Hurrying to catch a certain car at
a certain corner late one stormy night, I was suddenly
arrested by the sight of a queer-looking bundle lying
in a door-way.
‘Bless my heart, it’s
a child! O John! I’m afraid he’s
frozen!’ I exclaimed to my brother, as we both
bent over the bundle.
Such a little fellow as he was, in
the big, ragged coat; such a tired, baby face, under
the fuzzy cap; such a purple, little hand, still holding
fast a few papers; such a pathetic sight altogether
was the boy, lying on the stone step, with the snow
drifting over him, that it was impossible to go by.
’He is asleep; but he’ll
freeze, if left so long. Here! wake up, my boy,
and go home, as fast as you can,’ cried John,
with a gentle shake, and a very gentle voice; for
the memory of a dear little lad, safely tucked up
at home, made him fatherly kind to the small vagabond.
The moment he was touched, the boy
tumbled up, and, before he was half awake, began his
usual cry, with an eye to business.
’Paper, sir? “Herald!”
“Transkip!” Last’ — a great
gape swallowed up the ‘last edition,’
and he stood blinking at us like a very chilly young
owl.
’I’ll buy ’em all
if you’ll go home, my little chap; it’s
high time you were abed,’ said John, whisking
the damp papers into one pocket, and his purse out
of another, as he spoke.
’All of ’em? — why
there’s six!’ croaked the boy, for he was
as hoarse as a raven.
’Never mind, I can kindle the
fire with ’em. Put that in your pocket;
and trot home, my man, as fast as possible.’
‘Where do you live?’ I
asked, picking up the fifty cents that fell from the
little fingers, too benumbed to hold it.
‘Mills Court, out of Hanover.
Cold, ain’t it?’ said the boy, blowing
on his purple hands, and hopping feebly from one leg
to the other, to take the stiffness out.
’He can’t go all that
way in this storm — such a mite, and so used
up with cold and sleep, John.’
‘Of course he can’t; we’ll
put him in a car,’ began John; when the boy
wheezed out, —
’No; I’ve got ter wait
for Sam. He’ll be along as soon’s
the theatre’s done. He said he would; and
so I’m waitin’.’
‘Who is Sam?’ I asked.
’He’s the feller I lives
with. I ain’t got any folks, and he takes
care o’ me.’
’Nice care, indeed; leaving
a baby like you to wait for him here such a night
as this,’ I said crossly.
’Oh, he’s good to me Sam
is, though he does knock me round sometimes, when
I ain’t spry. The big feller shoves me back,
you see; and I gets cold, and can’t sing out
loud; so I don’t sell my papers, and has to
work ’em off late.’
‘Hear the child talk! One
would think he was sixteen, instead of six,’
I said, half laughing.
‘I’m most ten. Hi!
ain’t that a oner?’ cried the boy, as a
gust of sleet slapped him in the face, when he peeped
to see if Sam was coming. ’Hullo! the lights
is out! Why, the play’s done, and the folks
gone, and Sam’s forgot me.’
It was very evident that Sam had
forgotten his little protege; and a strong
desire to shake Sam possessed me.
‘No use waitin’ any longer;
and now my papers is sold, I ain’t afraid to
go home,’ said the boy, stepping down like a
little old man with the rheumatism, and preparing
to trudge away through the storm.
’Stop a bit, my little Casabianca;
a car will be along in fifteen minutes; and while
waiting you can warm yourself over there,’ said
John, with the purple hand in his.
‘My name’s Jack Hill,
not Cassy Banks, please, sir,’ said the little
party, with dignity.
‘Have you had your supper, Mr.
Hill?’ asked John, laughing.
’I had some peanuts, and two
sucks of Joe’s orange; but it warn’t very
fillin’,’ he said, gravely.
‘I should think not. Here!
one stew; and be quick, please,’ cried John,
as we sat down in a warm corner of the confectioner’s
opposite.
While little Jack shovelled in the
hot oysters, with his eyes shutting up now and then
in spite of himself, we looked at him and thought again
of little Rosy-face at home safe in his warm nest,
with mother-love watching over him. Nodding towards
the ragged, grimy, forlorn, little creature, dropping
asleep over his supper like a tired baby, I said, —
’Can you imagine our Freddy
out alone at this hour, trying to ‘work off’
his papers, because afraid to go home till he has?’
‘I’d rather not try,’
answered brother John, winking hard, as he stroked
the little head beside him, which, by the bye, looked
very like a ragged, yellow door-mat. I think
brother John winked hard, but I can’t be sure,
for I know I did; and for a minute there seemed to
be a dozen little newsboys dancing before my eyes.
‘There goes our car; and it’s
the last,’ said John, looking at me.
‘Let it go, but don’t
leave the boy;’ and I frowned at John for hinting
at such a thing.
‘Here is his car. Now,
my lad, bolt your last oyster, and come on.’
‘Good-night, ma’am! thankee,
sir!’ croaked the grateful little voice, as
the child was caught up in John’s strong hands
and set down on the car-step.
With a word to the conductor, and
a small business transaction, we left Jack coiled
up in a corner to finish his nap as tranquilly as if
it wasn’t midnight, and a ‘knocking-round’
might not await him at his journey’s end.
We didn’t mind the storm much
as we plodded home; and when I told the story to Rosy-face,
next day, his interest quite reconciled me to the
sniffs and sneezes of a bad cold.
‘If I saw that poor little boy,
Aunt Jo, I’d love him lots!’ said Freddy,
with a world of pity in his beautiful child’s
eyes.
And, believing that others also would
be kind to little Jack, and such as he, I tell the
story.
When busy fathers hurry home at night,
I hope they’ll buy their papers of the small
boys, who get ‘shoved back;’ the feeble
ones, who grow hoarse, and can’t ‘sing
out;’ the shabby ones, who evidently have only
forgetful Sams to care for them; and the hungry-looking
ones, who don’t get what is ‘fillin’.’
For love of the little sons and daughters safe at
home, say a kind word, buy a paper, even if you don’t
want it; and never pass by, leaving them to sleep
forgotten in the streets at midnight, with no pillow
but a stone, no coverlet but the pitiless snow, and
not even a tender-hearted robin to drop leaves over
them.