“He who serves well need not fear to ask his
wages.”
I
It was under a blue cap that I first
saw the honest face of Joe Collins. In the third
year of the late war a Maine regiment was passing
through Boston, on its way to Washington. The
Common was all alive with troops and the spectators
who clustered round them to say God-speed, as the
brave fellows marched away to meet danger and death
for our sakes.
Every one was eager to do something;
and, as the men stood at ease, the people mingled
freely with them, offering gifts, hearty grips of
the hand, and hopeful prophecies of victory in the
end. Irresistibly attracted, my boy Tom and I
drew near, and soon, becoming excited by the scene,
ravaged the fruit-stands in our neighborhood for tokens
of our regard, mingling candy and congratulations,
peanuts and prayers, apples and applause, in one enthusiastic
jumble.
While Tom was off on his third raid,
my attention was attracted by a man who stood a little
apart, looking as if his thoughts were far away.
All the men were fine, stalwart fellows, as Maine men
usually are; but this one over-topped his comrades,
standing straight and tall as a Norway pine, with
a face full of the mingled shrewdness, sobriety, and
self-possession of the typical New Englander.
I liked the look of him; and, seeing that he seemed
solitary, even in a crowd, I offered him my last apple
with a word of interest. The keen blue eyes met
mine gratefully, and the apple began to vanish in vigorous
bites as we talked; for no one thought of ceremony
at such a time.
“Where are you from?”
“Woolidge, ma’am.”
“Are you glad to go?”
“Wal, there’s two sides
to that question. I calk’late to do my duty,
and do it hearty: but it is rough on a
feller leavin’ his folks, for good, maybe.”
There was a sudden huskiness in the
man’s voice that was not apple-skins, though
he tried to make believe that it was. I knew a
word about home would comfort him, so I went on with
my questions.
“It is very hard. Do you leave a family?”
“My old mother, a sick brother, — and
Lucindy.”
The last word was uttered in a tone
of intense regret, and his brown cheek reddened as
he added hastily, to hide some embarrassment. —
“You see, Jim went last year,
and got pretty well used up; so I felt as if I’d
ought to take my turn now. Mother was a regular
old hero about it and I dropped everything, and come
off. Lucindy didn’t think it was my duty;
and that made it awful hard, I tell you.”
“Wives are less patriotic than
mothers,” I began; but he would not hear Lucindy
blamed, and said quickly, —
“She ain’t my wife yet,
but we calk’lated to be married in a month or
so; and it was wus for her than for me, women lot so
on not being disappointed. I couldn’t
shirk, and here I be. When I git to work, I shall
be all right: the first wrench is the tryin’
part.”
Here he straightened his broad shoulders,
and turned his face toward the flags fluttering far
in front, as if no backward look should betray the
longing of his heart for mother, home, and wife.
I liked that little glimpse of character; and when
Tom returned with empty hands, reporting that every
stall was exhausted, I told him to find out what the
man would like best, then run across the street and
get it.
“I know without asking.
Give us your purse, and I’ll make him as happy
as a king,” said the boy, laughing, as he looked
up admiringly at our tall friend, who looked down
on him with an elder-brotherly air pleasant to see.
While Tom was gone, I found out Joe’s name and
business, promised to write and tell his mother how
finely the regiment went off, and was just expressing
a hope that we might meet again, for I too was going
to the war as nurse, when the order to “Fall
in!” came rolling down the ranks, and the talk
was over. Fearing Tom would miss our man in the
confusion, I kept my eye on him till the boy came
rushing up with a packet of tobacco in one hand and
a good supply of cigars in the other. Not a romantic
offering, certainly, but a very acceptable one, as
Joe’s face proved, as we scrambled these treasures
into his pockets, all laughing at the flurry, while
less fortunate comrades helped us, with an eye to
a share of these fragrant luxuries by and by.
There was just time for this, a hearty shake of the
big hand, and a grateful “Good-by, ma’am;”
then the word was given, and they were off. Bent
on seeing the last of them, Tom and I took a short
cut, and came out on the wide street down which so
many troops marched that year; and, mounting some
high steps, we watched for our man, as we already
called him.
As the inspiring music, the grand
tramp, drew near, the old thrill went through the
crowd, the old cheer broke out. But it was a
different scene now than in the first enthusiastic,
hopeful days. Young men and ardent boys filled
the ranks then, brave by instinct, burning with loyal
zeal, and blissfully unconscious of all that lay before
them. Now the blue coats were worn by mature men,
some gray, all grave and resolute: husbands and
fathers, with the memory of wives and children tugging
at their heart-strings; homes left desolate behind
them, and before them the grim certainty of danger,
hardship, and perhaps the lifelong helplessness worse
than death. Little of the glamour of romance
about the war now: they saw it as it was, a long,
hard task; and here were the men to do it well.
Even the lookers-on were different now. Once
all was wild enthusiasm and glad uproar; now men’s
lips were set, and women’s smileless as they
cheered; fewer handkerchiefs whitened the air, for
wet eyes needed them; and sudden lulls, almost solemn
in their stillness, followed the acclamations
of the crowd. All watched with quickened breath
and brave souls that living wave, blue below, and
bright with a steely glitter above, as it flowed down
the street and away to distant battle-fields already
stained with precious blood.
“There he is! The outside
man, and tallest of the lot. Give him a cheer,
auntie: he sees us, and remembers!” cried
Tom, nearly tumbling off his perch, as he waved his
hat, and pointed out Joe Collins.
Yes, there he was, looking up, with
a smile on his brave brown face, my little nosegay
in his button-hole, a suspicious bulge in the pocket
close by, and doubtless a comfortable quid in his mouth,
to cheer the weary march. How like an old friend
he looked, though we had only met fifteen minutes
ago; how glad we were to be there to smile back at
him, and send him on his way feeling that, even in
a strange city, there was some one to say, “God
bless you, Joe!” We watched the tallest blue
cap till it vanished, and then went home in a glow
of patriotism, — Tom to long for his turn
to come, I to sew vigorously on the gray gown the
new nurse burned to wear as soon as possible, and
both of us to think and speak often of poor Joe Collins
and his Lucindy. All this happened long ago;
but it is well to recall those stirring times, — to
keep fresh the memory of sacrifices made for us by
men like these; to see to it that the debt we owe them
is honestly, gladly paid; and, while we decorate the
graves of those who died, to remember also those who
still live to deserve our grateful care.
II
I never expected to see Joe again;
but, six months later, we did meet in a Washington
hospital one winter’s night. A train of
ambulances had left their sad freight at our door,
and we were hurrying to get the poor fellows into
much needed beds, after a week of hunger, cold, and
unavoidable neglect. All forms of pain were in
my ward that night, and all borne with the pathetic
patience which was a daily marvel to those who saw
it.
Trying to bring order out of chaos,
I was rushing up and down the narrow aisle between
the rows of rapidly filling beds, and, after brushing
several times against a pair of the largest and muddiest
boots I ever saw, I paused at last to inquire why they
were impeding the passageway. I found they belonged
to a very tall man who seemed to be already asleep
or dead, so white and still and utterly worn out he
looked as he lay there, without a coat, a great patch
on his forehead, and the right arm rudely bundled
up. Stooping to cover him, I saw that he was
unconscious, and, whipping out my brandy-bottle and
salts, soon brought him round, for it was only exhaustion.
“Can you eat?” I asked,
as he said, “Thanky, ma’am,” after
a long draught of water and a dizzy stare.
“Eat! I’m starvin’!”
he answered, with such a ravenous glance at a fat
nurse who happened to be passing, that I trembled for
her, and hastened to take a bowl of soup from her
tray.
As I fed him, his gaunt, weather-beaten
face had a familiar look; but so many such faces had
passed before me that winter, I did not recall this
one till the ward-master came to put up the cards with
the new-comers’ names above their beds.
My man seemed absorbed in his food; but I naturally
glanced at the card, and there was the name “Joseph
Collins” to give me an additional interest in
my new patient.
“Why, Joe! is it really you?”
I exclaimed, pouring the last spoonful of soup down
his throat so hastily that I choked him.
“All that’s left of me.
Wal, ain’t this luck, now?” gasped Joe,
as gratefully as if that hospital-cot was a bed of
roses.
“What is the matter? A
wound in the head and arm?” I asked, feeling
sure that no slight affliction had brought Joe there.
“Right arm gone. Shot off
as slick as a whistle. I tell you, it’s
a sing’lar kind of a feelin’ to see a
piece of your own body go flyin’ away, with
no prospect of ever coming back again,” said
Joe, trying to make light of one of the greatest misfortunes
a man can suffer.
“That is bad, but it might have
been worse. Keep up your spirits, Joe; and we
will soon have you fitted out with a new arm almost
as good as new.”
“I guess it won’t do much
lumberin’, so that trade is done for. I
s’pose there’s things left-handed fellers
can do, and I must learn ’em as soon as possible,
since my fightin’ days are over,” and Joe
looked at his one arm with a sigh that was almost
a groan, helplessness is such a trial to a manly man, — and
he was eminently so.
“What can I do to comfort you
most, Joe? I’ll send my good Ben to help
you to bed, and will be here myself when the surgeon
goes his rounds. Is there anything else that
would make you more easy?”
“If you could just drop a line
to mother to let her know I’m alive, it would
be a sight of comfort to both of us. I guess I’m
in for a long spell of hospital, and I’d lay
easier if I knew mother and Lucindy warn’t frettin’
about me.”
He must have been suffering terribly,
but he thought of the women who loved him before himself,
and, busy as I was, I snatched a moment to send a
few words of hope to the old mother. Then I left
him “layin’ easy,” though the prospect
of some months of wearing pain would have daunted
most men. If I had needed anything to increase
my regard for Joe, it would have been the courage
with which he bore a very bad quarter of an hour with
the surgeons; for his arm was in a dangerous state,
the wound in the head feverish for want of care; and
a heavy cold on the lungs suggested pneumonia as an
added trial to his list of ills.
“He will have a hard time of
it, but I think he will pull through, as he is a temperate
fellow, with a splendid constitution,” was the
doctor’s verdict, as he left us for the next
man, who was past help, with a bullet through his
lungs.
“I don’no as I hanker
to live, and be a burden. If Jim was able to do
for mother, I feel as if I wouldn’t mind steppin’
out now I’m so fur along. As he ain’t,
I s’pose I must brace up, and do the best I can,”
said Joe, as I wiped the drops from his forehead, and
tried to look as if his prospect was a bright one.
“You will have Lucindy to help
you, you know; and that will make things easier for
all.”
“Think so? ’Pears
to me I couldn’t ask her to take care of three
invalids for my sake. She ain’t no folks
of her own, nor much means, and ought to marry a man
who can make things easy for her. Guess I’ll
have to wait a spell longer before I say anything to
Lucindy about marryin’ now;” and a look
of resolute resignation settled on Joe’s haggard
face as he gave up his dearest hope.
“I think Lucindy will have something
to say, if she is like most women, and you will find
the burdens much lighter, for sharing them between
you. Don’t worry about that, but get well,
and go home as soon as you can.”
“All right, ma’am;”
and Joe proved himself a good soldier by obeying orders,
and falling asleep like a tired child, as the first
step toward recovery.
For two months I saw Joe daily, and
learned to like him very much, he was so honest, genuine,
and kind-hearted. So did his mates, for he made
friends with them all by sharing such small luxuries
as came to him, for he was a favorite; and, better
still, he made sunshine in that sad place by the brave
patience with which he bore his own troubles, the
cheerful consolation he always gave to others.
A droll fellow was Joe at times, for under his sobriety
lay much humor; and I soon discovered that a visit
from him was more efficacious than other cordials
in cases of despondency and discontent. Roars
of laughter sometimes greeted me as I went into his
ward, and Joe’s jokes were passed round as eagerly
as the water-pitcher.
Yet he had much to try him, not only
in the ills that vexed his flesh, but the cares that
tried his spirit, and the future that lay before him,
full of anxieties and responsibilities which seemed
so heavy now when the strong right arm, that had cleared
all obstacles away before, was gone. The letters
I wrote for him, and those he received, told the little
story very plainly; for he read them to me, and found
much comfort in talking over his affairs, as most
men do when illness makes them dependent on a woman.
Jim was evidently sick and selfish. Lucindy,
to judge from the photograph cherished so tenderly
under Joe’s pillow, was a pretty, weak sort
of a girl, with little character or courage to help
poor Joe with his burdens. The old mother was
very like her son, and stood by him “like a
hero,” as he said, but was evidently failing,
and begged him to come home as soon as he was able,
that she might see him comfortably settled before she
must leave him. Her courage sustained his, and
the longing to see her hastened his departure as soon
as it was safe to let him go; for Lucindy’s letters
were always of a dismal sort, and made him anxious
to put his shoulder to the wheel.
“She always set consider’ble
by me, mother did, bein’ the oldest; and I wouldn’t
miss makin’ her last days happy, not if it cost
me all the arms and legs I’ve got,” said
Joe, as he awkwardly struggled into the big boots
an hour after leave to go home was given him.
It was pleasant to see his comrades
gather round him with such hearty adieus that his
one hand must have tingled; to hear the good wishes
and the thanks called after him by pale creatures in
their beds; and to find tears in many eyes beside
my own when he was gone, and nothing was left of him
but the empty cot, the old gray wrapper, and the name
upon the wall.
I kept that card among my other relics,
and hoped to meet Joe again somewhere in the world.
He sent me one or two letters, then I went home; the
war ended soon after, time passed, and the little story
of my Maine lumberman was laid away with many other
experiences which made that part of my life a very
memorable one.
III
Some years later, as I looked out
of my window one dull November day, the only cheerful
thing I saw was the red cap of a messenger who was
examining the slate that hung on a wall opposite my
hotel. A tall man with gray hair and beard, one
arm, and a blue army-coat. I always salute, figuratively
at least, when I see that familiar blue, especially
if one sleeve of the coat is empty; so I watched the
messenger with interest as he trudged away on some
new errand, wishing he had a better day and a thicker
pair of boots. He was an unusually large, well-made
man, and reminded me of a fine building going to ruin
before its time; for the broad shoulders were bent,
there was a stiffness about the long legs suggestive
of wounds or rheumatism, and the curly hair looked
as if snow had fallen on it too soon. Sitting
at work in my window, I fell into the way of watching
my Red Cap, as I called him, with more interest than
I did the fat doves on the roof opposite, or the pert
sparrows hopping in the mud below. I liked the
steady way in which he plodded on through fair weather
or foul, as if intent on doing well the one small
service he had found to do. I liked his cheerful
whistle as he stood waiting for a job under the porch
of the public building where his slate hung, watching
the luxurious carriages roll by, and the well-to-do
gentlemen who daily passed him to their comfortable
homes, with a steady, patient sort of face, as if
wondering at the inequalities of fortune, yet neither
melancholy nor morose over the small share of prosperity
which had fallen to his lot.
I often planned to give him a job,
that I might see him nearer; but I had few errands,
and little Bob, the hall-boy, depended on doing those:
so the winter was nearly over before I found out that
my Red Cap was an old friend.
A parcel came for me one day, and
bidding the man wait for an answer, I sat down to
write it, while the messenger stood just inside the
door like a sentinel on duty. When I looked up
to give my note and directions, I found the man staring
at me with a beaming yet bashful face, as he nodded,
saying heartily, —
“I mistrusted it was you, ma’am,
soon’s I see the name on the bundle, and I guess
I ain’t wrong. It’s a number of years
sence we met, and you don’t remember Joe Collins
as well as he does you, I reckon?”
“Why, how you have changed!
I’ve been seeing you every day all winter, and
never knew you,” I said, shaking hands with my
old patient, and very glad to see him.
“Nigh on to twenty years makes
consid’able of a change in folks, ’specially
if they have a pretty hard row to hoe.”
“Sit down and warm yourself
while you tell me all about it; there is no hurry
for this answer, and I’ll pay for your time.”
Joe laughed as if that was a good
joke, and sat down as if the fire was quite as welcome
as the friend.
“How are they all at home?”
I asked, as he sat turning his cap round, not quite
knowing where to begin.
“I haven’t got any home
nor any folks neither;” and the melancholy words
banished the brightness from his rough face like a
cloud. “Mother died soon after I got back.
Suddin’, but she was ready, and I was there,
so she was happy. Jim lived a number of years,
and was a sight of care, poor feller; but we managed
to rub along, though we had to sell the farm:
for I couldn’t do much with one arm, and doctor’s
bills right along stiddy take a heap of money.
He was as comfortable as he could be; and, when he
was gone, it wasn’t no great matter, for there
was only me, and I don’t mind roughin’
it.”
“But Lucindy, where was she?” I asked
very naturally.
“Oh! she married another man
long ago. Couldn’t expect her to take me
and my misfortins. She’s doin’ well,
I hear, and that’s a comfort anyway.”
There was a look on Joe’s face,
a tone in Joe’s voice as he spoke, that plainly
showed how much he had needed comfort when left to
bear his misfortunes all alone. But he made no
complaint, uttered no reproach, and loyally excused
Lucindy’s desertion with a simple sort of dignity
that made it impossible to express pity or condemnation.
“How came you here, Joe?”
I asked, making a sudden leap from past to present.
“I had to scratch for a livin’,
and can’t do much: so, after tryin’
a number of things, I found this. My old wounds
pester me a good deal, and rheumatism is bad winters;
but, while my legs hold out, I can git on. A
man can’t set down and starve; so I keep waggin’
as long as I can. When I can’t do no more,
I s’pose there’s almshouse and hospital
ready for me.”
“That is a dismal prospect,
Joe. There ought to be a comfortable place for
such as you to spend your last days in. I am sure
you have earned it.”
“Wal, it does seem ruther hard
on us when we’ve give all we had, and give it
free and hearty, to be left to knock about in our old
age. But there’s so many poor folks to
be took care of, we don’t get much of a chance,
for we ain’t the beggin’ sort,”
said Joe, with a wistful look at the wintry world
outside, as if it would be better to lie quiet under
the snow, than to drag out his last painful years,
friendless and forgotten, in some refuge of the poor.
“Some kind people have been
talking of a home for soldiers, and I hope the plan
will be carried out. It will take time; but, if
it comes to pass, you shall be one of the first men
to enter that home, Joe, if I can get you there.”
“That sounds mighty cheerin’
and comfortable, thanky, ma’am. Idleness
is dreadful tryin’ to me, and I’d rather
wear out than rust out; so I guess I can weather it
a spell longer. But it will be pleasant to look
forrard to a snug harbor bymeby. I feel a sight
better just hearin’ tell about it.”
He certainly looked so, faint as the hope was; for
the melancholy eyes brightened as if they already
saw a happier refuge in the future than almshouse,
hospital, or grave, and, when he trudged away upon
my errand, he went as briskly as if every step took
him nearer to the promised home.
After that day it was all up with
Bob, for I told my neighbors Joe’s story, and
we kept him trotting busily, adding little gifts, and
taking the sort of interest in him that comforted the
lonely fellow, and made him feel that he had not outlived
his usefulness. I never looked out when he was
at his post that he did not smile back at me; I never
passed him in the street that the red cap was not touched
with a military flourish; and, when any of us beckoned
to him, no twinge of rheumatism was too sharp to keep
him from hurrying to do our errands, as if he had
Mercury’s winged feet.
Now and then he came in for a chat,
and always asked how the Soldiers’ Home was
prospering; expressing his opinion that “Boston
was the charitablest city under the sun, and he was
sure he and his mates would be took care of somehow.”
When we parted in the spring, I told
him things looked hopeful, bade him be ready for a
good long rest as soon as the hospitable doors were
open, and left him nodding cheerfully.
IV
But in the autumn I looked in vain
for Joe. The slate was in its old place, and
a messenger came and went on his beat; but a strange
face was under the red cap, and this man had two arms
and one eye. I asked for Collins, but the new-comer
had only a vague idea that he was dead; and the same
answer was given me at headquarters, though none of
the busy people seemed to know when or where he died.
So I mourned for Joe, and felt that it was very hard
he could not have lived to enjoy the promised refuge;
for, relying upon the charity that never fails, the
Home was an actual fact now, just beginning its beneficent
career. People were waking up to this duty, money
was coming in, meetings were being held, and already
a few poor fellows were in the refuge, feeling themselves
no longer paupers, but invalid soldiers honorably supported
by the State they had served. Talking it over
one day with a friend, who spent her life working
for the Associated Charities, she said, —
“By the way, there is a man
boarding with one of my poor women, who ought to be
got into the Home, if he will go. I don’t
know much about him, except that he was in the army,
has been very ill with rheumatic fever, and is friendless.
I asked Mrs. Flanagin how she managed to keep him,
and she said she had help while he was sick, and now
he is able to hobble about, he takes care of the children,
so she is able to go out to work. He won’t
go to his own town, because there is nothing for him
there but the almshouse, and he dreads a hospital;
so struggles along, trying to earn his bread tending
babies with his one arm. A sad case, and in your
line; I wish you’d look into it.”
“That sounds like my Joe, one
arm and all. I’ll go and see him; I’ve
a weakness for soldiers, sick or well.”
I went, and never shall forget the
pathetic little tableau I saw as I opened Mrs. Flanagin’s
dingy door; for she was out, and no one heard my tap.
The room was redolent of suds, and in a grove of damp
clothes hung on lines sat a man with a crying baby
laid across his lap, while he fed three small children
standing at his knee with bread and molasses.
How he managed with one arm to keep the baby from squirming
on to the floor, the plate from upsetting, and to feed
the hungry urchins who stood in a row with open mouths,
like young birds, was past my comprehension.
But he did, trotting baby gently, dealing out sweet
morsels patiently, and whistling to himself, as if
to beguile his labors cheerfully.
The broad back, the long legs, the
faded coat, the low whistle were all familiar; and,
dodging a wet sheet, I faced the man to find it was
indeed my Joe! A mere shadow of his former self,
after months of suffering that had crippled him for
life, but brave and patient still; trying to help
himself, and not ask aid though brought so low.
For an instant I could not speak to
him, and, encumbered with baby, dish, spoon, and children,
he could only stare at me with a sudden brightening
of the altered face that made it full of welcome before
a word was uttered.
“They told me you were dead,
and I only heard of you by accident, not knowing I
should find my old friend alive, but not well, I’m
afraid?”
“There ain’t much left
of me but bones and pain, ma’am. I’m
powerful glad to see you all the same. Dust off
a chair, Patsey, and let the lady set down. You
go in the corner, and take turns lickin’ the
dish, while I see company,” said Joe, disbanding
his small troop, and shouldering the baby as if presenting
arms in honor of his guest.
“Why didn’t you let me
know how sick you were? And how came they to
think you dead?” I asked, as he festooned the
wet linen out of the way, and prepared to enjoy himself
as best he could.
“I did send once, when things
was at the wüst; but you hadn’t got back,
and then somehow I thought I was goin’ to be
mustered out for good, and so wouldn’t trouble
nobody. But my orders ain’t come yet, and
I am doing the fust thing that come along. It
ain’t much, but the good soul stood by me, and
I ain’t ashamed to pay my debts this way, sence
I can’t do it in no other;” and Joe cradled
the chubby baby in his one arm as tenderly as if it
had been his own, though little Biddy was not an inviting
infant.
“That is very beautiful and
right, Joe, and I honor you for it; but you were not
meant to tend babies, so sing your last lullabies,
and be ready to go to the Home as soon as I can get
you there.”
“Really, ma’am? I
used to lay and kind of dream about it when I couldn’t
stir without yellin’ out; but I never thought
it would ever come to happen. I see a piece in
the paper describing it, and it sounded dreadful nice.
Shouldn’t wonder if I found some of my mates
there. They were a good lot, and deservin’
of all that could be done for ’em,” said
Joe, trotting the baby briskly, as if the prospect
excited him, as well it might, for the change from
that damp nursery to the comfortable quarters prepared
for him would be like going from Purgatory to Paradise.
“I don’t wonder you don’t
get well living in such a place, Joe. You should
have gone home to Woolwich, and let your friends help
you,” I said, feeling provoked with him for
hiding himself.
“No, ma’am!” he
answered, with a look I never shall forget, it was
so full of mingled patience, pride, and pain.
“I haven’t a relation in the world but
a couple of poor old aunts, and they couldn’t
do anything for me. As for asking help of folks
I used to know, I couldn’t do it; and if you
think I’d go to Lucindy, though she is wal off,
you don’t know Joe Collins. I’d die
fust! If she was poor and I rich, I’d do
for her like a brother; but I couldn’t ask no
favors of her, not if I begged my vittles in the street,
or starved. I forgive, but I don’t forgit
in a hurry; and the woman that stood by me when I
was down is the woman I believe in, and can take my
bread from without shame. Hooray for Biddy Flanagin!
God bless her!” and, as if to find a vent for
the emotion that filled his eyes with grateful tears,
Joe led off the cheer, which the children shrilly
echoed, and I joined heartily.
“I shall come for you in a few
days; so cuddle the baby and make much of the children
before you part. It won’t take you long
to pack up, will it?” I asked, as we subsided
with a general laugh.
“I reckon not as I don’t
own any clothes but what I set in, except a couple
of old shirts and them socks. My hat’s stoppin’
up the winder, and my old coat is my bed-cover.
I’m awful shabby, ma’am, and that’s
one reason I don’t go out more. I can hobble
some, but I ain’t got used to bein’ a
scarecrow yet,” and Joe glanced from the hose
without heels that hung on the line to the ragged
suit he wore, with a resigned expression that made
me long to rush out and buy up half the contents of
Oak Hall on the spot.
Curbing this wild impulse I presently
departed with promises of speedy transportation for
Joe, and unlimited oranges to assuage the pangs of
parting for the young Flanagins, who escorted me to
the door, while Joe waved the baby like a triumphal
banner till I got round the corner.
There was such a beautiful absence
of red tape about the new institution that it only
needed a word in the right ear to set things going;
and then, with a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull
all together, Joe Collins was taken up and safely
landed in the Home he so much needed and so well deserved.
A happier man or a more grateful one
it would be hard to find, and if a visitor wants an
enthusiastic guide about the place, Joe is the one
to take, for all is comfort, sunshine, and good-will
to him; and he unconsciously shows how great the need
of this refuge is, as he hobbles about on his lame
feet, pointing out its beauties, conveniences, and
delights with his one arm, while his face shines,
and his voice quavers a little as he says gratefully, —
“The State don’t forget
us, you see, and this is a Home wuth havin’.
Long life to it!”