When Caleb awoke it was almost evening.
The rays of the setting sun were shining in at the
window. Caleb opened his eyes, and, after lying
still a few moments, began to sing. He thought
it was morning, and that it was time for him to get
up. Presently, however, he observed that the sun
was shining in at the wrong window for morning:
then he noticed that he was not undressed; and, finally,
he thought it must be night; but he could not think
how he came to be asleep there at that time.
Caleb went out into the parlour.
David and Dwight were just putting the chairs around
the tea table. At tea time, the boys talked a
good deal about the mole, and they asked Mary Anna
if she would help them rig some vessels to sail in
the Maelstrom.
“Sail in the Maelstrom!”
said Mary Anna; “whoever heard of sailing in
the Maelstrom? That is a great whirlpool, which
swallows up ships; they never sail in it. You
had better call it the Gulf Stream.”
“Well,” said Dwight, “we
will; and will you help us rig some vessels?”
“Yes,” said Mary Anna, “when you
get the mole done.”
Mary Anna was a beautiful girl, about
seventeen years old, with a mild and gentle expression
of countenance, and very pleasant tone of voice.
She helped the children in all their plays, and they
were always pleased when she was with them. She
had great stores of pasteboard and coloured papers,
to make boxes, and portfolios, and little pocket-books,
and wallets of; and she had a paint-box, and pencils,
and drawing-books, and portfolios of pictures and
drawing lessons.
She rigged the boys’ vessels,
and covered their balls, and made them beautiful flags
and banners out of her pieces of coloured silk.
She advised them to have a flag-staff out at the end
of the mole, as they generally have on all fortifications
and national works. She told them she would make
them a handsome flag for the purpose.
After tea she went down with them
to see the works. She seemed to like the mole
very much. The whirlpool was moving very regularly,
and she advised them to build the mole out pretty
far.
“Yes,” said Dwight; “and
we are going to have a piece across up and down the
stream, at the end of it, so as to make a T of it.”
“I think you had better make a Y of it,”
said Mary Anna.
“A Y!” said Dwight, “how?”
“Why instead of having the end
piece go straight across the end of the mole, let
the two parts of it branch out into the stream, one
upwards and the other down.”
“What good will that do?” said David.
“Why, if you make it straight
like a T, the current will run directly along the
outer edge of it, and so your vessels will not stay
there. But if you have it Y-shaped, there will
be a little sort of harbour in the crotch, where your
vessels can lie quietly, while the current flows along
by, out beyond the forks.”
“That will be excellent,” said Dwight,
clapping his hands.
“And besides,” said she,
“the upper part of the Y will run out obliquely
into the stream, and so turn more of the current into
your eddy, and make the whirlpool larger.”
“Well, and we will make it so,”
said David; “and then it will be an excellent
mole.”
“Yes,” said Mary Anna,
“there will be all sorts of water around it; - a
whirlpool above, a little harbour in the crotch, a
current in front, and still water below. It will
be as good a place for sailing boats as I ever saw.”
But the twilight was coming on, and
they all soon returned to the house.
Madam Rachel had a little double-bedroom,
as it was called, where she slept. It was called
a double-bedroom, because it consisted, in fact, of
two small rooms, with a large arched opening between
them, without any door. In one room was the bed,
which moved in and out on little trucks, for Caleb.
In the other room was a table in the middle, with books
and papers upon it. There was a window in one
side, and opposite the arched opening which led to
the bedroom was a small sofa.
Now, it was Madam Rachel’s custom
every evening, before the children went to bed, to
take them into her bedroom, and hear them read a few
verses of the Bible; and then she would explain the
verses, and talk with them a little about what had
occurred during the day, and give them good advice
and good instruction. At such times the children
usually sat upon the sofa, on one side of the table,
and Madam Rachel took her seat on the other side of
the table, in the chair, so as to face them. The
children generally liked this very much; and yet she
very seldom told them any stories at these times.
It was almost all reasonings and explanations; and
yet the children liked it very much.