“How all occasions do
inform against me!”
Shakspeare.
Rosamond Evering was one of those
indiscreet mischievous girls who are in the daily
practice of repeating every thing they see and hear;
particularly all the unpleasant remarks, and unfavourable
opinions that happen to be unguardedly expressed in
their presence. She did not content herself with
relating only as much as she actually saw and heard;
but (as is always the case with tell-tales) she dealt
greatly in exaggeration, and her stories never failed
to exceed the reality in all their worst points.
This unamiable and dangerous propensity
of their daughter, gave great pain to Mr. and Mrs.
Evering, who tried in vain to correct it. They
represented to her that as parents cannot be constantly
on their guard in presence of their own family, and
that as grown persons do not always remember
or observe when children are in the room, many things
are inadvertently said, which, though of little consequence
as long as they remain unknown, may be of great and
unfortunate importance if disclosed and exaggerated.
And as children are incapable of forming an accurate
judgment as to what may be told with safety, or what
ought to be kept secret, their wisest and most proper
course is to repeat no remarks and to relate no conversations
whatever; but more particularly those which they may
chance to hear from persons older than themselves.
But neither reproof nor punishment
seemed to make any lasting impression on Rosamond
Evering; and scarce a day passed that she did not exhibit
some vexatious specimen of her besetting sin.
A few instances will suffice.
Mrs. Evering had a very excellent
cook, a black woman, that had lived with her more
than six years, and whom she considered an invaluable
servant. One morning, when Venus (for that was
her name) had just left the parlour, after receiving
her orders for dinner, Mr. Evering remarked, in a
low voice, to his lady, “Certainly, the name
of Venus was never so unsuitably bestowed as on this
poor woman. I have rarely seen a negro whose
face had a greater resemblance to that of a baboon.”
In this remark Mrs. Evering acquiesced.
Rosamond was at this time sitting
in a corner, looking over her lessons. Just before
she went to school, her mother thought of a change
in the preparations for dinner, and not wishing to
give the old cook the trouble of coming up from the
kitchen a second time, she desired Rosamond to go
down and tell Venus she would have the turkey boiled
rather than roasted. Rosamond went down and delivered
the message; but fixing her eyes on the cook’s
face, she thought she had never seen Venus look so
ugly, and she said to her, “Venus, my father
thinks you are the ugliest negro he ever saw (even
for a negro) and he says your face is just like
a monkey’s, only worse.” Having made
this agreeable communication, Rosamond went out of
the kitchen and departed for school, leaving Venus
speechless with anger and astonishment; for though
in other respects a very good woman, she was extremely
vain, and had always considered herself among the
handsomest of her race.
As soon as Venus found herself able
to speak, she went into the parlour with her eyes
flashing fire, and told Mrs. Evering that she must
provide herself with another cook, as she was determined
to leave her that very day. Mrs. Evering with
much surprise inquired the reason, and Venus replied,
that “she would not live in any house where she
was called an ugly neger, the ugliest even of all
negers, and likened to a brute beast.”
Mrs. Evering, who had forgotten her
husband’s remark, asked the cook what she meant;
and Venus explained by repeating all that Rosamond
had told her. Mrs. Evering endeavoured to pacify
her, but in vain. Ignorant people when once offended
are very difficult to appease, and Venus had been
hurt on the tenderest point. She would listen
to nothing that Mrs. Evering could urge to induce
her to stay; but exclaimed in a high passion, “I
never was called a neger before. I am not a neger
but a coloured woman. I was born and raised on
a great plantation in Virginny where there was hundreds
of slaves, all among the Randolphs and sich like
quality, and nobody never called me a neger. And
now when I’m free, and come here to Philadelphy
where nobody has no servants without they hires them,
lo! and behold, I’m called a neger, and an ugly
neger too, and a neger-monkey besides. No, no,
I’ll not stay; and Nancy the chambermaid may
do the cooking till you get somebody else. And
a pretty way she’ll do it in. I’m
glad I shan’t be here to eat Nancy’s cooking.
I never know’d any white trash that could
cook; much less Irish.”
Finally, Mrs. Evering was obliged
to give Venus her wages and let here go at once, as
she protested “she would never eat another meal’s
victuals in the house.”
When Rosamond came from school, her
mother reprimanded her severely; and when her father
heard of the mischief she had caused, he would not
permit her to accompany the family to a concert that
evening, as she had been promised the day before.
After the departure of Venus, it was
a long time before Mrs. Evering could suit herself
with a cook. Several were tried in succession
but none were good; and to Rosamond’s great
regret, they were never able to get a woman whose
skill in making pies, and puddings, and cakes, bore
any comparison to that of Venus.
Still this lesson did not cure her
fault; she still told tales, and still suffered in
consequence.
One day, Mrs. Renwick, a lady who
lived next door, sent a message to Mrs. Evering, requesting
that she would lend her a pot of red currant jelly,
as she was quite out of that article, of which she
shortly intended making a supply; and as Mr. Renwick
had invited some company to dinner, some jelly would
be wanted to eat with the canvass-back ducks.
Mrs. Evering lent her a pot, and as
soon as currants were in the market, Mrs. Renwick
sent her in return some jelly of her own making.
It was not nice, and Mrs. Evering observed to her
sister, Mrs. Norwood, who happened to be present:
“I do not think Mrs. Renwick has been very successful
with her jelly. It is so thin it is almost liquid,
and so dark that it looks as if made of black currants.
I suspect she has boiled it too long, and has not
put in sugar enough.”
Next day as they were coming from
school together, Mrs. Renwick’s little daughter,
Marianne, said to Rosamond, “My mother made some
currant jelly on Tuesday, and yesterday when it was
cold, she gave me a whole saucer-full to eat with
my slice of bread, at twelve o’clock.”
“She might well give you a whole
saucer-full,” replied Rosamond, “for I
do not think it was worth saving for any better purpose.
She sent in a pot to my mother, in return for some
she had borrowed of her. Now my mother’s
jelly is always so firm that you might cut it with
a knife, and so bright and sparkling that it dazzles
your eyes. I heard her tell my aunt Norwood,
that Mrs. Renwick’s jelly was the worst she had
ever seen, that it was as thin and sour as plain currant
juice, and dark and dirty-looking beside.”
Marianne Renwick was much displeased
at the disrespectful manner in which her mother’s
jelly had been spoken of. She let go Rosamond’s
arm, and turning up another street, walked home by
herself, swelling with resentment, and told her mother
all that had passed.
Mrs. Renwick was a lady very easily
offended; and she always signified her anger as soon
as she felt it. She immediately sent to a confectioner’s
for a pot of the very best red currant jelly, and had
it carried into Mrs. Evering; accompanied by a note
implying “that she regretted to hear that her
jelly had not been so fortunate as to meet the approbation
of so competent a judge of sweetmeats; but that, as
she would be sorry if Mrs. Evering should lose any
thing by it, she had sent her a pot made by one of
the very first confectioners in the city; and she
hoped it would be found an ample equivalent for that
she had most unhappily borrowed.”
Rosamond was in the parlour when the
note and the pot of jelly arrived, and she coloured
and looked so confused, that her mother immediately
guessed she had been the cause of Mrs. Renwick’s
having taken offence. Reproof had no effect on
Rosamond except for a moment; but that she might frequently
be reminded of her fault, she was not allowed to taste
currant jelly till the next summer. Mrs. Renwick,
however, remained implacable; and could never be prevailed
on to visit Mrs. Evering again.
Mr. Evering had an aunt, the widow
of a western merchant who had made a large fortune
in business. After the death of her husband, Mrs.
Marbury had removed to Philadelphia, which was her
native place; and, being very plain in her habits
and ideas, she had bought a small neat house in a
retired street, where she kept but two servants, and
expended more money in presents to her relations,
than in any superfluities for herself. She generally
went to a place of worship in her own neighbourhood;
but hearing that a very celebrated minister from Boston
was to preach one Sunday in the church to which her
nephew’s family belonged, she sent a message
to Mr. Evering requesting that he would call for her
with his carriage and give her a seat in his pew,
that she might have an opportunity of hearing this
distinguished stranger. Mr. and Mrs. Evering
were both out when the message arrived, so that no
answer could be sent till their return; which was
not till evening.
It was dusk, and the lamps not being
yet lighted, they did not perceive that Rosamond was
lying on an ottoman in one of the recesses, or they
would not have spoken as they did while she was present.
“I am very sorry,” said
Mrs. Evering, “that Mrs. Marbury has fixed on
to-morrow for going to church with us, for I intended
asking Miss Leeson, who will be delighted to have
an opportunity of hearing this celebrated preacher;
and his discourse, however excellent, will be lost
on aunt Marbury, who always falls asleep soon after
she has heard the text, that being all she ever remembers
of a sermon. So that in reality, one preacher
is the same to her as another; though she goes regularly
to church twice a-day, and never could be convinced
that she sleeps half the time. And then she is
unfortunately so fat, and takes up so much room in
the pew.”
“My dear,” said Mr. Evering,
“we must show Mrs. Marbury as much kindness
and civility as we possibly can, for she is a most
excellent woman, is very liberal to us now, and at
her death will undoubtedly leave us the greatest part
of her large property. Even if we had no personal
regard for the good old lady, it would be very impolitic
in us to offend her.”
When the room was lighted, Mr. and
Mrs. Evering saw Rosamond on the ottoman, and felt
so much uneasiness at her having heard their conversation,
that they thought it best to caution her against repeating
it. “Oh!” exclaimed Rosamond, “do
you think I would be so wicked as to tell aunt Marbury
what you have just been saying about her?”
“You have often,” said
Mrs. Evering, “told things almost as improper
to be repeated.”
“But never with any bad intention,”
replied Rosamond, “I am sure my feelings are
always good.”
“I know not,” said her
father, “how it is possible that people with
good feelings and good intentions can take pleasure
in repeating whatever they hear to a person’s
disadvantage, and above all to the very object of
the unfavourable remarks. Beside the cruelty of
causing them poignant and unnecessary pain, and wounding
their self-love, there is the wickedness of embroiling
them with their friends; or at least destroying their
confidence, and imbittering their hearts. And
all these consequences have frequently ensued from
the tattling of a tell-tale child.”
The next morning was Saturday; and
the servants being all very busy, Mrs. Evering desired
Rosamond to stop, as she returned from taking her
music-lesson, and inform her aunt Marbury that they
would be happy to accommodate her with a seat in their
pew on Sunday morning; and that they would call for
her in the carriage, as she had requested.
“Now, Rosamond,” said
Mrs. Evering, “can I trust you? Will you,
for once, be discreet, and refrain from repeating
to your aunt Marbury, what you unluckily overheard
last evening?”
“O! indeed, dear mother,”
replied Rosamond, “bad as you think me, I am
not quite wicked enough for that.”
“But I fear the force of habit,”
said Mrs. Evering. “I believe I had better
send Peter with the message.”
“No,” answered Rosamond,
“I am anxious to retrieve my character.
Rely on me this once; and you will see how prudent
and honourable I can be.”
On her way home from her music-lesson,
Rosamond stopped at her aunt’s, and delivered
the message, exactly as it had been given to her.
While Rosamond was eating a piece
of the nice plum-cake that her aunt always kept in
the house for the gratification of her young visitors,
Mrs. Marbury said to her, “This weather is quite
too warm for the season; should it continue, it will
be very oppressive in church to-morrow.”
“No doubt,” answered Rosamond,
“and most probably our church will be
crowded in every part. I wonder, aunt, that you
are anxious to go, as you certainly must be,
when you sent so long beforehand to engage a seat
in our pew.”
“In truth,” returned Mrs.
Marbury, “I am willing to suffer some inconvenience
from the heat, for the sake of hearing this great
preacher.”
“But, aunt,” said Rosamond,
“if you get sleepy, you will not hear him after
all.”
“O!” replied Mrs. Marbury,
“I am never sleepy in church. I am always
so attentive that I never feel in the least drowsy.”
“O! indeed, aunt, I have often
seen you asleep in church,” exclaimed Rosamond.
“Impossible, Rosamond, impossible,”
cried Mrs. Marbury. “You are entirely mistaken.
It must have been merely your own imagination.”
“Why, dear aunt,” said
Rosamond, “my father and mother, as well as
myself, have all seen you asleep in church. If
it was not true, the whole family could not imagine
it. It was but last evening, I heard my mother
say, that she wished you had not taken a notion to
go to church with us on Sunday, as it would prevent
her from inviting Miss Leeson, whom she likes far
better than you. She said, beside, that fat people
take up so much room, that they are always encumbrances
every where; and that there was no use at all in your
going to church, as you slept soundly all the time
you were there, and even breathed so hard as to disturb
the congregation.”
“And what did your father say
to all this?” asked Mrs. Marbury, turning very
pale, and looking much shocked and mortified.
“My father,” answered
Rosamond, “said that, on account of your money,
we must endure you, and all the inconveniences belonging
to you; for if you were kept in good humour, he had
no doubt of your leaving him all your property when
you die.”
Mrs. Marbury looked aghast. She
burst into tears, and Rosamond, finding that she had
gone quite too far, vainly attempted to pacify her.
“You may go home, child,”
exclaimed Mrs. Marbury, sobbing with anger, “you
may go home, and tell your father and mother that I
shall not trouble them with my company at church or
any where else; and when I die, I shall leave my money
to the hospital or to some other institution.
How have I been deceived! But I shall take care
in future not to bestow my affection on those that
have any expectations from me.”
Rosamond, now very much frightened,
declared that she could not take such a message to
her parents; and begged her aunt to screen her from
their displeasure, by not informing them of the communication
she had so indiscreetly made.
Her alarm and agitation were so great,
that Mrs. Marbury consented, out of pity, not to betray
her to her father and mother; and to excuse herself
from going to church with them (which she declared
she could never do again) by alleging the heat of
the weather, and the probable crowd.
“And now, Rosamond,” said
her aunt Marbury, “do not think that I feel at
all obliged to you for having opened my eyes as to
the manner in which your parents really regard me.
Their behaviour to me, as far as I could judge for
myself, has always been exactly what I wished it; and
if their kindness was not sincere, I still thought
it so, and was happy in being deceived. And now,
after what you have told me, how can I again think
of them as I have hitherto done? You have acted
basely towards them in repeating their private conversation,
and cruelly to your kind aunt, in giving her unnecessary
pain and mortification. You have caused much
mischief; and who has been the gainer? Not yourself
certainly. You have lost my good opinion, for
I can never like a tell-tale. I had heard something
of your being addicted to this vice; but till now I
could not believe it. I shall not betray you
to your parents, though you have so shamefully betrayed
them to me. But you may rely on
it, that sooner or later the discovery will be made,
to your utter shame and confusion. Now you may
go home, with the assurance that you can no longer
be a welcome visitor at my house.”
Rosamond departed, overwhelmed with
compunction; and in the resolution (which she had
so often made and so often broken) never again to be
guilty of a similar fault. She gave her aunt’s
message to her parents, and Miss Leeson was invited
to accompany them next day to church.
Two days after, Mrs. Evering went
to visit Mrs. Marbury, and to her great surprise heard
from the servants that she had left town with some
western friends who were returning home; and that she
purposed being absent from Philadelphia five or six
months; dividing her time among various places on
the other side of the Alleghanies, and probably extending
her tour to Louisiana, where she owned some land.
Her going away so suddenly without
apprising them of her intention, was totally inexplicable
to Mr. and Mrs. Evering; and they justly concluded
that she must have taken some offence. Rosamond
well knew the cause, and rightly supposed that her
aunt finding herself unable to meet the family with
her former feelings towards them, had thought it best
to avoid seeing them for a very long time.
The confusion visible in Rosamond’s
face and manner when Mrs. Marbury was spoken of, aroused
the suspicions of her father and mother: and on
their questioning her closely, she confessed, with
many tears, that she had really informed her aunt
of what had passed on the subject of her accompanying
them to church. But as tell-tales have very little
candour where themselves are concerned, and as tale-telling
always leads to lying, she steadily denied that she
had been guilty of the slightest exaggeration in her
report to Mrs. Marbury; protesting that she had told
her nothing but the simple truth.
From that time, Rosamond was not allowed
to visit or call at any house unaccompanied by her
mother, who was almost afraid to trust her out of
her sight. Her parents avoided discussing any
thing of the least consequence in her presence;
always remembering to send her out of the room.
This mode of treatment very much mortified her; but
she could not help acknowledging that she deserved
it.
Her father received no intelligence
from Mrs. Marbury. He and Mrs. Evering both wrote
to her at different times, endeavouring to mollify
her displeasure; but not knowing exactly where she
was, the letters were not directed to the right places,
and did not reach her.
For a long time Rosamond was so unusually
discreet, that her parents began to hope that her
odious fault was entirely cured.
One day, her chamber having been washed
in the afternoon, it was found too damp for her to
sleep in with safety to her health; and her mother
told her that she must, that night, occupy the room
adjoining hers. This room, which was but seldom
used, was separated from Mrs. Evering’s apartment
by a very thin partition; and communicated with it
by a door which was almost always kept closed; the
bed in each of these chambers being placed against
it.
Rosamond, having been awakened in
the night by the fighting of some cats in the yard,
heard her father and mother in earnest conversation.
They had totally forgotten her vicinity to them; and
as tell-tales are never wanting in curiosity, she
sat up in her bed and applying her ear to the key-hole
of the door, she distinctly heard every word they said,
though they were speaking in a low voice.
She was soon able to comprehend the
subject of their conversation. Mr. Evering was
lamenting that the failure of a friend for whom he
had endorsed to a large amount, had brought him into
unexpected difficulties; but he hoped that he would
be able to go on till the sums due to him by some
western merchants should arrive.
Next evening, Rosamond was permitted
to go to a juvenile cotillon-party, held once a fortnight,
at the ball-room of her dancing-master. To this
place her mother always accompanied her; and while
Mrs. Evering was sitting in conversation with some
ladies, a boy named George Granby, who was frequently
the partner of Rosamond at these balls, came up and
asked her to dance. They were obliged to go to
the farthest end of the room before they could get
places in a cotillon; and while they were waiting
for the music to begin, George, who thought Rosamond
a very pretty girl, asked her if she would also be
his partner in the country-dance. She replied
that Henry Harford had engaged her, at the last ball,
for this country-dance.
“Oh!” replied George Granby,
“Henry Harford will not be here to-night; his
father failed yesterday.”
“True,” said Rosamond,
“I wonder I should have forgotten Mr. Harford’s
failure, when my father lost so much by him. But
when the fathers fail, must the children stay away
from balls?”
“Certainly,” replied George,
“it would be considered very improper for the
family to be seen in any place of amusement when its
head is in so much trouble, and when they have lost
all they possessed.”
“O then,” exclaimed Rosamond,
“I hope my father will not fail till the
cotillon-parties are over for the season. There
are but two more, and I should be very sorry to give
them up. I hope he will be able to go on, at
least till after that time. How sorry I shall
be when he does fail.”
“I believe you,” said
George; “but what makes you talk about your
father’s failing? I thought he was considered
safe enough.”
“Ah! you know but little about
it,” answered Rosamond. “I heard him
tell my mother last night, that he was in hourly dread
of failing, in consequence of the great losses by
Mr. Harford, and of his own business having gone on
badly for a long time. However, say nothing about
it, for such things ought not to be told.”
“They ought not, indeed,” said the boy.
As soon as George Granby went home,
he repeated what he had heard from Rosamond, to his
father, who was one of Mr. Evering’s creditors.
The consequence was, that Mr. Granby and all the principal
creditors took immediate measures to secure themselves;
and Mr. Evering (who could have gone on till he got
through his difficulties, had he been allowed time,
and had the state of his affairs remained unsuspected,)
became a bankrupt through the worse than indiscretion
of his daughter. Had Mrs. Marbury been in town,
or where he could have had speedy communication with
her, he doubted not that she would have lent him assistance
to ward off the impending blow. But she had gone
away in a fit of displeasure, occasioned, also, by
the tattling of Rosamond.
Mr. Granby, who was the chief creditor
and a man of contracted feelings and great severity,
showed no liberality on the occasion; and proceeded
to the utmost extremity that the law would warrant.
Every article of Mr. Evering’s property was
taken; and indeed, since it had come to this, his
principles would not allow him to reserve any thing
whatever from his creditors.
The scene that ensued in the Evering
family, on the day following the ball, can better
be imagined than described. Mr. Granby had at
once informed Mr. Evering of the source from whence
he had derived his information with respect to the
posture of his affairs; and when Rosamond found this
new and terrible proof of the fatal effects of her
predominant vice, she went into an hysteric fit, and
was so ill all night, that her parents, in addition
to their other troubles, had to fear for the life
of their daughter. The sufferings of her mind
brought on a fever; and it was more than a week before
she was able to leave her bed.
Her father and mother kindly forgave
her, and avoided all reference to her fault.
But she could not forgive herself, and on the day that
they left their handsome residence in one of the principal
streets, and removed to a small mean-looking house
in the suburbs, her agony was more than words can
express. All their furniture was sold at auction,
even Rosamond’s piano, and her mother’s
work-table. Their most expensive articles of
clothing were put away, as in their present circumstances
it would be improper to wear them. The house
they now inhabited, contained only one little parlour
with a kitchen back of it, and three small rooms upstairs.
Their furniture was limited to what was barely useful,
and of the cheapest kind. Their table was as
plain as possible; and their only servant a very young
half-grown girl.
This sad change in their way of living,
added to the stings of self-reproach, almost broke
Rosamond’s heart; and her pride was much shocked
when she found that her father had applied for the
situation of clerk in a counting-house, as a means
of supporting his family till something better should
offer.
At length Mrs. Marbury returned; having
hurried back to Philadelphia as soon as the intelligence
of her nephew’s failure had reached her.
How did she blame herself for having taken such serious
offence at what now appeared to her almost too trifling
to remember. All her former regard for the Evering
family returned. She sought them immediately in
their humble retreat, and offered Mr. Evering her
assistance to the utmost farthing she could command.
To conclude, Mr. Evering’s affairs
were again put in train. He resumed his business;
and a few years restored him to his former situation.
This sad, but salutary lesson produced
a lasting effect on Rosamond; and from that time,
she kept so strict a watch over her ruling passion,
that she succeeded in entirely eradicating it.
She grew up a discreet and amiable girl; and no one
who knew her in after years, could have believed that
till the age of fourteen she had been an incorrigible
tell-tale.