’Tis hard upon the dawn, and yet
She comes not from the ball.
The night is cold and bleak and wet,
And the snow lies over all.
I praised her with her diamonds on!
And as she went she smiled,
And yet I sighed when she was gone,
I sighed like any child.
-Meredith.
Meanwhile all Claudia Merlin’s
time was taken up with milliners, mantua makers, and
jewelers. She was to make her first appearance
in society at the President’s first evening
reception, which was to be held on Friday, the sixth
of January. It was now very near the New Year,
and all her intervening time was occupied in preparations
for the festivities that were to attend it.
On the twenty-third of December, two
days before Christmas, Mr. and Mrs. Middleton and
all their family arrived. They came up by the
“Columbia,” and reached Judge Merlin’s
house early in the morning. Consequently they
were not fatigued, and the day of their arrival was
a day of unalloyed pleasure and of family jubilee.
Ishmael took sympathetic part in all
the rejoicings, and was caressed by Mr. and Mrs. Middleton
and all their younger children as a sort of supplementary
son and brother.
On Christmas Eve, also, Reuben Gray,
Hannah, and her children came to town in their wagon.
Honest Reuben had brought a load of turkeys for the
Christmas market, and had “put up” at a
plain, respectable inn, much frequented by the farmers,
near the market house; but in the course of the day
he and his wife, leaving the children in the care of
their faithful Sally, who had accompanied them in
the character of nurse, called on Ishmael and brought
him his trunk of wearing apparel.
The judge, in his hearty, old-fashioned,
thoughtless hospitality, would have had Reuben and
his family come and stop at his own house. But
Reuben Gray, with all his simplicity, had the good
sense firmly to decline this invitation and keep to
his tavern.
“For you know, Hannah, my dear,”
he said to his wife, when they found themselves again,
at the Plow, “we would bother the family more’n
the judge reckoned on. What could they do with
us? Where could they put us? As to axing
of us in the drawing room or sitting of us down in
the dining room, with all his fine, fashionable friends,
that wasn’t to be thought on! And as to
you being put into the kitchen, along of the servants,
that I wouldn’t allow! Now the judge, he
didn’t think of all these things: but I
did; and I was right to decline the invitation, don’t
you think so?”
“Of course you were, Reuben,
and if you hadn’t declined it, I would, and
that I tell you,” answered Mrs. Gray.
“And so, Hannah, my dear, we
will just keep our Christmas where we are! We
won’t deprive Ishmael of his grand Christmas
dinner with his grand friends; but we will ax him
to come over and go to the playhouse with us and see
the play, and then we’ll all come back and have
a nice supper all on us together. We’ll
have a roast turkey and mince pie and egg-nog and
apple toddy, my dear, and make a night of it, once
in a way! What do you think?”
“I think that will be all very
well, Reuben, so that you don’t take too much
of that same egg-nog and apple toddy,” replied
Mrs. Gray.
“Now, Hannah, did you ever know
me to do such a thing?” inquired Reuben, with
an injured air.
“No, Reuben, I never did.
But I think that a man that even so much as touches
spiritable likkers is never safe until he is in his
grave,” said Mrs. Gray solemnly.
“Where he can never get no more,”
sighed Reuben; and as he had to attend the market
to sell his turkeys that night, he left Hannah and
went to put his horses to the wagon.
So fine a trade did Reuben drive with
his fat turkeys that he came home at ten with an empty
wagon and full pocketbook, and told Hannah that she
might have a new black silk “gownd,” and
Sally should have a red calico “un,” and
as for the children, they should have an outfit from
head to foot.
Christmas morning dawned gloriously.
All the little Middleton’s were made happy by
the fruit of the Christmas tree. In the many kind
interchanges of gifts Ishmael was not entirely forgotten.
Some loving heart had remembered him. Some skillful
hand had worked for him. When he went up to his
room after breakfast on Christmas morning, he saw upon
his dressing table a packet directed to himself.
On opening it he found a fine pocket-handkerchief
neatly hemmed and marked, a pair of nice gloves, a
pair of home-knit socks, and a pair of embroidered
slippers. Here was no useless fancy trumpery;
all were useful articles; and in the old-fashioned,
housewifely present Ishmael recognized the thoughtful
heart and careful hand of Bee, and grateful, affectionate
tears filled his eyes. He went below stairs to
a back parlor, where he felt sure he should find Bee
presiding over the indoor amusements of her younger
brothers and sisters.
And, sure enough, there the pretty
little motherly maiden was among the children.
Ishmael went straight up to her, saying,
in fervent tones:
“I thank you, Bee; I thank you for remembering
me.”
“Why, who should remember you
if not I, Ishmael? Are you not like one of ourselves?
And should I forget you any sooner than I should forget
Walter, or James, or John?” said Bee, with a
pleasant smile.
“Ah, Bee! I have neither
mother nor sister to think of me at festive times;
but you, dear Bee, you make me forget the need of either.”
“You have ‘neither mother
nor sister,’ Ishmael? Now, do not think
so, while my dear mother and myself live; for I am
sure she loves you as a son, Ishmael, and I love you-as
a brother,” answered Bee, speaking comfort to
the lonely youth from the depths of her own pure, kind
heart. But ah! the intense blush that followed
her words might have revealed to an interested observer
how much more than any brother she loved Ishmael Worth.
Judge Merlin, Claudia, Mr. and Mrs.
Middleton, and Ishmael went to church.
Bee stayed home to see that the nurses
took proper care of the children.
They had a family Christmas dinner.
And after that Ishmael excused himself,
and went over to the Plow to spend the evening with
Reuben and Hannah. That evening the three friends
went to the theater, and saw their first play, “the
Comedy of Errors,” together. And it did
many an old, satiated play-goer good to see the hearty
zest with which honest Reuben enjoyed the fun.
Nor was Hannah or Ishmael much behind him in their
keen appreciation of the piece; only, at those passages
at which Hannah and Ishmael only smiled, Reuben rubbed
his knees, and laughed aloud, startling all the audience.
“It’s a good thing I don’t
live in the city, Hannah, my dear, for I would go
to the play every night!” said Reuben, as they
left the theater at the close of the performance.
“And it is a good thing you
don’t, Reuben, for it would be the ruination
of you!” admitted Hannah.
They went back to the Plow, where
the Christmas supper was served for them in the plain
little private sitting room. After partaking
moderately of its delicacies, Ishmael bade them good-night,
and returned home.
Reuben and Hannah stayed a week in
the city. Reuben took her about to see all the
sights and to shop in all the stores. And on New
Year’s day, when the President received the
public, Reuben took Hannah to the White House, to
“pay their duty” to the chief magistrate
of the nation. And the day after New Year’s
day they took leave of Ishmael and of all their friends,
and returned home, delighted with the memory of their
pleasant visit to the city.
Ishmael, after all these interruptions,
returned with new zest to his duties, and, as before,
worked diligently day and night.
Claudia went deeper into her preparations
for her first appearance in society at the President’s
first drawing room of the season.
The night of nights for the heiress
came. After dinner Claudia indulged herself in
a long nap, so that she might be quite fresh in the
evening. When she woke up she took a cup of tea,
and immediately retired to her chamber to dress.
Mrs. Middleton superintended her toilet.
Claudia wore a rich point-lace dress
over a white satin skirt. The wreath that crowned
her head, the necklace that reposed upon her bosom,
the bracelets that clasped her arms, the girdle that
enclosed her waist, and the bunches of flowers that
festooned her upper lace dress, were all of the same
rich pattern-lilies of the valley, whose
blossoms were formed of pearl, whose leaves were of
emeralds, and whose dew was of diamonds. Snowy
gloves and snowy shoes completed this toilet, the effect
of which was rich, chaste, and elegant beyond description.
Mrs. Middleton wore a superb dress of ruby-colored
velvet.
When they were both quite ready, they
went down into the drawing room, where Judge Merlin,
Mr. Middleton, and Ishmael were awaiting them, and
where Claudia’s splendid presence suddenly dazzled
them. Mr. Middleton and Judge Merlin gazed upon
the radiant beauty with undisguised admiration.
And Ishmael looked on with a deep, unuttered groan.
How dared he love this stately, resplendent queen?
How dared he hope she would ever deign to notice him?
But the next instant he reproached himself for the
groan and the doubt-how could he have been
so fooled by a mere shimmer of satin and glitter of
jewels?
Judge Merlin and Mr. Middleton were
in the conventional evening dress of gentlemen, and
were quite ready to attend the ladies. They had
nothing to do, therefore, but to hand them to the
carriage, which they accordingly did. The party
of four, Mr. and Mrs. Middleton, Judge Merlin, and
Claudia, drove off.
Ishmael and Beatrice remained at home.
Ishmael to study his law books; Beatrice to give the
boys their supper and see that the nurses took proper
care of the children.