The Leveretts rejoiced heartily over
Doris’ good fortune. Aunt Priscilla began
to trouble herself again about her will. She had
taken the usual autumnal cold, but recovered from
it with good nursing. Certainly Elizabeth Leverett
was very kind. Aunt Priscilla had eased up Betty
while her mother spent a fortnight at Salem, helping
with the fall sewing and making comfortables.
And this time she brought home little Ruth, who was
thin and peevish, and who had not gotten well over
the measles, that had affected her eyes badly.
Ruth was past four.
“I wish Mary did not take life
so hard,” said Mrs. Leverett with a sigh.
“They have been buying a new twenty-acre pasture
lot and two new cows, and it is just drive all the
time. That poor little Elizabeth will be all
worn out before she is grown up. And Ruth wouldn’t
have lived the winter through there.”
Ruth was extremely troublesome at
first. But grandmothers have a soothing art,
and after a few weeks she began to improve. The
visits of Doris fairly transported her, and she amused
grandpa by asking every morning “if Doris would
come to-day,” having implicit faith in his knowledge
of everything.
Aunt Priscilla counted on the visits
as well. She kept her room a good deal.
Ruth’s chatter disturbed her. Pattern children
brought up on the strictest rules did not seem quite
so agreeable to her as the little flower growing up
in its own sweetness.
Betty used to walk a short distance
home with her, as she declared it was the only chance
she had for a bit of Doris. She was very fond
of hearing about the Royalls, and now Miss Isabel’s
engagement to Mr. Morris Winslow was announced.
Warren declared Jane was quite “top-loftical”
about it. She had been introduced to Miss Isabel
at an evening company, and then they had met at Thayer’s
dry goods store, where she and Mrs. Chapman had been
shopping, and had quite a little chat. They bowed
in the street, and Jane was much pleased at the prospect
of being indirectly related.
But Betty had taken tea at Uncle Winthrop’s
with Miss Alice Royall, who had come over with the
two little girls to return some of the visits Doris
had made. The girls fell in love with bright,
versatile Betty, and Alice was much interested in
her visit to Hartford, and thought her quite charming.
Then it was quite fascinating to compare
notes about Mr. Adams with one of his own kin.
Alice made no secret of her admiration for him; the
whole family joined in, for that matter. Young
girls could be a little free and friendly with elderly
gentlemen without exciting comment or having to be
so precise.
When Jane said “Cousin Morris
told me such or such a thing,” Betty was delighted
to reply, “Yes, Doris was speaking of it.”
The girls were the best of friends, but this half-unconscious
rivalry was natural.
Mrs. Leverett had no objections to
the intimacy now. Betty was older and more sensible,
and now she was really a young lady receiving invitations,
and going out to walk or to shop with the girls.
For hard as the times were, a little finery had to
be bought, or a gown now and then.
Mrs. King had not gone to New York,
though her husband had been there on business.
She would have been very glad of Betty’s company;
but with little Ruth and Aunt Priscilla, Betty felt
she ought not leave her mother. And, then, she
was having a young girl’s good time at home.
Mrs. Leverett half wished Jane might
“fancy Warren.” She was a smart,
attractive, and withal sensible girl. But Warren
was not thinking of girls just now, or of marrying.
The debating society was a source of great interest
and nearly every “talk” turned on some
aspect of the possible war. His singing class
occupied him one evening, and one evening was devoted
to dancing. He liked Jane very much in a friendly
fashion, and they went on calling each other by their
first names, but if he happened to drop in there was
almost sure to be other company.
The “Son” on the business
sign over the doorway gave him a great sense of responsibility,
especially now when everything was so dull, and money,
as people said, “came like drawing teeth,”
a painful enough process in those days.
Finally Miss Isabel Royall’s
wedding day was set for early in June. The shopping
was quite an undertaking. There were Thayer’s
dry-goods store and Daniel Simpson’s and Mr.
Bromfield’s, the greater and the lesser shops
on Washington and School streets. It was quite
a risk now ordering things from abroad, vessels were
interfered with so much. But there were China
silks and Canton crape,-a beautiful material,-and
French and English goods that escaped the enemy; so
if you had the money you could find enough for an
extensive wedding outfit. At home we had also
begun to make some very nice woolen goods.
May came out full of bloom and beauty.
Such a shower of blossoms from cherry, peach, pear,
and apple would be difficult now to imagine. For
almost every house had a yard or a garden. Colonnade
Row was among the earliest places to be built up compactly
of brick and was considered very handsome for the
time.
But people strolled around then to
see the beautiful unfolding of nature. There
was the old Hancock House on Beacon Street. The
old hero had gone his way, and his wife was now Madam
Scott, and lived in the same house, and though the
garden and nursery had been shorn of much of their
glory, there were numerous foreign trees that were
curiously beautiful, and people used to make at least
one pilgrimage to see these immense mulberry trees
in bloom.
The old Bowdoin garden was another
remarkable place, and the air around was sweet for
weeks with the bloom of fruit trees and later on the
grapes that were raised in great profusion. You
sometimes saw elegant old Madam Bowdoin walking up
and down the garden paths and the grandchildren skipping
rope or playing tag.
But Summer Street, with its crown
of beauty, held its head as high as any of its neighbors.
“I don’t see why May should
be considered unlucky for weddings,” Isabel
protested. “I should like to be married
in a bower of apple blossoms.”
“But isn’t a bower of roses as beautiful?”
“And the snow of the cherries and pears!
Think of it-fragrant snow!”
But Isabel gave parties to her friends,
and they took tea out under the great apple tree and
were snowed on with every soft wave of wind.
It was not necessary then to go into
seclusion. The bride-elect took pleasure in showing
her gowns and her finery to her dearest friends.
She was to be married in grandmother’s brocade.
Her own mother had it lent to her for the occasion.
It was very handsome and could almost “stand
alone.” There were great flowers that looked
as if they were embroidered on it, and now it had
assumed an ivory tint. Two breadths had been taken
out of the skirt, people were so slim at present.
But the court train was left. The bertha, as
we should call it now, was as a cobweb, and the lace
from the puff sleeve falling over the arm of the same
elegant material.
It was good luck to borrow something
to be married in, and good luck to have something
old as well as the something new.
Morris Winslow had been quite a beau
about town. He was thirty now, ten years older
than Isabel. He had a big house over in Dorchester
and almost a farm. He owned another in Boston,
where a tavern of the higher sort was kept and rooms
rented to bachelors. He had an apartment here
and kept his servant Joe and his handsome team, besides
his saddle horse. He was rather gay, but of good
moral character. No one else would have been
accepted as a lover at the Royalls’.
Jane was invited to one of the teas.
People had not come to calling them “Dove”
parties yet, nor had breakfasts or luncheon parties
come in vogue for such occasions. There were
about a dozen girls. They inspected the wedding
outfit, they played graces, they sang songs, and had
tea in Madam Royall’s old china that had come
to America almost a hundred years before.
Afterward several young gentlemen
called, and they walked up and down in the moonlight.
A young lady could invite her own escort, especially
if she was “keeping company.” Sometimes
the mothers sent a servant to fetch home their daughters.
Of course Jane had an invitation to
the wedding. Alice and a friend were to be bridesmaids,
and the children were to be gowned in simple white
muslin, with bows and streamers of pink satin ribbon
and strew roses in the bride’s path. They
were flower maidens. Dorcas Payne was asked, and
Madam Royall begged Mr. Adams to allow his niece to
join them. They would all take it as a great
favor.
“The idea!” cried Aunt
Priscilla; “and she no relation! If the
queen was to come to Boston I dare say Doris Adams
would be asked to turn out to meet her! Well,
I hope her pretty face won’t ever get her into
trouble.”
It was a beautiful wedding, everybody
said. The great rooms and the halls were full
of guests, but they kept a way open for the bride,
who came downstairs on her lover’s arm, and
he looked very proud and manly. The bridesmaids
and groomsmen stood one couple at each side. The
little girls strewed their flowers and then stood
in a circle, and the bride swept gracefully to the
open space and turned to face the guests. The
maid was a little excited when she pulled off the bride’s
glove, but all went well, and Isabel Royall was at
her very best.
While the kissing and congratulations
were going on, four violins struck up melodious strains.
It was just six o’clock then. The bride
and groom stood for a while in the center of the room,
then marched around and smiled and talked, and finally
went out to the dining room, where the feast was spread,
and where the bride had to cut the cake.
Cary Adams was among the young people.
He was a great favorite with Alice, and a welcome
guest, if he did not come quite as often as his father.
One of the prettiest things afterward
was the minuet danced by the four little girls, and
after that two or three cotillions were formed.
The bride danced with both of the groomsmen, and the
new husband with both of the bridesmaids. Then
their duty was done.
They were to drive over to Dorchester
that night, so presently they started. Two or
three old slippers were thrown for good luck.
Several of the younger men were quite nonplused at
this arrangement, for they had planned some rather
rough fun in a serenade, thinking the bridal couple
would stay in town.
There were some amusements, jesting
and laughter, some card-playing and health-drinking
among the elders. The guests congratulated Madam
Royall nearly as much as they had the bride.
Then one after another came and bade her good-night,
and took away their parcel of wedding cake to dream
on.
“Oh,” cried Doris on the
way home,-the night was so pleasant they
were walking,-“oh, wasn’t it
splendid! I wish Betty could have been there.
Cary, how old must you be before you can get married?”
“Well-I should have to look up a
girl.”
“Oh, take Miss Alice. She
likes you ever so much-I heard her say so.
But you haven’t any house like Mr. Winslow.
Uncle Win, couldn’t he bring her home to live
with us?”
Cary’s cheeks were in a red flame. Uncle
Win laughed.
“My dear,” he began, “a
young man must have some business or some money to
take care of his wife. She wouldn’t like
to be dependent on his relatives. Cary is going
to study law, which will take some years, then he
must get established, and so we will have to wait a
long while. He is too young. Mr. Winslow
is thirty; Cary isn’t twenty yet.”
“Oh, dear! Well, perhaps
Betty will get married. The girl doesn’t
have to be so old?”
“No,” said Uncle Win.
Betty came over the next morning to
spend the day and help Miss Recompense to distill.
She wanted to hear the first account from Doris and
Uncle Win, to take off the edge of Jane’s triumphant
news.
They made rose water and a concoction
from the spice pinks. Then they preserved cherries.
Uncle Win took them driving toward night and said
some day they would go over to Dorchester. He
had several friends there.
The next excitement for Doris was
the college commencement. Mr. Adams was disappointed
that his son should not stand at the head of almost
everything. He had taken one prize and made some
excellent examinations, but there were many ranking
as high and some higher.
There were no ball games, no college
regattas to share honors then. Not that these
things were tabooed. There were some splendid
rowing matches and games, but then young men had a
desire to stand high intellectually.
A long while before Judge Sewall had
expressed his disapproval of the excesses at dinners,
the wine-drinking and conviviality, and had set Friday
for commencement so that there would be less time for
frolicking. The war, with its long train of economies,
and the greater seriousness of life in general, had
tempered all things, but there was gayety enough now,
with dinners given to the prize winners and a very
general jollification.
Doris went with Uncle Winthrop.
Commencement was one of the great occasions of the
year. All the orations were in Latin, and the
young men might have been haranguing a Roman army,
so vigorous were they. Many of the graduates
were very young; boys really studied at that time.
The remainder of the day and the one
following were given over to festivities. Booths
were everywhere on the ground; colors flying, flowers
wreathed in every fashion, and so much merriment that
they quite needed Judge Sewall back again to restrain
the excesses.
Mr. Adams and Doris went to dine at
the Cragie House, and Doris would have felt quite
lost among judges and professors but for Miss Cragie,
who took her in charge. When they went home in
the early evening the shouts and songs and boisterousness
seemed like a perfect orgy.
Someone has said, with a kind of dry
wit, “Wherever an Englishman goes courts and
litigation are sure to prevail.” Certainly
our New England forefathers, who set out with the
highest aims, soon found it necessary to establish
law courts. In the early days every man pleaded
his own cause, and was especially versed in the “quirks
of the law.” Jeremy Gridley, a graduate
of Harvard, interested himself in forming a law club
in the early part of the previous century to pursue
the study enough “to keep out of the briars.”
And to Justice Dana is ascribed the credit of administering
to Mr. Secretary Oliver, standing under the Liberty
Tree in a great assemblage of angry townspeople, an
oath that he would take no measures to enforce the
odius Stamp Act of the British Parliament or distribute
it among the people.
And now the bar had a rank of its
own, and Winthrop Adams had a strong desire to see
his son one of the shining lights in the profession.
Cary had a fine voice and was a good speaker.
More than once he had distinguished himself in an
argument at some of the debates. To be admitted
to the office of Governor Gore was considered a high
honor then, and this Mr. Adams gained for his son.
Cary had another vague dream, but parental authority
in well-bred families was not to be disputed at that
period, and Cary acquiesced in his father’s decision,
since he knew his own must bring about much discussion
and probably a refusal.
Mrs. King came to visit her mother
this summer. She left all her children at home,
as she wanted to visit round, and was afraid they
might be an annoyance to Aunt Priscilla. Little
Ruth had gone home very much improved, her eyes quite
restored.
Uncle Winthrop enjoyed Mrs. King’s
society very much. She was intelligent and had
cultivated her natural abilities, she also had a certain
society suavity that made her an agreeable companion.
Doris thought her a good deal like Betty, she was
so pleasant and ready for all kinds of enjoyment.
Aunt Priscilla considered her very frivolous, and
there was so much going and coming that she wondered
Elizabeth did not get crazy over it.
They were to remove to New York in
the fall, Mr. King having perfected his business arrangements.
So Betty would have her winter in the gay city after
all.
There were many delightful excursions
with pleasure parties up and down the bay. The
Embargo had been repealed, and the sails of merchant
ships were again whitening the harbor, and business
people breathed more freely.
There were Castle Island, with its
fortifications and its waving flag, and queer old
dreary-looking Noddle’s Island, also little towns
and settlements where one could spend a day delightfully.
Every place, it seemed to Doris, had some queer, interesting
story, and she possessed an insatiable appetite for
them. There was the great beautiful sweep of
Boston Bay, with its inlets running around the towns
and its green islands everywhere-places
that had been famous and had suffered in the war,
and were soon to suffer again.
Mrs. King had a friend at Hingham,
and one day they went there in a sort of family party.
Uncle Winthrop obtained a carriage and drove them
around. It was still famous for its wooden-ware
factories, and Uncle Win said in the time of Governor
Andros, when money was scarce among the early settlers,
Hingham had paid its taxes in milk pails, but they
decided the taxes could not have been very high, or
the fame of the milk pails must have been very great.
Mrs. Gerry said in the early season
forget-me-nots grew wild all about, and the ground
was blue with them.
“Oh, Uncle Win, let us come
and see them next year,” cried Doris.
Then they hunted up the old church
that had been nearly rent asunder by the bringing
in of a bass viol to assist the singers. Party
spirit had run very high. The musical people
had quoted the harps and sacbuts of King David’s
time, the trumpets and cymbals. At last the big
bass viol won the victory and was there. And
the hymn was:
“Oh, may my heart in
tune be found,
Like David’s harp of
solemn sound.”
But the old minister was not to be
outdone. The hymn was lined off in this fashion:
“Oh, may my heart go
diddle, diddle,
Like Uncle David’s sacred
fiddle.”
There were still a great many people
opposed to instrumental music and who could see no
reverence in the organ’s solemn sound.
Uncle Winthrop smiled over the story,
and Betty said it would do to tell to Aunt Priscilla.
Betty begged that they might take
Doris to Salem with them. Doris thought she should
like to see the smart little Elizabeth, who was like
a woman already, and her old playfellow James, as well
as Ruth, who seemed to her hardly beyond babyhood.
And there were all the weird old stories-she
had read some of them in Cotton Mather’s “Magnalia,”
and begged others from Miss Recompense, who did not
quite know whether she believed them or not, but she
said emphatically that people had been mistaken and
there was no such thing as witches.
“A whole week!” said Uncle
Winthrop. “Whatever shall I do without a
little girl that length of time?”
“But you have Cary now,” she returned
archly.
Cary was a good deal occupied with
young friends and college associates. Now and
then he went over to Charlestown and stayed all night
with one of his chums.
“I suppose I ought to learn
how it will be without you when you want to go away
in real earnest.”
“I am never going away.”
“Suppose Mrs. King should invite
you to New York? She has some little girls.”
“You might like to go,”
she returned with a touch of hesitation.
“To see the little girls?” smilingly.
“To see a great city. Do you suppose they
are very queer-and Dutch?”
He laughed at that.
“But the Dutch people went there
and settled, just as the Puritans came here.
And I think I like the Dutch because they have such
a merry time at Christmas. We read about them
in history at school.”
“And then the English came,
you know. I think now there is not much that
would suggest Holland. I have been there.”
Then Doris was eager to know what
it was like, and Uncle Winthrop was interested in
telling her. They forgot all about Salem-at
least, Doris did until she was going to bed.
“If you do go you must
be very careful a witch does not catch you, for I
couldn’t spare my little girl altogether.”
“Uncle Winthrop, I am going
to stay with you always. When Miss Recompense
gets real old and cannot look after things I shall
be your housekeeper.”
“When Miss Recompense reaches
old age I am afraid I shall be quaking for very fear.”
“But it takes a long while for
people to get very old,” she returned decisively.
Betty came over the next day to tell
her they would start on Thursday morning, and were
going in a sloop to Marblehead with a friend of her
father’s, Captain Morton.
It was almost like going to sea, Doris
thought. They had to thread their way through
the islands and round Winthrop Head. There was
Grover’s Cliff, and then they went out past
Nahant into the broad, beautiful bay, where you could
see the ocean. It seemed ages ago since she had
crossed it. They kept quite in to the green shores
and could see Lynn and Swampscott, then they rounded
one more point and came to Marblehead, where Captain
Morton stopped to unload his cargo, while they went
on to Salem.
At the old dock they were met by a
big boy and a country wagon. This was Foster
Manning, the eldest grandson of the family.
“Oh,” cried Betty in amazement,
“how you have grown! It is Foster?”
He smiled and blushed under the sunburn-a
thin, angular boy, tall for his age, with rather large
features and light-brown hair with tawny streaks in
it. But his gray-blue eyes were bright and honest-looking.
“Yes, ’m,” staring
at the others, for he had at the moment forgotten his
aunt’s looks.
Betty introduced them.
“I should not have known you,”
said Aunt Electa. “But boys change a good
deal in two years or so.”
They were helped in the wagon, more
by Betty than Foster, who was evidently very bashful.
They drove up past the old Court House, through the
main part of the town, which even then presented a
thriving appearance with its home industries.
But the seaport trade had been sadly interfered with
by the rumors and apprehensions of war. At that
time it was quaint and country-looking, with few pretensions
to architectural beauty. There was old Gallows
Hill at one end, with its haunting stories of witchcraft
days.
The irregular road wandered out to
the farming districts. Many small towns had been
set off from the original Salem in the century before,
and the boundaries were marked mostly by the farms.
Betty inquired after everybody, but
most of the answers were “Yes, ’m”
and “No, ’m.” When they came
in sight of the house Mrs. Manning and little Ruth
ran out to welcome the guests, followed by Elizabeth,
who was almost as good as a woman.
The house itself was a plain two-story
with the hall door in the middle and a window on each
side. The roof had a rather steep pitch in front
with overhanging eaves. From this pitch it wandered
off in a slow curve at the back and seemed stretched
out to cover the kitchen and the sheds.
A grassy plot in front was divided
by a trodden path. On one side of the small stoop
was a great patch of hollyhocks that were tolerated
because they needed no special care. Mrs. Manning
had no time to waste upon flowers. The aspect
was neat enough, but rather dreary, as Doris contrasted
it with the bloom at home.
But the greetings were cordial, only
Mrs. Manning asked Betty “If she had been waiting
for someone to come and show her the way?” Ruth
ran to Doris at once and caught her round the waist,
nestling her head fondly on the bosom of the guest.
Elizabeth stood awkwardly distant, and only stared
when Betty presented her to Doris.
They were ushered into the first room,
which was the guest chamber. The floor was painted,
and in summer the rugs were put away. A large
bedstead with faded chintz hangings, a bureau, a table,
and two chairs completed the furniture. The ornaments
were two brass candlesticks and a snuffers tray on
the high mantel.
Here they took off their hats and
laid down their budgets, and then went through to
mother’s room, where there were a bed and a cradle,
a bureau, a big chest, a table piled up with work,
a smaller candlestand, and a curious old desk.
Next to this was the living-room, where the main work
of life went on. Beyond this were a kitchen and
some sheds.
Baby Hester sat on the floor and looked
amazed at the irruption, then began to whimper.
Her mother hushed her up sharply, and she crept out
to the living-room.
“We may as well all go out,”
said Mrs. Manning. “I must see about supper,
for that creature we have doesn’t know when the
kettle boils,” and she led the way.
Elizabeth began to spread the tea
table. A youngish woman was working in the kitchen.
The Mannings had taken one of the town’s poor,
who at this period were farmed out. Sarah Lewis
was not mentally bright, and required close watching,
which she certainly received at the Mannings’.
Doris stood by the window with Ruth, until the baby
cried, when her mother told her to take Hester out
in the kitchen and give her some supper and put her
to bed. And then Doris could do nothing but watch
Elizabeth while the elders discussed family affairs,
the conversation a good deal interrupted by rather
sharp orders to Sarah in the kitchen, and some not
quite so sharp to Elizabeth.
Supper was all on the table when the
men came in. There were Mr. Manning, Foster and
James, and two hired men.
“You must wait, James,”
said his mother-“you and Elizabeth.”
The guests were ranged at one end
of the table, the hired men and Foster at the other.
Elizabeth took some knitting and sat down by the window.
The two younger children remained in the kitchen.
Doris was curiously interested, though
she felt a little strange. Her eyes wandered
to Elizabeth, and met the other eyes, as curious as
hers. Elizabeth had straight light hair, cut
square across the neck, and across her forehead in
what we should call a bang. “It was time
to let it grow long,” her mother admitted, “but
it was such a bother, falling in her eyes.”
Her frock, whatever color it had been, was now faded
to a hopeless, depressing gray, and her brown gingham
apron tied at the waist betrayed the result of many
washings. She was thin and pale, too, and tired-looking.
Times had not been good, and some of the crops were
not turning out well, so every nerve had to be strained
to pay for the new lot, in order that the interest
on the amount should not eat up everything.
Afterward the men went to look to
the cattle, and Mrs. Manning, when she had given orders
a while in the kitchen, took her guests out on the
front porch. She sat and knit as she talked to
them, as the moon was shining and gave her light enough
to see.
When the old clock struck nine, Mr.
Manning came through the hall and stood in the doorway.
“Be you goin’ to sit up all night, mother?”
he inquired.
“Dear, no. And I expect
you’re all tired. We’re up so early
in the morning here that we go to bed early.
And I was thinking-Ruth needn’t have
gone upstairs, and Doris could have slept with Elizabeth -
“I’ll go upstairs with
Doris, and ’Lecty may have the room to herself,”
exclaimed Betty.
Grandmother Manning had a room downstairs,
back of the parlor, and one of the large rooms upstairs,
that the family had the privilege of using, though
it was stored nearly full with a motley collection
of articles and furniture. This was her right
in the house left by her husband. But she spent
most of her time between her daughter at Danvers and
another in the heart of the town, where there were
neighbors to look at, if nothing else.
Doris peered in the corners of the
room by the dim candlelight.
“It’s very queer,”
she said with a half-smile at Betty, glancing around.
For there were lines across on which hung clothes and
bags of dried herbs that gave the room an aromatic
fragrance, and parcels in one corner piled almost
up to the wall. But the space to the bed was clear,
and there were a stand for the candle and two chairs.
“The children are in the next
room, and the boys and men sleep at the back.
The other rooms have sloping roofs. And then there’s
a queer little garret. Grandmother Manning is
real old, and some time Mary will have all the house
to herself. Josiah bought out his sisters’
share, and Mrs. Manning’s runs only as long
as she lives.”
“I shouldn’t want to sleep
with Elizabeth. I love you, Betty.”
Betty laughed wholesomely. “You
will get acquainted with her to-morrow,” she
said.
Doris laid awake some time, wondering
if she really liked visiting, and recalling the delightful
Christmas visit at Uncle Winthrop’s. The
indefinable something that she came to understand was
not only leisure and refinement, but the certain harmonious
satisfactions that make up the keynote of life from
whence melody diffuses itself, were wanting here.
They had their breakfast by themselves
the next morning. Friday was a busy day, but
all the household except the baby were astir at five,
and often earlier. There were churning and the
working of butter and packing it down for customers.
Of course, June butter had the royal mark, but there
were plenty of people glad to get any “grass”
butter.
Betty took Doris out for a walk and
to show her what a farm was like. There was the
herd of cows, and in a field by themselves the young
ones from three months to a year. There were
two pretty colts Mr. Manning was raising. And
there was a flock of sheep on a stony pasture lot,
with some long-legged, awkward-looking lambs who had
outgrown their babyhood. Then they espied James
weeding out the garden beds.
Betty sat down on a stone at the edge
of the fence and took out some needlework she carried
around in her pocket. Doris stood patting down
the soft earth with her foot.
“Do you like to do that?” she asked presently.
“No, I don’t,” in a short tone.
“I think I should not either.”
“’Taint the things you
like, it’s what has to be done,” the boy
flung out impatiently. “I’m not going
to be a farmer. I just hate it. When I’m
big enough I’m coming to Boston.”
“When will you be big enough?”
“Well-when I’m
twenty-one. You’re of age then, you see,
and your own master. But I might run away before
that. Don’t tell anyone that, Doris.
Gewhilliker! didn’t I have a splendid time at
grandmother’s that winter! I wish I could
live there always. And grandpop is just the nicest
man I know! I just hate a farm.”
Doris felt very sorry for him.
She thought she would not like to work that way with
her bare hands. Miss Recompense always wore gloves
when she gardened.
“I’d like to be you, with nothing to do.”
That was a great admission. The
winter at Uncle Leverett’s he had rather despised
girls. Cousin Sam was the one to be envied then.
And it seemed to her that she kept quite busy at home,
but it was a pleasant kind of business.
She did not see Elizabeth until dinner
time. James took the men’s dinner out to
the field. They could not spend the time to come
in. And after dinner Betty harnessed the old
mare Jinny, and took Electa, Doris, and little Ruth
out driving. The sun had gone under a cloud and
the breeze was blowing over from the ocean. Electa
chose to see the old town, even if there were but
few changes and trade had fallen off. Several
slender-masted merchantmen were lying idly at the quays,
half afraid to venture with a cargo lest they might
fall into the hands of privateers. The stores
too had a depressed aspect. Men sat outside gossiping
in a languid sort of way, and here and there a woman
was tending her baby on the porch or doing a bit of
sewing.
“What a sleepy old place!”
said Mrs. King. “It would drive me to distraction.”