‘I say,’ cried Harold,
running up into his brother’s room, as soon as
he had put away the pony, ‘do you know whether
Paul is gone?’
‘It is always Paul, Paul!’
exclaimed Ellen; ‘I’m sure I hope he is.’
‘But why do you think he would be?’ asked
Alfred.
’Oh, didn’t you hear?
He knows no more than a baby about anything, and
so he turned the cows into Darnel meadow, and never
put the hurdle to stop the gap - never thinking
they could get down the bank; so the farmer found
them in the barley, and if he did not run out against
him downright shameful - though Paul up and
told him the truth, that ’twas nobody else that
did it.’
‘What, and turned him off?’
‘Well, that’s what I want
to know,’ said Harold, going on with his tea.
’Paul said to me he didn’t know how he
could stand the like of that - and yet he
didn’t like to be off - he’d taken
a fancy to the place, you see, and there’s me,
and there’s old Cæsar - and so he said
he wouldn’t go unless the farmer sent him off
when he came to be paid this evening - and
old Skinflint has got him so cheap, I don’t think
he will.’
‘For shame, Harold; don’t call names!’
‘Well, there he is,’ said
Alfred, pointing into the farm-yard, towards the hay-loft
door. This was over the cow-house in the gable
end; and in the dark opening sat Paul, his feet on
the top step of the ladder, and Cæsar, the yard-dog,
lying by his side, his white paws hanging down over
the edge, his sharp white muzzle and grey prick ears
turned towards his friend, and his eyes casting such
appealing looks, that he was getting more of the hunch
of bread than probably Paul could well spare.
‘How has he ever got the dog up the ladder?’
cried Harold.
‘Well!’ said Mrs. King, ‘I declare
he looks like a picture I have seen -
’Well, to be sure! who would
go for to draw a picture of the like of that!’
exclaimed Ellen, pausing as she put on her things to
carry home some work.
‘It was a picture of a Spanish
beggar-boy,’ said Mrs. King; ’and the
housekeeper at Castlefort used to say that the old
lord - that’s Lady Jane’s brother - had
given six hundred pounds for it.’
Ellen set out on her walk with a sound
of wonder quite beyond words. Six hundred pounds
for a picture like Paul Blackthorn! She did not
know that so poor and feeble are man’s attempts
to imitate the daily forms and colourings fresh from
the Divine Hand, that a likeness of the very commonest
sight, if represented with something of its true spirit
and life, wins a strange value, especially if the
work of the great master-artists of many years ago.
And even the painter Murillo himself,
though he might pleasantly recall on his canvas the
notion of the bright-eyed, olive-tinted lad, resting
after the toil of the day, could never have rendered
the free lazy smile on his face, nor the gleam of
the dog’s wistful eyes and quiver of its eager
ears, far less the glow of setting sunlight that shed
over all that warm, clear, ruddy light, so full of
rest and cheerfulness, beautifying, as it hid, so
many common things: the thatched roof of the barn,
the crested hayrick close beside it; the waggons,
all red and blue, that had brought it home, and were
led to rest, the horses drooping their meek heads
as they cooled their feet among the weed in the dark
pond; - the ducks moving, with low contented
quacks and quickly-wagging tails, in one long single
file to their evening foraging in the dewy meadows;
the spruce younger poultry pecking over the yard,
staying up a little later than their elders to enjoy
a few leavings in peace, free from the persécutions
of the cross old king of the dung-hill; - all
this left in shade, while the ruddy light had mounted
to the roofs, gave brilliance to every round tuft
of moss, and gleamed on the sober foliage of the old
spreading walnut tree.
‘Poor lad,’ said Mrs.
King, ’it seems a pity he should come to such
a rough life, when he seems to have got such an education!
I hope he is not run away from anywhere.’
‘You’re as bad as Ellen,
mother,’ cried Harold, ’who will have it
that he’s out of prison.’
‘No, not that,’ said Mrs.
King; ’but it did cross me whether he could
have run away from school, and if his friends were
in trouble for him.’
‘He never had any friends,’
said Harold, ’nor he never ran away. He’s
nothing but a foundling. They picked him up under
a blackthorn bush when he was a baby, with nothing
but a bit of an old plaid shawl round him.’
‘Did they ever know who he belonged to?’
asked Alfred.
’Never; nor he doesn’t
care if they don’t, for sure they could be no
credit to him; but they that found him put him into
the Union, and there an old woman, that they called
Granny Moll, took to him. She had but one eye,
he says; but, Mother, I do believe he never had another
friend like her, for he got to pulling up the bits
of grass, and was near crying when he said she was
dead and gone, and then he didn’t care for nothing.’
‘But who taught him about Cayenne?’ asked
Alfred.
’Oh, that was the Union School.
All the children went to school, and they had a terrible
sharp master, who used to cut them over the head quite
cruel, and was sent away at last for being such a savage;
but Paul being always there, and having nothing else
to do, you see, got on ever so far, and can work sums
in his head downright wonderful. There came an
inspector once who praised him up, and said he’d
recommend him to a place where he’d be taught
to be a school-master, if any one would pay the cost;
but the guardians wouldn’t hear of it at no price,
and were quite spiteful to find he was a good scholar,
for fear, I suppose, that he’d know more than
they.’
‘Hush, hush, Harold,’
said his mother; ’wait till you have to pay the
rates before you run out against the guardians.’
‘What do you mean, Mother?’
’Why, don’t you see, the
guardians have their duties to those who pay the rates,
as well as those that have parish pay. What they
have to do, is to mind that nobody starves, or the
like; and their means comes out of the rates, out
of my pocket, and the like of me, as well as my Lady’s
and all the rich. Well, whatever they might
like to do, it would not be serving us fairly to take
more than was a bare necessity from us, to send your
Master Paul and the like of him to a fine school.
’Tis for them to be just, and other folk to
be generous with what’s their own.’
‘Mother talks as if she was
a guardian herself!’ said Alfred in his funny
way.
‘Ah, the collector’s going
his rounds,’ responded Harold; and Mrs. King
laughed good-humouredly, always glad to see her sick
boy able to enjoy himself; but she sighed, saying,
’Ay, and ill can I spare it, though thanks be
to God that I’ve been as yet of them that pay,
and not of them that receive.’
‘Go on the parish! Mother,
what are you thinking of?’ cried both sons indignantly.
Poor Mrs. King was thinking of the
long winter, and the heavy doctor’s bill, and
feeling that, after all, suffering and humbling might
not be so very far off; but she was too cheerful and
full of trust to dwell on the thought, so she smiled
and said, ’I only said I was thankful, boys,
for the mercy that has kept us up. Go on now,
Harold; what about the boy?’
’Why, I don’t know that
he’d have gone if they had paid his expenses
ever so much,’ said Harold, ’for he’s
got a great spirit of his own, and wouldn’t
be beholden to any one, he said, now he could keep
himself - he’d had quite enough of
the parish and its keep; so he said he’d go on
the tramp till he got work; and they let him out of
the Union with just the clothes to his back, and a
shilling in his pocket. ’Twas the first
time he had ever been let out of bounds since he was
picked up under the tree; and he said no one ever
would guess the pleasure it was to have nobody to
order him here and there, and no bounds round him;
and he quite hated the notion of getting inside walls
again, as if it was a prison.’
‘Oh, I know! I can fancy
that!’ cried Alfred, raising himself and panting;
‘and where did he go first?’
’First, he only wanted to get
as far from Upperscote as ever he could, so he walked
on; I can’t say how he lived, but he didn’t
beg; he got a job here and a job there; but there
are not so many things he knows the knack of, having
been at school all his life. Once he took up
with a man that sold salt, to draw his cart for him,
but the man swore at him so awfully he could not bear
it, and beat him too, so he left him, and he had lived
terrible hard for about a month before he came here!
So you see, Mother, there’s not one bit of
harm in him; he’s a right good scholar, and never
says a bad word, nor has no love for drink; so you
won’t be like Ellen, and be always at me for
going near him?’
‘You’re getting a big
boy, Harold, and it is lonely for you,’ said
Mrs. King reluctantly; ’and if the lad is a
good lad I’d not cast up his misfortune against
him; but I must say, I should think better of him if
he would keep himself a little bit cleaner and more
decent, so as he could go to church.’
Harold made a very queer face, and
said, ’How is he to do it up in the hay-loft,
Mother? and he ha’n’t got enough to pay
for lodgings, nor for washing, nor to change.’
‘The river is cheap enough,’
said Alfred. ’Do you remember when we used
to bathe together, Harold, and go after the minnows?’
’Ay, but he don’t know
how; and then they did plague him so in the Union,
that he’s got to hate the very name of washing - scrubbing
them over and cutting their hair as if they were in
gaol.’
‘Poor boy! he is terribly forsaken,’
said Mrs. King compassionately.
‘You may say that!’ returned
Harold; ’why, he’s never so much as seen
how folks live at home, and wanted to know if you
were most like old Moll or the master of the Union!’
Alfred went into such a fit of laughter
as almost hurt him; but Mrs. King felt the more pitiful
and tender towards the poor deserted orphan, who could
not even understand what a mother was like, and the
tears came into her eyes, as she said, ’Well,
I’m glad he’s not a bad boy. I hope
he thinks of the Father and the Home that he has above.
I say, Harold, against next Sunday I’ll look
out Alfred’s oldest shirt for him to put on,
and you might bring me his to wash, only mind you soak
it well in the river first.’
Harold quite flushed with gratitude
for his mother’s kindness, for he knew it was
no small effort in one so scrupulously and delicately
clean, and with so much work on her hands; but Mrs.
King was one who did her alms by her trouble when
she had nothing else to give. Alfred smiled and
said he wondered what Ellen would say; and almost at
the same moment Harold shot down-stairs, and was presently
seen standing upon Paul’s ladder talking to
him; then Paul rose up as though to come down, and
there was much fun going on, as to how Cæsar was to
be got down; for, as every one knows, a dog can mount
a ladder far better than he can descend; and poor
Cæsar stretched out his white paw, looked down, seemed
to turn giddy, whined, and looked earnestly at his
friends till they took pity on him and lifted him
down between them, stretching out his legs to their
full length, like a live hand-barrow.
A few seconds more, and there was
a great trampling of feet, and then in walked Harold,
exclaiming, ‘Here he is!’ And there he
stood, shy and sheepish, with rusty black shag by
way of hair, keen dark beads of eyes, and very white
teeth; but all the rest, face, hands, jacket, trousers,
shoes, and all, of darker or lighter shades of olive-brown;
and as to the rents, one would be sorry to have to
count them; mending them would have been a thing impossible.
What a difference from the pure whiteness of everything
around Alfred! the soft pink of the flush of surprise
on his delicate cheek, and the wavy shine on his light
hair. A few months ago, Alfred would have been
as ready as his brother to take that sturdy hand,
marbled as it was with dirt, and would have heeded
all drawbacks quite as little; but sickness had changed
him much, and Paul was hardly beside his couch before
the colour fleeted away from his cheek, and his eye
turned to his mother in such distress, that she was
obliged to make a sign to Harold in such haste that
it looked like anger, and to mutter something about
his being taken worse. And while she was holding
the smelling salts to him, and sprinkling vinegar
over his couch, they heard the two boys’ voices
loud under the window, Paul saying he should never
come there again, and Harold something about people
being squeamish and fine.
It hurt Alfred, and he burst out,
almost crying, ’Mother! Mother, now isn’t
that too bad!’
‘It is very thoughtless,’
said Mrs. King sorrowfully; ’but you know everybody
has their feelings, Alfred, and I am sorry it happened
so.’
‘I’m sure I couldn’t
help it,’ said Alfred, as if his mother were
turning against him. ’Harold had better
have brought up the farmer’s whole stable at
once!’
’When you were well, you did
not think of such things any more than he does.’
Alfred grunted. He could not
believe that; and he did not feel gently when his
brother shewed any want of consideration; but his mother
thought he would only grow crosser by dwelling on
the unlucky subject, so she advised him to lie still
and rest before his being moved to bed, and went down
herself to finish some ironing.
Presently Alfred saw the Curate coming
over the bridge with quick long steps, and this brought
to his mind that he had been wishing to hear more
of the poor crippled boy. He watched eagerly,
and was pleased to see Mr. Cope turn in at the wicket,
and presently the tread upon the stairs was heard,
and the high head was lowered at the door.
’Good evening, Alfred; your
mother told me it would not disturb you if I came
up alone;’ and he began to inquire into his amusements
and occupations, till Alfred became quite at home
with him, and at ease, and ventured to ask, ‘If
you please, Sir, do you ever hear about Jem now?’
and as Mr. Cope looked puzzled, ’the boy you
told me of, Sir, that fell off the scaffold.’
’Oh, the boy at Liverpool!
No, I only saw him once when I was staying with my
cousin; but I will ask after him if you wish to hear.’
‘Thank you, Sir. I wanted
to know if he had been a bad boy.’
’That I cannot tell. Why
do you wish to know? Was it because he had such
an affliction?’
‘Yes, Sir.’
‘I don’t think that is
quite the way to look at troubles,’ said Mr.
Cope. ’I should think his accident had
been a great blessing to him, if it took him out of
temptation, and led him to think more of God.’
‘But isn’t it punishment?’
said Alfred, not able to get any farther; but Mr.
Cope felt that he was thinking of himself more than
of Jem.
‘All our sufferings in this
life come as punishment of sin,’ he said.
’If there had been no sin, there would have
been no pain; and whatever we have to bear in this
life is no more than is our due, whatever it may be.’
‘Every one is sinful,’
said Alfred slowly; ’but why have some more to
bear than others that may be much worse?’
’Did you never think it hard
to be kept strictly, and punished by your good mother?’
Alfred answered rather fretfully,
’But if it is good to be punished, why ain’t
all alike?’
’God in His infinite wisdom
sees the treatment that each particular nature needs.
Some can be better trained by joy, and some by grief;
some may be more likely to come right by being left
in active health; others, by being laid low, and having
their faults brought to mind.’
Alfred did not quite choose to take
this in, and his answer was half sulky:
‘Bad boys are quite well!’
’And a reckoning will be asked
of them. Do not think of other boys. Think
over your past life, of which I know nothing, and see
whether you can believe, after real looking into it,
that you have done nothing to deserve God’s
displeasure. There are other more comforting
ways of bringing joy out of pain; but of this I am
sure, that none will come home to us till we own from
the bottom of our heart, that whatever we suffer in
this life, we suffer most justly for the punishment
of our sins. God bless and help you, my poor
boy. Good night.’
With these words he went down-stairs,
for well he knew that while Alfred went on to justify
himself, no peace nor joy could come to him, and he
thought it best to leave the words to work in, praying
in his heart that they might do so, and help the boy
to humility and submission.
Finding Mrs. King in her kitchen,
he paused and said, ’We shall have a Confirmation
in the spring, Mrs. King; shall not you have some candidates
for me?’
’My daughter will be very glad,
thank you, Sir; she is near to seventeen, and a very
good girl to me. And Harold, he is but fourteen - would
he be old enough, Sir?’
’I believe the Bishop accepts
boys as young; and he might be started in life before
another opportunity.’
’Well, Sir, he shall come to
you, and I hope you won’t think him too idle
and thoughtless. He’s a good-hearted boy,
Sir; but it is a charge when a lad has no father to
check him.’
‘Indeed it is, Mrs. King; but
I think you must have done your best.’
‘I hope I have, Sir,’
she said sadly; ’I’ve tried, but my ability
is not much, and he is a lively lad, and I’m
sometimes afraid to be too strict with him.’
’If you have taught him to keep
himself in order, that’s the great thing, Mrs.
King; if he has sound principles, and honours you,
I would hope much for him.’
’And, Sir, that boy he has taken
a fancy to; he is a poor lost lad who never had a
home, but Harold says he has been well taught, and
he might take heed to you.’
’Thank you, Mrs. King; I will
certainly try to speak to him. You said nothing
of Alfred; do you think he will not be well enough?’
‘Ah! Sir,’ she said
in her low subdued voice, ’my mind misgives me
that it is not for Confirmation that you will be preparing
him.’
Mr. Cope started. He had seen
little of illness, and had not thought of this.
’Indeed! does the doctor think so ill of him?
Do not these cases often partially recover?’
‘I don’t know, Sir; Mr.
Blunt does not give much account of him,’ and
her voice grew lower and lower; ’I’ve
seen that look in his father’s and his brother’s
face.’
She hid her face in her handkerchief
as if overpowered, but looked up with the meek look
of resignation, as Mr. Cope said in a broken voice,
’I had not expected - you had been
much tried.’
‘Yes, Sir. The Will of
the Lord be done,’ she said, as if willing to
turn aside from the dark side of the sorrow that lay
in wait for her; ’but I’m thankful you
are come to help my poor boy now - he frets
over his trouble, as is natural, and I’m afraid
he should offend, and I’m no scholar to know
how to help him.’
‘You can help him by what is
better than scholarship,’ said Mr. Cope; and
he shook her hand warmly, and went away, feeling what
a difference there was in the ways of meeting affliction.