A year had elapsed since Adam Ladd’s
prize had been discussed over the teacups in Riverboro.
The months had come and gone, and at length the great
day had dawned for Rebecca, the day to which
she had been looking forward for five years, as the
first goal to be reached on her little journey through
the world. School-days were ended, and the mystic
function known to the initiated as “graduation”
was about to be celebrated; it was even now heralded
by the sun dawning in the eastern sky. Rebecca
stole softly out of bed, crept to the window, threw
open the blinds, and welcomed the rosy light that
meant a cloudless morning. Even the sun looked
different somehow, larger, redder, more
important than usual; and if it were really so, there
was no member of the graduating class who would have
thought it strange or unbecoming, in view of all the
circumstances. Emma Jane stirred on her pillow,
woke, and seeing Rebecca at the window, came and knelt
on the floor beside her. “It’s going
to be pleasant!” she sighed gratefully.
“If it wasn’t wicked, I could thank the
Lord, I’m so relieved in mind! Did you sleep?”
“Not much; the words of my class
poem kept running through my head, and the accompaniments
of the songs; and worse than anything, Mary Queen of
Scots’ prayer in Latin; it seemed as if
“’Adoro, imploro,
Ut liberes
me!’
were burned into my brain.”
No one who is unfamiliar with life
in rural neighborhoods can imagine the gravity, the
importance, the solemnity of this last day of school.
In the matter of preparation, wealth of detail, and
general excitement it far surpasses a wedding; for
that is commonly a simple affair in the country, sometimes
even beginning and ending in a visit to the parsonage.
Nothing quite equals graduation in the minds of the
graduates themselves, their families, and the younger
students, unless it be the inauguration of a governor
at the State Capitol. Wareham, then, was shaken
to its very centre on this day of days. Mothers
and fathers of the scholars, as well as relatives
to the remotest generation, had been coming on the
train and driving into the town since breakfast time;
old pupils, both married and single, with and without
families, streamed back to the dear old village.
The two livery stables were crowded with vehicles
of all sorts, and lines of buggies and wagons were
drawn up along the sides of the shady roads, the horses
switching their tails in luxurious idleness. The
streets were filled with people wearing their best
clothes, and the fashions included not only “the
latest thing,” but the well preserved relic of
a bygone day. There were all sorts and conditions
of men and women, for there were sons and daughters
of storekeepers, lawyers, butchers, doctors, shoemakers,
professors, ministers, and farmers at the Wareham schools,
either as boarders or day scholars. In the seminary
building there was an excitement so deep and profound
that it expressed itself in a kind of hushed silence,
a transient suspension of life, as those most interested
approached the crucial moment. The feminine graduates-to-be
were seated in their own bedrooms, dressed with a completeness
of detail to which all their past lives seemed to
have been but a prelude. At least, this was the
case with their bodies; but their heads, owing to
the extreme heat of the day, were one and all ornamented
with leads, or papers, or dozens of little braids,
to issue later in every sort of curl known to the
girl of that period. Rolling the hair on leads
or papers was a favorite method of attaining the desired
result, and though it often entailed a sleepless night,
there were those who gladly paid the price. Others,
in whose veins the blood of martyrs did not flow,
substituted rags for leads and pretended that they
made a more natural and less woolly curl. Heat,
however, will melt the proudest head and reduce to
fiddling strings the finest product of the waving-pin;
so anxious mothers were stationed over their offspring,
waving palm-leaf fans, it having been decided that
the supreme instant when the town clock struck ten
should be the one chosen for releasing the prisoners
from their self-imposed tortures.
Dotted or plain Swiss muslin was the
favorite garb, though there were those who were steaming
in white cashmere or alpaca, because in some cases
such frocks were thought more useful afterwards.
Blue and pink waist ribbons were lying over the backs
of chairs, and the girl who had a Roman sash was praying
that she might be kept from vanity and pride.
The way to any graduating dress at
all had not seemed clear to Rebecca until a month
before. Then, in company with Emma Jane, she visited
the Perkins attic, found piece after piece of white
butter-muslin or cheesecloth, and decided that, at
a pinch, it would do. The “rich blacksmith’s
daughter” cast the thought of dotted Swiss behind
her, and elected to follow Rebecca in cheesecloth
as she had in higher matters; straightway devising
costumes that included such drawing of threads, such
hemstitching and pin-tucking, such insertions of fine
thread tatting that, in order to be finished, Rebecca’s
dress was given out in sections, the sash
to Hannah, waist and sleeves to Mrs. Cobb, and skirt
to aunt Jane. The stitches that went into the
despised material, worth only three or four pennies
a yard, made the dresses altogether lovely, and as
for the folds and lines into which they fell, they
could have given points to satins and brocades.
The two girls were waiting in their
room alone, Emma Jane in rather a tearful state of
mind. She kept thinking that it was the last day
that they would be together in this altogether sweet
and close intimacy. The beginning of the end
seemed to have dawned, for two positions had been
offered Rebecca by Mr. Morrison the day before:
one in which she would play for singing and calisthenics,
and superintend the piano practice of the younger
girls in a boarding-school; the other an assistant’s
place in the Edgewood High School. Both were very
modest as to salary, but the former included educational
advantages that Miss Maxwell thought might be valuable.
Rebecca’s mood had passed from
that of excitement into a sort of exaltation, and
when the first bell rang through the corridors announcing
that in five minutes the class would proceed in a body
to the church for the exercises, she stood motionless
and speechless at the window with her hand on her
heart.
“It is coming, Emmie,”
she said presently; “do you remember in The Mill
on the Floss, when Maggie Tulliver closed the golden
gates of childhood behind her? I can almost see
them swing; almost hear them clang; and I can’t
tell whether I am glad or sorry.”
“I shouldn’t care how
they swung or clanged,” said Emma Jane, “if
only you and I were on the same side of the gate;
but we shan’t be, I know we shan’t!”
“Emmie, don’t dare to
cry, for I’m just on the brink myself! If
only you were graduating with me; that’s my
only sorrow! There! I hear the rumble of
the wheels! People will be seeing our grand surprise
now! Hug me once for luck, dear Emmie; a careful
hug, remembering our butter-muslin frailty!”
Ten minutes later, Adam Ladd, who
had just arrived from Portland and was wending his
way to the church, came suddenly into the main street
and stopped short under a tree by the wayside, riveted
to the spot by a scene of picturesque loveliness such
as his eyes had seldom witnessed before. The
class of which Rebecca was president was not likely
to follow accepted customs. Instead of marching
two by two from the seminary to the church, they had
elected to proceed thither by royal chariot.
A haycart had been decked with green vines and bunches
of long-stemmed field daisies, those gay darlings
of New England meadows. Every inch of the rail,
the body, even the spokes, all were twined with yellow
and green and white. There were two white horses,
flower-trimmed reins, and in the floral bower, seated
on maple boughs, were the twelve girls of the class,
while the ten boys marched on either side of the vehicle,
wearing buttonhole bouquets of daisies, the class flower.
Rebecca drove, seated on a green-covered
bench that looked not unlike a throne. No girl
clad in white muslin, no happy girl of seventeen, is
plain; and the twelve little country maids, from the
vantage ground of their setting, looked beautiful,
as the June sunlight filtered down on their uncovered
heads, showing their bright eyes, their fresh cheeks,
their smiles, and their dimples.
Rebecca, Adam thought, as he took
off his hat and saluted the pretty panorama, Rebecca,
with her tall slenderness, her thoughtful brow, the
fire of young joy in her face, her fillet of dark braided
hair, might have been a young Muse or Sibyl; and the
flowery hayrack, with its freight of blooming girlhood,
might have been painted as an allegorical picture
of The Morning of Life. It all passed him, as
he stood under the elms in the old village street
where his mother had walked half a century ago, and
he was turning with the crowd towards the church when
he heard a little sob. Behind a hedge in the garden
near where he was standing was a forlorn person in
white, whose neat nose, chestnut hair, and blue eyes
he seemed to know. He stepped inside the gate
and said, “What’s wrong, Miss Emma?”
“Oh, is it you, Mr. Ladd?
Rebecca wouldn’t let me cry for fear of spoiling
my looks, but I must have just one chance before I
go in. I can be as homely as I like, after all,
for I only have to sing with the school; I’m
not graduating, I’m just leaving! Not that
I mind that; it’s only being separated from
Rebecca that I never can stand!”
The two walked along together, Adam
comforting the disconsolate Emma Jane, until they
reached the old meeting-house where the Commencement
exercises were always held. The interior, with
its decorations of yellow, green, and white, was crowded,
the air hot and breathless, the essays and songs and
recitations precisely like all others that have been
since the world began. One always fears that the
platform may sink under the weight of youthful platitudes
uttered on such occasions; yet one can never be properly
critical, because the sight of the boys and girls
themselves, those young and hopeful makers of to-morrow,
disarms one’s scorn. We yawn desperately
at the essays, but our hearts go out to the essayists,
all the same, for “the vision splendid”
is shining in their eyes, and there is no fear of
“th’ inevitable yoke” that the years
are so surely bringing them.
Rebecca saw Hannah and her husband
in the audience; dear old John and cousin Ann also,
and felt a pang at the absence of her mother, though
she had known there was no possibility of seeing her;
for poor Aurelia was kept at Sunnybrook by cares of
children and farm, and lack of money either for the
journey or for suitable dress. The Cobbs she saw
too. No one, indeed, could fail to see uncle
Jerry; for he shed tears more than once, and in the
intervals between the essays descanted to his neighbors
concerning the marvelous gifts of one of the graduating
class whom he had known ever since she was a child;
in fact, had driven her from Maplewood to Riverboro
when she left her home, and he had told mother that
same night that there wan’t nary rung on the
ladder o’ fame that that child wouldn’t
mount before she got through with it.
The Cobbs, then, had come, and there
were other Riverboro faces, but where was aunt Jane,
in her black silk made over especially for this occasion?
Aunt Miranda had not intended to come, she knew, but
where, on this day of days, was her beloved aunt Jane?
However, this thought, like all others, came and went
in a flash, for the whole morning was like a series
of magic lantern pictures, crossing and recrossing
her field of vision. She played, she sang, she
recited Queen Mary’s Latin prayer, like one
in a dream, only brought to consciousness by meeting
Mr. Aladdin’s eyes as she spoke the last line.
Then at the end of the programme came her class poem,
Makers of To-morrow; and there, as on many a former
occasion, her personality played so great a part that
she seemed to be uttering Miltonic sentiments instead
of school-girl verse. Her voice, her eyes, her
body breathed conviction, earnestness, emotion; and
when she left the platform the audience felt that they
had listened to a masterpiece. Most of her hearers
knew little of Carlyle or Emerson, or they might have
remembered that the one said, “We are all poets
when we read a poem well,” and the other, “’T
is the good reader makes the good book.”
It was over! The diplomas had
been presented, and each girl, after giving furtive
touches to her hair, sly tweaks to her muslin skirts,
and caressing pats to her sash, had gone forward to
receive the roll of parchment with a bow that had
been the subject of anxious thought for weeks.
Rounds of applause greeted each graduate at this thrilling
moment, and Jeremiah Cobb’s behavior, when Rebecca
came forward, was the talk of Wareham and Riverboro
for days. Old Mrs. Webb avowed that he, in the
space of two hours, had worn out her pew more the
carpet, the cushions, and woodwork than
she had by sitting in it forty years. Yes, it
was over, and after the crowd had thinned a little,
Adam Ladd made his way to the platform. Rebecca
turned from speaking to some strangers and met him
in the aisle. “Oh, Mr. Aladdin, I am so
glad you could come! Tell me” and
she looked at him half shyly, for his approval was
dearer to her, and more difficult to win, than that
of the others “tell me, Mr. Aladdin, were
you satisfied?”
“More than satisfied!”
he said; “glad I met the child, proud I know
the girl, longing to meet the woman!”