The matter had settled itself so easily
that Doris could not find much opportunity for sorrow,
nor misgivings for her joy. She could not see
the struggle there had been in Uncle Leverett’s
mind, and the sturdy common sense that had come to
his assistance. He could recall habits of second-cousin
Charles that were like a woman’s for daintiness,
and Winthrop Adams had the same touch of refinement
and delicacy. It was in the Adams blood, doubtless.
Aunt Priscilla had not a large share, but he had noted
some of it in Elizabeth. It pervaded every atom
of Doris’ slender body and every cell of her
brain. She never would take to the rougher, coarser
things of life; indeed, why should she when there was
no need? He had wandered so far from the orthodox
faith that he began to question useless discipline.
Winthrop could understand and care
for her better. She would grow up in his house
to the kind of girl nature had meant her to be.
Here the useful, that might never come in use, would
be mingled and confused with what was necessary.
He had watched her trying to achieve the stocking
that all little girls could knit at her age. It
was as bad as Penelope’s web. Aunt Elizabeth
pulled it out after she had gone to bed, and knit
two or three “rounds,” so as not to utterly
discourage her inapt pupil. But Doris had set
up some lace on a “cushion,” after Madam
Sheafe’s direction, and it grew a web of beauty
under her dainty fingers.
It was not as if Doris would be quite
lost to them. They would see her every day or
two. And when it was decided that Aunt Priscilla
would come he was really glad. Aunt Priscilla’s
captious talk did not always proceed from an unkindly
heart.
Betty made a violent protest at first.
“After all, it will not be quite
so bad as I thought,” she admitted presently.
“I shall go to Uncle Win’s twice as often,
and I have always been so fond of him. And things
are prettier there, somehow. There is
a great difference in the way people live, and I mean
to change some things. It isn’t because
one is ashamed to be old-fashioned; some of the old
ways are lovely. It is only when you tack hardness
and commonness on them and think ugliness has a real
virtue in it. We will have both sides to talk
about. But if you were going back to England,
it would break my heart, Doris.”
Doris winked some tears out of her eyes.
She thought her room at Uncle Win’s
was like a picture. The wall was whitewashed:
people thought then it was much healthier for sleeping
chambers. The floor was painted a rather palish
yellow. There was only one window, but the door
was opposite, and a door that opened into the room
of Miss Recompense. The window had white curtains
with ruffled edges, made of rather coarse muslin,
but it was clear, and looked very tidy. Miss
Recompense had found a small bedstead among the stored-away
articles. It had high posts and curtains and valance
of pale-blue flowered chintz. There was a big
bureau, a dressing table covered with white, and a
looking glass prettily draped. At the top of this,
surmounted by a gilt eagle, was a marvelous picture
of a man with a blue coat and yellow smallclothes
handing into a boat a lady who wore a skirt of purple
and an overdress of scarlet, very much betrimmed, holding
a green parasol over her head with one hand and placing
a slippered foot on the edge of the boat. After
a long while Doris thought she should be much relieved
to have them sail off somewhere.
There were two quaint rush-bottomed
chairs and a yellow stool, such as we tie with ribbons
and call a milking stool. A nice warm rug lay
at the side of the bed, and a smaller one at the washing
stand. These were woven like rag carpet, but
made of woolen rags with plenty of ends standing up
all over, like the surface of a Moquette carpet.
They were considered quite handsome then, as they
were more trouble than braided rugs, and so soft to
the foot. Some strenuous housekeepers declared
them terrible dust catchers.
Doris’ delight in the room amply
repaid Miss Recompense. She had learned her way
about, and could come down alone, now that the weather
had grown pleasanter, and she was full of joy over
everything. Occasionally Uncle Winthrop would
be out, then she and Miss Recompense would have what
they called a “nice talk.”
Miss Recompense Gardiner was quite
sure she had never seen just such a child. Indeed
at five-and-forty she was rather set in her ways, disliked
noise and bustle, and could not bear to have a house
“torn up,” as she phrased it. Twelve
years before she had come here to “housekeep,”
as the old phrase went. She had not lacked admirers,
but she had been very particular. Her sisters
said she was a born old maid. There was in her
soul a great love of refinement and order.
Mr. Winthrop Adams just suited her.
He was quiet, neat, made no trouble, and did not smoke.
That was a wretched habit in her estimation. Cousin
Charles used to come over, and different branches of
the family were invited in now and then to tea.
Cary was a rather proper, well-ordered boy, trained
by his mother’s sister, who had married and gone
away just before the advent of Miss Gardiner.
There had been some talk that Mr. Winthrop might espouse
Miss Harriet Cary in the course of time, but as there
were no signs, and Miss Cary had an excellent offer
of marriage, she accepted it.
Cary went to the Latin School and
then to Harvard. He was a fair average boy, a
good student, and ready for his share of fun at any
time. His father had marked out his course, which
was to be law, and Cary was indifferent as to what
he took up.
So they had gone on year after year.
It promised a pleasant break to have the little girl.
The greatest trouble, Miss Recompense
thought, would be making Solomon feel at home.
Doris brought his cushion, and the box he slept in
at night was sent. Warren brought him over in
a bag and they put him in the closet for the night.
He uttered some pathetic wails, and Doris talked to
him until he quieted down. He was a good deal
frightened the next morning, but he clung to Doris,
who carried him about in her arms and introduced him
to every place. He was afraid of Mr. Adams and
Cato, his acquaintance with men having been rather
limited. After several days he began to feel
quite at home, and took cordially to his cushion in
the corner.
“He doesn’t offer to run
away,” announced Doris to Aunt Priscilla.
“He likes Miss Recompense. Uncle Winthrop
thinks him the handsomest cat he has ever seen.”
“Poor old Polly! She set
a great deal of store by Solomon. I never did
care much for a cat, but I do think Solomon was most
as wise as folks. I don’t know what I should
have done last winter when I was so miserable if it
had not been for him. He seemed to take such comfort
that it was almost as good as a sermon. And sometimes
when he purred it was like the sound of a hymn with
the up and down and the long notes. I don’t
believe he would have stayed with anyone else though.
Child, what is there about you that just goes to the
heart of even a dumb beast?”
Doris looked amazed, then thoughtful.
“I suppose it is because I love them,”
she said simply.
There was a great stir everywhere,
it seemed. The slow spring had really come at
last. The streets were being cleared up, the gardens
put in order, some of the houses had a fresh coat
of paint; the stores put out their best array, the
trees were misty-looking with tiny green shoots, and
the maples Doris thought wonderful. There were
four in the row on Common Street; one was full of
soft dull-red blooms, one had little pale-green hoods
on the end of every twig, another looked as if it held
a tiny scarlet parasol over each baby bud, and the
fourth dropped clusters of brownish-green fringe.
“Oh, how beautiful they are!”
cried Doris, her eyes alight with enthusiasm.
And then all the great Common began
to put on spring attire. The marsh grass over
beyond sent up stiff green spikes and tussocks that
looked like little islands, and there were water plants
with large leaves that seemed continually nodding
to their neighbors. The frog concerts at the
pond were simply bewildering with the variety of voices,
each one proclaiming that the reign of ice and snow
was at an end and they were giving thanks.
“They are so glad,” declared
Doris. “I shouldn’t like to be frozen
up all winter in a little hole.”
Miss Recompense smiled. Perhaps
they were grateful. She had never thought
of it before.
Doris did not go back to Mrs. Webb’s
school, though that lady said she was sorry to give
her up. Uncle Win gave her some lessons, and she
went to writing school for an hour every day.
Miss Recompense instructed her how to keep her room
tidy, but Uncle Win said there would be time enough
for her to learn housekeeping.
Then there were hunts for flowers.
Betty came over; she knew some nooks where the trailing
arbutus grew and bloomed. The swamp pinks and
the violets of every shade and almost every size-from
the wee little fellow who sheltered his head under
his mother’s leaf-green umbrella to the tall,
sentinel-like fellow who seemed to fling out defiance.
Doris used to come home with her hands full of blooms.
The rides too were delightful.
They went over the bridges to West Boston and South
Boston and to Cambridge, going through the college
buildings-small, indeed, compared with the
magnificent pile of to-day. But Boston did seem
almost like a collection of islands. The bays
and rivers, the winding creeks that crept through
the green marsh grass, the long low shores held no
presentiment of the great city that was to be.
Although people groaned over hard
times and talked of war, still the town kept a thriving
aspect. Men were at work leveling Beacon Hill.
Boylston Street was being made something better than
a lane, and Common Street was improved. Uncle
Winthrop said next thing he supposed they would begin
to improve him and order him to take up his house and
walk. For houses were moved even then, when they
stood in the way of a street.
The earth from the hill, or rather
hills, went to fill in the Mill Pond. Lord Lyndhurst
had once owned a large part, but he had gone to England
to live. Charles Street was partly laid out-as
far as the flats were filled in. It was quite
entertaining to watch the great patient oxen, which,
when they were standing still, chewed their cud in
solemn content and gazed around as though they could
predict unutterable things.
From the house down to Common Street
was a kind of garden where Cato raised vegetables
and Miss Recompense had her beds of sweet and medicinal
herbs. For then the housekeeper concocted various
household remedies, and made extracts by the use of
a little still for flavoring and perfumery. She
gathered all the rose leaves and lavender blossoms
and sewed them up in thin muslin bags and laid them
in the drawers and closets.
And, oh, what roses she had then!
Great sweet damask roses, pink and the loveliest deep
red, twice as large as the Jack roses of to-day.
And trailing pink and white roses climbing over everything.
Aunt Elizabeth said Miss Recompense could make a dry
stick grow and bloom.
Uncle Winthrop found a new and charming
interest in the little girl. She was so fond
of taking walks and hearing the legends about the old
places. She could see where the old beacon had
stood when the place was called Sentry Hill, and she
knew it had been blown down in a gale, and that on
the spot had been erected a beautiful Doric column
surmounted by an eagle, to commemorate “the
train of events that led to the American Revolution
and finally secured liberty and Independence.”
But the State House had made one great
excavation, and the Mill Pond Corporation was making
others, and they were planning to remove the monument.
“We ought to have more regard
for these old places,” Uncle Win used to say
with a sigh.
Cary had not been a companionable
child. He was a regular boy, and the great point
of interest in Sentry Hill for him was batting a ball
up the hill. It was a proud day for him when
he carried it farther than any other boy. He
was fond of games of all kinds, and was one of the
fleetest runners and a fine oarsman, and could sail
a boat equal to any old salt, he thought. He
was a boy, of course, and Uncle Win did not want him
to be a “Molly coddle,” so he gave in,
for he did not quite know what to do with a lad who
could tumble more books around in five minutes than
he could put in order in half an hour, and knew more
about every corner in Old Boston than anyone else,
and was much more confident of his knowledge.
But this little girl, who soon learned
the peculiarity of every tree, the song of the different
birds, and the season of bloom for wild flowers, and
could listen for hours to the incidents of the past,
that seem of more vital importance to middle-aged
people than the matters of every day, was a veritable
treasure to Mr. Winthrop Adams. He did not mind
if she could not knit a stocking, and he sometimes
excused her deficiencies in arithmetic because she
was so fond of hearing him read poetry. For Doris
thought, of all the things in the world, being able
to write verses was the most delightful, and that
was her aim when she was a grown-up young lady.
She did pick up a good deal of general knowledge that
she would not have acquired at school, but Uncle Win
wasn’t quite sure how much a girl ought to be
educated.
She began to see considerable of the
Chapman girls, and Madam Royall grew very fond of
her. But she did not forget her dear friends in
Sudbury Street. Sometimes when Uncle Win was going
out to a supper or to stay away all the evening she
would go up and spend the night with Betty, and sit
in the old corner, for it was Uncle Leverett’s
favorite place whether there was fire or not.
He was as fond as ever of listening to her chatter.
She always brought a message to Aunt
Priscilla about Solomon. Uncle Winthrop thought
him the handsomest cat he had ever seen, and now Solomon
was not even afraid of Cato, but would walk about the
garden with him, and Miss Recompense said he was so
much company when she, Doris, was out of the house.
Indeed, he would look at her with
inquiring eyes and a soft, questioning sound in his
voice that was not quite a mew.
“Yes,” Miss Recompense
would say, “Doris has gone up to Sudbury Street.
We miss her, don’t we, Solomon? It’s
a different house without her.”
Solomon would assent in a wise fashion.
“I never did think to take comfort
in talking to a cat,” Miss Recompense would
say to herself with a touch of sarcasm.
About the middle of June, when roses
and spice pinks and ten-weeks’ stocks, and sweet-williams
were at their best, Mr. Adams always gave a family
gathering at which cousins to the third and fourth
generation were invited. Everything was at its
loveliest, and the Mall just across the street was
resplendent in beauty. Even then it had magnificent
trees and great stretches of grass, green and velvety.
Already it was a favorite strolling place.
Miss Recompense had sent a special
request for Betty on that particular afternoon and
evening. There was to be a high tea at five o’clock.
“I shall have my new white frock
all done,” said Betty delightedly. “There
is just a little needlework around the neck and the
skirt to sew on.”
“But I wouldn’t wear it,”
rejoined her mother. “You may get a fruit
stain on it, or meet with some accident. Miss
Recompense will expect you to work a little.”
“Have you anything new, Doris?”
“Oh, yes,” replied Doris.
“A white India muslin, and a cambric with a
tiny rosebud in it. Madam Royall chose them and
ordered them made. And Betty, I have almost outgrown
the silk already. Madam Royall is going to see
about getting it altered. And in the autumn Helen
Chapman will have a birthday company, and I am invited
already, or my frock is,” and Doris laughed.
“She has made me promise to wear it then.”
“You go to the Royalls’
a good deal,” exclaimed Aunt Priscilla jealously.
She was sitting in a high-backed chair, very straight
and prim. She was not quite at home yet, and
kept wondering if she wouldn’t rather have her
own house if she could get a reasonable sort of servant.
Still, she did enjoy the sociable side of life, and
it was pleasant here at Cousin Leverett’s.
They all tried to make her feel at home, and though
Betty tormented her sometimes by a certain argumentativeness,
she was very ready to wait on her. Aunt Priscilla
did like to hear of the delightful entertainments
her silk gown had gone to after being hidden away
so many years. As for the hat, a young Englishman
had said “She looked like a princess in it.”
“You are just eaten up with
vanity, Betty Leverett,” Aunt Priscilla tried
to rejoin in her severest tone.
Doris glanced over to her now.
“Yes,” she answered.
“Uncle Winthrop thinks I ought to know something
about little girls. Eudora is six months older
than I am. They have such a magnificent swing,
four girls can sit in it. Helen is studying French
and the young ladies can talk a little. They do
not see how I can talk so fast.”
Doris laughed gleefully. Aunt
Priscilla sniffed. Winthrop Adams would make
a flighty, useless girl out of her. And companying
so much with rich people would fill her mind with
vanity. Yes, the child would be ruined!
“And we tell each other stories
about our Boston. This Boston,” making
a pretty gesture with her hand, “has the most
splendid ones about the war and all, and the ships
coming over here almost two hundred years ago.
It is a long while to live one hundred years, even.
But I knew about Mr. Cotton and the lady Arabella
Johnston. They had not heard about the saint
and how his body was carried around to make it rain.”
“To make it rain! Whose
body was it, pray?” asked Aunt Priscilla sharply,
scenting heresy. She was not quite sure but so
much French would shut one out from final salvation.
“Did you have saints in Old Boston?”
“Oh, it was the old Saint of
the Church-St. Botolph.” Doris
hesitated and glanced up at Uncle Leverett, who nodded.
“He was a very, very good man,” she resumed
seriously. “And one summer there was a very
long drought. The grass all dried up, the fruit
began to fall off, and they were afraid there would
be nothing for the cattle to feed upon. So they
took up St. Botolph in his coffin and carried him all
around the town, praying as they went. And it
began to rain.”
“Stuff and nonsense! The
idea of reasonable human beings believing that!”
“But you know the prophet prayed for rain in
the Bible.”
“But to take up his body!
Are they doing it now in a dry time?” Aunt Priscilla
asked sarcastically.
“They don’t now, but it
was said they did it several times, and it always
rained.”
“They wan’t good orthodox
Christians. No one ever heard of such a thing.”
“But our orthodox Christians
believed in witches-even the descendants
of this very John Cotton who came over to escape the
Lords Bishops,” said Warren.
“And, unlike Mr. Blacksone,
stayed and had a hard time with the Lords Brethren,”
said Mr. Leverett. “I hardly know which
was the worst”-smiling with a glint
of humor. “And you more than half believe
in witches yourself, Aunt Priscilla.”
“I am sure I have reason to.
Grandmother Parker was a good woman if ever there
was one, and she was bewitched. And would
it have said in the Bible-’Thou shalt
not suffer a witch to live,’ if there had not
been any?”
“They were telling stories at
Madam Royall’s one day. And sometime Uncle
Winthrop is going to take us all to Marblehead, where
Mammy Redd lived. Eudora said this:
“’Old Mammy Redd
Of Marblehead
Sweet milk could turn
To mold in churn.’
And Uncle Winthrop has a big book about them.”
“He had better take you to Salem.
That was the very hot-bed of it all,” said Warren.
Doris came around to Aunt Priscilla.
“Did your grandmother really see a witch?”
she asked in a serious tone.
“Well, perhaps she didn’t
exactly see it. But she was living at Salem
and had a queer neighbor. One day they had some
words, and when grandmother went to churn her milk
turned all moldy and spoiled the butter. Grandmother
didn’t even dare feed it to the pigs. So
it went on several times. Then another neighbor
said to her, ’The next time it happens you just
throw a dipper-full over the back log.’
And so grandmother did. It made an awful smell
and smoke. Then she washed out her churn and
put it away. She was barely through when someone
came running in, and said, ’Have you any sweet
oil, Mrs. Parker? Hetty Lane set herself afire
cleaning the cinders out of her oven, and she’s
dreadfully burned. Come right over.’
Grandmother was a little afraid, but she went, and,
sure enough, it had happened just the moment she threw
the milk in the fire. One side of her was burned,
and one hand. And although the neighbors suspected
her, they were all very kind to her while she was
ill. But grandmother had no more trouble after
that, and it was said Hetty Lane never bewitched anybody
again.”
“It’s something like the
kelpies and brownies Barby used to tell about that
were in England long time ago,” said Doris, big-eyed.
“They hid tools and ate up the food and spoiled
the milk and the bread, turning it to stone.
They went away-perhaps someone burned them
up.”
Aunt Priscilla gave her sniff.
To be compared with such childish stuff!
“It was very curious,”
said Mrs. Leverett. “I have always been
glad I was not alive at that time. Sometimes
unaccountable things happen.”
“Did you ever see a truly witch
yourself, Aunt Priscilla?” asked the child.
“No, I never did,” she answered honestly.
“Then I guess they did go with
the fairies and kelpies. Could I tell your story
over sometime?” she inquired eagerly.
Telling ghost stories and witch stories
was quite an amusement at that period.
“Why, yes-if you
want to.” She was rather pleased to have
it go to the Royalls’.
“The last stitch,” and
Betty folded up her work. “Come, Doris,
say good-night, and let us go to bed.”
Doris put a little kiss on Aunt Priscilla’s
wrinkled hand.