<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<center>
<h1>THE WRITINGS IN PROSE AND VERSE OF EUGENE FIELD </h1>
<br/>
<h2>A LITTLE BOOK OF PROFITABLE TALES</h2>
<br/><br/><br/>
<h3>NEW YORK 1901</h3>
<br/><br/><br/>
<h2>by EUGENE FIELD.</h2>
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<br/><br/>
<p><br/></p>
<blockquote><blockquote>
<p>TO MY SEVEREST CRITIC, MY MOST LOYAL ADMIRER, AND MY ONLY
DAUGHTER, MARY FRENCH FIELD, THIS LITTLE BOOK OF PROFITABLE TALES
IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED. E.F.</p>
</blockquote></blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>INTRODUCTION</p>
<p>I have never read a poem by Mr. Field without feeling
personally drawn to the author. Long after I had known him as a
poet, I found that he had written in prose little scraps or long
essays, which had attracted me in just the same way, when I had
met with them in the newspapers, although I had not known who the
author was.</p>
<p>All that he writes indeed is quite free from the
conventionalisms to which authorship as a profession is sadly
liable. Because he is free from them, you read his poems or you
read his prose, and are affected as if you met him. If you were
riding in a Pullman car with him, or if you were talking with him
at breakfast over your coffee, he would say just such things in
just this way. If he had any art, it was the art of concealing
art. But I do not think that he thought much of art. I do not
think that he cared much for what people say about criticism or
style. He wrote as he felt, or as he thought, without troubling
himself much about method. It is this simplicity, or what it is
the fashion of the day to call frankness, which gives a singular
charm to his writing.</p>
<p>EDWARD E. HALE.</p>
<p>The Tales in this Little Book</p>
<p>THE FIRST CHRISTMAS TREE</p>
<p>THE SYMBOL AND THE SAINT</p>
<p>THE COMING OF THE PRINCE</p>
<p>THE MOUSE AND THE MOONBEAM</p>
<p>THE DIVELL'S CHRYSTMASS</p>
<p>THE MOUNTAIN AND THE SEA</p>
<p>THE ROBIN AND THE VIOLET</p>
<p>THE OAK-TREE AND THE IVY</p>
<p>MARGARET: A PEARL</p>
<p>THE SPRINGTIME</p>
<p>RODOLPH AND HIS KING</p>
<p>THE HAMPSHIRE HILLS</p>
<p>EZRA'S THANKSGIVIN' OUT WEST</p>
<p>LUDWIG AND ELOISE</p>
<p>FIDO'S LITTLE FRIEND</p>
<p>THE OLD MAN</p>
<p>BILL, THE LOKIL EDITOR</p>
<p>THE LITTLE YALLER BABY</p>
<p>THE CYCLOPEEDY</p>
<p>DOCK STEBBINS</p>
<p>THE FAIRIES OF PESTH</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The First Christmas Tree</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE FIRST CHRISTMAS TREE</p>
<p>Once upon a time the forest was in a great commotion. Early in
the evening the wise old cedars had shaken their heads ominously
and predicted strange things. They had lived in the forest many,
many years; but never had they seen such marvellous sights as
were to be seen now in the sky, and upon the hills, and in the
distant village.</p>
<p>"Pray tell us what you see," pleaded a little vine; "we who
are not as tall as you can behold none of these wonderful things.
Describe them to us, that we may enjoy them with you."</p>
<p>"I am filled with such amazement," said one of the cedars,
"that I can hardly speak. The whole sky seems to be aflame, and
the stars appear to be dancing among the clouds; angels walk down
from heaven to the earth, and enter the village or talk with the
shepherds upon the hills."</p>
<p>The vine listened in mute astonishment. Such things never
before had happened. The vine trembled with excitement. Its
nearest neighbor was a tiny tree, so small it scarcely ever was
noticed; yet it was a very beautiful little tree, and the vines
and ferns and mosses and other humble residents of the forest
loved it dearly.</p>
<p>"How I should like to see the angels!" sighed the little tree,
"and how I should like to see the stars dancing among the clouds!
It must be very beautiful."</p>
<p>As the vine and the little tree talked of these things, the
cedars watched with increasing interest the wonderful scenes over
and beyond the confines of the forest. Presently they thought
they heard music, and they were not mistaken, for soon the whole
air was full of the sweetest harmonies ever heard upon earth.</p>
<p>"What beautiful music!" cried the little tree. "I wonder
whence it comes."</p>
<p>"The angels are singing," said a cedar; "for none but angels
could make such sweet music."</p>
<p>"But the stars are singing, too," said another cedar; "yes,
and the shepherds on the hills join in the song, and what a
strangely glorious song it is!"</p>
<p>The trees listened to the singing, but they did not understand
its meaning: it seemed to be an anthem, and it was of a Child
that had been born; but further than this they did not
understand. The strange and glorious song continued all the
night; and all that night the angels walked to and fro, and the
shepherd-folk talked with the angels, and the stars danced and
carolled in high heaven. And it was nearly morning when the
cedars cried out, "They are coming to the forest! the angels are
coming to the forest!" And, surely enough, this was true. The
vine and the little tree were very terrified, and they begged
their older and stronger neighbors to protect them from harm. But
the cedars were too busy with their own fears to pay any heed to
the faint pleadings of the humble vine and the little tree. The
angels came into the forest, singing the same glorious anthem
about the Child, and the stars sang in chorus with them, until
every part of the woods rang with echoes of that wondrous song.
There was nothing in the appearance of this angel host to inspire
fear; they were clad all in white, and there were crowns upon
their fair heads, and golden harps in their hands; love, hope,
charity, compassion, and joy beamed from their beautiful faces,
and their presence seemed to fill the forest with a divine peace.
The angels came through the forest to where the little tree
stood, and gathering around it, they touched it with their hands,
and kissed its little branches, and sang even more sweetly than
before. And their song was about the Child, the Child, the Child
that had been born. Then the stars came down from the skies and
danced and hung upon the branches of the tree, and they, too,
sang that song,—the song of the Child. And all the other trees
and the vines and the ferns and the mosses beheld in wonder; nor
could they understand why all these things were being done, and
why this exceeding honor should be shown the little tree.</p>
<p>When the morning came the angels left the forest,—all but one
angel, who remained behind and lingered near the little tree.
Then a cedar asked: "Why do you tarry with us, holy angel?" And
the angel answered: "I stay to guard this little tree, for it is
sacred, and no harm shall come to it."</p>
<p>The little tree felt quite relieved by this assurance, and it
held up its head more confidently than ever before. And how it
thrived and grew, and waxed in strength and beauty! The cedars
said they never had seen the like. The sun seemed to lavish its
choicest rays upon the little tree, heaven dropped its sweetest
dew upon it, and the winds never came to the forest that they did
not forget their rude manners and linger to kiss the little tree
and sing it their prettiest songs. No danger ever menaced it, no
harm threatened; for the angel never slept,—through the day and
through the night the angel watched the little tree and protected
it from all evil. Oftentimes the trees talked with the angel; but
of course they understood little of what he said, for he spoke
always of the Child who was to become the Master; and always when
thus he talked, he caressed the little tree, and stroked its
branches and leaves, and moistened them with his tears. It all
was so very strange that none in the forest could understand.</p>
<p>So the years passed, the angel watching his blooming charge.
Sometimes the beasts strayed toward the little tree and
threatened to devour its tender foliage; sometimes the woodman
came with his axe, intent upon hewing down the straight and
comely thing; sometimes the hot, consuming breath of drought
swept from the south, and sought to blight the forest and all its
verdure: the angel kept them from the little tree. Serene and
beautiful it grew, until now it was no longer a little tree, but
the pride and glory of the forest.</p>
<p>One day the tree heard some one coming through the forest.
Hitherto the angel had hastened to its side when men approached;
but now the angel strode away and stood under the cedars
yonder.</p>
<p>"Dear angel," cried the tree, "can you not hear the footsteps
of some one approaching? Why do you leave me?"</p>
<p>"Have no fear," said the angel; "for He who comes is the
Master."</p>
<p>The Master came to the tree and beheld it. He placed His hands
upon its smooth trunk and branches, and the tree was thrilled
with a strange and glorious delight. Then He stooped and kissed
the tree, and then He turned and went away.</p>
<p>Many times after that the Master came to the forest, and when
He came it always was to where the tree stood. Many times He
rested beneath the tree and enjoyed the shade of its foliage, and
listened to the music of the wind as it swept through the
rustling leaves. Many times He slept there, and the tree watched
over Him, and the forest was still, and all its voices were
hushed. And the angel hovered near like a faithful sentinel.</p>
<p>Ever and anon men came with the Master to the forest, and sat
with Him in the shade of the tree, and talked with Him of matters
which the tree never could understand; only it heard that the
talk was of love and charity and gentleness, and it saw that the
Master was beloved and venerated by the others. It heard them
tell of the Master's goodness and humility,—how He had healed
the sick and raised the dead and bestowed inestimable blessings
wherever He walked. And the tree loved the Master for His beauty
and His goodness; and when He came to the forest it was full of
joy, but when He came not it was sad. And the other trees of the
forest joined in its happiness and its sorrow, for they, too,
loved the Master. And the angel always hovered near.</p>
<p>The Master came one night alone into the forest, and His face
was pale with anguish and wet with tears, and He fell upon His
knees and prayed. The tree heard Him, and all the forest was
still, as if it were standing in the presence of death. And when
the morning came, lo! the angel had gone.</p>
<p>Then there was a great confusion in the forest. There was a
sound of rude voices, and a clashing of swords and staves.
Strange men appeared, uttering loud oaths and cruel threats, and
the tree was filled with terror. It called aloud for the angel,
but the angel came not.</p>
<p>"Alas," cried the vine, "they have come to destroy the tree,
the pride and glory of the forest!"</p>
<p>The forest was sorely agitated, but it was in vain. The
strange men plied their axes with cruel vigor, and the tree was
hewn to the ground. Its beautiful branches were cut away and cast
aside, and its soft, thick foliage was strewn to the tenderer
mercies of the winds.</p>
<p>"They are killing me!" cried the tree; "why is not the angel
here to protect me?"</p>
<p>But no one heard the piteous cry,—none but the other trees of
the forest; and they wept, and the little vine wept too.</p>
<p>Then the cruel men dragged the despoiled and hewn tree from
the forest, and the forest saw that beauteous thing no more.</p>
<p>But the night wind that swept down from the City of the Great
King that night to ruffle the bosom of distant Galilee, tarried
in the forest awhile to say that it had seen that day a cross
upraised on Calvary,—the tree on which was stretched the body of
the dying Master.</p>
<p>1884.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Symbol and the Saint</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE SYMBOL AND THE SAINT</p>
<p>Once upon a time a young man made ready for a voyage. His name
was Norss; broad were his shoulders, his cheeks were ruddy, his
hair was fair and long, his body betokened strength, and
good-nature shone from his blue eyes and lurked about the corners
of his mouth.</p>
<p>"Where are you going?" asked his neighbor Jans, the
forge-master.</p>
<p>"I am going sailing for a wife," said Norss.</p>
<p>"For a wife, indeed!" cried Jans. "And why go you to seek her
in foreign lands? Are not our maidens good enough and fair
enough, that you must need search for a wife elsewhere? For
shame, Norss! for shame!"</p>
<p>But Norss said, "A spirit came to me in my dreams last night
and said, 'Launch the boat and set sail to-morrow. Have no fear;
for I will guide you to the bride that awaits you.' Then,
standing there, all white and beautiful, the spirit held forth a
symbol—such as I had never before seen—in the figure of a
cross, and the spirit said: 'By this symbol shall she be known to
you.'"</p>
<p>"If this be so, you must need go," said Jans. "But are you
well victualled? Come to my cabin, and let me give you venison
and bear's meat."</p>
<p>Norss shook his head. "The spirit will provide," said he. "I
have no fear, and I shall take no care, trusting in the
spirit."</p>
<p>So Norss pushed his boat down the beach into the sea, and
leaped into the boat, and unfurled the sail to the wind. Jan
stood wondering on the beach, and watched the boat speed out of
sight.</p>
<p>On, on, many days on sailed Norss,—so many leagues that he
thought he must have compassed the earth. In all this time he
knew no hunger nor thirst; it was as the spirit had told him in
his dream,—no cares nor dangers beset him. By day the dolphins
and the other creatures of the sea gambolled about his boat; by
night a beauteous Star seemed to direct his course; and when he
slept and dreamed, he saw ever the spirit clad in white, and
holding forth to him the symbol in the similitude of a cross.</p>
<p>At last he came to a strange country,—a country so very
different from his own that he could scarcely trust his senses.
Instead of the rugged mountains of the North, he saw a gentle
landscape of velvety green; the trees were not pines and firs,
but cypresses, cedars, and palms; instead of the cold, crisp air
of his native land, he scented the perfumed zephyrs of the
Orient; and the wind that filled the sail of his boat and smote
his tanned cheeks was heavy and hot with the odor of cinnamon and
spices. The waters were calm and blue,—very different from the
white and angry waves of Norss's native fiord.</p>
<p>As if guided by an unseen hand, the boat pointed straight for
the beach of this strangely beautiful land; and ere its prow
cleaved the shallower waters, Norss saw a maiden standing on the
shore, shading her eyes with her right hand, and gazing intently
at him. She was the most beautiful maiden he had ever looked
upon. As Norss was fair, so was this maiden dark; her black hair
fell loosely about her shoulders in charming contrast with the
white raiment in which her slender, graceful form was clad.
Around her neck she wore a golden chain, and therefrom was
suspended a small symbol, which Norss did not immediately
recognize.</p>
<p>"Hast thou come sailing out of the North into the East?" asked
the maiden.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Norss.</p>
<p>"And thou art Norss?" she asked.</p>
<p>"I am Norss; and I come seeking my bride," he answered.</p>
<p>"I am she," said the maiden. "My name is Faia. An angel came
to me in my dreams last night, and the angel said: 'Stand upon
the beach to-day, and Norss shall come out of the North to bear
thee home a bride.' So, coming here, I found thee sailing to our
shore."</p>
<p>Remembering then the spirit's words, Norss said: "What symbol
have you, Faia, that I may know how truly you have spoken?"</p>
<p>"No symbol have I but this," said Faia, holding out the symbol
that was attached to the golden chain about her neck. Norss
looked upon it, and lo! it was the symbol of his dreams,—a tiny
wooden cross.</p>
<p>Then Norss clasped Faia in his arms and kissed her, and
entering into the boat they sailed away into the North. In all
their voyage neither care nor danger beset them; for as it had
been told to them in their dreams, so it came to pass. By day the
dolphins and the other creatures of the sea gambolled about them;
by night the winds and the waves sang them to sleep; and,
strangely enough, the Star which before had led Norss into the
East, now shone bright and beautiful in the Northern sky!</p>
<p>When Norss and his bride reached their home, Jans, the
forge-master, and the other neighbors made great joy, and all
said that Faia was more beautiful than any other maiden in the
land. So merry was Jans that he built a huge fire in his forge,
and the flames thereof filled the whole Northern sky with rays of
light that danced up, up, up to the Star, singing glad songs the
while. So Norss and Faia were wed, and they went to live in the
cabin in the fir-grove.</p>
<p>To these two was born in good time a son, whom they named
Claus. On the night that he was born wondrous things came to
pass. To the cabin in the fir-grove came all the quaint, weird
spirits,—the fairies, the elves, the trolls, the pixies, the
fadas, the crions, the goblins, the kobolds, the moss-people, the
gnomes, the dwarfs, the water-sprites, the courils, the bogles,
the brownies, the nixies, the trows, the stille-volk,—all came
to the cabin in the fir-grove, and capered about and sang the
strange, beautiful songs of the Mist-Land. And the flames of old
Jans's forge leaped up higher than ever into the Northern sky,
carrying the joyous tidings to the Star, and full of music was
that happy night.</p>
<p>Even in infancy Claus did marvellous things. With his baby
hands he wrought into pretty figures the willows that were given
him to play with. As he grew older, he fashioned, with the knife
old Jans had made for him, many curious toys,—carts, horses,
dogs, lambs, houses, trees, cats, and birds, all of wood and very
like to nature. His mother taught him how to make dolls
too,—dolls of every kind, condition, temper, and color; proud
dolls, homely dolls, boy dolls, lady dolls, wax dolls, rubber
dolls, paper dolls, worsted dolls, rag dolls,—dolls of every
description and without end. So Claus became at once quite as
popular with the little girls as with the little boys of his
native village; for he was so generous that he gave away all
these pretty things as fast as he made them.</p>
<p>Claus seemed to know by instinct every language. As he grew
older he would ramble off into the woods and talk with the trees,
the rocks, and the beasts of the greenwood; or he would sit on
the cliffs overlooking the fiord, and listen to the stories that
the waves of the sea loved to tell him; then, too, he knew the
haunts of the elves and the stille-volk, and many a pretty tale
he learned from these little people. When night came, old Jans
told him the quaint legends of the North, and his mother sang to
him the lullabies she had heard when a little child herself in
the far-distant East. And every night his mother held out to him
the symbol in the similitude of the cross, and bade him kiss it
ere he went to sleep.</p>
<p>So Claus grew to manhood, increasing each day in knowledge and
in wisdom. His works increased too; and his liberality dispensed
everywhere the beauteous things which his fancy conceived and his
skill executed. Jans, being now a very old man, and having no son
of his own, gave to Claus his forge and workshop, and taught him
those secret arts which he in youth had learned from cunning
masters. Right joyous now was Claus; and many, many times the
Northern sky glowed with the flames that danced singing from the
forge while Claus moulded his pretty toys. Every color of the
rainbow were these flames; for they reflected the bright colors
of the beauteous things strewn round that wonderful workshop.
Just as of old he had dispensed to all children alike the
homelier toys of his youth, so now he gave to all children alike
these more beautiful and more curious gifts. So little children
everywhere loved Claus, because he gave them pretty toys, and
their parents loved him because he made their little ones so
happy.</p>
<p>But now Norss and Faia were come to old age. After long years
of love and happiness, they knew that death could not be far
distant. And one day Faia said to Norss: "Neither you nor I, dear
love, fear death; but if we could choose, would we not choose to
live always in this our son Claus, who has been so sweet a joy to
us?"</p>
<p>"Ay, ay," said Norss; "but how is that possible?"</p>
<p>"We shall see," said Faia.</p>
<p>That night Norss dreamed that a spirit came to him, and that
the spirit said to him: "Norss, thou shalt surely live forever in
thy son Claus, if thou wilt but acknowledge the symbol."</p>
<p>Then when the morning was come Norss told his dream to Faia,
his wife; and Faia said,—</p>
<p>"The same dream had I,—an angel appearing to me and speaking
these very words."</p>
<p>"But what of the symbol?" cried Norss.</p>
<p>"I have it here, about my neck," said Faia.</p>
<p>So saying, Faia drew from her bosom the symbol of wood,—a
tiny cross suspended about her neck by the golden chain. And as
she stood there holding the symbol out to Norss, he—he thought
of the time when first he saw her on the far-distant Orient
shore, standing beneath the Star in all her maidenly glory,
shading her beauteous eyes with one hand, and with the other
clasping the cross,—the holy talisman of her faith.</p>
<p>"Faia, Faia!" cried Norss, "it is the same,—the same you wore
when I fetched you a bride from the East!"</p>
<p>"It is the same." said Faia, "yet see how my kisses and my
prayers have worn it away; for many, many times in these years,
dear Norss, have I pressed it to my lips and breathed your name
upon it. See now—see what a beauteous light its shadow makes
upon your aged face!"</p>
<p>The sunbeams, indeed, streaming through the window at that
moment, cast the shadow of the symbol on old Norss's brow. Norss
felt a glorious warmth suffuse him, his heart leaped with joy,
and he stretched out his arms and fell about Faia's neck, and
kissed the symbol and acknowledged it. Then likewise did Faia;
and suddenly the place was filled with a wondrous brightness and
with strange music, and never thereafter were Norss and Faia
beholden of men.</p>
<p>Until late that night Claus toiled at his forge; for it was a
busy season with him, and he had many, many curious and beauteous
things to make for the little children in the country round
about. The colored flames leaped singing from his forge, so that
the Northern sky seemed to be lighted by a thousand rainbows; but
above all this voiceful glory beamed the Star, bright, beautiful,
serene.</p>
<p>Coming late to the cabin in the fir-grove, Claus wondered that
no sign of his father or of his mother was to be seen.
"Father—mother!" he cried, but he received no answer. Just then
the Star cast its golden gleam through the latticed window, and
this strange, holy light fell and rested upon the symbol of the
cross that lay upon the floor. Seeing it, Claus stooped and
picked it up, and kissing it reverently, he cried: "Dear
talisman, be thou my inspiration evermore; and wheresoever thy
blessed influence is felt, there also let my works be known
henceforth forever!"</p>
<p>No sooner had he said these words than Claus felt the gift of
immortality bestowed upon him; and in that moment, too, there
came to him a knowledge that his parents' prayer had been
answered, and that Norss and Faia would live in him through all
time.</p>
<p>And lo! to that place and in that hour came all the people of
Mist-Land and of Dream-Land to declare allegiance to him: yes,
the elves, the fairies, the pixies,—all came to Claus, prepared
to do his bidding. Joyously they capered about him, and merrily
they sang.</p>
<p>"Now haste ye all," cried Claus,—"haste ye all to your homes
and bring to my workshop the best ye have. Search, little
hill-people, deep in the bowels of the earth for finest gold and
choicest jewels; fetch me, O mermaids, from the bottom of the sea
the treasures hidden there,—the shells of rainbow tints, the
smooth, bright pebbles, and the strange ocean flowers; go,
pixies, and other water-sprites, to your secret lakes, and bring
me pearls! Speed! speed you all! for many pretty things have we
to make for the little ones of earth we love!"</p>
<p>But to the kobolds and the brownies Claus said: "Fly to every
house on earth where the cross is known; loiter unseen in the
corners, and watch and hear the children through the day. Keep a
strict account of good and bad, and every night bring back to me
the names of good and bad, that I may know them."</p>
<p>The kobolds and the brownies laughed gleefully, and sped away
on noiseless wings; and so, too, did the other fairies and
elves.</p>
<p>There came also to Claus the beasts of the forest and the
birds of the air, and bade him be their master. And up danced the
Four Winds, and they said: "May we not serve you, too?"</p>
<p>The snow-king came stealing along in his feathery chariot.
"Oho!" he cried, "I shall speed over all the world and tell them
you are coming. In town and country, on the mountain-tops and in
the valleys,—wheresoever the cross is raised,—there will I
herald your approach, and thither will I strew you a pathway of
feathery white. Oho! oho!" So, singing softly, the snow-king
stole upon his way.</p>
<p>But of all the beasts that begged to do him service, Claus
liked the reindeer best. "You shall go with me in my travels; for
henceforth I shall bear my treasures not only to the children of
the North, but to the children in every land whither the Star
points me and where the cross is lifted up!" So said Claus to the
reindeer, and the reindeer neighed joyously and stamped their
hoofs impatiently, as though they longed to start
immediately.</p>
<p>Oh, many, many times has Claus whirled away from his far
Northern home in his sledge drawn by the reindeer, and thousands
upon thousands of beautiful gifts—all of his own making—has he
borne to the children of every land; for he loves them all alike,
and they all alike love him, I trow. So truly do they love him
that they call him Santa Claus, and I am sure that he must be a
saint; for he has lived these many hundred years, and we, who
know that he was born of Faith and Love, believe that he will
live forever.</p>
<p>1886.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Coming of the Prince</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE COMING OF THE PRINCE</p>
<p>I</p>
<p>Whirr-r-r! whirr-r-r! whirr-r-r!" said the wind, and it tore
through the streets of the city that Christmas eve, turning
umbrellas inside out, driving the snow in fitful gusts before it,
creaking the rusty signs and shutters, and playing every kind of
rude prank it could think of.</p>
<p>"How cold your breath is to-night!" said Barbara, with a
shiver, as she drew her tattered little shawl the closer around
her benumbed body.</p>
<p>"Whirr-r-r! whirr-r-r! whirr-r-r!" answered the wind; "but why
are you out in this storm? You should be at home by the warm
fire."</p>
<p>"I have no home," said Barbara; and then she sighed bitterly,
and something like a tiny pearl came in the corner of one of her
sad blue eyes.</p>
<p>But the wind did not hear her answer, for it had hurried up
the street to throw a handful of snow in the face of an old man
who was struggling along with a huge basket of good things on
each arm.</p>
<p>"Why are you not at the cathedral?" asked a snowflake, as it
alighted on Barbara's shoulder. "I heard grand music, and saw
beautiful lights there as I floated down from the sky a moment
ago."</p>
<p>"What are they doing at the cathedral?" inquired Barbara.</p>
<p>"Why, haven't you heard?" exclaimed the snowflake. "I supposed
everybody knew that the prince was coming to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Surely enough; this is Christmas eve," said Barbara, "and the
prince will come tomorrow."</p>
<p>Barbara remembered that her mother had told her about the
prince, how beautiful and good and kind and gentle he was, and
how he loved the little children; but her mother was dead now,
and there was none to tell Barbara of the prince and his
coming,—none but the little snowflake.</p>
<p>"I should like to see the prince," said Barbara, "for I have
heard he was very beautiful and good."</p>
<p>"That he is," said the snowflake. "I have never seen him, but
I heard the pines and the firs singing about him as I floated
over the forest to-night."</p>
<p>"Whirr-r-r! whirr-r-r!" cried the wind, returning boisterously
to where Barbara stood. "I've been looking for you everywhere,
little snowflake! So come with me."</p>
<p>And without any further ado, the wind seized upon the
snowflake and hurried it along the street and led it a merry
dance through the icy air of the winter night.</p>
<p>Barbara trudged on through the snow and looked in at the
bright things in the shop windows. The glitter of the lights and
the sparkle of the vast array of beautiful Christmas toys quite
dazzled her. A strange mingling of admiration, regret, and envy
filled the poor little creature's heart.</p>
<p>"Much as I may yearn to have them, it cannot be," she said to
herself, "yet I may feast my eyes upon them."</p>
<p>"Go away from here!" said a harsh voice. "How can the rich
people see all my fine things if you stand before the window? Be
off with you, you miserable little beggar!"</p>
<p>It was the shopkeeper, and he gave Barbara a savage box on the
ear that sent her reeling into the deeper snowdrifts of the
gutter.</p>
<p>Presently she came to a large house where there seemed to be
much mirth and festivity. The shutters were thrown open, and
through the windows Barbara could see a beautiful Christmas tree
in the centre of a spacious room,—a beautiful Christmas tree
ablaze with red and green lights, and heavy with toys and stars
and glass balls, and other beautiful things that children love.
There was a merry throng around the tree, and the children were
smiling and gleeful, and all in that house seemed content and
happy. Barbara heard them singing, and their song was about the
prince who was to come on the morrow.</p>
<p>"This must be the house where the prince will stop," thought
Barbara. "How I would like to see his face and hear his
voice!—yet what would he care for <i>me</i>, a 'miserable little
beggar'?"</p>
<p>So Barbara crept on through the storm, shivering and
disconsolate, yet thinking of the prince.</p>
<p>"Where are you going?" she asked of the wind as it overtook
her.</p>
<p>"To the cathedral," laughed the wind. "The great people are
flocking there, and I will have a merry time amongst them, ha,
ha, ha!"</p>
<p>And with laughter the wind whirled away and chased the snow
toward the cathedral.</p>
<p>"It is there, then, that the prince will come," thought
Barbara. "It is a beautiful place, and the people will pay him
homage there. Perhaps I shall see him if I go there."</p>
<p>So she went to the cathedral. Many folk were there in their
richest apparel, and the organ rolled out its grand music, and
the people sang wondrous songs, and the priests made eloquent
prayers; and the music, and the songs, and the prayers were all
about the prince and his expected coming. The throng that swept
in and out of the great edifice talked always of the prince, the
prince, the prince, until Barbara really loved him very much, for
all the gentle words she heard the people say of him.</p>
<p>"Please, can I go and sit inside?" inquired Barbara of the
sexton.</p>
<p>"No!" said the sexton, gruffly, for this was an important
occasion with the sexton, and he had no idea of wasting words on
a beggar child.</p>
<p>"But I will be very good and quiet," pleaded Barbara. "Please,
may I not see the prince?"</p>
<p>"I have said no, and I mean it," retorted the sexton. "What
have you for the prince, or what cares the prince for you? Out
with you, and don't be blocking up the doorway!" So the sexton
gave Barbara an angry push, and the child fell half-way down the
icy steps of the cathedral. She began to cry. Some great people
were entering the cathedral at the time, and they laughed to see
her falling.</p>
<p>"Have you seen the prince?" inquired a snowflake, alighting on
Barbara's cheek. It was the same little snowflake that had clung
to her shawl an hour ago, when the wind came galloping along on
his boisterous search.</p>
<p>"Ah, no!" sighed Barbara, in tears; "but what cares the prince
for <i>me</i>?"</p>
<p>"Do not speak so bitterly," said the little snowflake. "Go to
the forest and you shall see him, for the prince always comes
through the forest to the city."</p>
<p>Despite the cold, and her bruises, and her tears, Barbara
smiled. In the forest she could behold the prince coming on his
way; and he would not see her, for she would hide among the trees
and vines.</p>
<p>"Whirr-r-r, whirr-r-r!" It was the mischievous, romping wind
once more; and it fluttered Barbara's tattered shawl, and set her
hair to streaming in every direction, and swept the snowflake
from her cheek and sent it spinning through the air.</p>
<p>Barbara trudged toward the forest. When she came to the city
gate the watchman stopped her, and held his big lantern in her
face, and asked her who she was and where she was going.</p>
<p>"I am Barbara, and I am going into the forest," said she,
boldly.</p>
<p>"Into the forest?" cried the watchman, "and in this storm? No,
child; you will perish!"</p>
<p>"But I am going to see the prince," said Barbara. "They will
not let me watch for him in the church, nor in any of their
pleasant homes, so I am going into the forest."</p>
<p>The watchman smiled sadly. He was a kindly man; he thought of
his own little girl at home.</p>
<p>"No, you must not go to the forest," said he, "for you would
perish with the cold."</p>
<p>But Barbara would not stay. She avoided the watchman's grasp
and ran as fast as ever she could through the city gate.</p>
<p>"Come back, come back!" cried the watchman; "you will perish
in the forest!"</p>
<p>But Barbara would not heed his cry. The falling snow did not
stay her, nor did the cutting blast. She thought only of the
prince, and she ran straightway to the forest.</p>
<p>II</p>
<p>"What do you see up there, O pine-tree?" asked a little vine
in the forest.</p>
<p>"You lift your head among the clouds tonight, and you tremble
strangely as if you saw wondrous sights."</p>
<p>"I see only the distant hill-tops and the dark clouds,"
answered the pine-tree. "And the wind sings of the snow-king
to-night; to all my questionings he says, 'Snow, snow, snow,'
till I am weary with his refrain."</p>
<p>"But the prince will surely come to-morrow?" inquired the tiny
snowdrop that nestled close to the vine.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes," said the vine. "I heard the country folks talking
about it as they went through the forest to-day, and they said
that the prince would surely come on the morrow."</p>
<p>"What are you little folks down there talking about?" asked
the pine-tree.</p>
<p>"We are talking about the prince," said the vine.</p>
<p>"Yes, he is to come on the morrow," said the pine-tree, "but
not until the day dawns, and it is still all dark in the
east."</p>
<p>"Yes," said the fir-tree, "the east is black, and only the
wind and the snow issue from it."</p>
<p>"Keep your head out of my way!" cried the pine-tree to the
fir; "with your constant bobbing around I can hardly see at
all."</p>
<p>"Take <i>that</i> for your bad manners," retorted the fir,
slapping the pine-tree savagely with one of her longest
branches.</p>
<p>The pine-tree would put up with no such treatment, so he
hurled his largest cone at the fir; and for a moment or two it
looked as if there were going to be a serious commotion in the
forest.</p>
<p>"Hush!" cried the vine in a startled tone; "there is some one
coming through the forest."</p>
<p>The pine-tree and the fir stopped quarrelling, and the
snowdrop nestled closer to the vine, while the vine hugged the
pine-tree very tightly. All were greatly alarmed.</p>
<p>"Nonsense!" said the pine-tree, in a tone of assumed bravery.
"No one would venture into the forest at such an hour."</p>
<p>"Indeed! and why not?" cried a child's voice. "Will you not
let me watch with you for the coming of the prince?"</p>
<p>"Will you not chop me down?" inquired the pine-tree,
gruffly.</p>
<p>"Will you not tear me from my tree?" asked the vine.</p>
<p>"Will you not pluck my blossoms?" plaintively piped the
snowdrop.</p>
<p>"No, of course not," said Barbara; "I have come only to watch
with you for the prince."</p>
<p>Then Barbara told them who she was, and how cruelly she had
been treated in the city, and how she longed to see the prince,
who was to come on the morrow. And as she talked, the forest and
all therein felt a great compassion for her.</p>
<p>"Lie at my feet," said the pine-tree, "and I will protect
you."</p>
<p>"Nestle close to me, and I will chafe your temples and body
and limbs till they are warm," said the vine.</p>
<p>"Let me rest upon your cheek, and I will sing you my little
songs," said the snowdrop.</p>
<p>And Barbara felt very grateful for all these homely
kindnesses. She rested in the velvety snow at the foot of the
pine-tree, and the vine chafed her body and limbs, and the little
flower sang sweet songs to her.</p>
<p>"Whirr-r-r, whirr-r-r!" There was that noisy wind again, but
this time it was gentler than it had been in the city.</p>
<p>"Here you are, my little Barbara," said the wind, in kindly
tones. "I have brought you the little snowflake. I am glad you
came away from the city, for the people are proud and haughty
there; oh, but I will have my fun with them!"</p>
<p>Then, having dropped the little snowflake on Barbara's cheek,
the wind whisked off to the city again. And we can imagine that
it played rare pranks with the proud, haughty folk on its return;
for the wind, as you know, is no respecter of persons.</p>
<p>"Dear Barbara," said the snowflake, "I will watch with thee
for the coming of the prince."</p>
<p>And Barbara was glad, for she loved the little snowflake, that
was so pure and innocent and gentle.</p>
<p>"Tell us, O pine-tree," cried the vine, "what do you see in
the east? Has the prince yet entered the forest?"</p>
<p>"The east is full of black clouds," said the pine-tree, "and
the winds that hurry to the hill-tops sing of the snow."</p>
<p>"But the city is full of brightness," said the fir. "I can see
the lights in the cathedral, and I can hear wondrous music about
the prince and his coming."</p>
<p>"Yes, they are singing of the prince in the cathedral," said
Barbara, sadly.</p>
<p>"But we shall see him first," whispered the vine,
reassuringly.</p>
<p>"Yes, the prince will come through the forest," said the
little snowdrop, gleefully.</p>
<p>"Fear not, dear Barbara, we shall behold the prince in all his
glory," cried the snowflake.</p>
<p>Then all at once there was a strange hubbub in the forest; for
it was midnight, and the spirits came from their hiding-places to
prowl about and to disport themselves. Barbara beheld them all in
great wonder and trepidation, for she had never before seen the
spirits of the forest, although she had often heard of them. It
was a marvellous sight.</p>
<p>"Fear nothing," whispered the vine to Barbara,—"fear nothing,
for they dare not touch you."</p>
<p>The antics of the wood-spirits continued but an hour; for then
a cock crowed, and immediately thereat, with a wondrous
scurrying, the elves and the gnomes and the other grotesque
spirits sought their abiding-places in the caves and in the
hollow trunks and under the loose bark of the trees. And then it
was very quiet once more in the forest.</p>
<p>"It is very cold," said Barbara. "My hands and feet are like
ice."</p>
<p>Then the pine-tree and the fir shook down the snow from their
broad boughs, and the snow fell upon Barbara and covered her like
a white mantle.</p>
<p>"You will be warm now," said the vine, kissing Barbara's
forehead. And Barbara smiled.</p>
<p>Then the snowdrop sang a lullaby about the moss that loved the
violet. And Barbara said, "I am going to sleep; will you wake me
when the prince comes through the forest?"</p>
<p>And they said they would. So Barbara fell asleep.</p>
<p>III</p>
<p>"The bells in the city are ringing merrily," said the fir,
"and the music in the cathedral is louder and more beautiful than
before. Can it be that the prince has already come into the
city?"</p>
<p>"No," cried the pine-tree, "look to the east and see the
Christmas day a-dawning! The prince is coming, and his pathway is
through the forest!"</p>
<p>The storm had ceased. Snow lay upon all the earth. The hills,
the forest, the city, and the meadows were white with the robe
the storm-king had thrown over them. Content with his wondrous
work, the storm-king himself had fled to his far Northern home
before the dawn of the Christmas day. Everything was bright and
sparkling and beautiful. And most beautiful was the great hymn of
praise the forest sang that Christmas morning,—the pine-trees
and the firs and the vines and the snow-flowers that sang of the
prince and of his promised coming.</p>
<p>"Wake up, little one," cried the vine, "for the prince is
coming!"</p>
<p>But Barbara slept; she did not hear the vine's soft calling,
nor the lofty music of the forest.</p>
<p>A little snow-bird flew down from the fir-tree's bough and
perched upon the vine, and carolled in Barbara's ear of the
Christmas morning and of the coming of the prince. But Barbara
slept; she did not hear the carol of the bird.</p>
<p>"Alas!" sighed the vine, "Barbara will not awaken, and the
prince is coming."</p>
<p>Then the vine and the snowdrop wept, and the pine-tree and the
fir were very sad.</p>
<p>The prince came through the forest clad in royal raiment and
wearing a golden crown. Angels came with him, and the forest sang
a great hymn unto the prince, such a hymn as had never before
been heard on earth. The prince came to the sleeping child and
smiled upon her and called her by name.</p>
<p>"Barbara, my little one," said the prince, "awaken, and come
with me."</p>
<p>Then Barbara opened her eyes and beheld the prince. And it
seemed as if a new life had come to her, for there was warmth in
her body, and a flush upon her cheeks and a light in her eyes
that were divine. And she was clothed no longer in rags, but in
white flowing raiment; and upon the soft brown hair there was a
crown like those which angels wear. And as Barbara arose and went
to the prince, the little snowflake fell from her cheek upon her
bosom, and forthwith became a pearl more precious than all other
jewels upon earth.</p>
<p>And the prince took Barbara in his arms and blessed her, and
turning round about, returned with the little child unto his
home, while the forest and the sky and the angels sang a wondrous
song.</p>
<p>The city waited for the prince, but he did not come. None knew
of the glory of the forest that Christmas morning, nor of the new
life that came to little Barbara.</p>
<p><i>Come thou, dear Prince, oh, come to us this holy Christmas
time! Come to the busy marts of earth, the quiet homes, the noisy
streets, the humble lanes; come to us all, and with thy love
touch every human heart, that we may know that love, and in its
blessed peace bear charity to all mankind!</i></p>
<p>1886.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Mouse and the Moonbeam</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE MOUSE AND THE MOONBEAM</p>
<p>Whilst you were sleeping, little Dear-my-Soul, strange things
happened; but that I saw and heard them, I should never have
believed them. The clock stood, of course, in the corner, a
moonbeam floated idly on the floor, and a little mauve mouse came
from the hole in the chimney corner and frisked and scampered in
the light of the moonbeam upon the floor. The little mauve mouse
was particularly merry; sometimes she danced upon two legs and
sometimes upon four legs, but always very daintily and always
very merrily.</p>
<p>"Ah, me!" sighed the old clock, "how different mice are
nowadays from the mice we used to have in the good old times! Now
there was your grandma, Mistress Velvetpaw, and there was your
grandpa, Master Sniffwhisker,—how grave and dignified they were!
Many a night have I seen them dancing upon the carpet below me,
but always the stately minuet and never that crazy frisking which
you are executing now, to my surprise—yes, and to my horror,
too."</p>
<p>"But why shouldn't I be merry?" asked the little mauve mouse.
"To-morrow is Christmas, and this is Christmas eve."</p>
<p>"So it is," said the old clock. "I had really forgotten all
about it. But, tell me, what is Christmas to you, little Miss
Mauve Mouse?"</p>
<p>"A great deal to me!" cried the little mauve mouse. "I have
been very good a very long time: I have not used any bad words,
nor have I gnawed any holes, nor have I stolen any canary seed,
nor have I worried my mother by running behind the flour-barrel
where that horrid trap is set. In fact, I have been so good that
I'm very sure Santa Claus will bring me something very
pretty."</p>
<p>This seemed to amuse the old clock mightily; in fact, the old
clock fell to laughing so heartily that in an unguarded moment
she struck twelve instead of ten, which was exceedingly careless
and therefore to be reprehended.</p>
<p>"Why, you silly little mauve mouse," said the old clock, "you
don't believe in Santa Claus, do you?"</p>
<p>"Of course I do," answered the little mauve mouse. "Believe in
Santa Claus? Why shouldn't I? Didn't Santa Claus bring me a
beautiful butter-cracker last Christmas, and a lovely gingersnap,
and a delicious rind of cheese, and—and—lots of things? I
should be very ungrateful if I did <i>not</i> believe in Santa
Claus, and I certainly shall not disbelieve in him at the very
moment when I am expecting him to arrive with a bundle of goodies
for me.</p>
<p>"I once had a little sister," continued the little mauve
mouse, "who did not believe in Santa Claus, and the very thought
of the fate that befell her makes my blood run cold and my
whiskers stand on end. She died before I was born, but my mother
has told me all about her. Perhaps you never saw her; her name
was Squeaknibble, and she was in stature one of those long, low,
rangy mice that are seldom found in well-stocked pantries. Mother
says that Squeaknibble took after our ancestors who came from New
England, where the malignant ingenuity of the people and the
ferocity of the cats rendered life precarious indeed.
Squeaknibble seemed to inherit many ancestral traits, the most
conspicuous of which was a disposition to sneer at some of the
most respected dogmas in mousedom. From her very infancy she
doubted, for example, the widely accepted theory that the moon
was composed of green cheese; and this heresy was the first
intimation her parents had of the sceptical turn of her mind. Of
course, her parents were vastly annoyed, for their maturer
natures saw that this youthful scepticism portended serious, if
not fatal, consequences. Yet all in vain did the sagacious couple
reason and plead with their headstrong and heretical child.</p>
<p>"For a long time Squeaknibble would not believe that there was
any such archfiend as a cat; but she came to be convinced to the
contrary one memorable night, on which occasion she lost two
inches of her beautiful tail, and received so terrible a fright
that for fully an hour afterward her little heart beat so
violently as to lift her off her feet and bump her head against
the top of our domestic hole. The cat that deprived my sister of
so large a percentage of her vertebral colophon was the same
brindled ogress that nowadays steals ever and anon into this
room, crouches treacherously behind the sofa, and feigns to be
asleep, hoping, forsooth, that some of us, heedless of her hated
presence, will venture within reach of her diabolical claws. So
enraged was this ferocious monster at the escape of my sister
that she ground her fangs viciously together, and vowed to take
no pleasure in life until she held in her devouring jaws the
innocent little mouse which belonged to the mangled bit of tail
she even then clutched in her remorseless claws."</p>
<p>"Yes," said the old clock, "now that you recall the incident,
I recollect it well. I was here then, in this very corner, and I
remember that I laughed at the cat and chided her for her
awkwardness. My reproaches irritated her; she told me that a
clock's duty was to run itself down, <i>not</i> to be
depreciating the merits of others! Yes, I recall the time; that
cat's tongue is fully as sharp as her claws."</p>
<p>"Be that as it may," said the little mauve mouse, "it is a
matter of history, and therefore beyond dispute, that from that
very moment the cat pined for Squeaknibble's life; it seemed as
if that one little two-inch taste of Squeaknibble's tail had
filled the cat with a consuming passion, or appetite, for the
rest of Squeaknibble. So the cat waited and watched and hunted
and schemed and devised and did everything possible for a cat—a
cruel cat—to do in order to gain her murderous ends. One
night—one fatal Christmas eve—our mother had undressed the
children for bed, and was urging upon them to go to sleep earlier
than usual, since she fully expected that Santa Claus would bring
each of them something very palatable and nice before morning.
Thereupon the little dears whisked their cunning tails, pricked
up their beautiful ears, and began telling one another what they
hoped Santa Claus would bring. One asked for a slice of
Roquefort, another for Neufchâtel, another for Sap Sago,
and a fourth for Edam; one expressed a preference for de Brie,
while another hoped to get Parmesan; one clamored for imperial
blue Stilton, and another craved the fragrant boon of Caprera.
There were fourteen little ones then, and consequently there were
diverse opinions as to the kind of gift which Santa Claus should
best bring; still, there was, as you can readily understand, an
enthusiastic unanimity upon this point, namely, that the gift
should be cheese of some brand or other.</p>
<p>"'My dears,' said our mother, 'what matters it whether the
boon which Santa Claus brings be royal English cheddar or fromage
de Bricquebec, Vermont sage, or Herkimer County skim-milk? We
should be content with whatsoever Santa Glaus bestows, so long as
it be cheese, disjoined from all traps whatsoever, unmixed with
Paris green, and free from glass, strychnine, and other harmful
ingredients. As for myself, I shall be satisfied with a cut of
nice, fresh Western reserve; for truly I recognize in no other
viand or edible half the fragrance or half the gustfulness to be
met with in one of these pale but aromatic domestic products. So
run away to your dreams now, that Santa Claus may find you
sleeping.'</p>
<p>"The children obeyed,—all but Squeaknibble. 'Let the others
think what they please,' said she, 'but <i>I</i> don't believe in
Santa Claus. I'm not going to bed, either. I'm going to creep out
of this dark hole and have a quiet romp, all by myself, in the
moonlight.' Oh, what a vain, foolish, wicked little mouse was
Squeaknibble! But I will not reproach the dead; her punishment
came all too swiftly. Now listen: who do you suppose overheard
her talking so disrespectfully of Santa Claus?"</p>
<p>"Why, Santa Claus himself," said the old clock.</p>
<p>"Oh, no," answered the little mauve mouse. "It was that
wicked, murderous cat! Just as Satan lurks and lies in wait for
bad children, so does the cruel cat lurk and lie in wait for
naughty little mice. And you can depend upon it, that when that
awful cat heard Squeaknibble speak so disrespectfully of Santa
Claus, her wicked eyes glowed with joy, her sharp teeth watered,
and her bristling fur emitted electric sparks as big as marrowfat
peas. Then what did that bloodthirsty monster do but scuttle as
fast as she could into Dear-my-Soul's room, leap up into
Dear-my-Soul's crib, and walk off with the pretty little white
muff which Dear-my-Soul used to wear when she went for a visit to
the little girl in the next block! What upon earth did the horrid
old cat want with Dear-my-Soul's pretty little white muff? Ah,
the duplicity, the diabolical ingenuity of that cat! Listen.</p>
<p>"In the first place," resumed the little mauve mouse, after a
pause that testified eloquently to the depth of her emotion,—"in
the first place, that wretched cat dressed herself up in that
pretty little white muff, by which you are to understand that she
crawled through the muff just so far as to leave her four cruel
legs at liberty."</p>
<p>"Yes, I understand," said the old clock.</p>
<p>"Then she put on the boy doll's fur cap," said the little
mauve mouse, "and when she was arrayed in the boy doll's fur cap
and Dear-my-Soul's pretty little white muff, of course she didn't
look like a cruel cat at all. But whom did she look like?"</p>
<p>"Like the boy doll," suggested the old clock.</p>
<p>"No, no!" cried the little mauve mouse.</p>
<p>"Like Dear-my-Soul?" asked the old clock.</p>
<p>"How stupid you are!" exclaimed the little mauve mouse. "Why,
she looked like Santa Claus, of course!"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes; I see," said the old clock. "Now I begin to be
interested; go on."</p>
<p>"Alas!" sighed the little mauve mouse, "not much remains to be
told; but there is more of my story left than there was of
Squeaknibble when that horrid cat crawled out of that miserable
disguise. You are to understand that, contrary to her sagacious
mother's injunction, and in notorious derision of the mooted
coming of Santa Claus, Squeaknibble issued from the friendly hole
in the chimney corner, and gambolled about over this very carpet,
and, I dare say, in this very moonlight."</p>
<p>"I do not know," said the moonbeam, faintly. "I am so very
old, and I have seen so many things—I do not know."</p>
<p>"Right merrily was Squeaknibble gambolling," continued the
little mauve mouse, "and she had just turned a double back
somersault without the use of what remained of her tail, when,
all of a sudden, she beheld, looming up like a monster ghost, a
figure all in white fur! Oh, how frightened she was, and how her
little heart did beat! 'Purr, purr-r-r,' said the ghost in white
fur. 'Oh, please don't hurt me!' pleaded Squeaknibble. 'No; I'll
not hurt you,' said the ghost in white fur; 'I'm Santa Claus, and
I've brought you a beautiful piece of savory old cheese, you dear
little mousie, you.' Poor Squeaknibble was deceived; a sceptic
all her life, she was at last befooled by the most palpable and
most fatal of frauds. 'How good of you!' said Squeaknibble. 'I
didn't believe there was a Santa Claus, and—' but before she
could say more she was seized by two sharp, cruel claws that
conveyed her crushed body to the murderous mouth of mousedom's
most malignant foe. I can dwell no longer upon this harrowing
scene. Suffice it to say that ere the morrow's sun rose like a
big yellow Herkimer County cheese upon the spot where that
tragedy had been enacted, poor Squeaknibble passed to that bourn
whence two inches of her beautiful tail had preceded her by the
space of three weeks to a day. As for Santa Claus, when he came
that Christmas eve, bringing morceaux de Brie and of Stilton for
the other little mice, he heard with sorrow of Squeaknibble's
fate; and ere he departed he said that in all his experience he
had never known of a mouse or of a child that had prospered after
once saying that he didn't believe in Santa Claus."</p>
<p>"Well, that is a remarkable story," said the old clock. "But
if you believe in Santa Glaus, why aren't you in bed?"</p>
<p>"That's where I shall be presently," answered the little mauve
mouse, "but I must have my scamper, you know. It is very
pleasant, I assure you, to frolic in the light of the moon; only
I cannot understand why you are always so cold and so solemn and
so still, you pale, pretty little moonbeam."</p>
<p>"Indeed, I do not know that I am so," said the moonbeam. "But
I am very old, and I have travelled many, many leagues, and I
have seen wondrous things. Sometimes I toss upon the ocean,
sometimes I fall upon a slumbering flower, sometimes I rest upon
a dead child's face. I see the fairies at their play, and I hear
mothers singing lullabies. Last night I swept across the frozen
bosom of a river. A woman's face looked up at me; it was the
picture of eternal rest. 'She is sleeping,' said the frozen
river. 'I rock her to and fro, and sing to her. Pass gently by, O
moonbeam; pass gently by, lest you awaken her.'"</p>
<p>"How strangely you talk," said the old clock. "Now, I'll
warrant me that, if you wanted to, you could tell many a pretty
and wonderful story. You must know many a Christmas tale; pray
tell us one to wear away this night of Christmas watching."</p>
<p>"I know but one," said the moonbeam. "I have told it over and
over again, in every land and in every home; yet I do not weary
of it. It is very simple. Should you like to hear it?"</p>
<p>"Indeed we should," said the old clock; "but before you begin,
let me strike twelve; for I shouldn't want to interrupt you."</p>
<p>When the old clock had performed this duty with somewhat more
than usual alacrity, the moonbeam began its story:—</p>
<p>"Upon a time—so long ago that I can't tell how long ago it
was—I fell upon a hillside. It was in a far distant country;
this I know, because, although it was the Christmas time, it was
not in that country as it is wont to be in countries to the
north. Hither the snow-king never came; flowers bloomed all the
year, and at all times the lambs found pleasant pasturage on the
hillsides. The night wind was balmy, and there was a fragrance of
cedar in its breath. There were violets on the hillside, and I
fell amongst them and lay there. I kissed them, and they
awakened. 'Ah, is it you, little moonbeam?' they said, and they
nestled in the grass which the lambs had left uncropped.</p>
<p>"A shepherd lay upon a broad stone on the hillside; above him
spread an olive-tree, old, ragged, and gloomy; but now it swayed
its rusty branches majestically in the shifting air of night. The
shepherd's name was Benoni. Wearied with long watching, he had
fallen asleep; his crook had slipped from his hand. Upon the
hillside, too, slept the shepherd's flock. I had counted them
again and again; I had stolen across their gentle faces and
brought them pleasant dreams of green pastures and of cool
water-brooks. I had kissed old Benoni, too, as he lay slumbering
there; and in his dreams he seemed to see Israel's King come upon
earth, and in his dreams he murmured the promised Messiah's
name.</p>
<p>"'Ah, is it you, little moonbeam?' quoth the violets. 'You
have come in good time. Nestle here with us, and see wonderful
things come to pass.'</p>
<p>"'What are these wonderful things of which you speak?' I
asked.</p>
<p>"'We heard the old olive-tree telling of them to-night,' said
the violets. '"Do not go to sleep, little violets," said the old
olive-tree, "for this is Christmas night, and the Master shall
walk upon the hillside in the glory of the midnight hour." So we
waited and watched; one by one the lambs fell asleep; one by one
the stars peeped out; the shepherd nodded and crooned and crooned
and nodded, and at last he, too, went fast asleep, and his crook
slipped from his keeping. Then we called to the old olive-tree
yonder, asking how soon the midnight hour would come; but all the
old olive-tree answered was "Presently, presently," and finally
we, too, fell asleep, wearied by our long watching, and lulled by
the rocking and swaying of the old olive-tree in the breezes of
the night.'</p>
<p>"'But who is this Master?' I asked.</p>
<p>"'A child, a little child,' they answered. 'He is called the
little Master by the others. He comes here often, and plays among
the flowers of the hillside. Sometimes the lambs, gambolling too
carelessly, have crushed and bruised us so that we lie bleeding
and are like to die; but the little Master heals our wounds and
refreshes us once again.'</p>
<p>"I marvelled much to hear these things. 'The midnight hour is
at hand,' said I, 'and I will abide with you to see this little
Master of whom you speak.' So we nestled among the verdure of the
hillside, and sang songs one to another.</p>
<p>"'Come away!' called the night wind; 'I know a beauteous sea
not far hence, upon whose bosom you shall float, float, float
away out into the mists and clouds, if you will come with
me.'</p>
<p>"But I hid under the violets and amid the tall grass, that the
night wind might not woo me with its pleading. 'Ho, there, old
olive-tree!' cried the violets; 'do you see the little Master
coming? Is not the midnight hour at hand?'</p>
<p>"'I can see the town yonder,' said the old olive-tree. 'A star
beams bright over Bethlehem, the iron gates swing open, and the
little Master comes.'</p>
<p>"Two children came to the hillside. The one, older than his
comrade, was Dimas, the son of Benoni. He was rugged and sinewy,
and over his brown shoulders was flung a goat-skin; a leathern
cap did not confine his long, dark curly hair. The other child
was he whom they called the little Master; about his slender form
clung raiment white as snow, and around his face of heavenly
innocence fell curls of golden yellow. So beautiful a child I had
not seen before, nor have I ever since seen such as he. And as
they came together to the hillside, there seemed to glow about
the little Master's head a soft white light, as if the moon had
sent its tenderest, fairest beams to kiss those golden curls.</p>
<p>"'What sound was that?' cried Dimas, for he was exceeding
fearful.</p>
<p>"'Have no fear, Dimas,' said the little Master. 'Give me thy
hand, and I will lead thee.'</p>
<p>"Presently they came to the rock whereon Benoni, the shepherd,
lay; and they stood under the old olive-tree, and the old
olive-tree swayed no longer in the night wind, but bent its
branches reverently in the presence of the little Master. It
seemed as if the wind, too, stayed in its shifting course just
then; for suddenly there was a solemn hush, and you could hear no
noise, except that in his dreams Benoni spoke the Messiah's
name.</p>
<p>"'Thy father sleeps,' said the little Master, 'and it is well
that it is so; for that I love thee, Dimas, and that thou shalt
walk with me in my Father's kingdom, I would show thee the
glories of my birthright.'</p>
<p>"Then all at once sweet music filled the air, and light,
greater than the light of day, illumined the sky and fell upon
all that hillside. The heavens opened, and angels, singing joyous
songs, walked to the earth. More wondrous still, the stars,
falling from their places in the sky, clustered upon the old
olive-tree, and swung hither and thither like colored lanterns.
The flowers of the hillside all awakened, and they, too, danced
and sang. The angels, coming hither, hung gold and silver and
jewels and precious stones upon the old olive, where swung the
stars; so that the glory of that sight, though I might live
forever, I shall never see again. When Dimas heard and saw these
things he fell upon his knees, and catching the hem of the little
Master's garment, he kissed it.</p>
<p>"'Greater joy than this shall be thine, Dimas,' said the
little Master; 'but first must all things be fulfilled.'</p>
<p>"All through that Christmas night did the angels come and go
with their sweet anthems; all through that Christmas night did
the stars dance and sing; and when it came my time to steal away,
the hillside was still beautiful with the glory and the music of
heaven."</p>
<p>"Well, is that all?" asked the old clock.</p>
<p>"No," said the moonbeam; "but I am nearly done. The years went
on. Sometimes I tossed upon the ocean's bosom, sometimes I
scampered o'er a battle-field, sometimes I lay upon a dead
child's face. I heard the voices of Darkness and mothers'
lullabies and sick men's prayers,—and so the years went on.</p>
<p>"I fell one night upon a hard and furrowed face. It was of
ghostly pallor. A thief was dying on the cross, and this was his
wretched face. About the cross stood men with staves and swords
and spears, but none paid heed unto the thief. Somewhat beyond
this cross another was lifted up, and upon it was stretched a
human body my light fell not upon. But I heard a voice that
somewhere I had heard before,—though where I did not know,—and
this voice blessed those that railed and jeered and shamefully
entreated. And suddenly the voice called 'Dimas, Dimas!' and the
thief upon whose hardened face I rested made answer.</p>
<p>"Then I saw that it was Dimas; yet to this wicked criminal
there remained but little of the shepherd child whom I had seen
in all his innocence upon the hillside. Long years of sinful life
had seared their marks into his face; yet now, at the sound of
that familiar voice, somewhat of the old-time boyish look came
back, and in the yearning of the anguished eyes I seemed to see
the shepherd's son again.</p>
<p>"'The Master!' cried Dimas, and he stretched forth his neck
that he might see him that spake.</p>
<p>"'O Dimas, how art thou changed!' cried the Master, yet there
was in his voice no tone of rebuke save that which cometh of
love.</p>
<p>"Then Dimas wept, and in that hour he forgot his pain. And the
Master's consoling voice and the Master's presence there wrought
in the dying criminal such a new spirit, that when at last his
head fell upon his bosom, and the men about the cross said that
he was dead, it seemed as if I shined not upon a felon's face,
but upon the face of the gentle shepherd lad, the son of
Benoni.</p>
<p>"And shining on that dead and peaceful face, I bethought me of
the little Master's words that he had spoken under the old
olive-tree upon the hillside: 'Your eyes behold the promised
glory now, O Dimas,' I whispered, 'for with the Master you walk
in Paradise.'"</p>
<p>Ah, little Dear-my-Soul, you know—you know whereof the
moonbeam spake. The shepherd's bones are dust, the flocks are
scattered, the old olive-tree is gone, the flowers of the
hillside are withered, and none knoweth where the grave of Dimas
is made. But last night, again, there shined a star over
Bethlehem, and the angels descended from the sky to earth, and
the stars sang together in glory. And the bells,—hear them,
little Dear-my-Soul, how sweetly they are ringing,—the bells
bear us the good tidings of great joy this Christmas morning,
that our Christ is born, and that with him he bringeth peace on
earth and good-will toward men.</p>
<p>1888.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Divell's Christmass</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE DIVELL'S CHRYSTMASS.</p>
<p>It befell that on a time ye Divell did walk to and fro upon ye
earth, having in his mind full evill cogitations how that he
might do despight; for of soche nature is ye Divell, and ever
hath been, that continually doth he go about among men, being so
dispositioned that it sufficeth him not that men sholde of their
own frowardness, and by cause of the guile born in them, turn
unto his wickedness, but rather that he sholde by his crewel
artifices and diabolical machinations tempt them at all times and
upon every hand to do his fiendly plaisaunce.</p>
<p>But it so fortuned that this time wherein ye Divell so walked
upon ye earth was ye Chrystmass time; and wit ye well that how
evill soever ye harte of man ben at other seasons, it is tofilled
at ye Chrystmass time with charity and love, like as if it ben
sanctified by ye exceeding holiness of that feast. Leastwise,
this moche we know, that, whereas at other times envy and
worldliness do prevail, for a verity our natures are toched at ye
Chrystmass time as by ye hand of divinity, and conditioned for
merciful deeds unto our fellow kind. Right wroth was ye Divell,
therefore, when that he knew this ben ye Chrystmass time. And as
rage doth often confirm in ye human harte an evill purpose, so
was ye Divell now more diabolically minded to work his unclean
will, and full hejeously fell he to roar and lash his ribald legs
with his poyson taile. But ye Divell did presently conceive that
naught might he accomplish by this means, since that men,
affrighted by his roaring and astonied by ye fumes of brimstone
and ye sulphur flames issuing from his mouth, wolde flee
therefrom; whereas by subtile craft and by words of specious
guile it more frequently befalls that ye Divell seduceth men and
lureth them into his toils. So then ye Divell did in a little
season feign to be in a full plaisaunt mind and of sweet purpose;
and when that he had girt him about with an hermit's cloak, so
that none might see his cloven feet and his poyson taile, right
briskly did he fare him on his journey, and he did sing ye while
a plaisaunt tune, like he had ben full of joyous
contentation.</p>
<p>Now it befell that presently in his journey he did meet with a
frere, Dan Dennyss, an holy man that fared him to a neighboring
town for deeds of charity and godliness. Unto him spake ye Divell
full courteysely, and required of him that he might bear him
company; to which ye frere gave answer in seemly wise, that, if
so be that he ben of friendly disposition, he wolde make him joy
of his companionship and conversation. Then, whiles that they
journeyed together, began ye Divell to discourse of theologies
and hidden mysteries, and of conjurations, and of negromancy and
of magick, and of Chaldee, and of astrology, and of chymistry,
and of other occult and forbidden sciences, wherein ye Divell and
all that ply his damnable arts are mightily learned and
practised. Now wit ye well that this frere, being an holy man and
a simple, and having an eye single to ye blessed works of his
calling, was presently mightily troubled in his mind by ye
artifices of ye Divell, and his harte began to waver and to be
filled with miserable doubtings; for knowing nothing of ye things
whereof ye Divell spake, he colde not make answer thereto, nor,
being of godly cogitation and practice, had he ye confutations
wherewith to meet ye abhominable argumentations of ye fiend.</p>
<p>Yet (and now shall I tell you of a special Providence) it did
fortune, whiles yet ye Divell discoursed in this profane wise,
there was vouchsafed unto ye frere a certain power to resist ye
evill that environed him; for of a sodaine he did cast his
doubtings and his misgivings to ye winds, and did fall upon ye
Divell and did buffet him full sore, crying, "Thou art ye Divell!
Get thee gone!" And ye frere plucked ye cloake from ye Divell and
saw ye cloven feet and ye poyson taile, and straightway ye Divell
ran roaring away. But ye frere fared upon his journey, for that
he had had a successful issue from this grevious temptation, with
thanksgiving and prayse.</p>
<p>Next came ye Divell into a town wherein were many people going
to and fro upon works of charity, and doing righteous practices;
and sorely did it repent ye Divell when that he saw ye people
bent upon ye giving of alms and ye doing of charitable deeds.
Therefore with mighty diligence did ye Divell apply himself to
poyson ye minds of ye people, shewing unto them in artful wise
how that by idleness or by righteous dispensation had ye poore
become poore, and that, soche being ye will of God, it was an
evill and rebellious thing against God to seeke to minister
consolation unto these poore peoples. Soche like specious
argumentations did ye Divell use to gain his diabolical ends; but
by means of a grace whereof none then knew ye source, these men
and these women unto whom ye Divell spake his hejeous heresies
presently discovered force to withstand these fiendly
temptations, and to continue in their Chrystianly practices, to
ye glory of their faith and to ye benefite of ye needy, but to ye
exceeding discomfiture of ye Divell; for ye which discomfiture I
do give hearty thanks, and so also shall all of you, if so be
that your hartes within you be of rightful disposition.</p>
<p>All that day long fared ye Divell to and fro among ye people
of ye town, but none colde he bring into his hellish way of
cogitation. Nor do I count this to be a marvellous thing; for, as
I myself have herein shewn and as eche of us doth truly know, how
can there be a place for ye Divell upon earth during this
Chrystmass time when in ye very air that we breathe abideth a
certain love and concord sent of heaven for the controul and
edification of mankind, filling human hartes with peace and
inclining human hands to ye delectable and blessed employments of
charity? Nay, but you shall know that all this very season
whereof I speak ye holy Chrystchilde himself did follow ye Divell
upon earth, forefending the crewel evills which ye Divell fain
wolde do and girding with confidence and love ye else frail
natures of men. Soothly it is known of common report among you
that when ye Chrystmass season comes upon ye earth there cometh
with it also the spirit of our Chryst himself, that in ye
similitude of a little childe descendeth from heaven and walketh
among men. And if so be that by any chance ye Divell is minded to
issue from his foul pit at soche a time, wit ye well that
wheresoever ye fiend fareth to do his diabolical plaisaunce there
also close at hand followeth ye gentle Chrystchilde; so that ye
Divell, try how hard soever he may, hath no power at soche a time
over the hartes of men.</p>
<p>Nay, but you shall know furthermore that of soche sweete
quality and of so great efficacy is this heavenly spirit of
charity at ye Chrystmass season, that oftentimes is ye Divell
himself made to do a kindly deed. So at this time of ye which I
you tell, ye Divell, walking upon ye earth with evill purpose,
became finally overcome by ye gracious desire to give an alms;
but nony alms had ye Divell to give, sith it is wisely ordained
that ye Divell's offices shall be confined to his domain. Right
grievously tormented therefore was ye Divell, in that he had
nought of alms to bestow; but when presently he did meet with a
beggar childe that besought him charity, ye Divell whipped out a
knife and cut off his own taile, which taile ye Divell gave to ye
beggar childe, for he had not else to give for a lyttle trinket
toy to make merry with. Now wit ye well that this poyson
instrument brought no evill to ye beggar childe, for by a sodaine
miracle it ben changed into a flowre of gold, ye which gave great
joy unto ye beggar childe and unto all them that saw this miracle
how that it had ben wrought, but not by ye Divell. Then returned
ye Divell unto his pit of fire; and since that day, whereupon
befell this thing of which I speak, ye Divell hath had nony taile
at all, as you that hath seene ye same shall truly testify.</p>
<p>But all that day long walked ye Chrystchilde upon ye earth,
unseen to ye people but toching their hartes with his swete love
and turning their hands to charity; and all felt that ye
Chrystchilde was with them. So it was plaisaunt to do ye
Chrystchilde's will, to succor ye needy, to comfort ye afflicted,
and to lift up ye oppressed. Most plaisauntest of all was it to
make merry with ye lyttle children, sithence of soche is ye
kingdom whence ye Chrystchilde cometh.</p>
<p>Behold, ye season is again at hand; once more ye snows of
winter lie upon all ye earth, and all Chrystantie is arrayed to
the holy feast.</p>
<p>Presently shall ye star burn with exceeding brightness in ye
east, ye sky shall be full of swete music, ye angels shall
descend to earth with singing, and ye bells—ye joyous Chrystmass
bells—shall tell us of ye babe that was born in Bethlehem.</p>
<p>Come to us now, O gentle Chrystchilde, and walke among us
peoples of ye earth; enwheel us round about with thy protecting
care; forefend all envious thoughts and evil deeds; toche thou
our hearts with the glory of thy love, and quicken us to
practices of peace, good-will, and charity meet for thy approval
and acceptation.</p>
<p>1888.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Mountain and the Sea</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE MOUNTAIN AND THE SEA</p>
<p>Once upon a time the air, the mountain, and the sea lived
undisturbed upon all the earth. The mountain alone was immovable;
he stood always here upon his rocky foundation, and the sea
rippled and foamed at his feet, while the air danced freely over
his head and about his grim face. It came to pass that both the
sea and the air loved the mountain, but the mountain loved the
sea.</p>
<p>"Dance on forever, O air," said the mountain; "dance on and
sing your merry songs. But I love the gentle sea, who in sweet
humility crouches at my feet or playfully dashes her white spray
against my brown bosom."</p>
<p>Now the sea was full of joy when she heard these words, and
her thousand voices sang softly with delight. But the air was
filled with rage and jealousy, and she swore a terrible
revenge.</p>
<p>"The mountain shall not wed the sea," muttered the envious
air. "Enjoy your triumph while you may, O slumberous sister; I
will steal you from your haughty lover!"</p>
<p>And it came to pass that ever after that the air each day
caught up huge parts of the sea and sent them floating forever
through the air in the shape of clouds. So each day the sea
receded from the feet of the mountain, and her tuneful waves
played no more around his majestic base.</p>
<p>"Whither art thou going, my love?" cried the mountain in
dismay.</p>
<p>"She is false to thee," laughed the air, mockingly. "She is
going to another love far away."</p>
<p>But the mountain would not believe it. He towered his head
aloft and cried more beseechingly than before: "Oh, whither art
thou going, my beloved? I do not hear thy sweet voice, nor do thy
soft white arms compass me about."</p>
<p>Then the sea cried out in an agony of helpless love. But the
mountain heard her not, for the air refused to bring the words
she said.</p>
<p>"She is false!" whispered the air. "I alone am true to
thee."</p>
<p>But the mountain believed her not. Day after day he reared his
massive head aloft and turned his honest face to the receding sea
and begged her to return; day after day the sea threw up her
snowy arms and uttered the wildest lamentations, but the mountain
heard her not; and day by day the sea receded farther and farther
from the mountain's base. Where she once had spread her fair
surface appeared fertile plains and verdant groves all peopled
with living things, whose voices the air brought to the
mountain's ears in the hope that they might distract the mountain
from his mourning.</p>
<p>But the mountain would not be comforted; he lifted his sturdy
head aloft, and his sorrowing face was turned ever toward the
fleeting object of his love. Hills, valleys, forests, plains, and
other mountains separated them now, but over and beyond them all
he could see was her fair face lifted pleadingly toward him,
while her white arms tossed wildly to and fro. But he did not
know what words she said, for the envious air would not bear her
messages to him.</p>
<p>Then many ages came and went, until now the sea was far
distant, so very distant that the mountain could not behold
her,—nay, had he been ten thousand times as lofty he could not
have seen her, she was so far away. But still, as of old, the
mountain stood with his majestic head high in the sky, and his
face turned whither he had seen her fading like a dream away.</p>
<p>"Comeback, comeback, O my beloved!" he cried and cried.</p>
<p>And the sea, a thousand miles or more away, still thought
forever of the mountain. Vainly she peered over the western
horizon for a glimpse of his proud head and honest face. The
horizon was dark. Her lover was far beyond, forests, plains,
hills, valleys, rivers, and other mountains intervened. Her
watching was as hopeless as her love.</p>
<p>"She is false!" whispered the air to the mountain. "She is
false, and she has gone to another lover. I alone am true!"</p>
<p>But the mountain believed her not. And one day clouds came
floating through the sky and hovered around the mountain's
crest.</p>
<p>"Who art thou," cried the mountain,—"who art thou that thou
fill'st me with such a subtile consolation? Thy breath is like my
beloved's, and thy kisses are like her kisses."</p>
<p>"We come from the sea," answered the clouds. "She loves thee,
and she has sent us to bid thee be courageous, for she will come
back to thee."</p>
<p>Then the clouds covered the mountain and bathed him with the
glory of the sea's true love. The air raged furiously, but all in
vain. Ever after that the clouds came each day with love-messages
from the sea, and oftentimes the clouds bore back to the distant
sea the tender words the mountain spoke.</p>
<p>And so the ages come and go, the mountain rearing his giant
head aloft, and his brown, honest face turned whither the sea
departed; the sea stretching forth her arms to the distant
mountain and repeating his dear name with her thousand
voices.</p>
<p>Stand on the beach and look upon the sea's majestic calm and
hear her murmurings; or see her when, in the frenzy of her
hopeless love, she surges wildly and tosses her white arms and
shrieks,—then you shall know how the sea loves the distant
mountain.</p>
<p>The mountain is old and sear; the storms have beaten upon his
breast, and great scars and seams and wrinkles are on his sturdy
head and honest face But he towers majestically aloft, and he
looks always toward the distant sea and waits for her promised
coming.</p>
<p>And so the ages come and go, but love is eternal.</p>
<p>1886.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Robin and the Violet</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE ROBIN AND THE VIOLET</p>
<p>Once upon a time a robin lived in the greenwood. Of all the
birds his breast was the brightest, his music was the sweetest,
and his life was the merriest. Every morning and evening he
perched himself among the berries of the linden-tree, and
carolled a song that made the whole forest joyous; and all day
long he fluttered among the flowers and shrubbery of the
wild-wood, and twittered gayly to the brooks, the ferns, and the
lichens.</p>
<p>A violet grew among the mosses at the foot of the linden-tree
where lived the robin. She was so very tiny and so very modest
that few knew there was such a pretty little creature in the
world. Withal she was so beautiful and so gentle that those who
knew the violet loved her very dearly.</p>
<p>The south wind came wooing the violet. He danced through the
shrubbery and ferns, and lingered on the velvet moss where the
little flower grew. But when he kissed her pretty face and
whispered to her, she hung her head and said, "No, no; it cannot
be."</p>
<p>"Nay, little violet, do not be so cruel," pleaded the south
wind; "let me bear you as my bride away to my splendid home in
the south, where all is warmth and sunshine always."</p>
<p>But the violet kept repeating, "No, it cannot be; no, it
cannot be," till at last the south wind stole away with a very
heavy heart.</p>
<p>And the rose exclaimed, in an outburst of disgustful
indignation: "What a foolish violet! How silly of her to refuse
such a wooer as the south wind, who has a beautiful home and a
patrimony of eternal warmth and sunshine!"</p>
<p>But the violet, as soon as the south wind had gone, looked up
at the robin perched in the linden-tree and singing his clear
song; and it seemed as if she blushed and as if she were thrilled
with a great emotion as she beheld him. But the robin did not see
the violet. His eyes were turned the other way, and he sang to
the clouds in the sky.</p>
<p>The brook o'erleaped its banks one day, and straying toward
the linden-tree, it was amazed at the loveliness of the violet.
Never had it seen any flower half so beautiful.</p>
<p>"Oh, come and be my bride," cried the brook. "I am young and
small now, but presently you shall see me grow to a mighty river
whose course no human power can direct, and whose force nothing
can resist. Cast thyself upon my bosom, sweet violet, and let us
float together to that great destiny which awaits me."</p>
<p>But the violet shuddered and recoiled and said: "Nay, nay,
impetuous brook, I will not be your bride." So, with many murmurs
and complaints, the brook crept back to its jealous banks and
resumed its devious and prattling way to the sea.</p>
<p>"Bless me!" cried the daisy, "only to think of that silly
violet's refusing the brook! Was there ever another such piece of
folly! Where else is there a flower that would not have been glad
to go upon such a wonderful career? Oh, how short-sighted some
folks are!"</p>
<p>But the violet paid no heed to these words; she looked
steadfastly up into the foliage of the linden-tree where the
robin was carolling. The robin did not see the violet; he was
singing to the tops of the fir-trees over yonder.</p>
<p>The days came and went. The robin sang and fluttered in the
greenwood, and the violet bided among the mosses at the foot of
the linden; and although the violet's face was turned always
upward to where the robin perched and sang, the robin never saw
the tender little flower.</p>
<p>One day a huntsman came through the greenwood, and an arrow
from his cruel bow struck the robin and pierced his heart. The
robin was carolling in the linden, but his song was ended
suddenly, and the innocent bird fell dying from the tree. "Oh, it
is only a robin," said the huntsman, and with a careless laugh he
went on his way.</p>
<p>The robin lay upon the mosses at the foot of the linden, close
beside the violet. But he neither saw nor heard anything, for his
life was nearly gone. The violet tried to bind his wound and stay
the flow of his heart's blood, but her tender services were vain.
The robin died without having seen her sweet face or heard her
gentle voice.</p>
<p>Then the other birds of the greenwood came to mourn over their
dead friend. The moles and the mice dug a little grave and laid
the robin in it, after which the birds brought lichens and
leaves, and covered the dead body, and heaped earth over all, and
made a great lamentation. But when they went away, the violet
remained; and after the sun had set, and the greenwood all was
dark, the violet bent over the robin's grave and kissed it, and
sang to the dead robin. And the violet watched by the robin's
grave for weeks and months, her face pressed forward toward that
tiny mound, and her gentle voice always singing softly and
sweetly about the love she never had dared to tell.</p>
<p>Often after that the south wind and the brook came wooing her,
but she never heard them, or, if she heard them, she did not
answer. The vine that lived near the chestnut yonder said the
violet was greatly changed; that from being a merry, happy thing,
she had grown sad and reticent; she used to hold up her head as
proudly as the others, but now she seemed broken and weary. The
shrubs and flowers talked it all over many and many a time, but
none of them could explain the violet's strange conduct.</p>
<p>It was autumn now, and the greenwood was not what it had been.
The birds had flown elsewhere to be the guests of the storks
during the winter months, the rose had run away to be the bride
of the south wind, and the daisy had wedded the brook and was
taking a bridal tour to the seaside watering-places. But the
violet still lingered in the greenwood, and kept her vigil at the
grave of the robin. She was pale and drooping, but still she
watched and sang over the spot where her love lay buried. Each
day she grew weaker and paler. The oak begged her to come and
live among the warm lichens that protected him from the icy
breath of the storm-king, but the violet chose to watch and sing
over the robin's grave.</p>
<p>One morning, after a night of exceeding darkness and frost,
the boisterous north wind came trampling through the
greenwood.</p>
<p>"I have come for the violet," he cried; "she would not have my
fair brother, but she must go with <i>me</i>, whether it pleases
her or not!"</p>
<p>But when he came to the foot of the linden-tree his anger was
changed to compassion. The violet was dead, and she lay upon the
robin's grave. Her gentle face rested close to the little mound,
as if, in her last moment, the faithful flower had stretched
forth her lips to kiss the dust that covered her beloved.</p>
<p>1884.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Oak-tree and the Ivy</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE OAK-TREE AND THE IVY</p>
<p>In the greenwood stood a mighty oak. So majestic was he that
all who came that way paused to admire his strength and beauty,
and all the other trees of the greenwood acknowledged him to be
their monarch.</p>
<p>Now it came to pass that the ivy loved the oak-tree, and
inclining her graceful tendrils where he stood, she crept about
his feet and twined herself around his sturdy and knotted trunk.
And the oak-tree pitied the ivy.</p>
<p>"Oho!" he cried, laughing boisterously, but
good-naturedly,—"oho! so you love me, do you, little vine? Very
well, then; play about my feet, and I will keep the storms from
you and will tell you pretty stories about the clouds, the birds,
and the stars."</p>
<p>The ivy marvelled greatly at the strange stories the oak-tree
told; they were stories the oak-tree heard from the wind that
loitered about his lofty head and whispered to the leaves of his
topmost branches. Sometimes the story was about the great ocean
in the East, sometimes of the broad prairies in the West,
sometimes of the ice-king who lived in the North, and sometimes
of the flower-queen who dwelt in the South. Then, too, the moon
told a story to the oak-tree every night,—or at least every
night that she came to the greenwood, which was very often, for
the greenwood is a very charming spot, as we all know. And the
oak-tree repeated to the ivy every story the moon told and every
song the stars sang.</p>
<p>"Pray, what are the winds saying now?" or "What song is that I
hear?" the ivy would ask; and then the oak-tree would repeat the
story or the song, and the ivy would listen in great
wonderment.</p>
<p>Whenever the storms came, the oak-tree cried to the little
ivy: "Cling close to me, and no harm shall befall you! See how
strong I am; the tempest does not so much as stir me—I mock its
fury!"</p>
<p>Then, seeing how strong and brave he was, the ivy hugged him
closely; his brown, rugged breast protected her from every harm,
and she was secure.</p>
<p>The years went by; how quickly they flew,—spring, summer,
winter, and then again spring, summer, winter,—ah, life is short
in the greenwood as elsewhere! And now the ivy was no longer a
weakly little vine to excite the pity of the passer-by. Her
thousand beautiful arms had twined hither and thither about the
oak-tree, covering his brown and knotted trunk, shooting forth a
bright, delicious foliage and stretching far up among his lower
branches. Then the oak-tree's pity grew into a love for the ivy,
and the ivy was filled with a great joy. And the oak-tree and the
ivy were wed one June night, and there was a wonderful
celebration in the greenwood; and there was most beautiful music,
in which the pine-trees, the crickets, the katydids, the frogs,
and the nightingales joined with pleasing harmony.</p>
<p>The oak-tree was always good and gentle to the ivy. "There is
a storm coming over the hills," he would say. "The east wind
tells me so; the swallows fly low in the air, and the sky is
dark. Cling close to me, my beloved, and no harm shall befall
you."</p>
<p>Then, confidently and with an always-growing love, the ivy
would cling more closely to the oak-tree, and no harm came to
her.</p>
<p>"How good the oak-tree is to the ivy!" said the other trees of
the greenwood. The ivy heard them, and she loved the oak-tree
more and more. And, although the ivy was now the most umbrageous
and luxuriant vine in all the greenwood, the oak-tree regarded
her still as the tender little thing he had laughingly called to
his feet that spring day, many years before,—the same little ivy
he had told about the stars, the clouds, and the birds. And, just
as patiently as in those days he had told her of these things, he
now repeated other tales the winds whispered to his topmost
boughs,—tales of the ocean in the East, the prairies in the
West, the ice-king in the North, and the flower-queen in the
South. Nestling upon his brave breast and in his stout arms, the
ivy heard him tell these wondrous things, and she never wearied
with the listening.</p>
<p>"How the oak-tree loves her!" said the ash. "The lazy vine has
naught to do but to twine herself about the arrogant oak-tree and
hear him tell his wondrous stories!"</p>
<p>The ivy heard these envious words, and they made her very sad;
but she said nothing of them to the oak-tree, and that night the
oak-tree rocked her to sleep as he repeated the lullaby a zephyr
was singing to him.</p>
<p>"There is a storm coming over the hills," said the oak-tree
one day. "The east wind tells me so; the swallows fly low in the
air, and the sky is dark. Clasp me round about with thy dear
arms, my beloved, and nestle close unto my bosom, and no harm
shall befall thee."</p>
<p>"I have no fear," murmured the ivy; and she clasped her arms
most closely about him and nestled unto his bosom.</p>
<p>The storm came over the hills and swept down upon the
greenwood with deafening thunder and vivid lightning. The
storm-king himself rode upon the blast; his horses breathed
flames, and his chariot trailed through the air like a serpent of
fire. The ash fell before the violence of the storm-king's fury,
and the cedars groaning fell, and the hemlocks and the pines; but
the oak-tree alone quailed not.</p>
<p>"Oho!" cried the storm-king, angrily, "the oak-tree does not
bow to me, he does not tremble in my presence. Well, we shall
see."</p>
<p>With that the storm-king hurled a mighty thunderbolt at the
oak-tree, and the brave, strong monarch of the greenwood was
riven. Then, with a shout of triumph, the storm-king rode
away.</p>
<p>"Dear oak-tree, you are riven by the storm-king's
thunderbolt!" cried the ivy, in anguish.</p>
<p>"Ay," said the oak-tree, feebly, "my end has come; see, I am
shattered and helpless."</p>
<p>"But <i>I</i> am unhurt," remonstrated the ivy, "and I will
bind up your wounds and nurse you back to health and vigor."</p>
<p>And so it was that, although the oak-tree was ever afterward a
riven and broken thing, the ivy concealed the scars upon his
shattered form and covered his wounds all over with her soft
foliage.</p>
<p>"I had hoped, dear one," she said, "to grow up to thy height,
to live with thee among the clouds, and to hear the solemn voices
thou didst hear. Thou wouldst have loved me better then?"</p>
<p>But the old oak-tree said: "Nay, nay, my beloved; I love thee
better as thou art, for with thy beauty and thy love thou
comfortest mine age."</p>
<p>Then would the ivy tell quaint stories to the old and broken
oak-tree,—stories she had learned from the crickets, the bees,
the butterflies, and the mice when she was an humble little vine
and played at the foot of the majestic oak-tree towering in the
green-wood with no thought of the tiny shoot that crept toward
him with her love. And these simple tales pleased the old and
riven oak-tree; they were not as heroic as the tales the winds,
the clouds, and the stars told, but they were far sweeter, for
they were tales of contentment, of humility, of love.</p>
<p>So the old age of the oak-tree was grander than his youth.</p>
<p>And all who went through the greenwood paused to behold and
admire the beauty of the oak-tree then; for about his seared and
broken trunk the gentle vine had so entwined her graceful
tendrils and spread her fair foliage, that one saw not the havoc
of the years nor the ruin of the tempest, but only the glory of
the oak-tree's age, which was the ivy's love and ministering.</p>
<p>1886</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>Margaret: A Pearl</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>MARGARET: A PEARL</p>
<p>In a certain part of the sea, very many leagues from here,
there once lived a large family of oysters noted for their beauty
and size. But among them was one so small, so feeble, and so
ill-looking as to excite the pity, if not the contempt, of all
the others. The father, a venerable, bearded oyster, of august
appearance and solemn deportment, was much mortified that one of
his family should happen to be so sickly; and he sent for all the
doctors in the sea to come and treat her; from which circumstance
you are to note that doctors are an evil to be met with not alone
upon <i>terra firma</i>. The first to come was Dr. Porpoise, a
gentleman of the old school, who floundered around in a very
important manner and was full of imposing ceremonies.</p>
<p>"Let me look at your tongue," said Dr. Porpoise, stroking his
beard with one fin, impressively. "Ahem! somewhat coated, I see.
And your pulse is far from normal; no appetite, I presume? Yes,
my dear, your system is sadly out of order. You need
medicine."</p>
<p>The little oyster hated medicine; so she cried,—yes, she
actually shed cold, briny tears at the very thought of taking old
Dr. Porpoise's prescriptions. But the father-oyster and the
mother-oyster chided her sternly; they said that the medicine
would be nice and sweet, and that the little oyster would like
it. But the little oyster knew better than all that; yes, she
knew a thing or two, even though she <i>was</i> only a little
oyster.</p>
<p>Now Dr. Porpoise put a plaster on the little oyster's chest
and a blister at her feet. He bade her eat nothing but a tiny bit
of sea-foam on toast twice a day. Every two hours she was to take
a spoonful of cod-liver oil, and before each meal a wineglassful
of the essence of distilled cuttlefish. The plaster she didn't
mind, but the blister and the cod-liver oil were terrible; and
when it came to the essence of distilled cuttlefish —well, she
just couldn't stand it! In vain her mother reasoned with her, and
promised her a new doll and a skipping-rope and a lot of other
nice things: the little oyster would have none of the horrid
drug; until at last her father, abandoning his dignity in order
to maintain his authority, had to hold her down by main strength
and pour the medicine into her mouth. This was, as you will
allow, quite dreadful.</p>
<p>But this treatment did the little oyster no good; and her
parents made up their minds that they would send for another
doctor, and one of a different school. Fortunately they were in a
position to indulge in almost any expense, since the
father-oyster himself was president of one of the largest banks
of Newfoundland. So Dr. Sculpin came with his neat little
medicine-box under his arm. And when he had looked at the sick
little oyster's tongue, and had taken her temperature, and had
felt her pulse, he said he knew what ailed her; but he did not
tell anybody what it was. He threw away the plasters, the
blisters, the cod-liver oil, and the essence of distilled
cuttlefish, and said it was a wonder that the poor child had
lived through it all!</p>
<p>"Will you please bring me two tumblerfuls of water?" he
remarked to the mother-oyster.</p>
<p>The mother-oyster scuttled away, and soon returned with two
conch-shells filled to the brim with pure, clear sea-water. Dr.
Sculpin counted three grains of white sand into one shell, and
three grains of yellow sand into the other shell, with great
care.</p>
<p>"Now," said he to the mother-oyster, "I have numbered these 1
and 2. First, you are to give the patient ten drops out of No. 2,
and in an hour after that, eight drops out of No. 1; the next
hour, eight drops out of No. 2; and the next, or fourth, hour,
ten drops out of No. 1. And so you are to continue hour by hour,
until either the medicine or the child gives out."</p>
<p>"Tell me, doctor," asked the mother, "shall she continue the
food suggested by Dr. Porpoise?"</p>
<p>"What food did he recommend?" inquired Dr. Sculpin.</p>
<p>"Sea-foam on toast," answered the mother.</p>
<p>Dr. Sculpin smiled a smile which seemed to suggest that Dr.
Porpoise's ignorance was really quite annoying.</p>
<p>"My dear madam," said Dr. Sculpin, "the diet suggested by that
quack, Porpoise, passed out of the books years ago. Give the
child toast on sea-foam, if you wish to build up her debilitated
forces."</p>
<p>Now, the sick little oyster did not object to this treatment;
on the contrary, she liked it. But it did her no good. And one
day, when she was feeling very dry, she drank both tumblerfuls of
medicine, and it did not do her any harm; neither did it cure
her: she remained the same sick little oyster,—oh, so sick! This
pained her parents very much. They did not know what to do. They
took her travelling; they gave her into the care of the eel for
electric treatment; they sent her to the Gulf Stream for warm
baths,—they tried everything, but to no avail. The sick little
oyster remained a sick little oyster, and there was an end of
it.</p>
<p>At last one day,—one cruel, fatal day,—a horrid,
fierce-looking machine was poked down from the surface of the
water far above, and with slow but intrepid movement began
exploring every nook and crevice of the oyster village. There was
not a family into which it did not intrude, nor a home circle
whose sanctity it did not ruthlessly invade. It scraped along the
great mossy rock; and lo! with a monstrous scratchy-te-scratch,
the mother-oyster and the father-oyster and hundreds of other
oysters were torn from their resting-places and borne aloft in a
very jumbled and very frightened condition by the impertinent
machine. Then down it came again, and the sick little oyster was
among the number of those who were seized by the horrid monster
this time. She found herself raised to the top of the sea; and
all at once she was bumped in a boat, where she lay, puny and
helpless, on a huge pile of other oysters. Two men were handling
the fierce-looking machine. A little boy sat in the stern of the
boat watching the huge pile of oysters. He was a pretty little
boy, with bright eyes and long tangled hair. He wore no hat, and
his feet were bare and brown.</p>
<p>"What a funny little oyster!" said the boy, picking up the
sick little oyster; "it is no bigger than my thumb, and it is
very pale."</p>
<p>"Throw it away," said one of the men. "Like as not it is bad
and not fit to eat."</p>
<p>"No, keep it and send it out West for a Blue Point," said the
other man,—what a heartless wretch he was!</p>
<p>But the little boy had already thrown the sick little oyster
overboard. She fell in shallow water, and the rising tide carried
her still farther toward shore, until she lodged against an old
gum boot that lay half buried in the sand. There were no other
oysters in sight; her head ached and she was very weak; how
lonesome, too, she was!—yet anything was better than being
eaten,—at least so thought the little oyster, and so, I presume,
think you.</p>
<p>For many weeks and many months the sick little oyster lay hard
by the old gum boot; and in that time she made many acquaintances
and friends among the crabs, the lobsters, the fiddlers, the
star-fish, the waves, the shells, and the gay little fishes of
the ocean. They did not harm her, for they saw that she was sick;
they pitied her—some loved her. The one that loved her most was
the perch with green fins that attended school every day in the
academic shade of the big rocks in the quiet cove about a mile
away. He was very gentle and attentive, and every afternoon he
brought fresh, cool sea-foam for the sick oyster to eat; he told
her pretty stories, too,—stories which his grandmother, the
venerable codfish, had told him of the sea-king, the mermaids,
the pixies, the water-sprites, and the other fantastically
beautiful dwellers in ocean depths. Now while all this was very
pleasant, the sick little oyster knew that the perch's wooing was
hopeless, for she was very ill and helpless, and could never
think of becoming a burden upon one so young and so promising as
the gallant perch with green fins. But when she spoke to him in
this strain, he would not listen; he kept right on bringing her
more and more cool sea-foam every day.</p>
<p>The old gum boot was quite a motherly creature, and anon the
sick little oyster became very much attached to her. Many times
as the little invalid rested her aching head affectionately on
the instep of the old gum boot, the old gum boot told her stories
of the world beyond the sea: how she had been born in a mighty
forest, and how proud her folks were of their family tree; how
she had been taken from that forest and moulded into the shape
she now bore; how she had graced and served a foot in amphibious
capacities, until, at last, having seen many things and having
travelled much, she had been cast off and hurled into the sea to
be the scorn of every crab and the derision of every fish. These
stories were all new to the little oyster, and amazing, too; she
knew only of the sea, having lived therein all her life. She in
turn told the old gum boot quaint legends of the ocean,—the
simple tales she had heard in her early home; and there was a
sweetness and a simplicity in these stories of the deep that
charmed the old gum boot, shrivelled and hardened and pessimistic
though she was.</p>
<p>Yet, in spite of it all,—the kindness, the care, the
amusements, and the devotion of her friends,—the little oyster
remained always a sick and fragile thing. But no one heard her
complain, for she bore her suffering patiently.</p>
<p>Not far from this beach where the ocean ended its long travels
there was a city, and in this city there dwelt with her parents a
maiden of the name of Margaret. From infancy she had been sickly,
and although she had now reached the years of early womanhood,
she could not run or walk about as others did, but she had to be
wheeled hither and thither in a chair. This was very sad; yet
Margaret was so gentle and uncomplaining that from aught she said
you never would have thought her life was full of suffering.
Seeing her helplessness, the sympathetic things of Nature had
compassion and were very good to Margaret. The sunbeams stole
across her pathway everywhere, the grass clustered thickest and
greenest where she went, the winds caressed her gently as they
passed, and the birds loved to perch near her window and sing
their prettiest songs. Margaret loved them all,—the sunlight,
the singing winds, the grass, the carolling birds. She communed
with them; their wisdom inspired her life, and this wisdom gave
her nature a rare beauty.</p>
<p>Every pleasant day Margaret was wheeled from her home in the
city down to the beach, and there for hours she would sit,
looking out, far out upon the ocean, as if she were communing
with the ocean spirits that lifted up their white arms from the
restless waters and beckoned her to come. Oftentimes the children
playing on the beach came where Margaret sat, and heard her tell
little stories of the pebbles and the shells, of the ships away
out at sea, of the ever-speeding gulls, of the grass, of the
flowers, and of the other beautiful things of life; and so in
time the children came to love Margaret. Among those who so often
gathered to hear the gentle sick girl tell her pretty stories was
a youth of Margaret's age,—older than the others, a youth with
sturdy frame and a face full of candor and earnestness. His name
was Edward, and he was a student in the city; he hoped to become
a great scholar sometime, and he toiled very zealously to that
end. The patience, the gentleness, the sweet simplicity, the
fortitude of the sick girl charmed him. He found in her little
stories a quaint and beautiful philosophy he never yet had found
in books; there was a valor in her life he never yet had read of
in the histories. So, every day she came and sat upon the beach,
Edward came too; and with the children he heard Margaret's
stories of the sea, the air, the grass, the birds, and the
flowers. From her moist eyry in the surf the old gum boot
descried the group upon the beach each pleasant day. Now the old
gum boot had seen enough of the world to know a thing or two, as
we presently shall see.</p>
<p>"That tall young man is not a child," quoth the old gum boot,
"yet he comes every day with the children to hear the sick girl
tell her stories! Ah, ha!"</p>
<p>"Perhaps he is the doctor," suggested the little oyster; and
then she added with a sigh, "but, oh! I hope not."</p>
<p>This suggestion seemed to amuse the old gum boot highly; at
least she fell into such hysterical laughter that she sprung a
leak near her little toe, which, considering her environments,
was a serious mishap.</p>
<p>"Unless I am greatly mistaken, my child," said the old gum
boot to the little oyster, "that young man is in love with the
sick girl!"</p>
<p>"Oh, how terrible!" said the little oyster; and she meant it
too, for she was thinking of the gallant young perch with green
fins.</p>
<p>"Well, I've said it, and I mean it!" continued the old gum
boot; "now just wait and see."</p>
<p>The old gum boot had guessed aright—so much for the value of
worldly experience! Edward loved Margaret; to him she was the
most beautiful, the most perfect being in the world; her very
words seemed to exalt his nature. Yet he never spoke to her of
love. He was content to come with the children to hear her
stories, to look upon her sweet face, and to worship her in
silence. Was not that a very wondrous love?</p>
<p>In course of time the sick girl Margaret became more
interested in the little ones that thronged daily to hear her
pretty stories, and she put her beautiful fancies into the little
songs and quaint poems and tender legends,—songs and poems and
legends about the sea, the flowers, the birds, and the other
beautiful creations of Nature; and in all there was a sweet
simplicity, a delicacy, a reverence, that bespoke Margaret's
spiritual purity and wisdom. In this teaching, and marvelling
ever at its beauty, Edward grew to manhood. She was his
inspiration, yet he never spoke of love to Margaret. And so the
years went by.</p>
<p>Beginning with the children, the world came to know the sick
girl's power. Her songs were sung in every home, and in every
home her verses and her little stories were repeated. And so it
was that Margaret came to be beloved of all, but he who loved her
best spoke never of his love to her.</p>
<p>And as these years went by, the sick little oyster lay in the
sea cuddled close to the old gum boot. She was wearier now than
ever before, for there was no cure for her malady. The gallant
perch with green fins was very sad, for his wooing had been
hopeless. Still he was devoted, and still he came each day to the
little oyster, bringing her cool sea-foam and other delicacies of
the ocean. Oh, how sick the little oyster was! But the end came
at last.</p>
<p>The children were on the beach one day, waiting for Margaret,
and they wondered that she did not come. Presently, grown
restless, many of the boys scampered into the water and stood
there, with their trousers rolled up, boldly daring the little
waves that rippled up from the overflow of the surf. And one
little boy happened upon the old gum boot. It was a great
discovery.</p>
<p>"See the old gum boot," cried the boy, fishing it out of the
water and holding it on high. "And here is a little oyster
fastened to it! How funny!"</p>
<p>The children gathered round the curious object on the beach.
None of them had ever seen such a funny old gum boot, and surely
none of them had ever seen such a funny little oyster. They tore
the pale, knotted little thing from her foster-mother, and
handled her with such rough curiosity that even had she been a
robust oyster she must certainly have died. At any rate, the
little oyster was dead now; and the bereaved perch with green
fins must have known it, for he swam up and down his native cove
disconsolately.</p>
<p>It befell in that same hour that Margaret lay upon her
death-bed, and knowing that she had not long to live, she sent
for Edward. And Edward, when he came to her, was filled with
anguish, and clasping her hands in his, he told her of his
love.</p>
<p>Then Margaret answered him: "I knew it, dear one; and all the
songs I have sung and all the words I have spoken and all the
prayers I have made have been with you, dear one,—all with
<i>you</i>, in my heart of hearts."</p>
<p>"You have purified and exalted my life," cried Edward; "you
have been my best and sweetest inspiration; you have taught me
the eternal truth,—you are my beloved!"</p>
<p>And Margaret said: "Then in my weakness hath there been a
wondrous strength, and from my sufferings cometh the glory I have
sought!"</p>
<p>So Margaret died, and like a broken lily she lay upon her
couch; and all the sweetness of her pure and gentle life seemed
to come back and rest upon her face; and the songs she had sung
and the beautiful stories she had told came back, too, on angel
wings, and made sweet music in that chamber.</p>
<p>The children were lingering on the beach when Edward came that
day. He could hear them singing the songs Margaret had taught
them. They wondered that he came alone.</p>
<p>"See," cried one of the boys, running to meet him and holding
a tiny shell in his hand,—"see what we have found in this
strange little shell. Is it not beautiful!"</p>
<p>Edward took the dwarfed, misshapen thing, and lo! it held a
beauteous pearl.</p>
<p><i>O little sister mine, let me look into your eyes and read
an inspiration there; let me hold your thin white hand and know
the strength of a philosophy more beautiful than human knowledge
teaches; let me see in your dear, patient little face and hear in
your gentle voice the untold valor of your suffering life. Come,
little sister, let me fold you in my arms and have you ever with
me, that in the glory of your faith and love I may walk the paths
of wisdom and of peace</i>.</p>
<p>1887.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Springtime</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE SPRINGTIME</p>
<p>A child once said to his grandsire: "Gran'pa, what do the
flowers mean when they talk to the old oak-tree about death? I
hear them talking every day, but I cannot understand; it is all
very strange."</p>
<p>The grandsire bade the child think no more of these things;
the flowers were foolish prattlers,—what right had they to put
such notions into a child's head? But the child did not do his
grandsire's bidding; he loved the flowers and the trees, and he
went each day to hear them talk.</p>
<p>It seems that the little vine down by the stone wall had
overheard the south wind say to the rose-bush: "You are a proud,
imperious beauty now, and will not listen to my suit; but wait
till my boisterous brother comes from the North,—then you will
droop and wither and die, all because you would not listen to me
and fly with me to my home by the Southern sea."</p>
<p>These words set the little vine to thinking; and when she had
thought for a long time she spoke to the daisy about it, and the
daisy called in the violet, and the three little ones had a very
serious conference; but, having talked it all over, they came to
the conclusion that it was as much of a mystery as ever. The old
oak-tree saw them.</p>
<p>"You little folks seem very much puzzled about something,"
said the old oak-tree.</p>
<p>"I heard the south wind tell the rose-bush that she would
die," exclaimed the vine, "and we do not understand what it is.
Can you tell us what it is to die?"</p>
<p>The old oak-tree smiled sadly.</p>
<p>"I do not call it death," said the old oak-tree; "I call it
sleep,—a long, restful, refreshing sleep."</p>
<p>"How does it feel?" inquired the daisy, looking very full of
astonishment and anxiety.</p>
<p>"You must know," said the old oak-tree, "that after many, many
days we all have had such merry times and have bloomed so long
and drunk so heartily of the dew and sunshine and eaten so much
of the goodness of the earth that we feel very weary and we long
for repose. Then a great wind comes out of the north, and we
shiver in its icy blast. The sunshine goes away, and there is no
dew for us nor any nourishment in the earth, and we are glad to
go to sleep."</p>
<p>"Mercy on me!" cried the vine, "I shall not like that at all!
What, leave this smiling meadow and all the pleasant grass and
singing bees and frolicsome butterflies? No, old oak-tree, I
would never go to sleep; I much prefer sporting with the winds
and playing with my little friends, the daisy and the
violet."</p>
<p>"And I," said the violet, "I think it would be dreadful to go
to sleep. What if we never should wake up again!"</p>
<p>The suggestion struck the others dumb with terror,—all but
the old oak-tree.</p>
<p>"Have no fear of that," said the old oak-tree, "for you are
sure to awaken again, and when you have awakened the new life
will be sweeter and happier than the old."</p>
<p>"What nonsense!" cried the thistle.</p>
<p>"You children shouldn't believe a word of it. When you go to
sleep you die, and when you die there's the last of you!"</p>
<p>The old oak-tree reproved the thistle; but the thistle
maintained his abominable heresy so stoutly that the little vine
and the daisy and the violet were quite at a loss to know which
of the two to believe,—the old oak-tree or the thistle.</p>
<p>The child heard it all and was sorely puzzled. What was this
death, this mysterious sleep? Would it come upon him, the child?
And after he had slept awhile would he awaken? His grandsire
would not tell him of these things; perhaps his grandsire did not
know.</p>
<p>It was a long, long summer, full of sunshine and bird-music,
and the meadow was like a garden, and the old oak-tree looked
down upon the grass and flowers and saw that no evil befell them.
A long, long play-day it was to the little vine, the daisy, and
the violet. The crickets and the grasshoppers and the bumblebees
joined in the sport, and romped and made music till it seemed
like an endless carnival. Only every now and then the vine and
her little flower friends talked with the old oak-tree about that
strange sleep and the promised awakening, and the thistle scoffed
at the old oak-tree's cheering words. The child was there and
heard it all.</p>
<p>One day the great wind came out of the north. Hurry-scurry!
back to their warm homes in the earth and under the old stone
wall scampered the crickets and bumblebees to go to sleep. Whirr,
whirr! Oh, but how piercing the great wind was; how different
from his amiable brother who had travelled all the way from the
Southern sea to kiss the flowers and woo the rose!</p>
<p>"Well, this is the last of us!" exclaimed the thistle; "we're
going to die, and that's the end of it all!"</p>
<p>"No, no," cried the old oak-tree; "we shall not die; we are
going to sleep. Here, take my leaves, little flowers, and you
shall sleep warm under them. Then, when you awaken, you shall see
how much sweeter and happier the new life is."</p>
<p>The little ones were very weary indeed. The promised sleep
came very gratefully.</p>
<p>"We would not be so willing to go to sleep if we thought we
should not awaken," said the violet.</p>
<p>So the little ones went to sleep. The little vine was the last
of all to sink to her slumbers; she nodded in the wind and tried
to keep awake till she saw the old oak-tree close his eyes, but
her efforts were vain; she nodded and nodded, and bowed her
slender form against the old stone wall, till finally she, too,
had sunk into repose. And then the old oak-tree stretched his
weary limbs and gave a last look at the sullen sky and at the
slumbering little ones at his feet; and with that, the old
oak-tree fell asleep too.</p>
<p>The child saw all these things, and he wanted to ask his
grandsire about them, but his grandsire would not tell him of
them; perhaps his grandsire did not know.</p>
<p>The child saw the storm-king come down from the hills and ride
furiously over the meadows and over the forest and over the town.
The snow fell everywhere, and the north wind played solemn music
in the chimneys. The storm-king put the brook to bed, and threw a
great mantle of snow over him; and the brook that had romped and
prattled all the summer and told pretty tales to the grass and
flowers,—the brook went to sleep too. With all his fierceness
and bluster, the storm-king was very kind; he did not awaken the
old oak-tree and the slumbering flowers. The little vine lay
under the fleecy snow against the old stone wall and slept
peacefully, and so did the violet and the daisy. Only the wicked
old thistle thrashed about in his sleep as if he dreamed bad
dreams, which, all will allow, was no more than he deserved.</p>
<p>All through that winter—and it seemed very long—the child
thought of the flowers and the vine and the old oak-tree, and
wondered whether in the springtime they would awaken from their
sleep; and he wished for the springtime to come. And at last the
springtime came. One day the sunbeams fluttered down from the sky
and danced all over the meadow.</p>
<p>"Wake up, little friends!" cried the sunbeams,—"wake up, for
it is the springtime!"</p>
<p>The brook was the first to respond. So eager, so fresh, so
exuberant was he after his long winter sleep, that he leaped from
his bed and frolicked all over the meadow and played all sorts of
curious antics. Then a little bluebird was seen in the hedge one
morning. He was calling to the violet.</p>
<p>"Wake up, little violet," called the bluebird. "Have I come
all this distance to find you sleeping? Wake up; it is the
springtime!"</p>
<p>That pretty little voice awakened the violet, of course.</p>
<p>"Oh, how sweetly I have slept!" cried the violet; "how happy
this new life is! Welcome, dear friends!"</p>
<p>And presently the daisy awakened, fresh and beautiful, and
then the little vine, and, last of all, the old oak-tree. The
meadow was green, and all around there were the music, the
fragrance, the new, sweet life of the springtime.</p>
<p>"I slept horribly," growled the thistle. "I had bad dreams. It
was sleep, after all, but it ought to have been death."</p>
<p>The thistle never complained again; for just then a
four-footed monster stalked through the meadow and plucked and
ate the thistle and then stalked gloomily away; which was the
last of the sceptical thistle,—truly a most miserable end!</p>
<p>"You said the truth, dear old oak-tree!" cried the little
vine. "It was not death,—it was only a sleep, a sweet,
refreshing sleep, and this awakening is very beautiful."</p>
<p>They all said so,—the daisy, the violet, the oak-tree, the
crickets, the bees, and all the things and creatures of the field
and forest that had awakened from their long sleep to swell the
beauty and the glory of the springtime. And they talked with the
child, and the child heard them. And although the grandsire never
spoke to the child about these things, the child learned from the
flowers and trees a lesson of the springtime which perhaps the
grandsire never knew.</p>
<p>1885</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>Rodolph and his King</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>RODOLPH AND HIS KING</p>
<p>"Tell me, Father," said the child at Rodolph's knee,—"tell me
of the king."</p>
<p>"There is no king, my child," said Rodolph. "What you have
heard are old women's tales. Do not believe them, for there is no
king."</p>
<p>"But why, then," queried the child, "do all the people praise
and call on him; why do the birds sing of the king; and why do
the brooks always prattle his name, as they dance from the hills
to the sea?"</p>
<p>"Nay," answered Rodolph, "you imagine these things; there is
no king. Believe me, child, there is no king."</p>
<p>So spake Rodolph; but scarcely had he uttered the words when
the cricket in the chimney corner chirped loudly, and his shrill
notes seemed to say: "The king—the king." Rodolph could hardly
believe his ears. How had the cricket learned to chirp these
words? It was beyond all understanding. But still the cricket
chirped, and still his musical monotone seemed to say, "The
king—the king," until, with an angry frown, Rodolph strode from
his house, leaving the child to hear the cricket's song
alone.</p>
<p>But there were other voices to remind Rodolph of the king. The
sparrows were fluttering under the eaves, and they twittered
noisily as Rodolph strode along, "The king, king, king!" "The
king, king, king," twittered the sparrows, and their little tones
were full of gladness and praise.</p>
<p>A thrush sat in the hedge, and she was singing her morning
song. It was a hymn of praise,—how beautiful it was! "The
king—the king—the king," sang the thrush, and she sang, too, of
his goodness,—it was a wondrous song, and it was all about the
king.</p>
<p>The doves cooed in the elm-trees. "Sing to us!" cried their
little ones, stretching out their pretty heads from the nests.
Then the doves nestled hard by and murmured lullabies, and the
lullabies were of the king who watched over and protected even
the little birds in their nests.</p>
<p>Rodolph heard these things, and they filled him with
anger.</p>
<p>"It is a lie!" muttered Rodolph; and in great petulance he
came to the brook.</p>
<p>How noisy and romping the brook was; how capricious, how
playful, how furtive! And how he called to the willows and
prattled to the listening grass as he scampered on his way. But
Rodolph turned aside and his face grew darker. He did not like
the voice of the brook; for, lo! just as the cricket had chirped
and the birds had sung, so did this brook murmur and prattle and
sing ever of the king, the king, the king.</p>
<p>So, always after that, wherever Rodolph went, he heard voices
that told him of the king; yes, even in their quiet, humble way,
the flowers seemed to whisper the king's name, and every breeze
that fanned his brow had a tale to tell of the king and his
goodness.</p>
<p>"But there is no king!" cried Rodolph. "They all conspire to
plague me! There is no king—there is no king!"</p>
<p>Once he stood by the sea and saw a mighty ship go sailing by.
The waves plashed on the shore and told stories to the pebbles
and the sands. Rodolph heard their thousand voices, and he heard
them telling of the king.</p>
<p>Then a great storm came upon the sea, a tempest such as never
before had been seen. The waves dashed mountain-high and
overwhelmed the ship, and the giant voices of the winds and waves
cried of the king, the king! The sailors strove in agony till all
seemed lost. Then, when they could do no more, they stretched out
their hands and called upon the king to save them,—the king, the
king, the king!</p>
<p>Rodolph saw the tempest subside. The angry winds were lulled,
and the mountain waves sank into sleep, and the ship came safely
into port. Then the sailors sang a hymn of praise, and the hymn
was of the king and to the king.</p>
<p>"But there is no king!" cried Rodolph. "It is a lie; there is
no king!"</p>
<p>Yet everywhere he went he heard always of the king; the king's
name and the king's praises were on every tongue; ay, and the
things that had no voices seemed to wear the king's name written
upon them, until Rodolph neither saw nor heard anything that did
not mind him of the king.</p>
<p>Then, in great anger, Rodolph said: "I will go to the
mountain-tops; there I shall find no birds, nor trees, nor
brooks, nor flowers to prate of a monarch no one has ever seen.
There shall there be no sea to vex me with its murmurings, nor
any human voice to displease me with its superstitions."</p>
<p>So Rodolph went to the mountains, and he scaled the loftiest
pinnacle, hoping that there at last he might hear no more of that
king whom none had ever seen. And as he stood upon the pinnacle,
what a mighty panorama was spread before him, and what a mighty
anthem swelled upon his ears! The peopled plains, with their
songs and murmurings, lay far below; on every side the mountain
peaks loomed up in snowy grandeur; and overhead he saw the sky,
blue, cold, and cloudless, from horizon to horizon.</p>
<p>What voice was that which spoke in Rodolph's bosom then as
Rodolph's eyes beheld this revelation?</p>
<p>"There is a king!" said the voice. "The king lives, and this
is his abiding-place!"</p>
<p>And how did Rodolph's heart stand still when he felt Silence
proclaim the king,—not in tones of thunder, as the tempest had
proclaimed him, nor in the singing voices of the birds and
brooks, but so swiftly, so surely, so grandly, that Rodolph's
soul was filled with awe ineffable.</p>
<p>Then Rodolph cried: "There is a king, and I acknowledge him!
Henceforth my voice shall swell the songs of all in earth and air
and sea that know and praise his name!"</p>
<p>So Rodolph went to his home. He heard the cricket singing of
the king; yes, and the sparrows under the eaves, the thrush in
the hedge, the doves in the elms, and the brook, too, all singing
of the king; and Rodolph's heart was gladdened by their music.
And all the earth and the things of the earth seemed more
beautiful to Rodolph now that he believed in the king; and to the
song all Nature sang Rodolph's voice and Rodolph's heart made
harmonious response.</p>
<p>"There <i>is</i> a king, my child," said Rodolph to his little
one. "Together let us sing to him, for he is <i>our</i> king, and
his goodness abideth forever and forever."</p>
<p>1885.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Hampshire Hills</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE HAMPSHIRE HILLS</p>
<p>One afternoon many years ago two little brothers named Seth
and Abner were playing in the orchard. They were not troubled
with the heat of the August day, for a soft, cool wind came up
from the river in the valley over yonder and fanned their red
cheeks and played all kinds of pranks with their tangled curls.
All about them was the hum of bees, the song of birds, the smell
of clover, and the merry music of the crickets. Their little dog
Fido chased them through the high, waving grass, and rolled with
them under the trees, and barked himself hoarse in his attempt to
keep pace with their laughter. Wearied at length, they lay
beneath the bellflower-tree and looked off at the Hampshire
hills, and wondered if the time ever would come when they should
go out into the world beyond those hills and be great, noisy men.
Fido did not understand it at all. He lolled in the grass,
cooling his tongue on the clover bloom, and puzzling his brain to
know why his little masters were so quiet all at once.</p>
<p>"I wish I were a man," said Abner, ruefully. "I want to be
somebody and do something. It is very hard to be a little boy so
long and to have no companions but little boys and girls, to see
nothing but these same old trees and this same high grass, and to
hear nothing but the same bird-songs from one day to
another."</p>
<p>"That is true," said Seth. "I, too, am very tired of being a
little boy, and I long to go out into the world and be a man like
my gran'pa or my father or my uncles. With nothing to look at but
those distant hills and the river in the valley, my eyes are
wearied; and I shall be very happy when I am big enough to leave
this stupid place."</p>
<p>Had Fido understood their words he would have chided them, for
the little dog loved his home and had no thought of any other
pleasure than romping through the orchard and playing with his
little masters all the day. But Fido did not understand them.</p>
<p>The clover bloom heard them with sadness. Had they but
listened in turn they would have heard the clover saying softly:
"Stay with me while you may, little boys; trample me with your
merry feet; let me feel the imprint of your curly heads and kiss
the sunburn on your little cheeks. Love me while you may, for
when you go away you never will come back."</p>
<p>The bellflower-tree heard them, too, and she waved her great,
strong branches as if she would caress the impatient little lads,
and she whispered: "Do not think of leaving me: you are children,
and you know nothing of the world beyond those distant hills. It
is full of trouble and care and sorrow; abide here in this quiet
spot till you are prepared to meet the vexations of that outer
world. We are for <i>you</i>,—we trees and grass and birds and
bees and flowers. Abide with us, and learn the wisdom we
teach."</p>
<p>The cricket in the raspberry-hedge heard them, and she
chirped, oh! so sadly: "You will go out into the world and leave
us and never think of us again till it is too late to return.
Open your ears, little boys, and hear my song of
contentment."</p>
<p>So spake the clover bloom and the bellflower-tree and the
cricket; and in like manner the robin that nested in the linden
over yonder, and the big bumblebee that lived in the hole under
the pasture gate, and the butterfly and the wild rose pleaded
with them, each in his own way; but the little boys did not heed
them, so eager were their desires to go into and mingle with the
great world beyond those distant hills.</p>
<p>Many years went by; and at last Seth and Abner grew to
manhood, and the time was come when they were to go into the
world and be brave, strong men. Fido had been dead a long time.
They had made him a grave under the bellflower-tree,—yes, just
where he had romped with the two little boys that August
afternoon Fido lay sleeping amid the humming of the bees and the
perfume of the clover. But Seth and Abner did not think of Fido
now, nor did they give even a passing thought to any of their old
friends,—the bellflower-tree, the clover, the cricket, and the
robin. Their hearts beat with exultation. They were men, and they
were going beyond the hills to know and try the world.</p>
<p>They were equipped for that struggle, not in a vain, frivolous
way, but as good and brave young men should be. A gentle mother
had counselled them, a prudent father had advised them, and they
had gathered from the sweet things of Nature much of that wisdom
before which all knowledge is as nothing. So they were fortified.
They went beyond the hills and came into the West. How great and
busy was the world,—how great and busy it was here in the West!
What a rush and noise and turmoil and seething and surging, and
how keenly did the brothers have to watch and struggle for
vantage ground. Withal, they prospered; the counsel of the
mother, the advice of the father, the wisdom of the grass and
flowers and trees, were much to them, and they prospered. Honor
and riches came to them, and they were happy. But amid it all,
how seldom they thought of the little home among the circling
hills where they had learned the first sweet lessons of life!</p>
<p>And now they were old and gray. They lived in splendid
mansions, and all people paid them honor.</p>
<p>One August day a grim messenger stood in Seth's presence and
beckoned to him.</p>
<p>"Who are you?" cried Seth. "What strange power have you over
me that the very sight of you chills my blood and stays the
beating of my heart?"</p>
<p>Then the messenger threw aside his mask, and Seth saw that he
was Death. Seth made no outcry; he knew what the summons meant,
and he was content. But he sent for Abner.</p>
<p>And when Abner came, Seth was stretched upon his bed, and
there was a strange look in his eyes and a flush upon his cheeks,
as though a fatal fever had laid hold on him.</p>
<p>"You shall not die!" cried Abner, and he threw himself about
his brother's neck and wept.</p>
<p>But Seth bade Abner cease his outcry. "Sit here by my bedside
and talk with me," said he, "and let us speak of the Hampshire
hills."</p>
<p>A great wonder overcame Abner. With reverence he listened, and
as he listened a sweet peace seemed to steal into his soul.</p>
<p>"I am prepared for Death," said Seth, "and I will go with
Death this day. Let us talk of our childhood now, for, after all
the battle with this great world, it is pleasant to think and
speak of our boyhood among the Hampshire hills."</p>
<p>"Say on, dear brother," said Abner.</p>
<p>"I am thinking of an August day long ago," said Seth, solemnly
and softly. "It was <i>so very</i> long ago, and yet it seems
only yesterday. We were in the orchard together, under the
bellflower-tree, and our little dog—"</p>
<p>"Fido," said Abner, remembering it all, as the years came
back.</p>
<p>"Fido and you and I, under the bellflower-tree," said Seth.
"How we had played, and how weary we were, and how cool the grass
was, and how sweet was the fragrance of the flowers! Can you
remember it, brother?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes," replied Abner, "and I remember how we lay among the
clover and looked off at the distant hills and wondered of the
world beyond."</p>
<p>"And amid our wonderings and longings," said Seth, "how the
old bellflower-tree seemed to stretch her kind arms down to us as
if she would hold us away from that world beyond the hills."</p>
<p>"And now I can remember that the clover whispered to us, and
the cricket in the raspberry-hedge sang to us of contentment,"
said Abner.</p>
<p>"The robin, too, carolled in the linden."</p>
<p>"It is very sweet to remember it now," said Seth. "How blue
and hazy the hills looked; how cool the breeze blew up from the
river; how like a silver lake the old pickerel pond sweltered
under the summer sun over beyond the pasture and broomcorn, and
how merry was the music of the birds and bees!"</p>
<p>So these old men, who had been little boys together, talked of
the August afternoon when with Fido they had romped in the
orchard and rested beneath the bell-flower-tree. And Seth's voice
grew fainter, and his eyes were, oh! so dim; but to the very last
he spoke of the dear old days and the orchard and the clover and
the Hampshire hills. And when Seth fell asleep forever, Abner
kissed his brother's lips and knelt at the bedside and said the
prayer his mother had taught him.</p>
<p>In the street without there was the noise of passing carts,
the cries of tradespeople, and all the bustle of a great and busy
city; but, looking upon Seth's dear, dead face, Abner could hear
only the music voices of birds and crickets and summer winds as
he had heard them with Seth when they were little boys together,
back among the Hampshire hills.</p>
<p>1885.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>Ezra's Thanksgivin' Out West</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>EZRA'S THANKSGIVIN' OUT WEST</p>
<p>Ezra had written a letter to the home folks, and in it he had
complained that never before had he spent such a weary, lonesome
day as this Thanksgiving day had been. Having finished this
letter, he sat for a long time gazing idly into the open fire
that snapped cinders all over the hearthstone and sent its red
forks dancing up the chimney to join the winds that frolicked and
gambolled across the Kansas prairies that raw November night. It
had rained hard all day, and was cold; and although the open fire
made every honest effort to be cheerful, Ezra, as he sat in front
of it in the wooden rocker and looked down into the glowing
embers, experienced a dreadful feeling of loneliness and
homesickness.</p>
<p>"I'm sick o' Kansas," said Ezra to himself. "Here I 've been
in this plaguy country for goin' on a year, and—yes, I'm sick of
it, powerful sick of it. What a miser'ble Thanksgivin' this has
been! They don't know what Thanksgivin' is out this way. I wish I
was back in ol' Mass'chusetts—that's the country for <i>me</i>,
and they hev the kind o' Thanksgivin' I like!"</p>
<p>Musing in this strain, while the rain went patter-patter on
the window-panes, Ezra saw a strange sight in the
fireplace,—yes, right among the embers and the crackling flames
Ezra saw a strange, beautiful picture unfold and spread itself
out like a panorama.</p>
<p>"How very wonderful!" murmured the young man. Yet he did not
take his eyes away, for the picture soothed him and he loved to
look upon it.</p>
<p>"It is a pictur' of long ago," said Ezra, softly. "I had like
to forgot it, but now it comes back to me as nat'ral-like as an
ol' friend. An' I seem to be a part of it, an' the feelin' of
that time comes back with the pictur', too."</p>
<p>Ezra did not stir. His head rested upon his hand, and his eyes
were fixed upon the shadows in the firelight.</p>
<p>"It is a pictur' of the ol' home," said Ezra to himself. "I am
back there in Belchertown, with the Holyoke hills up north an'
the Berkshire mountains a-loomin' up gray an' misty-like in the
western horizon. Seems as if it wuz early mornin'; everything is
still, and it is so cold when we boys crawl out o' bed that, if
it wuzn't Thanksgivin' mornin', we'd crawl back again an' wait
for Mother to call us. But it <i>is</i> Thanksgivin' mornin', an'
we're goin' skatin' down on the pond. The squealin' o' the pigs
has told us it is five o'clock, and we must hurry; we're goin' to
call by for the Dickerson boys an' Hiram Peabody, an' we've got
to hyper! Brother Amos gets on 'bout half o' my clo'es, an' I get
on 'bout half o' his, but it's all the same; they are stout, warm
clo'es, and they're big enough to fit any of us boys,—Mother
looked out for that when she made 'em. When we go down-stairs we
find the girls there, all bundled up nice an' warm,—Mary an'
Helen an' Cousin Irene. They're goin' with us, an' we all start
out tiptoe and quiet-like so's not to wake up the ol' folks. The
ground is frozen hard; we stub our toes on the frozen ruts in the
road. When we come to the minister's house, Laura is standin' on
the front stoop, a-waitin' for us. Laura is the minister's
daughter. She's a friend o' Sister Helen's—pretty as a
dag'err'otype, an' gentle-like and tender. Laura lets me carry
her skates, an' I'm glad of it, although I have my hands full
already with the lantern, the hockies, and the rest. Hiram
Peabody keeps us waitin', for he has overslept himself, an' when
he comes trottin' out at last the girls make fun of him,—all
except Sister Mary, an' she sort o' sticks up for Hiram, an'
we're all so 'cute we kind o' calc'late we know the reason
why.</p>
<p>"And now," said Ezra, softly, "the pictur' changes; seems as
if I could see the pond. The ice is like a black lookin'-glass,
and Hiram Peabody slips up the first thing, an' down he comes
lickety-split, an' we all laugh,—except Sister Mary, an'
<i>she</i> says it is very imp'lite to laugh at other folks'
misfortunes. Ough! how cold it is, and how my fingers ache with
the frost when I take off my mittens to strap on Laura's skates!
But, oh, how my cheeks burn! And how careful I am not to hurt
Laura, an' how I ask her if that's 'tight enough,' an' how she
tells me 'jist a little tighter,' and how we two keep foolin'
along till the others hev gone an' we are left alone! An' how
quick I get my <i>own</i> skates strapped on,—none o' your
new-fangled skates with springs an' plates an' clamps an' such,
but honest, ol'-fashioned wooden ones with steel runners that
curl up over my toes an' have a bright brass button on the end!
How I strap 'em and lash 'em and buckle 'em on! An' Laura waits
for me an' tells me to be sure to get 'em on tight enough,—why,
bless me! after I once got 'em strapped on, if them skates hed
come off, the feet w'u'd ha' come with 'em! An' now away we
go,—Laura an' me. Around the bend—near the medder where Si
Barker's dog killed a woodchuck last summer—we meet the rest. We
forget all about the cold. We run races an' play snap the whip,
an' cut all sorts o' didoes, an' we never mind the pick'rel weed
that is froze in on the ice an' trips us up every time we cut the
outside edge; an' then we boys jump over the airholes, an' the
girls stan' by an' scream an' tell us they know we're agoin' to
drownd ourselves. So the hours go, an' it is sun-up at last, an'
Sister Helen says we must be gettin' home. When we take our
skates off, our feet feel as if they were wood. Laura has lost
her tippet; I lend her mine, an' she kind o' blushes. The old
pond seems glad to have us go, and the fire-hangbird's nest in
the willer-tree waves us good-by. Laura promises to come over to
our house in the evenin', and so we break up.</p>
<p>"Seems now," continued Ezra, musingly,—"seems now as if I
could see us all at breakfast. The race on the pond has made us
hungry, and Mother says she never knew anybody else's boys that
had such capac'ties as hers. It is the Yankee Thanksgivin'
breakfast,—sausages an' fried potatoes, an' buckwheat cakes an'
syrup,—maple syrup, mind ye, for Father has his own sugar-bush,
and there was a big run o' sap last season. Mother says, 'Ezry
an' Amos, won't you never get through eatin'? We want to clear
off the table, for there's pies to make, an' nuts to crack, and
laws sakes alive! the turkey's got to be stuffed yit!' Then how
we all fly round! Mother sends Helen up into the attic to get a
squash while Mary's makin' the pie-crust. Amos an' I crack the
walnuts,—they call 'em hickory nuts out in this pesky country of
sage-brush and pasture land. The walnuts are hard, and it's all
we can do to crack 'em. Ev'ry once 'n a while one on 'em slips
outer our fingers an' goes dancin' over the floor or flies into
the pan Helen is squeezin' pumpkin into through the col'nder.
Helen says we're shif'less an' good for nothin' but frivollin';
but Mother tells us how to crack the walnuts so's not to let 'em
fly all over the room, an' so's not to be all jammed to pieces
like the walnuts was down at the party at the Peasleys' last
winter. An' now here comes Tryphena Foster, with her gingham gown
an' muslin apron on; her folks have gone up to Amherst for
Thanksgivin', an' Tryphena has come over to help our folks get
dinner. She thinks a great deal o' Mother, 'cause Mother teaches
her Sunday-school class an' says Tryphena oughter marry a
missionary. There is bustle everywhere, the rattle of pans an'
the clatter of dishes; an' the new kitch'n stove begins to warm
up an' git red, till Helen loses her wits an' is flustered, an'
sez she never could git the hang o' that stove's dampers.</p>
<p>"An' now," murmured Ezra, gently, as a tone of deeper
reverence crept into his voice, "I can see Father sittin' all by
himself in the parlor. Father's hair is very gray, and there are
wrinkles on his honest old face. He is lookin' through the winder
at the Holyoke hills over yonder, and I can guess he's thinkin'
of the time when he wuz a boy like me an' Amos, an' useter climb
over them hills an' kill rattlesnakes an' hunt partridges. Or
doesn't his eyes quite reach the Holyoke hills? Do they fall kind
o' lovingly but sadly on the little buryin'-ground jest beyond
the village? Ah, Father knows that spot, an' he loves it, too,
for there are treasures there whose memory he wouldn't swap for
all the world could give. So, while there is a kind o' mist in
Father's eyes, I can see he is dreamin'-like of sweet an' tender
things, and a-com-munin' with memory,—hearin' voices I never
heard an' feelin' the tech of hands I never pressed; an' seein'
Father's peaceful face I find it hard to think of a Thanksgivin'
sweeter than Father's is.</p>
<p>"The pictur' in the firelight changes now," said Ezra, "an'
seems as if I wuz in the old frame meetin'-house. The
meetin'-house is on the hill, and meetin' begins at half-pas'
ten. Our pew is well up in front,—seems as if I could see it
now. It has a long red cushion on the seat, and in the hymn-book
rack there is a Bible an' a couple of Psalmodies. We walk up the
aisle slow, and Mother goes in first; then comes Mary, then me,
then Helen, then Amos, and then Father. Father thinks it is jest
as well to have one o' the girls set in between me an' Amos. The
meetin'-house is full, for everybody goes to meetin' Thanksgivin'
day. The minister reads the proclamation an' makes a prayer, an'
then he gives out a psalm, an' we all stan' up an' turn round an'
join the choir. Sam Merritt has come up from Palmer to spend
Thanksgivin' with the ol' folks, an' he is singin' tenor to-day
in his ol' place in the choir. Some folks say he sings wonderful
well, but <i>I</i> don't like Sam's voice. Laura sings soprano in
the choir, and Sam stands next to her an' holds the book.</p>
<p>"Seems as if I could hear the minister's voice, full of
earnestness an' melody, comin' from 'way up in his little round
pulpit. He is tellin' us why we should be thankful, an', as he
quotes Scriptur' an' Dr. Watts, we boys wonder how anybody can
remember so much of the Bible. Then I get nervous and worried.
Seems to me the minister was never comin' to lastly, and I find
myself wonderin' whether Laura is listenin' to what the preachin'
is about, or is writin' notes to Sam Merritt in the back of the
tune-book. I get thirsty, too, and I fidget about till Father
looks at me, and Mother nudges Helen, and Helen passes it along
to me with interest.</p>
<p>"An' then," continues Ezra in his revery, "when the last hymn
is given out an' we stan' up ag'in an' join the choir, I am glad
to see that Laura is singin' outer the book with Miss Hubbard,
the alto. An' goin' out o' meetin' I kind of edge up to Laura and
ask her if I kin have the pleasure of seen' her home.</p>
<p>"An' now we boys all go out on the Common to play ball. The
Enfield boys have come over, and, as all the Hampshire county
folks know, they are tough fellers to beat. Gorham Polly keeps
tally, because he has got the newest jack-knife,—oh, how slick
it whittles the old broom-handle Gorham picked up in Packard's
store an' brought along jest to keep tally on! It is a great game
of ball; the bats are broad and light, and the ball is small and
soft. But the Enfield boys beat us at last; leastwise they make
70 tallies to our 58, when Heman Fitts knocks the ball over into
Aunt Dorcas Eastman's yard, and Aunt Dorcas comes out an' picks
up the ball an' takes it into the house, an' we have to stop
playin'. Then Phineas Owens allows he can flop any boy in
Belchertown, an' Moses Baker takes him up, an' they wrassle like
two tartars, till at last Moses tuckers Phineas out an' downs him
as slick as a whistle.</p>
<p>"Then we all go home, for Thanksgivin' dinner is ready. Two
long tables have been made into one, and one of the big
tablecloths Gran'ma had when she set up housekeepin' is spread
over 'em both. We all set round, Father, Mother, Aunt Lydia
Holbrook, Uncle Jason, Mary, Helen, Tryphena Foster, Amos, and
me. How big an' brown the turkey is, and how good it smells!
There are bounteous dishes of mashed potato, turnip, an' squash,
and the celery is very white and cold, the biscuits are light an'
hot, and the stewed cranberries are red as Laura's cheeks. Amos
and I get the drumsticks; Mary wants the wish-bone to put overthe
door for Hiram, but Helen gets it. Poor Mary, she always
<i>did</i> have to give up to 'rushin' Helen,' as we call her.
The pies,—oh, what pies Mother makes; no dyspepsia in 'em, but
good-nature an' good health an' hospitality! Pumpkin pies, mince
an' apple too, and then a big dish of pippins an' russets an'
bellflowers, an', last of all, walnuts with cider from the
Zebrina Dickerson farm! I tell ye, there's a Thanksgivin' dinner
for ye! that's what we get in old Belchertown; an' that's the
kind of livin' that makes the Yankees so all-fired good an'
smart.</p>
<p>"But the best of all," said Ezra, very softly to
himself,—"oh, yes, the best scene in all the pictur' is when
evenin' comes, when the lamps are lit in the parlor, when the
neighbors come in, and when there is music an' singin' an' games.
An' it's this part o' the pictur' that makes me homesick now and
fills my heart with a longin' I never had before; an' yet it sort
o' mellows an' comforts me, too. Miss Serena Cadwell, whose beau
was killed in the war, plays on the melodeon, and we all
sing,—all on us, men, womenfolks, an' children. Sam Merritt is
there, an' he sings a tenor song about love. The women sort of
whisper round that he's goin' to be married to a Palmer lady nex'
spring, an' I think to myself I never heard better singin' than
Sam's. Then we play games, proverbs, buzz, clap-in-clap-out,
copenhagen, fox-an'-geese, button-button-who's-got-the-button,
spin-the-platter, go-to-Jerusalem, my-ship's-come-in, and all the
rest. The ol' folks play with the young folks just as nat'ral as
can be; and we all laugh when Deacon Hosea Cowles hez to measure
six yards of love ribbon with Miss Hepsy Newton, and cut each
yard with a kiss; for the deacon hez been sort o' purrin' round
Miss Hepsy for goin' on two years. Then, aft'r a while, when Mary
an' Helen bring in the cookies, nut-cakes, cider, an' apples,
Mother says: 'I don't b'lieve we're goin' to hev enough apples to
go round; Ezry, I guess I'll have to get you to go down-cellar
for some more.' Then I says: 'All right, Mother, I'll go,
providin' some one'll go along an' hold the candle.' An' when I
say this I look right at Laura and she blushes. Then Helen, jest
for meanness, says: 'Ezry, I s'pose you ain't willin' to have
your fav'rite sister go down-cellar with you an' catch her death
o' cold?' But Mary, who hez been showin' Hiram Peabody the
phot'graph album for more 'n an hour, comes to the rescue an'
makes Laura take the candle, and she shows Laura how to hold it
so it won't go out.</p>
<p>"The cellar is warm an' dark. There are cobwebs all between
the rafters an' everywhere else except on the shelves where
Mother keeps the butter an' eggs an' other things that would
freeze in the butt'ry upstairs. The apples are in bar'ls up
against the wall, near the potater-bin. How fresh an' sweet they
smell! Laura thinks she sees a mouse, an' she trembles an' wants
to jump up on the pork-bar'l, but I tell her that there sha'n't
no mouse hurt her while I'm round; and I mean it, too, for the
sight of Laura a-tremblin' makes me as strong as one of Father's
steers. 'What kind of apples do you like best, Ezry?' asks
Laura,—'russets or greenin's or crow-eggs or bell-flowers or
Baldwins or pippins?' 'I like the Baldwins best,' says I, ''coz
they've got red cheeks jest like yours.' 'Why, Ezry Thompson! how
you talk!' says Laura. 'You oughter be ashamed of yourself!' But
when I get the dish filled up with apples there ain't a Baldwin
in all the lot that can compare with the bright red of Laura's
cheeks. An' Laura knows it, too, an' she sees the mouse ag'in,
an' screams, and then the candle goes out, and we are in a
dreadful stew. But I, bein' almost a man, contrive to bear up
under it, and knowin' she is an orph'n, I comfort an' encourage
Laura the best I know how, and we are almost up-stairs when
Mother comes to the door and wants to know what has kep' us so
long. Jest as if Mother doesn't know! Of course she does; an'
when Mother kisses Laura good-by that night there is in the act a
tenderness that speaks more sweetly than even Mother's words.</p>
<p>"It is so like Mother," mused Ezra; "so like her with her
gentleness an' clingin' love. Hers is the sweetest picture of
all, and hers the best love."</p>
<p>Dream on, Ezra; dream of the old home with its dear ones, its
holy influences, and its precious inspiration,—mother. Dream on
in the far-away firelight; and as the angel hand of memory
unfolds these sacred visions, with thee and them shall abide,
like a Divine comforter, the spirit of thanksgiving.</p>
<p>1885.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>Ludwig and Eloise</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>LUDWIG AND ELOISE</p>
<p>Once upon a time there were two youths named Herman and
Ludwig; and they both loved Eloise, the daughter of the old
burgomaster. Now, the old burgomaster was very rich, and having
no child but Eloise, he was anxious that she should be well
married and settled in life. "For," said he, "death is likely to
come to me at any time: I am old and feeble, and I want to see my
child sheltered by another's love before I am done with earth
forever."</p>
<p>Eloise was much beloved by all the youth in the village, and
there was not one who would not gladly have taken her to wife;
but none loved her so much as did Herman and Ludwig. Nor did
Eloise care for any but Herman and Ludwig, and she loved Herman.
The burgomaster said: "Choose whom you will—I care not! So long
as he be honest I will have him for a son and thank Heaven for
him."</p>
<p>So Eloise chose Herman, and all said she chose wisely; for
Herman was young and handsome, and by his valor had won
distinction in the army, and had thrice been complimented by the
general. So when the brave young captain led Eloise to the altar
there was great rejoicing in the village. The beaux, forgetting
their disappointments, and the maidens, seeing the cause of all
their jealousy removed, made merry together; and it was said that
never had there been in the history of the province an event so
joyous as was the wedding of Herman and Eloise.</p>
<p>But in all the village there was one aching heart. Ludwig, the
young musician, saw with quiet despair the maiden he loved go to
the altar with another. He had known Eloise from childhood, and
he could not say when his love of her began, it was so very long
ago; but now he knew his heart was consumed by a hopeless
passion. Once, at a village festival, he had begun to speak to
her of his love; but Eloise had placed her hand kindly upon his
lips and told him to say no further, for they had always been and
always would be brother and sister. So Ludwig never spoke his
love after that, and Eloise and he were as brother and sister;
but the love of her grew always within him, and he had no thought
but of her.</p>
<p>And now, when Eloise and Herman were wed, Ludwig feigned that
he had received a message from a rich relative in a distant part
of the kingdom bidding him come thither, and Ludwig went from the
village and was seen there no more.</p>
<p>When the burgomaster died all his possessions went to Herman
and Eloise; and they were accounted the richest folk in the
province, and so good and charitable were they that they were
beloved by all. Meanwhile Herman had risen to greatness in the
army, for by his valorous exploits he had become a general, and
he was much endeared to the king. And Eloise and Herman lived in
a great castle in the midst of a beautiful park, and the people
came and paid them reverence there.</p>
<p>And no one in all these years spoke of Ludwig. No one thought
of him. Ludwig was forgotten. And so the years went by.</p>
<p>It came to pass, however, that from a far-distant province
there spread the fame of a musician so great that the king sent
for him to visit the court. No one knew the musician's name nor
whence he came, for he lived alone and would never speak of
himself; but his music was so tender and beautiful that it was
called heart-music, and he himself was called the Master. He was
old and bowed with infirmities, but his music was always of youth
and love; it touched every heart with its simplicity and pathos,
and all wondered how this old and broken man could create so much
of tenderness and sweetness on these themes.</p>
<p>But when the king sent for the Master to come to court the
Master returned him answer: "No, I am old and feeble. To leave my
home would weary me unto death. Let me die here as I have lived
these long years, weaving my music for hearts that need my
solace."</p>
<p>Then the people wondered. But the king was not angry; in pity
he sent the Master a purse of gold, and bade him come or not
come, as he willed. Such honor had never before been shown any
subject in the kingdom, and all the people were dumb with
amazement. But the Master gave the purse of gold to the poor of
the village wherein he lived.</p>
<p>In those days Herman died, full of honors and years, and there
was a great lamentation in the land, for Herman was beloved by
all. And Eloise wept unceasingly and would not be comforted.</p>
<p>On the seventh day after Herman had been buried there came to
the castle in the park an aged and bowed man who carried in his
white and trembling hands a violin. His kindly face was deeply
wrinkled, and a venerable beard swept down upon his breast. He
was weary and foot-sore, but he heeded not the words of pity
bestowed on him by all who beheld him tottering on his way. He
knocked boldly at the castle gate, and demanded to be brought
into the presence of Eloise.</p>
<p>And Eloise said: "Bid him enter; perchance his music will
comfort my breaking heart."</p>
<p>Then, when the old man had come into her presence, behold! he
was the Master,—ay, the Master whose fame was in every land,
whose heart-music was on every tongue.</p>
<p>"If thou art indeed the Master," said Eloise, "let thy music
be balm to my chastened spirit."</p>
<p>The Master said: "Ay, Eloise, I will comfort thee in thy
sorrow, and thy heart shall be stayed, and a great joy will come
to thee."</p>
<p>Then the Master drew his bow across the strings, and lo!
forthwith there arose such harmonies as Eloise had never heard
before. Gently, persuasively, they stole upon her senses and
filled her soul with an ecstasy of peace.</p>
<p>"Is it Herman that speaks to me?" cried Eloise. "It is his
voice I hear, and it speaks to me of love. With thy heart-music,
O Master, all the sweetness of his life comes back to comfort
me!"</p>
<p>The Master did not pause; as he played, it seemed as if each
tender word and caress of Herman's life was stealing back on
music's pinions to soothe the wounds that death had made.</p>
<p>"It is the song of our love-life," murmured Eloise. "How full
of memories it is—what tenderness and harmony—and oh! what
peace it brings! But tell me, Master, what means this minor
chord,—this undertone of sadness and of pathos that flows like a
deep, unfathomable current throughout it all, and wailing, weaves
itself about thy theme of love and happiness with its weird and
subtile influences?"</p>
<p>Then the Master said: "It is that shade of sorrow and
sacrifice, O Eloise, that ever makes the picture of love more
glorious. An undertone of pathos has been <i>my</i> part in all
these years to symmetrize the love of Herman and Eloise. The song
of thy love is beautiful, and who shall say it is not beautified
by the sad undertone of Ludwig's broken heart?"</p>
<p>"Thou art Ludwig!" cried Eloise. "Thou art Ludwig, who didst
love me, and hast come to comfort me who loved thee not!"</p>
<p>The Master indeed was Ludwig; but when they hastened to do him
homage he heard them not, for with that last and sweetest
heart-song his head sank upon his breast, and he was dead.</p>
<p>1885.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>Fido's Little Friend</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>FIDO'S LITTLE FRIEND</p>
<p>One morning in May Fido sat on the front porch, and he was
deep in thought. He was wondering whether the people who were
moving into the next house were as cross and unfeeling as the
people who had just moved out. He hoped they were not, for the
people who had just moved out had never treated Fido with that
respect and kindness which Fido believed he was on all occasions
entitled to.</p>
<p>"The new-comers must be nice folks," said Fido to himself,
"for their feather-beds look big and comfortable, and their
baskets are all ample and generous,—and see, there goes a bright
gilt cage, and there is a plump yellow canary bird in it! Oh, how
glad Mrs. Tabby will be to see it,—she so dotes on dear little
canary birds!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Tabby was the old brindled cat, who was the mother of the
four cunning little kittens in the hay-mow. Fido had heard her
remark very purringly only a few days ago that she longed for a
canary bird, just to amuse her little ones and give them correct
musical ears. Honest old Fido! There was no guile in his heart,
and he never dreamed there was in all the wide world such a sin
as hypocrisy. So when Fido saw the little canary bird in the cage
he was glad for Mrs. Tabby's sake.</p>
<p>While Fido sat on the front porch and watched the people
moving into the next house another pair of eyes peeped out of the
old hollow maple over the way. This was the red-headed
woodpecker, who had a warm, cosey nest far down in the old hollow
maple, and in the nest there were four beautiful eggs, of which
the red-headed woodpecker was very proud.</p>
<p>"Good-morning, Mr. Fido," called the red-headed woodpecker
from her high perch. "You are out bright and early to-day. And
what do you think of our new neighbors?"</p>
<p>"Upon my word, I cannot tell," replied Fido, wagging his tail
cheerily, "for I am not acquainted with them. But I have been
watching them closely, and by to-day noon I think I shall be on
speaking terms with them,—provided, of course, they are not the
cross, unkind people our old neighbors were."</p>
<p>"Oh, I do so hope there are no little boys in the family,"
sighed the red-headed woodpecker; and then she added, with much
determination and a defiant toss of her beautiful head: "I hate
little boys!"</p>
<p>"Why so?" inquired Fido. "As for myself, I love little boys. I
have always found them the pleasantest of companions. Why do
<i>you</i> dislike them?"</p>
<p>"Because they are wicked," said the redheaded woodpecker.
"They climb trees and break up the nests we have worked so hard
to build, and they steal away our lovely eggs—oh, I hate little
boys!"</p>
<p>"Good little boys don't steal birds' eggs," said Fido, "and
I'm sure I never would play with a bad boy."</p>
<p>But the red-headed woodpecker insisted that all little boys
were wicked; and, firm in this faith, she flew away to the linden
over yonder, where, she had heard the thrush say, there lived a
family of fat white grubs. The red-headed woodpecker wanted her
breakfast, and it would have been hard to find a more palatable
morsel for her than a white fat grub.</p>
<p>As for Fido, he sat on the front porch and watched the people
moving in. And as he watched them he thought of what the
redheaded woodpecker had said, and he wondered whether it could
be possible for little boys to be so cruel as to rob birds'
nests. As he brooded over this sad possibility, his train of
thought was interrupted by the sound of a voice that fell
pleasantly on his ears.</p>
<p>"Goggie, goggie, goggie!" said the voice. "Tum here, 'ittle
goggie—tum here, goggie, goggie, goggie!"</p>
<p>Fido looked whence the voice seemed to come, and he saw a tiny
figure on the other side of the fence,—a cunning baby-figure in
the yard that belonged to the house where the new neighbors were
moving in. A second glance assured Fido that the calling stranger
was a little boy not more than three years old, wearing a pretty
dress, and a broad hat that crowned his yellow hair and shaded
his big blue eyes and dimpled face. The sight was a pleasing one,
and Fido vibrated his tail,—very cautiously, however, for Fido
was not quite certain that the little boy meant his greeting for
him, and Fido's sad experiences with the old neighbors had made
him wary about scraping acquaintances too hastily.</p>
<p>"Turn, 'ittle goggie!" persisted the prattling stranger, and,
as if to encourage Fido, the little boy stretched his chubby arms
through the fence and waved them entreatingly.</p>
<p>Fido was convinced now, so he got up, and with many cordial
gestures of his hospitable tail, trotted down the steps and over
the lawn to the corner of the fence where the little stranger
was.</p>
<p>"Me love oo," said the little stranger, patting Fido's honest
brown back; "me love oo, 'ittle goggie!"</p>
<p>Fido knew that, for there were caresses in every stroke of the
dimpled hands. Fido loved the little boy, too,—yes, all at once
he loved the little boy; and he licked the dimpled hands, and
gave three short, quick barks, and wagged his tail hysterically.
So then and there began the friendship of Fido and the little
boy.</p>
<p>Presently Fido crawled under the fence into the next yard, and
then the little boy sat down on the grass, and Fido put his
fore-paws in the little boy's lap and cocked up his ears and
looked up into the little boy's face, as much as to say, "We
shall be great friends, shall we not, little boy?"</p>
<p>"Me love oo," said the little boy; "me wan' to tiss oo, 'ittle
goggie!"</p>
<p>And the little boy did kiss Fido,—yes, right on Fido's cold
nose; and Fido liked to have the little boy kiss him, for it
reminded him of another little boy who used to kiss him, but who
was now so big that he was almost ashamed to play with Fido any
more.</p>
<p>"Is oo sit, 'ittle goggie?" asked the little boy, opening his
blue eyes to their utmost capacity and looking very piteous. "Oo
nose be so told, oo mus' be sit, 'ittle goggie!"</p>
<p>But no, Fido was not sick, even though his nose <i>was</i>
cold. Oh, no; he romped and played all that morning in the cool,
green grass with the little boy; and the red-headed woodpecker,
clinging to the bark on the hickory-tree, laughed at their merry
antics till her sides ached and her beautiful head turned fairly
livid. Then, at last, the little boy's mamma came out of the
house and told him he had played long enough; and neither the
red-headed woodpecker nor Fido saw him again that day.</p>
<p>But the next morning the little boy toddled down to the
fence-corner, bright and early, and called, "Goggie! goggie!
goggie!" so loudly, that Fido heard him in the wood-shed, where
he was holding a morning chat with Mrs. Tabby. Fido hastened to
answer the call; the way he spun out of the wood-shed and down
the gravel walk and around the corner of the house was a
marvel.</p>
<p>"Mamma says oo dot f'eas, 'ittle goggie," said the little boy.
"<i>Has</i> oo dot f'eas?"</p>
<p>Fido looked crestfallen, for could Fido have spoken he would
have confessed that he indeed <i>was</i> afflicted with
fleas,—not with very many fleas, but just enough to interrupt
his slumbers and his meditations at the most inopportune moments.
And the little boy's guileless impeachment set Fido to feeling
creepy-crawly all of a sudden, and without any further ado Fido
turned deftly in his tracks, twisted his head back toward his
tail, and by means of several well-directed bites and plunges
gave the malicious Bedouins thereabouts located timely warning to
behave themselves. The little boy thought this performance very
funny, and he laughed heartily. But Fido looked crestfallen.</p>
<p>Oh, what play and happiness they had that day; how the green
grass kissed their feet, and how the smell of clover came with
the springtime breezes from the meadow yonder! The red-headed
woodpecker heard them at play, and she clambered out of the
hollow maple and dodged hither and thither as if she, too, shared
their merriment. Yes, and the yellow thistle-bird, whose nest was
in the blooming lilac-bush, came and perched in the pear-tree and
sang a little song about the dear little eggs in her cunning
home. And there was a flower in the fence-corner,—a sweet,
modest flower that no human eyes but the little boy's had ever
seen,—and she sang a little song, too, a song about the kind old
Mother Earth and the pretty sunbeams, the gentle rain and the
droning bees. Why, the little boy had never known anything half
so beautiful, and Fido,—he, too, was delighted beyond all
telling. If the whole truth must be told, Fido had such an
exciting and bewildering romp that day that when night came, and
he lay asleep on the kitchen floor, he dreamed he was tumbling in
the green grass with the little boy, and he tossed and barked and
whined so in his sleep that the hired man had to get up in the
night and put him out of doors.</p>
<p>Down in the pasture at the end of the lane lived an old
woodchuck. Last year the freshet had driven him from his
childhood's home in the corn-field by the brook, and now he
resided in a snug hole in the pasture. During their rambles one
day, Fido and his little boy friend had come to the pasture, and
found the old woodchuck sitting upright at the entrance to his
hole.</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm not going to hurt you, old Mr. Woodchuck," said Fido.
"I have too much respect for your gray hairs."</p>
<p>"Thank you," replied the woodchuck, sarcastically, "but I'm
not afraid of any bench-legged fyste that ever walked. It was
only last week that I whipped Deacon Skinner's yellow mastiff,
and I calc'late I can trounce you, you ridiculous little brown
cur!"</p>
<p>The little boy did not hear this badinage. When he saw the
woodchuck solemnly perched at the entrance to his hole he was
simply delighted.</p>
<p>"Oh, see!" cried the little boy, stretching out his fat arms
and running toward the woodchuck,—"oh, see,—'nuzzer 'ittle
goggie! Turn here, 'ittle goggie,—me love oo!"</p>
<p>But the old woodchuck was a shy creature, and not knowing what
guile the little boy's cordial greeting might mask, the old
woodchuck discreetly disappeared in his hole, much to the little
boy's amazement.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, the old woodchuck, the little boy, and Fido
became fast friends in time, and almost every day they visited
together in the pasture. The old woodchuck—hoary and scarred
veteran that he was—had wonderful stories to tell,—stories of
marvellous adventures, of narrow escapes, of battles with cruel
dogs, and of thrilling experiences that were altogether new to
his wondering listeners. Meanwhile the red-headed woodpecker's
eggs in the hollow maple had hatched, and the proud mother had
great tales to tell of her baby birds,—of how beautiful and
knowing they were, and of what good, noble birds they were going
to be when they grew up. The yellow-bird, too, had four fuzzy
little babies in her nest in the lilac-bush, and every now and
then she came to sing to the little boy and Fido of her darlings.
Then, when the little boy and Fido were tired with play, they
would sit in the rowen near the fence-corner and hear the flower
tell a story the dew had brought fresh from the stars the night
before. They all loved each other,—the little boy, Fido, the old
woodchuck, the redheaded woodpecker, the yellow-bird, and the
flower,—yes, all through the days of spring and all through the
summer time they loved each other in their own honest, sweet,
simple way.</p>
<p>But one morning Fido sat on the front porch and wondered why
the little boy had not come to the fence-corner and called to
him. The sun was high, the men had been long gone to the harvest
fields, and the heat of the early autumn day had driven the birds
to the thickest foliage of the trees. Fido could not understand
why the little boy did not come; he felt, oh' so lonesome, and he
yearned for the sound of a little voice calling "Goggie, goggie,
goggie."</p>
<p>The red-headed woodpecker could not explain it, nor could the
yellow-bird. Fido trotted leisurely down to the fence-corner and
asked the flower if she had seen the little boy that morning. But
no, the flower had not laid eyes on the little boy, and she could
only shake her head doubtfully when Fido asked her what it all
meant. At last in desperation Fido braced himself for an heroic
solution of the mystery, and as loudly as ever he could, he
barked three times,—in the hope, you know, that the little boy
would hear his call and come. But the little boy did not
come.</p>
<p>Then Fido trotted sadly down the lane to the pasture to talk
with the old woodchuck about this strange thing. The old
woodchuck saw him coming and ambled out to meet him.</p>
<p>"But where is our little boy?" asked the old woodchuck.</p>
<p>"I do not know," said Fido. "I waited for him and called to
him again and again, but he never came."</p>
<p>Ah, those were sorry days for the little boy's friends, and
sorriest for Fido. Poor, honest Fido, how lonesome he was and how
he moped about! How each sudden sound, how each footfall,
startled him! How he sat all those days upon the front
door-stoop, with his eyes fixed on the fence-corner and his rough
brown ears cocked up as if he expected each moment to see two
chubby arms stretched out toward him and to hear a baby voice
calling "Goggie, goggie, goggie."</p>
<p>Once only they saw him,—Fido, the flower, and the others. It
was one day when Fido had called louder than usual. They saw a
little figure in a night-dress come to an upper window and lean
his arms out. They saw it was the little boy, and, oh! how pale
and ill he looked. But his yellow hair was as glorious as ever,
and the dimples came back with the smile that lighted his thin
little face when he saw Fido; and he leaned on the window
casement and waved his baby hands feebly, and cried: "Goggie!
goggie!" till Fido saw the little boy's mother come and take him
from the window.</p>
<p>One morning Fido came to the fence-corner—how very lonely
that spot seemed now—and he talked with the flower and the
woodpecker; and the yellow-bird came, too, and they all talked of
the little boy. And at that very moment the old woodchuck reared
his hoary head by the hole in the pasture, and he looked this way
and that and wondered why the little boy never came any more.</p>
<p>"Suppose," said Fido to the yellow-bird,—"suppose you fly to
the window 'way up there and see what the little boy is doing.
Sing him one of your pretty songs, and tell him we are lonesome
without him; that we are waiting for him in the old
fence-corner."</p>
<p>Then the yellow-bird did as Fido asked,—she flew to the
window where they had once seen the little boy, and alighting
upon the sill, she peered into the room. In another moment she
was back on the bush at Fido's side.</p>
<p>"He is asleep," said the yellow-bird.</p>
<p>"Asleep!" cried Fido.</p>
<p>"Yes," said the yellow-bird, "he is fast asleep. I think he
must be dreaming a beautiful dream, for I could see a smile on
his face, and his little hands were folded on his bosom. There
were flowers all about him, and but for their sweet voices the
chamber would have been very still."</p>
<p>"Come, let us wake him," said Fido; "let us all call to him at
once. Then perhaps he will hear us and awaken and answer; perhaps
he will come."</p>
<p>So they all called in chorus,—Fido and the other honest
friends. They called so loudly that the still air of that autumn
morning was strangely startled, and the old woodchuck in the
pasture 'way off yonder heard the echoes and wondered.</p>
<p>"Little boy! little boy!" they called, "why are you sleeping?
Why are you sleeping, little boy?"</p>
<p>Call on, dear voices! but the little boy will never hear. The
dimpled hands that caressed you are indeed folded upon his
breast; the lips that kissed your honest faces are sealed; the
baby voice that sang your playtime songs with you is hushed, and
all about him are the fragrance and the beauty of flowers. Call
on, O honest friends! but he shall never hear your calling; for,
as if he were aweary of the love and play and sunshine that were
all he knew of earth, our darling is asleep forever.</p>
<p>1885.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Old Man</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE OLD MAN</p>
<p>I called him the Old Man, but he wuzn't an old man; he wuz a
little boy—our fust one; 'nd his gran'ma, who'd had a heap of
experience in sich matters, allowed that he wuz for looks as
likely a child as she'd ever clapped eyes on. Bein' our fust, we
sot our hearts on him, and Lizzie named him Willie, for that wuz
the name she liked best, havin' had a brother Willyum killed in
the war. But I never called him anything but the Old Man, and
that name seemed to fit him, for he wuz one of your sollum
babies,—alwuz thinkin' 'nd thinkin' 'nd thinkin', like he wuz a
jedge, and when he laffed it wuzn't like other children's laffs,
it wuz so sad-like.</p>
<p>Lizzie 'nd I made it up between us that when the Old Man
growed up we'd send him to collige 'nd give him a lib'ril
edication, no matter though we had to sell the farm to do it. But
we never c'u'd exactly agree as to what we was goin' to make of
him; Lizzie havin' her heart sot on his bein' a preacher like his
gran'pa Baker, and I wantin' him to be a lawyer 'nd git rich
out'n the corporations, like his uncle Wilson Barlow. So we never
come to no definite conclusion as to what the Old Man wuz goin'
to be bime by; but while we wuz thinkin' 'nd debatin' the Old Man
kep' growin' 'nd growin', and all the time he wuz as serious 'nd
sollum as a jedge.</p>
<p>Lizzie got jest wrapped up in that boy; toted him round
ever'where 'nd never let on like it made her tired,—powerful big
'nd hearty child too, but heft warn't nothin' 'longside of
Lizzie's love for the Old Man. When he caught the measles from
Sairy Baxter's baby Lizzie sot up day 'nd night till he wuz well,
holdin' his hands 'nd singin' songs to him, 'nd cryin' herse'f
almost to death because she dassent give him cold water to drink
when he called f'r it. As for me, <i>my</i> heart wuz wrapped up
in the Old Man, <i>too</i>, but, bein' a man, it wuzn't for me to
show it like Lizzie, bein' a woman; and now that the Old Man
is—wall, now that he has gone, it wouldn't do to let on how much
I sot by him, for that would make Lizzie feel all the wuss.</p>
<p>Sometimes, when I think of it, it makes me sorry that I didn't
show the Old Man some way how much I wuz wrapped up in him. Used
to hold him in my lap 'nd make faces for him 'nd alder whistles
'nd things; sometimes I'd kiss him on his rosy cheek, when nobody
wuz lookin'; oncet I tried to sing him a song, but it made him
cry, 'nd I never tried my hand at singin' again. But, somehow,
the Old Man didn't take to me like he took to his mother: would
climb down outern my lap to git where Lizzie wuz; would hang on
to her gownd, no matter what she wuz doin',—whether she wuz
makin' bread, or sewin', or puttin' up pickles, it wuz alwuz the
same to the Old Man; he wuzn't happy unless he wuz right there,
clost beside his mother.</p>
<p>'Most all boys, as I've heern tell, is proud to be round with
their father, doin' what <i>he</i> does 'nd wearin' the kind of
clothes <i>he</i> wears. But the Old Man wuz different; he
allowed that his mother was his best friend, 'nd the way he stuck
to her—wall, it has alwuz been a great comfort to Lizzie to
recollect it.</p>
<p>The Old Man had a kind of confidin' way with his mother. Every
oncet in a while, when he'd be playin' by hisself in the front
room, he'd call out, "Mudder, mudder;" and no matter where Lizzie
wuz,—in the kitchen, or in the wood-shed, or in the yard, she'd
answer: "What is it, darlin'?" Then the Old Man 'u'd say: "Turn
here, mudder, I wanter tell you sumfin'." Never could find out
what the Old Man wanted to tell Lizzie; like 's not he didn't
wanter tell her nothin'; maybe he wuz lonesome 'nd jest wanted to
feel that Lizzie wuz round. But that didn't make no diff'rence;
it wuz all the same to Lizzie. No matter where she wuz or what
she wuz a-doin', jest as soon as the Old Man told her he wanted
to tell her somethin' she dropped ever'thing else 'nd went
straight to him. Then the Old Man would laff one of his sollum,
sad-like laffs, 'nd put his arms round Lizzie's neck 'nd
whisper—or pertend to whisper—somethin' in her ear, 'nd Lizzie
would laff 'nd say, "Oh, what a nice secret we have atween us!"
and then she would kiss the Old Man 'nd go back to her work.</p>
<p>Time changes all things,—all things but memory, nothin' can
change <i>that</i>. Seems like it was only yesterday or the day
before that I heern the Old Man callin', "Mudder, mudder, I
wanter tell you sumfin'," and that I seen him put his arms around
her neck 'nd whisper softly to her.</p>
<p>It had been an open winter, 'nd there wuz fever all around us.
The Baxters lost their little girl, and Homer Thompson's children
had all been taken down. Ev'ry night 'nd mornin' we prayed God to
save our darlin'; but one evenin' when I come up from the
wood-lot, the Old Man wuz restless 'nd his face wuz hot 'nd he
talked in his sleep. Maybe you've been through it
yourself,—maybe you've tended a child that's down with the
fever; if so, maybe you know what we went through, Lizzie 'nd me.
The doctor shook his head one night when he come to see the Old
Man; we knew what that meant. I went out-doors,—I couldn't stand
it in the room there, with the Old Man seein' 'nd talkin' about
things that the fever made him see. I wuz too big a coward to
stay 'nd help his mother to bear up; so I went out-doors 'nd
brung in wood,—brung in wood enough to last all spring,—and
then I sat down alone by the kitchen fire 'nd heard the clock
tick 'nd watched the shadders flicker through the room.</p>
<p>I remember Lizzie's comin' to me and sayin': "He's breathin'
strange-like, 'nd his little feet is cold as ice." Then I went
into the front chamber where he lay. The day wuz breakin'; the
cattle wuz lowin' outside; a beam of light come through the
winder and fell on the Old Man's face,—perhaps it wuz the
summons for which he waited and which shall some time come to me
'nd you. Leastwise the Old Man roused from his sleep 'nd opened
up his big blue eyes. It wuzn't me he wanted to see.</p>
<p>"Mudder! mudder!" cried the Old Man, but his voice warn't
strong 'nd clear like it used to be. "Mudder, where <i>be</i>
you, mudder?"</p>
<p>Then, breshin' by me, Lizzie caught the Old Man up 'nd held
him in her arms, like she had done a thousand times before.</p>
<p>"What is it, darlin'? <i>Here</i> I be," says Lizzie.</p>
<p>"Tum here," says the Old Man,—"tum here; I wanter tell you
sumfin'."</p>
<p>The Old Man went to reach his arms around her neck 'nd whisper
in her ear. But his arms fell limp and helpless-like, 'nd the Old
Man's curly head drooped on his mother's breast.</p>
<p>1889.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>Bill, the Lokil Editor</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>BILL, THE LOKIL EDITOR</p>
<p>Bill wuz alluz fond uv children 'nd birds 'nd flowers. Ain't
it kind o' curious how sometimes we find a great, big, awkward
man who loves sech things? Bill had the biggest feet in the
township, but I'll bet my wallet that he never trod on a violet
in all his life. Bill never took no slack from enny man that wuz
sober, but the children made him play with 'em, and he'd set for
hours a-watchin' the yaller-hammer buildin' her nest in the old
cottonwood.</p>
<p>Now I ain't defendin' Bill; I'm jest tellin' the truth about
him. Nothink I kin say one way or t'other is goin' to make enny
difference now; Bill's dead 'nd buried, 'nd the folks is
discussin' him 'nd wond'rin' whether his immortal soul is all
right. Sometimes I <i>hev</i> worried 'bout Bill, but I don't
worry 'bout him no more. Uv course Bill had his faults,—I never
liked that drinkin' business uv his'n, yet I allow that Bill got
more good out'n likker, and likker got more good out'n Bill, than
I ever see before or sence. It warn't when the likker wuz in Bill
that Bill wuz at his best, but when he hed been on to one uv his
bats 'nd had drunk himself sick 'nd wuz comin' out uv the other
end of the bat, then Bill wuz one uv the meekest 'nd properest
critters you ever seen. An' po'try? Some uv the most beautiful
po'try I ever read wuz writ by Bill when he wuz recoverin'
himself out'n one uv them bats. Seemed like it kind uv exalted
an' purified Bill's nachur to git drunk an' git over it. Bill
c'u'd drink more likker 'nd be sorrier for it than any other man
in seven States. There never wuz a more penitent feller than he
wuz when he wuz soberin'. The trubble with Bill seemed to be that
his conscience didn't come on watch quite of'n enuff.</p>
<p>It'll be ten years come nex' spring sence Bill showed up here.
I don't know whar he come from; seemed like he didn't want to
talk about his past. I allers suspicioned that he had seen
trubble—maybe, sorrer. I reecollect that one time he got a
telegraph,—Mr. Ivins told me 'bout it afterwards,—and when he
read it he put his hands up to his face 'nd groaned, like. That
day he got full uv likker 'nd he kep' full uv likker for a week;
but when he come round all right he wrote a pome for the paper,
'nd the name uv the pome wuz "Mary," but whether Mary wuz his
sister or his wife or an old sweetheart uv his'n I never knew.
But it looked from the pome like she wuz dead 'nd that he loved
her.</p>
<p>Bill wuz the best lokil the paper ever had. He didn't hustle
around much, but he had a kind er pleasin' way uv dishin' things
up. He c'u'd be mighty comical when he sot out to be, but his
best holt was serious pieces. Nobody could beat Bill writing
obituaries. When old Mose Holbrook wuz dyin' the minister sez to
him: "Mr. Holbrook, you seem to be sorry that you're passin' away
to a better land?"</p>
<p>"Wall, no; not exactly <i>that</i>," sez Mose, "but to be
frank with you, I <i>hev</i> jest one regret in connection with
this affair."</p>
<p>"What's that?" asked the minister.</p>
<p>"I can't help feelin' sorry," sez Mose, "that I ain't goin' to
hev the pleasure uv readin' what Bill Newton sez about me in the
paper. I know it'll be sumthin' uncommon fine; I loant him two
dollars a year ago last fall."</p>
<p>The Higginses lost a darned good friend when Bill died. Bill
wrote a pome 'bout their old dog Towze when he wuz run over by
Watkins's hay-wagon seven years ago. I'll bet that pome is in
every scrap-book in the county. You couldn't read that pome
without cryin',—why, that pome w'u'd hev brought a dew out on
the desert uv Sary. Old Tim Hubbard, the meanest man in the
State, borrered a paper to read the pome, and he wuz so 'fected
by it that he never borrered anuther paper as long as he lived. I
don't more'n half reckon, though, that the Higginses appreciated
what Bill had done for 'em. I never heerd uv their givin' him
anythink more'n a basket uv greenin' apples, and Bill wrote a
piece 'bout the apples nex' day.</p>
<p>But Bill wuz at his best when he wrote things about the
children,—about the little ones that died, I mean. Seemed like
Bill had a way of his own of sayin' things that wuz beautiful 'nd
tender; he said he loved the children because they wuz innocent,
and I reckon—yes, I know he did, for the pomes he writ about 'em
showed he did.</p>
<p>When our little Alice died I started out for Mr. Miller's; he
wuz the undertaker. The night wuz powerful dark, 'nd it wuz all
the darker to me, because seemed like all the light hed gone out
in my life. Down near the bridge I met Bill; he weaved round in
the road, for he wuz in likker.</p>
<p>"Hello, Mr. Baker," sez he, "whar be you goin' this time o'
night?"</p>
<p>"Bill," sez I, "I'm goin' on the saddest errand uv my
life."</p>
<p>"What d' ye mean?" sez he, comin' up to me as straight as he
c'u'd.</p>
<p>"Why, Bill," sez I, "our little girl—my little girl—Allie,
you know—she's dead."</p>
<p>I hoarsed up so I couldn't say much more. And Bill didn't say
nothink at all; he jest reached me his hand, and he took my hand
and seemed like in that grasp his heart spoke many words of
comfort to mine. And nex' day he had a piece in the paper about
our little girl; we cut it out and put it in the big Bible in the
front room. Sometimes when we get to fussin', Martha goes 'nd
gets that bit of paper 'nd reads it to me; then us two kind uv
cry to ourselves, 'nd we make it up between us for the dead
child's sake.</p>
<p>Well, you kin see how it wuz that so many uv us liked Bill; he
had soothed our hearts,—there's nothin' like sympathy after all.
Bill's po'try hed heart in it; it didn't surprise you or scare
you; it jest got down in under your vest, 'nd before you knew it
you wuz all choked up. I know all about your fashionable po'try
and your famous potes,—Martha took Godey's for a year. Folks
that live in the city can't write po'try,—not the real, genuine
article. To write po'try, as I figure it, the heart must have
somethin' to feed on; you can't get that somethin' whar there
ain't trees 'nd grass 'nd birds 'nd flowers. Bill loved these
things, and he fed his heart on 'em, and that's why his po'try
wuz so much better than anybody else's.</p>
<p>I ain't worryin' much about Bill now; I take it that
everythink is for the best. When they told me that Bill died in a
drunken fit I felt that his end oughter have come some other
way,—he wuz too good a man for that. But maybe, after all, it
was ordered for the best. Jist imagine Bill a-standin' up for
jedgment; jist imagine that poor, sorrowful, shiverin' critter
waitin' for his turn to come. Pictur', if you can, how full of
penitence he is, 'nd how full uv po'try 'nd gentleness 'nd
misery. The Lord ain't a-goin' to be too hard on that poor
wretch. Of course we can't comprehend Divine mercy; we only know
that it is full of compassion,—a compassion infinitely tenderer
and sweeter than ours. And the more I think on 't, the more I
reckon that Bill will plead to win that mercy, for, like as not,
the little ones—my Allie with the rest—will run to him when
they see him in his trubble and will hold his tremblin' hands 'nd
twine their arms about him, and plead, with him, for
compassion.</p>
<p>You've seen an old sycamore that the lightnin' has struck; the
ivy has reached up its vines 'nd spread 'em all around it 'nd
over it, coverin' its scars 'nd splintered branches with a velvet
green 'nd fillin' the air with fragrance. You've seen this thing
and you know that it is beautiful.</p>
<p>That's Bill, perhaps, as he stands up f'r jedgment,—a
miserable, tremblin', 'nd unworthy thing, perhaps, but twined
about, all over, with singin' and pleadin' little children—and
that is pleasin' in God's sight, I know.</p>
<p>What would you—what would <i>I</i>—say, if we wuz settin' in
jedgment then?</p>
<p>Why, we'd jest kind uv bresh the moisture from our eyes 'nd
say: "Mister recordin' angel, you may nolly pros this case 'nd
perseed with the docket."</p>
<p>1888.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Little Yaller Baby</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE LITTLE YALLER BABY</p>
<p>I hev allus hed a good opinion uv the wimmin folks. I don't
look at 'em as some people do; uv course they're a
necessity—just as men are. Uv course if there warn't no wimmin
folks there wouldn't be no men folks—leastwise that's what the
medikil books say. But I never wuz much on discussin' humin
economy; what I hev allus thought 'nd said wuz that wimmin folks
wuz a kind uv luxury, 'nd the best kind, too. Maybe it's because
I hain't hed much to do with 'em that I'm sot on 'em. Never did
get real well acquainted with more'n three or four uv 'em in all
my life; seemed like it wuz meant that I shouldn't hev 'em round
me as most men hev. Mother died when I wuz a little tyke, an'
Aunt Mary raised me till I wuz big enuff to make my own livin'.
Down here in the Southwest, you see, most uv the girls is boys;
there ain't none uv them civilizin' influences folks talk
uv,—nothin' but flowers 'nd birds 'nd such things as poetry
tells about. So I kind uv growed up with the curi's notion that
wimmin folks wuz too good for our part uv the country, 'nd I
hevn't quite got that notion out'n my head yet.</p>
<p>One time—wall, I reckon 't wuz about four years ago—I got a
letter frum ol' Col. Sibley to come up to Saint Louey 'nd consult
with him 'bout some stock int'rests we hed together. Railroad
travellin' wuz no new thing to me. I hed been prutty
prosperous,—hed got past hevin' to ride in a caboose 'nd git out
at every stop to punch up the steers. Hed money in the Hoost'n
bank 'nd used to go to Tchicargo oncet a year; hed met Fill Armer
'nd shook hands with him, 'nd oncet the city papers hed a colume
article about my bein' a millionnaire; uv course 't warn't so,
but a feller kind uv likes that sort uv thing, you know.</p>
<p>The mornin' after I got that letter from Col. Sibley I started
for Saint Louey. I took a bunk in the Pullman car, like I hed
been doin' for six years past; 'nd I reckon the other folks must
hev thought I wuz a heap uv a man, for every haff-hour I give the
nigger ha'f a dollar to bresh me off. The car wuz full uv
people,—rich people, too, I reckon, for they wore good clo'es
'nd criticized the scenery. Jest across frum me there wuz a lady
with a big, fat baby,—the pruttiest woman I hed seen in a month
uv Sundays; and the baby! why, doggone my skin, when I wuzn't
payin' money to the nigger, darned if I didn't set there watchin'
the big, fat little cuss, like he wuz the only baby I ever seen.
I ain't much of a hand at babies, 'cause I hain't seen many uv
'em, 'nd when it comes to handlin' 'em—why, that would break me
all up, 'nd like 's not 't would break the baby all up too. But
it has allus been my notion that nex' to the wimmin folks babies
wuz jest about the nicest things on earth. So the more I looked
at that big, fat little baby settin' in its mother's lap 'cross
the way, the more I wanted to look; seemed like I wuz hoodooed by
the little tyke; 'nd the first thing I knew there wuz water in my
eyes; don't know why it is, but it allus makes me kind ur slop
over to set 'nd watch a baby cooin' 'nd playin' in its mother's
lap.</p>
<p>"Look a' hyar, Sam," says I to the nigger, "come hyar 'nd
bresh me off ag'in! Why ain't you 'tendin' to bizness?"</p>
<p>But it didn't do no good 't all; pertendin' to be cross with
the nigger might fool the other folks in the car, but it didn't
fool me. I wuz dead stuck on that baby—gol durn his pictur'! And
there the little tyke set in its mother's lap, doublin' up its
fists 'nd tryin' to swaller 'em, 'nd talkin' like to its mother
in a lingo I couldn't understan', but which the mother could, for
she talked back to the baby in a soothin' lingo which I couldn't
understand, but which I liked to hear, 'nd she kissed the baby
'nd stroked its hair 'nd petted it like wimmin do.</p>
<p>It made me mad to hear them other folks in the car criticizin'
the scenery 'nd things. A man's in mighty poor bizness, anyhow,
to be lookin' at scenery when there's a woman in sight,—a woman
<i>and</i> a baby!</p>
<p>Prutty soon—oh, maybe in a hour or two—the baby began to
fret 'nd worrit. Seemed to me like the little critter wuz hungry.
Knowin' that there wuz no eatin'-house this side of Bowieville, I
jest called the train-boy, 'nd says I to him: "Hev you got any
victuals that will do for a baby?"</p>
<p>"How is oranges 'nd bananas?" says he.</p>
<p>"That ought to do," says I. "Jist do up a dozen uv your best
oranges 'nd a dozen uv your best bananas 'nd take 'em over to
that baby with my complerments."</p>
<p>But before he could do it, the lady hed laid the baby on one
uv her arms 'nd hed spread a shawl over its head 'nd over her
shoulder, 'nd all uv a suddint the baby quit worritin' and seemed
like he hed gone to sleep.</p>
<p>When we got to York Crossin' I looked out'n the winder 'nd
seen some men carryin' a long pine box up towards the
baggage-car. Seein' their hats off, I knew there wuz a dead body
in the box, 'nd I couldn't help feelin' sorry for the poor
creetur that hed died in that lonely place uv York Crossin'; but
I mought hev felt a heap sorrier for the creeters that hed to
live there, for I'll allow that York Crossin' is a <i>leetle</i>
the durnedest lonesomest place I ever seen.</p>
<p>Well, just afore the train started ag'in, who should come into
the car but Bill Woodson, and he wuz lookin' powerful tough. Bill
herded cattle for me three winters, but hed moved away when he
married one uv the waiter-girls at Spooner's Hotel at
Hoost'n.</p>
<p>"Hello, Bill," says I; "what air you totin' so kind uv
keerful-like in your arms there?"</p>
<p>"Why, I've got the baby," says he; 'nd as he said it the tears
come up into his eyes.</p>
<p>"Your own baby, Bill?" says I.</p>
<p>"Yes," says he. "Nellie took sick uv the janders a fortnight
ago, 'nd—'nd she died, 'nd I'm takin' her body up to Texarkany
to bury. She lived there, you know, 'nd I'm goin' to leave the
baby there with its gran'ma."</p>
<p>Poor Bill! it wuz his wife that the men were carryin' in that
pine box to the baggage-car.</p>
<p>"Likely-lookin'baby, Bill," says I, cheerful like. "Perfect
pictur' uv its mother; kind uv favors you round the lower part uv
the face, tho'."</p>
<p>I said this to make Bill feel happier. If I'd told the truth,
I'd 've said the baby wuz a sickly, yaller-lookin' little thing,
for so it wuz; looked haff-starved, too. Couldn't help comparin'
it with that big, fat baby in its mother's arms over the way.</p>
<p>"Bill," says I, "here's a ten-dollar note for the baby, 'nd
God bless you!"</p>
<p>"Thank ye, Mr. Goodhue," says he, 'nd he choked all up as he
moved off with that yaller little baby in his arms. It warn't
very fur up the road he wuz goin', 'nd he found a seat in one uv
the front cars.</p>
<p>But along about an hour after that back come Bill, moseyin'
through the car like he wuz huntin' for somebody. Seemed like he
wuz in trubble and wuz huntin' for a friend.</p>
<p>"Anything I kin do for you, Bill?" says I, but he didn't make
no answer. All uv a suddint he sot his eyes on the prutty lady
that had the fat baby sleepin' in her arms, 'nd he made a break
for her like he wuz crazy. He took off his hat 'nd bent down over
her 'nd said somethin' none uv the rest uv us could hear. The
lady kind uv started like she wuz frightened, 'nd then she looked
up at Bill 'nd looked him right square in the countenance. She
saw a tall, ganglin', awkward man, with long yaller hair 'nd
frowzy beard, 'nd she saw that he wuz tremblin' 'nd hed tears in
his eyes. She looked down at the fat baby in her arms, 'nd then
she looked out'n the winder at the great stretch uv prairie land,
'nd seemed like she wuz lookin' off further 'n the rest uv us
could see. Then at last she turnt around 'nd said, "Yes," to
Bill, 'nd Bill went off into the front car ag'in.</p>
<p>None uv the rest uv us knew what all this meant, but in a
minnit Bill come back with his little yaller baby in his arms,
'nd you never heerd a baby squall 'nd carry on like that baby wuz
squallin' 'nd carryin' on. Fact is, the little yaller baby wuz
hungry, hungrier 'n a wolf, 'nd there wuz its mother dead in the
car up ahead 'nd its gran'ma a good piece up the road. What did
the lady over the way do but lay her own sleepin' baby down on
the seat beside her 'nd take Bill's little yaller baby 'nd hold
it on one arm 'nd cover up its head 'nd her shoulder with a
shawl, jist like she had done with the fat baby not long afore.
Bill never looked at her; he took off his hat and held it in his
hand, 'nd turnt around 'nd stood guard over that mother, 'nd I
reckon that ef any man bed darst to look that way jist then Bill
would 've cut his heart out.</p>
<p>The little yaller baby didn't cry very long. Seemed like it
knowed there wuz a mother holdin' it,—not its own mother, but a
woman whose life hed been hallowed by God's blessin' with the
love 'nd the purity 'nd the sanctity uv motherhood.</p>
<p>Why, I wouldn't hev swapped that sight uv Bill an' them two
babies 'nd that sweet woman for all the cattle in Texas! It jest
made me know that what I'd allus thought uv wimmin was gospel
truth. God bless that lady! I say, wherever she is to-day, 'nd
God bless all wimmin folks, for they're all alike in their
unselfishness 'nd gentleness 'nd love!</p>
<p>Bill said, "God bless ye!" too, when she handed him back his
poor little yaller baby. The little creeter wuz fast asleep, 'nd
Bill darsent speak very loud for fear he'd wake it up. But his
heart wuz 'way up in his mouth when he says "God bless ye!" to
that dear lady; 'nd then he added, like he wanted to let her know
that he meant to pay her back when he could: "I'll do the same
for you some time, marm, if I kin."</p>
<p>1888.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Cyclopeedy</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE CYCLOPEEDY</p>
<p>Havin' lived next door to the Hobart place f'r goin' on thirty
years, I calc'late that I know jest about ez much about the case
ez anybody else now on airth, exceptin' perhaps it's ol' Jedge
Baker, and he's so plaguy old 'nd so powerful feeble that
<i>he</i> don't know nothin'.</p>
<p>It seems that in the spring uv '47—the year that Cy Watson's
oldest boy wuz drownded in West River—there come along a
book-agent sellin' volyumes 'nd tracks f'r the diffusion uv
knowledge, 'nd havin' got the recommend of the minister 'nd uv
the selectmen, he done an all-fired big business in our part uv
the county. His name wuz Lemuel Higgins, 'nd he wuz ez likely a
talker ez I ever heerd, barrin' Lawyer Conkey, 'nd everybody
allowed that when Conkey wuz round he talked so fast that the
town pump 'u'd have to be greased every twenty minutes.</p>
<p>One of the first uv our folks that this Lemuel Higgins struck
wuz Leander Hobart. Leander had jest marr'd one uv the Peasley
girls, 'nd had moved into the old homestead on the Plainville
road,—old Deacon Hobart havin' give up the place to him, the
other boys havin' moved out West (like a lot o' darned fools that
they wuz!). Leander wuz feelin' his oats jest about this time,
'nd nuthin' wuz too good f'r him.</p>
<p>"Hattie," sez he, "I guess I'll have to lay in a few books f'r
readin' in the winter time, 'nd I've half a notion to subscribe
f'r a cyclopeedy. Mr. Higgins here says they're invalerable in a
family, and that we orter have 'em, bein' as how we're likely to
have the fam'ly bime by."</p>
<p>"Lor's sakes, Leander, how you talk!" sez Hattie, blushin' all
over, ez brides allers does to heern tell uv sich things.</p>
<p>Waal, to make a long story short, Leander bargained with Mr.
Higgins for a set uv them cyclopeedies, 'nd he signed his name to
a long printed paper that showed how he agreed to take a
cyclopeedy oncet in so often, which wuz to be ez often ez a new
one uv the volyumes wuz printed. A cyclopeedy isn't printed all
at oncet, because that would make it cost too much; consekently
the man that gets it up has it strung along fur apart, so as to
hit folks oncet every year or two, and gin'rally about harvest
time. So Leander kind uv liked the idee, and he signed the
printed paper 'nd made his affidavit to it afore Jedge
Warner.</p>
<p>The fust volyume of the cyclopeedy stood on a shelf in the old
seckertary in the settin'-room about four months before they had
any use f'r it. One night Squire Turner's son come over to visit
Leander 'nd Hattie, and they got to talkin' about apples, 'nd the
sort uv apples that wuz the best. Leander allowed that the Rhode
Island greenin' wuz the best, but Hattie and the Turner boy stuck
up f'r the Roxbury russet, until at last a happy idee struck
Leander, and sez he: "We'll leave it to the cyclopeedy, b'gosh!
Whichever one the cyclopeedy sez is the best will settle it."</p>
<p>"But you can't find out nothin' 'bout Roxbury russets nor
Rhode Island greenin's in <i>our</i> cyclopeedy," sez Hattie.</p>
<p>"Why not, I'd like to know?" sez Leander, kind uv indignant
like.</p>
<p>"'Cause ours hain't got down to the R yet," sez Hattie. "All
ours tells about is things beginnin' with A."</p>
<p>"Well, ain't we talkin' about Apples?" sez Leander. "You
aggervate me terrible, Hattie, by insistin' on knowin' what you
don't know nothin' 'bout."</p>
<p>Leander went to the seckertary 'nd took down the cyclopeedy
'nd hunted all through it f'r Apples, but all he could find wuz
"Apple—See Pomology."</p>
<p>"How in thunder kin I see Pomology," sez Leander, "when there
ain't no Pomology to see? Gol durn a cyclopeedy, anyhow!"</p>
<p>And he put the volyume back onto the shelf 'nd never sot eyes
into it ag'in.</p>
<p>That's the way the thing run f'r years 'nd years. Leander
would 've gin up the plaguy bargain, but he couldn't; he had
signed a printed paper 'nd had swore to it afore a justice of the
peace. Higgins would have had the law on him if he had throwed up
the trade.</p>
<p>The most aggervatin' feature uv it all wuz that a new one uv
them cussid cyclopeedies wuz allus sure to show up at the wrong
time,—when Leander wuz hard up or had jest been afflicted some
way or other. His barn burnt down two nights afore the volyume
containin' the letter B arrived, and Leander needed all his chink
to pay f'r lumber, but Higgins sot back on that affidavit and
defied the life out uv him.</p>
<p>"Never mind, Leander," sez his wife, soothin' like, "it's a
good book to have in the house, anyhow, now that we've got a
baby."</p>
<p>"That's so," sez Leander, "babies does begin with B, don't
it?"</p>
<p>You see their fust baby had been born; they named him
Peasley,—Peasley Hobart,—after Hattie's folks. So, seein' as
how it wuz payin' f'r a book that told about babies, Leander
didn't begredge that five dollars so very much after all.</p>
<p>"Leander," sez Hattie one forenoon, "that B cyclopeedy ain't
no account. There ain't nothin' in it about babies except 'See
Maternity'!"</p>
<p>"Waal, I'll be gosh durned!" sez Leander. That wuz all he
said, and he couldn't do nothin' at all, f'r that book-agent,
Lemuel Higgins, had the dead wood on him,—the mean, sneakin'
critter!</p>
<p>So the years passed on, one of them cyclopeedies showin' up
now 'nd then,—sometimes every two years 'nd sometimes every
four, but allus at a time when Leander found it pesky hard to
give up a fiver. It warn't no use cussin' Higgins; Higgins just
laffed when Leander allowed that the cyclopeedy was no good 'nd
that he wuz bein' robbed. Meantime Leander's family wuz
increasin' and growin'. Little Sarey had the hoopin' cough
dreadful one winter, but the cyclopeedy didn't help out at all,
'cause all it said wuz: "Hoopin' Cough—See Whoopin' Cough"—and
uv course there warn't no Whoopin' Cough to see, bein' as how the
W hadn't come yet!</p>
<p>Oncet when Hiram wanted to dreen the home pasture, he went to
the cyclopeedy to find out about it, but all he diskivered
wuz:</p>
<p>"Drain—See Tile." This wuz in 1859, and the cyclopeedy had
only got down to G.</p>
<p>The cow wuz sick with lung fever one spell, and Leander laid
her dyin' to that cussid cyclopeedy, 'cause when he went to
readin' 'bout cows it told him to "See Zoology."</p>
<p>But what's the use uv harrowin' up one's feelin's talkin' 'nd
thinkin' about these things? Leander got so after a while that
the cyclopeedy didn't worry him at all: he grew to look at it ez
one uv the crosses that human critters has to bear without
complainin' through this vale uv tears. The only thing that
bothered him wuz the fear that mebbe he wouldn't live to see the
last volyume,—to tell the truth, this kind uv got to be his
hobby, and I've heern him talk 'bout it many a time settin' round
the stove at the tarvern 'nd squirtin' tobacco juice at the
sawdust box. His wife, Hattie, passed away with the yaller
janders the winter W come, and all that seemed to reconcile
Leander to survivin' her wuz the prospect uv seein' the last
volyume of that cyclopeedy. Lemuel Higgins, the book-agent, had
gone to his everlastin' punishment; but his son, Hiram, had
succeeded to his father's business 'nd continued to visit the
folks his old man had roped in. By this time Leander's children
had growed up; all on 'em wuz marr'd, and there wuz numeris
grandchildren to amuse the ol' gentleman. But Leander wuzn't to
be satisfied with the common things uv airth; he didn't seem to
take no pleasure in his grandchildren like most men do; his mind
wuz allers sot on somethin' else,—for hours 'nd hours, yes, all
day long, he'd set out on the front stoop lookin' wistfully up
the road for that book-agent to come along with a cyclopeedy. He
didn't want to die till he'd got all the cyclopeedies his
contract called for; he wanted to have everything straightened
out before he passed away. When—oh, how well I recollect
it—when Y come along he wuz so overcome that he fell over in a
fit uv paralysis, 'nd the old gentleman never got over it. For
the next three years he drooped 'nd pined, and seemed like he
couldn't hold out much longer. Finally he had to take to his
bed,—he was so old 'nd feeble,—but he made 'em move the bed up
ag'inst the winder so he could watch for that last volyume of the
cyclopeedy.</p>
<p>The end come one balmy day in the spring uv '87. His life wuz
a-ebbin' powerful fast; the minister wuz there, 'nd me, 'nd Dock
Wilson, 'nd Jedge Baker, 'nd most uv the fam'ly. Lovin' hands
smoothed the wrinkled forehead 'nd breshed back the long, scant,
white hair, but the eyes of the dyin' man wuz sot upon that piece
uv road down which the cyclopeedy man allus come.</p>
<p>All to oncet a bright 'nd joyful look come into them eyes, 'nd
ol' Leander riz up in bed 'nd sez, "It's come!"</p>
<p>"What is it, Father?" asked his daughter Sarey, sobbin'
like.</p>
<p>"Hush," says the minister, solemnly; "he sees the shinin'
gates uv the Noo Jerusalum."</p>
<p>"No, no," cried the aged man; "it is the cyclopeedy—the
letter Z—it's comin'!"</p>
<p>And, sure enough! the door opened, and in walked Higgins. He
tottered rather than walked, f'r he had growed old 'nd feeble in
his wicked perfession.</p>
<p>"Here's the Z cyclopeedy, Mr. Hobart," sez Higgins.</p>
<p>Leander clutched it; he hugged it to his pantin' bosom; then
stealin' one pale hand under the piller he drew out a faded
banknote 'nd gave it to Higgins.</p>
<p>"I thank Thee for this boon," sez Leander, rollin' his eyes up
devoutly; then he gave a deep sigh.</p>
<p>"Hold on," cried Higgins, excitedly, "you've made a
mistake—it isn't the last—"</p>
<p>But Leander didn't hear him—his soul hed fled from its mortal
tenement 'nd hed soared rejoicin' to realms uv everlastin'
bliss.</p>
<p>"He is no more," sez Dock Wilson, metaphorically.</p>
<p>"Then who are his heirs?" asked that mean critter Higgins.</p>
<p>"We be," sez the family.</p>
<p>"Do you conjointly and severally acknowledge and assume the
obligation of deceased to me?" he asked 'em.</p>
<p>"What obligation?" asked Peasley Hobart, stern like.</p>
<p>"Deceased died owin' me f'r a cyclopeedy!" sez Higgins.</p>
<p>"That's a lie!" sez Peasley. "We all seen him pay you for the
Z!"</p>
<p>"But there's another one to come," sez Higgins.</p>
<p>"Another?" they all asked.</p>
<p>"Yes, the index!" sez he.</p>
<p>So there wuz, and I'll be eternally gol durned if he ain't
a-suin' the estate in the probate court now f'r the price uv
it!</p>
<p>1889</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>Dock Stebbins</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>DOCK STEBBINS</p>
<p>Most everybody liked Dock Stebbins, fur all he wuz the
durnedest critter that ever lived to play jokes on folks! Seems
like he wuz born jokin' 'nd kep' it up all his life. Ol' Mrs.
Stebbins used to tell how when the Dock wuz a baby he used to
wake her up haff a dozen times uv a night cryin' like he wuz
hungry, 'nd when she turnt over in bed to him he w'u'd laff 'nd
coo like he wuz sayin', "No, thank ye—I wuz only foolin'!"</p>
<p>His mother allus thought a heap uv the Dock, 'nd she allus put
up with his jokes 'nd things without grumblin'; said it warn't
his fault that he wuz so full uv tricks 'nd funny business; kind
uv took the responsibility uv it onto herself, because, as she
allowed, she'd been to a circus jest afore he wuz born.</p>
<p>Nothin' tickled the Dock more 'n to worry folks,—not in a
mean way, but jest to sort uv bother 'em. Used to hang round the
post-office 'nd pertend to have fits,—sakes alive! but how that
scared the wimmin folks. One day who should come along but ol'
Sue Perkins; Sue wuz suspicioned uv takin' a nip uv likker on the
quiet now 'nd then, but nobody had ever ketched her at it. Wall,
the Dock he had one uv his fits jest as Sue hove in sight, 'nd
Lem Thompson (who stood in with Dock in all his deviltry) leant
over Dock while he wuz wallerin' 'nd pertendin' to foam at the
mouth, and Lem cried out: "Nothink will fetch him out'n this turn
but a drink uv brandy." Sue, who wuz as kind-hearted a' old maid
as ever super'ntended a strawbeiry festival, whipped a bottle
out'n her bag 'nd says: "Here you be, Lem, but don't let him
swaller the bottle." Folks bothered Sue a heap 'bout this joke
till she moved down into Texas to teach school.</p>
<p>Dock had a piece uv wood 'bout two inches long,—maybe three:
it wuz black 'nd stubby 'nd looked jest like the butt uv a cigar.
Nobody but Dock w'u'd ever hev thought uv sech a fool thing, but
Dock used to go round with that thing in his mouth like it wuz a
cigar, and when he 'd meet a man who wuz smokin' he'd say:
"Excuse me, but will you please to gimme a light?" Then the man
w'u'd hand over his cigar, and Dock w'u'd plough that wood stub
uv his'n around in the lighted cigar and would pertend to puff
away till he had put the real cigar out, 'nd then Dock w'u'd hand
the cigar back, sayin', kind uv regretful like: "You don't seem
to have much uv a light there; I reckon I'll wait till I kin git
a match." You kin imagine how that other feller's cigar tasted
when he lighted it ag'in. Dock tried it on me oncet, 'nd when I
lighted up ag'in seemed like I wuz smokin' a piece uv rope or a
liver-pad.</p>
<p>One time Dock 'nd Lem Thompson went over to Peory on the
railroad, 'nd while they wuz settm' in the car in come two wimmin
'nd set in the seat ahead uv 'em. All uv a suddint Dock nudged
Lem 'nd says, jest loud enuff fur the wimmin to hear: "I didn't
git round till after it wuz over, but I never see sech a sight as
that baby's ear wuz."</p>
<p>Lem wuz onto Dock's methods, 'nd he knew there wuz sumthin'
ahead. So he says: "Tough-lookin' ear, wuz it?"</p>
<p>"Wall, I should remark," says Dock. "You see it wuz like this:
the mother had gone out into the back yard to hang some clo'es
onto the line, 'nd she laid the baby down in the crib. Baby
wa'n't more 'n six weeks old,—helpless little critter as ever
you seen. Wall, all to oncet the mother heerd the baby cryin',
but bein' busy with them clo'es she didn't mind much. The baby
kep' cryin' 'nd cryin', 'nd at last the mother come back into the
house, 'nd there she found a big rat gnawin' at one uv the baby's
ears,—had e't it nearly off! There lay that helpless little
innocent, cryin' 'nd writhin', 'nd there sat that rat with his
long tail, nippin' 'nd chewin' at one uv them tiny coral
ears—oh, it wuz offul!"</p>
<p>"Jest imagine the feelinks uv the mother!" says Lem, sad
like.</p>
<p>"Jest imagine the feelinks uv the <i>baby</i>," says Dock.
"How'd you like to be lyin' helpless in a crib with a big rat
gnawin' your ear?"</p>
<p>Wall, all this conversation wuz fur from pleasant to those two
wimmin in the front seat, fur wimmin love babies 'nd hate rats,
you know. It wuz nuts fur Dock 'nd Lem to see the two wimmin
squirm, 'nd all the way to Peory they didn't talk about nuthink
but snakes 'nd spiders 'nd mice 'nd caterpillers. When the train
got to Peory a gentleman met the two wimmin 'nd says to one uv
'em: "I'm 'feered the trip hain't done you much good, Lizzie,"
says he. "Sakes alive, John," says she, "it's a wonder we hain't
dead, for we've been travellin' forty miles with a real live
Beadle dime novvell!"</p>
<p>'Nuther trick Dock had wuz to walk 'long the street behind
wimmin 'nd tell about how his sister had jest lost one uv her
diamond earrings while out walkin'. Jest as soon as the wimmin
heerd this they'd clap their han's up to their ears to see if
their earrings wuz all right. Dock never laffed nor let on like
he wuz jokin', but jest the same this sort uv thing tickled him
nearly to de'th.</p>
<p>Dock went up to Chicago with Jedge Craig oncet, 'nd when they
come back the jedge said he'd never had such an offul time in all
his born days. Said that Dock bought a fool Mother Goose book to
read in the hoss-cars jest to queer folks; would set in a
hoss-car lookin' at the pictur's 'nd readin' the verses 'nd
laffin' like it wuz all new to him 'nd like he wuz a child.
Everybody sized him up for a' eject, 'nd the wimmin folks shook
their heads 'nd said it was orful fur so fine a lookin' feller to
be such a torn fool. 'Nuther thing Dock did wuz to git hold uv a
bad quarter 'nd give it to a beggar, 'nd then foller the beggar
into a saloon 'nd git him arrested for tryin' to pass counterf'it
money. I reckon that if Dock had stayed in Chicago a week he'd
have had everybody crazy.</p>
<p>No, I don't know how he come to be a medikil man. He told me
oncet that when he found out that he wuzn't good for anythink he
concluded he'd be a doctor; but I reckon that wuz one uv his
jokes. He didn't have much uv a practice: he wuz too yumorous to
suit most invalids 'nd sick folks. We had him tend our boy Sam
jest oncet when Sam wuz comin' down with the measles. He looked
at Sam's tongue 'nd felt his pulse 'nd said he'd leave a pill for
Sam to take afore goin' to bed.</p>
<p>"How shell we administer the pill?" asked my wife.</p>
<p>"Wall," says Dock, "the best way to do is to git the boy down
on the floor 'nd hold his mouth open 'nd gag him till he swallers
the pill. After the pill gits into his system it will explode in
about ten minnits, 'nd then the boy will feel better."</p>
<p>This wuz cheerful news for the boy. No human power c'u'd ha'
got that pill into Sam. We never solicited Dock's perfeshional
services ag'in.</p>
<p>One time Dock 'nd Lem Thompson drove over to Knoxville to help
Dock Parsons cut a man's leg off. About four miles out uv town
'nd right in the middle uv the hot peraroor they met Moses
Baker's oldest boy trudgin' along with a basket uv eggs. The Dock
whoaed his hoss 'nd called to the boy,—</p>
<p>"Where be you goin' with them eggs?" says he.</p>
<p>"Goin' to town to sell 'em," says the boy.</p>
<p>"How much a dozen?" asked the Dock.</p>
<p>"'Bout ten cents, I reckon," says the boy.</p>
<p>"Putty likely-lookin' eggs," says the Dock; 'nd he handed the
lines over to Lem, 'nd got out'n the buggy.</p>
<p>"How many hev you got?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Ten dozen," says the boy.</p>
<p>"Git out!" says Dock. "There hain't no ten dozen eggs in that
basket!"</p>
<p>"Yes, there is," says the boy, "fur I counted 'em myself."</p>
<p>The Dock allowed that he wuzn't goin' to take nobody's count
on eggs; so he got that fool boy to stan' there in the middle uv
that hot peraroor, claspin' his two hands together, while he, the
Dock, counted them eggs out'n the basket one by one into the
boy's arms. Ten dozen eggs is a heap; you kin imagine, maybe, how
that boy looked with his arms full uv eggs! When the Dock had got
about nine dozen counted out he stopped all uv a suddint 'nd
said, "Wall, come to think on 't, I reckon I don't want no eggs
to-day, but I'm jest as much obleeged to you fur yer trubble."
And so he jumped back into the buggy 'nd drove off.</p>
<p>Now, maybe that fool boy wuzn't in a peck uv trubble! There he
stood in the middle uv that hot—that all-fired hot—peraroor
with his arms full uv eggs. What wuz there fur him to do? He wuz
afraid to move, lest he should break them eggs; yet the longer he
stood there the less chance there wuz uv the warm weather
improvin' the eggs.</p>
<p>Along in the summer of '78 the fever broke out down South, 'nd
one day Dock made up his mind that as bizness wuzn't none too
good at home he'd go down South 'nd see what he could do there.
That wuz jest like one of Dock's fool notions, we all said. But
he went. In about six weeks along come a telegraph sayin' that
Dock wuz dead,—he'd died uv the fever. The minister went up to
the homestead 'nd broke the news gentle like to Dock's mother;
but, bless you! she didn't believe it—she wouldn't believe it.
She said it wuz one uv Dock's jokes; she didn't blame him,
nuther—it wuz <i>her</i> fault, she allowed, that Dock wuz allus
that way about makin' fun uv life 'nd death. No, sir; she never
believed that Dock wuz dead, but she allus talked like he might
come in any minnit; and there wuz allus his old place set fur him
at the table 'nd nuthin' wuz disturbed in his little room
up-stairs. And so five years slipped by 'nd no Dock come back,
'nd there wuz no tidin's uv him. Uv course, the rest uv us knew;
but his mother—oh, no, <i>she</i> never would believe it.</p>
<p>At last the old lady fell sick, and the doctor said she
couldn't hold out long, she wuz so old 'nd feeble. The minister
who wuz there said that she seemed to sleep from the evenin' uv
this life into the mornin' uv the next. Jest afore the last she
kind uv raised up in bed and cried out like she saw sumthin' that
she loved, and she held out her arms like there wuz some one
standin' in the doorway. Then they asked her what the matter wuz,
and she says, joyful like: "He's come back, and there he stan's
jest as he used ter: I knew he wuz only jokin'!"</p>
<p>They looked, but they saw nuthin'; 'nd when they went to her
she wuz dead.</p>
<p>1888.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>The Fairies of Pesth</b></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>THE FAIRIES OF PESTH [1]</p>
<p>An old poet walked alone in a quiet valley. His heart was
heavy, and the voices of Nature consoled him. His life had been a
lonely and sad one. Many years ago a great grief fell upon him,
and it took away all his joy and all his ambition. It was because
he brooded over his sorrow, and because he was always faithful to
a memory, that the townspeople deemed him a strange old poet; but
they loved him and they loved his songs,—in his life and in his
songs there was a gentleness, a sweetness, a pathos that touched
every heart. "The strange, the dear old poet," they called
him.</p>
<p>Evening was coming on. The birds made no noise; only the
whip-poor-will repeated over and over again its melancholy
refrain in the marsh beyond the meadow. The brook ran slowly, and
its voice was so hushed and tiny that you might have thought that
it was saying its prayers before going to bed.</p>
<p>The old poet came to the three lindens. This was a spot he
loved, it was so far from the noise of the town. The grass under
the lindens was fresh and velvety. The air was full of fragrance,
for here amid the grass grew violets and daisies and buttercups
and other modest wild-flowers. Under the lindens stood old Leeza,
the witchwife.</p>
<p>"Take this," said the poet to old Leeza, the witchwife; and he
gave her a silver piece.</p>
<p>"You are good to me, master poet," said the witchwife. "You
have always been good to me. I do not forget, master poet, I do
not forget."</p>
<p>"Why do you speak so strangely?" asked the old poet. "You mean
more than you say. Do not jest with me; my heart is heavy with
sorrow."</p>
<p>"I do not jest," answered the witchwife. "I will show you a
strange thing. Do as I bid you; tarry here under the lindens, and
when the moon rises, the Seven Crickets will chirp thrice; then
the Raven will fly into the west, and you will see wonderful
things, and beautiful things you will hear."</p>
<p>Saying this much, old Leeza, the witch-wife, stole away, and
the poet marvelled at her words. He had heard the townspeople say
that old Leeza was full of dark thoughts and of evil deeds, but
he did not heed these stories.</p>
<p>"They say the same of me, perhaps," he thought. "I will tarry
here beneath the three lindens and see what may come of this
whereof the witch wife spake."</p>
<p>The old poet sat amid the grass at the foot of the three
lindens, and darkness fell around him. He could see the lights in
the town away off; they twinkled like the stars that studded the
sky. The whip-poor-will told his story over and over again in the
marsh beyond the meadow, and the brook tossed and talked in its
sleep, for it had played too hard that day.</p>
<p>"The moon is rising," said the old poet. "Now we shall
see."</p>
<p>The moon peeped over the tops of the far-off hills. She
wondered whether the world was fast asleep. She peeped again.
There could be no doubt; the world was fast asleep,—at least so
thought the dear old moon. So she stepped boldly up from behind
the distant hills. The stars were glad that she came, for she was
indeed a merry old moon.</p>
<p>The Seven Crickets lived in the hedge. They were brothers, and
they made famous music. When they saw the moon in the sky they
sang "chirp-chirp, chirp-chirp, chirp-chirp," three times, just
as old Leeza, the witchwife, said they would.</p>
<p>"Whir-r-r!" It was the Raven flying out of the oak-tree into
the west. This, too, was what the old witchwife had foretold.
"Whir-r-r" went the two black wings, and then it seemed as if the
Raven melted into the night. Now, this was strange enough, but
what followed was stranger still.</p>
<p>Hardly had the Raven flown away, when out from their
habitations in the moss, the flowers, and the grass trooped a
legion of fairies,—yes, right there before the old poet's eyes
appeared, as if by magic, a mighty troop of the dearest little
fays in all the world.</p>
<p>Each of these fairies was about the height of a cambric
needle. The lady fairies were, of course, not so tall as the
gentleman fairies, but all were of quite as comely figure as you
could expect to find even among real folk. They were quaintly
dressed; the ladies wearing quilted silk gowns and broadbrim hats
with tiny feathers in them, and the gentlemen wearing curious
little knickerbockers, with silk coats, white hose, ruffled
shirts, and dainty cocked hats.</p>
<p>"If the witchwife had not foretold it I should say that I
dreamed," thought the old poet. But he was not frightened. He had
never harmed the fairies, therefore he feared no evil from
them.</p>
<p>One of the fairies was taller than the rest, and she was much
more richly attired. It was not her crown alone that showed her
to be the queen. The others made obeisance to her as she passed
through the midst of them from her home in the bunch of red
clover. Four dainty pages preceded her, carrying a silver web
which had been spun by a black-and-yellow garden spider of great
renown. This silver web the four pages spread carefully over a
violet leaf, and thereupon the queen sat down. And when she was
seated the queen sang this little song:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"From the land of murk and mist<br/>
Fairy folk are coming<br/>
To the mead the dew has kissed,<br/>
And they dance where'er they list<br/>
To the cricket's thrumming.<br/>
<br/>
"Circling here and circling there,<br/>
Light as thought and free as air,<br/>
Hear them cry, 'Oho, oho,'<br/>
As they round the rosey go.<br/>
<br/>
"Appleblossom, Summerdew,<br/>
Thistleblow, and Ganderfeather!<br/>
Join the airy fairy crew<br/>
Dancing on the swaid together!<br/>
Till the cock on yonder steeple<br/>
Gives all faery lusty warning,<br/>
Sing and dance, my little people,—<br/>
Dance and sing 'Oho' till morning!"<br/></p>
</blockquote>
The four little fairies the queen called to must have been
loitering. But now they came scampering up,—Ganderfeather behind
the others, for he was a very fat and presumably a very lazy
little fairy.
<p>"The elves will be here presently," said the queen, "and then,
little folk, you shall dance to your heart's content. Dance your
prettiest to-night, for the good old poet is watching you."</p>
<p>"Ah, little queen," cried the old poet, "you see me, then? I
thought to watch your revels unbeknown to you. But I meant you no
disrespect,—indeed, I meant you none, for surely no one ever
loved the little folk more than I."</p>
<p>"We know you love us, good old poet," said the little fairy
queen, "and this night shall give you great joy and bring you
into wondrous fame."</p>
<p>These were words of which the old poet knew not the meaning;
but we, who live these many years after he has fallen asleep,—we
know the meaning of them.</p>
<p>Then, surely enough, the elves came trooping along. They lived
in the further meadow, else they had come sooner. They were
somewhat larger than the fairies, yet they were very tiny and
very delicate creatures. The elf prince had long flaxen curls,
and he was arrayed in a wonderful suit of damask web, at the
manufacture of which seventy-seven silkworms had labored for
seventy-seven days, receiving in payment therefor as many
mulberry leaves as seven blue beetles could carry and stow in
seven times seven sunny days. At his side the elf prince wore a
sword made of the sting of a yellow-jacket, and the hilt of this
sword was studded with the eyes of unhatched dragon-flies, these
brighter and more precious than the most costly diamonds.</p>
<p>The elf prince sat beside the fairy queen. The other elves
capered around among the fairies. The dancing sward was very
light, for a thousand and ten glowworms came from the marsh and
hung their beautiful lamps over the spot where the little folk
were assembled. If the moon and the stars were jealous of that
soft, mellow light, they had good reason to be.</p>
<p>The fairies and elves circled around in lively fashion. Their
favorite dance was the ring-round-a-rosey which many children
nowadays dance. But they had other measures, too, and they danced
them very prettily.</p>
<p>"I wish," said the old poet, "I wish that I had my violin
here, for then I would make merry music for you."</p>
<p>The fairy queen laughed. "We have music of our own," she said,
"and it is much more beautiful than even you, dear old poet,
could make."</p>
<p>Then, at the queen's command, each gentleman elf offered his
arm to a lady fairy, and each gentleman fairy offered his arm to
a lady elf, and so, all being provided with partners, these
little people took their places for a waltz. The fairy queen and
the elf prince were the only ones that did not dance; they sat
side by side on the violet leaf and watched the others. The
hoptoad was floor manager; the green burdock badge on his breast
showed that.</p>
<p>"Mind where you go—don't jostle each other," cried the
hoptoad, for he was an exceedingly methodical fellow, despite his
habit of jumping at conclusions.</p>
<p>Then, when all was ready, the Seven Crickets went
"chirp-chirp, chirp-chirp, chirp-chirp," three times, and away
flew that host of little fairies and little elves in the
daintiest waltz imaginable:—</p>
<p><ANTIMG src="images/1st.jpg" alt="1st.jpg"></p>
<p>The old poet was delighted. Never before had he seen such a
sight; never before had he heard so sweet music. Round and round
whirled the sprite dancers; the thousand and ten glowworms caught
the rhythm of the music that floated up to them, and they swung
their lamps to and fro in time with the fairy waltz. The plumes
in the hats of the cunning little ladies nodded hither and
thither, and the tiny swords of the cunning little gentlemen
bobbed this way and that as the throng of dancers swept now here,
now there. With one tiny foot, upon which she wore a lovely shoe
made of a tanned flea's hide, the fairy queen beat time, yet she
heard every word which the gallant elf prince said. So, with the
fairy queen blushing, the mellow lamps swaying, the elf prince
wooing, and the throng of little folk dancing hither and thither,
the fairy music went on and on:—</p>
<p><ANTIMG src="images/2nd.jpg" alt="2nd.jpg" ></p>
<p>"Tell me, my fairy queen," cried the old poet, "whence comes
this fairy music which I hear? The Seven Crickets in the hedge
are still, the birds sleep in their nests, the brook dreams of
the mountain home it stole away from yester morning. Tell me,
therefore, whence comes this wondrous fairy music, and show me
the strange musicians that make it."</p>
<p><ANTIMG src="images/3rd.jpg" alt="3rd.jpg"></p>
<p>"Look to the grass and the flowers," said the fairy queen. "In
every blade and in every bud lie hidden notes of fairy music.
Each violet and daisy and buttercup,—every modest wild-flower
(no matter how hidden) gives glad response to the tinkle of fairy
feet. Dancing daintily over this quiet sward where flowers dot
the green, my little people strike here and there and everywhere
the keys which give forth the harmonies you hear."</p>
<p>Long marvelled the old poet. He forgot his sorrow, for the
fairy music stole into his heart and soothed the wound there. The
fairy host swept round and round, and the fairy music went on and
on.</p>
<p><ANTIMG src="images/4th.jpg" alt="4th.jpg"></p>
<p>"Why may I not dance?" asked a piping voice. "Please, dear
queen, may I not dance, too?"</p>
<p>It was the little hunchback that spake,—the little hunchback
fairy who, with wistful eyes, had been watching the merry throng
whirl round and round.</p>
<p>"Dear child, thou canst not dance," said the fairy queen,
tenderly; "thy little limbs are weak. Come, sit thou at my feet,
and let me smooth thy fair curls and stroke thy pale cheeks."</p>
<p>"Believe me, dear queen," persisted the little hunchback, "I
can dance, and quite prettily, too. Many a time while the others
made merry here I have stolen away by myself to the brookside and
danced alone in the moonlight,—alone with my shadow. The violets
are thickest there. 'Let thy halting feet fall upon us, Little
Sorrowful,' they whispered, 'and we shall make music for thee.'
So there I danced, and the violets sang their songs for me. I
could hear the others making merry far away, but I was merry,
too; for I, too, danced, and there was none to laugh."</p>
<p>"If you would like it, Little Sorrowful," said the elf prince,
"I will dance with you."</p>
<p>"No, brave prince," answered the little hunchback, "for that
would weary you. My crutch is stout, and it has danced with me
before. You will say that we dance very prettily,—my crutch and
I,—and you will not laugh, I know."</p>
<p>Then the queen smiled sadly; she loved the little hunchback
and she pitied her.</p>
<p>"It shall be as you wish," said the queen. The little
hunchback was overjoyed.</p>
<p>"I have to catch the time, you see," said she, and she tapped
her crutch and swung one little shrunken foot till her body fell
into the rhythm of the waltz.</p>
<p>Far daintier than the others did the little hunchback dance;
now one tiny foot and now the other tinkled on the flowers, and
the point of the little crutch fell here and there like a tear.
And as she danced, there crept into the fairy music a tenderer
cadence, for (I know not why) the little hunchback danced ever on
the violets, and their responses were full of the music of tears.
There was a strange pathos in the little creature's grace; she
did not weary of the dance: her cheeks flushed, and her eyes grew
fuller, and there was a wondrous light in them. And as the little
hunchback danced, the others forgot her limp and felt only the
heart-cry in the little hunchback's merriment and in the music of
the voiceful violets.</p>
<p><ANTIMG src="images/5th.jpg" alt="5th.jpg"></p>
<p>Now all this saw the old poet, and all this wondrously
beautiful music he heard. And as he heard and saw these things,
he thought of the pale face, the weary eyes, and the tired little
body that slept forever now. He thought of the voice that had
tried to be cheerful for his sake, of the thin, patient little
hands that had loved to do his bidding, of the halting little
feet that had hastened to his calling.</p>
<p>"Is it thy spirit, O my love?" he wailed, "Is it thy spirit, O
dear, dead love?"</p>
<p>A mist came before his eyes, and his heart gave a great
cry.</p>
<p>But the fairy dance went on and on. The others swept to and
fro and round and round, but the little hunchback danced always
on the violets, and through the other music there could be
plainly heard, as it crept in and out, the mournful cadence of
those tenderer flowers.</p>
<p>And, with the music and the dancing, the night faded into
morning. And all at once the music ceased and the little folk
could be seen no more. The birds came from their nests, the brook
began to bestir himself, and the breath of the new-born day
called upon all in that quiet valley to awaken.</p>
<p>So many years have passed since the old poet, sitting under
the three lindens half a league the other side of Pesth, saw the
fairies dance and heard the fairy music,—so many years have
passed since then, that had the old poet not left us an echo of
that fairy waltz there would be none now to believe the story I
tell.</p>
<p><ANTIMG src="images/6th.jpg" alt="6th.jpg"></p>
<p>Who knows but that this very night the elves and the fairies
will dance in the quiet valley; that Little Sorrowful will tinkle
her maimed feet upon the singing violets, and that the little
folk will illustrate in their revels, through which a tone of
sadness steals, the comedy and pathos of our lives? Perhaps no
one shall see, perhaps no one else ever did see, these fairy
people dance their pretty dances; but we who have heard old
Robert Volkmann's waltz know full well that he at least saw that
strange sight and heard that wondrous music.</p>
<p>And you will know so, too, when you have read this true story
and heard old Volkmann's claim to immortality.</p>
<p>1887.</p>
<p>[Footnote 1: The music arranged by Mr. Theodore Thomas.]</p>
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