<h3 align="center">Chapter XIV</h3>
<p>The high-school master was a distant relative of the Lloyd's,
through whom he had obtained the position. One evening when he was
taking tea with them at Cynthia Lennox's, he spoke of Ellen. “I
have one really remarkable scholar,” he said, with a curious
air of self-gratulation, as if he were principally responsible for
it; “her name is Brewster—Ellen Brewster.”</p>
<p>“Good land! That must be the child that ran away five or six
years ago, and all the town up in arms over it,” said Mrs.
Norman Lloyd. “Don't you remember, Cynthia?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied Cynthia, and continued pouring tea.
Cynthia was very little changed. In some faces time seems to engrave
lines delicately, once for all, and then lay by. She was rather more
charming now than when one had looked at her with any expectancy of
youth, since there was now no sense of disappointment.</p>
<p>“I remember that,” said Norman Lloyd. “The child
would never tell where she had been. A curious case.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said the school-master, “leaving that
childish episode out of the question, she has a really remarkable
mind. If she were a boy, I should advise a thorough education and a
profession. I should as it is, if her family were able to bear the
expense. She has that intuitive order of mind which is wonderful
enough, though not, after all, so rare in a girl; but in addition she
has the logical, which, according to my experience, is almost unknown
in a woman. She ought to have an education.”</p>
<p>“But,” said Risley, “what is the use of
educating that unfortunate child?”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“What I say. What is the use? There she is in her sphere of
life, the daughter of a factory operative, in all probability in
after-years to be the wife of one and the mother of others. Nothing
but a rich marriage can save her, and that she is not likely to make.
Milk-maids are more likely to make rich marriages than factory girls;
there is a certain savor of romance about milk, and the dewy meadows,
and the breath of kine, but a shoe factory is brutally realistic and
illusionary. Now, why do you want to increase the poor child's
horizon farther than her little feet can carry her? Fit her to be a
good female soldier in the ranks of labor, to be a good wife and
mother to the makers of shoes, to wash and iron their uniforms of
toil, to cook well the food which affords them the requisite
nourishment to make shoes, to appreciate book-lore, which is a
pleasure and a profit to the makers of shoes; possibly in the
non-event of marriage she will make shoes herself. The system of
education in our schools is all wrong. It is both senseless and
futile. Look at the children filing past to school, and look at their
fathers, and their mothers too, filing past to the factory. Look at
their present, and look at their future. And look at the trash taught
them in their text-books—trash from its utter dissociation with
their lives. You might as well teach a Zulu lace-work, instead of the
use of the assagai.”</p>
<p>“Now look here, Mr. Risley,” said the school-master,
his face flushing, “is not—I beg your pardon, of
course—this view of yours a little narrow and
ultra-conservative? You do not want to establish a permanent
factory-operative class in this country, do you? That is what your
theory would ultimately tend towards. Ought not these children be
given their chance to rise in the ranks; ought they to be condemned
to tread in the same path as their fathers?”</p>
<p>“I would have those little paths which intersect every
unoccupied field in this locality worn by the feet of these men and
their children after them unto the third and fourth
generation,” said Risley. “If not, where is our skilled
labor?”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Risley,” said Mrs. Lloyd, anxiously,
“you wouldn't want all those dear little children to work as
hard as their fathers, and not do any better, would you?”</p>
<p>“If they don't, who is going to make our shoes, dear Mrs.
Lloyd?” asked Risley.</p>
<p>Mrs. Lloyd and the school-master stared at him, and Lloyd laughed
his low, almost mirthless laugh.</p>
<p>“Don't you know, Edward,” he said, “that Mr.
Risley is not in earnest, and speaks with the deadly intent of an
anarchist with a bomb in his bag? He is the most out-and-out radical
in the country. If there were a strike, and I did not yield to the
demands of the oppressed, and imported foreign labor, I don't know
that my life would be safe from him.”</p>
<p>“Then you do approve of a higher education?” asked the
school-master, while Mrs. Lloyd stared from one to the other in
bewilderment.</p>
<p>“Yes, if we and our posterity have to go barefoot,”
said Risley, laughing out with a sudden undertone of seriousness.</p>
<p>“I suppose everybody could get accustomed to going barefoot
after a while,” said Mrs. Lloyd. “Do you suppose that
dear little thing was barefooted when she ran away,
Cynthia?”</p>
<p>Risley answered as if he had been addressed. “I can vouch
for the fact that she was not, Mrs. Lloyd,” he said.
“They would sooner have walked on red-hot ploughshares
themselves than let her.”</p>
<p>“Her father is getting quite an old man,” Norman Lloyd
said, with no apparent relevancy, as if he were talking to
himself.</p>
<p>All the time Cynthia Lennox had been quietly sitting at the head
of the table. When the rest of the company had gone, and she and
Risley were alone, seated in the drawing-room before the parlor fire,
for it was a chilly day, she turned her fair, worn face towards him
on the crimson velvet of her chair. “Do you know why I did not
speak and tell them where the child was that time?” she
asked.</p>
<p>“Because of your own good sense?”</p>
<p>“No; because of you.”</p>
<p>He looked at her adoringly. She was older than he, her beauty
rather recorded than still evident on her face; she had been to him
from the first like a fair, forbidden flower behind a wall of
prohibition, but nothing could alter his habit of loving her.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said she. “It was more on your account
than on my own; confession would be good for the soul. The secret has
always rankled in my pride. I would much rather defy opinion than fly
before it. But I know that you would mind. However, there was another
reason.”</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>She hesitated a little and colored, even laughed a little,
embarrassed laugh which was foreign to her. “Well,
Lyman,” said she, finally, “one reason why I did not
speak was that I see my way clear to making up to that child and her
parents for any wrong which I may have done them by causing them a
few hours' anxiety. When she has finished the high-school I mean to
send her to college.”</p>
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