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<h2> Chapter 13—Cosey Corner </h2>
<p>Vacation was over, the boys went back to school, and poor Mac was left
lamenting. He was out of the darkened room now, and promoted to blue
goggles, through which he took a gloomy view of life, as might have been
expected; for there was nothing he could do but wander about, and try to
amuse himself without using his eyes. Anyone who has ever been condemned
to that sort of idleness knows how irksome it is, and can understand the
state of mind which caused Mac to say to Rose in a desperate tone one day,</p>
<p>“Look here, if you don't invent some new employment or amusement for me, I
shall knock myself on the head as sure as you live.”</p>
<p>Rose flew to Uncle Alec for advice, and he ordered both patient and nurse
to the mountains for a month, with Aunt Jessie and Jamie as escort. Pokey
and her mother joined the party, and one bright September morning six very
happy-looking people were aboard the express train for Portland two
smiling mammas, laden with luncheon baskets and wraps; a pretty young girl
with a bag of books on her arm; a tall thin lad with his hat over his
eyes; and two small children, who sat with their short legs straight out
before them, and their chubby faces beaming with the first speechless
delight of “truly travelling.”</p>
<p>An especially splendid sunset seemed to have been prepared to welcome them
when, after a long day's journey, they drove into a wide, green door-yard,
where a white colt, a red cow, two cats, four kittens, many hens, and a
dozen people, old and young, were gaily disporting themselves. Everyone
nodded and smiled in the friendliest manner, and a lively old lady kissed
the new-comers all round, as she said heartily,</p>
<p>“Well, now, I'm proper glad to see you! Come right in and rest, and we'll
have tea in less than no time, for you must be tired. Lizzie, you show the
folks upstairs; Kitty, you fly round and help father in with the trunks;
and Jenny and I will have the table all ready by the time you come down.
Bless the dears, they want to go see the pussies, and so they shall!”</p>
<p>The three pretty daughters did “fly round,” and everyone felt at home at
once, all were so hospitable and kind. Aunt Jessie had raptures over the
home-made carpets, quilts and quaint furniture; Rose could not keep away
from the windows, for each framed a lovely picture; and the little folks
made friends at once with the other children, who filled their arms with
chickens and kittens, and did the honours handsomely.</p>
<p>The toot of a horn called all to supper, and a goodly party, including six
children besides the Camp-bells, assembled in the long dining-room, armed
with mountain appetites and the gayest spirits. It was impossible for
anyone to be shy or sober, for such gales of merriment arose they blew the
starch out of the stiffest, and made the saddest jolly. Mother Atkinson,
as all called their hostess, was the merriest there, and the busiest; for
she kept flying up to wait on the children, to bring out some new dish, or
to banish the live stock, who were of such a social turn that the colt
came into the entry and demanded sugar; the cats sat about in people's
laps, winking suggestively at the food; and speckled hens cleared the
kitchen floor of crumbs, as they joined in the chat with a cheerful
clucking.</p>
<p>Everybody turned out after tea to watch the sunset till all the lovely red
was gone, and mosquitoes wound their shrill horns to sound the retreat.
The music of an organ surprised the new-comers, and in the parlor they
found Father Atkinson playing sweetly on the little instrument made by
himself. All the children gathered about him, and, led by the tuneful
sisters, sang prettily till Pokey fell asleep behind the door, and Jamie
gaped audibly right in the middle of his favourite,</p>
<p>“Coo,” said the little doves: “Coo,” said she,<br/>
“All in the top of the old pine-tree.”<br/></p>
<p>The older travellers, being tired, went to “bye low” at the same time, and
slept like tops in home-spun sheets, on husk mattresses made by Mother
Atkinson, who seemed to have put some soothing powder among them, so deep
and sweet was the slumber that came.</p>
<p>Next day began the wholesome out-of-door life, which works such wonders
with tired minds and feeble bodies. The weather was perfect, and the
mountain air made the children as frisky as young lambs; while the elders
went about smiling at one another, and saying, “Isn't it splendid?” Even
Mac, the “slow coach,” was seen to leap over a fence as if he really could
not help it; and when Rose ran after him with his broad-brimmed hat, he
made the spirited proposal to go into the woods and hunt for a catamount.</p>
<p>Jamie and Pokey were at once enrolled in the Cosey Corner Light Infantry a
truly superb company, composed entirely of officers, all wearing cocked
hats, carrying flags, waving swords, or beating drums. It was a spectacle
to stir the dullest soul when this gallant band marched out of the yard in
full regimentals, with Captain Dove a solemn, big-headed boy of eleven
issuing his orders with the gravity of a general, and his Falstaffian
regiment obeying them with more docility than skill. The little Snow
children did very well, and Lieutenant Jack Dove was fine to see; so was
Drummer Frank, the errand-boy of the house, as he rub-a-dub-dubbed with
all his heart and drumsticks. Jamie had “trained” before, and was made a
colonel at once; but Pokey was the best of all, and called forth a
spontaneous burst of applause from the spectators as she brought up the
rear, her cocked hat all over one eye, her flag trailing over her
shoulder, and her wooden sword straight up in the air; her face beaming
and every curl bobbing with delight as her fat legs tottered in the vain
attempt to keep step manfully.</p>
<p>Mac and Rose were picking blackberries in the bushes beside the road when
the soldiers passed without seeing them, and they witnessed a sight that
was both pretty and comical. A little farther on was one of the family
burial spots so common in those parts, and just this side of it Captain
Fred Dove ordered his company to halt, explaining his reason for so doing
in the following words,</p>
<p>“That's a graveyard, and it's proper to muffle the drums and lower the
flags as we go by, and we'd better take off our hats, too; it's more
respectable, I think.”</p>
<p>“Isn't that cunning of the dears?” whispered Rose, as the little troop
marched slowly by to the muffled roll of the drums, every flag and sword
held low, all the little heads uncovered, and the childish faces very
sober as the leafy shadows flickered over them.</p>
<p>“Let's follow and see what they are after,” proposed Mac, who found
sitting on the wall and being fed with blackberries luxurious but
tiresome.</p>
<p>So they followed and heard the music grow lively, saw the banners wave in
the breeze again when the graveyard was passed, and watched the company
file into the dilapidated old church that stood at the corner of three
woodland roads. Presently the sound of singing made the outsiders quicken
their steps, and, stealing up, they peeped in at one of the broken
windows.</p>
<p>Captain Dove was up in the old wooden pulpit, gazing solemnly down upon
his company, who, having stacked their arms in the porch, now sat in the
bare pews singing a Sunday-school hymn with great vigour and relish.</p>
<p>“Let us pray,” said Captain Dove, with as much reverence as an army
chaplain; and, folding his hands, he repeated a prayer which he thought
all would know an excellent little prayer, but not exactly appropriate to
the morning, for it was,</p>
<p>“Now I lay me down to sleep.”<br/></p>
<p>Everyone joined in saying it, and it was a pretty sight to see the little
creatures bowing their curly heads and lisping out the words they knew so
well. Tears came into Rose's eyes as she looked; Mac took his hat off
involuntarily, and then clapped it on again as if ashamed of showing any
feeling.</p>
<p>“Now I shall preach you a short sermon, and my text is, 'Little children,
love one another.' I asked mamma to give me one, and she thought that
would be good; so you all sit still and I'll preach it. You mustn't
whisper, Marion, but hear me. It means that we should be good to each
other, and play fair, and not quarrel as we did this very day about the
wagon. Jack can't always drive, and needn't be mad because I like to go
with Frank. Annette ought to be horse sometimes and not always driver; and
Willie may as well make up his mind to let Marion build her house by his,
for she will do it, and he needn't fuss about it. Jamie seems to be a good
boy, but I shall preach to him if he isn't. No, Pokey, people don't kiss
in church or put their hats on. Now you must all remember what I tell you,
because I am the captain, and you should mind me.”</p>
<p>Here Lieutenant Jack spoke right out in meeting with the rebellious
remark,</p>
<p>“Don't care if you are; you'd better mind yourself, and tell how you took
away my strap, and kept the biggest doughnut, and didn't draw fair when we
had the truck.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and you slapped Frank; I saw you!” bawled Willie Snow, bobbing up in
his pew.</p>
<p>“And you took my book away and hid it 'cause I wouldn't go and swing when
you wanted me to,” added Annette, the oldest of the Snow trio.</p>
<p>“I shan't build my house by Willie's if he don't want me to, so now!” put
in little Marion, joining the mutiny.</p>
<p>“I will tiss Dimmy! and I tored up my hat 'tause a pin picked me,” shouted
Pokey, regardless of Jamie's efforts to restrain her.</p>
<p>Captain Dove looked rather taken aback at this outbreak in the ranks; but,
being a dignified and calm personage, he quelled the rising rebellion with
great tact and skill, by saying, briefly,</p>
<p>“We'll sing the last hymn; 'Sweet, sweet good-by' you all know that, so do
it nicely, and then we will go and have luncheon.”</p>
<p>Peace was instantly restored, and a burst of melody drowned the suppressed
giggles of Rose and Mac, who found it impossible to keep sober during the
latter part of this somewhat remarkable service. Fifteen minutes of repose
rendered it a physical impossibility for the company to march out as
quietly as they had marched in. I grieve to state that the entire troop
raced home as hard as they could pelt, and were soon skirmishing briskly
over their lunch, utterly oblivious of what Jamie (who had been much
impressed by the sermon) called “the captain's beautiful teck.”</p>
<p>It was astonishing how much they all found to do at Cosey Corner; and Mac,
instead of lying in a hammock and being read to, as he had expected, was
busiest of all. He was invited to survey and lay out Skeeterville, a town
which the children were getting up in a huckleberry pasture; and he found
much amusement in planning little roads, staking off house-lots, attending
to the water-works, and consulting with the “selectmen” about the best
sites for public buildings; for Mac was a boy still, in spite of his
fifteen years and his love of books.</p>
<p>Then he went fishing with a certain jovial gentleman from the West; and
though they seldom caught anything but colds, they had great fun and
exercise chasing the phantom trout they were bound to have. Mac also
developed a geological mania, and went tapping about at rocks and stones,
discoursing wisely of “strata, periods, and fossil remains”; while Rose
picked up leaves and lichens, and gave him lessons in botany in return for
his lectures on geology.</p>
<p>They led a very merry life; for the Atkinson girls kept up a sort of
perpetual picnic; and did it so capitally, that one was never tired of it.
So their visitors throve finely, and long before the month was out it was
evident that Dr. Alec had prescribed the right medicine for his patients.</p>
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