When Jan and Marie awoke, their mother’s
bed was empty. “She’s gone to milk
the cow,” cried Marie. “Come, Jan,
we will surprise her! When she comes back from
the pasture, we will have breakfast all ready.”
“You can,” said Jan, as
he struggled into his clothes, and twisted himself
nearly in two trying to do up the buttons in the back;
“you can, but I must do a man’s work!
I will go out and feed the pig and catch old Pier
and hitch him to the cart,” he said importantly.
“I must finish the wheat harvest to-day.”
“Ho!” said Marie.
“You will spill the pig-feed all over yourself!
You are such a messy boy!”
“I guess I can do it just as
well as you can make coffee,” said Jan with
spirit. “You’ve never made coffee
in your life!”
“I’ve watched Mother do
it lots of times,” said Marie. “I’m
sure I can do it just the same way.”
“All right, let’s see
you do it, then,” said Jan. And he strode
out of the room with his hands in his pockets, taking
as long steps as his short legs would permit.
When she was dressed and washed, Marie
ran to the pump and filled the kettle. Then she
stirred the embers of the fire in the kitchen and put
on fresh coal. She set the kettle on to boil and
only slopped a little water on her apron in doing
so. Then she put the dishes on the table.
Meanwhile she heard no sound from
Jan. She went to the kitchen door and looked
out. Jan had already let out the fowls, and was
just in the act of feeding the pig. He had climbed
up on the fence around the pig-pen, and by dint of
great effort had succeeded in lifting the heavy pail
of feed to the top of it. He was now trying to
let it down on the other side and pour the contents
into the trough, but the pig was greedy, and the moment
the pail came within reach, she stuck her nose and
her fore feet into it. This added weight was
too much for poor Jan; down went the pail with a crash
into the trough, and Jan himself tumbled suddenly
forward, his feet flew out behind, and he was left
hanging head down, like a jack knife, over the fence!
It was just at this moment that Marie
came to the door, and when she saw Jan balancing on
the fence and kicking out wildly with his feet, she
screamed with laughter.
Jan was screaming, too, but with pain
and indignation. “Come here and pick me
off this fence!” he roared. “It’s
cutting me in two! Oh, Mother! Mother!”
Marie ran to the pigpen as fast as,
she could go. She snatched an old box by the
stable as she ran, and, placing it against the fence,
seized one of Jan’s feet, which were still waving
wildly in the air, and planted it firmly on the box.
“Oh! Oh!” laughed
Marie, as Jan reached the ground once more. “If
you could only have seen yourself, Jan! You would
have laughed, too! Instead of pouring the pig-feed
on to yourself, you poured yourself on to the pig-feed!”
“I don’t see anything
to laugh at,” said Jan with dignity; “it
might have happened to any man.”
“Anyway, you’ll have to
get the pail again,” said Marie, wiping her
eyes. “That greedy pig will bang it all
to pieces, if you leave it in the pen.”
“I can’t reach it,” said Jan.
“Yes, you can,” said Marie.
“I’ll hold your legs so you won’t
fall in, and you can fish for it with a stick.”
She ran for a stick to poke with, while Jan bravely
mounted the box again, and, firmly anchored by Marie’s
grasp upon his legs, he soon succeeded in rescuing
the pail.
“Anyway, I guess I’ve
fed the pig just as well as you have made the coffee,”
he said, as he handed it over to Marie.
“Oh, my sakes!” cried
Marie; “I forgot all about the coffee!”
And she ran back to the kitchen, to find that the
kettle had boiled over and put the fire out.
Jan stuck hid head in the door, just
as she got the bellows to start the fire again.
“What did I tell you!” he shouted, running
out his tongue derisively.
“Scat!” said Marie, shaking
the bellows at him, and Jan sauntered away toward
the pasture with Pier’s halter over his arm.
Pier had been eating grass for two
nights and a day without doing any work, and it took
Jan some time to catch him and put the halter over
his head. When at last he returned from the pasture,
red and tired, but triumphant, leading Pier, Marie
and her mother had already finished their breakfast.
“Look what a man we have!”
cried Mother Van Hove as Jan appeared. “He
has caught Pier all by himself.”
“He lifted me clear off my feet
when I put his halter on,” said Jan proudly,
“but I hung on and he had to come!”
“Marie,” cried her mother,
“our Jan has earned a good breakfast! Cook
an egg for him, while I hitch Pier to the cart.
Then, while he and I work in the field, you can put
the house in order. There is only one more load
to bring in, and we can do that by ourselves.”
By noon the last of the wheat had
been garnered, and this time Jan drove Pier home,
while his mother sat on the load. In the afternoon
the three unloaded the wagon and stowed the grain
away in the barn to be threshed; and when the long
day’s work was over, and they had eaten their
simple supper of bread and milk, Mother Van Hove and
the children went together down the village street
to see their neighbors and hear the news, if there
should be any.
There were no daily papers in Meer,
and now there were no young men to go to the city
and bring back the gossip of the day, as there had
used to be. The women, with their babies on their
arms, stood about in the street, talking quietly and
sadly among themselves. On the doorsteps a few
old men lingered together over their pipes. Already
the bigger boys were playing soldier, with paper caps
on their heads, and sticks for guns. The smaller
children were shouting and chasing each other through
the little street of the village. Jan and Marie
joined in a game of blindman’s buff, while Mother
Van Hove stopped with the group of women.
“If we only knew what to expect!”
sighed the Burgomeister’s wife, as she shifted
her baby from one arm to the other. “It
seems as if we should know better what to do.
In a day or two I shall send my big boy Leon to the
city for a paper. It is hard to wait quietly and
know nothing.”
“Our good King and Queen doubtless
know everything,” said the wife of Boer Maes.
“They will do better for us than we could do
for ourselves, even if we knew all that they do.”
“And there are our own brave
men, besides,” added Mother Van Hove. “We
must not forget them! We are not yet at war.
I pray God we may not be, and that we shall soon see
them come marching home again to tell us that the
trouble, whatever it is, is over, and that we may go
on living in peace as we did before.”
“It seems a year since yesterday,”
said the Burgomeister’s wife.
“Work makes the time pass quickly,”
said Mother Van Hove cheerfully. “Jan and
I got in the last of our wheat to-day. He helped
me like a man.”
“Who will thresh it for you?”
asked the wife of Boer Maes.
“I will thresh it myself, if
need be,” said Mother Van Hove with spirit.
“My good man shall not come home and find the
farm-work behind if I can help it.” And
with these brave words she said good-night to the
other women, called Jan and Marie, and turned once
more down the street toward the little house on the
edge of the village. Far across the peaceful
twilight fields came the sound of distant bells.
“Hark!” said Mother Van Hove to the Twins-“the
cathedral bells of Malines! And they are playing
‘The Lion of Flanders!’”
(three lines of music)
sang the bells, and, standing upon
the threshold of her little home, with head held proudly
erect, Mother Van Hove lifted her voice and joined
the words to the melody. “They will never
conquer him, the old Lion of Flanders, so long as
he has claws!” she sang, and the Twins, looking
up into her brave and inspired face, sang too.