Schoolroom and meeting-house.
There were only two or three
houses between ours and the main street, and then
our lane came out directly opposite the finest house
in town, a three-story edifice of brick, painted white,
the “Colonel’s” residence.
There was a spacious garden behind it, from which we
caught glimpses and perfumes of unknown flowers.
Over its high walls hung boughs of splendid great
yellow sweet apples, which, when they fell on the
outside, we children considered as our perquisites.
When I first read about the apples of the Hesperides,
my idea of them was that they were like the Colonel’s
“pumpkin-sweetings.”
Beyond the garden were wide green
fields which reached eastward down to the beach.
It was one of those large old estates which used to
give to the very heart of our New England coast towns
a delightful breeziness and roominess.
A coach-and-pair was one of the appurtenances
of this estate, with a coachman on the box; and when
he took the family out for an airing we small children
thought it was a sort of Cinderella spectacle, prepared
expressly for us.
It was not, however, quite so interesting
as the Boston stage-coach, that rolled regularly every
day past the head of our lane into and out of its
headquarters, a big, unpainted stable close at hand.
This stage-coach, in our minds, meant the city, twenty
miles off; an immeasurable distance to us then.
Even our elders did not go there very often.
In those early days, towns used to
give each other nicknames, like schoolboys. Ours
was called “Bean-town” not because it was
especially devoted to the cultivation of this leguminous
edible, but probably because it adhered a long time
to the Puritanic custom of saving Sunday-work by baking
beans on Saturday evening, leaving them in the oven
over night. After a while, as families left off
heating their ovens, the bean-pots were taken by the
village baker on Saturday afternoon, who returned
them to each house early on Sunday morning with the
pan of brown bread that went with them. The jingling
of the baker’s bells made the matter a public
one.
The towns through which our stage-coach
passed sometimes called it the “bean-pot.”
The Jehn who drove it was something of a wag.
Once, coming through Charlestown, while waiting in
the street for a resident passenger, he was hailed
by another resident who thought him obstructing the
passage, with the shout,
“Halloo there! Get your old bean-pot out
of the way!”
“I will, when I have got my
pork in,” was the ready reply. What the
sobriquet of Charlestown was, need not be explained.
We had a good opportunity to watch
both coaches, as my father’s shop was just at
the head of the lane, and we went to school upstairs
in the same building. After he left off going
to sea, before my birth, my
father took a store for the sale of what used to be
called “West India goods,” and various
other domestic commodities.
The school was kept by a neighbor
whom everybody called “Aunt Hannah.”
It took in all the little ones about us, no matter
how young they were, provided they could walk and
talk, and were considered capable of learning their
letters.
A ladder-like flight of stairs on
the outside of the house led up to the schoolroom,
and another flight, also outside, took us down into
a bit of a garden, where grew tansy and spearmint
and southernwood and wormwood, and, among other old-fashioned
flowers, an abundance of many-tinted four o’clocks,
whose regular afternoon-opening just at the close
of school, was a daily wonder to us babies. From
the schoolroom window we could watch the slow hands
of the town clock and get a peep at what was going
on in the street, although there was seldom anybody
in sight except the Colonel’s gardener or coachman,
going into or out of the driveway directly opposite.
It was a very still street; the front windows of the
houses were generally closed, and a few military-looking
Lombardy poplars stood like sentinels on guard before
them.
Another shop a very small
one joined my father’s, where three
shoemakers, all of the same name the name
our lane went by sat at their benches and
plied their “waxed ends.” One of them,
an elderly man, tall and erect, used to come out regularly
every day, and stand for a long time at the corner,
motionless as a post, with his nose and chin pointing
skyward, usually to the northeast. I watched his
face with wonder, for it was said that “Uncle
John” was “weatherwise,” and knew
all the secrets of the heavens.
Aunt Hannah’s schoolroom and
“our shop” are a blended memory to me.
As I was only a baby when I began to go to school,
I was often sent down-stairs for a half hour’s
recreation not permitted to the older ones. I
think I looked upon both school and shop entirely as
places of entertainment for little children.
The front shop-window was especially
interesting to us children, for there were in it a
few glass jars containing sticks of striped barley-candy,
and red and white peppermint-drops, and that delectable
achievement of the ancient confectioner’s art,
the “Salem gibraltar.” One of my
first recollections of my father is connected with
that window. He had taken me into the shop with
him after dinner, I was perhaps two years
old, and I was playing beside him on the
counter when one of his old sea-comrades came in,
whom we knew as “Captain Cross.”
The Captain tried to make friends with me, and, to
seal the bond, asked my father to take down from its
place of exhibition a strip of red peppermints dropped
on white paper, in a style I particularly admired,
which he twisted around my neck, saying, “Now
I’ve bought you! Now you are my girl.
Come, go home with me!”
His words sounded as if he meant them.
I took it all in earnest, and ran, scared and screaming,
to my father, dashing down the sugar-plums I wanted
so much, and refusing even to bestow a glance upon
my amused purchaser. My father pacified me by
taking me on his shoulders and carrying me “pickaback”
up and down the shop, and I clung to him in the happy
consciousness that I belonged to him, and that he would
not let anybody else have me; though I did not feel
quite easy until Captain Cross disappeared. I
suppose that this little incident has always remained
in my memory because it then for the first time became
a fact in my consciousness that my father really loved
me as I loved him. He was not at all a demonstrative
man, and any petting that he gave us children could
not fail to make a permanent impression.
I think that must have been also the
last special attention I received from him, for a
little sister appeared soon after, whose coming was
announced to me with the accompaniment of certain mysterious
hints about my nose being out of joint. I examined
that feature carefully in the looking glass, but could
not discover anything usual about it. It was
quite beyond me to imagine that our innocent little
baby could have anything to do with the possible disfigurement
of my face, but she did absorb the fondness of the
whole family, myself included, and she became my father’s
playmate and darling, the very apple of his eye.
I used sometimes to wish I were a baby too, so that
he would notice me, but gradually I accepted the situation.
Aunt Hannah used her kitchen or her
sitting room for a schoolroom, as best suited her
convenience. We were delighted observers of her
culinary operations and other employments. If
a baby’s head nodded, a little bed was made
for it on a soft “comforter” in the corner,
where it had its nap out undisturbed. But this
did not often happen; there were so many interesting
things going on that we seldom became sleepy.
Aunt Hannah was very kind and motherly,
but she kept us in fear of her ferule, which indicated
to us a possibility of smarting palms. This ferule
was shaped much like the stick with which she stirred
her hasty pudding for dinner, I thought
it was the same, and I found myself caught
in a whirlwind of family laughter by reporting at home
that “Aunt Hannah punished the scholars with
the pudding-stick.”
There was one colored boy in school,
who did not sit on a bench, like the rest, but on
a block of wood that looked like a backlog turned
endwise. Aunt Hannah often called him a “blockhead,”
and I supposed it was because he sat on that block.
Sometimes, in his absence, a boy was made to sit in
his place for punishment, for being a “blockhead”
too, as I imagined. I hoped I should never be
put there. Stupid little girls received a different
treatment, an occasional rap on the head
with the teacher’s thimble; accompanied with
a half-whispered, impatient ejaculation, which sounded
very much like “Numskull!” I think this
was a rare occurrence, however, for she was a good-natured,
much-enduring woman.
One of our greatest school pleasures
was to watch Aunt Hannah spinning on her flax-wheel,
wetting her thumb and forefinger at her lips to twist
the thread, keeping time, meanwhile, to some quaint
old tune with her foot upon the treadle.
A verse of one of her hymns, which
I never heard anybody else sing, resounds in the farthest
corner of my memory yet:”
“Whither goest thou, pilgrim stranger,
Wandering through this lowly vale?
Knowest thou not ’t is full of danger?
And will not thy courage fail?”
Then a little pause, and the refrain
of the answer broke in with a change, quick and jubilant,
the treadle moving more rapidly, also:
“No, I’m bound for the kingdom!
Will you go to glory with me?
Hallelujah! Praise the Lord!”
I began to go to school when I was
about two years old, as other children about us did.
The mothers of those large families had to resort
to some means of keeping their little ones out of mischief,
while they attended to their domestic duties.
Not much more than that sort of temporary guardianship
was expected of the good dame who had us in charge.
But I learned my letters in a few
days, standing at Aunt Hannah’s knee while she
pointed them out in the spelling-book with a pin, skipping
over the “a b abs” into words of one
and two syllables, thence taking a flying leap into
the New Testament, in which there is concurrent family
testimony that I was reading at the age of two years
and a half. Certain it is that a few passages
in the Bible, whenever I read them now, do not fail
to bring before me a vision of Aunt Hannah’s
somewhat sternly smiling lips, with her spectacles
just above them, far down on her nose, encouraging
me to pronounce the hard words. I think she tried
to choose for me the least difficult verses, or perhaps
those of which she was herself especially fond.
Those which I distinctly recall are the Beatitudes,
the Twenty-third Psalm, parts of the first and fourteenth
chapters of the Gospel of St. John, and the thirteenth
chapter of the First Epistle to the Corinthians.
I liked to say over the “Blesseds,” the
shortest ones best, about the meek and
the pure in heart; and the two “In the beginnings,”
both in Genesis and John. Every child’s
earliest and proudest Scriptural conquest in school
was, almost as a matter of course, the first verse
in the Bible.
But the passage which I learned first,
and most delighted to repeat after Aunt Hannah, I
think it must have been her favorite too, was,
“Let not your heart be troubled. In my Father’s
house are many mansions.”
The Voice in the Book seemed so tender!
Somebody was speaking who had a heart, and who knew
that even a little child’s heart was sometimes
troubled. And it was a Voice that called us somewhere;
to the Father’s house, with its many mansions,
so sunshiny and so large.
It was a beautiful vision that came
to me with the words, I could see it best
with my eyes shut,-a great, dim Door standing ajar,
opening out of rosy morning mists, overhung with swaying
vines and arching boughs that were full of birds;
and from beyond the Door, the ripple of running waters,
and the sound of many happy voices, and above them
all the One Voice that was saying, “I go to
prepare a place for you.” The vision gave
me a sense of freedom, fearless and infinite.
What was there to be afraid of anywhere? Even
we little children could see the open door of our
Father’s house. We were playing around its
threshold now, and we need never wander out of sight
of it. The feeling was a vague one, but it was
like a remembrance. The spacious mansions were
not far away. They were my home. I had known
them, and should return to them again.
This dim half-memory, which perhaps
comes to all children, I had felt when younger still,
almost before I could walk. Sitting on the floor
in a square of sunshine made by an open window, the
leaf-shadows from great boughs outside dancing and
wavering around me, I seemed to be talking to them
and they to me in unknown tongues, that left within
me an ecstasy yet unforgotten. These shadows
had brought a message to me from an unseen Somewhere,
which my baby heart was to keep forever. The
wonder of that moment often returns. Shadow-traceries
of bough and leaf still seem to me like the hieroglyphics
of a lost language.
The stars brought me the same feeling.
I remember the surprise they were to me, seen for
the first time. One evening, just before I was
put to bed, I was taken in somebody’s arms my
sister’s, I think outside the door,
and lifted up under the dark, still, clear sky, splendid
with stars, thicker and nearer earth than they have
ever seemed since. All my little being shaped
itself into a subdued delighted “Oh!” And
then the exultant thought flitted through the mind
of the reluctant child, as she was carried in, “Why,
that is the roof of the house I live in.”
After that I always went to sleep happier for the feeling
that the stars were outside there in the dark, though
I could not see them.
I did firmly believe that I came from
some other country to this; I had a vague notion that
we were all here on a journey, that this
was not the place where we really belonged. Some
of the family have told me that before I could talk
plainly, I used to run about humming the sentence
“My father and mother
Shall come unto the land,”
sometimes varying it with,
“My brothers and sisters
Shall come unto the land;”
Nobody knew where I had caught the
words, but I chanted them so constantly that my brother
wrote them down, with chalk, on the under side of
a table, where they remained for years. My thought
about that other land may have been only a baby’s
dream; but the dream was very real to me. I used
to talk, in sober earnest, about what happened “before
I was a little girl, and came here to live”;
and it did seem to me as if I remembered.
But I was hearty and robust, full
of frolicsome health, and very fond of the matter-of-fact
world I lived in. My sturdy little feet felt the
solid earth beneath them. I grew with the sprouting
grass, and enjoyed my life as the buds and birds seemed
to enjoy theirs. It was only as if the bud and
the bird and the dear warm earth knew, in the same
dumb way that I did, that all their joy and sweetness
came to them out of the sky.
These recollections, that so distinctly
belong the baby Myself, before she could speak her
thoughts, though clear and vivid, are difficult to
put into shape. But other grown-up children, in
looking back, will doubtless see many a trailing cloud
of glory, that lighted their unconscious infancy from
within and from beyond.
I was quite as literal as I was visionary
in my mental renderings of the New Testament, read
at Aunt Hannah’s knee. I was much taken
with the sound of words, without any thought of their
meaning a habit not always outgrown with
childhood. The “sounding brass and tinkling
cymbals,” for instance, in the Epistle to the
Corinthians, seemed to me things to be greatly desired.
“Charity” was an abstract idea. I
did not know what it meant. But “tinkling
cymbals” one could make music with. I wished
I could get hold of them. It never occurred to
me that the Apostle meant to speak of their melody
slightingly.
At meeting, where I began to go also
at two years of age, I made my own private interpretations
of the Bible readings. They were absurd enough,
but after getting laughed at a few times at home for
making them public, I escaped mortification by forming
a habit of great reserve as to my Sabbath-day thoughts.
When the minister read, “Cut
it down: why cumbereth it the ground?”?
I thought he meant to say “cu-cumbereth.”
These vegetables grew on the ground, and I had heard
that they were not very good for people to eat.
I honestly supposed that the New Testament forbade
the cultivation of cucumbers.
And “Galilee” I understood
as a mispronunciation of “gallery.”
“Going up into Galilee” I interpreted
into clattering up the uncarpeted stairs in the meeting-house
porch, as the boys did, with their squeaking brogans,
looking as restless as imprisoned monkeys after they
had got into those conspicuous seats, where they behaved
as if they thought nobody could see their pranks.
I did not think it could be at all nice to “go
up into Galilee.”
I had an “Aunt Nancy,”
an uncle’s wife, to whom I was sometimes sent
for safe-keeping when house-cleaning or anything unusual
was going on at home. She was a large-featured
woman, with a very deep masculine voice, and she conducted
family worship herself, kneeling at prayer, which
was not the Orthodox custom.
She always began by saying,
“Oh Lord, Thou knowest that
we are all groveling worms of the dust.”
I thought she meant that we all looked like wriggling
red earthworms, and tried to make out the resemblance
in my mind, but could not. I unburdened my difficulty
at home, telling the family that “Aunt Nancy
got down on the floor and said we were all grubbelin’
worms,” begging to know whether everybody did
sometimes have to crawl about in the dust.
A little later, I was much puzzled
as to whether I was a Jew or Gentile. The Bible
seemed to divide people into these two classes only.
The Gentiles were not well spoken of: I did not
want to be one of them. The talked about Abraham
and Isaac and Jacob and the rest, away back to Adam,
as if they were our forefathers (there was a time when
I thought that Adam and Eve and Cain and Abel were
our four fathers); and yet I was very sure that I
was not a Jew. When I ventured to ask, I was told
that we were all Christians or heathen now. That
did not help me for I thought that only grown-up persons
could be Christians, from which it followed that all
children must be heathen. Must I think of Myself
as a heathen, then, until I should be old enough to
be a Christian? It was a shocking conclusion,
but I could see no other answer to my question, and
I felt ashamed to ask again. My self-invented
theory about the human race was that Adam and Eve
were very tall people, taller than the tallest trees
in the Garden of Eden, before they were sent out of
it; but that they then began to dwindle; that their
children had ever since been getting smaller and smaller,
and that by and by the inhabitants of the world would
be no bigger than babies. I was afraid I should
stop growing while I was a child, and I used to stand
on the footstool in the pew, and try to stretch myself
up to my mother’s height, to imagine how it
would seem to be a woman. I hoped I should be
a tall one. I did not wish to be a diminishing
specimen of the race; an anxiety which
proved to be entirely groundless.
The Sabbath mornings in those old
times had a peculiar charm. They seemed so much
cleaner than other mornings! The roads and the
grassy footpaths seemed fresher, and the air itself
purer and more wholesome than on week-days. Saturday
afternoon and evening were regarded as part of the
Sabbath (we were taught that it was heathenish to call
the day Sunday); work and playthings were laid aside,
and every body, as well as every thing, was subjected
to a rigid renovation. Sabbath morning would
not have seemed like itself without a clean house,
a clean skin, and tidy and spotless clothing.
The Saturday’s baking was a
great event, the brick oven being heated to receive
the flour bread, the flour-and-Indian, and the rye-and-Indian
bread, the traditional pot of beans, the Indian pudding,
and the pies; for no further cooking was to be done
until Monday. We smaller girls thought it a great
privilege to be allowed to watch the oven till the
roof of it should be “white-hot,” so that
the coals could be shoveled out.
Then it was so still, both out of
doors and within! We were not allowed to walk
anywhere except in the yard or garden. I remember
wondering whether it was never Sabbath-day over the
fence, in the next field; whether the field was not
a kind of heathen field, since we could only go into
it on week-days. The wild flowers over there were
perhaps Gentile blossoms. Only the flowers in
the garden were well-behaved Christians. It was
Sabbath in the house, and possibly even on the doorstep;
but not much farther. The town itself was so quiet
that it scarcely seemed to breathe. The sound
of wheels was seldom heard in the streets on that
day; if we heard it, we expected some unusual explanation.
I liked to go to meeting, not
wholly oblivious to the fact that going there sometimes
implied wearing a new bonnet and my best white dress
and muslin “vandyke,” of which adornments,
if very new, I vainly supposed the whole congregation
to be as admiringly aware as I was myself.
But my Sabbath-day enjoyment was not
wholly without drawbacks. It was so hard, sometimes,
to stand up through the “long prayer,”
and to sit still through the “ninthlies,”
and “tenthlies,” and “finallys”
of the sermon! It was impressed upon me that
good children were never restless in meeting, and
never laughed or smiled, however their big brothers
tempted them with winks or grimaces. And I did
want to be good.
I was not tall enough to see very
far over the top of the pew. I think there were
only three persons that came within range of my eyes.
One was a dark man with black curly hair brushed down
in “bangs” over his eyebrows, who sat
behind a green baize curtain near the outside door,
peeping out at me, as I thought. I had an impression
that he was the “tidy-man,” though that
personage had become mythical long before my day.
He had a dragonish look, to me; and I tried never to
meet his glance.
But I did sometimes gaze more earnestly
than was polite at a dear, demure little lady who
sat in the corner of the pew next ours, her downcast
eyes shaded by a green calash, and her hidden right
hand gently swaying a long-handled Chinese fan.
She was the deacon’s wife, and I felt greatly
interested in her movements and in the expression of
her face, because I thought she represented the people
they called “saints,” who were, as I supposed,
about the same as first cousins to the angels.
The third figure in sight was the
minister. I did not think he ever saw me; he
was talking to the older people, usually
telling them how wicked they were. He often said
to them that there was not one good person among them;
but I supposed he excepted himself. He seemed
to me so very good that I was very much afraid of
him. I was a little afraid of my father, but
then he sometimes played with us children: and
besides, my father was only a man. I thought the
minister belonged to some different order of beings.
Up there in the pulpit he seemed to me so far off oh!
a great deal farther off than God did. His distance
made my reverence for him take the form of idolatry.
The pulpit was his pedestal. If any one had told
me that the minister ever did or thought anything
that was wrong, I should have felt as if the foundations
of the earth under me were shaken. I wondered
if he ever did laugh. Perhaps it was wicked for
a minister even to smile.
One day, when I was very little, I
met the minister in the street; and he, probably recognizing
me as the child of one of his parishioners, actually
bowed to me! His bows were always ministerially
profound, and I was so overwhelmed with surprise and
awe that I forgot to make the proper response of a
“curtsey,” but ran home as fast as I could
go to proclaim the wonder. It would not have
astonished me any more, if one of the tall Lombardy
poplars that stood along the sidewalk had laid itself
down at my feet.
I do not remember anything that the
preacher ever said, except some words which I thought
sounded well, such as “dispensations,”
“decrees,” “ordinances,” “covenants,” although
I attached no meaning to them. He seemed to be
trying to explain the Bible by putting it into long
words. I did not understand them at all.
It was from Aunt Hannah that I received my first real
glimpses of the beautiful New Testament revelation.
In her unconscious wisdom she chose for me passages
and chapters that were like openings into heaven.
They contained the great, deep truths which are simple
because they are great. It was not explanations
of those grand words that I required, or that anybody
requires. In reading them we are all children
together, and need only to be led to the banks of
the river of God, which is full of water, that we
may look down into its pellucid depths for ourselves.
Our minister was not unlike other
ministers of the time, and his seeming distance from
his congregation was doubtless owing to the deep reverence
in which the ministerial office was universally held
among our predecessors. My own graven-image worship
of him was only a childish exaggeration of the general
feeling of grown people around me. He seemed
to us an inhabitant of a Sabbath-day sphere, while
we belonged to the every-day world. I distinctly
remember the day of my christening, when I was between
three and four years old. My parents did not
make a public profession of their faith until after
the birth of all their children, eight of whom I
being my father’s ninth child and seventh daughter were
baptized at one time. My two half-sisters were
then grown-up young women. My mother had told
us that the minister would be speaking directly to
us, and that we must pay close attention to what he
said. I felt that it was an important event, and
I wished to do exactly what the minister desired of
me. I listened eagerly while he read the chapter
and the hymn. The latter was one of my favorites:
“See Israel’s gentle Shepherd
stands;”
and the chapter was the third of St.
Matthew, containing the story of our Lord’s
baptism. I could not make out any special message
for us, until he came to the words, “Whose fan
is in his hand.”
That must be it! I looked anxiously
at my sisters, to see if they had brought their fans.
It was warm weather, and I had taken a little one
of my own to meeting. Believing that I was following
a direct instruction, I clasped my fan to my bosom
and held it there as we walked up the aisle, and during
the ceremony, wondering why the others did not do
so, too. The baby in my mother’s arms Octavia,
the eighth daughter shocked me by crying
a little, but I tried to behave the better on that
account.
It all seemed very solemn and mysterious
to me. I knew from my father’s and mother’s
absorbed manner then, and when we returned from church,
that it was something exceedingly important to Them something
that they wished us neither to talk about nor to forget.
I never did forget it. There
remained within me a sweet, haunting feeling of having
come near the “gentle Shepherd” of the
hymn, who was calling the lambs to his side.
The chapter had ended with the echo of a voice from
heaven, and with the glimpse of a descending Dove.
And the water-drops on my forehead, were they not
from that “pure river of water of life, clear
as crystal,” that made music through those lovely
verses in the last chapter of the good Book?
I am glad that I have always remembered
that day of family consecration. As I look back,
it seems as if the horizons of heaven and earth met
and were blended then. And who can tell whether
the fragrance of that day’s atmosphere may not
enter into the freshness of some new childhood in
the life which is to come?