‘Goodness! If ever I did
see such a pig!’ said Ellen King, as she mounted
the stairs. ‘I wouldn’t touch him
with a pair of tongs!’
‘Who?’ said a voice from the bedroom.
’Why, that tramper who has just
been in to buy a loaf! He is a perfect pig,
I declare! I only wonder you did not find of
him up here! The police ought to hinder such
folk from coming into decent people’s shops!
There, you may see him now!’
‘Is that he upon the bridge - that
chap about the size of our Harold?’
’Yes. Did you ever see
such a figure? His clothes aren’t good
enough for a scare-crow - and the dirt, you
can’t see that from here, but you might sow
radishes in it!’
’Oh, he’s swinging on
the rail, just as I used to do. Put me down,
Nelly; I don’t want to see any more.’
And the eyes filled with tears; there was a working
about the thin cheeks and the white lips, and a long
sigh came out at last, ‘Oh, if I was but like
him!’
‘Like him! I’d wish
something else before I wished that,’ said Ellen.
‘Don’t think about it, Alfred dear; here
are Miss Jane’s pictures.’
‘I don’t want the pictures,’
said Alfred wearily, as he laid his head down on his
white pillow, and shut his eyes because they were hot
with tears.
Ellen looked at him very sadly, and
the feeling in her own mind was, that he was right,
and nothing could make up for the health and strength
that she knew her mother feared would never return
to him.
There he lay, the fair hair hanging
round the white brow with the furrows of pain in it,
the purple-veined lids closed over the great bright
blue eyes, the long fingers hanging limp and delicate
as a lady’s, the limbs stretched helplessly
on the couch, whither it cost him so much pain to be
daily moved. Who would have thought, that not
six months ago that poor cripple was the merriest
and most active boy in the parish?
The room was not a sad-looking one.
There were spotless white dimity curtains round the
lattice window; and the little bed, and the walnut
of the great chest, and of the doors of the press-bed
on which Alfred lay, shone with dark and pale grainings.
There was a carpet on the floor, and the chairs had
chintz cushions; the walls were as white as snow, and
there were pretty china ornaments on the mantel-piece,
many little pictures hanging upon the walls, and quite
a shelf of books upon the white cloth, laid so carefully
on the top of the drawers. A little table beside
Alfred held a glass with a few flowers, a cup with
some toast and water, a volume of the ‘Swiss
Family Robinson;’ and a large book of prints
of animals was on a chair where he could reach it.
A larger table was covered with needle-work,
shreds of lining, scissors, tapes, and Ellen’s
red work-box; and she herself sat beside it, a very
nice-looking girl of about seventeen, tall and slim,
her lilac dress and white collar fitting beautifully,
her black apron sitting nicely to her trim waist,
and her light hair shining, like the newly-wound silk
of the silk-worm, round her pleasant face; where the
large, clear, well-opened blue eyes, and the contrast
of white and red on the cheek, were a good deal like
poor Alfred’s, and gave an air of delicacy.
Their father had been, as their mother
said, ’the handsomest coachman who ever drove
to St. James’s;’ but he had driven thither
once too often; he had caught his death of cold one
bitter day when Lady Jane Selby was obliged to go
to a drawing-room, and had gone off in a deep decline
fourteen years ago, when the youngest of his five children
was not six weeks old.
The Selby family were very kind to
Mrs. King, who, besides her husband’s claims
on them, had been once in service there; and moreover,
had nursed Miss Jane, the little heiress, Ellen’s
foster-sister. By their help she had been able
to use her husband’s savings in setting up a
small shop, where she sold tea, tobacco and snuff,
tape, cottons, and such little matters, besides capital
bread of her own baking, and various sweet-meats,
the best to the taste of her own cooking, the prettiest
to the eye brought from Elbury. Oranges too,
and apples, shewed their yellow or rosy cheeks at
her window in their season; and there was sometimes
a side of bacon, displaying under the brown coat the
delicate pink stripes bordering the white fat.
Of late years one pane of her window had been fitted
up with a wooden box, with a slit in it on the outside,
and a whole region round it taken up with printed sheets
of paper about ’Mails to Gothenburg, - Weekly
Post to Vancouver’s Island’ - and
all sorts of places to which the Friarswood people
never thought of writing.
Altogether, she throve very well;
and she was a good woman, whom every one respected
for the pains she took to bring up her children well.
The eldest, Charles, had died of consumption soon
after his father, and there had been much fear for
his sister Matilda; but Lady Jane had contrived to
have her taken as maid to a lady who usually spent
the winter abroad, and the warm climate had strengthened
her health. She was not often at Friarswood;
but when she came she looked and spoke like a lady - all
the more so as she gave herself no airs, but was quite
simple and humble, for she was a very good right-minded
young woman, and exceedingly fond of her home and
her good mother.
Ellen would have liked to copy Matilda
in everything; and as a first step, she went for a
year to a dress-maker; but just as this was over,
Alfred’s illness had begun; and as he wanted
constant care and attendance, it was thought better
that she should take in work at home. Indeed
Alfred was such a darling of hers, that she could not
have endured to go away and leave him so ill.
Alfred had been a most lively, joyous
boy, with higher spirits than he quite knew what to
do with, all fun and good-humour, and yet very troublesome
and provoking. He and his brother Harold were
the monkeys of the school, and really seemed sometimes
as if they could not sit still, nor hinder
themselves from making faces, and playing tricks; but
that was the worst of them - they never told
untruths, never did anything mean or unfair, and could
always be made sorry when they had been in fault.
Their old school-mistress liked them in spite of
all the plague they gave her; and they liked her too,
though she had tried upon them every punishment she
could devise.
Little Miss Jane, the orphan whom
the Colonel and Mrs. Selby had left to be brought
up by her grandmother, had a great fancy that Alfred
should be a page; and as she generally had her own
way, he went up to the Grange when he was about thirteen
years old, and put on a suit thickly sown with buttons.
But ere the gloss of his new jacket had begun to wear
off, he had broken four wine-glasses, three cups,
and a decanter, all from not knowing where he was
going; he had put sugar instead of salt into the salt-cellars
at the housekeeper’s dining-table, that he might
see what she would say; and he had been caught dressing
up Miss Jane’s Skye terrier in one of the butler’s
clean cravats; so, though Puck, the aforesaid terrier,
liked him better than any other person, Miss Jane not
excepted, a regular complaint went up of him to my
Lady, and he was sent home. He was abashed,
and sorry to have vexed mother and disappointed Miss
Jane; but somehow he could not be unhappy when he had
Harold to play with him again, and he could halloo
as loud as they pleased, and stamp about in the garden,
instead of being always in mind to walk softly.
There was the pony too! A new
arrangement had just been made, that the Friarswood
letters should be fetched from Elbury every morning,
and then left at the various houses of the large straggling
district that depended on that post-office.
All letters from thence must be in the post before
five o’clock, at which time they were to be sent
in to Elbury. The post-master at Elbury asked
if Mrs. King’s sons could undertake this; and
accordingly she made a great effort, and bought a small
shaggy forest pony, whom the boys called ‘Peggy,’
and loved not much less than their sisters.
It was all very well in the summer
to take those two rides in the cool of the morning
and evening; but when winter came on, and Alfred had
to start for Elbury in the tardy dawn of a frosty
morning, or still worse, in the gloom of a wet one,
he did not like it at all. He used to ride in
looking blue and purple with the chill; and though
he went as close to the fire as possible, and steamed
like the tea-kettle while he ate his breakfast and
his mother sorted the letters, he had not time to warm
himself thoroughly before he had to ride off to leave
them - two miles further altogether; for
besides the bag for the Grange, and all the letters
for the Rectory, and for the farmers, there was a young
gentlemen’s school at a great old lonely house,
called Ragglesford, at the end of a very long dreary
lane; and many a day Alfred would have given something
if those boys’ relations would only have been
so good as, with one consent, to leave them without
letters.
It would not have mattered if Alfred
had been a stouter boy; but his mother had always
thought he had his poor father’s constitution,
and therefore wished him to be more in the house;
but his idleness had prevented his keeping any such
place. It might have been the cold and wet,
or, as Alfred thought, it might have been the strain
he gave himself one day when he was sliding on the
ice and had a fall; but one morning he came in from
Elbury very pale, and hobbling, as he said his hip
hurt him so much, that Harold must take the letters
round for him.
Harold took them that morning, and
for many another morning and evening besides; while
poor Alfred came from sitting by the fire to being
a prisoner up-stairs, only moved now and then from
his own bed to lie outside that of his mother, when
he could bear it. The doctor came, and did his
best; but the disease had thrown itself into the hip
joint, and it was but too plain that Alfred must be
a great sufferer for a long time, and perhaps a cripple
for life. But how long might this life be?
His mother dared not think. Alfred himself, poor
boy, was always trying with his whole might to believe
himself getting better; and Ellen and Harold always
fancied him so, when he was not very bad indeed; but
for the last fortnight he had been decidedly worse,
and his heart and hopes were sinking, though he would
not own it to himself, and that and the pain made
his spirits fail so, that he had been more inclined
to be fretful than any time since his illness had
begun.
His view from the window was a pleasant
one; and when he was pretty well, afforded him much
amusement. The house stood in a neat garden,
with green railings between it and the road, over
which Alfred could see every one who came and went
towards Elbury, and all who had business at the post-office,
or at Farmer Shepherd’s. Opposite was the
farm-yard; and if nothing else was going on, there
were always cocks and hens, ducks and turkeys, pigs,
cows, or horses, to be seen there; and the cow-milking,
or the taking the horses down to the water, the pig-feeding,
and the like, were a daily amusement. Sloping
down from the farm-yard, the ground led to the river,
a smooth clear stream, where the white ducks looked
very pretty, swimming, diving, and ‘standing
tail upwards;’ and there was a high-arched bridge
over it, where Alfred could get a good view of the
carriages that chanced to come by, and had lately seen
all the young gentlemen of Ragglesford going home
for the summer holidays, making such a whooping and
hurrahing, that the place rang again; and beyond, there
were beautiful green meadows, with a straight path
through them, leading to a stile; and beyond that,
woods rose up, and there was a little glimpse of a
stately white house peeping through them. Hay-making
was going on merrily in the field, under the bright
summer sun, and the air was full of the sweet smell
of the grass, but there was something sultry and oppressive
to the poor boy’s feelings; and when he remembered
how Farmer Shepherd had called him to lend a hand
last year, and how happy he had been tossing the hay,
and loading the waggon, a sad sick feeling crept over
him; and so it was that the tears rose in his eyes,
and he made his sister lay him back on the pillow,
for he did not wish to see any more.
Ellen worked and thought, and wanted
to entertain him, but could not think how. Presently
she burst out, however, ’Oh, Alfred! there’s
Harold coming running back! There he is, jumping
over that hay-cock - not touched the ground
once - another - oh! there’s
Farmer Shepherd coming after him!’
‘Hold your tongue,’ muttered
Alfred moodily, as if each of her words gave him unbearable
pain; and he hid his face in the pillow.
Ellen kept silence for ten minutes,
and then broke forth again, ’Now then, Alfred,
you will be glad! There’s Miss Jane
getting over the stile.’
‘I don’t want Miss Jane,’
grumbled Alfred; and as Ellen sprang up and began
smoothing his coverings, collecting her scraps, and
tidying the room, already so neat, he growled again,
‘What a racket you keep!’
’There, won’t you be raised
up to see her? She does look so pretty in her
new pink muslin, with a double skirt, and her little
hat and feather, that came from London; and there’s
Puck poking in the hay - he’s looking
for a mouse! And she’s showering the hay
over him with her parasol! Oh, look, Alfred!’
and she was going to lift him up, but he only murmured
a cross ‘Can’t you be quiet?’ and
she let him alone, but went on talking: ’Ah,
there’s Puck’s little tail wriggling out - hinder-end
foremost - here he comes - they
are touching their hats to her now, the farmer and
all, and she nods just like a little queen!
She’s got her basket, Alfred. I wonder
what she has for you in it! Oh dear, there’s
that strange boy on the bridge! She won’t
like that.’
‘Why, what would he do to her?
He won’t bite her,’ said Alfred.
’Oh, if he spoke to her, or
begged of her, she’d be so frightened!
There, he looked at her, and she gave such a start.
You little vagabond! I’d like to -
’Stuff! what could he do to
her, with all the hay-field and Farmer Shepherd there
to take care of her? What a fuss you do make!’
said poor Alfred, who was far too miserable just then
to agree with any one, though at almost any other
time he would have longed to knock down any strange
boy who did but dare to pass Miss Selby without touching
his cap; and her visits were in general the very light
of his life.
They were considered a great favour;
for though old Lady Jane Selby was a good, kind-hearted
person, still she had her fancies, and she kept her
young grand-daughter like some small jewel, as a thing
to be folded up in a case, and never trusted in common.
She was afraid to allow her to go about the village,
or into the school and cottages, always fancying she
might be made ill, or meet with some harm; but Mrs.
King being an old servant, whom she knew so well,
and the way lying across only two meadows beyond Friarswood
Park, the little pet was allowed to go so far to visit
her foster-mother, and bring whatever she could devise
to cheer the poor sick boy.
Miss Jane, though of the same age
as Ellen, and of course with a great deal more learning
and accomplishment, had been so little used to help
herself, or to manage anything, that she was like one
much younger. The sight of the rough stranger
on the bridge was really startling to her, and she
came across the road and garden as fast as she could
without a run; and the first thing the brother and
sister heard, was her voice saying rather out of breath
and fluttered, ’Oh, what a horrid-looking boy!’
Seeing that Mrs. King was serving
some one in the shop, she only nodded to her, and
came straight up-stairs. Alfred raised up his
head, and beheld the little fairy through the open
door, first the head, and the smiling little face
and slight figure in the fresh summer dress.
Miss Jane was not thought very pretty
by strangers; but that dainty little person, and sweet
sunny eyes and merry smile, and shy, kind, gracious
ways, were perfect in the eyes of her grandmamma and
of Mrs. King and her children, if of nobody else.
Alfred, in his present dismal state, only felt vexed
at a fresh person coming up to worry him, and make
a talking; especially one whose presence was a restraint,
so that he could not turn about and make cross answers
at his will.
‘Well, Alfred, how are you to-day?’
said the sweet gay voice, a little subdued.
‘Better, Ma’am, thank
you,’ said Alfred, who always called himself
better, whatever he felt; but his voice told the truth
better than his words.
‘He’s had a very bad night,
Miss Jane,’ said his sister; ’no sleep
at all since two o’clock, and he is so low to-day,
that I don’t know what to do with him.’
Alfred hated nothing so much as to
hear that he was low, for it meant that he was cross.
‘Poor Alfred!’ said the
young lady kindly. ’Was it pain that kept
you awake?’
‘No, Ma’am - not so much - ’
said the boy.
Miss Jane saw he looked very sad,
and hoped to cheer him by opening her basket.
’I’ve brought you a new book, Alfred.
It is “The Cherry-stones.” Have
you finished the last?’
‘No, Ma’am.’
‘Did you like it?’
‘Yes, Ma’am.’
But it was a very matter-of-course sort of Yes, and
disappointed Miss
Jane, who thought he would have been charmed with
the ’Swiss Family
Robinson.’
Ellen spoke: ’Oh yes, Alfred,
you know you did like it. I heard you laughing
to yourself at Ernest and the shell of soup.
And Harold reads that; and ‘tis so seldom he
will look at a book.’
Jane did not like this quite as well
as if Alfred had spoken up more; but she dived into
her basket again, and brought out a neat little packet
of green leaves, with some strawberries done up in
it, and giving a little smile, she made sure that
it would be acceptable.
Ellen thanked vehemently, and Alfred
gave feeble thanks; but, unluckily, he had so set
his mind upon raspberries, that he could not enjoy
the thought of anything else. It was a sickly
distaste for everything, and Miss Selby saw that he
was not as much pleased as she meant him to be; she
looked at him wistfully, and, half grieved, half impatient,
she longed to know what he would really like, or if
he were positively ungrateful. She was very
young, and did not know whether it was by his fault
or her mistake that she had failed to satisfy him.
Puck had raced up after her, and had
come poking and snuffling round Alfred. She
would have called him away lest he should be too much
for one so weak, but she saw Alfred really did enjoy
this: his hand was in the long rough coat, and
he was whispering, ‘Poor Puck,’ and ’Good
little doggie;’ and the little hairy rummaging
creature, with the bright black beads of eyes gleaming
out from under his shaggy hair, was doing him more
good than her sense and kindness, or Ellen’s
either.
She turned to the window, and said
to Ellen, ’What a wild-looking lad that is on
the bridge!’
‘Yes, Miss Jane,’ said
Ellen; ‘I was quite afraid he would frighten
you.’
‘Well, I was surprised,’
said Jane; ’I was afraid he might speak to me;
but then I knew I was too near friends for harm to
come to me;’ and she laughed at her own fears.
’How ragged and wretched he looks! Has
he been begging?’
’No, Miss Jane; he came into
the shop, and bought some bread. He paid for
it honestly; but I never did see any one so dirty.
And there’s Alfred wishing to be like him.
I knew you would tell him it is quite wicked, Miss
Jane.’
It is not right, I suppose, to wish
to be anything but what we are,’ said Jane,
rather puzzled by the appeal; ’and perhaps that
poor beggar-boy would only like to have a nice room,
and kind mother and sister, like you, Alfred.’
‘I don’t say anything
against them!’ cried the boy vehemently; ’but - but - I’d
give anything - anything in the world - to
be able to run about again in the hay-field!
No, don’t talk to me, Ellen, I say - I
hate them all when I see them there, and I forced
to lie here! I wish the sun would never shine!’
He hid his eyes and ears in the pillow,
as if he never wished to see the light again, and
would hear nothing. The two girls both stood
trembling. Ellen looked at Miss Selby, and she
felt that she must say something. But what could
she say?
With tears in her eyes she laid hold
of Alfred’s thin hand and tried to speak, choked
by tears. ’Dear Alfred, don’t say
such dreadful things. You know we are all so
sorry for you; but God sent it.’
Alfred gave a groan of utter distress,
as if it were no consolation.
‘And - and things come
to do us good,’ continued Miss Jane, the tears
starting to her cheeks.
‘I don’t know what good
it can do me to lie here!’ cried Alfred.
‘Oh, but, Alfred, it must.’
‘I tell you,’ exclaimed
the poor boy, forgetting his manners, so that Ellen
stood dismayed, ’it does not do me good!
I didn’t use to hate Harold, nor to hate everybody.’
‘To hate Harold!’ said Jane faintly.
‘Ay,’ said Alfred, ’when
I hear him whooping about like mad, and jumping and
leaping, and going on like I used to do, and never
shall again.’
The tears came thick and fast, and
perhaps they did him good.
‘But, Alfred,’ said Jane,
trying to puzzle into the right thing, ’sometimes
things are sent to punish us, and then we ought to
submit quietly.’
‘I don’t know what I’ve
done, then,’ he cried angrily. ’There
have been many worse than I any day, that are well
enough now.’
‘Oh, Alfred, it is not who is
worse, but what one is oneself,’ said Jane.
Alfred grunted.
‘I wish I knew how to help you,’
she said earnestly; ’it is so very sad and hard;
and I dare say I should be just as bad myself if I
were as ill; but do, pray, Alfred, try to think that
nobody sent it but God, and that He must know best.’
Alfred did not seem to take in much
comfort, and Jane did not believe she was putting
it rightly; but it was time for her to go home, so
she said anxiously, ‘Good-bye, Alfred; I hope
you’ll be better next time - and - and - ’
She bent down and spoke in a very frightened whisper,
’You know when we go to church, we pray you
may have patience under your sufferings.’
Then she sprang away, as if ashamed
of the sound of her own words; but as she was taking
up her basket and wishing Ellen good-bye, she saw that
the strange lad had moved nearer the house, and timid
little thing as she was, she took out a sixpence,
and said, ’Do give him that, and ask him to
go away.’
Ellen had no very great fancy for
facing the enemy herself, but she made no objection;
and looking down-stairs, she saw her brother Harold
waiting while his mother stamped the letters, and
she called to him, and sent him out to the boy.
He came back in a few moments so much
amazed, that she could see the whites all round his
eyes.
’He won’t have it!
He’s a rum one that! He says he’s
no beggar, and that if the young lady would give him
work, he’d thank her; but he wants none of her
money, and he’ll stand where he chooses!’
‘Why didn’t you lick him?’
hallooed out Alfred’s voice from his bed.
’Oh! if I -
‘Nonsense, Alfred!’ cried
Miss Jane, frightened into spirit; ’stand still,
Harold! I don’t mind him.’
And she put up her parasol, and walked
straight out at the house door as bold as a little
lioness, going on without looking to the right or left.
‘If - ’
began Harold, clenching his fists - and Alfred
raised himself upon his bed with flashing eyes to
watch, as the boy had moved nearer, and looked for
a moment as if he were going to grin, or say something
impudent; but the quiet childish form stepping on so
simply and steadily seemed to disarm him, and he shrunk
back, left her to trip across the road unmolested,
and stood leaning over the rail of the bridge, gazing
after her as she crossed the hay-field.
Harold rode off with the letters;
and Alfred lay gazing, and wondering what that stranger
could be, counting the holes in his garments, and
trying to guess at his history.
One good thing was, that Alfred was
so much carried out of himself, that he was cheerful
all the evening.