It was a wagon, shaped like a great
square basket, on low wheels, and drawn by a stout
donkey. There was one seat, on which Miss Fairbairn
the governess sat; and all round her, leaning over
the edge of the basket, were children, with little
wooden shovels and baskets in their hands, going down
to play on the beach. Away they went, over the
common, through the stony lane, out upon the wide,
smooth sands. All the children but one immediately
fell to digging holes, and making ponds, castles,
or forts. They did this every day, and were never
tired of it; but little Fancy made new games for herself,
and seldom dug in the sand. She had a garden
of sea-weed, which the waves watered every day:
she had a palace of pretty shells, where she kept
all sorts of little water-creatures as fairy tenants;
she had friends and playmates among the gulls and
peeps, and learned curious things by watching crabs,
horse-shoes, and jelly-fishes; and every day she looked
for a mermaid.
It was of no use to tell her that
there were no mermaids: Fancy firmly believed
in them, and was sure she would see one some day.
The other children called the seals mermaids; and
were contented with the queer, shiny creatures who
played in the water, lay on the rocks, and peeped at
them with soft, bright eyes as they sailed by.
Fancy was not satisfied with seals, — they
were not pretty and graceful enough for her, — and
she waited and watched for a real mermaid. On
this day she took a breezy run with the beach-birds
along the shore; she planted a pretty red weed in
her garden; and let out the water-beetles and snails
who had passed the night in her palace. Then
she went to a rock that stood near the quiet nook
where she played alone, and sat there looking for a
mermaid as the tide came in; for it brought her many
curious things, and it might perhaps bring a mermaid.
As she looked across the waves that
came tumbling one over the other, she saw something
that was neither boat nor buoy nor seal. It was
a queer-looking thing, with a wild head, a long waving
tail, and something like arms that seemed to paddle
it along. The waves tumbled it about, so Fancy
could not see very well: but, the longer she looked,
the surer she was that this curious thing was a mermaid;
and she waited eagerly for it to reach the shore.
Nearer and nearer it came, till a great wave threw
it upon the sand; and Fancy saw that it was only a
long piece of kelp, torn up by the roots. She
was very much disappointed; but, all of a sudden,
her face cleared up, she clapped her hands, and began
to dance round the kelp, saying:
“I’ll make a mermaid myself, since none
will come to me.”
Away she ran, higher up the beach,
and, after thinking a minute, began her work.
Choosing a smooth, hard place, she drew with a stick
the outline of her mermaid; then she made the hair
of the brown marsh-grass growing near by, arranging
it in long locks on either side the face, which was
made of her prettiest pink and white shells, — for
she pulled down her palace to get them. The eyes
were two gray pebbles; the neck and arms of larger,
white shells; and the dress of sea-weed, — red,
green, purple, and yellow; very splendid, for Fancy
emptied her garden to dress her mermaid.
“People say that mermaids always
have tails; and I might make one out of this great
leaf of kelp. But it isn’t pretty, and I
don’t like it; for I want mine to be beautiful:
so I won’t have any tail,” said Fancy,
and put two slender white shells for feet, at the
lower edge of the fringed skirt. She laid a wreath
of little star-fish across the brown hair, a belt
of small orange-crabs round the waist, buttoned the
dress with violet snail-shells, and hung a tiny white
pebble, like a pearl, in either ear.
“Now she must have a glass and
a comb in her hand, as the song says, and then she
will be done,” said Fancy, looking about her,
well pleased.
Presently she found the skeleton of
a little fish, and his backbone made an excellent
comb; while a transparent jelly-fish served for a glass,
with a frame of cockle-shells round it. Placing
these in the hands of her mermaid, and some red coral
bracelets on her wrists, Fancy pronounced her done;
and danced about her, singing:
“My pretty little mermaid,
Oh! come, and
play with me:
I’ll love you, I’ll
welcome you;
And happy we shall
be.”
Now, while she had been working, the
tide had crept higher and higher; and, as she sung,
one wave ran up and wet her feet.
“Oh, what a pity I didn’t
put her farther up!” cried Fancy; “the
tide will wash her all away; and I meant to keep her
fresh, and show her to Aunt Fiction. My poor
mermaid! — I shall lose her; but perhaps she
will be happier in the sea: so I will let her
go.”
Mounting her rock, Fancy waited to
see her work destroyed. But the sea seemed to
pity her; and wave after wave came up, without doing
any harm. At last one broke quite over the mermaid,
and Fancy thought that would be the end of her.
But, no: instead of scattering shells, stones,
and weeds, the waves lifted the whole figure, without
displacing any thing, and gently bore it back into
the sea.
“Good by! good by!” cried
Fancy, as the little figure floated away; then, as
it disappeared, she put her hands before her face, — for
she loved her mermaid, and had given all her treasures
to adorn her; and now to lose her so soon seemed hard, — and
Fancy’s eyes were full of tears. Another
great wave came rolling in; but she did not look up
to see it break, and, a minute after, she heard steps
tripping toward her over the sand. Still she
did not stir; for, just then, none of her playmates
could take the place of her new friend, and she didn’t
want to see them.
“Fancy! Fancy!” called
a breezy voice, sweeter than any she had ever heard.
But she did not raise her head, nor care to know who
called. The steps came quite close; and the touch
of a cold, wet hand fell on her own. Then she
looked up, and saw a strange little girl standing by
her, who smiled, showing teeth like little pearls,
and said, in the breezy voice:
“You wanted me to play with you, so I came.”
“Who are you?” asked Fancy,
wondering where she had seen the child before.
“I’m your mermaid,” said the child.
“But the water carried her away,” cried
Fancy.
“The waves only carried me out
for the sea to give me life, and then brought me back
to you,” answered the new comer.
“But are you really a mermaid?”
asked Fancy, beginning to smile and believe.
“I am really the one you made:
look, and see if I’m not;” and the little
creature turned slowly round, that Fancy might be sure
it was her own work.
She certainly was very like the figure
that once lay on the sand, — only she was
not now made of stones and shells. There was the
long brown hair blowing about her face, with a wreath
of starry shells in it. Her eyes were gray, her
cheeks and lips rosy, her neck and arms white; and
from under her striped dress peeped little bare feet.
She had pearls in her ears, coral bracelets, a golden
belt, and a glass and comb in her hands.
“Yes,” said Fancy, drawing
near, “you are my little mermaid; but
how does it happen that you come to me at last?”
“Dear friend,” answered
the water-child, “you believed in me, watched
and waited long for me, shaped the image of the thing
you wanted out of your dearest treasures, and promised
to love and welcome me. I could not help coming;
and the sea, that is as fond of you as you are of it,
helped me to grant your wish.”
“Oh, I’m glad, I’m
glad! Dear little mermaid, what is your name?”
cried Fancy, kissing the cool cheek of her new friend,
and putting her arms about her neck.
“Call me by my German cousin’s
pretty name, — Lorelei,” answered the
mermaid, kissing back as warmly as she could.
“Will you come home and live
with me, dear Lorelei?” asked Fancy, still holding
her fast.
“If you will promise to tell
no one who and what I am, I will stay with you as
long as you love and believe in me. As soon as
you betray me, or lose your faith and fondness, I
shall vanish, never to come back again,” answered
Lorelei.
“I promise: but won’t
people wonder who you are? and, if they ask me, what
shall I say?” said Fancy.
“Tell them you found me on the
shore; and leave the rest to me. But you must
not expect other people to like and believe in me as
you do. They will say hard things of me; will
blame you for loving me; and try to part us.
Can you bear this, and keep your promise faithfully?”
“I think I can. But why
won’t they like you?” said Fancy, looking
troubled.
“Because they are not like you,
dear,” answered the mermaid, with salt tears
in her soft eyes. “They have not your power
of seeing beauty in all things, of enjoying invisible
delights, and living in a world of your own.
Your Aunt Fiction will like me; but your Uncle Fact
won’t. He will want to know all about me;
will think I’m a little vagabond; and want me
to be sent away somewhere, to be made like other children.
I shall keep out of his way as much as I can; for
I’m afraid of him.”
“I’ll take care of you,
Lorelei dear; and no one shall trouble you. I
hear Miss Fairbairn calling; so I must go. Give
me your hand, and don’t be afraid.”
Hand in hand the two went toward the
other children, who stopped digging, and stared at
the new child. Miss Fairbairn, who was very wise
and good, but rather prim, stared too, and said, with
surprise:
“Why, my dear, where did you find that queer
child?”
“Down on the beach. Isn’t
she pretty?” answered Fancy, feeling very proud
of her new friend.
“She hasn’t got any shoes
on; so she’s a beggar, and we mustn’t play
with her,” said one boy, who had been taught
that to be poor was a very dreadful thing.
“What pretty earrings and bracelets
she’s got!” said a little girl, who thought
a great deal of her dress.
“She doesn’t look as if
she knew much,” said another child, who was kept
studying so hard that she never had time to dig and
run, and make dirt-pies, till she fell ill, and had
to be sent to the sea-side.
“What’s your name? and
who are your parents?” asked Miss Fairbairn.
“I’ve got no parents;
and my name is Lorelei,” answered the mermaiden.
“You mean Luly; mind your pronunciation,
child,” said Miss Fairbairn, who corrected every
one she met in something or other. “Where
do you live?”
“I haven’t got any home
now,” said Lorelei, smiling at the lady’s
tone.
“Yes, you have: my home
is yours; and you are going to stay with me always,”
cried Fancy, heartily. “She is my little
sister, Miss Fairbairn: I found her; and I’m
going to keep her, and make her happy.”
“Your uncle won’t like
it, my dear.” And Miss Fairbairn shook her
head gravely.
“Aunt will; and Uncle won’t
mind, if I learn my lessons well, and remember the
multiplication table all right. He was going to
give me some money, so I might learn to keep accounts;
but I’ll tell him to keep the money, and let
me have Lorelei instead.”
“Oh, how silly!” cried the boy who didn’t
like bare feet.
“No, she isn’t; for, if
she’s kind to the girl, maybe she’ll get
some of her pretty things,” said the vain little
girl.
“Keeping accounts is a very
useful and important thing. I keep mine; and
mamma says I have great arth-met-i-cal talent,”
added the pale child, who studied too much.
“Come, children; it’s
time for dinner. Fancy, you can take the girl
to the house; and your uncle will do what he thinks
best about letting you keep her,” said Miss
Fairbairn, piling them into the basket-wagon.
Fancy kept Lorelei close beside her;
and as soon as they reached the great hotel, where
they all were staying with mothers and fathers, uncles
or aunts, she took her to kind Aunt Fiction, who was
interested at once in the friendless child so mysteriously
found. She was satisfied with the little she
could discover, and promised to keep her, — for
a time, at least.
“We can imagine all kinds of
romantic things about her; and, by and by, some interesting
story may be found out concerning her. I can make
her useful in many ways; and she shall stay.”
As Aunt Fiction laid her hand on the
mermaid’s head, as if claiming her for her own,
Uncle Fact came stalking in, with his note-book in
his hand, and his spectacles on his nose. Now,
though they were married, these two persons were very
unlike. Aunt Fiction was a graceful, picturesque
woman; who told stories charmingly, wrote poetry and
novels, was very much beloved by young folks, and
was the friend of some of the most famous people in
the world. Uncle Fact was a grim, grave, decided
man; whom it was impossible to bend or change.
He was very useful to every one; knew an immense deal;
and was always taking notes of things he saw and heard,
to be put in a great encyclopaedia he was making.
He didn’t like romance, loved the truth, and
wanted to get to the bottom of every thing. He
was always trying to make little Fancy more sober,
well-behaved, and learned; for she was a freakish,
dreamy, yet very lovable and charming child.
Aunt Fiction petted her to her heart’s content,
and might have done her harm, if Uncle Fact had not
had a hand in her education; for the lessons of both
were necessary to her, as to all of us.
“Well, well, well! who is this?”
he said briskly, as he turned his keen eyes and powerful
glasses on the new comer.
Aunt Fiction told him all the children
had said; but he answered impatiently:
“Tut, tut! my dear: I want
the facts of the case. You are apt to exaggerate;
and Fancy is not to be relied on. If the child
isn’t a fool, she must know more about herself
than she pretends. Now, answer truly, Luly, where
did you come from?”
But the little mermaid only shook
her head, and answered as before, “Fancy found
me on the beach, and wants me to stay with her.
I’ll do her no harm: please, let me stay.”
“She has evidently been washed
ashore from some wreck, and has forgotten all about
herself. Her wonderful beauty, her accent, and
these ornaments show that she is some foreign child,”
said Aunt Fiction, pointing to the earrings.
“Nonsense! my dear: those
are white pebbles, not pearls; and, if you examine
them, you will find that those bracelets are the ones
you gave Fancy as a reward for so well remembering
the facts I told her about coral,” said the
uncle, who had turned Lorelei round and round, pinched
her cheek, felt her hair, and examined her frock through
the glasses which nothing escaped.
“She may stay, and be my little
playmate, mayn’t she? I’ll take care
of her; and we shall be very happy together,”
cried Fancy eagerly.
“One can’t be sure of
that till one has tried. You say you will take
care of her: have you got any money to pay her
board, and buy her clothes?” asked her uncle.
“No; but I thought you’d
help me,” answered Fancy wistfully.
“Never say you’ll do a
thing till you are sure you can,” said Uncle
Fact, as he took notes of the affair, thinking they
might be useful by and by. “I’ve
no objection to your keeping the girl, if, after making
inquiries about her, she proves to be a clever child.
She can stay awhile; and, when we go back to town,
I’ll put her in one of our charity schools,
where she can be taught to earn her living. Can
you read, Luly?”
“No,” said the mermaid, opening her eyes.
“Can you write and cipher?”
“What is that?” asked Lorelei innocently.
“Dear me! what ignorance!” cried Uncle
Fact.
“Can you sew, or tend babies?” asked Aunt
Fiction gently.
“I can do nothing but play and sing, and comb
my hair.”
“I see! I see! — some
hand-organ man’s girl. Well, I’m glad
you keep your hair smooth, — that’s
more than Fancy does,” said Uncle Fact.
“Let us hear you sing,”
whispered his little niece; and, in a voice as musical
as the sound of ripples breaking on the shore, Lorelei
sung a little song that made Fancy dance with delight,
charmed Aunt Fiction, and softened Uncle Fact’s
hard face in spite of himself.
“Very well, very well, indeed:
you have a good voice. I’ll see that you
have proper teaching; and, by and by, you can get your
living by giving singing-lessons,” he said,
turning over the leaves of his book, to look for the
name of a skilful teacher; for he had lists of every
useful person, place, and thing under the sun.
Lorelei laughed at the idea; and Fancy
thought singing for gold, not love, a hard way to
get one’s living.
Inquiries were made; but nothing more
was discovered, and neither of the children would
speak: so the strange child lived with Fancy,
and made her very happy. The other children didn’t
care much about her; for with them she was shy and
cold, because she knew, if the truth was told, they
would not believe in her. Fancy had always played
a good deal by herself, because she never found a
mate to suit her; now she had one, and they enjoyed
each other very much. Lorelei taught her many
things besides new games; and Aunt Fiction was charmed
with the pretty stories Fancy repeated to her, while
Uncle Fact was astonished at the knowledge of marine
plants and animals which she gained without any books.
Lorelei taught her to swim, like a fish; and the two
played such wonderful pranks in the water that people
used to come down to the beach when they bathed.
In return, Fancy tried to teach her friend to read
and write and sew; but Lorelei couldn’t learn
much, though she loved her little teacher dearly,
and every evening sung her to sleep with beautiful
lullabies.
There was a great deal of talk about
the curious stranger; for her ways were odd, and no
one knew what to make of her. She would eat nothing
but fruit and shell-fish, and drink nothing but salt
water. She didn’t like tight clothes; but
would have run about in a loose, green robe, with
bare feet and flying hair, if Uncle Fact would have
allowed it. Morning, noon, and night, she plunged
into the sea, — no matter what the weather
might be; and she would sleep on no bed but one stuffed
with dried sea-weed. She made lovely chains of
shells; found splendid bits of coral; and dived where
no one else dared, to bring up wonderful plants and
mosses. People offered money for these things;
but she gave them all to Fancy and Aunt Fiction, of
whom she was very fond. It was curious to see
the sort of people who liked both Fancy and her friend, — poets,
artists; delicate, thoughtful children; and a few old
people, who had kept their hearts young in spite of
care and time and trouble. Dashing young gentlemen,
fine young ladies, worldly-minded and money-loving
men and women, and artificial, unchildlike children,
the two friends avoided carefully; and these persons
either made fun of them, neglected them entirely,
or seemed to be unconscious that they were alive.
The others they knew at a glance; for their faces
warmed and brightened when the children came, they
listened to their songs and stories, joined in their
plays, and found rest and refreshment in their sweet
society.
“This will do for a time; as
Fancy is getting strong, and not entirely wasting
her days, thanks to me! But our holiday is nearly
over; and, as soon as I get back to town, I’ll
take that child to the Ragged Refuge, and see what
they can make of her,” said Uncle Fact, who was
never quite satisfied about Lorelei; because he could
find out so little concerning her. He was walking
over the beach as he said this, after a hard day’s
work on his encyclopaedia. He sat down on a rock
in a quiet place; and, instead of enjoying the lovely
sunset, he fell to studying the course of the clouds,
the state of the tide, and the temperature of the air,
till the sound of voices made him peep over the rock.
Fancy and her friend were playing there, and the old
gentleman waited to see what they were about.
Both were sitting with their little bare feet in the
water; Lorelei was stringing pearls, and Fancy plaiting
a crown of pretty green rushes.
“I wish I could go home, and
get you a string of finer pearls than these,”
said Lorelei; “but it is too far away, and I
cannot swim now as I used to do.”
“I must look into this.
The girl evidently knows all about herself, and can
tell, if she chooses,” muttered Uncle Fact, getting
rather excited over this discovery.
“Never mind the pearls:
I’d rather have you, dear,” said Fancy
lovingly. “Tell me a story while we work,
or sing me a song; and I’ll give you my crown.”
“I’ll sing you a little
song that has got what your uncle calls a moral to
it,” said Lorelei, laughing mischievously.
Then, in her breezy little voice, she sang the story
of —
THE ROCK AND THE BUBBLE.
Oh!
a bare, brown rock
Stood
up in the sea,
The
waves at its feet
Dancing
merrily.
A
little bubble
Came
sailing by,
And
thus to the rock
Did
it gayly cry, —
“Ho!
clumsy brown stone,
Quick,
make way for me:
I’m
the fairest thing
That
floats on the sea.
“See
my rainbow-robe,
See
my crown of light,
My
glittering form,
So
airy and bright.
“O’er
the waters blue,
I’m
floating away,
To
dance by the shore
With
the foam and spray.
“Now,
make way, make way;
For
the waves are strong,
And
their rippling feet
Bear
me fast along.”
But
the great rock stood
Straight
up in the sea:
It
looked gravely down,
And
said pleasantly, —
“Little
friend, you must
Go
some other way;
For
I have not stirred
This
many a long day.
“Great
billows have dashed,
And
angry winds blown;
But
my sturdy form
Is
not overthrown.
“Nothing
can stir me
In
the air or sea;
Then,
how can I move,
Little
friend, for thee?”
Then
the waves all laughed,
In
their voices sweet;
And
the sea-birds looked,
From
their rocky seat,
At
the bubble gay,
Who
angrily cried,
While
its round cheek glowed
With
a foolish pride, —
“You
shall move for me;
And
you shall not mock
At
the words I say,
You
ugly, rough rock!
“Be
silent, wild birds!
Why
stare you so?
Stop
laughing, rude waves,
And
help me to go!
“For
I am the queen
Of
the ocean here,
And
this cruel stone
Cannot
make me fear.”
Dashing
fiercely up,
With
a scornful word,
Foolish
bubble broke;
But
rock never stirred.
Then
said the sea-birds,
Sitting
in their nests,
To
the little ones
Leaning
on their breasts, —
“Be
not like Bubble,
Headstrong,
rude, and vain,
Seeking
by violence
Your
object to gain;
“But
be like the rock,
Steadfast,
true, and strong,
Yet
cheerful and kind,
And
firm against wrong.
“Heed,
little birdlings,
And
wiser you’ll be
For
the lesson learned
To-day
by the sea.”
“Well, to be sure the song has
got a moral, if that silly Fancy only sees it,”
said Uncle Fact, popping up his bald head again as
the song ended.
“I thank you: that’s
a good little song for me. But, Lorelei, are you
sorry you came to be my friend?” cried Fancy;
for, as she bent to lay the crown on the other’s
head, she saw that she was looking wistfully down
into the water that kissed her feet.
“Not yet: while you love
me, I am happy, and never regret that I ceased to
be a mermaid for your sake,” answered Lorelei,
laying her soft cheek against her friend’s.
“How happy I was the day my
play-mermaid changed to a real one!” said Fancy.
“I often want to tell people all about that wonderful
thing, and let them know who you really are:
then they’d love you as I do, instead of calling
you a little vagabond.”
“Few would believe our story;
and those that did would wonder at me, — not
love me as you do. They would put me in a cage,
and make a show of me; and I should be so miserable
I should die. So don’t tell who I am, will
you?” said Lorelei earnestly.
“Never,” cried Fancy,
clinging to her. “But, my deary, what will
you do when uncle sends you away from me, as he means
to do as soon as we go home? I can see you sometimes;
but we cannot be always together, and there is no
ocean for you to enjoy in the city.”
“I shall bear it, if I can,
for your sake; if I cannot, I shall come back here,
and wait till you come again next year.”
“No, no! I will not be
parted from you; and, if uncle takes you away, I’ll
come here, and be a mermaid with you,” cried
Fancy.
The little friends threw their arms
about each other, and were so full of their own feelings
that they never saw Uncle Fact’s tall shadow
flit across them, as he stole away over the soft sand.
Poor old gentleman! he was in a sad state of mind,
and didn’t know what to do; for in all his long
life he had never been so puzzled before.
“A mermaid indeed!” he
muttered. “I always thought that child was
a fool, and now I’m sure of it. She thinks
she is a mermaid, and has made Fancy believe it.
I’ve told my wife a dozen times that she let
Fancy read too many fairy tales and wonder-books.
Her head is full of nonsense, and she is just ready
to believe any ridiculous story that is told her.
Now, what on earth shall I do? If I put Luly in
an asylum, Fancy will break her heart, and very likely
they will both run away. If I leave them together,
Luly will soon make Fancy as crazy as she is herself,
and I shall be mortified by having a niece who insists
that her playmate is a mermaid. Bless my soul!
how absurd it all is!”
Aunt Fiction had gone to town to see
her publishers about a novel she had written, and
he didn’t like to tell the queer story to any
one else; so Uncle Fact thought it over, and decided
to settle the matter at once. When the children
came in, he sent Fancy to wait for him in the library,
while he talked alone with Lorelei. He did his
best; but he could do nothing with her, — she
danced and laughed, and told the same tale as before,
till the old gentleman confessed that he had heard
their talk on the rocks: then she grew very sad,
and owned that she was a mermaid. This
made him angry, and he wouldn’t believe it for
an instant; but told her it was impossible, and she
must say something else.
Lorelei could say nothing else, and
wept bitterly when he would not listen; so he locked
her up and went to Fancy, who felt as if something
dreadful was going to happen when she saw his face.
He told her all he knew, and insisted that Lorelei
was foolish or naughty to persist in such a ridiculous
story.
“But, uncle, I really did make
a mermaid; and she really did come alive, for I saw
the figure float away, and then Lorelei appeared,”
said Fancy, very earnestly.
“It’s very likely you
made a figure, and called it a mermaid: it would
be just the sort of thing you’d do,” said
her uncle. “But it is impossible that any
coming alive took place, and I won’t hear any
such nonsense. You didn’t see this girl
come out of the water; for she says you never looked
up, till she touched you. She was a real child,
who came over the beach from somewhere; and you fancied
she looked like your figure, and believed the silly
tale she told you. It is my belief that she is
a sly, bad child; and the sooner she is sent away the
better for you.”
Uncle Fact was so angry and talked
so loud, that Fancy felt frightened and bewildered;
and began to think he might be right about the mermaid
part, though she hated to give up the little romance.
“If I agree that she is
a real child, won’t you let her stay, uncle?”
she said, forgetting that, if she lost her faith, her
friend was lost also.
“Ah! then you have begun to
come to your senses, have you? and are ready to own
that you don’t believe in mermaids and such rubbish?”
cried Uncle Fact, stopping in his tramp up and down
the room.
“Why, if you say there never
were and never can be any, I suppose I must
give up my fancy; but I’m sorry,” sighed
the child.
“That’s my sensible girl!
Now, think a minute, my dear, and you will also own
that it is best to give up the child as well as the
mermaid,” said her uncle briskly.
“Oh! no: we love one another;
and she is good, and I can’t give her up,”
cried Fancy.
“Answer me a few questions;
and I’ll prove that she isn’t good, that
you don’t love her, and that you can
give her up,” said Uncle Fact, and numbered
off the questions on his fingers as he spoke.
“Didn’t Luly want you
to deceive us, and every one else, about who she was?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Don’t you like to be with her better
than with your aunt or myself?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Hadn’t you rather hear her songs and
stories than learn your lessons?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Isn’t it wrong to deceive
people, to love strangers more than those who are
a father and mother to you, and to like silly tales
better than useful lessons?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Very well. Then, don’t
you see, that, if Luly makes you do these wrong and
ungrateful things, she is not a good child, nor a fit
playmate for you?”
Fancy didn’t answer; for she
couldn’t feel that it was so, though he made
it seem so. When Uncle Fact talked in that way,
she always got confused and gave up; for she didn’t
know how to argue. He was right in a certain
way; but she felt as if she was right also in another
way, though she could not prove it: so she hung
her head, and let her tears drop on the carpet one
by one.
Uncle Fact didn’t mean to be
unkind, but he did mean to have his own way; and,
when he saw the little girl’s sad face, he took
her on his knee, and said, more mildly:
“Do you remember the story about
the German Lorelei, who sung so sweetly, and lured
people to death in the Rhine?”
“Yes, uncle; and I like it,” answered
Fancy, looking up.
“Well, my dear, your Lorelei
will lead you into trouble, if you follow her.
Suppose she is what you think her, — a mermaid:
it is her delight to draw people into the water, where,
of course, they drown. If she is what I think
her, — a sly, bad child, who sees that you
are very simple, and who means to get taken care of
without doing any thing useful, — she will
spoil you in a worse way than if you followed her into
the sea. I’ve got no little daughter of
my own, and I want to keep you as safe and happy as
if you were mine. I don’t like this girl,
and I want you to give her up for my sake. Will
you, Fancy?”
While her uncle said these things,
all the beauty seemed to fall away from her friend,
all the sweetness from their love, and all her faith
in the little dream which had made her so happy.
Mermaids became treacherous, unlovely, unreal creatures;
and Lorelei seemed like a naughty, selfish child,
who deceived her, and made her do wrong things.
Her uncle had been very kind to her all her life; and
she loved him, was grateful, and wanted to show that
she was, by pleasing him. But her heart clung
to the friend she had made, trusted, and loved; and
it seemed impossible to give up the shadow, even though
the substance was gone. She put her hands before
her face for a moment; then laid her arms about the
old man’s neck, and whispered, with a little
sob:
“I’ll give her up; but
you’ll be kind to her, because I was fond of
her once.”
As the last word left Fancy’s
lips, a long, sad cry sounded through the room; Lorelei
sprung in, gave her one kiss, and was seen to run swiftly
toward the beach, wringing her hands. Fancy flew
after; but, when she reached the shore, there was
nothing to be seen but the scattered pebbles, shells,
and weeds that made the mock mermaid, floating away
on a receding wave.
“Do you believe now?”
cried Fancy, weeping bitterly, as she pointed to the
wreck of her friend, and turned reproachfully toward
Uncle Fact, who had followed in great astonishment.
The old gentleman looked well about
him; then shook his head, and answered decidedly:
“No, my dear, I don’t.
It’s an odd affair; but, I’ve no doubt,
it will be cleared up in a natural way sometime or
other.”
But there he was mistaken; for this
mystery never was cleared up. Other people
soon forgot it, and Fancy never spoke of it; yet she
made very few friends, and, though she learned to
love and value Uncle Fact as well as Aunt Fiction,
she could not forget her dearest playmate. Year
after year she came back to the sea-side; and the first
thing she always did was to visit the place where
she used to play, and stretch her arms toward the
sea, crying tenderly:
“O my little friend! come back to me!”
But Lorelei never came again.