MY PET FROM THE CLOUDS.
How odd it was! Such a funny
little event! I have often told the story to
my one little chick, but it has always seemed to me
too absurd to put into print; yet you see I have finally
made up my mind to tell you all about it.
I was seven years old that summer, seven,
“going on” eight, as we country children
used to say. It was the term during which I commenced
the study of geography, dear old Peter Parley’s
charming little book, which first formally introduced
me to the great world we live in, or rather on, and
first made me realize that it was round, and all that.
It was on an afternoon in the early part of July, I
am not sure, though, that it was n’t in the
latter part of June, that it happened, the
singular event I am going to tell you about.
It had been dreadfully hot all day, so
hot that the very hillsides seemed to pant, like the
sides of the poor cattle, in the parched pastures.
I thought it extremely lucky that my geography lesson
that day was in Greenland. I don’t believe
I could have been equal to a lesson in Mesopotamia.
I remember saying to Bob Linn, at recess, that I wished
I was a seal, riding on an iceberg; and he said he
wished he was a white bear, climbing the North Pole
and sliding down backwards. That was so like
Bob Linn. He used to climb the lightning-rod
of the meeting-house, and ring the bell at very improper
hours, till Deacon Jones tarred it, the
rod, not the bell. I wonder where he is now, Bob,
not the Deacon. He was the first schoolmate to
whom I told what had happened that July, or June afternoon.
As I think I have said, it was a very hot day; but,
just before school was dismissed, there came up a
refreshing thunder-shower. How we revived, in
the cool, moist air, like the poor wilted field-flowers!
The shrunken stream in the glen grew, and took heart,
and went tumbling down the rocks, in its old, headlong
spring-fashion. The cattle stopped panting and
whisking off flies, and stood dripping and chewing,
while a smile of brightening greenness ran over the
faded face of the pasture.
I had a half-mile walk home.
One of the girls who lived nearer the school-house
invited me to stay all night with her; but I thought
that I, who was old enough to study about oceans,
avalanches, earthquakes, and volcanoes, ought not
to be afraid of such rain, thunder, and lightning
as we had in our free, enlightened, and Christian country.
So I thanked her “no,” which was very well;
for, if I had stayed, that wouldn’t have happened
that did happen, or, at least, I would n’t
have seen it. Well, I set out for home, bravely
breasting the wind, and really enjoying the rain,
in spite of my new sun-bonnet getting every minute
more limp and flappy. I remember wondering if
it was raining at that very time in China, right under
my feet. If so, study on it as I would, I could
n’t make it seem any other way than that it rained
upwards there. I was thinking of such things,
and not expecting anything particular to happen, till
I got in sight of home, past the old Phillips place,
where it did happen. It was here I first noticed
over my head the blackest of black clouds, big with
barrels of rain. I started into a run, to get
out of the way, when now it is coming, what I was going to relate! No, I
must first tell you that there was near me then no house, nor tree, nor even
bush, that it could have dropped or jumped off from. Now it really is
coming! Well, right down before my eyes, straight out of that cloud, fell a little frog!! There,
it is out! I like to take people by surprise,
and not, like some story-tellers, drag my listeners
all “round Robin Hood’s barn” before
I get at a thing.
I stood stock still for a moment,
in wonder and astonishment. Then, half afraid,
I picked the little creature up out of the sand.
He was of a greenish-brown, brightening to gold in
the sun. His limbs were extremely delicate,
and his eyes were as bright as diamonds. I carried
him gently home, and ran with him in the greatest excitement
to my mother, exclaiming, “O mamma! do look
at this lovely little frog! It is n’t
human! It came right down to me out of the sky.
I do believe it is an angel-frog!”
My mother laughed, but, on being told
the story of Froggy’s descent from the clouds,
said it was a great marvel and mystery where he came
from, and how he got there. Glad of a chance
to display my learning, I said, “Why, mamma,
you know the stars are round balls, like our earth,
swinging in the air; and may be he was whirled off
one of them, or maybe he jumped off the horn of the
moon last night, and has been travelling ever since.
Poor little fellow! how tired he must be!”
When my father came in, he gave it
as his opinion that the frog had been carried up by
a waterspout, from a lake about twenty miles distant,
kept up and borne along by currents of air. At
all events, he was a hero and an adventurer, and I
resolved to keep him as a curiosity. So I put
him in a large rain-water trough, at the back of the
house, where he lived in apparent content, the monarch
of all he surveyed. During dry times, I kept
him well supplied with fresh water from the well,
and I frequently threw in broad dock-leaves, for him
to take shelter under from the heat. He soon
grew to know me, and would actually come at my call
from the farthest end of the trough. He was
very shy of others, and I was not sorry, for I wanted
all his affection, and was proud of his discernment.
This was thought so singular that I was often sent
out with visitors, to show off my pet. I don’t
believe that the keeper of the hippopotamus can be
prouder of his mud-loving monster than I was of my
lively little friend.
My brother Will built for him a neat
little ship, on which he sailed about, being captain,
crew, cabin-boy, and all. One morning, while
I was playing with him, he hopped down the hatchway.
I shut him into the little cabin, and was careless
enough to forget to let him out before going to school.
When I came home, I found him lying on the cabin
floor, still and lifeless! He had been suffocated
in the close, hot air. I am not ashamed to own
that I cried heartily over the poor limp little body.
I wrapped it tenderly in a plantain-leaf, and laid
it beside my last lost kitty.
In the evening, when I told my father
of my loss, he by no means made light of it, knowing
my pet was no common frog.
“Poor fellow!” he said,
“it was as bad for him as the ’Black Hole
of Calcutta.’” I did n’t know what
that meant then; I know now, but haven’t time
to tell you. Besides it is n’t a pleasant
story. Then papa added, “Perhaps, after
all, it is only a case of suspended animation.
Your little frog may have only been in a swoon.
If you open his grave in the morning, you may find
that he has come to.”
That was a pleasant hope to go to
bed on, and you may believe I rose bright and early
in the morning, to run with my shingle-spade to the
cemetery of all my dead pets. With an anxious
heart, I removed the earth, and unfolded the plantain-leaf.
Sure enough, there was my pet, “alive and kicking!”
He hopped out on to a full-blown dandelion, and looked
about him as pert and knowing as ever. I caught
him up, and ran with him into the house, crying, “Froggy
is resurrected! Froggy is resurrected!”
After this, nothing especial happened
to him for some months. He grew in intelligence
and lively graces, but not in size, remaining precisely
the same pretty, tiny creature as at the first.
This fairy-like, unchangeable youthfulness, and his
little, piping note, “most musical, most melancholy,”
made me still half believe that he was a frog of another
and a higher race than ours, star-born,
or a native of cloud-land. After the frosty
nights of November, I used to remove the thin ice
from his tank, so that he could swim freely, and he
did not seem to suffer much from the rigors of the
season. But, on the first morning in December,
I found to my grief that the shallow water in the
trough was frozen solid, and Froggy with
it! I could see him tightly imprisoned in the
clear ice, about midway from the surface. His
limbs were extended, showing that he had bravely kicked
against his hard fate to the last. I gave him
up, then, and went into the house disconsolate.
But my mother was still hopeful. Under her directions
I heated the kitchen shovel, and with it thawed out
a block of ice some inches square, with Froggy in
the centre. This I placed on the hearth before
the fire. You see I did not dare to break the
ice, for fear of breaking with it the frozen limbs
of my pet. I watched the melting of the block
with affectionate interest. It was slow work,
but it came to an end at last, and Froggy was free.
Still, for a time he lay motionless, and I feared
he was dead. Then, one limb twitched, then another,
and then he was alive all over, and began to hop away
from the fire. I rejoiced over him with great
joy, put him in a tub of water, with a piece of bark
to sail on, and began laying plans for keeping him
in-doors all winter. But my mother said it was
impossible, that there was but one way
to save the life of my pet, and that was to take him
down to the millstream and fling him in. There
the water was deep, and the frogs lived under the
ice, cosey and comfortable all winter.
“O mamma,” I said, “I
can’t make up my mind to do that. He would
miss me so, and I don’t believe that the other
frogs would treat him well. He is n’t of
their kind, you know.”
“I think it more likely,”
she answered, “that they will have sense enough
to perceive his superiority, and will treat him accordingly, perhaps
make a Prince or President of him. He will come
among them as a distinguished stranger, a
travelled adventurer.”
This consoled and determined me.
I put on my cloak and hood, and set out at once,
for fear I should lose courage. I ran all the
way, talking to my funny little pet, and saying, I
doubt not, many silly things, but which, I am sure,
went no further.
When I came to the bank of the stream,
I thought perhaps he would hop in of his own accord.
I bade him farewell, and held him out over the water.
But I suppose it looked big and dreary to him, for
he did not stir. I even fancied that he looked
at me reproachfully for thinking that he would be
so willing to leave me. I was obliged to give
him a toss, and the next instant he disappeared forever
under the dark, wintry waters, among the reeds and
rushes.
So now you know all I know about My Pet from the Clouds.
A CHARADE.
FOR WILLIE WINKIE
So Will, my lad, you beg that I’ll
Concoct you a charade;
Well, dear, here goes: My first
is first
Your favorite little maid;
The hearts of roses too are it,
And vine-blooms under which I sit;
And childhood’s dreams, and sinless
thoughts,
And tones attuned to love,
“The uses of adversity,”
The cooings of the dove,
And Lilly’s eyes, and Kitty’s
lips,
And Tommy’s ’lassed finger-tips.
My second was the royal name
Of England’s conquering
foe.
Who set his foot on Saxon necks
Eight hundred years ago;
The name too of a poet-king,
Who still rules many a land;
No soldier he, but a knightlier soul
Did ne’er shake spear
or brand.
My whole is no exotic rare,
A common flower found everywhere;
In form ’t is somewhat like the
pink,
But its scent is finer, I declare,
Than musk, or your patchouli.
You ’ve guessed it now, I really
think,
So I’ll refrain from wasting ink.
Sweet Will, I am
Yours truly,
GRACE
GREENWOOD.
THE TWO GEORGES.
A TRAGEDY.
The summer that I was eight years
old I went to school, at our little brown country
schoolhouse, alone; my elder sister going to a select
school in the village, where she actually studied grammar
and wrote compositions! Our school-mistress
was Miss Grey, quite a pretty young lady, but folks
said not a good teacher. They said she had “no
government,” and certainly we had a very easy
time of it. She was what is called “absent-minded,”
and often forgot to hear some of our lessons, and
we thought it would n’t be polite to remind her
of them. She had a soft and mournful voice, and
a droopy sort of a look, especially about her hair.
She dressed a little queer sometimes, and played
on the accordion, so it was whispered about that she
wrote poetry. I know she read it a good deal,
and novels too. She had in her desk a very long
romance, called “The Children of the Abbey,”
which she used to read at noontime and recess.
She read it through, and then she appeared to read
it backward, for it lasted nearly all summer.
It seemed to me that the story went on and on, till
it came to the last page of the book, then turned
round and went the other way.
I said I went to school alone; yet
after a while I had company, which no one else would
have thought of much account, but which was quite a
comfort to me. One day I made a purchase with
my own money. It was only a little pocket-handkerchief,
but such a handkerchief! On it was printed,
in bright blue, a picture of General George Washington,
in full regimentals, with his sword in his hand, flanked
by the Ten Commandments, and with a scroll labelled
“Constitution” for his base.
At first I looked upon that stern
face, with its strong, tight mouth, like a steel-trap
just sprung, with a good deal of reverence; but as
I grew familiar with him I became fond of him, and
part of the time treated him as a doll; indeed, he
seemed to me more real than any doll I ever had, and
far dearer. I folded him carefully every morning
and laid him in my dinner-basket, over my rations,
grieving that I was obliged from limited space to
fold under his legs, giving them an amputated look.
But I laid him out at full length in my desk, and
often lifted the cover to take an admiring look at
him, during the day. At night, I laid him in
one of my dolls’ beds, and actually “tucked
in” the “Father of his Country,”
calling him “George, my boy,” and telling
him to be good, and not to get up in the morning and
go to hacking away at cherry-trees, with that sword
of his.
He was two in one, George
I. and II. He was little George, or the great
General, just as the occasion demanded. On the
Fourth of July, I remember, he appeared in all his
glory to deliver an oration to “a large and
appreciative audience” of dolls and kittens.
He spoke in this wise: “Fellow-Citizens,
and your wives and daughters, I ’m a warrior,
not an orator. I only want to say to
say to tell you that if it had n’t
been for me you would n’t have had any Fourth
of July the year round, nor any parades, nor rockets,
nor squibs, nor star-spangled banners, nor pumpkin-pies,
nor ginger-pop. We should all have been British,
or Irish, and worn red coats, and ate blood-puddings,
and drank ale, and hurrahed for King George forevermore.
This is the truth, fellow-citizens, for I cannot
tell a lie, you know I cannot tell a lie.
But I don’t want to brag over you, and if you
will still be good Yankee Christians, brave and industrious,
I will still be the father of your country, world
without end, Amen! Band, please strike up ‘Hail
Columbia!’”
By the middle of the summer the poor
General’s face became as badly soiled as ever
it was after a long march, over dusty summer roads.
Yet I declined to have him washed, fearing that,
after all, his colors might not be “true blue.”
One Monday morning my mother sent
by me a note to Miss Grey, inviting her to accompany
me home that day, and spend a week with us. With
my head full of thoughts of this invitation, I hurried
away to school earlier than usual, and for the first
time left General George behind me, lying on his bed
in my chamber. I missed him sadly during the
day, but came home in triumph at night, bringing Miss
Grey with me. I took her at once about the premises,
to show her my pets. I exhibited with much pride
my tame hawk Toby, but she was afraid of him; though
I assured her that he was a hawk of most exemplary
character, and civilized to such a degree that he
respected the rights of all the mother-hens and ducks,
and never asked for spring-chickens, but contented
himself with frogs, like a Frenchman. Then I
took her to the woodshed, to see my cat, with almost
a barrelful of young kittens. What a lovely sight
it was! Then I led her to where my speckled hen
kept house in a coop, with half a dozen cunning little
chicks. The hen-mother was frightened as we
came near, and called to her little ones to come in
out of danger; but they would n’t mind, and she
was very angry, and ruffled up her feathers, and scolded
furiously at their disobedience. “I think
biddies are very unamiable creatures,” said
Miss Grey. I said nothing, but I thought to myself,
“Ah, Miss Grey, if you were a mother, with ever
so many children, playing around the door so peacefully,
and you shut up in jail, for no crime but scratching
up food in gardens for them, and you should love them
dreadfully, and should see two giantesses,
a big giantess and a middling-sized giantess, come
tramping right in among them, and you not able to help
them only by ruffling up your feathers and scolding,
you ’d be a little unamiable too, perhaps, for
I’ve heard my mother say that hen nature was
a good deal like human nature.” Then I
showed her our gray goose’s nest, with an egg
in it. But when I expected her to be astonished,
she only said, “Why, I thought the egg of the
fowl that saved Rome was much larger than this.”
Now this goose laid the largest eggs of any goose
in the neighborhood. “Did you expect it
to be as big as the roc’s egg in ’Sinbad
the Sailor’?” I asked.
As we were passing through the yard,
going to the stable, to see my brother’s little
colt, we encountered the week’s washing, hanging
on the line, and right before my eyes swung my handkerchief,
with the beloved portrait almost washed out!
Indeed, scarce a ghost of the great and worthy George
remained. I caught it off and burst into tears,
crying, “O, it’s all faded out, it’s
all faded out!”
“Why, you silly child,”
said Miss Grey, “don’t cry so for a little
scrap of a handkerchief like that.”
“It ain’t only a handkerchief,”
I sobbed, “it’s General Washington and
my boy George both together. I ’ve
seen you cry, Miss Grey, over the ‘Children
of the Abbey,’ and mother says they never lived;
but General Washington did live, and was the Father
of his Country; and then there were all the Ten Commandments,
too. I declare Nancy is as bad as Moses was,
when he smashed the tables of stone.”
But Miss Grey only laughed at my sorrow,
and went into the house. When I followed her,
I whispered to mother, “Have we got the ’Children
of the Abbey’? If we have, please give
it to Miss Grey to amuse herself with.”
Then I went up stairs and laid out
my dead George, and had my foolish little cry out.
After all, my great General had faded and wilted away
into an unsightly little rag of a handkerchief.
What a fall was there! We have seen some very
like it in these days.
I had no heart to keep him by me any
longer, so I gave him to my little brother, who put
him to every possible use except that of a handkerchief.
That was a hard campaign for the feeble old General.
Sometimes he did service as the sail for a boat; sometimes
green apples, or rabbit feed, or worms for bait were
tied up in him. His feet, with what was left
of the Constitution, were torn off and rammed into
a small cannon’s mouth for wadding; and, finally,
he went up on the tail of a kite. In mid-air
he became detached, and dropped into a tall thorn-tree.
Here he got stuck fast, and so remained till he fluttered
himself to pieces bit by bit.
A CHARADE.
My first the poet Cowper loved,
A creature soft and fleet;
To vote my second to valiant puss,
The long-tailed sages meet.
It calls to prayer; at dead of night
Rouses the city street;
And to the bridal train sends out
A greeting wild and sweet.
My whole would shine all dewy bright
In your golden hair, Bell, to-night.
Hare-bell.
THE LITTLE WIDOW’S MITE.
On a nice little farm, on the shore
of one of our beautiful Western lakes, lives a noble
young German girl named Bertha Johansen, but oftener
called “little woman,” for her womanly
qualities, and her staid, quaint ways; and for a while,
among her family-friends, still oftener called “little
widow,” for a reason I will give by and by.
Early in the war against the Rebellion, Bertha’s
father and three brothers enlisted in one regiment,
and were very soon marched away to the front, taking
with them the tender, tearful blessings of the lonely
little household left behind. The good wife and
mother, Ernestine Johansen, took upon her brave heart
and strong hands the entire business of the little
farm, having for a while only the assistance of a
young adopted son, an orphan nephew, who had lived
with the Johansens from his infancy. But after
having seen his uncle and cousins go forth so bravely
to their grand though dreadful duty, the lad Heinrich
grew discontented and unhappy. He had a man’s
heart in his boyish breast, a heart full
of patriotic ardor and devotion; and at last his good
aunt consented that he too should go to the war, in
the only capacity in which he could be accepted, as
a drummer boy, in a regiment just ready to march to
the front.
Bertha had grieved deeply, though
quietly, in the brave, uncomplaining, submissive spirit
peculiar to her, at bidding adieu to her dear father, to
Gustave, and Fritz, and Carl, her brothers, but
she grieved no less at parting with Heinrich Holberg.
The two children had always been to each other the
best and dearest of friends. Almost from her
babyhood, Heinrich had called Bertha his “little
wife,” and she had early learned to play the
character, in the most demure and charming manner.
She had for him a tender and clinging affection; she
believed in him with all her heart, and he was not
altogether unworthy of such love and confidence, he
was a very good boy, as boys go.
Well, Heinrich marched away with the
rest of the admirable German band, proudly and gayly
they said, the pluckiest of drummer-boys.
But he had seemed neither proud nor gay, a few hours
before, when he had run down to the little lakeside
farm, to take leave of his aunt and cousin. He
had looked pale and very sad. He had said farewell
in a voice choked with sobs, and when he ran down
the little garden walk to the road, great tears were
dropping fast on the bright buttons of his new uniform.
His “little wife” went to her little chamber,
knelt down beside her little bed, and said a little
prayer for him, then dashed the bitter
dew from her sweet violet eyes, and went about her
household duties, like the dear little woman that
she was.
Alas, it was the same old sad story!
The father was killed at Pittsburg Landing, and the
oldest brother wounded and taken captive: he
afterwards died in Libby Prison. The second brother
returned home, after a year’s hard marching
and fighting, a pale, wan invalid, with one sleeve
of his worn blue coat hanging empty. The third
brother is now an officer in the triumphant Union
army, and let us thank God for him, for his work is
nearly done.
The sorrow of the little German household
did not end with the death of the beloved father,
and of brave Gustave, and the loss of the good right
arm of poor Fritz. Heinrich was also taken prisoner,
in a sudden night attack on his regiment in Tennessee,
and carried off by one of the robber bands of the
barbarous Forrest. His tender age, and gentle,
prepossessing ways, won him no pity. He was shut
up, with thousands of others, in one of those horrible
slaughter-pens of the South, called a “stockade,”
where he languished for many months, bearing all his
hardships with the utmost sweetness and patience, feeling
that his suffering was but a drop to the great ocean
of human agony and despair around him.
Heinrich had been religiously brought
up, and while many brave men about him lost all faith
and hope, and believed themselves forgotten by the
God who made them, he believed that over their loathsome
prison-yard hovered hosts of pitying angels, and that
above and around the vast field of fraternal strife
brooded an infinite fatherly love, and “the
peace of God that passeth all understanding.”
He had never a doubt but that Heaven was very near
to their prison-pen, that the “many
mansions” of the Father would be all open to
those martyrs of freedom, that there rest
and sweet refreshment awaited them, that
there pitiless hate and cruel wounds, hunger and fierce
heat and bitter cold, would torture them no more forever.
From the time of his capture, nothing
more was heard of poor Heinrich in his sad home on
the Lake shore, and he was at last given up as dead
by all his friends, except little Bertha. She
had a “feeling,” she said, that he was
living still, and would come back one day, if only
she could keep up heart for him. He might be
so weak and ill, she thought, that he would die if
she once should give him up, but not till
then. O little woman, great was thy faith!
Bertha knew not that she was already called by neighbors
and friends “the little widow.” She
would have passionately rejected the title. She
“could not make him dead.”
She had little time for fretting about
her absent friend. Her mother’s brave
spirit had bent under the successive burdens of sorrow,
and her bodily strength for a while gave way.
Carl, the invalid soldier, had much difficulty in
managing the affairs of the farm, and nearly all the
cares of the household came upon Bertha. O, nobly
she bore herself under them. She so completely
took the place of her sick mother, that all went well
in that humble and peaceful home, till the bitterest
trouble was past, and the good mother rallied and was
able to take part of the burden of labor and care,
which, however cheerfully borne, was quite too heavy
for such young shoulders.
Bertha’s wise little head was
perplexed. There was to be a great Sanitary
fair in the city near by, and she felt a passionate
desire to contribute something towards the great and
good work. What could she do? She was
not rich enough to give money; she could not paint
nor embroider; she had not the skill to manufacture
elegant trifles; she was not old or pretty or fashionable
enough to stand behind one of the tables. What
could she do?
At last it occurred to her that she
could contribute to the refreshment department a roll
of butter of her own churning, from the milk of her
own little snow-white cow. So, with her good
mother’s consent, she saved all the cream off
the rich milk of her pet for a week, and dedicated
the golden product to the soldiers. She had two
churnings, and the result was five pounds of delicious
butter. Her pleasant work was done in the open
air, before the side-door of the cottage, in sight
of the beautiful lake. On the day of her second
churning, her thoughts were peculiarly sweet and cheerful.
She sung as gayly as the robin, nestling in the vine-leaves
over the cottage window. Her soul was as serene
as the sky, her heart as tranquil as the lake, sleeping
in the still sunshine.
As Bertha worked with all the strength
of her vigorous little arms, and with a gay good-will,
little jets of cream now and then spirted up around
the dasher, sometimes sprinkling her round, rosy face,
and once or twice reaching her smiling lips to dissolve
in sweetness there; and she said to herself, “How
many sweet and beautiful things have gone to make
up this golden cream! the tender bloom of
the early summer clover and daisies, and dew and sunshine,
and by and by, when it hardens into more golden butter,
and goes to the ‘Sanitary,’ won’t
more beautiful things still be added to it? pity,
and love, and patriotism, and the blessing of God?”
Then her thoughts wandered, and her face clouded,
and she murmured, “O our poor sick and wounded
soldiers! O the poor prisoners! O my poor,
dear Heinrich!”
Just then she heard her mother call
her in an eager, trembling voice. She ran into
the cottage to see, seated in the neat kitchen, a young
soldier, in a faded and tattered uniform, a
pale, emaciated figure, childlike in weakness, but
old in suffering.
Bertha knew him rather by heart than
by sight, and, falling on his neck, cried, “Dear,
dear Heinrich! I have always said the Lord would
bring you back, and He has, has n’t he?”
“Yes, little wife, all that the Rebels have
left of me.”
The drummer-boy’s story was
sad and strange but such stories are painfully common
now-a-days. He had escaped from the stockade
with a party of friends; they had been chased by bloodhounds
and all retaken. Heinrich escaped again, alone;
he was befriended, fed, guided by loyal negroes; he
made his way, on foot, through the mountains of Tennessee,
and, after countless hardships and adventures, reached
the glorious Northwest, and his home. He was
ill with a disease brought on by starvation and exposure,
and though he had no battle-wounds to show, there
were, on his neck and arms, the terrible marks of the
bloodhound’s teeth, surely honorable
scars. On the whole, Bertha Johansen thought
her cousin Heinrich a hero, and I think she was right.
But to return to the Sanitary butter, “the
little widow’s mite.” Bertha made
it up into beautiful rolls, which she printed with
a stamp representing buttercups and clover-flowers,
and it looked deliciously tempting. “There
is only five pounds,” she said, as she walked
towards the Fair Grounds, bearing her offering in
a neat basket, covered with a snowy napkin.
“Only five pounds; how I wish there were fifty.
If our dear Lord were only here on earth, He could
easily make them fifty. If He could multiply
loaves of bread, I suppose He could rolls of butter.
But, O dear, He is n’t here!”
Dear Bertha, our Lord is always on
earth, in the hearts of good men and women, is
always ready to work through them His miracles of love
and mercy.
Bertha presented her humble gift most
modestly to one of the lady managers, who received
it very graciously. This lady was one of Bertha’s
neighbors, and knew of her beautiful life of duty,
obedience, and cheerful self-sacrifices.
She told the simple story of the child
to some friends about her, and showed the five rolls
of golden butter. A group of gentlemen soon
gathered near. “I will give a dollar a
pound for that butter,” said one. “I
will give two,” called out another. Then
there was a laugh. Then other bids were made, three,
four, five dollars. It was getting to be a nice
little frolic, and those grave business men entered
into it like boys. Higher and higher they went,
till at last Bertha’s butter was knocked down
at fifty dollars, ten dollars a pound.
As the purchaser laid down a roll
of “greenbacks” for the golden rolls of
butter, a gust of wind caught the bills and blew them
over the counter, where the lady secured them.
“So riches fly away in your Sanitary Fairs,”
said the gentleman, smiling. “Yes,”
replied the lady, “but with healing on
their wings.”
A COUPLE OF CHARADES
I.
My first is the sweet diminutive
Of a name we love to hear;
The name of one while here
we live
We find not earth or Heaven can give
A friend more true and dear.
My second should bring pride and
joy
To parent-hearts, alway,
Should bear the fresh soul of the boy
Into the earnest man’s employ,
And ne’er from honor
stray.
My whole has ever stood for one
Who rears, with toil and care,
Block after block, stone after stone,
On city street, or prairie lone,
A building plain, or fair.
But now the name once honest, stands
For one who has not feared
To seek to level with the sands
The glorious structure, by the hands
Of Washington upreared.
II.
The stealthy fox, the prowling rat,
The serpent, Heaven-accursed,
The cruel tiger, and the cat,
The weasel, and the vampyre bat,
Have all been called my first.
My second is a shadowed place
Of forest bloom and song,
Where mosses creep o’er the rock’s
stern face,
Vines climb and swing in wildest grace,
And a streamlet laughs along.
My whole upbore the traitor’s
crest,
And gloried in his crime;
Yet England took him to her breast,
Which once received a like brave guest,
Our Arnold, of old time.
BESSIE RAEBURN’S CHRISTMAS ADVENTURE.
CHAPTER I.
Bessie Raeburn was a very nice little
girl indeed, truthful, trustful, generous, and affectionate.
But she was by no means without some spicy little
faults of her own. She was impulsive to rashness,
and decidedly self-willed. She was given to
odd little romantic fancies and secret schemes, which
sometimes got her into trouble, when she attempted
to carry them out. She was an only child, and
much petted and indulged in a happy and luxurious
home, having everything which a reasonable little
lady in short frocks and long curls could ask for.
Yet she was not contented; having a foolish ambition
to distinguish herself by doing something quite out
of the ordinary line of little girls, something
that would make people stare, and say “wonderful!”
“surprising!” “a most extraordinary
child!” She liked to say “I dare!”
and “I ’m not afraid!” “I
don’t fear anything there is,” she
would say, “not even lions, or spiders, or bears,
or bumblebees, but I don’t like them
near me; they are disagreeable.”
She learned to read when very young,
and took most eagerly to books of travel and adventure.
She passionately longed for adventures of her own,
and often planned out exploits of a most perilous and
surprising character.
One Christmas-eve, when Bessie was
between seven and eight years of age, a wild little
scheme came into her head, as she sat curled up on
a sofa in the library, listening to her father, while
he read to her sweet young mother a very sad account
of the poor of New York, especially of the poor children,
and of the noble efforts that were being made by a
few good men and women to alleviate their wretched
condition, to clothe them, teach them, and lift them
into a better life.
“Ah, Charles,” said Mrs.
Raeburn, “what a sad, comfortless Christmas
many of those poor little creatures will have, children
as dear to their parents as our little girl is to
us. Only to think of it! cold, hungry, ignorant,
helpless, and hopeless. It is dreadful.”
“Why, mamma,” exclaimed
Bessie, “won’t they have any Christmas
gifts?”
“No, darling; I fear many must
be without all the good and pleasant things by which
we remind one another that our dear Lord’s birthday
has come round again.”
“What, mamma! No toys, no nuts, no candies?”
“None, my child.”
“Why, then, how can they wish
one another a merry Christmas? I should
think they would all have a crying Christmas
together. I should think they would feel as
though they had no Lord Jesus; as though he
only belonged to the rich people. And yet, mamma,
he was dreadful poor, and spent the first day of his
life in a manger, with cows and things; though, to
be sure, he had beautiful presents, those the wise
old gentlemen that came from down East brought him,
you know.”
“Yes, dear, he was very poor,
and in remembering him we should not forget the poor
around us, and should always be ready to assist, as
far as we can, the worthy and honest unfortunates
who need our help. But it is your bedtime.
You will wish to be up bright and early to-morrow.”
Bessie sprang up promptly, and kissed
her father good night. At the foot of the stairs
she paused, and called him in her pretty imperious
way, and he came to her, like the good, obedient papa
that he was. Bessie kissed him again, and called
him “a dear, handsome old darling,” and
then, with another last coquettish kiss through the
balusters, she bounded laughingly past her mamma,
up the stairs, into her little room and behind the
door, from which point of vantage she emerged with
a terrific “boo!” intended to startle
her mamma out of her senses, but I don’t
think it did.
Mrs. Raeburn, having heard her daughter
repeat her simple prayer, kissed her and returned
to the library; and soon after the maid, having seen
her nicely in bed, and put everything in order for
the morning, left her quite alone. And then
the wonderful scheme that had flashed into her brain
down stairs was thought over and resolutely arranged,
and a famous little plot of mischievous benevolence
it was, as you shall see.
Amid all the joyful excitement and
merry confusion of Christmas morning, Bessie found
time to think over her plan; and she would set her
red lips very firmly whenever she felt her courage
giving way the least in the world. She would
be a heroine for once, would have a real
adventure of her own to relate to a wondering and admiring
circle, that very Christmas night.
While mamma and servants were occupied
in preparations for a large dinner-party, Bessie found
opportunities for packing a little basket with tiny
tarts, apples, nuts, and candies; then she put on her
pretty winter coat, trimmed with fur, and her new
velvet hat, with a long scarlet plume, the pride of
her heart, and her warm tippet and soft gloves and
high Balmoral boots. Then she took from her drawer
a dainty porte-monnaie, well filled with bright
new pennies and small silver coin, and containing
a little compartment lined with crimson satin, wherein
two gold dollars dwelt together in state, like a Mongolian
king and queen. Then taking her basket on her
arm, and thrusting her hands into her little muff,
she stole down stairs on tiptoe, and made her escape
from the house, unperceived by any one.
Mr. Raeburn lived in the aristocratic
part of the city of New York; and Bessie, thinking
that she could not there carry out her plan in a perfectly
satisfactory manner, hailed a down-town stage.
Driver and passengers looked surprised to see a child
taking a trip all alone; but Bessie had such an old,
authoritative manner, that they supposed that all
was right. After a long, long ride, she alighted
somewhere in the neighborhood of the poorest and least
respectable part of the city. I may as well
tell you now, if you have n’t guessed it, Bessie
was bound on a mission, a charitable visit to the
poor, the miserably poor, of whom she had
heard her father read. She anxiously looked around
her for a beggar-child, who should act as her guide
to some home of unmerited misfortune, where virtuous
poverty pined, and wept, and waited. Alas! there
were plenty of sad little mendicants on the streets
that day, but Bessie was not easily satisfied.
“It must be a little girl,” she said
to herself, “very, very poor, pale,
and thin, and ragged, and sorrowful, but still pretty,
and mild-looking. And she must have a pretty
name too, like the little girls that beg in magazine
stories, or sell matches, and are stolen by gypsies,
and sing ballads for dreadful organ-grinders, and
all that.” It was a long time before she
found one at all to her mind, but finally she was accosted
by a little girl, who looked wretched enough, to be
sure, tattered, and sickly, and starved. She was not quite up to the mark
as to prettiness, though she had soft, sorrowful eyes and a delicate mouth.
Hunger, cold, and ill-treatment are not very favorable to beauty. Then the
name she gave was decidedly unromantic, Molly
Magee. But the poor child told a piteous
story, which soon brought tears to Bessie’s
gentle eyes, how her father was dead of
fever, and her mother a suffering invalid; how she
was obliged to beg in the streets, from morning till
night, to obtain food for that poor dear mother, three
darling little brothers, and two sisters, twins and
blind! It was a hard case, surely, and
Bessie offered at once to go home with her petitioner,
to see what she could do towards alleviating the family
distress. The little mendicant hesitated at first,
and attempted to dissuade her, but at last, as Bessie
obstinately insisted on her own plan of benevolence,
she yielded, and rather sullenly led the way homeward.
Ah, what a way it was! down one dirty street and up
another, through vile courts and alleys
reeking with filth, swarming with idle, loud-voiced
men, wretched-looking women, slatternly girls, and
forlorn children. Bessie’s heart grew sick
and her courage failed her. If she had known
the way back, she would gladly have made an inglorious
retreat!
The guide at last conducted her down
a flight of slippery steps, leading to the basement
of a squalid old tenement-house, in the five stories
of which more than as many families were packed, layer
on layer, and Bessie found herself in the very bosom
of the distressed family of her humble little friend.
This home of virtuous poverty was not exactly what
she looked for. It was darker, dirtier, more
confused and noisy; it smelt worse. There were
the “three darling little brothers,” to
be sure, and they were quite satisfactorily ragged.
But Bessie looked in vain for the twin-sisters, whose
blindness had so engaged her sympathies. But
she said to herself, “Perhaps they, too, have
gone out begging, with a pair of twin dogs to lead
them.” The invalid mother was surely on
the mend, for she looked quite stout, and her face
was flushed, though that might be from fever.
She sat by an old stove, smoking a short black pipe.
“Well, Molly, what have you
brought us?” exclaimed this interesting invalid,
in a voice by no means agreeable.
“I have n’t got
anything,” was the reply; “but here’s
a rich little miss, as says she has got something
for us; she would come herself, instead of
giving it to me.”
The woman took her pipe from her lips,
and fixing a pair of hard, hungry eyes upon Bessie,
as she stood smiling kindly, with her basket on her
arm, like a dear little Red Ridinghood, broke out with,
“And what put it into the head of such a fine
lady to come anear the likes of us the day?”
“I wanted to see how poor people
live,” replied Bessie, honestly, “and
I have brought you something for Christmas,”
she continued, stepping up a little timidly, and offering
her basket.
The woman caught it eagerly, and turned
its contents into her lap. “And is this
all?” she growled. “A pretty dinner,
indade, for a starving family; nuts and candies
and the like! No bread, not the laste
taste of butter or mate.”
“O, I thought you would have
such common things,” said Bessie; “but
I have some money to buy them with.”
At this, a tall figure sprang up from
a heap of rags in a dark corner, and came forward, a
very dirty, disreputable-looking man. Bessie,
who had taken him for a sick man, was surprised to
see that he also had a fine color in his cheeks, and
even in his nose, but she noticed that he seemed very
weak in his legs. “Hello! my little angel,”
he cried; “give me the money,”
and rudely caught the porte-monnaie from Bessie’s
hand.
His right to it was disputed by the
woman, and they two quarrelled over pennies, dimes,
and dollars, as “the three darling little brothers”
quarrelled over apples, nuts, and candies.
“Who is that man?” asked
Bessie, beginning to be frightened.
“It’s father,” replied Molly.
“Why, you told me your father
was dead. What makes you tell such stories?”
exclaimed Bessie, greatly shocked.
“She makes me,”
said Molly. “May be you would tell stories,
rather than be beaten half to death.”
At last the disreputable-looking man,
having secured the lion’s share of the money,
snatched up an old hat and staggered towards the door.
He stopped a moment beside Bessie, saying, “I
’m obliged to you, darling. This will
get me something good for Christmas.”
“Some new clothes?” asked Bessie.
“No, miss; something better nor clothes.”
“Food?”
“No; something better nor food.”
As he held a big bottle in his hand, Bessie next suggested
“Medicine?”
“Why, bless your swate sowl, do I look like
a sick man?”
“No, sir; but I thought you
walked as though something was the matter with your
legs.”
Patrick Magee gave a loud, foolish
laugh, as he stumbled up the slippery steps, and reeled
down the dirty alley. When he was gone, Bessie
proposed to take leave of her pensioners, saying, “I
must go home now, or I shall miss my dinner, and they
will be troubled about me. Will you show me
as far as Broadway, Molly?”
“Not so fast, if you plase,
miss,” said Mrs. Magee. “You have
seen how poor people live; now I want you to
feel how they are clad, this biting winter
weather. Take off your fine clothes, just, and
change with Molly there.”
“O please, madam, I would rather
go home,” cried poor Bessie. “Do
let me go! Mamma has often said, that, if I
could be poor for one hour even, I would know better
how to pity the poor; but I really think I have seen
enough to-day. I am very sorry for you, indeed.
I ’ll ask papa to help you, and give you all
you want; only let me go home.”
“So you shall, my pretty bird,
but you must drop your fine feathers first.
Off with them! And, Molly, take off all thim
lovely holiday clothes of yours. Sure, exchange
is no robbery.”
Poor Bessie saw it was vain for her
to resist, to plead, or to cry. In a very short
time she found herself divested of every article of
her nice warm apparel, and clad in the dirty, coarse,
tattered street clothes of Molly Magee.
To do the beggar-child justice, she
seemed shocked at this cruel proceeding, this wicked
outrage, and pleaded for Bessie as long as she dared.
But Bridget Magee, a bad-tempered woman at the best,
had been drinking bad whiskey all the morning, and
the brutal rage of drunkenness blazed in her hard
black eyes. Molly was evidently in mortal fear
of her, and could only give Bessie stolen glances of
regret and sorrow. Very pretty she looked in
Bessie’s beautiful dress, though her face was
far sadder than before. In the midst of her trouble,
Bessie noticed this, and thought how different was
the poor child from all the rest of the household
of Magee. When the change was completed, Mistress
Bridget whispered for a minute or two to the eldest
of the three little boys, and then, turning to her
victim, said, with a horrible laugh, “There
now, ye poor little simpleton, follow where Larry
will lade ye. Be off wid ye! I ’m
thinking ye know a little more about poor folk than
you did a bit ago, when ye came prancing into a dacent
house to show off yer grand airs and yer finery.
It’s an adventure as will be good for your
proud young stomach, miss.”
As Bessie, too much frightened and
shocked to speak, was hastening out after Larry, Molly
sprang forward, caught her hand, kissed it, and sobbed
out, “O, forgive me! forgive me! I did
n’t think they would treat you so, or I wouldn’t
have let you come!”
The next instant the poor girl was
dashed backwards by a sudden blow from her mother’s
heavy hand, and Bessie saw her no more.
Master Larry Magee, a sharp-eyed and
fleet-footed little vagabond, hurried Bessie off in
a different direction from that in which she had come,
and by many different and devious ways, for his object
evidently was to confuse her, so that it would be
impossible for her to act as a guide to the den of
thieves in which she had been robbed. There was
little danger. Poor child, she had not even thought
to take note of the name of the miserable little alley
to which she had been conducted by the melancholy
Molly.
At first, in her joy at having escaped
alive from that dreadful Irish ogress, Bessie was
hardly sensible of the cold; but at length it pierced
through her thin and ragged garments, and struck chills
to her very heart. It seemed to clutch at her
bare throat, and to snip her ears, under the old cotton
handkerchief which covered her head. Her hands,
muffless and gloveless, grew stiff, and the rosy tips
of her fingers changed to a dismal purple; while her
poor little toes, peering through great holes in shoes
and stockings, looked as piteous as little baby birds,
left unbrooded to the storm, in dilapidated nests.
After a long, bewildering, winding
walk, or rather run, the two children reached a wide,
respectable-looking street, when they came suddenly
upon a policeman, at sight of which officer Master
Larry halted, wheeled, and executed a brilliant retreat
down a dark alley. But Bessie, who in her innocence
believed in a policeman, as a sort of street guardian-angel,
went confidently up to this one, the star on his breast
shining as the star of hope to her, related to him
her wonderful Christmas adventure, and begged him
to conduct her home. To her surprise and grief,
he refused to believe a word of the story, but, taking
her for the little vagrant she seemed, gruffly ordered
her to “move on,” adding, “You can’t
gammon me: I ’ve heard too many
such yarns.”
My private opinion is, that that policeman
was a crusty old bachelor, with not a chick nor child, not
even a little sister to his name.
With her feelings a good deal hurt,
and her feet benumbed with cold, poor Bessie tottered
on, she knew not whither. Happily, at the very
next corner, she encountered another policeman, a
cheery, kindly, family-looking man. To him Bessie
sobbed out her piteous story; and he, having a little
girl of his own at home, was touched by her distress,
and, looking into the clear depths of her innocent
blue eyes, believed her. Immediately calling
a cab he put her in, and got in himself, and taking
off his warm blue overcoat, wrapped her in it, which
was the street guardian-angel’s way of brooding;
and so they went away up town, to a large brown-stone
house on Madison Avenue, Bessie’s
home, where they found everybody in great
distress. Papa and mamma were almost wild with
anxiety, for Bessie had been gone four long hours,
and a dozen police officers were already searching
for her, and street-criers were tramping up and down,
ringing bells, and shouting dismally, “A child
l-o-s-t!”
Mr. and Mrs. Raeburn with difficulty
recognized their daughter in her ragged disguise.
They were shocked by her appearance, fearing she
might be made ill by the exposure. They were
pained and indignant at hearing all she had suffered,
but they both said it would prove a good experience,
if it should teach her to be less rash, venturesome,
and self-assured. They hoped, they said, it
would cure her of forming secret schemes, even of
benevolence, and of an unchildlike ambition to act
in matters of importance independent of the aid and
advice of her parents. It did all this, I believe;
and if you care to hear, I will tell you, by and by,
what other good thing came out of that Christmas adventure.
That night, Bessie Raeburn added to
her usual prayer these words: “O Father
in Heaven, I thank thee more than ever for my warm
bed, and everything so comfortable. Forgive
me for running off, and giving dear papa and mamma
so much trouble. Make those wicked people sorry
for what they have done, and then forgive them.
And please put it into Mrs. Magee’s heart to
send home my muff, if she keeps all the other things.
And bless my good policeman, and pity and help poor
Molly Magee. Amen.”
CHAPTER II.
Little Bessie Raeburn never got back
her darling muff, nor any other article of her stolen
wardrobe. Her friend the good policeman, and
other officers, searched diligently for the dismal
den of thieves to which she had been led; but either
they failed to find the exact spot, or the wretched
family had removed. When all search was abandoned,
Bessie was sadly disappointed, not because they had
failed to recover her pretty street dress, as her
loss had been at once made up to her by her kind parents,
but that they had failed to find Molly Magee.
For ever since her adventure, Bessie had cherished
a humane and romantic desire to save and befriend
that poor little mendicant, whose pity for her, and
vain intercession in her behalf, had touched her heart.
“She is so different from the
others, mamma,” she would say, “I do believe
she was changed in her cradle by some wicked nurse,
if there are not any such things as malignant fairies.
O, I ’m so sorry I can’t believe in fairies
any more, they were so convenient; we could account
for so many things that way; but it is n’t sensible
and religious to believe in them, so I won’t.
But, mamma, what was I saying? O, I do believe
that some wicked nurse changed her in her cradle, took
her from some beautiful mamma and a great fine house
to Mrs. Magee’s dreadful homo, and took back
a little Magee and put in her place. And may
be her name is n’t Molly Magee after all, but
Lilly Livingston, or Isabella Van Rensselaer, or Gertrude
Stuyvesant, and
“Stop, stop, my child!
You are going on in your old romantic way. You
must not let your imagination gallop off with you in
that manner. Take care lest it carry you into
the basement of a tenement-house again,” Mrs.
Raeburn would say. Then Bessie would blush and
be silent; but she could not help thinking of poor
little Molly Magee; and she so constantly looked for
her on the street that it was hardly a pleasure to
her papa and mamma to walk or drive with her.
But the winter went by without her catching sight
of the beggar-girl who had obtained so strong a hold
on her sympathies.
But one sunny day in the early spring
her generous, faithful desire was granted. She
had been driving with her papa in the Park, and for
a little change and exercise they had left the carriage
and were walking beside one of the ponds, watching
the swans, when all at once Bessie exclaimed, “O
papa, there’s Molly Magee!” And surely,
right before them stood the beggar-girl! her face
paler, thinner, and sadder than before, while she
wore a still more wretched garb than the one Bessie
had been compelled to take from her. Her head
was covered, but scarcely protected, by a large, dilapidated
straw bonnet, through the rents of which peeped rebellious
curls of her soft brown hair. A faded band of
ribbon, half detached from the crown, fluttered like
a tattered pennon in the April wind.
On hearing Bessie’s exclamation,
the child stood as motionless as though turned to
stone. The next moment Mr. Raeburn’s hand
rested firmly on her shoulder. She looked up
in mute terror, then turned a pleading glance on Bessie,
who answered it by saying kindly, “Don’t
be afraid; he is my papa, and he won’t hurt
you. We have been looking for you ever so long.
We want to do something for you, don’t we, papa?”
“Yes, Molly,” said Mr.
Raeburn, gently, “we want to help you, if we
can. My little girl says you were better than
the rest of your family. Do your father and mother
still get their living by robbing little girls?”
“O, sir, she is dead!”
sobbed out Molly. “They sold all thim things,
and bought whiskey with the money, and drank and drank,
and one morning I myself found mother dead and cold.
Father behaved a little better for a while, but he
is as bad as ever now, and keeps me and the boys begging,
and when we have bad luck, beats us till we are like
to die.”
“Poor, poor child!” said
Mr. Raeburn, “you must come home with us, and
we will see what we can do for you.”
Molly looked surprised, but passively
allowed herself to be led to the carriage and lifted
on to the front seat, to the immense astonishment,
not to say horror, of the coachman, a very grand personage,
with four capes to his coat.
When they reached home, Mr. Raeburn
took Molly at once to his wife’s room, and those
two good people had a long talk with her. They
questioned her kindly but closely about her life, and
her story was such a sad one that tears soon fell
from Mrs. Raeburn’s eyes, while her husband
turned to the window to hide his.
A little later Molly found herself
again stripped of her rags, and clad (after a warm
bath) in some of Bessie’s clothes. Molly
looked intensely grateful, but was evidently too thoroughly
bewildered to say much. When she was taken to
Mrs. Raeburn’s parlor, she gazed about her curiously, not
in admiration, but with a strange, perplexed look,
which struck Mrs. Raeburn. “What are you
thinking of, my child?”
“Why, ma’am, it seems
to me I remember all these grand things, carpets
and curtains and pictures, or things just
like them.”
“Perhaps your mother has taken
you to such houses, or you went by yourself, sometime?”
“No, lady, she never
took me with her; and the servants of grand houses
never let the likes of me come farther than the alley
gate or the kitchen door. No, it must be I dreamed
it all. Many is the lovely things I see in my
dreams, ma’am. I see blue water, with
vessels sailing softly by, like the great white swans
in the Park, and mountains and trees, and flowers
that smell like fine ladies’ handkerchiefs on
Broadway; and many’s the time, when I am tired
and footsore, I seem to sleep, as I tramp, and dream
of a good, kind gentleman, who takes me up in his
arms and carries me. And sometimes at night,
when I am cold and hungry, I dream of a sweet lady,
who parts my hair, and pats me, and kisses me, and
hugs me up warm. I call those my dream
father and mother.”
As Mrs. Raeburn sat reflecting on
the words of the child, Bessie brought a story-book
to her young friend. Molly turned over its leaves
sadly, saying, “I don’t know how to read,
miss.”
“Nor write?” asked Bessie.
“No, miss.”
“Nor cipher, nor find places on the map?”
“No, miss.”
“Dear me! Do you know any hymns?”
“No, miss. What are they, thin?”
“Hymns? Why hymns are a sort of singing
prayers.”
“O, thin, miss, I do know one.
I say it every night; and when I ’ve had
to tell a great many lies I say it over and over hard:
’Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray the Lord my soul to keep;
If I should die before I wake,
I pray the Lord my soul to take.’”
“Who taught you that?” asked Mrs. Raeburn.
“I don’t know, ma’am. It seems
to me my dream-mother taught it to me.”
Bessie soon grew very fond of her
protegee (a French word, meaning one whom you protect);
and her romantic mind rushed at once to the conclusion
that she was to have an adopted sister. But her
parents had other plans for Molly. They felt
that it would be much better for the child, if she
could be wholly removed from the city, in which she
had lived so unhappy and discreditable a life, and
where it was to be feared she would always be subject
to the degrading influence or annoying interference
of her father.
Following Molly’s directions,
Mr. Raeburn, accompanied by Mr. Blair, the good policeman,
sought out Patrick Magee, and by sternly threatening
him with arrest and a long term in prison, for his
share in the robbery of little Bessie, made him sign
away all claim to the persons or services of his children.
For when Mr. Raeburn came to see the three little
boys, he was so touched by their worse than heathenish
condition that he resolved to try to do something towards
saving them, as well as their more interesting sister.
Then he called at the office of the
noble Children’s Aid Society, and placed
the poor little street waifs under the protection of
its excellent officers, pledging himself for their
clothing, instruction, and support, till proper homes
should be found for them.
I am glad to say, that, under kind
Christian care, the poor little lads improved rapidly,
grew healthy and happy, and showed quite an eager
desire to learn. Before a year had passed, comfortable
homes were found for them in the West, where I believe
they still are.
To return to Molly. The account
of her dream-home and parents so impressed Mr. and
Mrs. Raeburn, that they put an advertisement in the
daily papers, stating that they had taken in a little
street wanderer, who had evidently been born in a
happier and higher condition, and begging any parents
who may have had a little girl stolen from them, eight
or nine years before, to call, with the hope of identifying
her. But weeks, months went by, and no answer
came, and Molly was not claimed, except by a hideous
old German organ-grinder, who could n’t prove
property, so could n’t take her away, but
took herself off, scolding in very low Dutch.
That advertisement met many thousands
of careless eyes, but not the sad, yearning eyes to
which it would have come like the message of angels, “Glad
tidings of great joy.” Those eyes were
then gazing on strange tropical scenes, on orange-groves
and jessamine bowers, and on the purple sea that washes
the lovely shores of Florida.
All hope of finding Molly’s
dream-home being abandoned, her good friends
set about finding a real home for her.
At last, through the Reverend C
B , the Chief Shepherd of the Lord’s
lost lambs in the great wicked city, they succeeded.
A farmer and his wife, good, kindly, intelligent
people, living pleasantly and comfortably near a village
among the hills of Berkshire, Massachusetts, offered
to take her to their home and hearts, to
adopt her as their own, for they were childless.
Bessie was grieved at the prospect
of being parted from her friend, whom she really loved,
but was comforted by the promise of an annual visit
to her, in Berkshire.
Poor little Molly wept much when she
left her good friends. They had not only taught
her what human kindness and affection were, but had
taught her much about her Heavenly Father, had
led her straight to the arms of His infinite love.
So her tears were not all of sadness, but of tenderest
gratitude, as she went from their door with kindly
Farmer Morton.
CHAPTER III.
Our little friend Molly spent five
peaceful, happy years in her home among the grand
old hills of Berkshire, with Farmer Morton and his
kind, good wife. She was treated in every respect
as a daughter, well instructed in religious duties
and moral obligations, and in all useful housewifely
arts. Nor was school education withheld.
As soon as she had acquired the first rudiments of
knowledge, she was sent to the excellent village academy,
where she proved an apt and diligent scholar.
In return for all this generous, fostering care, Molly
(or Mary Morton as she was usually called)
gave to the kind pair who had so generously adopted
her, all the affection, respect, and obedience due
to parents; added to a gratitude inexpressibly deep
and tender. Her life as a beggar-girl, half fed,
half clad, and always abused, had been so terribly
sad that she could never forget it; and her present
life seemed one of heavenly serenity and security in
contrast.
She did not see her “dream-father
and mother” as often as formerly. She did
not need them. But when they did come to her
in her slumbers, they looked happy, and smiled over
her.
Molly was now in her fifteenth summer, a
tall, graceful girl, with a sweet, delicate face.
She was still pale and slender, for she had not quite
outgrown the effects of the old sorrow, starvation,
and exposure. Her face often wore an expression
of pensive sadness, unsuited to her years, a
faint shadow of her unhappy childhood still lingering
about her, but it was always ready to brighten
into cheerful smiles at a kind word or look.
Molly had made more than one visit
to her friends in New York, and now the Raeburns were
spending some weeks in the pretty village which was
scarcely a mile from the farm-house of Mr. Morton.
They were as kind as ever to Molly, and quite proud
of her. They took her with them on all their
drives among the hills, or rows upon the lakes.
Bessie always spoke of her friend as “My Molly,”
seeming to think she had in her “certain inalienable
rights,” chief of which was the right of discovery.
Molly never thought of disputing those rights.
She looked up to pretty, wayward, impulsive Bessie
Raeburn as to a superior being, an angelic
deliverer. In her half-adoring gratitude and
love, she could have “kissed the hem of her
garment,” or the lower flounce of her pretty
organdie dress. She would often say, “O,
where would I have been now, if it had not been for
you, dear Bessie? In a pauper’s
grave, or worse, in prison, or
worse still, on the streets, a wicked, lost girl,
loving nobody, and only knowing of God and Jesus by
hearing their names in dreadful oaths.”
“But, Molly dear,” replied
Bessie, “I must always call
you Molly, I have done so little, after
all. In thanking me, don’t forget papa
and your father Morton.”
“I don’t forget them,
nor my Father in heaven either; but you, Bessie, were
the first to pity me and try to help me, though I had
done you wrong.”
“Well, as for that, Molly,”
said Bessie, seriously, “perhaps God had more
to do with that wild Christmas expedition of mine than
anybody thought at the time. It seemed so rash
and foolish. I have always thought that good
policeman an angel, an Irish angel, in the rough,
though he did not know it. I don’t believe
that angels and saints ever have a very high opinion
of themselves, do you?”
This was the happiest summer of Molly’s
life, it was also to prove the most memorable.
One afternoon, as she was returning
from the village, down a quiet, shady lane, which
led through her father’s farm, she was suddenly
confronted by the tyrant of her unhappy childhood,
Patrick Magee. He was even a more wretched looking
creature than of old, shabbier, dirtier,
with every mark of the most degrading vice. As
he stepped from behind a hazel-bush, where he had
been skulking, into her path, Molly gave an involuntary
shriek, and shrank back from him in fear and aversion.
“Whist, darling!” he exclaimed
in a wheedling tone. “Be aisy, just;
it’s not meself that will harm a hair of yer
head. And sure this is not the way you should
meet yer poor ould unfortunate father. Is this
the kind of filial piety you ’ve larned
from your grand friends?”
“I do not believe you are
my father,” replied Molly, looking directly
into his bleared eyes, that quailed under her gaze.
“Now, now, whoever heard the
likes o’ that?” began Patrick, with a
shocked expression. “Denies her own father,
that tiled and spint for her! Why, Molly dear,
you are the image of me, barring the color of the
hair, mine being a trifle foxy, while yourn is a darkish
brown; and barring the lines of care and trouble on
my brow, the hard lines I ’ve
had no child’s hand to smooth away, the saints
pity me!”
Hero Molly’s soft heart was
touched, and she asked, gently, “Where do you
come from now? and what do you want of me?”
“Well, I came last from New
York, when, after a power of trouble, I found out
your whereabouts. My heart so cried out for my
daughter and my darling boys. You see, for the
five years past I ’ve been, so to speak,
in retirement on the Hudson.”
“Where?” asked Molly, bewildered.
“Why, in a quiet town called
Sing Sing; but; faith! it’s little singing I
did there.”
“Do you mean that you have been
in the penitentiary?” said Molly, startled.
“Well, not to put too fine a
point on it, yes. But you see it’s a hard
word to pronounce, that same. I got into what
gintlemen call ‘difficulties,’ pretty
soon after my Biddy died, and my poor children was
torn from my arms. Somehow, I had no heart to
keep up a good character. I was what they call
desperate; so I went into a gintleman’s
house one avening, without ringing the bell and sending
up my card, as in my better days I should have done,
you know. I went in head foremost, through a
back window, and when I was coming out with a trifle
of silver, the police nabbed me, and it was all up
for a while with poor Pat Magee. Now what do
I want with you? I want to know about my darling
boys, of course. Are they living and respectable?”
“Yes,” replied Molly;
“they are well and doing well. I hear from
them twice a year, and write to them oftener.”
“Doing well, are they! but doing
nothing for their poor ould father. Ah, this
is a hard world.”
Molly could not refrain from saying,
“They used to think it so, but they don’t
now. They have good friends, comfortable homes,
and are happy and industrious.”
“Industrious! and isn’t
it myself that taught them to be that same? Niver
did I spare the rod when they came home empty-handed
from a day on the streets.”
Molly made no reply, but tried to
pass on. Again Patrick stopped her, and said,
with a strange, cunning smile, “And so, miss,
you don’t believe I ’m your rale father.”
“No,” answered Molly,
firmly. “I have always had indistinct
recollections of a very different home from that wretched
cellar in the Five Points, and of other parents than
you and Mrs. Magee. I believe you stole me when
I was very young.”
“No, indade. I had nothing
to do with it,” replied Patrick, hastily.
“Then your wife did it?”
“Well, yes. You see, my
dear, when I ’m fairly cornered, I scorns to
lie. That same was one of the little thaving
operations of the late Mrs. Magee, Heaven rest her
sowl!” said Patrick, rolling his eyes.
“O, then, for mercy’s
sake, tell me who and where are my parents!”
cried Molly, clasping her hands in an agony of entreaty.
“Softly, softly; bide a bit,
my darling. Nothing is sold for nothing.
I can niver consint to blacken the memory of my poor
departed Biddy without a consideration.”
“What do you mean?”
“Pay me fifty dollars, and I
’ll make a clane breast of it, and tell you
all you want to know.”
“But, Mr. Magee,” cried
Molly, in distress, “I have not so much money.
I have only a very few dollars of my own in the world;
but I will promise to give it to you, and more too,
as soon as I can earn it. Only tell me.”
“No, miss, I must be paid down.
’A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.’
If you have n’t the money, belike your new governor,
Mr. Morton, would pay a trifle like that for the sake
of getting rid of you.”
“He might advance it
for me; though he is not rich, he is so good,”
rejoined Molly. “I would ask you to come
up to the house and see, only he is away from home,
and is not expected back till late in the evening.
Please, please tell me now, and trust me for
your reward. Indeed, indeed, I will pay you some
time, and be your friend always.”
“Your servant, miss,”
replied Patrick, with a mocking bow, “but I ’d
rather not trust a fine lady as has just scorned an
ould friend in reduced circumstances, who, if he is
n’t her father, sure it’s no fault of
his. Tell your Mr. Morton that I ’ll call
to-morrow morning, ready to arrange matters in a business-like,
gintlemanly way. But mind, no money, no sacret.
I ’ll not have my family affairs paraded in
the newspapers for nothing, and all Mrs. Magee’s
little wakenesses exposed, after she’s left
this wicked world, and the crowner has set on
her, and she’s been dacently buried at the city’s
expinse, hard on to six years.”
Molly reached home in a state of intense
excitement, but, on relating her strange story, was
soothed and cheered by Mrs. Morton’s tender,
motherly sympathy. Mr. Morton came home earlier
than he was looked for, and was at once informed of
the important revelation which Mr. Magee proposed
to make for a “consideration.” Doubtful
what course to pursue, he hurried into the village
to consult with Molly’s first friends, the Raeburns.
The consequence of this consultation was, that the
next morning, when Patrick Magee appeared at the farm-house,
he was confronted, not alone by Mr. Morton, but by
Mr. Raeburn and the sheriff of the county. Taking
these as mere witnesses, however, he was not abashed,
but greeted all with a jaunty air, and the old Irish
expression, “The top of the morning to ye, gintlemen.”
On Mr. Morton referring to the secret
he had to reveal, he said, with the utmost assurance,
“Well, Mr. Morton, I ’ve slept on
that same matter, and I ’ve concluded that
I can’t in conscience consint to blacken the
memory of the late Mrs. Magee for less nor a hundred
dollars. And sure, your honors, a rale live
father and mother, rich and respectable, are chape
at that, to say nothing of the reputation of a poor,
hard-working woman, that’s dead and gone, and
can’t defind herself.”
“These, Mr. Magee, are the best
terms you offer, then?” asked the farmer.
“Yes; but if you don’t
close the bargain immadiately, I may rise a trifle.
I ’ve been too aisy, on account of
poor Molly. My feelings are too much for me.”
“Then, Mr. Sheriff,” said
Mr. Morton, “you must do your duty.”
So Patrick Magee found himself again
in the stern grasp of the law. He was taken
to a magistrate’s office for examination, but
there he obstinately refused to reveal a word of the
important secret, saying he would die first.
So he was committed to the county jail, there to
await his trial on a charge of kidnapping.
For more than a week the prisoner
remained sullenly silent, while poor Molly suffered
agonies of suspense, and her friends were fearful that
for lack of sufficient evidence the villain might yet
escape justice, carrying his secret with him.
But at last he yielded, subdued, not by hard fare, hard
words, or solitude, but by the mad thirst of the inebriate. Since leaving
the penitentiary he had been drinking very hard, and now, being suddenly
deprived of all stimulants, his spirits sunk, his strength and appetite failed,
and he was threatened with the terrible disease of the intemperate, delirium tremens.
Being told by the doctor that he thought
Magee must have some brandy, Mr. Raeburn paid a visit
to the jail. He found the prisoner sitting on
his narrow bed, looking haggard and ill, but as sullen
as ever.
“Well, Magee,” said Mr.
Raeburn, pleasantly, “have you made up your
mind to tell all you know of the parentage of that
stolen child? You have confessed that you connived
at, if you did not assist in the crime, and it may
go hard with you at the trial.”
Patrick replied, with a furious oath,
“Niver a word more will I spake about the matter,
if they hang me.”
“If I will endeavor to get you
discharged; if I will promise to give you some decent
clothes, and to furnish you with easy and constant
employment, will you tell?”
“No.”
“If I will give you a glass of good brandy,
will you tell?”
Patrick started, and his dull eyes
flashed, but with his old cunning he replied, “Show
me first the brandy.”
Mr. Raeburn took a flask from his
pocket and poured out a glass nearly full. With
a trembling, outstretched hand, the poor sot cried,
“Yes, yes, yer honor, give it to me, and on
my word, on my sowl, I’ll tell.”
The glass was given him, and he drained
it with a sort of frantic relish; then almost immediately,
and very hurriedly, began his story.
“Molly’s father is Squire
Phillips, a mighty clever lawyer and a rich man.
He lives at Newburgh, on the Hudson, forninst Fishkill;
you mind the town?”
“Yes, and I have heard of Mr. Phillips; go on.”
“I should have said he has an
office in Newburgh, but he lives on a fine place up
the river, out of town, a couple of miles or so.
You see, when ill-luck sent me over from Ireland,
where I lived in ease and plenty, never taking up
a spade but for devarsion, after a hard day following
the hounds or riding steeple-chases, I lived with Mr.
Phillips as gardener. But he and I niver could
agree, and so parted; and soon after my Biddy, who
was the cook, was discharged for taking a drop too
much just. You see she fell down stairs with
the tea-tray. So she had a spite against the
master on my account, and against the mistress on
her own account, and vowed by all the saints she ’d
be aven with them. After we settled in
New York, many’s the trip she took up the river
to prowl about the place (women is quare cratures,
yer honor) for a chance to balance accounts.
But she never got a shy at them till one afternoon,
just before dark, she found little Miss Mary, Mistress
Phillips’s one child, playing alone on the river-bank,
out of sight of the house; it’s likely she ’d
run away from a lazy nurse. My Biddy wasn’t
one of the kind that dilly-dallies or shilly-shallies:
she pounces on the child like a hawk on a chicken,
stops its mouth so it could n’t as much as peep,
and carries it into a wood near by and hides till
dark. Then she takes it over to Fishkill, where
she has friends, who lend her proper clothes for the
child, and give it a drink that hushes its crying
like magic just. Then she takes the night-boat
for New York, and in the big, crowded city the child
was as completely lost as the small chicken I likened
her to would be if the hawk should drop it in a wide
sea-marsh. There was a great hue and cry about
’the mysterious disappearance of the only child
of John Phillips, Esq.,’ (just as if no poor,
hard-working man ever lost an only child!) but most
of the newspapers drowned her, I believe. Biddy
kept her mighty close for a time, and sheared off
her curls, but niver a hound of a detective smelt
at our door.
“I always told Biddy that trouble
would come of this same matter sooner or later, and
sure had n’t we a power of trouble with Molly
herself, what with her pining and crying,
(though Biddy soon learned her to cry silent,)
and her sickly turn, and her ungrateful disposition?
And didn’t she forsake us at last, me
a lone widower, and the poor motherless boys?”
“Ah, Magee, what an awful hypocrite
you are!” exclaimed Mr. Raeburn; “but
go on.”
“What more do you want to know, thin?”
“How old was the child when your wife stole
it?”
“I should say that the child
was a trifle over three years old when Mrs. Magee
adopted her,” replied Patrick, with imposing
dignity.
“Are Mr. and Mrs. Phillips both living?”
“It ’s not ten days since I was towld
they were, yer honor.”
“I start for Newburgh to-morrow
morning, with Molly Miss Phillips,”
resumed Mr. Raeburn; “but you must remain where
you are, in close confinement, at least until we have
ascertained if your statement be true. If it
be found so, I will do my best to effect your release.
Meanwhile, I hope you will improve the time in repenting
of your past life, and resolving to begin a better,
for you are a great sinner, Patrick.”
“Arrah, yer honor, don’t
be too hard on a poor man! And sure you won’t
lave me without an’ other comforting drop of
brandy?”
“You can have more if the doctor
prescribes it again. He will know what is best
for you. But I hope you will think on what I
have said. If you wish to be a better man, you
shall not want for help.”
“Thank you kindly, Mr. Raeburn,
but I doubt it’s too late. ’It’s
mighty hard to tache ould dogs new tricks,’
but if you ’ll spake a good word for me to the
doctor about the brandy, I’ll try.”
At bedtime Molly kissed her father
and mother Morton good night with tender and tearful
emotion, but without a word, her heart was
too full. On reaching her pleasant chamber,
where her trunk stood ready packed for the journey,
she sank on her knees beside her dear little bed,
and prayed for the parents she was about to leave,
and for those she was about to seek; for her generous
friends, the Raeburns, and for poor, sinful Patrick
Magee, who needed somebody’s prayers so much.
When she laid her head on her pillow, she could not
sleep, but lay in a tremulous, excited state, half
joy, half sorrow. Then Mrs. Morton came in to
kiss her once more, and to tuck her in, as she used
to do when Molly first came to her a sad and feeble
child. As she bent to kiss her she fell on her
neck and wept, saying, “My child, my child, how
can I give you up?”
“O mother, dear!” replied
Molly, embracing her, “you must never give me
up. I must still be your child as well as hers.”
“Do you want very much to go to her,
darling?”
“Yes, though you have been so
good, so good, and I love you very dearly,
I have always had a sort of blind yearning in my heart
for her. It seems to me that the cry of my infancy,
‘Mamma!’ ‘Papa!’ which the
cruel blows of Mrs. Magee hushed, has always been whispering
in my soul, and must be answered. But
if I love them, and they love me ever so much, I shall
love you and dear father Morton all my life and into
God’s forever.”
“It is well, dear child, and
the Lord’s will be done. Good night!”
Molly was wakened early in the morning
by the carol of an oriole, but she could make nothing
of his song but “Good by, good by, good by!”
and the clambering roses by her window seemed sending
in sweet farewell sighs. Soon after breakfast,
Mr. Raeburn drove up in his carriage, and so Molly
set out to seek her fortune and her parents.
CHAPTER IV.
It was the afternoon of a cool, showery
summer day, when Mr. Raeburn and Mary drove through
a handsome stone gateway, and up an avenue of maples,
to the fine old-fashioned mansion of Mr. Phillips.
As they stood on the steps, Mr. Raeburn noticed that
Mary had been much agitated by recognizing scenes
once familiar to her baby eyes, and he begged her
to try to be calm. “Remember,” he
said, “we have no positive, reliable evidence
that you are the lost child of Mr. and Mrs. Phillips.
You must not suddenly proclaim yourself. They
have probably despaired so long that they will be
unable to credit your story, if too abruptly told,
and any repulse would be very painful to you.
Leave it to me to let the joyful light gradually
in upon their minds, and second me when I refer to
you.”
“I will do so; trust me,” replied Mary,
in a low voice.
When the servant came to the door, Mr. Raeburn inquired for
Mr. Phillips only, thinking it best that the first communication should be made
to him alone. They were shown into a pleasant library, opening on to a
piazza by French windows, looking towards the river. Mary seated herself
on a sofa, in the most shadowed part of the room, and kept her face hidden by a
thick veil. She sat in silence, except that to her ear the beatings of her
loving, impatient heart were audible. It seemed to her a long hour that
they were kept waiting, though it was probably not more than fifteen minutes.
Then the door gently opened, and Mr. Phillips entered. Mary half rose,
then sank back, faint with happiness, for she had recognized his face, it was
that of her dream-father!
Mr. Phillips was of middle age; the
dark-brown curls of his hair were slightly tinged
with silver. His face was very thoughtful, if
not sad in expression. His form was stately,
and his manner courteous and refined, a
gentleman, every inch of him.
He pleasantly greeted by name Mr.
Raeburn, who then introduced his companion as “Miss
Morton.” Mary rose, courtesied, and again
sank into her seat. The galloping heart was
getting almost too much for her, she was
gasping under her veil.
Mr. Phillips apologized for keeping
his visitor so long waiting, and added, “When
word was brought me of your arrival, I was assisting
in carrying Mrs. Phillips from her sitting-room to
her bedchamber. She is ill.”
Mary started, and a new terror seized her.
“Not seriously ill, I hope?” said Mr.
Raeburn.
“No, we trust not, now; but
she has been very ill from a fever, and is still extremely
delicate. She has been a good deal of an invalid
for the past fifteen years,” said Mr. Phillips
with a sigh.
After a plan formed that morning,
Mr. Raeburn then requested the opinion of Mr. Phillips,
as a lawyer, on an important land claim in which he
was interested.
As they talked on and on, Mary still
sat silent and motionless. She was hardly impatient
any longer, for had she not her father’s face
to watch, and his voice to listen to?
At length there was a pause; then
the two gentlemen began to talk about the lovely scenery
around them, the river, the estate, the Phillips mansion
and family, and finally Mr. Raeburn said, “I
think I have heard, Mr. Phillips, a sad story of your
having once lost a little child in some mysterious
way. Perhaps at this remote day you will not
be unwilling to give me the facts of this loss.”
“Certainly not, my dear sir,”
replied Mr. Phillips, “if you care to hear so
melancholy a tale. All I myself know can be soon
told. Our first child was a daughter, a
lovely, engaging little creature, the very light of
our eyes. She was rather delicate, and most carefully
tended and watched till she was past three years of
age. Then, one summer day, I invited my wife
to accompany me to New York, where I had business,
and she had as what woman has not? shopping
to attend to. She hesitated, as little Mary’s
nurse was young and rather thoughtless, but I over-persuaded
her and she went, giving at the last moment many charges
to the young girl concerning the child.
“I remember how lovingly little
Mary kissed us good by that morning, and how, still
unsatisfied, she ran after the carriage, commanding
the coachman, in a pretty, imperious way she had,
to stop till she could get another kiss. I was
a little vexed, fearing we should miss the train,
yet she was obeyed, lifted up, kissed, and put down
into her nurse’s arms, and that was the last
we ever saw of her. How thankful I have always
been that we stopped for her good-by kiss. Many
a time since, in my sleep, I have felt that last kiss
on my lips.
“We had intended to stay till
the afternoon of the next day, in New York, but at
evening Mrs. Phillips grew so strangely anxious about
her baby girl, whom she had never before left for
a night, that we took a late train for home.
Just as we reached our station, I noticed a New York
boat put off from the landing. I have since thought
it was possible our child was on that boat.”
Here Mary could scarcely restrain
herself from crying out, “She was! she was!”
but she shut her lips and clasped her hands tight,
and was still.
“When we reached home,”
continued Mr. Phillips, “we found all in confusion
and consternation, Our darling little one was missing!
She had not been seen since five o’clock, at
which time she had been left by her nurse fast asleep,
and to all human apprehension in perfect safety.
On that day she had been allowed to have the range
of the house, and taking a freak to have her belated
afternoon nap on the drawing-room sofa, was there
put to sleep.
“The nurse took the opportunity
to have a little gossip with the cook and coachman,
in the kitchen, and it was a good deal more than an
hour, I believe, though she declared it was not half
that time, before she went to look after her charge.
The room was empty; the low window was open, and
our bird had flown forever!
“It was some time before the
servants were really alarmed, as it was thought she
was somewhere in the house or garden, hiding, after
her roguish way. I think it was actually dark
before they made any serious and thorough effort to
find her. Indeed, I set on foot the first systematic
search. I roused all our neighbors, and employed
the police of our town, and afterwards of New York
and other cities; but all was in vain, utterly in
vain! No real trace of her could be found.
We could not even hear of any child answering to
her description, as having been taken from the town
on that day, in any direction, except one,
who was seen on the New York boat I have mentioned,
and who must, I think, have been younger than ours,
or it was ill or stupid, as it was said the woman
who had charge of it carried it constantly in her
arms, where it lay quite still. Even this child
we could only trace as far as New York. It seemed
to disappear in the great city as a snowflake melts
in the sea.
“Our friends all believed that
our little Mary had fallen from the river-bank and
had been drowned, and the body carried away by the
swift current. Some lads, who were out on the
water that day in a sail-boat, said that they saw
a child on the bank a little below our house, running
about quite alone, apparently chasing butterflies.
But it was several months before we relaxed our efforts
to find her. So many lost children were brought
to us in answer to our advertisements, so
many poor little homeless ones, whom nobody owned, that
it looked as though we were about to set up an orphan
asylum. In truth, we sometimes felt like it,
for dear little Mary’s sake. We could not
give her up, for we could not believe her dead.
Our sorrow was such a live anguish without
comfort, without rest that we felt that
the dear object must be living and suffering.
The tender ties that had bound our hearts to her
quivered with pain, but we felt that, though sorely
wounded, they were not quite severed.
“Then we had strangely vivid
dreams of her. Very sad dreams they were; she
always appeared to us pale, and sorrowful, and thin,
as though pinched with want. Of late years we
have dreamed of her more seldom; and, singularly enough,
when we have dreamed, she has worn to both of us a
changed and happier look. So we feel at last
that somewhere, in this or a better world, ‘it
is well with the child.’
“The health of Mrs. Phillips
received a great shock in this loss; in fact, she
has never been quite well since. She has been
threatened with consumption, and has been obliged
to spend most of her winters in the South. I
think she still mourns for her first-born; no other
child has yet been able to fill her place.”
“You have then other children?” said Mr.
Raeburn.
“Yes, three; two boys, of eleven
and nine, and a little girl, now nearly five years
old.”
Here Mary felt a happy glow overspread
her veiled face, and her heart palpitated with a new
joy.
“Believe me, my dear sir,”
said Mr. Raeburn, after a pause, “I have not
drawn from you this painful story from mere curiosity.
My friend now present, Miss Morton, is acquainted
with a young girl who believes herself to have been
stolen in her early childhood, from a happy home and
kind parents, by a vulgar and cruel woman, who hid
her for years in a wretched den in the worst part
of New York. But, my dear Miss Morton, you can
tell the story better than I; will you not do so?”
Mary began in a voice low and tremulous,
but of penetrating sweetness, thus: “That
poor young girl was, while yet a child, not wholly
lost and wicked, rescued from a life of sin and beggary
by some good kind friends, whom God will bless for
ever and ever! When they took pity on her, she
had forgotten her true last name; it had been frightened
out of her memory, or driven out by blows; but she
knew that her first name was Mary, though she was
only called Molly, and she had not forgotten
her true parents, though she called them her dream
father and mother, because they came to her in her
sleep, to kiss her and comfort her. She was surrounded
by squalor and wretchedness; but she never quite forgot
her old beautiful home, for her dim sweet memories
of it were all she knew of heaven.”
Here Mary rose and threw back her
veil, as she continued, “And she hopes, she
believes that this is her old home, for she
recognizes everything around her. O yes, I know
that carved mantel, that ebony writing-case, that
screen, that bust, and that picture over the cabinet.
It is mamma’s portrait!”
Mr. Phillips uttered an exclamation
of joyful surprise and started forward, but immediately
fearful of some mistake, calmed himself, and merely
said, “Will you let me see you without your bonnet?”
Mary hastily uncovered her beautiful
head, and stood before him, a soft, timid smile playing
about her lips, and a tremulous light of love and
joy in her eyes. Mr. Phillips looked from that
yearning young face to the one on the canvas, so
wonderfully like they were! “It is enough!”
he exclaimed; “I know you for our daughter,
our long-lost lamb! O Father in heaven, I thank
Thee!”
And the next moment Mary was clasped
in her father’s arms, her head on his breast,
her arms about his neck, laughing and weeping in her
passionate emotion, so long restrained.
Mr. Raeburn rose and softly loft the
room, passing out on to the piazza, where he stood
for many minutes, apparently admiring the fine scenery,
though in fact he could see but little for the tears
of tender sympathy that would spring to his kindly
eyes. Whichever way he looked there was a water-view.
He returned just in time to see the
two boys, George and Herbert, introduced to their
sister. They received the good news at first
in a bewildered, boyish, awkward way. They blushed
and stammered, stepped forward and back, then stood
stock still, and looked at Mary in silent, wide-eyed
wonder and admiration.
“Ah, boys,” she said,
“I suppose I seem to you like one come back from
the dead, or like another Undine, risen from the water;
but won’t you take my hand? see, it isn’t
cold!” Then she shook hands with them and kissed
them, and they rapturously returned her caress, and
all was right.
“Now, my dear boys,” said
Mr. Phillips, “you have a task of self-restraint
before you. It is necessary that this great joy
of ours should be kept awhile from your mother.
She is not strong enough to bear it. But she
must see Mary and get accustomed to her as soon as
possible. I have a plan. A new nurse is
needed for Lilly; will you accept the position for
a few days, my darling?”
“Most joyfully, papa.”
“I give you warning, sister,
that it will not be a very jolly life for you,”
put in Master George. “Lilly is awfully
spoiled, and will order you about, and put on all
the airs of old Queen Bess.”
“That will do, George,”
said his father, with a wave of his hand. “You,
Mary, I am sure, will soon win Lilly’s heart,
though she is quite too young to be intrusted with
our secret. Having charge of her, you can have
frequent access to your mother, and perhaps gradually
reveal yourself to her. We must contrive to
have you get your first glimpse of her unseen, otherwise
you might betray yourself by your emotion.
“And now, my daughter, if you
are sufficiently calm, you will give me a brief account
of your life since we were so sadly parted, more than
twelve long years ago.”
Mary told her piteous story very simply,
passing as lightly as possible over her early sorrows
and hardships, but again and again bringing tears
to the eyes of her father and brothers.
When Mr. Phillips heard the name of
Patrick Magee, he exclaimed, “Why, I had that
villain under pay for months for pretending to search
for you in New York, and all along he had you hid
in his vile den! He must be made to suffer for
it.”
“He will suffer, he does suffer,
father. Poor, lost creature! I am willing
to leave him to God,” said Mary, gently.
Mr. Raeburn returned to his hotel
in the town that evening, but called at the Phillips
mansion in the morning, to say good by to Mary and
her father.
Mary came to him, all radiant with
her new happiness. “I have seen my mother
twice!” she said. “The first time
she was asleep. I stole up softly to her bedside,
and held my breath as I bent over her. Her face
is no longer rosy and dimpled, like the pictured face,
yet far lovelier. In repose it seemed worn and
sorrowful, but O, so gentle and sweet! I stood
by her a long time, and looked and looked, trying to
make up a little for what I had lost. Her dear
hand lay on the counterpane. I longed to kiss
it, but I dared not. I did kiss a braid of her
hair that fell over the pillow, and such a thrill went
through me! Her hair is as beautiful and dark
as ever, and so are her eyes. I looked straight
into them, once this morning. Papa presented
me to her, as Lilly’s new nurse. She looked
so kind and gracious, I thought I should have sunk
at her feet, to beg her to bless her child. I
could not speak, and papa apologized for me by saying
that I was very diffident, but that Lilly seemed to
take to me, and he hoped I would do well; and then
she smiled on me, and I took that for the blessing.
“I slept in the nursery with
Lilly last night, in the very bed, I believe, I used
to sleep in; and when I knelt beside it, I could think
of no words to say but those of my little childish
prayer, ’Now I lay me down to sleep.’
Was n’t it strange?”
At this moment Lilly came dancing
into the parlor, to claim her new friend. The
child was a dainty little thing, as restless and radiant
as a butterfly, evidently a little spoiled,
yet very charming.
The tears sprang to Mary’s eyes,
as her good friend rose to take leave. She weighed
down his memory with messages for the dear ones to
whom he was going; and, as he gave her his hand in
parting, she lifted up her sweet, ingenuous face,
with a timid, grateful smile, and kissed him, for
the first time. She had never before felt that
she had a social position equal to his and dear Bessie’s.
Mr. Phillips accompanied Mr. Raeburn
to the station, and parted from him with much regret
and many heartfelt thanks and blessings.
A few days later there came to Mary
letters from all her friends in Berkshire, letters
of loving congratulation, most grateful to her heart.
One from Mr. Raeburn contained the intelligence that
Patrick Magee had been released from prison in a very
solemn way. After a terrible attack of delirium,
he had fallen into a stupor, and died. So that
sinful and blinded soul had gone stumbling down the
dark valley, and forth into the unknown world, where
neither human pity nor judgment could reach him.
“O, I hope God forgave him at
the last, as I forgive him,” said Mary, weeping.
“Why, sister Mary,” said
George Phillips, “you are n’t crying for
that old reprobate, are you?”
“No, Georgie; only crying because
nobody can cry for him. You see, Georgie
dear, I have been wicked myself, and know how to pity
the erring.”
“You wicked, Mary!
I suppose you have in your mind the few little lies
you told when you were the bound slave of that old
Irish ogre and his ogress. It’s my opinion
the angel that writes down things don’t make
much account of such sins.”
Day by day, Mary won her way to the
inmost hearts of all the household. Mrs. Phillips
was especially interested in the young stranger, who
seemed so superior to her station, who moved
about so softly, and was so careful and watchful.
She loved to have her in her apartments, and often
sat and gazed at her, so mournfully, so searchingly,
that Mary longed inexpressibly to kneel by her side
and tell her all.
At last the time came. It was
Sunday, and little Lilly’s birthday. Mrs.
Phillips was so much better that she was brought down
stairs, for the first time for many weeks, and seated
on the vine-shaded piazza, overlooking the river.
She looked very happy, and there was a delicate rose-tint
on her cheek. All the family were gathered around
her; it was a jubilee of love. Her husband sat
at her side; the boys stood near, leaning over the
railing, watching the graceful sloops sailing by.
Mary sat on a low stool before her, showing some Bible
pictures to Lilly, who wore a birthday wreath of blue
violets and white rosebuds. Suddenly the child
was heard to say, “This is my birthday, you know,
Mary, and that’s why it’s so pleasant.
When is your birthday?”
“O, never mind,” said
Mary, blushing, “look at this picture.”
“No, no, not till you tell me when your birthday
comes.”
“I cannot tell you, dear.”
“Why, don’t you know? I ’m
only five years old, and I know mine.”
“Why, how is this, Mary?”
asked Mrs. Phillips; “don’t you really
know your birthday?”
Mary hesitated a moment, then replied,
“There were some sad circumstances in my childhood
that prevented me from knowing much even about myself.
I do not know exactly how old I am, but I think
about fifteen.”
“About fifteen!” repeated
Mrs. Phillips, in a dreamy way, “and your name
Mary. John, our Mary would have been just
about her age, could we have kept her; and do you
know I fancy she would have looked very much like
this young girl. I suppose this coincidence of
age and name has given me a peculiar interest in her.
I felt strangely drawn towards her at first sight.
I have an odd idea that she looks like our family,
somewhat as I used to look; and, stranger still, like
you, John.”
At this, all instinctively drew near
to the mother. Mr. Phillips took her hand, and
said calmly, “My dear Caroline, nobody on earth
has a better right to look like our Mary, like you
and like me, than this dear young girl.”
“O John, John, tell me! Can she he!
O blessed God!
She could not utter a word more, but
she stretched out her trembling arms, and Mary crept
into them and lay on her mother’s breast, the
long hunger of her heart satisfied at last!
“Yes, dear, this is our
lost child, given back to us by a gracious God,”
said Mr. Phillips. But there was no need to tell
her that; she knew all now. Kissing her darling,
patting her head, and murmuring over her sweet pet
names, as though Mary were still the baby girl she
had lost, she sat for a few bewildered, rapturous moments,
then sank back in a swoon. She lay with such
a smile on her lips that those about her were little
alarmed. She had only fainted under her burden
of happiness. She afterwards said that this swoon
was like a trance of heavenly joy. She revived
with a sigh, thinking it all a dream, but
we know it was n’t.
I don’t know that I have anything
more to tell you, except that Mrs. Phillips got well
very rapidly, and did n’t have to go South with
the birds that year. Joy and Love are very good
physicians, though they practice without a diploma,
in defiance of medical professors and all the college
of surgeons.
Yes, one other thing. There
was a great Christmas gathering at the Phillips mansion
that year. The Raeburns and Mortons were there,
with a host of Mary’s uncles, aunts, and cousins,
and actually two pairs of grandparents. Only
think how rich she was!
On Christmas-eve there was dancing
and charade-acting, there were games and tableaux
in the great hall; and last and best of all, there
was story-telling around the fragrant wood-fire in
the library.
Of all the stories told that night,
there was none to compare, everybody said, with the
one related by pretty Bessie Raeburn, of a certain
Christmas adventure of hers, and of what came of it.
A CHARADE
I love my first on a summer eve,
Or a breezy autumn morning;
My soul bounds with it, and my heart
Laughs out, all trouble scorning.
I love it by the wild sea-beach,
When fades the sunset splendor,
And the new moon, like a fairy boat,
Sails through the sky-deeps
tender.
My second brings up visions sad
Of lifes most fearful duty,
Of green mounds hiding from our sight
Dear forms of youth and beauty.
My third, if speaking slowly, clouds
The brightest day with sadness;
If quickly, thrills the air, and wakes
The gloomiest morn to gladness.
It calls, and through the churchyard gate
A funeral is creeping;
It calls, and down the old church aisle
A bridal train is sweeping!
My whole grew in a garden old,
Round which my heart still
lingers;
Its azure petals formed a cup
Fit for a fairy’s fingers.
Canterbury-bell