Elizabeth Leverett busied herself
about the supper. She felt as one does in the
threatening of a thunderstorm, when the clouds roll
up and the rumbling is low and distant and one studies
the sky with presentiments. Then it comes nearer,
flirts a little with the elements, breaks open and
shows the blue that the scurrying wind soon hides and
the real storm bursts. She had believed all along
that it must come.
She was not an ungracious or a selfish
woman outside of her own home. She was good to
the sick and the needy, she gave of her time and strength.
In the home there was a sense of ownership, of the
self-appropriation so often termed duty. Everything
had gone on smoothly for years. She had settled
that Chilian would not marry. Such a bookish
man, whose interests lay chiefly with men, did not
need a wife when there was some one at hand to make
him comfortable. And that he surely was.
He understood and enjoyed it. He had only to suggest
to have. Her affection for him was like that
for a younger brother. Even Eunice could not
minister so well for his comfort, though, like Mary
of Bible lore, she often added a delicate pleasure
in listening to matters or incidents that interested
him.
Elizabeth had settled to the idea
of a little heathen soul that she was to lead aright.
Missionary work in godless lands had not made much
advance and, having no mother, who was there to warn
her of the great peril of her soul? Seafaring
men were not much given to thought of the other world.
Perhaps there was some grace for them in the hours
of peril, she had heard they prayed to God in an extremity;
and there was the dying thief. But on land no
one had a right to count on this.
The child had changed everything.
Even Eunice seemed to have lost the sharp distinction.
Miss Winn belonged to the ungodly, that was clear though
she was upright, honest, neat, and in some ways sensible.
But her ideas about the child were foreign and reprehensible dangerous
even. The child was no worse than others, not
as bad as some, for she had either by nature or training
a delicate respect for the property of others.
She never meddled. She asked few questions even
when she stood by the kitchen table and watched the
mysteries of cake and pie making and the delicacies
of cooking. It was the right to herself that annoyed
Elizabeth. People had hardly begun to suspect
that children had any rights.
“But if she went away?
If she was swallowed up in the vortex of the more
populous city” greater, Salem would
not have admitted. “If the child’s
soul was finally lost, would she be quite clear?
Would she have done all that she could for her salvation?”
She thought of it as she prepared
the supper. She surveyed the inviting-looking
table and then rang the bell. Eunice brought in
a handful of flowers. Chilian came and
Miss Winn.
“Cynthia has gone to bed, she
does not want any supper,” was her quiet announcement.
Elizabeth would have sent her to bed
supperless, and approved of a severer punishment.
Miss Winn asked some questions about Boston.
“I have quite a desire to see it,” she
added.
Yes, she would no doubt plan for a
removal. Then the child would be forever lost.
And a Leverett, too, come of a strong God-fearing family!
The child, when she had hidden her
face on Rachel’s bosom, gave some dry, hard
sobs that shook her small frame. Rachel smoothed
her hair, patted the shoulder softly, and said “Dear”
in a caressing tone. Then had come a torrent
of tears, a wild hysterical weeping. She did not
attempt to check it, but took Cynthia in her arms as
if she had been a baby.
“I’m not going to that
school any more,” she said brokenly, after a
while.
“What happened, dear?”
Cynthia raised her head. “It
was very mean, as if I had done it on purpose!
Why, I might have hurt myself;” indignantly.
“How was it?” gently.
And then the story came tumbling out.
She saw a certain ludicrous aspect in it now, and
laughed a little herself. “I couldn’t
help being saucy. And I thought she was going
to strike me. Tommy Marsh began to laugh first.
The slate broke ”
“Are you quite sure you were not hurt?”
“Well, my arm hurt a little
at first, but it is all well now. But I shan’t
go back to school, no, not even to please
Cousin Leverett, and I like him best of any one.”
“I’m going down to supper, dear.
Shall I bring up yours?”
“I don’t want any.
I couldn’t eat anything. And I can’t
have Cousin Elizabeth’s sharp eyes looking at
me. Oh, I’m glad I am not her little girl!
I like you a million times better, Rachel;” hugging
her rapturously. “I think I’d like
to have a glass of milk. And may I lie on your
little bed?”
“Yes, dear.”
She was asleep when Rachel came up
and it was past nine when she woke, drank her milk,
and went to bed for the night.
How gaily the birds were singing the
next morning, and the sunbeams were playing hide-and-seek
through the branches that dance in the soft wind.
All the air was sweet and the little girl couldn’t
help being light-hearted. She sang, too; not
measured hymns of sorrow and repentance, but a gay
lilt that followed the bird voices. And she went
down to breakfast and said her good-morning cheerfully.
“That child has the assurance
of the Evil One,” Elizabeth thought.
Cynthia waylaid Cousin Chilian as
he was going down the path.
“I meant what I said yesterday.
I won’t go to that school any more. If
there was some other only only
I wish you could teach me until I could get up straight
in all the things, so the other children wouldn’t
laugh when I made blunders. I suppose it does
sound funny;” and a smile hovered about the
seriousness.
“We will consider another school,”
he returned kindly, smiling himself at the remembrance
of the tempest of yesterday.
She persuaded Rachel to go out to
walk and they went over to the bridge. She had
been so interested in the story of it. Before
it had faded from the minds of men it was to be splendidly
commemorated as a point of interest in the old town.
“I like real stories,”
she said. “I don’t understand about
the war, but it is fine to think the Salem men made
the British soldiers go back when all the while the
cannon and other arms were hidden away. You don’t
mind, Rachel, if the Colonists did beat England, do
you? I’m a Colonist, you know.”
“That is long ago, and we are
all friends now. I think the Colonists were very
brave and persevering and they deserved their liberty.
I have heard your father talk about the war.”
“Oh, when do you suppose he
will come? It seems so long to wait.”
Rachel smiled to keep the tears out of her eyes.
Chilian Leverett made a call and a
brief explanation to Dame Wilby. She admitted
she had been hasty, but the children were unusually
trying. She was getting to be an old body and
maybe she hadn’t as much patience as years ago.
Cynthia said so many odd things that the children would
giggle. She was slow in some things, and it seemed
hard for her to learn tables, but she was not a bad
child.
So the tempest blew over. Elizabeth
preserved a rather injured silence, but Eunice was
cheerful and ready to entertain Cynthia with stories
of the time when she was a little girl. Chilian
arranged for her to spend most of the mornings with
him when he was at home. She liked so very much
to hear him read. The histories of that time were
rather dry and long spun out, but he had a way of
skipping the moralizing and the endless disquisitions
and adding a little more vividness to people and incidents.
It inspired him to watch her face changing with every
emotion, her eyes deepening or brightening, and the
slight mark in her forehead where lines of perplexity
crossed. Then they would talk it all over.
Often he was puzzled with her endless “whys”
that he could not rightly explain to a child’s
limited understanding. Sometimes she would say,
“Why, I would have done so,” and he found
her course would be on the side of the finest right,
if not what was considered feasible.
The spelling was a trial when the
words were a little obscure. And though she had
a wonderful knack of guessing at things, she surely
was not born for a mathematician. He had a fine,
quick mind in that respect. But the Latin was
a delight to her and she delved away at the difficult
parts for the sake of what she called the grand and
beautiful sound. His rendering of it enchanted
her.
“I don’t see any sense
in educating her like a boy,” declared Elizabeth.
“And she can’t do a decent bit of hemming.
She ought to work a sampler and learn the letters
to mark her own clothes. We did it before we were
her age. Chilian thinks you can hire people to
do these things for you, but it seems so helpless
not to be able to do them for yourself. Housekeeping
is of more account than all this folderol. She
can never be a college professor.”
“But women are keeping schools,”
interposed Eunice.
“They don’t teach Latin
and all kinds of nonsense. That Miss Miller was
here a few days ago to see if we didn’t want
our niece folks are beginning to call her
that to see if we did not want her to take
lessons on the spinet. I was so glad she did not
appeal to Chilian, though he was out. I said,
‘No,’ very decidedly, ’that she had
a good many things to learn before she tackled that.’
And she said she ought to be trained while her fingers
were flexible, and I said I thought washing would
make them flexible enough. And there’s fine
ironing.”
“There’s no need of either for her,”
protested Eunice.
“Oh, you don’t know.
There might be a war again. And a trouble about
money. I’m sure there is talk enough and
the country raising loans all the time, one party
pulling one way, one the other. People are getting
awfully extravagant nowadays. Patty Conant gave
seven dollars a yard for her new black silk, and there
were twelve yards. It broke pretty well into
a hundred, and there was some fancy gimp and fringe
and the making. Of course, there’s going
to be two weddings in the family, and I don’t
suppose Patty will ever buy another handsome gown at
her time of life. Abner brought her home that
elegant crape shawl, with the fringe and netting nearly
half a yard deep. Maybe ’twas a present,
she let it go that way.”
“Of course, there’s money
enough among the Conants,” Eunice commented
gently.
“As I said one can’t
always tell what will come to pass, nor how much need
you may have for your money. But I’m thankful
my heart is not set on the pomps and vanities of this
world. And children ought to be brought up to
some useful habits.”
It was a fact that Cynthia did not
take to the useful branches of womanly living.
She abhorred hemming and such work as she
made of it! Miss Eunice groaned over it.
“But you ought to have seen
what I did two or three weeks ago,” and she
laughed with a gay ring. “Such stitches!
When I made them nice on the top, they were dreadful
underneath, and the cotton thread was almost black.
What is the use of taking such little bits of stitches?”
“Why they look prettier.
And it is the right thing to do.”
“But you know Rachel can hem
all the ruffles. And Cousin Elizabeth said ruffles
were vanity. I’d like my frocks just as
well to be plain.”
“There would have to be nice stitches in the
hem.”
“Rachel didn’t sew when
she was little. A great lady took her to Scotland,
to wait on her, to get her shawl when she was a little
cool, and fan her when she was warm, and carry messages,
and drive out in the carriage with her. They
had servants for everything. And then she
was ten years old she sent her to a school,
where she learned everything. But she doesn’t
know all the tables and a great many other things.”
“But she knows what fits her for her station
in life.”
Cynthia looked puzzled. “What
is your station in life?” she asked with an
accent of curiosity.
“Oh, child, it is where you
are placed; and the work of life is the duties that
grow out of it and your duty towards God.”
Cynthia dropped into thought.
“Then my duty now is to study.
I like it; that is, I like a good many things in it.
And when my father comes home it will be changed, I
suppose. You can’t stay a little girl always.”
“But you will have to learn
to keep house,” returned Eunice.
“Oh, I’ll have some one
to do that. Men never have to cook or keep house.
Oh, yes; all the cooks on the ship were men. Wasn’t
that funny!” she continued.
She laughed with so much innocent
merriment that Miss Eunice laughed too.
“I suppose you have to do various
things in your life,” she sagely remarked, after
a pause.
“Then you must learn to do the various things
now.”
“I believe I won’t ever
get married. I’ll live with father always,
and we will have some one to keep the house, and Rachel
will make the clothes. And I’ll read aloud
to father. We’ll have a carriage and go
out riding, and talk about India. I remember
so many things just by thinking them over. Isn’t
it queer, when for a long time they have gone out of
your mind? Oh, dear Cousin Eunice, what makes
you sigh?”
Cousin Eunice took off her glasses,
wiped them vigorously, and then wiped her eyes.
“It is a bad habit I have.”
But she was thinking of the dream of the little girl
that could never come true.
The two days in the week that Chilian
went into Boston were long to Cynthia. She sat
in his room and studied. He had given her a small
table to herself and a shelf in a sort of miscellaneous
bookcase. He found that she never trespassed
and that she did really study her two hours, sometimes
longer when the task was not so easily mastered.
There was some of the old Leverett blood in
her, but it had a picturesque strain. She placed
every book at its prettiest, and her papers were gathered
up and taken down to the kitchen when she was done
with them. She was beginning to write quite well.
Then in the afternoon she went to
walk with Rachel to show her the curious places Cousin
Leverett had told her about. And there were still
beautiful woods around the town, where they found wild
flowers and sassafras buds.
Elizabeth was very much engrossed.
She had cleared the garret spick and span, scrubbed
up the floor, wiped off her quilting frames, and put
in her white quilt, rolling up both sides so she could
get at the middle. There was to be a circle,
with clover leaves on the outside. Then long
leaves rayed off from the exact middle. She had
all the patterns marked out. When that was done
a wreath went around next oak leaves and
acorns.
She had groaned over the time the
little girl devoted to Latin, but she never thought
all this a waste of precious hours. She would
never need it and she could not decide upon any relative
she would like to leave it to. There was one
quilt of this pattern in Salem and, though white quilts
were made, few could afford to spend so much time over
them. There were knitted quilts, with ball fringe
around four sides, and the tester fringed the same
way. Old ladies kept up their habits of industry
in this manner when they were past hard work.
Eunice had finished her basket quilt
and it was really a work of art. But she was
out in the flower garden a good deal in the early morning
and late afternoon. Cynthia sometimes kept her
company, but she was not an expert in gardening science.
In the evening they sat out on the porch, and a neighbor
called perhaps. Or she walked over to South River
if it was moonlight. And, oh, how beautiful everything
was!
But it was not all quilting with Miss
Elizabeth. In July wild green grapes were gathered
for preserves. Cynthia thought it quite fun to
help “pit” them. You cut them through
the middle and with a small pointed knife took out
the seeds. She tired of it presently and did not
cut them evenly, beside she was afraid of cutting
her thumb.
Cousin Elizabeth went about getting
dinner, which was quite a simple thing when Chilian
was away, and at night they had a high tea.
“I’ll cut them,”
said Eunice, “and you can pick out the seeds.
But maybe you are tired;” with a glance of solicitude.
“Yes, I’m tired, but I’m
going to keep straight on until dinner-time,”
she answered pluckily.
“You are a brave little girl.”
But Cousin Elizabeth said, “Well,
for once you have made yourself useful.”
There was a great point of interest
just then for the people on this side of the town.
Front Street was the old river path that had followed
the shore line. One end was known now as Wharf
Street, and was beginning to be lined with docks.
Up farther to what is now Essex Street there had stood
a house with a history. Its owner had been a Tory,
and just before the war broke out he entertained Governor
Gage and the civil and military staff. Timothy
Pickering had been summoned to the Governor’s
presence, but he kept his Excellency so long in an
indecent passion that the town-meeting had to be adjourned.
Troops were ordered up from the Neck and for a while
an encounter seemed imminent. Later, when the
Colonists were in the ascendency, Colonel Browne’s
estate was confiscated, and after the close of the
war it was turned over to Mr. Elias Derby. Now
he was removing it to make way for a much finer residence
and, being a notably patriotic citizen, he did not
enjoy the stigma of a Tory house. Parts were
carried away as curiosities, and there were some beautiful
carvings and fine newel posts that found a place in
new homes as mementoes. Afterward, Mr. Derby built
the handsomest and costliest house in Salem, with
grounds laid out magnificently.
Then came a very busy time. There
was preserving that every housewife attended to for
winter use, pickling of various kinds, for there was
no canning stock in those days to eke out. There
were some queer fruits from India, and preserved ginger
in curious jars that are highly esteemed to this day,
but they were luxuries. Then a house-cleaning
season, not as bad as the spring, but still bad enough.
And flower seeds to be saved, garden seeds to be dried,
so the beautiful quilt was rolled up in a thick sheet
and put away for the present.
The little girl had made quite friends
with the Upham children and went over there to tea
all alone, but she felt very strange. They played
tag and blind-man’s buff, but Cynthia thought
puss in the corner the most fun. Bentley was
a nice big boy and very well mannered. Polly talked
over her school and brought out her needlework, which
was to be the bottom of a white frock. It would
be only two yards round and she had almost a yard
worked. Then she was making a sampler, with an
oak and acorn vine around it, and it was to have four
different kinds of lettering on it.
“I don’t know when I shall
get it done,” she said with a sigh.
Betty declared Dame Wilby was crosser
than ever and Priscilla Lee wasn’t coming back,
nor Margaret Rand, and she was coaxing mother to let
her go elsewhere.
After a while Cynthia declared she
must go home. Cousin Chilian had said he would
come for her, but the clock was striking nine and he
had not come. He sometimes did forget.
Bentley took his hat and walked beside
her in quite a mannish way.
“I do hope you will come again,”
he said. “You were so pleasant when you
were caught, and I do hate to have girls saying all
the time, ’Now that isn’t fair,’
and squirming out.”
“But if you’re playing
you must take the best and the worst. I liked
puss in the corner and didn’t mind being the
left-out pussy. I thought it was quite fun to
hunt a corner again.”
Then they met Cousin Chilian, who
had been playing a rather prolonged game of chess
with a visitor. But Bentley kept on with them,
and said good-night with a polite bow, adding, “She
must come again, Mr. Leverett, we had such a very
nice time.”
“And wasn’t he nice!”
exclaimed the child eagerly. “He is like
some of the grown-up men. I like big boys much
better than the little ones.”
He smiled to himself at that.
Now there came cool nights and mornings,
but the world was beautiful in its turning leaves,
the fragrance of ripening fruit, and the late gorgeous-colored
flowers. They took delightful walks and found
so many curious places. Sometimes Bentley Upham
met them and joined in their walks and talks.
He thought the little girl knew a great deal.
And that she had been in India, and China, and ever
so many of the islands, was wonderful.
“Don’t you ever sew?”
he asked one afternoon, as they were rambling about.
“I don’t like it much;”
and she glanced up with fascinating archness.
“I suppose I shall have to some day, but Cousin
Leverett thinks there is time enough.”
“I’m glad you don’t,”
in a hearty tone. “I don’t have any
good of Polly any more. What with her white frock,
and some lace she is making for a cape, and forty
other things, she never has time for a game of anything,
or a nice walk. And she doesn’t care about
study, though her lessons are so different. I
don’t know another girl who studies Latin, and
it’s so nice to talk it over. How rapidly
you must have learned.”
He looked at her in admiration.
“Oh, I knew some of it before
I came here. There was a chaplain in Calcutta
who was well, not exactly ill, but not well;
and father took him with us on the vessel when he
went for certain things, and he staid with us afterward.
He used to read aloud, and it sounded so splendid!
Then he taught me. But Cousin Leverett said it
wasn’t quite right, so I am going over it.
And he is teaching me a little French.”
“You know they think women don’t
need to know much beside housekeeping and sewing.
I just hate to hear about ruffles cut on the straight
or bias, and I couldn’t tell what Dacca muslin,
or jaconet, or dimity was to save myself. And
eyelet work and French knots and run lace that’s
what the big girls who come to see Polly talk about.
But I like books, and studies, and different countries.
I’d like to travel. But I don’t know
that I want to be a sea captain.”
They found some queer old houses that
were odd enough. Mr. Leverett said they were
almost two hundred years old, and that at first the
place kept the old Indian name, Naumkeag. But
the Reverend Francis Higginson gave it a new name
out of the Bible “In Salem also is
His tabernacle.” The early pilgrims built
a chapel at once.
“How close the houses are!”
It was a row that had survived the
hand of improvement. There was a huge central
chimney-stack, big enough for a modern factory, and
the house seemed built around it. The second
story overhung the first, and in some of them were
small dormer windows looking like bird houses.
And the little panes of greenish glass seemed to make
windows all framework.
Cynthia was much interested in the
Roger Williams house, and the story of the old minister.
“Why, I thought religion made
people good and pleasant ”
Then she checked herself, for often Cousin Elizabeth
was not pleasant. And she seemed more
religious than Cousin Eunice. And Cousin Chilian
rarely scolded or said a cross word he
never talked about religion, but he went to church
on Sunday; they all did. She studied the Catechism,
she could learn easily when she had a mind to, but
she didn’t understand it at all. She shocked
Elizabeth by her irreverent questions. There was
the old horn-book primer with
“In Adam’s fall
We sinned all.”
“I don’t see how that
could be when we were not there!” she said almost
defiantly.
“It means the nature we inherited.”
“But I don’t think that fair!”
“You don’t know, you never
can understand until you are in a state of grace.
Don’t ask such impertinent questions. You
are a little heathen child.”
Then she asked Cousin Chilian what “a state
of grace” meant.
“I think it is the willingness
to do right, to be truthful, kindly, obliging.
It is all comprised in the Golden Rule to
love God with all your heart and your neighbor as
yourself, not to do anything to him that you would
not like to have done to yourself, and to do to him
whatever you would like him to do for you. That
is enough for a little girl.”
“That sounds like Confucius,” she said
thoughtfully.
But she went back to Roger Williams
when Bentley said he was one of his heroes.
“What did he do?” she asked, interested.
“Well, he founded the City of
Providence. And if William Penn is to be honored
for founding a city of brotherly love, Roger Williams
deserves it for establishing a city where different
sects should agree without persecuting each other.
You see, they banished him from Salem back to England
because he thought a man had some right to his own
opinions, so long as he worshipped God. So he
went to Providence instead. He walked all the
way with just his pocket compass to guide him, and
how he must have worked to make a dwelling-place for
himself and his friends in the dead of winter!
There were some Quakers already there, who had been
banished from other settlements, and they all resolved
to be friendly. Yes, I call him a hero!”
Cynthia studied the house with the
little courtyard and the great tree shading it.
“Polly said it was the Witch House,” she
remarked.
“That was because there were
trials for witchcraft. You are too young to hear
about that,” Chilian said decisively, with a
glance at Bentley.