Cling to thy home! If
there the meanest shed
Yield thee a hearth and a
shelter for thy head,
And some poor plot, with vegetables
stored,
Be all that Heaven allots
thee for thy board,
Unsavory bread, and herbs
that scatter’d grow
Wild on the river-brink, or
mountain-brow;
Yet e’en this cheerless
mansion shall provide
More heart’s repose
than all the world beside.
Leonidas.
“Do you know, Adam,” said
Robin, when they had walked a mile in silence, “do
you know that you are a fraud?”
“Well, yes,” he responded,
“but I didn’t know you knew it. Is
the discovery recent?”
“Never mind about dates, but
tell me why you didn’t use the rifle instead
of the lariat? What did you take it for?”
“I took it for your peace of
mind. I didn’t use it for several good
and substantial and sentimental reasons. To reverse
them, this last year I have grown to understand your
horror of killing things. We have done very well
without sacrificing any of our dependents; in fact,
it would seem like murder to slaughter the animals
about us. And it’s such a little world
it seems a pity to kill off any of its inhabitants.
To tell the truth, I hope the bear got away all right.
This is maudlin, I know, but I don’t want my
hand first to bring death on all there is left of
earth. Incidentally, there are no
cartridges.”
He stopped the horses, while Robin
readjusted the kids to make them more comfortable,
and took the lame one in her arms, then they moved
on.
Presently she said, “I am so glad of these kids!”
There was so much enthusiasm in her voice that Adam laughed
and asked why, and she answered:
“Like you, I have sound and
sentimental reasons. The sound one is that we
shall need their fleece unless, why, goodness
gracious, Adam, there is a baking-powder can of flax
in the dresser, and I never thought till this moment
that we can plant it.”
“True,” answered Adam,
“but given flax or fleece, what would you do
with it?”
“Spin it,” she answered
sententiously. “Of course you think I can’t,
but it happens that I once lived, when I was a little
girl, very near to an old woman. I don’t
refer to her age, but her ideas. She carded and
spun and wove and dyed all the family clothing.
She made her own soap and wouldn’t have a stove
in the house. She had eight children, too, and
they all of them turned out badly. I used to go
there off and on; I think she looked on me as a kind
of sinful amusement. Anyhow, she told me the
world was going to ruin, and the women were poor ‘doless’
creatures, who couldn’t spin a hank of yarn,
or gin a pound of cotton, or heel a sock. She
shook her head over me when she found I couldn’t
knit, but she set a garter for me at once, and during
the seven or eight years that I went by her door on
my way to school she taught me all those marvelous
accomplishments. I daresay I have forgotten them.”
“What are the sentimental reasons?” asked
Adam.
She looked at the kid as it nestled against her shoulder.
“I have a fancy,” she
said, “that Nannette and her children are going
to minister to a mind diseased, and help pluck a rooted
sorrow from the brain. The world was getting
too healthy. Has it ever struck you that we have
neither of us been sick for a day this year? I
have had to mother the chickens, but there has been
no suffering. I’m not glad to have pain
come into the world, but it is good to be able to
alleviate it. We will put Nannette in a sling
till her leg has a chance to set, and by the time
it is well she won’t want to leave us.
As for the kids, I expect they will be like the plague
of frogs, and we shall find them in our beds and our
ovens and our kneading troughs. Oh, Adam, there
is the house! Doesn’t it look dear and homey?”
She put the kid back on the sled,
and ran on, pointing out this and that, the growth
of the corn, the afternoon radiance, till they reached
their doorway. Then there were a thousand things
to do. First Nannette was made comfortable in
the stable; then the chickens were summoned to a meal
of yellow corn, and when Lassie drove the cows into
the barnyard, each was congratulated in turn upon her
calf, and those interesting, if wobbly, bovine infants
were carefully inspected. After supper they sat
down before the fire, very tired, but the nearest
happy they had been in a year. The dogs were lying
about them, and the thump, thump of first one tail
and then another told the story of canine content,
while the kittens walked over them impartially.
“What a strange thing human
nature is!” Adam said. “The only thing
needed to make our life perfect is that it shall not
last. The moment, if that moment ever comes,
when it is real no more, it will become ideal.”
“I know,” she said dreamily.
“Things in the world used to be too good to
be true. This must cease to be, to be good at
all.”