AT GRANDFATHER.
Easily distinguished in the crowd
gathered to welcome the coach, whose arrival was always
the event of the evening, was Bert’s grandfather,
Squire Stewart, a typical old Scotchman, from every
point of view. As the passengers got out, he
stood watching them in silent dignity, until Mrs.
Lloyd, catching sight of him, ran impulsively up, and
taking his face between her two hands, gave him a
warm kiss on each cheek, saying:
“Dear father, I’m so glad to see you looking
so well.”
“And I’m well pleased
to see you, Kate,” responded the Squire, in a
tone of deep affection, adding: “And is
this your boy?” as Bert, who in the meantime
had been lifted down from his place, came to his mother’s
side.
“He’s a fine big boy,
and not ill-looking, either. I trust his manners
have not been neglected.”
“You’ll have to judge
of that for yourself, father,” replied Mrs. Lloyd.
“He’s by no means perfect, but he’s
pretty good, upon the whole.”
“Well, daughter, I’ll
go and get the carriage, if you’ll just wait
here a moment,” said Mr. Stewart, going off
toward the stables.
Presently he returned, driving an
elegant carriage with a fine pair of well-matched
bays, which, old man though he was, he held in complete
control.
“We won’t mind the trunks
now, Kate; I will send in for them in the morning,”
said he, as he helped them into their seats.
Maplebank, Squire Stewart’s
place, was situated about four miles from Riverton,
and on the way out father and daughter had much to
say to one another. As for Bert, he sat in silence
on his seat. He felt very much awed by his grandfather.
There was something so stern and severe about his
time-worn countenance, he seemed so stiff in his bearing,
and his voice had such a deep, rough tone in it, that,
to tell the truth, Bert began to feel half sorry he
had come. But this feeling disappeared entirely
when, on arriving at Maplebank, he found himself in
the arms of Aunt Sarah before he had time to jump
out of the carriage, and was then passed over to his
grandmother, who nearly smothered him with kisses.
If his grandfather filled him with
awe, his grandmother inspired him with love, from
the very start. And no wonder, indeed, for she
was the very poetry of a grandmother. A small
woman, with slender frame, already stooping somewhat
beneath the burden of years, her snow-white hair and
spotless cap framed one of the sweetest faces that
ever beamed on this earth. Bert gave her his
whole heart at once, and during all the days he spent
at Maplebank she was his best loved friend.
Yet he did not fail to be very fond
of his two aunts, likewise. With an uncle, who
remained at home, assisting his father in the management
of the property, they comprised the household, and
the three apparently conspired to do their best to
spoil Master Bert during that summer. Bert took
very kindly to the spoiling, too, and under the circumstances
it was a wonder he did not return to Halifax quite
demoralised, as regards domestic discipline.
But of this further.
They were a merry party sitting down
to tea that evening, and Bert, having appeased his
hunger and found his tongue, amused them all very
much by his account of what he had seen from the coach
top. The narrow escape they had had at Brown’s
Gully was of course much discussed. Squire Stewart
had nothing but censure for the driver.
“The man had no business to
go out with anything likely to break. Better
for you to have waited a day than run any such risks.
I shall certainly bring the matter to the attention
of Mr. Lindsay,” he said.
Nobody ventured to say anything to
the contrary; but Bert, who was sitting by his mother,
turned an anxious face up to hers, and whispered:
“Grandpapa won’t hurt Mr. Davis, will he?
He was so good to me, and he asked God to save us;
and He did.”
“It will be all right, dear,”
his mother whispered back. “Don’t
worry yourself about it.” And Bert, reassured,
said nothing more.
Bedtime for him soon came, and then,
to his great delight, he found that instead of being
banished to a room somewhere away upstairs, he was
to be put in a curious bed, that filled a corner of
the parlour in which the family sat. Bert had
never seen anything like that bed before. It
looked just like a closet, but when you opened the
closet door, behold, there was a bed, and a very comfortable
one, too. Just behind the parlour, with a door
between, was the best bedroom, which his mother would
have, and there Bert undressed, returning in his night-gown
to say goodnight to all before tumbling into bed.
With the closet door wide open, he
could see everything that went on in the room; and
it was so delightful to lie there watching the family
reading or talking, until at last, sleep came to claim
him.
“Now, if you’re a good
boy, and don’t attempt to talk after your head’s
on the pillow, I’ll leave the door open, so you
can see us all,” said Aunt Sarah, as she tucked
Bert snugly in; and he had sense enough to be a good
boy, so that not a sound came from him ere his brown
eyes closed for the night.
Many a night after that did he lie
there luxuriously, watching his grandfather reading
the newspaper, with a candle placed between his face
and the paper, in such close proximity to both, that
Bert’s constant wonder was that one or the other
of them never got burned; his grandmother, whose eyes
no longer permitted her to read at night, knitting
busily in her arm-chair, or nodding over her needles;
Aunt Sarah, reading in the book that always lay at
hand for leisure moments; Aunt Martha, stitching away,
perhaps on some of his own torn garments; his mother
writing home to Mr. Lloyd, or to Mary; while from the
kitchen, outside, came the subdued sound of the servants’
voices, as they chattered over their tasks. Bert
thought it a lovely way to go to sleep, and often
afterward, when at home, going up alone to bed in his
own room, wished that he was back at grandfather’s
again.
Bert slept late the next morning,
for he was a very tired boy when he went to bed; and
for this once he was indulged. But as he entered
the dining-room, his grandfather, who had finished
breakfast a full hour before, looking at him with
that stern expression which was habitual to him, said:
“City boys must keep country
hours when they come to the country. Early to
bed, early to rise, is the rule of this house, my boy.”
Poor Bert was rather disconcerted
by this reception, but managed to say:
“All right, grandpapa, I’ll try,”
as he took his seat.
The day was full of novelty and delight
to the city boy, as, under Uncle Alec’s guidance,
he went about the farm, and visited the horses in the
stable, the cattle in the pasture, the pigs in the
stye; and then, with Aunt Martha, inspected the dairy,
a big cool room in a small building, well shaded by
trees, where long rows of shallow pans stood filled
with rich milk or golden cream; while just before
tea, Aunt Sarah claimed him for a walk in the garden,
where tiger lilies, hollyhocks, mock oranges, peonies,
and other old-fashioned flowers grew in gay profusion.
Grandmother was too much engrossed
with her daughter to pay much attention to Bert that
day. Yet he had more than one token of affection
at her hands; and, taken altogether, it was a very
happy day.
After tea, Mrs. Lloyd took her son
off for a little chat alone, wishing to draw him out
as to his first impressions.
“Have you had a happy day, Bert?” she
asked.
“Yes, indeed, mother. It
has been just splendid. I think grandmamma and
uncle and my aunties are lovely, but” and
here Bert hesitated as if afraid to finish his remark.
“But what, Bert?” asked
Mrs. Lloyd. “What were you going to say
when you stopped?”
“I don’t like grandpapa,
mother,” said Bert, after a little pause, bringing
the words out slowly, and then adding, almost in a
whisper, “I’m afraid of grandpapa, mother.”
“Hush, Bert. You shouldn’t
say that you don’t like your grandfather.
But, tell me, why are you afraid of him?”
“Oh, because he seems so cross,
and isn’t kind to me like the others.”
“But he isn’t really cross,
Bert. He loves you quite as much as the others
do, but then he is an old man and has a great deal
to think about. Now, Bert darling, I want you
to learn to love your grandpapa, and to try and never
be any bother to him. You will, won’t you?”
“I’ll try not to be a
bother to him, mother, but I don’t think it’s
much use my trying to love him unless he stops looking
so cross.”
“Well, try your best, at all
events, Bert,” said Mrs. Lloyd, giving her son
a tender kiss. “And now come, let’s
see if we can find grandmother.”