THE HORSESHOE
They laid out the Waite Place in this manner:
Right into the pretty wooded pasture,
starting from a point a little way down the road from
the old house, they projected a roadway which swept
round, horseshoe fashion, till it met itself again
within a space of some twenty yards or so; and this
sweep made a frontage upon its inclosed
bit of natural, moss-turfed green, sprinkled with
birch and pine and oak trees, and with gray out-croppings
of rock here and there for the twenty houses,
behind which opened the rest of the unspoiled, irregular,
open slope and swell and dingle of the hill-foot tract
that dipped down at one reach, we know, to the river.
The trees, and shrubs, and vines,
and ferns, and stones, were left in their wild prettiness;
only some roughness of nature’s wear and tear
of dead branches and broken brushwood, and the like,
were taken away, and the little footpaths cleared
for pleasant walking.
There were all the little shady, sweet-smelling
nooks, just as they had been; all the little field-parlors,
opening with their winding turns between bush and
rock, one into another. The twenty households
might find twenty separate places, if they all wanted
to take a private out-door tea at once.
The cellars were dug; the frames were
up; workmen were busy with brick and mortar, hammer
and plane; two or three buildings were nearly finished,
and two the two standing at the head of
the Horseshoe, looking out at the back into the deepest
and pleasantest wood-aisle, where the leaves were
reddening and mellowing in the early October frost,
and the ferns were turning into tender transparent
shades of palest straw-color were completed,
and had dwellers in them; the cheeriest, and happiest,
and coziest of neighbors; and who do you think these
were?
Miss Waite and Delia, of course, in
one house; and with them, dividing the easy rent and
the space that was ample for four women, were Lucilla
Waters and her mother. In the other, were Kenneth
and Rosamond Kincaid and Dorris.
Kenneth and Rosamond had been married
just three weeks. Rosamond had told him she would
begin the world with him, and they had begun.
Begun in the simple, true old-fashioned way, in which,
if people only would believe it, it is even yet not
impossible for young men and women to inaugurate their
homes.
They could not have had a place at
Westover, and a horse and buggy for Kenneth to go
back and forth with; nor even a house in one of the
best streets of Z ; and down at
East Square everything was very modern and pretentious,
based upon the calculation of rising values and a
rush of population.
But here was this new neighborhood
of well, yes, “model houses;”
a blessed Christian speculation for a class not easily
or often reached by any speculations save those that
grind and consume their little regular means, by forcing
upon them the lawless and arbitrary prices of the
day, touching them at every point in their living,
but not governing correspondingly their income, as
even the hod-carrier’s and railroad navvy’s
daily pay is reached and ruled to meet the proportion
of the time.
They would be plain, simple, little-cultured
people that would live there: the very “betwixt
and betweens” that Rosamond had used to think
so hardly fated. Would she go and live among them,
in one of these little new, primitive homes, planted
down in the pasture-land, on the outskirts? Would
she the pretty, graceful, elegant Rosamond live
semi-detached with old Miss Arabel Waite?
That was just exactly the very thing
she would do; the thing she did not even let Kenneth
think of first, and ask her, but that, when they had
fully agreed that they would begin life somehow, in
some right way together, according to their means,
she herself had questioned him if they might not do.
And so the houses were hurried in
the building; for old Miss Arabel must have hers before
the winter; (it seems strange how often the change
comes when one could not have waited any longer for
it;) and Kenneth had mill building, and surveying,
and planning, in East Square, and Mr. Roger Marchbanks’
great gray-stone mansion going up on West Hill, to
keep him busy; work enough for any talented young
fellow, fresh from the School of Technology, who had
got fair hold of a beginning, to settle down among
and grasp the “next things” that were
pretty sure to follow along after the first.
Dorris has all Ruth’s music
scholars, and more; for there has never been anybody
to replace Miss Robbyns, and there are many young girls
in Z , and down here in East Square,
who want good teaching and cannot go away to get it.
She has also the organ-playing in the new church.
She keeps her morning hours and her
Saturdays to help Rosamond; for they are “cooeperating”
here, in the new home; what was the use, else, of
having cooeperated in the old? Rosamond cannot
bear to have any coarse, profane fingers laid upon
her little household gods, her wedding-tins
and her feather dusters, while the first
gloss and freshness are on, at any rate; and with her
dainty handling, the gloss is likely to last a long
while.
Such neighbors, too, as the Waites
and Waterses are! How they helped in the fitting
up, running in in odd half hours from their own nailing
and placing, which they said could wait awhile, since
they weren’t brides; and such real old times
visiting as they have already between the houses;
coming and taking right hold, with wiping up dinner
plates as likely as not, if that is the thing in hand;
picking up what is there, as easily as “the girls”
used to help work out some last new pattern of crochet,
or try over music, or sort worsteds for gorgeous affghans
for the next great fair!
Miss Arabel is apt to come in after
dinner, and have a dab at the plates; she knows she
interrupts nothing then; and she “has never
been used to sitting talking, with gloves on and a
parasol in her lap.” And now she has given
up trying to make impossible biases, she has such
a quantity of time!
It was the matter of receiving visits
from her friends who did sit with their parasols
in their laps, or who only expected to see the house,
or look over wedding presents, that would be the greatest
hindrance, Rosamond realized at once; that is, if she
would let it; so she did just the funniest thing,
perhaps, that ever a bride did do: she set her
door wide open from her pretty parlor, with its books
and flowers and pictures and window-draperies of hanging
vines, into the plain, cozy little kitchen, with its
tin pans and bright new buckets and its Shaker chairs;
and when she was busy there, asked her girl-friends
right in, as she had used to take them up into her
bedroom, if she were doing anything pretty or had
something to show.
And they liked it, for the moment,
at any rate; they could not help it; they thought
it was lovely; a kind of bewitching little play at
keeping house; though some of them went away and wondered,
and said that Rosamond Holabird had quite changed
all her way of living and her position; it was very
splendid and strong-minded, they supposed; but they
never should have thought it of her, and of course
she could not keep it up.
“And the neighborhood!”
was the cry. “The rabble she has got, and
is going to have, round her! All planks and sand,
and tubs of mortar, now; you have to half break your
neck in getting up there; and when it is settled it
will be such a frowze of common people!
Why the foreman of our factory has engaged a house,
and Mrs. Haslam, who actually used to do up laces
for mamma, has got another!”
That is what is said in
some instances over on West Hill, when the
elegant visitors came home from calling at the Horseshoe.
Meanwhile, what Rosamond does is something like this,
which she happened to do one bright afternoon a very
little while ago.
She and Dorris had just made and baked
a charming little tea-cake, which was set on a fringed
napkin in a round white china dish, and put away in
the fresh, oak-grained kitchen pantry, where not a
crumb or a slop had ever yet been allowed to rest
long enough to defile or give a flavor of staleness;
out of which everything is tidily used up while it
is nice, and into which little delicate new-made bits
like this, for next meals, are always going.
The tea-table itself, with
its three plates, and its new silver, and the pretty,
thin, shallow cups and saucers, that an Irish girl
would break a half-dozen of every week, was
laid with exquisite preciseness; the square white
napkins at top and bottom over the crimson cloth,
spread to the exactness of a line, and every knife
and fork at fair right angles; the loaf was upon the
white carved trencher, and nothing to be done when
Kenneth should come in, but to draw the tea, and bring
the brown cake forth.
Rosamond will not leave all these
little doings to break up the pleasant time of his
return; she will have her leisure then, let her be
as busy as she may while he is away.
There was an hour or more after all
was done; even after the Panjandrums had made their
state call, leaving their barouche at the heel of
the Horseshoe, and filling up all Rosamond’s
little vestibule with their flounces, as they came
in and went out.
The Panjandrums were new people at
West Hill; very new and very grand, as only new things
and new people can be, turned out in the latest style
pushed to the last agony. Mrs. Panjandrum’s
dress was all in two shades of brown, to the tips
of her feathers, and the toes of her boots, and the
frill of her parasol; and her carriage was all in
two shades of brown, likewise; cushions, and tassels,
and panels; the horses themselves were cream-color,
with dark manes and tails. Next year, perhaps,
everything will be in pansy-colors, black
and violet and gold; and then she will probably have
black horses with gilded harness and royal purple tails.
It was very good of the Panjandrums,
doubtless, to come down to the Horseshoe at all; I
am willing to give them all the credit of really admiring
Rosamond, and caring to see her in her little new home;
but there are two other things to be considered also:
the novel kind of home Rosamond had chosen to set
up, and the human weakness of curiosity concerning
all experiments, and friends in all new lights; also
the fact of that other establishment shortly to branch
out of the Holabird connection. The family could
not quite go under water, even with people of the
Panjandrum persuasion, while there was such a pair
of prospective corks to float them as Mr. and Mrs.
Dakie Thayne.
The Panjandrum carriage had scarcely
bowled away, when a little buggy and a sorrel pony
came up the road, and somebody alighted with a brisk
spring, slipped the rein with a loose knot through
the fence-rail at the corner, and came up one side
of the two-plank foot-walk that ran around the Horseshoe;
somebody who had come home unexpectedly, to take his
little wife to ride. Kenneth Kincaid had business
over at the new district of “Clarendon Park.”
Drives, and livery-stable bills, were
no part of the items allowed for, in the programme
of these young people’s living; therefore Rosamond
put on her gray hat, with its soft little dove’s
breast, and took her bright-striped shawl upon her
arm, and let Kenneth lift her into the buggy for
which there was no manner of need except that they
both liked it, with very much the feeling
as if she were going off on a lovely bridal trip.
They had had no bridal trip, you see; they did not
really want one; and this little impromptu drive was
such a treat!
Now the wonders of nature and the
human mind show if I must go so far to
find an argument for the statement I am making that
into a single point of time or particle of matter
may be gathered the relations of a solar system or
the experiences of a life; that a universe may be
compressed into an atom, or a molecule expanded into
a macrocosm; therefore I expect nobody to sneer at
my Rosamond as childishly nappy in her simple honeymoon,
or at me for making extravagant and unsupported assertions,
when I say that this hour and a half, and these four
miles out to Clarendon Park and back, the
lifting and the tucking in, and the setting off, the
sitting side by side in the ripe October air and the
golden twilight, the noting together every pretty
turn, every flash of autumn color in the woods, every
change in the cloud-groupings overhead, every glimpse
of busy, bright-eyed squirrels up and down the walls,
every cozy, homely group of barnyard creatures at the
farmsteads, the change, the pleasure, the thought of
home and always-togetherness, all this
made the little treat of a country ride as much to
them, holding all that any wandering up and down the
whole world in their new companionship could hold, as
a going to Europe, or a journey to mountains and falls
and sea-sides and cities, in a skimming of the States.
You cannot have more than there is; and you do not
care, for more than just what stands for and emphasizes
the essential beauty, the living gladness, that no
place gives, but that hearts carry about into
places and baptize them with, so that ever afterward
a tender charm hangs round them, because “we
saw it then.”
And Kenneth and Rosamond Kincaid had
all these bright associations, these beautiful glamours,
these glad reminders, laid up for years to come, in
a four miles space that they might ride or walk over,
re-living it all, in the returning Octobers of many
other years. I say they had a bridal tour that
day, and that the four miles were as good as four
thousand. Such little bits of signs may stand
for such high, great, blessed things!
“How lovely stillness and separateness
are!” said Rosamond as they sat in the buggy,
stopping to enjoy a glimpse of the river on one side,
and a flame of burning bushes on the other, against
the dark face of a piece of woods that held the curve
of road in which they stood, in sheltered quiet.
“How pretty a house would be, up on that knoll.
Do you know things puzzle me a little, Kenneth?
I have almost come to a certain conclusion lately,
that people are not meant to live apart, but that
it is really everybody’s duty to live in a town,
or a village, or in some gathering of human beings
together. Life tends to that, and all the needs
and uses of it; and yet, it is so sweet
in a place like this, and however kind and
social you may be, it seems once in a while such an
escape! Do you believe in beautiful country places,
and in having a little piece of creation all to yourself,
if you can get it, or if not what do you suppose all
creation is made for?”
“Perhaps just that which you
have said, Rose.” Rosamond has now, what
her mother hinted once, somebody to call her “Rose,”
with a happy and beautiful privilege. “Perhaps
to escape into. Not for one, here and there,
selfishly, all the time; but for the whole, with fair
share and opportunity. Creation is made very big,
you see, and men and women are made without wings,
and with very limited hands and feet. Also with
limited lives; that makes the time-question, and the
hurry. There is a suggestion, at any
rate, a necessity, in that. It brings
them within certain spaces, always. In spite of
all the artificial lengthening of railroads and telegraphs,
there must still be centres for daily living, intercourse,
and need. People tend to towns; they cannot establish
themselves in isolated independence. Yet packing
and stifling are a cruelty and a sin. I do not
believe there ought to be any human being so poor as
to be forced to such crowding. The very way we
are going to live at the Horseshoe, seems to me an
individual solution of the problem. It ought
to come to pass that our towns should be built and
if built already, wrongly, thinned out, on
this principle. People are coming to learn a
little of this, and are opening parks and squares
in the great cities, finding that there must be room
for bodies and souls to reach out and breathe.
If they could only take hold of some of their swarming-places,
where disease and vice are festering, and pull down
every second house and turn it into a garden space,
I believe they would do more for reform and salvation
than all their separate institutions for dealing with
misery after it is let grow, can ever effect.”
“O, why can’t they?”
cried Rose. “There is money enough, somewhere.
Why can’t they do it, instead of letting the
cities grow horrid, and then running away from it
themselves, and buying acres and acres around their
country places, for fear somebody should come too
near, and the country should begin to grow horrid too?”
“Because the growing and the
crowding and the striving of the city make
so much of the money, little wife! Because to
keep everybody fairly comfortable as the world goes
along, there could not be so many separate piles laid
up; it would have to be used more as it comes, and
it could not come so fast. If nobody cared to
be very rich, and all were willing to live simply
and help one another, in little ‘horseshoe neighborhoods,’
there wouldn’t be so much that looks like grand
achievement in the world perhaps; but I think maybe
the very angels might show themselves out of the unseen,
and bring the glory of heaven into it!”
Kenneth’s color came, and his
eyes glowed, as he spoke these words that burst into
eloquence with the intensity of his meaning; and Rosamond’s
face was holy-pale, and her look large, as she listened;
and they were silent for a minute or so, as the pony,
of his own accord, trotted deliberately on.
“But then, the beauty, and the
leisure, and all that grows out of them to separate
minds, and what the world gets through the refinement
of it! You see the puzzle comes back. Must
we never, in this life, gather round us the utmost
that the world is capable of furnishing? Must
we never, out of this big creation, have the piece
to ourselves, each one as he would choose?”
“I think the Lord would show
us a way out of that,” said Kenneth. “I
think He would make His world turn out right, and all
come to good and sufficient use, if we did not put
it in a snarl. Perhaps we can hardly guess what
we might grow to all together, ’the
whole body, fitly joined by that which every joint
supplieth, increasing and building itself up in love.’
And about the quietness, and the separateness, we
don’t want to live in that, Rose; we only
want it sometimes, to make us fitter to live.
When the disciples began to talk about building tabernacles
on the mountain of the vision, Christ led them straight
down among the multitude, where there was a devil
to be cast out. It is the same thing in the old
story of the creation. God worked six days, and
rested one.”
“Well,” said Rose, drawing
a deep breath, “I am glad we have begun at the
Horseshoe! It was a great escape for me, Kenneth.
I am such a worldly girl in my heart. I should
have liked so much to have everything elegant and
artistic about me.”
“I think you do. I think
you always will. Not because of the worldliness
in you, though; but the other-worldliness, the
sense of real beauty and truth. And I am glad
that we have begun at all! It was a greater escape
for me. I was in danger of all sorts of hardness
and unbelief. I had begun to despise and hate
things, because they did not work rightly just around
me. And then I fell in, just in time, with some
real, true people; and then you came, with the ‘little
piece of your world,’ and then I came here, and
saw what your world was, and how you were making it,
Rose! How a little community of sweet and generous
fellowship was crystallizing here among all sorts outward
sorts of people; a little community of the
kingdom; and how you and yours had done it.”
“O, Kenneth! I was the
worst little atom in the whole crystal! I only
got into my place because everybody else did, and there
was nothing else left for me to do.”
“You see I shall never believe
that,” said Kenneth, quietly. “There
is no flaw in the crystal. You were all polarized
alike. And besides, can’t I see daily just
how your nature draws and points?”
“Well, never mind,” said
Rose. “Only some particles are natural
magnets, I believe, and some get magnetized by contact.
Now that we have hit upon this metaphor, isn’t
it funny that our little social experiment should
have taken the shape of a horseshoe?”
“The most sociable, because
the most magnetic, shape it could take. You will
see the power it will develop. There’s a
great deal in merely taking form according to fundamental
principles. Witness the getting round a fireside.
Isn’t that a horseshoe? And could half as
much sympathy be evolved from a straight line?”
“I believe in firesides,” said Rose.
“And in women who can organize
and inform them,” said Kenneth. “First,
firesides; then neighborhoods; that is the way the
world’s life works out; and women have their
hands at the heart of it. They can do so much
more there than by making the laws! When the life
is right, the laws will make themselves, or be no
longer needed. They are such mere outside patchwork, makeshifts
till a better time!”
“Wrong living must make wrong
laws, whoever does the voting,” said Rosamond,
sagely.
“False social standards make
false commercial ones; inflated pretensions demand
inflated currency; selfish, untrue domestic living
eventuates in greedy speculations and business shams;
and all in the intriguing for corrupt legislation,
to help out partial interests. It isn’t
by multiplying the voting power, but by purifying
it, that the end is to be reached.”
“That is so sententious, Kenneth,
that I shall have to take it home and ravel it out
gradually in my mind in little shreds. In the
mean while, dear, suppose we stop in the village,
and get some little brown-ware cups for top-overs.
You never ate any of my top-overs? Well, when
you do, you’ll say that all the world ought to
be brought up on top-overs.”
Rosamond was very particular about
her little brown-ware cups. They had to be real
stone, brown outside, and gray-blue in;
and they must be of a special size and depth.
When they were found, and done up in a long parcel,
one within another, in stout paper, she carried it
herself to the chaise, and would scarcely let Kenneth
hold it while she got in; after which, she laid it
carefully across her lap, instead of putting it behind
upon the cushion.
’You see they were rather dear;
but they are the only kind worth while. Those
little yellow things would soak and crack, and never
look comfortable in the kitchen-closet. I give
you very fair warning, I shall always want the best
of things but then I shall take very fierce and jealous
care of them, like this.’
And she laid her little nicely-gloved
hand across her homely parcel, guardingly.
How nice it was to go buying little
homely things together! Again, it was as good
and pleasant, and meant ever so much more, than
if it had been ordering china with a monogram in Dresden,
or glass in Prague, with a coat-of-arms engraved.
When they drove up to the Horseshoe,
Dakie Thayne and Ruth met them. They had been
getting “spiritual ferns” and sumach leaves
with Dorris; “the dearest little tips,”
Ruth said, “of scarlet and carbuncle, just like
jets of fire.”
And now they would go back to tea,
and eat up the brown cake?
“Real Westover summum-bonum
cake?” Dakie wanted to know. “Well,
he couldn’t stand against that. Come, Ruthie!”
And Ruthie came.
“What do you think Rosamond
says?” said Kenneth, at the tea-table, over
the cake. “That everybody ought to live
in a city or a village, or, at least, a Horseshoe.
She thinks nobody has a right to stick his elbows
out, in this world. She’s in a great hurry
to be packed as closely as possible here.”
“I wish the houses were all
finished, and our neighbors in; that is what I said,”
said Rosamond. “I should like to begin to
know about them, and feel settled; and to see flowers
in their windows, and lights at night.”
“And you always hated so a ‘little crowd!’”
said Ruth.
“It isn’t a crowd when
they don’t crowd,” said Rosamond.
“I can’t bear little miserable jostles.”
“How good it will be to see
Rosamond here, at the head of her court; at the top
of the Horseshoe,” said Dakie Thayne. “She
will be quite the ‘Queen of the County.’”
“Don’t!” said Rosamond.
“I’ve a very weak spot in my head.
You can’t tell the mischief you might do.
No, I won’t be queen!”
“Any more than you can help,” said Dakie.
“She’ll be Rosa Mundi, wherever
she is,” said Ruth affectionately.
“I think that is just grand
of Kenneth and Rosamond,” said Dakie Thayne,
as he and Ruth were walking home up West Hill in the
moonlight, afterward. “What do you think
you and I ought to do, one of these days, Ruthie?
It sets me to considering. There are more Horseshoes
to make, I suppose, if the world is to jog on.”
“You have a great deal
to consider about,” said Ruth, thoughtfully.
“It was quite easy for Kenneth and Rosamond to
see what they ought to do. But you might make
a great many Horseshoes, or something!”
“What do you mean by that second
person plural, eh? Are you shirking your responsibilities,
or are you addressing your imaginary Boffinses?
Come, Ruthie, I can’t have that! Say ‘we,’
and I’ll face the responsibilities and talk
it all out; but I won’t have anything to do
with ‘you!’”
“Won’t you?” said
Ruth, with piteous demureness. “How can
I say ‘we,’ then?”
“You little cat! How you can scratch!”
“There are such great things
to be done in the world Dakie,” Ruth said seriously,
when they had got over that with a laugh that lifted
her nicely by the “we” question. “I
can’t help thinking of it.”
“O,” said Dakie, with
significant satisfaction. “We’re getting
on better. Well?”
“Do you know what Hazel Ripwinkley
is doing? And what Luclarion Grapp has done?
Do you know how they are going among poor people, in
dreadful places, really living among them,
Luclarion is, and finding out, and helping,
and showing how? I thought of that to-night,
when they talked about living in cities and villages.
Luclarion has gone away down to the very bottom of
it. And somehow, one can’t feel satisfied
with only reaching half-way, when one knows and
might!”
“Do you mean, Ruthie, that you
and I might go and live in such places?
Do you think I could take you there?”
“I don’t know, Dakie,”
Ruth answered, forgetting in her earnestness, to blush
or hesitate for what he said; but I feel as if we ought to reach down, somehow, away
down! Because that, you see, is the most.
And to do only a little, in an easy way, when we are
made so strong to do; wouldn’t it be a waste
of power, and a missing of the meaning? Isn’t
it the ‘much’ that is required of us, Dakie?”
They were under the tall hedge of
the Holabird “parcel of ground,” on the
Westover slope, and close to the home gates. Dakie
Thayne put his arm round Ruth as she said that, and
drew her to him.
“We will go and be neighbors
somewhere, Ruthie. And we will make as big a
Horseshoe as we can.”