Little more than two years have passed
away since the September afternoon when the deep-toned
bell rang out the merry tidings, “Maude can
see-Maude can see,” and again upon
the billow another vessel rides. But this time
to the westward; and the beautiful lady, whose soft,
dark eyes look eagerly over the wave says to her companion,
“It is very pleasant going home.”
They had tarried for a long time in
Italy, both for Louis’ sake and because, after
the recovery of her sight, Maude’s health had
been delicate, and her husband would stay until it
was fully re-established. She was better now;
roses were blooming on her cheek-joy was
sparkling in her eye-while her bounding
step, her ringing laugh, and finely rounded form told
of youthful vigor and perfect health. And they
were going home at last-James, Louis, and
Maude-going to Hampton, where Mrs. De Vere
awaited so anxiously their coming. She did not,
however, expect them so soon, for they had left England
earlier than they anticipated, and they surprised her
one day; as she sat by her pleasant window gazing
out upon the western sky and wondering how many more
suns would set ere her children would be with her.
It was a happy meeting; and after the first joy of
it was over Maude inquired after the people at Laurel
Hill.
“It is more than four months
since we heard from them,” she said, “and
then Mrs. Kennedy’s letter was very unsatisfactory.
The doctor, she hinted, had lost his senses, but she
made no explanation. What did she mean?”
“Why,” returned Mrs. De
Vere, “he had a paralytic shock more than six
months ago.”
“Oh, poor father,” cried
Louis, while Mrs. De Vere continued, “It was
not a severe attack, but it has impaired his health
somewhat. You knew, of course, that his house
and farm were to be sold.”
“Our house, our old home!
It shall not be!” and the tears glittered in
Louis’ eyes, while, turning to Mrs. De Vere,
Maude whispered softly, “His wife has ruined
him, but don’t let us talk of it before Louis.”
The lady nodded, and when at last
they were alone, told all she knew of the affair.
Maude Glendower had persisted in her folly until her
husband’s property was reduced to a mere pittance.
There was a heavy mortgage upon the farm, and even
a chattel-mortgage upon the furniture, and as the
man who held them was stern and unrelenting, he had
foreclosed, and the house was to be sold at auction.
“Why has mother kept it from us?” said
Maude, and Mrs. De Vere replied, “Pride and
a dread of what you might say prevented her writing
it, I think. I was there myself a few weeks since,
and she said it could do no good to trouble you.
The doctor is completely broken down, and seems like
an old man. He cannot endure the handsome rooms
below, but stays all day in that small garret chamber,
which is furnished with your carpet, your mother’s
chair, and the high-past bedstead which his first
wife owned.”
Maude’s sympathies were roused,
and, fatigued as she was, she started the next morning
with her husband and brother for Laurel Hill.
Louis seemed very sad, and not even the familiar way-marks,
as he drew near his home, had power to dissipate that
sadness. He could not endure the thought that
the house where he was born and where his mother had
died should pass into the hands of strangers.
He had been fortunate with his paintings, and of his
own money had nearly two thousand dollars; but this
could do but little toward canceling the mortgage,
and he continued in the same dejected mood until the
tall poplars of Laurel Hill appeared in view.
Then, indeed, he brightened up, for there is something
in the sight of home which brings joy to every human
heart.
It was a hazy October day. The
leaves were dropping one by one, and lay in little
hillocks upon the faded grass. The blue hills
which embosomed the lake were encircled with a misty
veil, while the sunshine seemed to fall with a somber
light upon the fields of yellow corn. Everything,
even the gossamer thistle-top which floated upon the
autumnal air, conspired to make the day one of those
indescribable days when all hearts are pervaded with
a feeling of pleasurable sadness-a sense
of beauty mingled with decay.
“Is this home?” cried
Maude, as they stopped before the gate. “I
should hardly have recognized it.”
It was indeed greatly changed, for
Maude Glendower had perfect taste, and if she had
expended thousands upon the place, she had greatly
increased its value.
“Beautiful home, beautiful home-it
must not be sold,” was Louis’ exclamation
as he gazed upon it.
“No, it must not be sold,”
returned Maude, while her husband smiled quietly upon
them both, and said nothing.
Maude Glendower had gone to an adjoining
town, but Hannah and John greeted the strangers with
nosy demonstrations, the latter making frequent use
of his coat skirts to wipe away his tears.
“Can you see, marm-see
me as true as you live?” he said, bowing with
great humility to Maude, of whom he stood a little
in awe, so polished were her manners and so elegant
her appearance. Maude assured him that she could,
and then observing how impatient Louis appeared, she
asked for Dr. Kennedy. Assuming a mysterious air,
old Hannah whispered, “He’s up in de ruff,
at de top of de house, in dat little charmber, where
he stays mostly, to get shet of de music and dancin’
and raisin’ ob cain generally. He’s
mighty broke down, but the sight of you will peart
him up right smart. You’d better go up
alone-he’ll bar it better one at a
time.”
“Yes, go, sister,” said
Louis, who heard the last part of Hannah’s remarks,
and felt that he could not take his father by surprise.
So, leaving her husband and brother below, Maude glided
noiselessly upstairs to the low attic room, where,
by an open window, gazing sorrowfully out upon the
broad harvest-fields, soon to be no longer his, a
seemingly old man sat. And Dr. Kennedy was old,
not in years, perhaps, but in appearance. His
hair had bleached as white as snow, his form was bent,
his face was furrowed with many a line of care, while
the tremulous motion of his head told of the palsy’s
blighting power. And he sat there alone, that
hazy autumnal day, shrinking from the future and musing
sadly of the past. From his armchair the top
of a willow tree was just discernible, and as he thought
of the two graves beneath that tree he moaned, “Oh,
Katy, Matty, darlings. You would pity me, I know,
could you see me now so lonesome. My only boy
is over the sea-my only daughter is selfish
and cold, and all the day I’m listening in vain
for someone to call me father.”
“Father!” The name dropped
involuntarily from the lips of Maude, standing without
the door.
But he did not hear it, and she could
not say it again; for he was not her father; but her
heart was moved with sympathy, and going to him laid
her hands on his head and looked into his face.
“Maude-Matty’s
Maude-my Maude!” And the poor head
shook with a palsied tremor, as he wound his arms
around her and asked her when she came.
Her sudden coming unmanned him wholly,
and bending over her he wept like a little child.
It would seem that her presence inspired in him a
sense of protection, a longing to detail his grievances,
and with quivering lips he said, “I am broken
in body and mind. I’ve nothing to call
my own, nothing but a lock of Matty’s hair and
Louis’ little crutches-the crutches
that you cushioned so that I should not hear their
sound. I was a hard-hearted monster then.
I aint much better now, but I love my child.
What of Louis, Maude? Tell me of my boy,”
and over the wrinkled face of the old man broke beautifully
the father-love, giving place to the father-pride,
as Maude told of Louis’ success, of the fame
he won, and the money he had earned.
“Money!” Dr. Kennedy started
quickly at that word, but ere he could repeat it his
ear caught a coming sound, and his eyes flashed eagerly
as, grasping the arm of Maude, he whispered, “It’s
music, Maude-it’s music-don’t
you hear it? Louis crutches on the stairs.
He comes! he comes! Matty’s boy and mine!
Thank Heaven, I have something left in which that
woman has no part.”
In his excitement he had risen, and
with lips apart, and eyes bent on the open door he
waited for his crippled boy; nor waited long ere Louis
came in sight, when with a wild, glad cry which made
the very rafters ring he caught him to his bosom.
Silently Maude stole from the room, leaving them thus
together, the father and his son. Nor is it for
us to intrude upon the sanctity of that interview,
which lasted more than an hour, and was finally terminated
by the arrival of Maude Glendower. She had returned
sooner than was anticipated, and, after joyfully greeting
Maude started in quest of Louis.
“Don’t let her in here,”
whispered the doctor, as he heard her on the stairs.
“Don’t let her in here; she’d be
seized with a fit of repairs. Go to her; she
loves you, at least.”
Louis obeyed, and in a moment was
in the arms of his stepmother. She had changed
since last they, met. Much of her soft, voluptuous
beauty was gone, and in its place was a look of desperation,
as if she did not care for what she had done, and
meant to brave it through. Still, when alone
with Mr. De Vere and Maude, she conversed freely of
their misfortunes, and ere the day was over they thoroughly
understood the matter. The doctor was ruined;
and when his wife was questioned of the future she
professed to have formed no plan, unless, indeed,
her husband lived with Nellie, who was now housekeeping,
while she went whither she could find a place.
To this arrangement Mr. De Vere made no comment.
He did not seem disposed to talk, but when the day
of sale came he acted; and it was soon understood
that the house together with fifty acres of land would
pass into his hands. Louis, too, was busy.
Singling out every article of furniture which had
been his mother’s, he bought it with his own
money, while John, determining that “t’other
one,” as he called Katy, should not be entirely
overlooked, bid off the high-post bedstead and chest
of drawers which once were hers. Many of the
more elegant pieces of furniture were sold, but Mr.
De Vere kept enough to furnish the house handsomely;
and when the sale was over and the family once more
reassembled in the pleasant parlor, Dr. Kennedy wept
like a child as he blessed the noble young man who
had kept for him his home. Maude Glendower, too,
was softened; and going up to Mr. De Vere she said,
“If I know how to spend lavishly I know also
how to economize, and henceforth none shall accuse
me of extravagance.”
These were no idle words, for, as
well as she could, she kept her promise; and though
she often committed errors, she usually tried to do
the thing which her children would approve. After
a day or two Mr. De Vere and Maude returned to Hampton,
leaving Louis with his father, who, in his society,
grew better and happier each day. Hannah, who
was growing old, went, from choice, to live with Maude,
but John would not forsake his master. Nobody
knew the kinks of the old place like himself, he said,
and he accordingly stayed, superintending the whole,
and coming ere long to speak of it all as his.
It was his farm, his oxen, his horses, his everything,
except the pump which Hannah in her letter to Mauda,
had designated as an injun.
“’Twas a mighty good thing
in its place,” he said, “and at a fire
it couldn’t be beat, but he’d be hanged
if he didn’t b’lieve a nigger was made
for somethin’ harder and more sweaty-like than
turnin’ that crank to make b’lieve rain
when it didn’t. He reckoned the Lord knew
what he was about, and if He was a mind to dry up the
grass and the arbs, it wasn’t for Cary nor nary
other chap to take the matter into their own hands,
and invent a patent thunder shower.”
John reasoned clearly upon some subjects,
and though his reasoning was not always correct, he
proved a most invaluable servant. Old Hannah’s
place was filled by another colored woman, Sylvia,
and though John greatly admired her complexion, as
being one which would not fade, he lamented her inefficiency,
often wishing that the services of Janet Hopkins could
be again secured.
But Janet was otherwise engaged; and
here, near the close of our story, it may not be amiss
to glance for a moment at one who in the commencement
of the narrative occupied a conspicuous place.
About the time of Maude’s blindness she had
removed to a town in the southern part of New York,
and though she wrote apprising her young mistress
of the change, she forgot entirely to say where she
was going, consequently the family were ignorant of
her place of residence, until accident revealed it
to J.C. De Vere. It was but a few weeks
preceding Maude’s return from Europe that he
found himself compelled to spend a Sabbath in the
quiet town of Fayette. Not far from his hotel
an Episcopal church reared its slender tower, and
thither, at the usual hour for service, he wended his
way. There was to be a baptism that morning,
and many a smile flitted over the face of matron and
maid, as a meek-looking man came slowly up the aisle,
followed by a short, thick, resolute Scotchwoman, in
whom we recognize our old friend Janet Hopkins.
Notwithstanding her firm conviction that Maude Matilda
Remington Blodgett was her last and only one, she
was now the mother of a sturdy boy, which the meek
man carried in his arms. Hot disputes there had
been between the twain concerning a name, Mr. Hopkins
advocating simply John, as having been borne by his
sire, while Janet, a little proud of the notoriety
which her daughter’s cognomen had brought to
her, determined to honor her boy with a name which
should astonish every one.
At the time of Maude’s engagement
with J.C. De Vere she had written to know what
J.C. was for, and Jedediah Cleishbotham pleased her
fancy as being unusual and odd. Indirectly she
had heard that Maude was married to Mr. De Vere, and
gone to Europe, and supposing it was of course J.C.,
she on this occasion startled her better half by declaring
that her son should be baptized “John Joel Jedediah
Cleishbotham,” or nothing! It was in vain
that he remonstrated. Janet was firm, and hunting
up Maude’s letter, written more than three years
before, she bade him write down the name, so as not
to make a blunder. But this he refused to do.
“He guessed he could remember that horrid name;
there was not another like it in Christendom,”
he said, and on the Sunday morning of which we write
he took his baby in his arms, and in a state of great
nervous irritability started for church, repeating
to himself the names, particularly the last, which
troubled him the most. Many a change he rang
upon it, and by the time he stood before the altar
the perspiration was starting from every pore, so
anxious was he to acquit himself creditably, and thus
avoid the Caudle lecture which was sure to follow
a mistake. “But he should not make a mistake;
he knew exactly what the name was; he’d said
it over a hundred times,” and when the minister,
taking the baby in his arms, said, “Name this
child,” he spoke up loud and promptly, jerking
out the last word with a vengeance, as if relieved
to have it off his mind, “John Joel Jedediah
Leusebottom.”
“That’s for me,”
was J.C.’s involuntary exclamation, which, however,
was lost amid the general titter which ran through
the house.
In an agony of anxiety Janet strove
to rectify the mistake, while her elbow sought the
ribs of her conjugal lord; but the minister paid no
heed, and when the screaming infant was given back
to its frightened father’s arms it bore the
name of “John Joel,” and nothing more.
To this catastrophe Janet was in a
measure reconciled when after church J.C. sought her
out and, introducing himself, informed her of the
true state of affairs.
“Then you aint married to Maude
after all,” said the astonished Janet, as she
proceeded to question him of the doctor’s family.
“It beats all, I never heard on’t; but
no wonder, livin’ as we do in this out o’
the way place-no cars, no stage, no post
office but twice a week-no nothin’.”
This was indeed the reason why Janet
had remained so long in ignorance of the people with
whom she formerly lived. Fayette, as she said,
was an out of the way place, and after hearing from
a man who met them in New York, that Maude and Louis
were both gone to Europe, she gave Laurel Hill no
further thought, and settled quietly down among the
hills until her monotonous life was broken by the
birth of a son, the John Joel who, as she talked with
J.C., slept calmly in his crib.
“So you aint merried to her,”
she kept repeating, her anger at her husband’s
treacherous memory fast decreasing. “I kinder
thought her losin’ my money might make a difference,
but you’re jest as happy with Nellie, aint you?”
The question was abrupt, and J.C.
colored crimson as he tried to stammer out an answer.
“Never you mind,” returned
Janet, noticing his embarrassment. “Married
life is just like a checker-board, and all on us has
as much as we can do to swaller it at times; but you
would of been happy with Maude, I know.”
J.C. knew so, too, and long after
he parted with Janet her last words were ringing in
his ears, while mingled with them was the bitter memory,
“It might perhaps have been.”
But there was no hope now, and with
an increased air of dejection he went back to his
cheerless home. They were housekeeping, Nellie
and himself, for Mrs. Kelsey had married again, and
as the new husband did not fancy the young people
they had set up an establishment of their own, and
J.C. was fast learning how utterly valueless are soft,
white hands when their owner knows not how to use them.
Though keeping up an outside show, he was really very
poor, and when he heard of the doctor’s misfortune
he went to his chamber and wept as few men ever weep.
As Hannah well expressed it, “he was shiftless,”
and did not know how to take care of himself.
This James De Vere understood, and after the sale
at Laurel Hill he turned his attention to his unfortunate
cousin, and succeeded at last in securing for him
the situation of bookkeeper in a large establishment
in New York with which he was himself remotely connected.
Thither about Christmas J.C. and Nellie went, and from
her small back room in the fifth story of a New York
boarding-house Nellie writes to Louis glowing descriptions
of high life in the city, and Louis, glancing at his
crutches and withered feet, smiles as he thinks how
weary he should be climbing the four flights of stairs
which lead to that high life.
And now, with one more glance at Maude,
we bring our story to a close. It is Easter,
and over the earth the April sun shines brightly,
just as it shone on the Judean hills eighteen hundred
years ago. The Sabbath bells are ringing, and
the merry peal which comes from the Methodist tower
bespeaks in John a frame of mind unsuited to the occasion.
Since forsaking the Episcopalians, he had seldom attended
their service, but this morning, after his task is
done, he will steal quietly across the common to the
old stone church, where James De Vere and Maude sing
together the glorious Easter Anthem. Maude formerly
sang the alto, but in the old world her voice was
trained to the higher notes, and to-day it will be
heard in the choir where it has so long been missed.
The bells have ceased to toll, and
a family group come slowly up the aisle. Dr.
Kennedy, slightly bent, his white hair shading a brow
from which much of his former sternness has gone, and
his hand shaking but slightly as he opens the pew
door and then steps back for the lady to enter, the
lady Maude Glendower, who walks not as proudly as
of old. She, too, has been made better by adversity,
and though she will never love the palsied man, her
husband, she will be to him a faithful wife, and a
devoted mother to his boy, who in the square, old-fashioned
pew sits where his eye can rest upon his beautiful
sister, as her snowy fingers sweep once more the organ
keys, which tremble joyfully as it were to the familiar
touch. Low, deep-toned, and heavy is the prelude
to the song, and they who listen feel the floor tremble
beneath their feet. Then a strain of richest
melody echoes through the house, arid the congregation
hold their breath, as Maude De Vere sings to them
of the Passover once sacrificed for us.
And now, shall we not leave them thus
with the holy Easter light streaming up the aisles
and the sweet music of the Easter song dying on the
air?