“It is so good to be home again!
I wonder how we ever made up our minds to go away!”
exclaimed Rose as she went roaming about the old house
next morning, full of the satisfaction one feels at
revisiting familiar nooks and corners and finding
them unchanged.
“That we might have the pleasure
of coming back again,” answered Phebe, walking
down the hall beside her little mistress, as happy
as she.
“Everything seems just as we
left it, even to the rose leaves we used to tuck in
here,” continued the younger girl, peeping into
one of the tall India jars that stood about the hall.
“Don’t you remember how
Jamie and Pokey used to play Forty Thieves with them,
and how you tried to get into that blue one and got
stuck, and the other boys found us before I could
pull you out?” asked Phebe, laughing.
“Yes, indeed, and speaking of
angels, one is apt to hear the rustling of their wings,”
added Rose, as a shrill whistle came up the avenue
accompanied by the clatter of hoofs.
“It is the circus!” cried
Phebe gaily as they both recalled the red cart and
the charge of the clan.
There was only one boy now, alas,
but he made noise enough for half a dozen, and before
Rose could run to the door, Jamie came bouncing in
with a “shining morning face,” a bat over
his shoulder, a red and white jockey cap on his head,
one pocket bulging with a big ball, the other overflowing
with cookies, and his mouth full of the apple he was
just finishing off in hot haste.
“Morning! I just looked
in to make sure you’d really come and see that
you were all right,” he observed, saluting with
bat and doffing the gay cap with one effective twitch.
“Good morning, dear. Yes,
we really are here, and getting to rights as fast
as possible. But it seems to me you are rather
gorgeous, Jamie. What do you belong to a fire
company or a jockey club?” asked Rose, turning
up the once chubby face, which now was getting brown
and square about the chin.
“No, ma’am! Why,
don’t you know? I’m captain of the
Base Ball Star Club. Look at that, will you?”
And, as if the fact were one of national importance,
Jamie flung open his jacket to display upon his proudly
swelling chest an heart-shaped red flannel shield decorated
with a white cotton star the size of a tea plate.
“Superb! I’ve been
away so long I forgot there was such a game. And
you the captain?” cried Rose, deeply impressed
by the high honor to which her kinsman had arrived.
“I just am, and it’s no
joke you’d better believe, for we knock our
teeth out, black our eyes, and split our fingers almost
as well as the big fellows. You come down to
the Common between one and two and see us play a match,
then you’ll understand what hard work it is.
I’ll teach you to bat now if you’ll come
out on the lawn,” added Jamie, fired with a
wish to exhibit his prowess.
“No, thank you, captain.
The grass is wet, and you’ll be late at school
if you stay for us.”
“I’m not afraid.
Girls are not good for much generally, but you never
used to mind a little wet and played cricket like a
good one. Can’t you ever do that sort of
thing now?” asked the boy, with a pitying look
at these hapless creatures debarred from the joys and
perils of manly sports.
“I can run still and I’ll
get to the gate before you, see if I don’t.”
And, yielding to the impulse of the moment, Rose darted
down the steps before astonished Jamie could mount
and follow.
He was off in a moment, but Rose had
the start, and though old Sheltie did his best, she
reached the goal just ahead, and stood there laughing
and panting, all rosy with fresh October air, a pretty
picture for several gentlemen who were driving by.
“Good for you, Rose!”
said Archie, jumping out to shake hands while Will
and Geordie saluted and Uncle Mac laughed at Jamie,
who looked as if girls had risen slightly in his opinion.
“I’m glad it is you, because
you won’t be shocked. But I’m so happy
to be back I forgot I was not little Rose still,”
said Atalanta, smoothing down her flying hair.
“You look very like her, with
the curls on your shoulders in the old way. I
missed them last night and wondered what it was.
How are Uncle and Phebe?” asked Archie, whose
eyes had been looking over Rose’s head while
he spoke toward the piazza, where a female figure was
visible among the reddening woodbines.
“All well, thanks. Won’t
you come up and see for yourselves?”
“Can’t, my dear, can’t
possibly. Business, you know, business. This
fellow is my right-hand man, and I can’t spare
him a minute. Come, Arch, we must be off, or
these boys will miss their train,” answered Uncle
Mac, pulling out his watch.
With a last look from the light-haired
figure at the gate to the dark-haired one among the
vines, Archie drove away and Jamie cantered after,
consoling himself for his defeat with apple number
two.
Rose lingered a moment, feeling much
inclined to continue her run and pop in upon all the
aunts in succession, but, remembering her uncovered
head, was about to turn back when a cheerful “Ahoy!
ahoy!” made her look up to see Mac approaching
at a great pace, waving his hat as he came.
“The Campbells are coming, thick
and fast this morning, and the more the merrier,”
she said, running to meet him. “You look
like a good boy going to school, and virtuously conning
your lesson by the way,” she added, smiling
to see him take his finger out of the book he had evidently
been reading, and tuck it under his arm, just as he
used to do years ago.
“I am a schoolboy, going to
the school I like best,” he answered, waving
a plumy spray of asters as if pointing out the lovely
autumn world about them, full of gay hues, fresh airs,
and mellow sunshine.
“That reminds me that I didn’t
get a chance to hear much about your plans last night
the other boys all talked at once, and you only got
a word now and then. What have you decided to
be, Mac?” asked Rose as they went up the avenue
side by side.
“A man first, and a good one
if possible. After that, what God pleases.”
Something in the tone, as well as
the words, made Rose look up quickly into Mac’s
face to see a new expression there. It was indescribable,
but she felt as she had often done when watching the
mists part suddenly, giving glimpses of some mountaintop,
shining serene and high against the blue.
“I think you will be something
splendid, for you really look quite glorified, walking
under this arch of yellow leaves with the sunshine
on your face,” she exclaimed, conscious of a
sudden admiration never felt before, for Mac was the
plainest of all the cousins.
“I don’t know about that,
but I have my dreams and aspirations, and some of
them are pretty high ones. Aim at the best, you
know, and keep climbing if you want to get on,”
he said, looking at the asters with an inward sort
of smile, as if he and they had some sweet secret between
them.
“You are queerer than ever.
But I like your ambition, and hope you will get on.
Only mustn’t you begin at something soon?
I fancied you would study medicine with Uncle that
used to be our plan, you know.”
“I shall, for the present at
least, because I quite agree with you that it is necessary
to have an anchor somewhere and not go floating off
into the world of imagination without ballast of the
right sort. Uncle and I had some talk about it
last night and I’m going to begin as soon as
possible, for I’ve mooned long enough,”
and giving himself a shake, Mac threw down the pretty
spray, adding half aloud:
“Chide me not, laborious
band,
For the idle flowers
I brought:
Every aster in my hand
Goes home laden
with a thought.”
Rose caught the words and smiled,
thinking to herself, “Oh, that’s it he
is getting into the sentimental age and Aunt Jane has
been lecturing him. Dear me, how we are growing
up!”
“You look as if you didn’t
like the prospect very well,” she said aloud,
for Mac had rammed the volume of Shelley into his pocket
and the glorified expression was so entirely gone,
Rose fancied she had been mistaken about the mountaintop
behind the mists.
“Yes, well enough I always thought
the profession a grand one, and where could I find
a better teacher than Uncle? I’ve got into
lazy ways lately, and it is high time I went at something
useful, so here I go,” and Mac abruptly vanished
into the study while Rose joined Phebe in Aunt Plenty’s
room.
The dear old lady had just decided,
after long and earnest discussion, which of six favorite
puddings should be served for dinner, and thus had
a few moments to devote to sentiment, so when Rose
came in she held out her arms, saying fondly:
“I shall not feel as if I’d got my child
back again until I have her in my lap a minute.
No, you’re not a bit too heavy, my rheumatism
doesn’t begin much before November, so sit here,
darling, and put your two arms round my neck.”
Rose obeyed, and neither spoke for
a moment as the old woman held the young one close
and appeased the two years’ longing of a motherly
heart by the caresses women give the creatures dearest
to them. Right in the middle of a kiss, however,
she stopped suddenly and, holding out one arm, caught
Phebe, who was trying to steal away unobserved.
“Don’t go there’s
room for both in my love, though there isn’t
in my lap. I’m so grateful to get my dear
girls safely home again that I hardly know what I’m
about,” said Aunt Plenty, embracing Phebe so
heartily that she could not feel left out in the cold
and stood there with her black eyes shining through
the happiest tears.
“There, now I’ve had a
good hug, and feel as if I was all right again.
I wish you’d set that cap in order, Rose I went
to bed in such a hurry, I pulled the strings off it
and left it all in a heap. Phebe, dear, you shall
dust round a mite, just as you used to, for I haven’t
had anyone to do it as I like since you’ve been
gone, and it will do me good to see all my knickknacks
straightened out in your tidy way,” said the
elder lady, getting up with a refreshed expression
on her rosy old face.
“Shall I dust in here too?”
asked Phebe, glancing toward an inner room which used
to be her care.
“No, dear, I’d rather
do that myself. Go in if you like, nothing is
changed. I must go and see to my pudding.”
And Aunt Plenty trotted abruptly away with a quiver
of emotion in her voice which made even her last words
pathetic.
Pausing on the threshold as if it
was a sacred place, the girls looked in with eyes
soon dimmed by tender tears, for it seemed as if the
gentle occupant was still there. Sunshine shone
on the old geraniums by the window; the cushioned
chair stood in its accustomed place, with the white
wrapper hung across it and the faded slippers lying
ready. Books and basket, knitting and spectacles,
were all just as she had left them, and the beautiful
tranquility that always filled the room seemed so
natural, both lookers turned involuntarily toward the
bed, where Aunt Peace used to greet them with a smile.
There was no sweet old face upon the pillow now, yet
the tears that wet the blooming cheeks were not for
her who had gone, but for her who was left, because
they saw something which spoke eloquently of the love
which outlives death and makes the humblest things
beautiful and sacred.
A well-worn footstool stood beside
the bed, and in the high-piled whiteness of the empty
couch there was a little hollow where a gray head
nightly rested while Aunt Plenty said the prayers her
mother taught her seventy years ago.
Without a word, the girls softly shut
the door. And while Phebe put the room in the
most exquisite order, Rose retrimmed the plain white
cap, where pink and yellow ribbons never rustled now,
both feeling honored by their tasks and better for
their knowledge of the faithful love and piety which
sanctified a good old woman’s life.
“You darling creature, I’m
so glad to get you back! I know it’s shamefully
early, but I really couldn’t keep away another
minute. Let me help you I’m dying to see
all your splendid things. I saw the trunks pass
and I know you’ve quantities of treasures,”
cried Annabel Bliss all in one breath as she embraced
Rose an hour later and glanced about the room bestrewn
with a variety of agreeable objects.
“How well you are looking!
Sit down and I’ll show you my lovely photographs.
Uncle chose all the best for me, and it’s a treat
to see them,” answered Rose, putting a roll
on the table and looking about for more.
“Oh, thanks! I haven’t
time now one needs hours to study such things.
Show me your Paris dresses, there’s a dear I’m
perfectly aching to see the last styles,” and
Annabel cast a hungry eye toward certain large boxes
delightfully suggestive of French finery.
“I haven’t got any,”
said Rose, fondly surveying the fine photographs as
she laid them away.
“Rose Campbell! You don’t
mean to say that you didn’t get one Paris dress
at least?” cried Annabel, scandalized at the
bare idea of such neglect.
“Not one for myself. Aunt
Clara ordered several, and will be charmed to show
them when her box comes.”
“Such a chance! Right there
and plenty of money! How could you love your
uncle after such cruelty?” sighed Annabel, with
a face full of sympathy.
Rose looked puzzled for a minute,
then seemed to understand, and assumed a superior
air which became her very well as she said, good-naturedly
opening a box of laces, “Uncle did not forbid
my doing it, and I had money enough, but I chose not
to spend it on things of that sort.”
“Could and didn’t!
I can’t believe it!” And Annabel sank into
a chair, as if the thought was too much for her.
“I did rather want to at first,
just for the fun of the thing. In fact, I went
and looked at some amazing gowns. But they were
very expensive, very much trimmed, and not my style
at all, so I gave them up and kept what I valued more
than all the gowns Worth every made.”
“What in the world was it?”
cried Annabel, hoping she would say diamonds.
“Uncle’s good opinion,”
answered Rose, looking thoughtfully into the depths
of a packing case, where lay the lovely picture that
would always remind her of the little triumph over
girlish vanity, which not only kept but increased
“Uncle’s good opinion.”
“Oh, indeed!” said Annabel
blankly, and fell to examining Aunt Plenty’s
lace while Rose went on with a happy smile in her eyes
as she dived into another trunk.
“Uncle thinks one has no right
to waste money on such things, but he is very generous
and loves to give useful, beautiful, or curious gifts.
See, all these pretty ornaments are for presents, and
you shall choose first whatever you like.”
“He’s a perfect dear!”
cried Annabel, reveling in the crystal, filigree,
coral, and mosaic trinkets spread before her while
Rose completed her rapture by adding sundry tasteful
trifles fresh from Paris.
“Now tell me, when do you mean
to have your coming-out party? I ask because
I’ve nothing ready and want plenty of time, for
I suppose it will be the event of the season,”
asked Annabel a few minutes later as she wavered between
a pink coral and a blue lava set.
“I came out when I went to Europe,
but I suppose Aunty Plen will want to have some sort
of merry-making to celebrate our return. I shall
begin as I mean to go on, and have a simple, sociable
sort of party and invite everyone whom I like, no
matter in what ‘set’ they happen to belong.
No one shall ever say I am aristocratic and exclusive
so prepare yourself to be shocked, for old friends
and young, rich and poor, will be asked to all my
parties.”
“Oh, my heart! You are
going to be odd, just as Mama predicted!” sighed
Annabel, clasping her hands in despair and studying
the effect of three bracelets on her chubby arm in
the midst of her woe.
“In my own house I’m going
to do as I think best, and if people call me odd,
I can’t help it. I shall endeavor not to
do anything very dreadful, but I seem to inherit Uncle’s
love for experiments and mean to try some. I
daresay they will fail and I shall get laughed at.
I intend to do it nevertheless, so you had better
drop me now before I begin,” said Rose with
an air of resolution that was rather alarming.
“What shall you wear at this
new sort of party of yours?” asked Annabel,
wisely turning a deaf ear to all delicate or dangerous
topics and keeping to matters she understood.
“That white thing over there.
It is fresh and pretty, and Phebe has one like it.
I never want to dress more than she does, and gowns
of that sort are always most becoming and appropriate
to girls of our age.”
“Phebe! You don’t
mean to say you are going to make a lady of her!”
gasped Annabel, upsetting her treasures as she fell
back with a gesture that made the little chair creak
again, for Miss Bliss was as plump as a partridge.
“She is one already, and anybody
who slights her slights me, for she is the best girl
I know and the dearest,” cried Rose warmly.
“Yes, of course I was only surprised
you are quite right, for she may turn out to be somebody,
and then how glad you’ll feel that you were so
good to her!” said Annabel, veering around at
once, seeing which way the wind blew.
Before Rose could speak again, a cheery
voice called from the hall, “Little mistress,
where are you?”
“In my room, Phebe, dear,”
and up came the girl Rose was going to “make
a lady of,” looking so like one that Annabel
opened her china-blue eyes and smiled involuntarily
as Phebe dropped a little curtsey in playful imitation
of her old manner and said quietly: “How
do you do, Miss Bliss?”
“Glad to see you back, Miss
Moore,” answered Annabel, shaking hands in a
way that settled the question of Phebe’s place
in her mind forever, for the stout damsel had a kind
heart in spite of a weak head and was really fond
of Rose. It was evidently “Love me, love
my Phebe,” so she made up her mind on the spot
that Phebe was somebody, and that gave an air of romance
even to the poorhouse.
She could not help staring a little
as she watched the two friends work together and listened
to their happy talk over each new treasure as it came
to light, for every look and word plainly showed that
years of close companionship had made them very dear
to one another. It was pretty to see Rose try
to do the hardest part of any little job herself still
prettier to see Phebe circumvent her and untie the
hard knots, fold the stiff papers, or lift the heavy
trays with her own strong hands, and prettiest of
all to hear her say in a motherly tone, as she put
Rose into an easy chair: “Now, my deary,
sit and rest, for you will have to see company all
day, and I can’t let you get tired out so early.”
“That is no reason why I should
let you either. Call Jane to help or I’ll
bob up again directly,” answered Rose, with a
very bad assumption of authority.
“Jane may take my place downstairs,
but no one shall wait on you here except me, as long
as I’m with you,” said stately Phebe, stooping
to put a hassock under the feet of her little mistress.
“It is very nice and pretty
to see, but I don’t know what people will say
when she goes into society with the rest of us.
I do hope Rose won’t be very odd,” said
Annabel to herself as she went away to circulate the
depressing news that there was to be no grand ball
and, saddest disappointment of all, that Rose had
not a single Paris costume with which to refresh the
eyes and rouse the envy of her amiable friends.
“Now I’ve seen or heard
from all the boys but Charlie, and I suppose he is
too busy. I wonder what he is about,” thought
Rose, turning from the hall door, whither she had
courteously accompanied her guest.
The wish was granted a moment after,
for, going into the parlor to decide where some of
her pictures should hang, she saw a pair of brown
boots at one end of the sofa, a tawny-brown head at
the other, and discovered that Charlie was busily
occupied in doing nothing.
“The voice of the Bliss was
heard in the land, so I dodged till she went upstairs,
and then took a brief siesta while waiting to pay my
respects to the distinguished traveler, Lady Hester
Stanhope,” he said, leaping up to make his best
bow.
“The voice of the sluggard would
be a more appropriate quotation, I think. Does
Annabel still pine for you?” asked Rose, recalling
certain youthful jokes upon the subject of unrequited
affections.
“Not a bit of it. Fun has
cut me out, and the fair Annabella will be Mrs. Tokio
before the winter is over if I’m not much mistaken.”
“What, little Fun See?
How droll it seems to think of him grown up and married
to Annabel of all people! She never said a word
about him, but this accounts for her admiring my pretty
Chinese things and being so interested in Canton.”
“Little Fun is a great swell
now, and much enamored of our fat friend, who will
take to chopsticks whenever he says the word.
I needn’t ask how you do, Cousin, for you beat
that Aurora all hollow in the way of color. I
should have been up before, but I thought you’d
like a good rest after your voyage.”
“I was running a race with Jamie
before nine o’clock. What were you doing,
young man?”
“‘Sleeping I dreamed,
love, dreamed, love, of thee,’” began Charlie,
but Rose cut him short by saying as reproachfully
as she could, while the culprit stood regarding her
with placid satisfaction: “You ought to
have been up and at work like the rest of the boys.
I felt like a drone in a hive of very busy bees when
I saw them all hurrying off to their business.”
“But, my dear girl, I’ve
got no business. I’m making up my mind,
you see, and do the ornamental while I’m deciding.
There always ought to be one gentleman in a family,
and that seems to be rather my line,” answered
Charlie, posing for the character with an assumption
of languid elegance which would have been very effective
if his twinkling eyes had not spoilt it.
“There are none but gentlemen
in our family, I hope,” answered Rose, with
the proud air she always wore when anything was said
derogatory to the name of Campbell.
“Of course, of course.
I should have said gentleman of leisure. You see
it is against my principles to slave as Archie does.
What’s the use? Don’t need the money,
got plenty, so why not enjoy it and keep jolly as
long as possible? I’m sure cheerful people
are public benefactors in this world of woe.”
It was not easy to object to this
proposition, especially when made by a comely young
man who looked the picture of health and happiness
as he sat on the arm of the sofa smiling at his cousin
in the most engaging manner. Rose knew very well
that the Epicurean philosophy was not the true one
to begin life upon, but it was difficult to reason
with Charlie because he always dodged sober subjects
and was so full of cheery spirits, one hated to lessen
the sort of sunshine which certainly is a public benefactor.
“You have such a clever way
of putting things that I don’t know how to contradict
you, though I still think I’m right,” she
said gravely. “Mac likes to idle as well
as you, but he is not going to do it because he knows
it’s bad for him to fritter away his time.
He is going to study a profession like a wise boy,
though he would much prefer to live among his beloved
books or ride his hobbies in peace.”
“That’s all very well
for him, because he doesn’t care for society
and may as well be studying medicine as philandering
about the woods with his pockets full of musty philosophers
and old-fashioned poets,” answered Charlie with
a shrug which plainly expressed his opinion of Mac.
“I wonder if musty philosophers,
like Socrates and Aristotle, and old-fashioned poets,
like Shakespeare and Milton, are not safer company
for him to keep than some of the more modern friends
you have?” said Rose, remembering Jamie’s
hints about wild oats, for she could be a little sharp
sometimes and had not lectured “the boys”
for so long it seemed unusually pleasant.
But Charlie changed the subject skillfully
by exclaiming with an anxious expression: “I
do believe you are going to be like Aunt Jane, for
that’s just the way she comes down on me whenever
she gets the chance! Don’t take her for
a model, I beg she is a good woman but a mighty disagreeable
one in my humble opinion.”
The fear of being disagreeable is
a great bugbear to a girl, as this artful young man
well knew, and Rose fell into the trap at once, for
Aunt Jane was far from being her model, though she
could not help respecting her worth.
“Have you given up your painting?”
she asked rather abruptly, turning to a gilded Fra
Angelico angel which leaned in the sofa corner.
“Sweetest face I ever saw, and
very like you about the eyes, isn’t it?”
said Charlie, who seemed to have a Yankee trick of
replying to one question with another.
“I want an answer, not a compliment,”
and Rose tried to look severe as she put away the
picture more quickly than she had taken it up.
“Have I given up painting?
Oh, no! I daub a little in oils, slop a little
in watercolors, sketch now and then, and poke about
the studios when the artistic fit comes on.”
“How is the music?”
“More flourishing. I don’t
practice much, but sing a good deal in company.
Set up a guitar last summer and went troubadouring
round in great style. The girls like it, and
it’s jolly among the fellows.”
“Are you studying anything?”
“Well, I have some lawbooks
on my table good, big, wise-looking chaps and I take
a turn at them semioccasionally when pleasure palls
or parents chide. But I doubt if I do more than
learn what ‘a allybi’ is this year,”
and a sly laugh in Charlie’s eye suggested that
he sometimes availed himself of this bit of legal
knowledge.
“What do you do then?”
“Fair catechist, I enjoy myself.
Private theatricals have been the rage of late, and
I have won such laurels that I seriously think of adopting
the stage as my profession.”
“Really!” cried Rose, alarmed.
“Why not? If I must go to work, isn’t
that as good as anything?”
“Not without more talent than
I think you possess. With genius one can do anything
without it one had better let the stage alone.”
“There’s a quencher for
the ‘star of the goodlie companie’ to which
I belong. Mac hasn’t a ray of genius for
anything, yet you admire him for trying to be an M.D.,”
cried Charlie, rather nettled at her words.
“It is respectable, at all events,
and I’d rather be a second-rate doctor than
a second-rate actor. But I know you don’t
mean it, and only say so to frighten me.”
“Exactly. I always bring
it up when anyone begins to lecture and it works wonders.
Uncle Mac turns pale, the aunts hold up their hands
in holy horror, and a general panic ensues. Then
I magnanimously promise not to disgrace the family
and in the first burst of gratitude the dear souls
agree to everything I ask, so peace is restored and
I go on my way rejoicing.”
“Just the way you used to threaten
to run off to sea if your mother objected to any of
your whims. You are not changed in that respect,
though you are in others. You had great plans
and projects once, Charlie, and now you seem to be
contented with being a ’jack of all trades and
master of none’”.
“Boyish nonsense! Time
has brought wisdom, and I don’t see the sense
of tying myself down to one particular thing and grinding
away at it year after year. People of one idea
get so deucedly narrow and tame, I’ve no patience
with them. Culture is the thing, and the sort
one gets by ranging over a wide field is the easiest
to acquire, the handiest to have, and the most successful
in the end. At any rate, it is the kind I like
and the only kind I intend to bother myself about.”
With this declaration, Charlie smoothed
his brow, clasped his hands over his head, and, leaning
back, gently warbled the chorus of a college song
as if it expressed his views of life better than he
could:
“While our rosy fillets
shed
Blushes o’er each fervid
head,
With many a cup and many a
smile
The festal moments we beguile.”
“Some of my saints here were
people of one idea, and though they were not very
successful from a worldly point of view while alive,
they were loved and canonized when dead,” said
Rose, who had been turning over a pile of photographs
on the table and just then found her favorite, St.
Francis, among them.
“This is more to my taste.
Those worn-out, cadaverous fellows give me the blues,
but here’s a gentlemanly saint who takes things
easy and does good as he goes along without howling
over his own sins or making other people miserable
by telling them of theirs.” And Charlie
laid a handsome St. Martin beside the brown-frocked
monk.
Rose looked at both and understood
why her cousin preferred the soldierly figure with
the sword to the ascetic with his crucifix. One
was riding bravely through the world in purple and
fine linen, with horse and hound and squires at his
back; and the other was in a lazar-house, praying
over the dead and dying. The contrast was a strong
one, and the girl’s eyes lingered longest on
the knight, though she said thoughtfully, “Yours
is certainly the pleasantest and yet I never heard
of any good deed he did, except divide his cloak with
a beggar, while St. Francis gave himself to charity
just when life was most tempting and spent years working
for God without reward. He’s old and poor,
and in a dreadful place, but I won’t give him
up, and you may have your gay St. Martin if you want
him.”
“No, thank you, saints are not
in my line but I’d like the golden-haired angel
in the blue gown if you’ll let me have her.
She shall be my little Madonna, and I’ll pray
to her like a good Catholic,” answered Charlie,
turning to the delicate, deep-eyed figure with the
lilies in its hand.
“With all my heart, and any
others that you like. Choose some for your mother
and give them to her with my love.”
So Charlie sat down beside Rose to
turn and talk over the pictures for a long and pleasant
hour. But when they went away to lunch, if there
had been anyone to observe so small but significant
a trifle, good St. Francis lay face downward behind
the sofa, while gallant St. Martin stood erect upon
the chimneypiece.