“I wonder how we are going to
get all the people in to-night,” Edith Slater
said gravely as the family sat at supper. “I
am afraid the walls will be bulged out to-morrow.”
“The new chicken-house and the
cellar will do for the overflow meetings,” George
remarked.
“I borrow the pantry if it comes
to a crush, you and I, Camilla,” Peter Slater
said, helping himself to another piece of pie.
Camilla had come out in the afternoon to help with
the preparations.
“No, Camilla is my partner,”
Fred said severely. “Peter is growing up
too fast, don’t you think so, mother? Since
I lent him my razor to play with there’s no
end to the airs he gives himself. I think he should
go to bed at eight o’clock to-night, same as
other nights.”
Peter laughed scornfully, but Nellie interposed.
“You boys needn’t quarrel
over Camilla for Jim Russell is coming, and when Camilla
sees him, what chance do you suppose you’ll have?”
“And when Jim sees Camilla,
what chance will you have, Nell?” George asked.
“Not one in a hundred; but I
am prepared for the worst,” Nellie answered,
good-naturedly.
“That means she has asked Tom
Motherwell,” Peter explained.
Then Mrs. Slater told them to hurry
along with their supper for the people would soon
be coming.
It was Mrs. Slater who had planned
the party. Mrs. Slater was the leading spirit
in everything in the household that required dash and
daring. Hers was the dominant voice, though nothing
louder than a whisper had been heard from her for
years. She laughed in a whisper, she cried in
a whisper. Yet in some way her laugh was contagious,
and her tears brought comfort to those with whom she
wept.
When she proposed the party the girls
foresaw difficulties. The house was small-there
were so many to ask-it was a busy time.
Mrs. Slater stood firm.
“Ask everybody,” she whispered.
“Nobody minds being crowded at a party.
I was at a party once where we had to go outside to
turn around, the house was so small. I’ll
never forget what a good time we had.”
Mr. Slater was dressed and ready for
anything long before the time had come for the guests
to arrive. An hour before he had sat down resignedly
and said, “Come, girls, do as you think best
with the old man, scrub him, polish him, powder him,
blacken his eyebrows, do not spare him, he’s
yours,” and the girls had laughingly accepted
the privilege.
George, whose duty it was to attend
to the lamps for the occasion, came in with a worried
look, on his usually placid face.
“The aristocratic parlour-lamp
is indisposed,” he said. “It has balked,
refuses to turn up, and smells dreadfully.”
“Bring in the plebeians, George,”
Fred cried gaily, “and never mind the patrician-the
forty-cent plebs never fail. I told Jim Russell
to bring his lantern, and Peter can stand in a corner
and light matches if we are short.”
“It’s working now,”
Edith called from the parlour, “burning beautifully;
mother drew her hand over it.”
Soon the company began to arrive.
Bashful, self-conscious girls, some of them were,
old before their time with the marks of toil, heavy
and unremitting, upon them, hard-handed, stoop-shouldered,
dull-eyed and awkward. These were the daughters
of rich farmers. Good girls they were, too, conscientious,
careful, unselfish, thinking it a virtue to stifle
every ambition, smother every craving for pleasure.
When they felt tired, they called
it laziness and felt disgraced, and thus they had
spent their days, working, working from the gray dawn,
until the darkness came again, and all for what?
When in after years these girls, broken in health
and in spirits, slipped away to premature graves,
or, worse still, settled into chronic invalidism, of
what avail was the memory of the cows they milked,
the mats they hooked, the number of pounds of butter
they made.
Not all the girls were like these.
Maud Murray was there. Maud Murray with the milkmaid
cheeks and curly black hair, the typical country girl
of bounding life aid spirits, the type so often seen
upon the stage and so seldom elsewhere.
Mrs. Motherwell had warned Tom against
Maud Murray as well as Nellie Slater. She had
once seen Maud churning, and she had had a newspaper
pinned to the wall in front of her, and was reading
it as she worked, and Mrs. Motherwell knew that a
girl who would do that would come to no good.
Martha Perkins was the one girl of
whom Mrs. Motherwell approved. Martha’s
record on butter and quilts and mats stood high.
Martha was a nice quiet girl. Mrs. Motherwell
often said a “nice, quiet, unappearing girl.”
Martha certainly was quiet. Her conversational
attainments did not run high. “Things is
what they are, and what’s the good of saying
anything,” Martha had once said in defence of
her silent ways.
She was small and sallow-skinned and
was dressed in an anæmic gray; her thin hay-coloured
hair was combed straight back from a rather fine forehead.
She stooped a little when she walked, and even when
not employed her hands picked nervously at each other.
Martha’s shyness, the “unappearing”
quality, was another of her virtues in the eyes of
Tom’s mother. Martha rarely left home even
to go to Millford. Martha did not go to the Agricultural
Fair when her mats and quilts and butter and darning
and buttonholes on cotton got their red tickets.
Martha stayed at home and dug potatoes-a
nice, quiet, unappearing girl.
When they played games at the Slaters
that evening, Martha would not play. She never
cared for games she said, they tired a person so.
She would just watch the others, and she wished again
that she had her knitting.
Then the kitchen floor was cleared;
table, chairs and lounge were set outside to make
room for the dancing, and when the violins rang out
with the “Arkansaw Traveller,” and big
John Kennedy in his official voice of caller-off announced,
“Select your partners,” every person felt
that the real business of the evening had begun.
Tom had learned to dance, though his
parents would have been surprised had they known it.
Out in the granary on rainy days hired men had obligingly
instructed him in the mysteries of the two-step and
waltz. He sat in a corner and watched the first
dance. When Jim Russell came into the hall, after
receiving a warm welcome from Mr. and Mrs. Slater,
who stood at the door, he was conscious of a sudden
thrill of pleasure. It was the vision of Camilla,
at the farther end of the dining-room, as she helped
the Slater girls to receive their guests. Camilla
wore a red dress that brought out the blue-black of
her eyes, and it seemed to Jim as he watched her graceful
movements that he had never seen anyone so beautiful.
She was piloting a bevy of bashful girls to the stairway,
and as she passed him she gave him a little nod and
smile that set his heart dancing.
He heard the caller-off calling for
partners for a quadrille. The fiddlers had already
tuned their instruments. From where he stood he
could see the figures forming, but Jim watched the
stairway. At last she came, with a company of
other girls, none of whom he saw, and he asked her
for the first dance. Jim was not a conceited young
man, but he felt that she would not refuse him.
Nor did she.
Camilla danced well and so did Jim,
and many an eye followed them as they wound in and
out through the other dancers. When the dance
was over he led her to a seat and sat beside her.
They had much to talk of. Camilla was anxious
to hear of Pearl, and it seemed all at once that they
had become very good friends indeed.
The second dance was a waltz.
Tom did not know that it was the music that stirred
his soul with a sudden tenderness, a longing indefinite,
that was full of pain and yet was all sweetness.
Martha who sat near him looked at him half expectantly.
But her little gray face and twitching hands repelled
him. On the other side of the room, Nellie Slater,
flushed and smiling was tapping her foot to the music.
He found himself on his feet.
“Who cares for mats?” he muttered.
He was beside Nellie in an instant.
“Nellie, will you dance with
me?” he faltered, wondering at his own temerity.
“I will, Tom, with pleasure,” she said,
smiling.
His arm was around her now and they
were off, one, two, three; one, two, three; yes, he
had the step. “Over the foam we glide,”
in and out through the other dancers, the violins
weaving that story of love never ending. “What
though the world be wide”-Nellie’s
head was just below his face-“Love’s
golden star will guide.” Nellie’s
hand was in his as they floated on the rainbow-sea.
“Drifting along, glad is our song”-her
hair blew against his cheek as they swept past the
open door. What did he care what his mother would
say. He was Egbert now. Edythe was in his
arms. “While we are side by side”
the violins sang, glad, triumphant, that old story
that runs like a thread of gold through all life’s
patterns; that old song, old yet ever new, deathless,
unchangeable, which maketh the poor man rich and without
which the richest becomes poor!
When the music stopped, Tom awoke
from his idolatrous dream. He brought Nellie
to a seat and sat awkwardly beside her. His old
self-complacency had left him. Nellie was talking
to him, but he did not hear what she said. He
was not looking at her, but at himself. Before
he knew it she had left him and was dancing with Jim
Russell. Tom looked after them, miserable.
She was looking into Jim’s face, smiling and
talking. What the mischief were they saying?
He tried to tell himself that he could buy and sell
Jim Russell; Jim had not anything in the world but
a quarter of scrub land. They passed him again,
still smiling and talking. “Nellie Slater
is making herself mighty cheap,” he thought
angrily. Then the thought came home to him with
sudden bitterness-how handsome Jim was,
so straight and tall, so well-dressed, so clever,
and, bitterest of all, how different from him.
When Jim and Camilla were sitting
out the second dance he told her about Arthur, the
Englishman, who sat in a corner, shy and uncomfortable.
Camilla became interested at once, and when he brought
Arthur over and introduced him, Camilla’s friendly
smile set him at his ease. Then Jim generously
vacated his seat and went to find Nellie Slater.
“Select your partners for a
square dance!” big John, the caller-off announced,
when the floor was cleared. This was the dance
that Mr. and Mrs. Slater would have to dance.
It was in vain that Mrs. Slater whispered that she
had not danced for years, that she was a Methodist
bred and born. That did not matter. Her son
Peter declared that his mother could dance beautifully,
jigs and hornpipes and things like that. He had
often seen her at it when she was down in the milkhouse
alone.
Mrs. Slater whispered dreadful threats;
but her son Peter insisted, and when big John’s
voice rang out “Honors all,” “Corners
the same,” Mrs. Slater yielded to the tide of
public opinion.
Puffing and blowing she got through
the “First four right and left,” “Right
and left back and ladies’ chain”; but when
it came to “Right hand to partner” and
“Grand right and left,” it was good-bye
to mother! Peter dashed into the set to put his
mother right, but mother was always pointing the wrong
way. “Swing the feller that stole the sheep,”
big John sang to the music; “Dance to the one
that drawed it home,” “Whoop ’er
up there, you Bud,” “Salute the one that
et the beef” and “Swing the dog, that
gnawed the bone.” “First couple lead
to the right,” and mother and father went forward
again and “Balance all!” Tonald McKenzie
was opposite mother; Tonald McKenzie did steps-Highland
fling steps they were. Tonald was a Crofter from
the hills, and had a secret still of his own which
made him a sort of uncrowned king among the Crofters.
It was a tight race for popularity between mother
and Tonald in that set, and when the two stars met
face to face in the “Balance all!” Tonald
surpassed all former efforts. He cracked his
heels together, he snapped his fingers; he threaded
the needle; he wrung the dishcloth-oh you
should have seen Tonald!
Then big John clapped his hands together,
and the first figure was over.
In the second figure for which the
violins played “My Love Is but a Lassie Yet,”
Mrs. Slater’s memory began to revive, and the
dust of twenty years fell from her dancing experience.
She went down the centre and back again, right and
left on the side, ladies’ chain on the head,
right hand to partner and grand right and left, as
neat as you please, and best of all, when all the
ladies circled to the left, and all the gentlemen
circled to the right, no one was quicker to see what
was the upshot of it all; and before big John told
them to “Form the basket,” mother whispered
to father that she knew what was coming, and father
told mother she was a wonderful woman for a Methodist.
“Turn the basket inside out,” “Circle
to the left-to the centre and back, circle
to the right,” “Swing the girl with the
hole in her sock,” “Promenade once and
a half around on the head, once and a half around on
the side,” “Turn ’em around to place
again and balance all!” “Clap! Clap!
Clap!”
Mother wanted to quit then, but dear
me no! no one would let her, they would dance the
“Break-down” now, and leave out the third
figure, and as a special inducement, they would dance
“Dan Tucker.” She would stay for
“Dan Tucker.” Peter came in for “Tucker,”
an extra man being necessary, and then off they went
into
Clear the way for old Dan Tucker,
He’s too late to come to supper.
Two by two they circled around, Peter
in the centre singing-
Old Dan Tucker
Was a fine old man-
Then back to the right-
He washed his face
In the frying-pan.
Then around in a circle hand in hand-
He combed his hair
On a wagon-wheel,
And died with the tooth-ache
In his heel!
As they let go of their partners’
hands and went right and left, Peter made his grand
dash into the circle, and when the turn of the tune
came he was swinging his mother, his father had Tonald’s
partner, and Tonald was in the centre in the title
roll of Tucker, executing some of the most intricate
steps that had ever been seen outside of the Isle of
Skye.
Then the tune changed into the skirling
bag-pipe lilt all Highlanders love-and
which we who know not the Gaelic profanely call “Weel
may the keel row”-and Tonald got
down to his finest work.
He was in the byre now at home beyond
the sea, and it is not strange faces he will be seein’,
but the lads and lassies of the Glen, and it is John
McNeash who holds the drone under his arm and the chanter
in his hands, and the salty tang of the sea comes
up to him and the peat-smoke is in his nostrils, and
the pipes skirl higher and higher as Tonald McKenzie
dances the dance of his forbears in a strange land.
They had seen Tonald dance before, but this was different,
for it was not Tonald McKenzie alone who danced before
them, but the incarnate spirit of the Highlands, the
unconquerable, dauntless, lawless Highlands, with
its purple hills and treacherous caverns that fling
defiance at the world and fear not man nor devil.
Tonald finished with a leap as nimble
as that with which a cat springs on its victim while
the company watched spellbound. He slipped away
into a corner and would dance no more that night.
When twelve o’clock came, the
dancing was over, and with the smell of coffee and
the rattle of dishes in the kitchen it was not hard
to persuade big John Kennedy to sing.
Big John lived alone in a little shanty
in the hills, and the prospect of a good square meal
was a pleasant one to the lonely fellow who had been
his own cook so long. Big John lived among the
Crofters, whose methods of cooking were simple in
the extreme, and from them he had picked up strange
ways of housekeeping. He ate out of the frying
pan; he milked the cow in the porridge pot, and only
took what he needed for each meal, reasoning that
she had a better way of keeping it than he had.
Big John had departed almost entirely from “white
man’s ways,” and lived a wild life free
from the demands of society. His ability to “call
off” at dances was the one tie that bound him
to the Canadian people on the plain.
“Oh, I can’t sing,”
John said sheepishly, when they urged him.
“Tell us how it happened any
way John,” Bud Perkins said. “Give
us the story of it.”
“Go on John. Sing about the cowboy,”
Peter Slater coaxed.
“It iss a teffle of a good song, that,”
chuckled Tonald.
“Well,” John began, clearing
his throat, “here it’s for you. I’ve
ruined me voice drivin’ oxen though, but here’s
the song.”
It was a song of the plains, weird
and wistful, with an uncouth plaintiveness that fascinated
these lonely hill-dwellers.
As I was a-walkin’ one beautiful
morning,
As I was a-walkin’
one morning in May,
I saw a poor cowboy rolled up in
his blanket,
Rolled up in his
blanket as cold as the clay!
The listener would naturally suppose
that the cowboy was dead in his blanket that lovely
May morning; but that idea had to be abandoned as
the song went on, because the cowboy was very much
alive in the succeeding verses, when-
Round the bar bummin’ where
bullets were hummin’
He snuffed out
the candle to show why he come!
Then his way of giving directions
for his funeral was somewhat out of the usual procedure
but no one seemed to notice these little discrepancies-
Beat the drum slowly boys, beat
the drum lowly boys,
Beat the dead
march as we hurry along.
To show that ye love me, boys, write
up above me, boys,
“Here lies
a poor cowboy who knows he done wrong.”
In accordance with a popular custom,
John spoke the last two words in a very slow
and distinct voice. This was considered a very
fine thing to do-it served the purpose
of the “Finis” at the end of the book,
or the “Let us pray,” at the end of the
sermon.
The applause was very loud and very genuine.
Bud Perkins, who was the wit of the
Perkins family, and called by his mother a “regular
cut-up,” was at last induced to sing. Bud’s
“Come-all-ye” contained twenty-three verses,
and in it was set forth the wanderings of one, young
Willie, who left his home and native land at a very
tender age, and “left a good home when he left.”
His mother tied a kerchief of blue around his neck.
“God bless you, son,” she said. “Remember
I will watch for you, till life itself is fled!”
The song went on to tell how long the mother watched
in vain. Young Willie roamed afar, but after
he had been scalped by savage bands and left for dead
upon the sands, and otherwise maltreated by the world
at large, he began to think of home, and after shipwrecks,
and dangers and hair-breadth escapes, he reached his
mother’s cottage door, from which he had gone
long years before.
Then of course he tried to deceive
his mother, after the manner of all boys returning
after a protracted absence-
Oh, can you tell me, ma’m,
he said,
How far to Edinboro’ town.
But he could not fool his mother,
no, no! She knew him by the kerchief blue, still
tied around his neck.
When the applause, which was very
generous, had been given, Jim Russell wanted to know
how young Willie got his neck washed in all his long
meanderings, or if he did not wash, how did he dodge
the health officers.
George Slater gravely suggested that
perhaps young Willie used a dry-cleaning process-French
chalk or brown paper and a hot iron.
Peter Slater said he did not believe
it was the same handkerchief at all. No handkerchief
could stand the pace young Willie went. It was
another one very like the one he had started off with.
He noticed them in the window as he passed, that day,
going cheap for cash.
The young Englishman looked more and
more puzzled. It was strange how Canadians took
things. He turned to Camilla.
“It is only a song, don’t
you know,” he said with a distressed look.
“It is really impossible to say how he had the
kerchief still tied around his neck.”
The evening would not have been complete
without a song from Billy McLean. Little Billy
was a consumptive, playing a losing game against a
relentless foe; but playing like a man with unfailing
cheerfulness, and eyes that smiled ever.
There is a bright ship on the ocean,
Bedecked in silver
and gold;
They say that my Willie is sailing,
Yes, sailing afar
I am told,
was little Billy’s song, known
and loved in many a thresher’s caboose, but
heard no more for many a long day, for little Billy
gave up the struggle the next spring when the snow
was leaving the fields and the trickle of water was
heard in the air. But he and his songs are still
lovingly remembered by the boys who “follow the
mill,” when their thoughts run upon old times.
Peter and Fred Slater came in with
the coffee. Jim Russell with a white apron around
his neck followed with a basket of sandwiches, and
Tom Motherwell with a heaping plate of cake.
“Did you make this cake, Nell?”
Tom whispered to Nellie in the pantry as she filled
the plate for him.
“Me!” she laughed.
“Bless you no! I can’t make anything
but pancakes.”
Martha Perkins still sat by the window.
She looked older and more careworn-she
was thinking of how late it was getting. Martha
could make cakes, Tom knew that. Martha could
do everything.
“Go along Tom,” Nellie
was saying, “give a piece to big John. Don’t
you see how hungry he looks.” Their eyes
met. Hers were bright and smiling. He smiled
back.
Oh pshaw! pancakes are not so bad.
Jim Russell whispered to Camilla,
as he passed near where she and Arthur sat, “Will
you please come and help Nellie in the pantry?
We need you badly.”
Camilla called Maud Murray to take
her seat. She knew Maud would be kind to the
young Englishman.
When Camilla reached the pantry she
found Nellie and Tom Motherwell happily engaged in
eating lemon tarts, and evidently not needing her at
all. Jim was ready with an explanation. “I
was thinking of poor Thursa, far across the sea,”
he said, “what a shock it would be to her if
Arthur was compelled to write home that he had changed
his mind,” and Camilla did not look nearly so
angry as she should have, either.
After supper there was another song
from Arthur Wemyss, the young Englishman. He
played his own accompaniment, his fingers, stiffened
though they were with hard work, ran lightly over the
keys. Every person sat still to listen.
Even Martha Perkins forgot to twirl her fingers and
leaned forward. It was a simple little English
ballad he sang:
Where’er I wander over land
or foam,
There is a place so dear the heart
calls home.
Perhaps it was because the ocean rolled
between him and his home that he sang with such a
wistful longing in his voice, that even his dullest
listener felt the heart-cry in it. It was a song
of one who reaches longing arms across the sea to
the old home and the old friends, whom he sees only
in his dreams.
In the silence that followed the song,
his fingers unconsciously began to play Mendelssohn’s
beautiful air, “We Would See Jesus, for the
Shadows Lengthen.” Closely linked with the
young man’s love of home was his religious devotion.
The quiet Sabbath morning with its silvery chimes
calling men to prayer; the soft footfalls in the aisle;
the white-robed choir, his father’s voice in
the church service, so full of divine significance;
the many-voiced responses and the swelling notes of
the “Te Deum”-he missed it so.
All the longing for the life he had left, all the
spiritual hunger and thirst that was in his heart sobbed
in his voice as he sang:
We would see Jesus,
For the shadows
lengthen
O’er this little landscape
of our life.
We would see Jesus,
Our weak faith to strengthen,
For the last weariness,
the final strife.
We would see Jesus, other lights
are paling,
Which for long
years we have rejoiced to see,
The blessings of our pilgrimage
are failing,
We would not mourn
them for we go to Thee.
He sang on with growing tenderness
through all that divinely tender hymn, and the longing
of it, the prayer of it was not his alone, but arose
from every heart that listened.
Perhaps they were in a responsive
mood, easily swayed by emotion. Perhaps that
is why there was in every heart that listened a desire
to be good and follow righteousness, a reaching up
of feeble hands to God. The Reverend Hugh Grantley
would have said that it was the Spirit of God that
stands at the door of every man’s heart and knocks.
The young man left the organ, and
the company broke up soon after. Before they
parted, Mr. Slater in whom the Englishman’s singing
had revived the spiritual hunger of his Methodist
heart, requested them to sing “God be with you
till we meet again.” Every one stood up
and joined hands. Martha, with her thoughts on
the butter and eggs; Tonald McKenzie and big John
with the vision of their lonely dwellings in the hills
looming over them; Jim and Camilla; Tom and Nellie,
hand in hand; little Billy, face to face with the
long struggle and its certain ending. Little
Billy’s voice rang sweet and clear above the
others-
God be with you till we meet again,
Keep love’s
banner floating o’er you,
Smite death’s
threatening wave before you;
God be with you till we meet again!