“This is Doris Adams, a little
girl who came from England not long ago. You
must make her welcome and show her what delightful
children there are in Boston. These two girls
are Helen and Eudora Chapman, my grandchildren, and
the others are grandnieces and friends. Helen,
you must do the honors.”
Dorcas Payne came forward. “She
goes to the same school that I do.” She
had been entertaining the girls with nearly all she
knew about Doris. That Mr. Winthrop Adams was
her uncle and guardian raised her a good deal in the
estimation of Dorcas, for even then a man was thought
unusually well off to be able to live without doing
any real business.
“Would you like to play graces?” asked
Eudora.
“I don’t know,” admitted Doris.
“We were playing. Grace
and Molly, you go down that end of the room.
Now, this is the way. When Betty tosses it you
catch it on the sticks, so.”
It seemed very easy when Eudora caught
it and tossed it back, and Betty threw it again.
“Now you try,” and she
put the sticks in Doris’ hands. “Oh,
what tiny little hands you have, and as white as snow!”
Doris blushed. She threw the
hoop and it “wabbled,” but Betty, a bright,
black-eyed girl, made a lunge or two, and caught it
on the tip of one stick, and back it came. Doris
was looking at her and never moved her hand.
“Pick it up and try again,”
said Eudora. “That isn’t the right
way, but we will excuse you this time.”
Alas! this time Doris ran and brandished
her stick in the air to no purpose.
“I would rather see you play,”
she said. “You are all doing it so beautifully.”
“Then you stand here and watch.”
It was very fascinating. There
were three sets playing. Doris found that when
a girl missed she gave up to some other companion.
Her eyes could hardly move quickly enough to watch
all the hoops. Now and then a girl was crowned,-that
meant the hoops encircled her head,-and
they all shouted.
Then Helen said they had played that
long enough, and now they would try “Hunt the
slipper.” The slipper was a pretty one,
made of pink plush with a dainty heel and a shining
buckle set in a small pink bow. Doris said “it
looked like a Cinderella slipper.”
“Oh, do you know about Cinderella?
Do you know many stories?”
“Not a great many. Little
Red Riding Hood and Beauty and the Beast, and a few
in verses.”
“I wish you knew something quite new. Oh!”
Eudora had forgotten to keep the slipper
going. The girls were sitting in a ring, so she
jumped up cheerfully and began to hunt. There
were a great many little giggles and exclamations,
and then someone said: “Oh, let’s
stop playing and tell riddles!”
That was a never-failing amusement.
There were some very bright ones, some very puzzling
ones. One girl asked how many baskets of dirt
there were in Copp’s Hill.
“Why, there can’t anybody
tell,” said Helen. “You couldn’t
measure it that way.”
Everybody looked at everybody else,
and the glances finally grew indignant.
“There isn’t any answer.”
“Give it up?”
“Yes,” cried the voices in unison.
“Why, one-if the basket is big enough.”
“There couldn’t be a basket
made as large as that. You might as well ask
how many drops of water there are in the sea, and then
say only one because they all run together.”
The girls applauded that, and, before
anyone had thought of another, Miranda,-tall,
black, imposing, with a gay turban wound round her
head,-announced:
“De little misses were all disquested
to walk out to de Christmas supper.”
Grandmamma did not know how to leave
her guests, and she was in the middle of a game of
loo, but she had promised to sit at the head of the
table, so Mrs. Chapman took her place. No one
felt troubled because there were no boys at the party:
the only boy of the house had gone out skating with
some other boys.
It was quite a royal feast. There
were thin bread and butter, dainty biscuits not much
larger than the penny of that day, cold turkey and
cold ham, and cake of every kind, it would seem, ranged
around the iced Christmas cake that was surmounted
by a wreath of some odd golden flowers that people
dried and kept all winter for ornamental purposes.
They puzzled grandmamma with the two
riddles, but she thought that about the sea the better
one. And she said no one would ever have an opportunity
to measure Copp’s Hill, but for all that they
did, if they had cared to.
The grown-up people had some tea and
chocolate in the dining room, and seemed to be having
as merry a time as the children. There was something
infectious in the air or the house. Doris thought
it very delightful. Her cheeks began to bloom
in a wild-rose tint, and her eyes had a luminous look,
as if happiness was shining through them.
Afterward grandmamma played on the
spinet and they danced several pretty simple figures,
ending with the minuet. When the clock struck
seven someone came in a sleigh for four of the girls
who lived quite near together. Pompey, the Royalls’
servant, was to escort the others, and Betty March
lived just across in Winter Street. When children
went out the hours were kept pretty strictly.
Seven o’clock meant seven truly, and not eight
or nine.
Each child had a pretty paper box
of candy, tied with a bright ribbon. Bonbons
we should call them now. And they all expressed
their thanks and made a courtesy as they reached the
hall door.
“Have you had a good time?”
asked Madam Royall, taking Doris by the hand.
“It’s been just delightful,
every moment,” the child answered.
“And she’s only looked
on, grandmamma,” exclaimed Eudora. “Now,
let’s us get real acquainted. We will go
in the parlor and have a good talk.”
“Very well,” returned
grandmamma. “I’ll go and see what
the old people are about.”
“I am glad you don’t have
to go home so soon,” began Helen. “Why
don’t you live with your Uncle Adams instead
of in Sudbury Street? Are there any girls there?”
“One real big one who is sixteen.
She has gone to Hartford now. That’s Betty
Leverett. And I went there first, because-well,
Uncle Leverett came for me when the vessel reached
Boston.”
“Oh, he is your uncle, too!
Did you come from another Boston, truly now?”
“Yes, it was Boston.”
“And like this?”
“Oh, no.”
“Did you know ever so many girls?”
“No. We lived quite out of the town.”
“And, oh, were you not afraid
to cross the ocean? Suppose there had been a
pirate or something?”
“I didn’t know anything
about pirates,” said Doris. “But I
was afraid at first, when you could not see any land
for days and days. There were two little girls
and they had a doll. We played together and grew
used to the water. But it was worse when it stormed.”
“I should have been frightened
out of my life. Grandmamma has been to England.
We have some cousins there, but they are grown-up people
and married. Which place do you like best?”
“I had no real relatives there
after papa died. Oh, I like this Boston best.”
Then they branched off into school
matters. Eudora and her sister went to a Miss
Parker, and to a writing school an hour in the afternoon.
Eudora wished she was grown-up like Isabel and Alice,
and could go out to real parties and have a silk frock.
Grandmamma was going to give her one when she was
fifteen.
A feeling of delicacy kept Doris from
confessing that she owned the coveted article.
Some of the girls had worn very pretty frocks.
Eudora’s was a beautiful soft blue, and had
bands of black velvet and short sleeves with lace
around them. But Doris had forgotten about her
own attire, though she recalled the fact that there
was only one little girl in a gray frock, and it didn’t
seem very pretty.
So they chattered on, and Eudora said
they would have splendid times if she came in the
summer. They had a big swing, and they went over
on the Common and had no end of fun playing tag.
The warm weather was the nicest, though there was
great fun sledding and snowballing when the boys were
not too rough. Oh, had she seen the forts and
the great light out at Fort Hill? Wasn’t
it just grand?
“But, you know, Walter said
if the redoubts had been stone instead of snow, the
Rebels never could have taken them. You know,
they called us Rebels then. And now we
are a nation.”
Doris wondered what a redoubt was,
but she saved it to ask Uncle Win. She gave a
sigh to think what an ignorant little girl she was.
“I think it is a great deal
finer to be a country all by yourself and govern your
own people. The King of England is half crazy,
you know. You don’t mind, do you, when
we talk about the English? We don’t really
mean every person, and our friends and-and
all”-getting rather confused with
distinctions.
“We mean the government,”
interposed Helen. “It stands to reason people
thousands of miles away wouldn’t know what is
best for us. Wouldn’t it be ridiculous
if someone in Virginia should pretend to instruct
grandmamma what to do? Grandmamma knows so much.
And she is one of the handsomest old ladies in Boston.
Oh, listen!”
A mysterious sound came from the kitchen.
A fiddle was surely tuning up somewhere.
“The big folks are going to
dance, and that is black Joe, Mr. Winslow’s
man.”
Mr. Winslow and a young lady had arrived
also. They tendered many apologies about their
lateness.
The people in the dining room left
the table and came out in the hall. Cary Adams
had been having a very nice time, for a young fellow.
Isabel poured the chocolate, and on her right sat
a Harvard senior. Alice poured the tea, and beside
her sat Cary, who made himself useful handing it about.
He liked Alice very much. A young married couple
were over on the other side, and now this addition
and the fiddle looked suspicious.
“My dear Doris,” exclaimed
her uncle. He had been discussing Greek poets
with the Harvard professor, and had really forgotten
about her. “Are you tired? It’s
about time a young person like you, and an old person
like me, went home.”
He didn’t look a bit old.
There was a tint of pink in his cheeks-he
had been so roused and warmed with his argument and
his tea.
“Oh, do let Doris stay and see
them dance, just one dance,” pleaded Eudora.
“We have been sitting here talking, and haven’t
tired ourselves out a bit.”
The fiddler and the dancers went to
the room where the children had their frolic.
That was Jane Morse’s cousin Winslow. How
odd she should see him and hear black Joe, who fiddled
like the blind piper. The children kept time
with their feet.
The minuet was elegant. Then
they had a cotillion in which there was a great deal
of bowing. After that Mr. Adams said they must
go home, and Madam Royall came and talked to Doris
in a charming fashion, and then told Susan, the slim
colored maid, to wrap her up head and ears, and in
spite of Mr. Adams’ protest Pompey came round
with the sleigh.
“I hope you had a nice time,”
said Madam Royall, as she put a Christmas box in the
little girl’s hand.
“I’m just full of joy,”
she answered with shining eyes. “I couldn’t
hold any more unless I grew,” laughingly.
They made her promise to come again,
and the children kissed her good-by. Then they
were whisked off and set down at their own door in
no time.
“Now you must run to bed.
Aunt Elizabeth would be horrified at your staying
up so late.”
Miss Recompense was-almost.
She had been nodding over the fire.
They went upstairs together.
She took a look at Doris, and suddenly the child clasped
her round the waist.
“Oh, dear Miss Recompense, I
was so glad about the beautiful sash. Most of
the frocks were prettier than mine. Some had tiny
ruffles round the bottom and the sleeves. But
the party was so nice I forgot all about that.
Oh, Miss Recompense, were you ever brimful of happiness,
and you wanted to sing for pure gladness? I think
that is the way the birds must feel.”
No, Miss Recompense had never been
that happy. A great joy, the delight of childhood,
had been lost out of her life. She had been trained
to believe that for every miserable day you spent
bewailing your sins, a day in heaven would be intensified,
and that happiness on earth was a snare of the Evil
One to lead astray. She had gone out in the fields
and bemoaned herself, and wondered how the birds could
sing when they had to die so soon, and how anyone
could laugh when he had to answer for everything at
the Day of Judgment.
“Everybody was so delightful,
though at first I felt strange. And I did not
make out at all playing graces. That’s just
beautiful, and I’d like to know how. And
now if you will untie the sash and put it away, and
I am a hundred times obliged to you.”
Some of the children she had known
would have begged for the sash. Doris’
frank return touched her. Mr. Adams no doubt meant
her to keep it-she would ask him.
And then the happy little girl went
to bed, while even in the dark the room seemed full
of exquisite visions and voices that charmed her.
Cary had to go away the next morning.
Uncle Win said he couldn’t spare her, and sent
Cato over to tell Mrs. Leverett. A young man came
in for some instruction, and Doris followed the fate
of the Vicar’s household a while, until she
felt she ought to study, since there were so many
things she did not know.
Uncle Win found her in the chimney
corner with a pile of books.
“What is it now?” he asked.
“I think I know all my
spelling. But I can’t get some of the addition
tables right when I ask myself questions. I wish
there had not been any nine.”
“The world couldn’t get
along without the nine. It is very necessary.”
“Most of the good things are
hard,” she said with a philosophic sigh.
He laughed.
“Eudora does not like tables either.”
“I will tell you a famous thing
about nine that you can’t do with any other
figure. How much is ten and ten?”
“Why, twenty, and ten more are
thirty, and so on. It is easy as turning over
your hand.”
“Ten and nine.”
Doris looked nonplused and began to draw her brow
in perplexed lines.
“Nine is only one less than ten. Now, if
you can remember that -
“Nineteen! Why, that is splendid.”
“Now sixteen and nine?”
“Twenty-five,” rather hesitatingly.
He nodded. “And nine more.”
“Thirty-four. Oh, we made
a rhyme. Uncle Winthrop, is it very hard to write
verses? They are so beautiful.”
“I think it is-rather,” with
his half-smile.
People had not had the leisure to
be very poetical as yet. But through these years
some children were being born into the world whose
verses were to find a place by every fireside before
the little girl said her last good-night to it.
So far there had been some bright witticisms and sarcasms
in rhyme, and the clergy had penned verses for wedding
and funeral occasions. The Rev. John Cotton had
indulged in flowing versification, and even Governor
Bradford had interspersed his severer cares with visions
of softer strains. Anne Dudley, the wife of Governor
Bradstreet, with her eight children, had found time
for study and writing, and about 1650 had a volume
of verse published in London entitled “The Tenth
Muse. Several poems compiled with a great variety
of wit and learning. By an American Gentlewoman.”
And she makes this protest even then:
I am obnoxious to each carping
tongue,
Who says my hand
a needle better fits;
A poet’s pen all scorn
I thus should wrong,
For such despite
they cast on female wits:
If what I do prove well it
won’t advance,
They’ll say it’s
stolen, or else it was by chance.
There was also a Mrs. Murray and a
Mercy Otis Warren, who evinced very fine intellectual
ability; and Mrs. Adams had written letters that the
world a hundred years later was to admire and esteem.
On the parlor table in some houses
you found a thin volume of poems with a romantic history.
A Mrs. Wheatley bought a little girl at the slave
market one day, mostly out of pity. She learned
to read very rapidly, and was so modest and thoughtful
that as a young woman she was held in high esteem
by Dr. Sewall’s flock at the Old South Church.
She went abroad with her master’s son before
the breaking out of the war, and interested Londoners
so much that her poems were published and she was
the recipient of a good many attentions. Afterward
they were reissued in Boston and met with warm commendations
for the nobility of sentiment and smooth versification.
So to Phillis Wheately belongs the honor of having
been one of the first female poets in Boston.
And young men even now celebrated
their sweethearts’ charms in rhyme. Gay
gallants wrote their own valentines. Young collegians
struggled with Latin verse, and sometimes scaled the
heights of Thessaly from whence inspiration sprang.
But, for the most part, the temperaments that inclined
to the worship of the Muses sought solace in Chaucer,
Shakspere, and Milton while the later ones were winning
their way.
Doris sighed over the doubtfulness
in her uncle’s tone. But it was music rather
than poetry that floated through her brain.
“You might come and read a little
Latin, and then we will have a talk in French.
We will leave the prosaic part. What you will
do in square root and cube root -
“I am afraid I shall not grow
at all. I’ll just wither up. Isn’t
there some round root?”
“Yes, among vegetables.”
They both laughed at that.
She did quite well in the Latin.
Then she spelled some rather difficult words, and
being in the high tide of French when dinner was announced,
they kept on talking, to the great amusement of Miss
Recompense, who could hardly convince herself that
it really did mean anything reasonable.
Uncle Winthrop said then they certainly
deserved some indulgence, and if she was not afraid
of blowing away they would go out riding again.
They took the small sleigh and he drove, and they
turned down toward the stem end of the pear, and if
Boston had not held on good and strong in those early
years it might in some high wind have been twisted
off and left an island.
It does not look, to-day, much as
it did when Doris first saw it. Charles River
has shrunken, Back Bay has been filled up. It
has stretched out everywhere and made itself a marvelous
city. The Common has changed as well, and is
more beautiful than one could have imagined then,
but a thousand old recollections cling to it.
They left the streets behind.
Sleigh riding was the great winter amusement then,
but you had to take it in cold weather, for the salt
air all about softened the snow the first mild day.
There was no factory smoke or dust to mar it, and
it lay in great unbroken sheets. There were people
skating on Back Bay, and chairs on runners with ladies
well wrapped up in furs, and sleds of every description.
They came up around the other side
and saw the wharves and the idle shipping and the
white-capped islands in the harbor. Now the wind
did nearly blow you away.
The next day was very lowering and
chilly. Uncle Winthrop had to go to a dinner
among some notables. Miss Recompense always brushed
his hair and tied the queue. Young men did not
wear them, but some of the older people thought leaving
them off was aping youthfulness. He put on his
black velvet smallclothes, his silk stockings and low
shoes with silver buckles, his flowered waistcoat,
his high stock and fine French broadcloth coat.
His shirt front had two full ruffles beautifully crimped.
Miss Recompense did it with a penknife.
“You look just like a picture,
Uncle Winthrop,” Doris exclaimed admiringly.
“Party clothes do make one handsomer.
I suppose it isn’t good for one to be handsome
all the time.”
“We should grow too vain,”
he answered smilingly, yet he did enjoy the honest
praise.
“Perhaps if we were used to
it all the time it would not seem so beautiful.
It would get to be everyday-like, and you would not
think about it.”
True enough. He had a fancy Madam
Royall did not think half so much about her apparel
as some of the more strenuous people who referred
continually to conscience.
“Good-by. Maybe you will be in bed when
I come back.”
“Oh, will you be gone that late?”
She stood upon a stool and reached over to give him
a parting kiss, if she could not see him until to-morrow,
and she did not even touch his immaculate ruffles.
It was growing dusky, and Miss Recompense
was in and out, and was in no hurry for candlelight
herself. Doris sat in a kind of chaotic thinking.
Someone came up the steps, stamped his feet quite too
noisily for Cato,-even if he had returned
so soon,-knocked at the door, and then
opened it.
“Oh, Uncle Leverett!” and she sprang up.
“Well, well, little runaway!
I was quite struck when mother told me you were going
to stay all the week. I wanted to see my little
girl. It’s lonesome without you and Betty,
I can tell you-lonesome as the woods in
winter; and as I couldn’t get to see her, I thought
I would run around this way and see you. The
longest way round is the surest way home, I have heard”-with
a twinkle in his eye. “Where’s Uncle
Win? What are you doing in the dark alone?”
“Uncle Win has gone to a grand
dinner at the Exchange something. And he dressed
all up. He looked splendid.”
“I dare say. He isn’t
bad-looking in his everyday gear. And you are
having a good time?”
“A most beautiful time, Uncle
Leverett. I went to church Christmas morning.
And a lady asked us both to a party-yes,
it was a party. The grown people were by themselves,
and the children-there were ten little
girls-they had a grand supper and played
games and told riddles, and we talked-
“Where was this fine affair?”
“At Madam Royall’s. And she was so
kind and sweet and handsome.”
“Well, I declare! Right
in amongst the quality! I don’t know what
mother would say to a party. What a pity you
didn’t have that pretty frock!”
“I did wish for it at first,
but we had such a nice time it made no difference.
And then some more people came and Mr. Winslow and
Black Joe, who was at Betty’s party, and they
danced. Cary went, too. He stayed after
Uncle Win and I came home.”
“Great doings. I am glad
you are happy. But I shall be doubly glad to
get you back. And now I must run off home.”
Miss Recompense came in and lighted
the candles. They were going to have supper in
five minutes and he must take off his coat and stay.
“I’ve sort of run away,
and no one would know where I am. Wife would
keep supper waiting. No, I must hustle back, thanking
you for the asking. I wanted to see Doris.
Somehow we have grown so used to her already that
the house seems kind of lost without her, Betty being
away. We haven’t had any letter from Hartford,
but I dare say she is there all safe.”
“Post teams do get delayed.
Doris is well and satisfied. She and her uncle
have great times studying.”
“That is good. Wife worried
a little about school. Now I must go. Good-night.
You will surely be home on Saturday.”
“Good-night,” returned the soft voice.
Somehow the supper was very quiet.
Doris had begun to read aloud to Miss Recompense “The
Story of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia.”
She did not like it as well as her dear Vicar, but
Uncle Win said it was good. He was not quite
sure of the Vicar for such a child. So she read
along very well for a while, and then she yawned.
“You were up late last night
and you must go to bed,” said the elder lady.
Doris was ready. She was
sleepy, but somehow she did not drop asleep all in
a minute. There was a grave subject to consider.
All day she was thinking how splendid it would be
if Uncle Win should ask her to come here and live.
She liked him. She liked the books and the curiosities
and the talks and the teaching. Uncle Win was
so much more interesting than Mrs. Webb, who flung
questions at you in a way that made you jump if you
were not paying strict attention. There were other
delights that she could not explain to herself.
And the books, the leisure to sit and think.
For careful Aunt Elizabeth said-“Have
you hung up your cloak, Doris? Are you sure you
know your spelling? I do wonder if you will ever
get those tables perfect! The idea of such a big
girl not knowing how to knit a stocking! Don’t
sit there looking into the fire and dreaming, Doris;
attend to your book. Jimmie boy is away ahead
of you in some things.”
And here she could sit and dream.
Of course she was not going to school. Miss Recompense
did not think of something all the time. She had
learned a sort of graciousness since she had lived
with Mr. Winthrop Adams. True, she had nothing
to worry about-no children to advance in
life, no husband whose business she must be anxiously
considering. She had a snug little sum of money,
and was adding to it all the time, and she was still
a long way from old age. Doris could not have
understood the difference in both position and demands,
but she enjoyed the atmosphere of ease. And there
was a certain aspect of luxury, a freedom from the
grinding exactions of conscience that had been trained
to keep continually on the alert lest one “fall
into temptation.”
“He had wanted to see his little
girl. He was lonesome without her.”
She could see the longing in Uncle
Leverett’s face and hear his wistful voice there
in the dark. He had come to the ship and given
her the first greeting and brought her home.
Yes, she supposed she was his little girl.
Guardians were to take care of one’s money; you
did not have to live with them, of course. Uncle
Leverett was something in a business way, too; and
he loved her. She knew that without any explanation.
She was quite sure Uncle Win loved her also, but her
real place was in Sudbury Street.
Friday afternoon she was curled up
by the fire reading, looking like a big kitten, if
you had seen only her gray frock. Uncle Win had
glanced at her every now and then. He did not
mind having her around-not as much, in
fact, as Cary, who tumbled books about and moved chairs
noisily and kept one’s nerves astir all the
time, as a big healthy fellow whose body has grown
so fast that he hardly knows what to do with his long
arms and legs is apt to do.
Doris was like a little mouse.
She never rattled the leaves when she turned them
over, she never put books in the cases upside down,
she did not finger papers or anything that lay on
the table when she stood by it. He had a fancy
that all children were meddlesome and curious and
given to asking queer questions: these were the
things he remembered about Cary in those first years
of sorrow when he could hardly bear him out of his
sight.
Instead, Doris was restful with her
quaint ways. She did not run against chairs nor
move a stool so that the legs emitted a “screak”
of agony, and she could sit still for an hour at a
time if she had a book. Of course, being a girl
she ought to sew instead.
It was getting quite dusky. Uncle
Winthrop came and stirred the fire and put on a pine
log, then drew up his chair.
“Put away your book, Doris. You will try
your eyes.”
She shut it up and came and stood by him. He
passed his arm around her.
“Uncle Win, there was a time
when people had to read and sew by the blaze of logs
and torches. There were no candles.”
“They did it not so many years
ago here. I dare say they are still doing it
out in country places. They go to bed early.”
“What seems queer to me is that
people are continually finding out things. They
must at one time have been very ignorant. No,
they could not have been either,” reflectively.
“For just think how Adam named the animals.
And Miss Arabella said that Job knew all about the
stars and called them by their names. But perhaps
it was the little things like candles and such.
Yet they had lamps ever and ever so long ago.”
“People seem to advance and
then fall back. They emigrate and cannot take
all their appliances with them, and they make simpler
things to use until they have leisure and begin to
accumulate wealth. You see, they could not bring
a great deal from England or Holland in the vessels
they had in early sixteen hundred. So they had
to begin at the foundation in many things.”
“It is all so wonderful when
you really come to learn about it,” she said
with a gentle sigh.
The blaze was shining on her now,
and bringing out the puzzles on the fair child’s
face. She was very intelligent, if she was slow
at figures.
“Doris,”-after
a long pause,-“how would you like
to live here?”
“Oh, Uncle Win, it would be the most splendid
thing -
“I fancied you might like to
change. And there are some matters connected
with your education-why, what is it, Doris?”
She raised her eyes an instant, then
they drooped and he saw the dark fringe beaded with
tears. She took a long quivering inspiration.
“Uncle Win-I don’t
believe I can.” The words came very slowly.
“You see Betty is away, and Uncle Leverett missed
me very much. He said the other night I was his
little girl, and he was lonesome -
“I shall be lonesome when you are gone.”
“But you have so many books
and things, and people coming, and-I should
like to stay. Oh, I do like you so.”
She put her slim arm around his neck and laid her
cheek against his. “Sometimes it seems as
if you were like what I remember of papa. I only
saw such a little of him, you know, after I went to
England. But Aunt Elizabeth says it is the hard
things that are right always. She would have
Jimmie boy, you know, if I stayed, but Uncle Leverett
wants me. I can just feel how it is, but I don’t
know how to explain it. He has always been so
good to me. And that day on the ship he said,
‘Is this my little girl?’ and I was so
glad to really belong to someone again -
She was crying softly. He felt
the tears on his cheek. Her simple heroism touched
him.
“Yes, dear,” he said with
a comforting sound in his voice. “Perhaps
it would be best to wait a little, until Betty returns,
or in the summer. You can come over Friday night
and spend Sunday, and brush up on Latin, and brush
me up on French, and we will have a nice visit.”
“Oh, thank you, thank you.
Uncle Win-if I could be two little girls -
“I want you all, complete.
We will keep it to think about.”
Then Miss Recompense said supper was
ready, and Doris wiped the tears out of her eyes and
smiled. But the pressure of her hand as they walked
out confessed that she belonged to him.