for alms ; and I could not take you to my heart. But, O God ! I thank A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 293 thee, most gracious Father, for the preservation of my child, and for the restoration of her at last to my arms ! " All the while Birdie lay sobbing in her father's arms, while Veary only bowed his head in acquiescence. After Dr. St. George ceased to speak there was silence for some moments, and to these three persons they were moments of silent bliss, and the happiest of all their lives. Dr. St. George raised the head of his fair child from his bosom, and turning to Veary Elmore, he said: " Veary, my brave and noble boy, to your tender care I intrust my child ; into your keeping I place her happiness for you are worthy of the treasure I yield to you ; you have a better right to her than any man living ; but, Veary, my son, you must not take her from me; you will live with me always, since our past has been so wide apart our future must be together. I can not bear to be separated from my baby, for to me she is baby still." "Your every wish shall be gratified," said Veary, grasping his hand and pressing it between his own, and, laying his arm around Birdie, he said, "Come, darling, and see where your mother lies, for I know she is smiling down upon her baby, which once was lost, but now is found," and the three walked away to where her mother was sleeping beneath the daisies and trailing ivy. And there, in the presence of solemn death, by the side of her "angel mother's grave," the "Beautiful Bird Without a Name" found her name and mate. 294 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. There was rejoicing in heaven on that sweet May-day, for surely the angels would rejoice with that mother, and the bells of heaven would ring in honor of the re-ilnion on earth. No wonder the moon came out on that glorious eve and hung, moored like a crescent skiff of silver, over the hallowed spot; no wonder the stars twinkled and blazed upon their silver thrones like altar-candles around God's holy sanctuary ; no wonder the birds burst forth in joyous strains of melody, filling earth and heaven with music that seemed not of earth ; no wonder the drooping flowers raised their dying heads and smiled, and sent forth their sweet perfume, wave after wave, as vespers wept for joy and filled their waxen petals with tears of crystal dew for a soul was rejoicing in heaven, and three hearts were made happy on earth. CHAPTER XXIII. LINES TO LITTLE IDA PETERSON. Dear little Ida, so loving and true, With violet eyes, bespangled with dew ; No constellation, however bright, Can equal those dear orbs to-night. Thy silken hair wears a sunset bloom, And like threads of gold from a fairy's loom, Thy Laby arms so plump and round Ah, where can such another pair be found'? Thy hand hath no match save its fellow, So dimpled, so tiny, and fair; No down upon the neck of the sparrow Is so soft as thy rosy fingers are. Thy gentle voice is soft and low, Like ,/Eolian harps when the south winds blow"; And thy dear little feet, as they pat along, Sound sweeter to my ear than nightingale's song. Dear little Ida, I miss you to-night; I'm alone in my chamber, and trying to write; Not a sound is heard save my own deep sighs, And the drops that fall from my tearful eyes. Last night, when I laid me down to rest, I dreamed your head was on my breast; (295) A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. But, alas ! I awoke with a sense of despair, To find my darling not nestling there. Oft in ray waking dreams I, too, Have seen those eyes of heavenly blue ; For an instant they,flit before my sight, Then leave my heart as blank as night. But now I'll lay my pen aside, My tearful eyes I'll dry, For surely we will meet again In that sweet bye-and-bye. Ah ! we shall meet, with kisses sweet, Little Ida dear and I, And won't that be a happy day In that sweet bye-and-bye? CHAPTER XXIV. ESSAY ON THE MEN AND WOMEN OF THE PRESENT DAY. Kind and gentle reader, we thank you for the interest with which you have perused our narrative, and trust that your patience has not been exhausted, as my inclination leads me to attempt the task of presenting to you, as far as I am capable, a picture of the men and women of the pres- ent day, and trust, gentle reader, you who have always been so kind and true will pardon all digressions made from the special subject we have under consideration. First, we will view woman, the noblest gift of God to man, through an unprejudiced telescope which will carry us back through the vista of years and note her boundless influence for good or for evil. It is with woman as it is with everything else of God's creatures. They are pro- miscuous, morally and physically. There are good and bad, good and better, bad and worse. They are not all terres- trial angels neither is there one in this wide world that does not have her faults, and neither was there ever a creat- ure in existence without a fault, save one the Saviour and Preserver of our immortal souls. And I will add that sometimes the best of men and women are molded out of (297) 298 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. faults. Perfection among mortals is a thing unknown, and if we would but stop and think over our own faults, when tempted to criticise those of others, we would often check words which only tend to irritate, and many times convert into an enemy one whose friendship we prize too highly to lose ; and " In speaking of others' faults Pray don't forget your own ; Remember those with homes of glass Should seldom throw a stone. " If we have nothing else to do Than talk of those that sin, 'Tis better to commence at home, And from that point begin. " Then let us all when we begin To slander friend or foe, Think of the harm one word may do To those we little know. " Remember, curses, sometimes, like Our chickens, roost at home ; Don't speak of others' faults Until you have none of your own." It is sometimes said of persons that they can not tell what they know, but observation teaches that there are far more persons who can and do tell more than they know, than there are of those who know more than they tell. Although it may be very inconvenient not to be able to A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 299 tell what we do know, it is far more dangerous to tell more than we know. If every person would adopt the motto, "I will tell nothing except what I know, or have good evidence to believe," every community would doubtless be relieved of a great deal of gossip, and many a slander- ous report would die unborn ; in fact, the slanderer's occu- pation would be gone. But, alas ! how often a careless word, a knowing look, a significant nod, or a shrug of the shoulders, or even a sly wink or sneering gesture, throws a cloud of gloom and sorrow over some innocent soul, or casts a dark suspicion upon an innocent character, that re- quires months, years, and even a lifetime to dispel. And these results are not always the work of street gossip or common tattlers, but oftentimes, persons who occupy re- spectable positions in life and are influential in society become instrumental in carrying on this most reprehen- sible and pernicious work. The evil practice of encouraging and circulating reports or tales without knowing anything about their truthful- ness is too common and too serious a matter to pass lightly by ; it prevails to a greater or less extent in all classes of society, and even among professed Christians ; but I take the liberty right here to say that no person can be a good citizen or a good neighbor, much more a Christian who will encourage or circulate a rumor or tale that is detri- mental to the interest or character of another, without knowing or having some reliable evidence of its truthful- 3OO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. ness. " A tree is known by the fruit it bears." Our ac- tions are the fruits of our character ; therefore, every person's character should be judged by his or her actions and not by what designing persons may say about them. Every person should be adjudged innocent until there is some evidence of guilt. The rights and character of others should always be held as sacred as those of ourselves. We should never assume a privilege that we are not willing to grant to others. It is far easier to tear down than to build up. Any man can take a hammer and break a statue in pieces, or with one stroke of the brush destroy a fine paint- ing, but it is not every man who can model the first or paint the latter. Let us then strive to look closely at our own lives and less at the lives of others. Let charity for our fellow-beings expand and deepen, and depend upon it, those little faults which mar our neigh- bor's character will vanish like the wavelet on the shore, that is caught back by the one following, leaving a spotless surface, uninjured by the marks of man. We will now return to our subject, and I will add that there is a certain class of our fair sex whose examples and influence are a malediction upon that God-given name, woman, and is pernicious in the very sight of all true and honorable women. And she is the idle, gossiping lady who never has any business of her own, but wastes a whole lifetime in idle gossip and watching over the personal affairs of others, and whenever she does try to present her A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 30! nocturnal illuminations they are as irradiate and as mo- mentary as a flash of lightning in the dark. She is a nefarious, heterogeneous, unconglomerated mass of nihil- ity, and good for nothing but a stumbling-block, and an agent for the devil, and is under the continual control of that schoolmaster. She makes a most excellent one, too ; she never fails to give every one a call that comes under her jurisdiction. Her tongue is her pen, steeped in the dyes of defamation, and dipped in the murky waters of falsehood, with which she inscribes the names of her victims. She goes into the peaceful homes And blows her poisonous breath, And writes upon the fairest one A stain as deep as death. Her tongue is never still ; her heart is never warm. She carries upon her lips the hissing sound of a Judas kiss, with duplicity for her hobby-horse, on which she rides without curb or reins, with a branding-iron in one hand and a dagger in the other, and smiles to see the crimson current stream from the point of her dagger with which she has pierced the heart of her victim. She neglects her household duties, her husband and children (if any man is so unfortunate as to claim her), to attend to the personal affairs of other people. She is in possession of all the events that transpire, from the grocery to the pulpit, from the dark alley-way to the gubernatorial 3O2 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. chair. Nothing escapes her observation. Doors, windows, gate-posts, corners of the streets, are all familiar to her, where she stands for hours watching and gossiping, picking to pieces her neighbor's dress, bonnet, and character, while her children are loafing in the streets, black and dirty, and her careworn and wearied husband is toiling and struggling against contending billows and waves of misfortune to earn a support for his helpless family ; and perhaps his strivings are more difficult because the wife he has so unfortunately chosen can never find time to offer him any assistance, or even give him a word of cheer. She has too much of other people's business to occupy her time. Such women have done as much toward furnishing material for our work-houses, our State prisons, our asylums, as the dis- tilleries of intoxicating liquors. She has caused many a good and noble man to fill a drunkard's grave. As this subject is one we do not like to dwell upon, we will leave her for a time and turn our thoughts into a more magnanimous and philanthropic channel, and dwell with unspeakable pleasure upon the priceless value of a true and good woman, whose physiognomy befits the reflection of heavenly purity in an earthly medium that crowns her loveliness as piety scatters around the sweetness and power of her charms. " How divine her mission here upon our natural sod ! " How great the task assigned to her by the Omnipotent hand of Jehovah ! but not to make laws, not to lead ar- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 303 mies, not to govern empires, but to inspire those princi- ples, to inculcate those doctrines, to animate those senti- ments which generations yet unknown and nations yet uncivilized will learn to bless. Soften firmness into mercy, allay the anguish of the mind by her tenderness, disarm pas- sion, visit the couch of the tortured sufferer, the prison of the deserted friend, the cross of the rejected Saviour these are the theories on which her great triumph has been achieved. Time can not mar the love of a pure woman, nor rust deface its brilliancy. Distance strengthens its influence, bolts and bars can not limit its progress. It follows the prisoner into his dark cell. She loves him yet, though the world turns coldly from him. Still as disease lays its hand heavily upon the strong frame, and sorrow wrings the proud heart of man, she is at his side teaching him to bend to the storms of life, that he may not be broken by them, and answering his countless calls till the stars pale in the heavens, and no repining words escape her lips, humbly stooping herself that she may remove from his path every stone of stumbling, and gently lead him on- ward and upward to a Divine Counselor, with whose blessed ministrations the necessities of a more timid spirit and feeble physical organization have made her familiar. The couch made by the hands of the loved one is soft to his weary limbs; the pillow carefully adjusted by the same hands brings sweet repose to his fevered brain; 304 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. and her words of kind encouragement revive the drooping spirit, and drive sorrow from his careworn brow, and in- close it in wreaths of domestic bliss. If misfortune is his lot he will find a friendly welcome from a heart beating true to his own. The chosen partner of his life has a smile of approbation, when all others have refused, and a heart to feel his sorrows as if they were her own. It would almost seem that God, compassionating wom- an's great frailty, had planted this jewel in her breast, which like a tender flower expands its fragrance to all around, till transplanted to bloom in the Paradise of God, where immortal flowers forever bloom, and crystal waters gush forth from exhaustless fountains. How sweetly the poet has said : " Blessings on the hand of woman, Angels guard its strength and grace, In the cottage, palace, hovel, O, no matter where the place. " May no tempest clouds assail thee, And rainbow ever gently curl, For the hand that rocks the cradle Is the hand that rules the world. "Infancy, thy tender fountain, Bowers may with beauty flow, Mothers first to guide the streamlet From the soul unresting grow. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 305 " Grow on for the good or evil, Sunshine streams o'er darkness hurl, For the hand that rocks the cradle Is the hand that rules the world. " Woman, how divine your mission, Here upon our natural sod, Keep, O keep, the young heart open Always to the breath of God. " All true trophies of the ages, Are from mother's love imperiled, For the hand that rocks the cradle, Is the hand that rules the world." And yet with all her charms, her purity of heart, her high aspiration for all that is good and pure and noble, is she fully appreciated by those who deem themselves her lord and master? Is she valued at her true worth, or is she placed in the dish of balance and weighed with the fallen and unrighteous? The latter I will answer, yes. She may be as good and pure as the breeze that kisses the flowers which bloom in Paradise, and that damnable fin- ger of suspicion is ever pointing toward her, especially if fate has so ordained that she should go out to work for her daily bread. This is a sad truth, reader, and as I write I utter a prayer for the working-women of our fair land, and I know it will reach the throne of her hidden Friend and wonderful Counselor, who alone will give her justice. He who has ever been as true to the barbarians 20 3O6 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. as to the civilized ; who has stood over the dusky woman of ancient times, and hovered around the accomplished mother of our civilization, when she lays the darling of her bosom beneath the dark, green sod, and will ever stand over the last lingering spark of humanity, until the star of hope ceases to blaze and disappears from the heaven of our anticipations. And when the hills and valleys of time are all past, when the weary and fervent disap- pointments and sorrows of life are over, and the weary weaver has finished her web of destiny at the loom of time, and it has ceased its motion, she will then find her reward in that beautiful homestead over whose blessed roofs no sorrow even of clouds, across whose threshold the voice of sorrow is never heard ; built upon eternal hills, and standing with spires and pinnacles of celestial beauty beneath the shadows of the palm trees of the city on high. In some countries woman is looked upon as being an in- ferior creature, and is treated with as much servility as their horses and cattle, and our own Southern sunny land is full, too, alas ! of men who look upon her with no higher appreciation ; but it is only those whose selfish hearts have never asked themselves, Were the cross of woman laid on their cowardly shoulders would they be able to bear it ? The rib was not taken from Adam's foot, that man might trample woman beneath him ; neither was it taken from his head that she might rule over him ; but was taken from his side that she might be his equal. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 3O/ Woman was given unto man as a helpmeet, but not as a helpmeet in his kitchen and his field alone as a servant, but as his equal, his companion. "What is the meaning of equality as here used? is it not intended to convey the idea that the soul of woman has an equal interest with man in all those great events which have marked the dealings of God with His intelli- gent creatures on our earth ? "Are we not to understand from this, that woman, equally with man, has a trust committed to her by the great Jehovah, for the fulfillment of which she will be held responsible ? ' ' Were not Mary and Martha loved as well as Laza- rus ? and did not the soul of Anna kindle with as divine an inspiration as that of Simeon's when she held in her arms the infant Saviour ? "Although woman was tempted by Satan to violate the laws of God. and caused her husband to violate them, whereby he lost his seat in Paradise, and doomed his descendants to toil and suffering and death, yet if she was first in transgression she was first in the breach. She stood by the expiring Saviour when boasting Peter and His other disciples had forsaken their Lord and Mas- ter; she was last at the tomb, embalmed His sacred body, and was first to discover that He had bursted the bars of death." Has the value of a good and true woman ever been enumer- 3O8 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. ated? That question will remain unanswered until she hears it echoed from the throne of the Great Judge and Counselor although woman's labor has been consid- ered as a matter of little importance by the lords of crea- tion ; and I have heard some of them make some ex- tremely soothing observations, something after this style : " O, how I would like to have as easy a time as a woman. Just to sit in the house all day and have nothing in the world to do. " Now, I would like for all those who have such nar- row views of woman's worth to try Darby's plan just a little while, and I think they will change their views upon the subject, and will acknowledge that her vocation is equally, if not more, laborious than their own. " When Darby saw the setting sun, He swung his scythe and home he run, Sat down, drank off his pint, and said, ' My work is done, I'll go to bed.' ' My work is done,' retorted Joan, ' My work is done, your constant tone ; But helpless woman ne'er can say My work is done till judgment day.' Here Darby hem'd and scratched his head To answer what his Joan had said ; But all in vain her clack went on ' Yes, woman's work is never done.' At early morn e'er Phoebus rose Joan resumed her tale of woes, When Darby said, 'I'll end the strife, You be the man and I the wife ; A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 309 Take you the scythe, and now while I Will all your boasting cares supply.' 'Content,' quoth Joan, 'give me the stent,' This Darby did and out she went. Darby arose and seized the broom And whirled the dirt around the room, Which having done, he scarce knew how, And out he went to milk the cow. The fretful cow whisked round her tail In Darby's eye, and kicked the pail ; Darby perplexed with grief and shame Swore he'd never try to milk again, When turning round in sad amaze He saw his cottage in a blaze. As he chanced to brush the room In careless haste he fired the broom. The fire at last subdued, he swore The broom and he would meet no more. Pressed by misfortune, and perplexed, Darby prepared for breakfast next, But what to get he scarcely knew, The bread was spent and butter, too, With hands bedaubed with paste and flour Poor Darby labored full an hour. But, helpless wight, he could not make The dough take form of loaf or cake. As every door wide open stood, In came the pig in search of food, And stumbling onward with her snout O'erset the churn, the cream ran out. As Darby turned the pig to beat, The slippery cream betrayed his feet, 3IO A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. He caught the bread-tray in his fall And down came Darby, tray, and all. The children awakened by the clatter Started up and cried, ' What is the matter? ' Old Jowler barked, and Tabby mewed, And helpless Darby bawled aloud, 'Return, my Joan, heretofore, I'll play the housewife part no more ; I see by sad experience taught Compared with thine, my work is naught, Henceforth as business calls I'll take Content the plow, the scythe, the rake, And never will transgress the line Our fates have marked, whilst thou art mine.' " Now, if every man would try Darby's plan for once in his life, woman would be more appreciated and less up- braided, and we would not hear so much about woman's indolence and woman's extravagance. Extravagance ! This is another one of her besetting sins ; for we can hard- ly pick up a newspaper without finding something about woman's extravagance, with admonitions about the dread- ful sin committed, etc., and I for one have been unable to see that women are any more given to willful waste than men ; it is only in a different manner, and with this view of the case in my mind, I propose to give the other side of the question. Some man will lay out hundreds of dol- lars for his farming implements, that his business might glide on smoothly without any difficulty, or without one- half the labor that is required of the muscles of man, that A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 3 I I his land may be cultivated and his harvest reaped, as he leisurely rides along upon the seat of his machinery with an umbrella at his back and the smoke of ten cents curl- ing gracefully over his nose, when he would look as sour as a crab-apple if his wife would even hint about buying a sewing-machine, or mention the death of the old stove that had been her companion for the last ten years. Be- sides, who is it that takes all the old clothing that has been worn until it would seem impossible to make use of them any longer, and rip them up, and press them, and turn them inside out, and bottom side up, and make them into dresses and pants for Katie and Jimmie and Johnnie? And who is it that takes all the old paper-collars and cast- off clothing that is of no service, and transforms them into pie-pans, water-dippers, and nutmeg-graters? And who is it that saves all the little scraps of meat, and the little grease that accumulates from day to day, and with a little acid of potash and sal soda it reappears in gallons of nice, soft soap? Was it the man who did this? No! His plan would be to throw it in the fire and make clean work of it. Now, if the man was as careful with all matters, great and small, in his department, as the woman is in hers, there would be many dollars saved that are thrown away, and do no one any good. But he is so much occupied in watching the women folk he has no time to spare to look over the small matters in his own depart- ment. While looking so intently at the mote in the house- 312 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. hold management, he stumbles over the beam of misman- agement in his own department. And if he does not prosper as fast as he thinks he ought to, it is all owing to the woman's carelessness and extravagance ; and who, because it will not be resented, inflicts his spleen and bad temper upon those who love him best, simply because the security of love and family pride keeps him from getting his head broken. And if he is handsome, thinks himself a perfect Apollo, and is vain enough to imagine that every woman who' looks or smiles upon him is in love with him. And, with his head full of imaginary conquests, he goes home to his quiet, patient wife, and delights himself by snubbing her at every other word, in the most supercilious manner. And when her heart full of the truest love for this un- worthy being she humbles herself in acts of devotion to him, really in every sense her "lord and master," he treats her, as her reward, in a contemptuous manner, as if she were too much beneath him to allow her a commonplace civility. The holiest and strongest love that ever entered the heart of woman can be stung to death by such a man, and " The heart that loves the deepest Can also deepest hate." This sort of men generally have good wives, who die off early, and it always happens that the one who soon takes her place is a regular Tartar, and makes him hop, A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 313 skip, and jump in a lively style, and before he is aware of it, he is as bald an eagle. " It is a shame that a man will speak more impolitely at times to his wife or sisters than he would dare to any other female, except a low and vicious one. It is thus that the holiest affection of man's nature proves to be a weaker protection to a woman in the family circle than the re- straints of society, and that woman is usually indebted for the kindness and politeness of life to those not belong- ing to her own household. " Kind words are the circulating medium between true gentlemen and true ladies at home, and no polish exhib- ited in society can atone for the harsh language and dis- respectful treatment too often indulged in between those bound together by God's own ties of blood, and the still more sacred bonds of conjugal love. ' ' The true ideal of a husband is one who considers his wife his equal ; treats her on all occasions with respect ; does not think it beneath him to confide to her the state of his finances ; loves to have and enjoy her society at home and abroad ; and lets her see that he cares more about pleasing her than himself, and not want everything in and about the house to suit himself and no one else. In fact, they are true gentlemen generous, unexacting, courteous of speech, and kind of heart. In them you will find the protecting strength of manhood, which scorns to use its strength except for protection the proud hon- 3H A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. esty of man which infinitely prefers being lovingly and openly resisted to being twisted around one's finger, as mean men are twisted, and mean women will always be found ready to do it, but which, I think, all honest men and brave women not merely dislike, but utterly despise. ' ' There has been a little moldly piece of sentiment fished up from the brain of some egotistical old bachelor, and that is, 'Always meet your husband with a smile,' just as if it was not as much the duty of a man to confer smiles upon his wife as it is hers to confer smiles upon him, and much the easier, I should imagine, for it is not such an easy matter for a woman to scare up a smile every time her lord and master happens to step in, especially if she is trying to get dinner over a smoky stove with half a dozen little ' pinafores ' clinging to her skirts ; and if one of them happens to come in his way, it's ' clear the track, children ; don't trouble me ; run to your mother, she will attend to you.' At the same time, he will light his Hav- ana, place himself in an easy chair, and elevate his heels above the level of his nose, and bury himself in a news- paper, and remain a fixture for the evening. Perhaps the wife will come in weary and worji, thinking she will have a sociable chat with her husband. Not a bit of it ! There he sits, buried in that odious newspaper, informing madam, by appearance if not by words, that he does not wish to be disturbed. So, with a faint little sigh she turns away, and with unswerving, martyr-like devotion plies her neecile and A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 315 thread until that man gets ready to speak to her, and that will probably be when he wants a button sewed on." " From Monday morning till Saturday night, She is toiling and struggling with all her might. The scouring and washing to be done, Cows to milk and cream to churn, Beds to make and furniture to dust, Ashes to take up and rooms to brush, The cradle to rock and socks to darn : One baby in the cradle and another on her arm ; While Johnnie is crying, ' Mamma, want a piece of bread ! ' And Jimmie crying, ' Mamma, want to go to bed! ' Dinner to get and pies to bake, Though her eyes are red with a sick-headache ; Dishes to wash and cream to churn, And supper to get before papa's return ; And after supper is prepared and the table spread, And the lord and master the blessings have said, The faithful mother the tea will pour, P'or six or eight little ones, or more; And, one by one. they'll drop to sleep, And the mother from the table must make her retreat; And when she returns her coffee is cold, And her butter is even frozen still on her roll. After each little one his prayer has said, And tucked away snugly in his little trundle-bed, Poor mamma sinks wearily in her chair, She looks weary and worn, but her sewing is there; She'll sit and sew till eleven or more, While her needle keeps time with her husband's snore. Stitch, stitch, stitch, from gusset to seam, And her buttons, sometimes, sewed on in a dream. 3l6 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. O, all you men who have carelessly said, ' Woman's labor is nothing,' 'tis shame on your head ; Just try it awhile, and you'll find it no sham ; You'll calmly admit that you'd rather be a man." Now, my dear reader, I am only speaking of those men who are built up without hearts, or if they have a heart, it has never been reached only through their stomach. Man is as promiscuous as woman. They are not all alike, thanks to the maker; but I do say, if they were all a little more self sacrificing, and let their wives see that they were appreciated by their husbands, let her see that he cares more about pleasing her than himself, I have no doubt but there would be more happy men and women in this world, and the court dockets would not be disfig- ured with applications for divorces. One single word of praise from the husband will do more toward raising a sec- ond heaven in a wife's heart than all the flattery and praise the whole world can bestow. And even if that husband should think that his wife is not worthy of his praises and commendation, the sacrifice he makes of his feelings is not such a great boon after all. Self-sacrifice is more glorious than victory. The most glorious episode in the revolu- tionary war was not the surrender of Burgoyne or Lord Cornwallis. It was the march across the plains at jersey and the winter encampment at Valley Forge. It is the glory of Christ that points us to God, and who willingly A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 317 laid aside robe and scepter and crown for love's sake ; who, though he was rich, became poor, that we through his poverty might be made rich. \Yhat is the glory of a good man ? Is it fame ? No ! Is it bravery ? No! Is it money? No! Is it good din- ners? No! It is the chosen partner of his toils the crowning joy of his life. What is the glory of woman ? It has often been said by (we know whom) that her chief glory is in fine dress, waving plumes, and artificial blossoms, but Say not woman's love is bought With vain and empty treasure ; O, say not woman's heart is caught By every idle pleasure. Her chief glory is in the patience of a love that beareth all things, hopeth all things, that endureth all things, and not in the apparel with which she is clothed. And I trust the day will yet come when good and true women will be valued at their intrinsic worth. Though I fear that time will never come, unless "every tub is made to stand upon its own bottom," and that the world will cease to condemn the whole race of God's fair creatures because some of them have deviated from the paths of virtue and truth. But, my fair readers, you, to whom I dedicate these few written pages, there is one thing need- ful, and that is that bond of sympathy which is so much 3l8 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. required between our women of the present day. If we would be more charitable toward each other, and appre- ciate our own sex more than we do, and try to exalt our neighbor's wife, instead of trying to humiliate her, men would be more charitable in their criticisms toward women. And, with this view of the case in my mind, I do not con- sider it entirely man's fault it we are not more highly ap- preciated by them. If we do not honor, love, and appreciate our own sex, we can not expect it of the sterner sex. Therefore, let us write our name, by kindness, love, and mercy, upon the heart of each and every one, though lowly they may be. For the lowliest heart with love can beat, The humblest soul aspire ; And write on earth a record sweet, That seraphs may admire. Let us be tender with our friends while they are with us, and not wait until they are dead to find out their good qualities, and strew flowers upon their graves, which should have been strewn upon their pathway while liv- ing. Let us bring all possible sweetness and tender- ness and truthfulness into all our relations with each other, thus blessing and being blessed, and our names and deeds will be as legible on the hearts of our neighbors as the stars on the brow of the evening, and our gloomy and rayless homes will be transformed into flowery meads, A BEAUTIFUL HIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 319 and we will not only lay the foundation for our terrestial glory, but will erect a structure for our celestial glory. We build for eternity. The present life is only a prep- aration for that glorious life everlasting. The present is linked with the future through creation, in the vegetable, in the animal, and in the moral, world. As is the egg, so is the fowl ; as is the boy, so is the man ; as is the girl, so is the woman ; and as the rational being in this world, so will he be in the next world. Dives estranged from God in this world is Dives estranged from God in the next world. Enoch walking with God here is Enoch walking with God in a calm and better world. Perhaps you think that o'ne hour buries another, but it is not so. You think, perhaps, that you have parted forever from the things which have passed you. Xo, you have not. It has only stepped behind you, and there it waits ; that which you have done is with you to-day, and that which you are doing will be with you to-morrow. When the mason carries up a wall, the course of brick he laid yesterday is the foundation upon which he is lay- ing another course to-day. And all that you do on the structure which you are building will remain as a basis for that you will do to-morrow. And all that has been done is the understructure for that which is to be done. The following is for you, young ladies : Take heed how you build. That which you are doing, the work 32O A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. which you are performing, you do not leave behind you because you forget it ; it passes away from you apparently, but not in reality. Every stroke, every single element, abides. And one hour each day that you waste on trifles or indolence, saved and daily devoted to improvement, is enough to make an ignorant woman wise in ten years to provide the luxuries of intelligence to a mind torpid from the lack of energy to brighten up and strengthen facul- ties perishing with rust to make life a fruitful field and death a harvest of glorious deeds. Real life is thought and action. Usefulness strengthens our days. But lazi- ness, like rust, eats into the very heart of our strength. It is the paralysis of the soul. All power appears only in transaction. The firefly only glows when upon its wing. And all that are desirous of rosy cheeks, good appetite, and sweet temper, let me recommend to you nature's physi- cian, who will fill all your prescriptions free. And his name is employment ; and any occupation is better than nothing at all. Life, with all its joys and sorrows, is open before you ; life, with all its opportunities and possibilities, beckons you forward ! Do not go out in the world indo- lent and listless, drifting hither and thither on the boister- ous sea of life without a single noble purpose or a single high aspiration. As you raise yourselves, you raise society, and infallibly raise men with you. From the throne of home and fireside woman wields the triple scepter of love, charity, virtue, and benevolence, and her influence from that noble position is felt wherever man is found. A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 32! Paul says that woman should be very bashful and shame-faced, and should keep her head covered. There is nothing that the world admires more than modesty in a lady, but there are two kinds of modesty, the true and the false, but the latter is more prevalent, and my opinion is that if Paul could rise from the grave and view the thou- sands of women going to destruction, sitting in the lap of false modesty, he would weep as no man ever wept before, and would exclaim with a loud voice, saying: "Young ladies, uncover your heads, and tear from your faces the veil of false modesty ; buckle on your armor of faith, hope, and independence, and look the world square in the face, and never be ashamed of honest labor." There has been quite a revolution on our terrestrial globe since Paul's day. This world has been transformed into a grab-box, and its citizens are the grabbers. All those who have no one to grab for them will have to grab for themselves. It is not every woman that is blessed with a good grabber, while there are thousands who have none at all, and no likelihood of it. Now, my opinion is, if we all sit back with covered heads and bashful faces, while the performance is going on, we will be pretty apt to come out lacking, and the worst of it is we will come out hungry, too. You may now be blessed with happy homes and kind parents, and all in life to make you happy. Your paths may be strewn with flowers of the richest hue, and pros- 21 322 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. perity may hover over you with her shining wings, while the gentle zephyrs catch the echo of your mirthful laugh- ter and chant it across the chords of the JEolian harp. But you "know not what a day may bring forth." Death may come along and take those parents from you. Ad- versity may come along and sweep from over your unso- phisticated heads that dear parental roof, and you may be left alone "to live or die, survive or perish," with nothing but your resolution, your energies, and a right mind, to labor and to wait, and to make the best of life you can. The time will surely come when you will be called on to do your share of the duties and responsibilities of life. Do it cheerfully and prayerfully, and, if your hands are browned by labor, do not envy Miss Fuss-and-Feathers, whose mother works in the kitchen, while the daughter lounges in the sitting-room. Do not feel yourselves too lofty to do anything that is honorable. Christ washed the weary feet of His disciples to-day, Christ is enthroned. Even the highest archangel bows before Him. The nobles and dignitaries of heaven are none the less respectful, none the less worshipful, because He washed the dusty feet of His disciples. And, when we come to stand before Him, think you that we will be less honored because we have done lowly service ? Ah ! my friend, it ' ' demands a far more nobility of soul to observe the importance of little things than to follow the great." " Great events come from small beginnings. The high- A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. 323 est workmen are those who take the trifles of to-day, and make of them the grand movements of to-morrow." " Great men and noble women in all ages, and among all nations, have worked their way up from the bottom, like a seed cast upon the earth, to rise up and unfold the branches, the blossoms, and the fruit, whose tender buds are first directed by the delicate hands of a faithful mother." Go to the worm that you tread upon and learn a lesson of wisdom. The very caterpillar that seeks the food that fosters it for another and similar state, and more wise than man, builds its own sepulcher from which, in time, by a kind of resurrection, it comes forth a new creature almost angelic in form. That which crawled flies, and that which fed on comparatively gross food sips the honey from the beautiful flowers, and the dewdrops that sparkle and revel in the green pastures, an emblem of that paradise where flows the River of Life, and grows the tree of life. If the caterpillar had never attained the butterfly's splendid form and hue, it would have certainly perished a worthless worm. Consider their ways and be wise. Let not our reason be less available than their instinct. And as often as it flits across our path, remember it whispers in its flight, " We live in deeds and not in words." So live and act in all the positions that you may be called to fill, in all the duties of life with which you may be burdened, that, 324 A BEAUTIFUL BIRD WITHOUT A NAME. when at last for you, the bucket is broken at the well, the pitcher at the fountain, and the gold cord of life is snapped asunder, when at last for you the bell tolls a requiem, and the angel of death hovers over your shattered form and sweeps away the mist that gathers on the soul in its earth wanderings, heaven's aisles may echo with, "Well done, thou good and faithful servant. Thou hast been faithful in a few things, I will make thee ruler over many." THE END. DOUBT AND DESPAIR. Alone I made my daily round, With a spirit of unrest and strife ; And I thought to myself as I pondered along, " What is this wearisome thing called life?" For my path was rugged, and briers Grew thick with each day ; The road was of stone, and tired My feet in their toilsome way. Depressed with care I wandered forth, Some shady spot to seek ; The sun was shining bright in heaven, Its rays the sky did streak. Through many a narrow path I pressed, Till 'neath an ancient tree I saw an aged man at rest And lost in reverie. Upon his venerable brow Deep thought had set its seal, And I, with a respectful bow, Did thus to him appeal : " Old man, content you seem to be, While I my head in sorrow bend ; Can you not tell me what is best For a discontented friend ? " What is best for me to try Contentment to secure? What will my many wants supply And happiness insure?" (325) 326 DOUBT AND DESPAIR. Looking up with tearful eyes The old man did thus respond : " My child, you seek perfection here 'Tis nowhere to be found ! " Earthly anticipations bright, However freely they are given, Bring neither unalloyed delight There is no peace this side of heaven. " Religion points the only way To charms so truly great ; The honest Christian surely may In peace those charms await ! " I then my own little chamber sought, And knelt there down and prayed. That God would give me courage, The sea of life to wade. Then upon my couch I sank, My cares to forget, And soon to the land of dreams I roved, And two hideous figures met. Upon a ship I seemed to ride, Whose sails were blacker than the tide ; Upon its ghostly deck I stood, And gazed upon a sea of blood. As I stood upon the lonely deck, These hideous figures came, To steer my phantom ship across The dark and stormy main. Upon their heads they wear a crown With their appellation branded there, And as I gazed on them I found Their names were Doubt and Despair. DOUBT AND DESPAIR. 327 O, those dark and hideous figures ! O'er me their forms were bowed, And o'er their face was wrapped a mantle And robed as with an angry cloud. " I'll give you a crown," said Despair, " A crown a queen might proudly wear, With leaves and stems of matchless sheen, Of emerald seem superbly green." And upon my pallid brow they placed A wreath of thorns instead of flowers, Then rang the mocking laugh ha, ha ! As they gazed upon these brandish bowers. I then with bitter anguish flung Myself beneath the darkening sky, So black the clouds that o'er me hung, I laid me down and prayed to die. But vainly rose my feeble prayer, The King of Terrors came not there, The wind swept on with ceaseless moan, And mocked my prayer with hollow tone. " Now come,'' said Doubt, " and dwell with me, There is no one that cares for thee ; For thee there's naught but grief and pain ; Hope is false and prayer is vain." " O, no," said I, " you can not be The friend that I would wish to see, I spy another ship afar Whose pilot is the evening star. "And from that ship I hear a voice, Saying, ' Come all ye unto me That are weary and heavy laden, And I will give you passage free. 328 DOUBT AND DESPAIR. " ' No storm disturbs our peaceful isle, No tempest wrecks our happy shore, All is calm, repose doth smile, And there is peace forever more.' " With a content and joyous heart, I sought at last this peaceful ark, Where glow-worms dropped in shining showers, And my thorns were turned to orange flowers. Then where dark clouds so late had driven, And rolling thunders fiercely spoke, Now sunlight through the gates of heaven In streams of softest splendor broke. There is one thing that I have learned There is no truth above the sod, There is no real trust or love But that which Christians place in God. IN PRESS: CRADLED UPON THE TIDE, BY Miss BELLE PETERSON, AUTHOR OF " A Beautiful Bird Without a Name," " Rose Sherwood," " A Word and a Tear," Etc., Etc.