“Thou drugging pain
by patience.”
ARNOLD
“Laces cleaned, and fluting
and ruffling done here,” that was
what the little sign swinging outside the little green
door said. And, coming under it into the cosey
little rooms, you felt this was just the place in
which to leave things soiled and torn, and come back
to find them, by some mysterious process, immaculate
and whole.
Two rooms, with folding-doors between,
in which through the day stood a counter, cut up on
the one side into divers pigeon-holes rilled with
small boxes and bundles, carefully pinned and labelled, owner’s
name, time left, time to be called for, money due;
neat and nice as a new pin, as every one said who
had any dealings there.
The counter was pushed back now, as
always after seven o’clock, for the people who
came in the evening were few; and then, when that was
out of the way, it seemed more home-like and less
shoppy, as Mrs. Franklin said every night, as she
straightened things out, and peered through the window
or looked from the front door, and wondered if “Abram
weren’t later than usual,” though she
knew right well he was punctual as clock-work, good
clock-work too, when he was going to his
toil or hurrying back to his home.
Pleasant little rooms, with the cleanest
and brightest of rag carpets on the floor; a paper
on the walls, cheap enough, but gay with scarlet rosebuds
and green leaves, rivalled by the vines and berries
on the pretty chintz curtains; chairs of a dozen ages
and patterns, but all of them with open, inviting
countenances and a hospitable air; a wood fire that
looked like a wood fire crackling and sparkling
on the hearth, shining and dancing over the ceiling
and the floor and the walls, cutting queer capers
with the big rocking-chair, which turned
into a giant with long arms, and with the
little figures on the mantel-shelf, and the books
in their cases, softening and glorifying the two grand
faces hanging in their frames opposite, and giving
just light enough below them to let you read “John
Brown” and “Phillips,” if you had
any occasion to read, and did not know those whom
the world knows; and first and last, and through all,
as if it loved her, and was loath to part with her
for a moment, whether she poked the flame, or straightened
a chair, or went out towards the little kitchen to
lift a lid and smell a most savory stew, or came back
to the supper-table to arrange and rearrange what
was already faultless in its cleanliness and simplicity,
wherever she went and whatever she did, this firelight
fell warm about a woman, large and comfortable and
handsome, with a motherly look to her person, and
an expression that was all kindness in her comely face
and dark, soft eyes, eyes and face and
form, though, that might as well have had “Pariah”
written all over them, and “leper” stamped
on their front, for any good, or beauty, or grace,
that people could find in them; for the comely face
was a dark face, and the voice, singing an old Methodist
hymn, was no Anglo-Saxon treble, but an Anglo-African
voice, rich and mellow, with the touch of pathos or
sorrow always heard in these tones.
“There!” she said, “there
he is!” as a step, hasty yet halting, was heard
on the pavement; and, turning up the light, she ran
quickly to open the door, which, to be sure, was unfastened,
and to give the greeting to her “boy,”
which, through many a year, had never been omitted.
Her boy, you would
have known that as soon as you saw him, the
same eyes, same face, the same kindly look; but the
face was thinner and finer, and the brow was a student’s
brow, full of thought and speculation; and, looking
from her hearty, vigorous form, you saw that his was
slight to attenuation.
“Sit down, sonny, sit down and
rest. There! how tired you look!” bustling
round him, smoothing his thin face and rough hair.
“Now don’t do that! let your old mother
do it!” It pleased her to call herself old,
though she was but just in her prime. “You’ve
done enough for one day, I’m sure, waiting on
other people, and walking with your poor lame foot
till you’re all but beat out. You be quiet
now, and let somebody else wait on you.”
And, going down on her knees, she took up the lame
foot, and began to unlace the cork-soled, high-cut
shoe, and, drawing it out, you saw that it was shrunken
and small, and that the leg was shorter than its fellow.
“Poor little foot!” rubbing
it tenderly, smoothing the stocking over it, and chafing
it to bring warmth and life to its surface. Her
“baby,” she called it, for it was no bigger
than when he was a little fellow. “Poor,
tired foot! ain’t it a dreadful long walk, sonny?”
“Pretty long, mother; but I’d
take twice that to do such work at the end.”
“Yes, indeed, it’s good
work, and Mr. Surrey’s a good man, and a kind
one, that’s sure! I only wish some others
had a little of his spirit. Such a shame to have
you dragging all the way up here, when any dirty fellow
that wants to can ride. I don’t mind for
myself so much, for I can walk about spry enough yet,
and don’t thank them for their old omnibuses
nor cars; but it’s too bad for you, so it is, too
bad!”
“Never mind, mother! keep a
brave heart. ’There’s a good time
coming soon, a good time coming!’ as I heard
Mr. Hutchinson sing the other night, and
it’s true as gospel.”
“Maybe it is, sonny!”
dubiously, “but I don’t see it, not
a sign of it, no indeed, not one!
It gets worse and worse all the time, and it takes
a deal of faith to hold on; but the good Lord knows
best, and it’ll be right after a while, anyhow!
And now that’s straight!” pulling
a soft slipper on the lame foot, and putting its mate
by his side; then going off to pour out the tea, and
dish up the stew, and add a touch or two to the appetizing
supper-table.
“It’s as good as a feast,” taking
a bite out of her nice home-made bread, “better’n
a feast, to think of you in that place; and I can’t
scarcely realize it yet. It seems too fine to
be true.”
“That’s the way I’ve
felt all the month, mother! It has been just like
a dream to me, and I keep thinking surely I’m
asleep and will waken to find this is just an air-castle
I’ve been building, or ’a vision of the
night,’ as the good book says.”
“Well, it’s a blessed
vision, sure enough! and I hope to the good Lord it’ll
last; but you won’t if you make a
vision of your supper in that way. You just eat,
Abram! and have done your talking till you’re
through, if you can’t do both at once. Talking’s
good, but eating’s better when you’re
hungry; and it’s my opinion you ought to be hungry,
if you ain’t.”
So the teacups were filled and emptied,
and the spoons clattered, and the stew was eaten,
and the baked potatoes devoured, and the bread-and-butter
assaulted vigorously, and general havoc made with the
good things and substantial things before and between
them; and then, this duty faithfully performed, the
wreck speedily vanished away; and cups and forks,
spoons and plates, knives and dishes, cleaned and
cupboarded, Mrs. Franklin came, and, drawing away the
book over which he was poring, said, while she smoothed
face and hair once more, “Come, Abram, what
is it?”
“What’s what, mother?” with a little
laugh.
“Something ails you, sonny.
That’s plain enough. I know when anything’s
gone wrong with ye, sure, and something’s gone
wrong to-day.”
“O mother! you worry about me
too much, indeed you do. If I’m a little
tired or out of sorts, which I haven’t
any right to be, not here, or quiet, or
anything, you think somebody’s been hurting me,
or abusing me, or that everything’s gone wrong
with me, when I do well enough all the time.”
“Now, Abram, you can’t
deceive me, not that way. My eyes is
mother’s eyes, and they see plain enough, where
you’re concerned, without spectacles. Who’s
been putting on you to-day? Somebody. You
don’t carry that down look in your face and
your eyes for nothing, I found that out long ago,
and you’ve got it on to-night.”
“O mother!”
“Don’t you ‘O mother’
me! I ain’t going to be put off in that
way, Abram, an’ you needn’t think it.
Has Mr. Surrey been saying anything hard to you?”
“No, indeed, mother; you needn’t ask that.”
“Nor none of the foremen?”
“None.”
“Has Snipe been round?”
“Hasn’t been near the office since Mr.
Surrey dismissed him.”
“Met him anywhere?”
“Nein!” laughing, “I haven’t
laid eyes on him.”
“Well, the men have been saying or doing something
then.”
“N-no; why, what an inquisitor it is!”
“‘N-no.’ You
don’t say that full and plain, Abram. Something
has been going wrong with the men. Now
what is it? Come, out with it.”
“Well, mother, if you will
know, you will, I suppose; and, as you never get tired
of the story, I’ll go over the whole tale.
“So long as I was Mr. Surrey’s
office-boy, to make his fires, and sweep and dust,
and keep things in order, the men were all good enough
to me after their fashion; and if some of them growled
because they thought he favored me, Mr. Given, or
some one said, ’O, you know his mother was a
servant of Mrs. Surrey for no end of years, and of
course Mr. Surrey has a kind of interest in him’;
and that put everything straight again.
“Well! you know how good Mr.
Willie has been to me ever since we were little boys
in the same house, he in the parlor and
I in the kitchen; the books he’s given me, and
the chances he’s made me, and the way he’s
put me in of learning and knowing. And he’s
been twice as kind to me ever since I refused that
offer of his.”
“Yes, I know, but tell me about it again.”
“Well, Mr. Surrey sent me up
to the house one day, just while Mr. Willie was at
home from college, and he stopped me and had a talk
with me, and asked me in his pleasant way, not as
if I were a ‘nigger,’ but just as he’d
talk to one of his mates, ever so many questions about
myself and my studies and my plans; and I told him
what I wanted, how hard you worked, and
how I hoped to fit myself to go into some little business
of my own, not a barber-shop, or any such thing, but
something that’d support you and keep you like
a lady after while, and that would help me and my
people at the same time. For, of course,”
I said, “every one of us that does anything
more than the world expects us to do, or better, makes
the world think so much the more and better of us all.”
“What did he say to that?”
“I wish you’d seen him!
He pushed back that beautiful hair of his, and his
eyes shone, and his mouth trembled, though I could
see he tried hard to hold it still, and put up his
hand to cover it; and he said, in a solemn sort of
way, ’Franklin, you’ve opened a window
for me, and I sha’n’t forget what I see
through it to-day.’ And then he offered
to set me up in some business at once, and urged hard
when I declined.”
“Say it all over again, sonny; what was it you
told him?”
“I said that would do well enough
for a white man; that he could help, and the white
man be helped, just as people were being and doing
all the time, and no one would think a thought about
it. But, sir,” I said, “everybody
says we can do nothing alone; that we’re a poor,
shiftless set; and it will be just one of the master
race helping a nigger to climb and to stand where
he couldn’t climb or stand alone, and I’d
rather fight my battle alone.”
“Yes, yes! well, go on, go on.
I like to hear what followed.”
“Well, there was just a word
or two more, and then he put out his hand and shook
mine, and said good by. It was the first time
I ever shook hands with a white gentleman.
Some white hands have shaken mine, but they always
made me feel that they were white and that mine
was black, and that it was a condescension. I
felt that, when they didn’t mean I should.
But there was nothing between us. I didn’t
think of his skin, and, for once in my life, I quite
forgot I was black, and didn’t remember it again
till I got out on the street and heard a dirty little
ragamuffin cry, ‘Hi! hi! don’t that nagur
think himself foine?’ I suspect, in spite of
my lameness, I had been holding up my head and walking
like a man.”
In spite of his lameness he was holding
up his head and walking like a man now; up and down
and across the little room, trembling, excited, the
words rushing in an eager flow from his mouth.
His mother sat quietly rocking herself and knitting.
She knew in this mood there was nothing to be said
to him; and, indeed, what had she to say save that
which would add fuel to the flame?
“Well!” a long
sigh, “after that Mr. Surrey doubled
my wages, and was kinder to me than ever, and watched
me, as I saw, quite closely; and that was the way
he found out about Mr. Snipe.
“You see Mr. Snipe had been
very careless about keeping the books; would come
down late in the mornings, just before Mr. Surrey came
in, and go away early in the afternoons, as soon as
he had left. Of course, the books got behindhand
every month, and Mr. Snipe didn’t want to stay
and work overhours to make them up. One day he
found out, by something I said, that I understood
bookkeeping, and tried me, and then got me to take
them home at night and go over them. I didn’t
know then how bad he was doing, and that I had no
business to shield him, and all went smooth enough
till the day I was too sick to get down to the office,
and two of the books were at home. Then Mr. Surrey
discovered the whole thing. There was a great
row, it seems; and Mr. Surrey examined the books, and
found, as he was pleased to say, that I’d kept
them in first-rate style; so he dismissed Mr. Snipe
on the spot, with six months’ pay, for
you know he never does anything by halves, and
put me in his place.
“The men don’t like it,
I know, and haven’t liked it, but of course they
can’t say anything to him, and they haven’t
said anything to me; but I’ve seen all along
that they looked at me with no friendly eyes, and
for the last day or two I’ve heard a word here
and there which makes me think there’s trouble
brewing, bad enough, I’m afraid; maybe
to the losing of my place, though Mr. Surrey has said
nothing about it to me.”
Just here the little green door opened,
and the foreman whom we have before seen James
Given as the register had him entered, Jim Given as
every one knew him came in; no longer with
grimy face and flannel sleeves, but brave in all his
Sunday finery, and as handsome a b’hoy, they
said, at his engine-house, as any that ran with the
machine; having on his arm a young lady whom he apostrophized
as Sallie, as handsome and brave as he.
“Evening,” a
nod of the head accompanying. “Miss Howard’s
traps done?”
“I wish you wouldn’t say
‘traps,’ Jim,” corrected Sallie,
sotto voce: “it’s not proper.
It’s for a collar and pair of cuffs, Mrs. Franklin,”
she added aloud, putting down a little check.
“Not proper! goodness gracious
me! there spoke Snipe! Come, Sallie, you’ve
pranced round with that stuck-up jackanapes till you’re
getting spoiled entirely, so you are, and I scarcely
know you. Not proper, O my!”
“Spoiled, am I? Thank you,
sir, for the compliment! And you don’t know
me at all, don’t you? Very well,
then I’ll say good night, and leave; for it
wouldn’t be proper to take a young lady you don’t
know to the theatre, now, would it?
Good by!” making for the door.
“Now don’t, Sallie, please.”
“Don’t what?”
“Don’t talk that way.”
“Don’t yourself, more
like. You’re just as cross as cross can
be, and disagreeable, and hateful, all
because I happen to know there’s some other
man in the world besides yourself, and smile at him
now and then. ‘Don’t,’ indeed!”
“Come, Sallie, you’re
too hard on a fellow. It’s your own fault,
you know well enough, if you will be so handsome.
Now, if you were an ugly old girl, or I was certain
of you, I shouldn’t feel so bad, nor act so
neither. But when there’s a lot of hungry
chaps round, all gaping to gobble you up, and even
poor little Snipes trying to peck and bite at you,
and you won’t say ‘yes’ nor ‘no’
to me, how do you expect a man to keep cool?
Can’t do it, nohow, and you needn’t ask
it. Human nature’s human nature, I suppose,
and mine ain’t a quiet nor a patient one, not
by no manner of means. Come, Sallie, own up; you
wouldn’t like me so well as I hope you do if
it was, now, would you?”
Mrs. Franklin smiled, though she had
heard not a word of the lovers’ quarrel, as
she put a pin in the back of the ruffled collar which
Sallie had come to reclaim. A quarrel it had
evidently been, and as evidently the lady was mollified,
for she said, “Don’t be absurd, Jim!”
and Jim laughed and responded, “All right, Sallie,
you’re an angel! But come, we must hurry,
or the curtain’ll be up,” and
away went the dashing and handsome couple.
Abram, shutting in the shutters, and
fastening the door, sat down to a quiet evening’s
reading, while his mother knitted and sewed, an
evening the likeness of a thousand others of which
they never tired; for this mother and son, to whom
fate had dealt so hard a measure, upon whom the world
had so persistently frowned, were more to each other
than most mothers and sons whose lines had fallen
in pleasanter places, compensation, as
Mr. Emerson says, being the law of existence the world
over.