’"You can’t do this”
and “you mustn’t do that,” from morning
to night. Try it yourself and see how you’d
like it,’ muttered Harry, as he flung down his
hat in sulky obedience to his father’s command
to give up a swim in the river and keep himself cool
with a book that warm summer evening.
‘Of course I should like to
mind my parents. Good children always do,’
began Mr. Fairbairn, entirely forgetting the pranks
of his boyhood, as people are apt to.
‘Glad I didn’t know you
then. Must have been a regular prig,’ growled
Harry under his breath.
’Silence, sir! go to your room,
and don’t let me see you till tea-time.
You must be taught respect as well as obedience,’
and Mr. Fairbairn gave the table a rap that caused
his son to retire precipitately.
On the stairs he met his sister Kitty
looking as cross as himself.
‘What’s the matter with
you?’ he asked, pausing a minute, for misery
loves company.
’Mamma will make me dress up
in a stiff clean frock, and have my hair curled over
again just because some one may come. I
want to play in the garden, and I can’t all
fussed up this way. I do hate company and clothes
and manners, don’t you?’ answered Kitty,
with a spiteful pull at her sash.
’I hate being ordered round
everlastingly, and badgered from morning till night.
I’d just like to be let alone,’ and Harry
went on his way to captivity with a grim shake of
the head and a very strong desire to run away from
home altogether.
‘So would I, mamma is so fussy.
I never have any peace of my life,’ sighed Kitty,
feeling that her lot was a hard one.
The martyr in brown linen went up,
and the other martyr in white cambric went down, both
looking as they felt, rebellious and unhappy.
Yet a stranger seeing them and their home would have
thought they had everything heart could desire.
All the comforts that money could buy, and all the
beauty that taste could give seemed gathered round
them. Papa and mamma loved the two little people
dearly, and no real care or sorrow came to trouble
the lives that would have been all sunshine but for
one thing. With the best intentions in the world,
Mr. and Mrs. Fairbairn were spoiling their children
by constant fault-finding, too many rules and too
little sympathy with the active young souls and bodies
under their care. As Harry said, they were ordered
about, corrected and fussed over from morning till
night, and were getting so tired of it that the most
desperate ideas began to enter their heads.
Now, in the house was a quiet old
maiden aunt, who saw the mischief brewing, and tried
to cure it by suggesting more liberty and less ‘nagging,’
as the boys call it. But Mr. and Mrs. F. always
silenced her by saying, —
’My dear Betsey, you never had
a family, so how can you know anything about
the proper management of children?’
They quite forgot that sister Betsey
had brought up a flock of motherless brothers and
sisters, and done it wisely and well, though she never
got any thanks or praise for it, and never expected
any for doing her duty faithfully. If it had
not been for aunty, Harry and Kitty would have long
ago carried out their favorite plan, and have run away
together, like Roland and Maybird. She kept them
from this foolish prank by all sorts of unsuspected
means, and was their refuge in troublous times.
For all her quiet ways, aunty was full of fun as well
as sympathy and patience, and she smoothed the thorny
road to virtue with the innocent and kindly little
arts that make some people as useful and beloved as
good fairy godmothers were once upon a time.
As they sat at tea that evening papa
and mamma were most affable and lively; but the children’s
spirits were depressed by a long day of restraint,
and they sat like well-bred mutes, languidly eating
their supper.
’It’s the warm weather.
They need something bracing. I’ll give them
a dose of iron mixture to-morrow,’ said mamma.
‘I’ve taken enough now
to make a cooking-stove,’ groaned Kitty, who
hated being dosed.
‘If you’d let me go swimming
every night I’d be all right,’ added Harry.
’Not another word on that point.
I will not let you do it, for you will get
drowned as sure as you try,’ said mamma, who
was so timid she had panics the minute her boy was
out of sight.
‘Aunt Betsey let her boys go,
and they never came to grief,’ began Harry.
’Aunt Betsey’s ideas and
mine differ. Children are not brought up now as
they were in her day,’ answered mamma with a
superior air.
‘I just wish they were. Jolly good times
her boys had.’
’Yes, and girls too, playing
anything they liked, and not rigged up and plagued
with company,’ cried Kitty, with sudden interest.
‘What do you mean by that?’
asked papa good-naturedly; for somehow his youth returned
to him for a minute, and seemed very pleasant.
The children could not explain very
well, but Harry said slowly, —
‘If you were to be in our places
for a day you’d see what we mean.’
‘Wouldn’t it be worth
your while to try the experiment?’ said Aunt
Betsey, with a smile.
Papa and mamma laughed at the idea,
but looked sober when aunty added, —
’Why not put yourselves in their
places for a day and see how you like it? I think
you would understand the case better than any one could
describe it, and perhaps do both yourselves and the
children a lasting service.’
‘Upon my word, that’s
a droll idea! What do you say to it, mamma?’
and papa looked much amused.
’I am willing to try it if you
are, just for the fun of the thing, but I don’t
think it will do any good;’ and mamma shook her
head as if Aunt Betsey’s plan was a wild one.
The children sat quiet, speechless
with surprise at this singular proposal, but as its
full richness dawned upon them, they skipped in their
chairs and clapped their hands delightedly.
‘How do you propose to carry
out this new educational frolic?’ asked papa,
beginning to feel some curiosity as to the part he
was to play.
’Merely let the children do
as they like for one day and have full power over
you. Let them plan your duties and pleasures,
order your food, fix your hours, and punish or reward
you as they think proper. You must promise entire
obedience, and keep the agreement till night.’
‘Good! good! Oh, won’t
it be fun!’ cried Harry and Kitty, applauding
enthusiastically; while papa and mamma looked rather
sober as the plan was developed before them.
’To-morrow is a holiday for
us all, and we might celebrate it by this funny experiment.
It will amuse us and do no harm, at any rate,’
added aunty, quite in love with her new scheme.
’Very well, we will. Come,
mamma, let us promise, and see what these rogues will
do for us. Playing father and mother is no joke,
mind you; but you will have an easier time of it than
we do, for we shall behave ourselves,’
said papa, with a virtuous expression.
Mamma agreed, and the supper ended
merrily, for every one was full of curiosity as to
the success of the new play. Harry and Kitty went
to bed early, that they might be ready for the exciting
labors of the next day. Aunt Betsey paid each
a short visit before they slept, and it is supposed
that she laid out the order of performances, and told
each what to do; for the little people would never
have thought of so many sly things if left to themselves.
At seven the next morning, as mamma
was in her dressing-room, just putting on her cool,
easy wrapper, in came Kitty with a solemn face, though
her eyes danced with fun, as she said, —
’Careless, untidy girl!
Put on a clean dress, do up your hair properly, and
go and practise half an hour before breakfast.’
At first mamma looked as if inclined
to refuse, but Kitty was firm; and, with a sigh, mamma
rustled into a stiff, scratchy, French print, took
her hair out of the comfortable net, and braided it
carefully up; then, instead of reading in her arm-chair,
she was led to the parlor and set to learning a hard
piece of music.
‘Can’t I have my early
cup of tea and my roll?’ she asked.
‘Eating between meals is a very
bad habit, and I can’t allow it,’ said
Kitty, in the tone her mother often used to her.
’I shall have a mug of new milk and a roll,
because grown people need more nourishment than children;’
and sitting down, she ate her early lunch with a relish,
while poor mamma played away, feeling quite out of
tune herself.
Harry found papa enjoying the last
delightful doze that makes bed so fascinating of a
morning. As if half afraid to try the experiment,
the boy slowly approached and gave the sleeper a sudden,
hard shake, saying briskly, —
‘Come, come, come, lazy-bones! Get up,
get up!’
Papa started as if an earthquake had
roused him, and stared at Harry, astonished for a
minute, then he remembered, and upset Harry’s
gravity by whining out, —
‘Come, you let me alone.
It isn’t time yet, and I am so tired.’
Harry took the joke, and assuming
the stern air of his father on such occasions, said
impressively, —
’You have been called, and now
if you are not down in fifteen minutes you won’t
have any breakfast. Not a morsel, sir, not a morsel;’
and, coolly pocketing his father’s watch, he
retired, to giggle all the way downstairs.
When the breakfast bell rang, mamma
hurried into the dining-room, longing for her tea.
But Kitty sat behind the urn, and said gravely, —
’Go back, and enter the room
properly. Will you never learn to behave like
a lady?’
Mamma looked impatient at the delay,
and having re-entered in her most elegant manner,
sat down, and passed her plate for fresh trout and
muffins.
’No fish or hot bread for you,
my dear. Eat your good oatmeal porridge and milk;
that is the proper food for children.’
‘Can’t I have some tea?’
cried mamma, in despair, for without it she felt quite
lost.
’Certainly not. I never
was allowed tea when a little girl, and couldn’t
think of giving it to you,’ said Kitty, filling
a large cup for herself, and sipping the forbidden
draught with a relish.
Poor mamma quite groaned at this hard
fate, but meekly obeyed, and ate the detested porridge,
understanding Kitty’s dislike to it at last.
Harry, sitting in his father’s
chair, read the paper, and ate everything he could
lay his hands on, with a funny assumption of his father’s
morning manner. Aunt Betsey looked on much amused,
and now and then nodded to the children as if she
thought things were going nicely.
Breakfast was half over when papa
came in, and was about to take Harry’s place
when his son said, trying vainly to look grave as he
showed the watch, —
’What did I tell you, sir?
You are late again, sir. No breakfast, sir.
I’m sorry, but this habit must be broken
up. Not a word; it’s your own fault, and
you must bear the penalty.’
’Come, now, that’s hard
on a fellow! I’m awful hungry. Can’t
I have just a bite of something?’ asked papa,
quite taken aback at this stern decree.
’I said not a morsel, and I
shall keep my word. Go to your morning duties
and let this be a lesson to you.’
Papa cast a look at Aunt Betsey, that
was both comic and pathetic, and departed without
a word; but he felt a sudden sympathy with his son,
who had often been sent fasting from the table for
some small offence.
Now it was that he appreciated aunty’s
kind heart, and felt quite fond of her, for in a few
minutes she came to him, as he raked the gravel walk
(Harry’s duty every day), and slipping a nice,
warm, well-buttered muffin into his hand, said, in
her motherly way, —
’My dear, do try and please
your father. He is right about late rising, but
I can’t bear to see you starve.’
‘Betsey, you are an angel!’
and turning his back to the house, papa bolted the
muffin with grateful rapidity, inquiring with a laugh,
’Do you think those rogues will keep it up in
this vigorous style all day?’
‘I trust so; it isn’t
a bit overdone. Hope you like it!’ and Aunt
Betsey walked away, looking as if she enjoyed
it extremely.
’Now put on your hat and draw
baby up and down the avenue for half an hour.
Don’t go on the grass, or you will wet your feet;
and don’t play with baby, I want her to go to
sleep; and don’t talk to papa, or he will neglect
his work,’ said Kitty, as they rose from table.
Now, it was a warm morning and baby
was heavy and the avenue was dull, and mamma much
preferred to stay in the house and sew the trimming
on to a new and pretty dress.
‘Must I really? Kitty you
are a hard-hearted mamma to make me do it,’
and Mrs. Fairbairn hoped her play-parent would relent.
But she did not, and only answered with a meaning
look.
‘I have to do it every
day, and you don’t let me off.’
Mamma said no more, but put on her
hat and trundled away with fretful baby, thinking
to find her fellow-sufferer and have a laugh over the
joke. She was disappointed, however, for Harry
called papa away to weed the lettuce-bed, and then
shut him up in the study to get his lessons, while
he mounted the pony and trotted away to town to buy
a new fishing-rod and otherwise enjoy himself.
When mamma came in, hot and tired,
she was met by Kitty with a bottle in one hand and
a spoon in the other.
‘Here is your iron mixture,
dear. Now take it like a good girl.’
‘I won’t!’ and mamma looked quite
stubborn.
‘Then aunty will hold your hands and I shall
make you.’
‘But I don’t like it; I don’t need
it,’ cried mamma.
’Neither do I, but you give
it to me all the same. I’m sure you need
strengthening more than I do, you have so many “trials,"’
and Kitty looked very sly as she quoted one of the
words often on her mother’s lips.
’You’d better mind, Carrie;
it can’t hurt you, and you know you promised
entire obedience. Set a good example,’ said
aunty.
’But I never thought these little
chits would do so well. Ugh, how disagreeable
it is!’ And mamma took her dose with a wry face,
feeling that Aunt Betsey was siding with the wrong
party.
’Now sit down and hem these
towels till dinner-time. I have so much to do
I don’t know which way to turn,’ continued
Kitty, much elated with her success.
Rest of any sort was welcome, so mamma
sewed busily till callers came. They happened
to be some little friends of Kitty’s, and she
went to them in the parlor, telling mamma to go up
to nurse and have her hair brushed and her dress changed,
and then come and see the guests. While she was
away Kitty told the girls the joke they were having,
and begged them to help her carry it out. They
agreed, being ready for fun and not at all afraid
of Mrs. Fairbairn. So when she came in they all
began to kiss and cuddle and praise and pass her round
as if she was a doll, to her great discomfort and
the great amusement of the little girls.
While this was going on in the drawing-room,
Harry was tutoring his father in the study, and putting
that poor gentleman through a course of questions
that nearly drove him distracted; for Harry got out
the hardest books he could find, and selected the
most puzzling subjects. A dusty old history was
rummaged out also, and classical researches followed,
in which papa’s memory played him false more
than once, calling forth rebukes from his severe young
tutor. But he came to open disgrace over his
mathematics, for he had no head for figures, and, not
being a business man, had not troubled himself about
the matter; so Harry, who was in fine practice, utterly
routed him in mental arithmetic by giving him regular
puzzlers, and when he got stuck offered no help, but
shook his head and called him a stupid fellow.
The dinner-bell released the exhausted
student, and he gladly took his son’s place,
looking as if he had been hard at work. He was
faint with hunger, but was helped last, being ‘only
a boy,’ and then checked every five minutes
for eating too fast. Mamma was very meek, and
only looked wistfully at the pie when told in her
own words that pastry was bad for children.
Any attempts at conversation were
promptly quenched by the worn-out old saying, ‘Children
should be seen, not heard,’ while Harry and Kitty
chattered all dinner-time, and enjoyed it to their
hearts’ content, especially the frequent pecks
at their great children, who, to be even with them,
imitated all their tricks as well as they could.
‘Don’t whistle at table,
papa;’ ‘keep your hands still mamma;’
’wait till you are helped, sir;’ ’tuck
your napkin well in, and don’t spill your soup,
Caroline.’
Aunt Betsey laughed till her eyes
were full, and they had a jolly time, though the little
people had the best of it, for the others obeyed them
in spite of their dislike to the new rules.
‘Now you may play for two hours,’
was the gracious order issued as they rose from table.
Mamma fell upon a sofa exhausted,
and papa hurried to read his paper in the shady garden.
Usually these hours of apparent freedom
were spoilt by constant calls, — not to run,
not to play this or that, or frequent calls to do
errands. The children had mercy, however, and
left them in peace; which was a wise move on the whole,
for the poor souls found rest so agreeable they privately
resolved to let the children alone in their play-hours.
‘Can I go over and see Mr. Hammond?’
asked papa, wishing to use up the last half-hour of
his time by a neighbourly call.
’No; I don’t like Tommy
Hammond, so I don’t wish you to play with his
father,’ said Harry, with a sly twinkle of the
eye, as he turned the tables on his papa.
Mr. Fairbairn gave a low whistle and
retired to the barn, where Harry followed him, and
ordered the man to harness up old Bill.
‘Going to drive, sir?’ asked papa, respectfully.
‘Don’t ask questions,’ was all the
answer he got.
Old Bill was put into the best buggy
and driven to the hall door. Papa followed, and
mamma sprang up from her nap, ready for her afternoon
drive.
‘Can’t I go?’ she asked, as Kitty
came down in her new hat and gloves.
‘No; there isn’t room.’
‘Why not have the carryall,
and let us go, too, we like it so much,’ said
papa, in the pleading tone Harry often used.
Kitty was about to consent, for she
loved mamma, and found it hard to cross her so.
But Harry was made of sterner stuff; his wrongs still
burned within him, and he said impatiently —
’We can’t be troubled
with you. The buggy is nicest and lightest, and
we want to talk over our affairs. You, my son,
can help John turn the hay on the lawn, and Caroline
can amuse baby, or help Jane with the preserves.
Little girls should be domestic.’
‘Oh, thunder!’ growled papa.
‘Aunt Betsey taught you that
speech, you saucy boy,’ cried mamma, as the
children drove off in high glee, leaving their parents
to the distasteful tasks set them.
Mrs. Fairbairn wanted to read, but
baby was fretful, and there was no Kitty to turn him
over to, so she spent her afternoon amusing the small
tyrant, while papa made hay in the sun and didn’t
like it.
Just at tea-time the children came
home, full of the charms of their drive, but did not
take the trouble to tell much about it to the stay-at-home
people. Bread and milk was all they allowed their
victims, while they revelled in marmalade and cake,
fruit and tea.
’I expect company this evening,
but I don’t wish you to sit up, Caroline; you
are too young, and late hours are bad for your eyes.
Go to bed, and don’t forget to brush your hair
and teeth well, five minutes for each; cold cream
your hands, fold your ribbons, hang up your clothes,
put out your boots to be cleaned, and put in the mosquito
bars; I will come and take away the light when I am
dressed.’
Kitty delivered this dread command
with effect, for she had heard and cried over it too
often not to have it quite by heart.
’But I can’t go to bed
at half-past seven o’clock of a summer night!
I’m not sleepy, and this is just the pleasantest
time of the whole day,’ said mamma, thinking
her bargain a hard one.
’Go up directly, my daughter,
and don’t discuss the matter; I know what is
best for you,’ and Kitty sent social, wide-awake
mamma to bed, there to lie thinking soberly till Mrs.
Kit came for the lamp.
‘Have you had a happy day, love?’
she asked, bending over the pillow, as her mother
used to do.
‘No, ma’am.’
’Then it was your own fault,
my child. Obey your parents in all things, and
you will be both good and happy.’
’That depends’ — began
mamma, but stopped short, remembering that to-morrow
she would be on the other side, and anything she might
say now would be quoted against her.
But Kitty understood, and her heart
melted as she hugged her mother and said in her own
caressing way —
’Poor little mamma! did she
have a hard time? and didn’t she like being
a good girl and minding her parents?’
Mamma laughed also, and held Kitty
close, but all she said was —
‘Good-night, dear; don’t
be troubled: it will be all right to-morrow.’
‘I hope so,’ and with
a hearty kiss, Kitty went thoughtfully downstairs
to meet several little friends whom she had asked to
spend the evening with her.
As the ladies left the room, papa
leaned back and prepared to smoke a cigar, feeling
that he needed the comfort of it after this trying
day. But Harry was down upon him at once.
’A very bad habit — can’t
allow it. Throw that dirty thing away, and go
and get your Latin lesson for to-morrow. The study
is quiet, and we want this room.’
’But I am tired. I can’t
study at night. Let me off till to-morrow, please,
sir!’ begged papa, who had not looked at Latin
since he left school.
’Not a word, sir! I shall
listen to no excuses, and shall not let you
neglect your education on any account,’ and Harry
slapped the table a la papa in the most impressive
manner.
Mr. Fairbairn went away into the dull
study and made believe do his lesson, but he really
smoked and meditated.
The young folks had a grand revel,
and kept it up till ten o’clock, while mamma
lay awake, longing to go down and see what they were
about, and papa shortly fell asleep, quite exhausted
by the society of a Latin Grammar.
‘Idle boy, is this the way you
study?’ said Harry, audaciously tweaking him
by the ear.
‘No, it’s the way you
do;’ and feeling that his day of bondage was
over, papa cast off his allegiance, tucked a child
under each arm, and marched upstairs with them, kicking
and screaming. Setting them down at the nursery
door, he said, shaking his finger at them in an awful
manner, —
‘Wait a bit, you rascals, and
see what you will get to-morrow.’
With this dark threat he vanished
into his own room, and a minute after a great burst
of laughter set their fears at rest.
‘It was a fair bargain, so I’m
not afraid,’ said Harry stoutly.
’He kissed us good-night though
he did glower at us, so I guess it was only fun,’
added Kitty.
‘Hasn’t it been a funny day?’ asked
Harry.
‘Don’t think I quite like
it, everything is so turned round,’ said Kitty.
’Guess they didn’t
like it very well. Hear ’em talking in there;’
and Harry held up his finger, for a steady murmur
of conversation had followed the laughter in papa
and mamma’s room.
‘I wonder if our joke will do
any good?’ said Kitty thoughtfully.
‘Wait and see,’ answered
Aunt Betsey, popping her night-capped head out of
her room with a nod and a smile that sent them to bed
full of hope for the future.