While Pearl was writing her experiences
in her little red book, Mr. and Mrs. Motherwell were
in the kitchen below reading a letter which Mr. Motherwell
had just brought from the post office. It read
as follows:
Brandon hospital, August 10th.
Dear Mr. and Mrs. Motherwell:
I know it will be at least some slight comfort for
you to know that the poppies you sent Polly reached
her in time to be the very greatest comfort to her.
Her joy at seeing them and holding them in her hands
would have been your reward if you could have seen
it, and although she had been delirious up to that
time for several days, the sight of the poppies seemed
to call her mind back. She died very peacefully
and happily at daybreak this morning. She was
a sweet and lovable girl and we had all grown very
fond of her, as I am sure you did, too.
May God abundantly bless you, dear
Mr. and Mrs. Motherwell, for your kind thoughtfulness
to this poor lonely girl. “Inasmuch as ye
have done it unto the least of these, ye have done
it unto Me.”
Yours cordially,
(Nurse) Agnes Hunt.
“By Jinks.”
Sam Motherwell took the letter from
his wife’s hand and excitedly read it over to
himself, going over each word with his blunt forefinger.
He turned it over and examined the seal, he looked
at the stamp and inside of the envelope, and failing
to find any clue to the mystery he ejaculated again:
“By Jinks! What the deuce
is this about poppies. Is that them things she
sowed out there?”
His wife nodded.
“Well, who do you suppose sent
them? Who would ever think of sending them?”
Mrs. Motherwell made no reply.
“It’s a blamed nice letter
anyway,” he said, looking it over again, “I
guess Polly didn’t give us a hard name to them
up there in the ‘ospital, or we wouldn’t
ha’ got a letter like this; and poor Polly’s
dead. Well, she was a kind of a good-natured,
willin’ thing too, and not too slow either.”
Mrs. Motherwell was still silent.
She had not thought that Polly would die, she had
always had great faith in the vitality of English people.
“You can’t kill them,” she had often
said; but now Polly was dead. She was sick, then,
when she went around the house so strangely silent
and flushed. Mrs. Motherwell’s memory went
back with cruel distinctness-she had said
things to Polly then that stung her now with a remorse
that was new and terrible, and Polly had looked at
her dazed and wondering, her big eyes flushed and
pleading. Mrs. Motherwell remembered now that
she had seen that look once before. She had helped
Sam to kill a lamb once, and it came back to her now,
how through it all, until the blow fell, the lamb
had stood wondering, pleading, yet unflinching, and
she had run sobbing away-and now Polly was
dead-and those big eyes she had so often
seen tearful, yet smiling, were closed and their tears
forever wiped away.
That night she dreamed of Polly, confused,
troubled dreams; now it was Polly’s mother who
was dead, then it was her own mother, dead thirty
years ago. Once she started violently and sat
up. Someone had been singing-the echo
of it was still in the room:
Over my grave keep the green willers
growing.
The yellow harvest moon flooded the
room with its soft light. She could see through
the window how it lay like a mantle on the silent fields.
It was one of those glorious, cloudless nights, with
a hint of frost in the air that come just as the grain
is ripening. From some place down the creek a
dog barked; once in a while a cow-bell tinkled:
a horse stamped in the stable and then all was still.
Numberless stars shone through the window. The
mystery of life and death and growing things was around
her. As for man his days are as grass; as a flower
of the field so he flourisheth-for it is
soon cut off and we fly away-fly away where?-where?-her
head throbbed with the question.
The eastern sky flushed red with morning;
a little ripple came over the grain. She watched
it listlessly. Polly had died at daybreak-didn’t
the letter say? Just like that, the light rising
redder and redder, the stars disappearing, she wondered
dully to herself how often she would see the light
coming, like this, and yet, and yet, some time would
be the last, and then what?
We shall be where suns are not,
A far serener
clime.
came to her memory she knew not from
whence. But she shuddered at it. Polly’s
eyes, dazed, pleading like the lamb’s, rose before
her; or was it that Other Face, tender, thorn-crowned,
that had been looking upon her in love all these long
years!
She spoke so kindly to Pearl when
she went into the kitchen that the little girl looked
up apprehensively.
“Are ye not well, ma’am?” she asked
quickly.
Mrs. Motherwell hesitated.
“I did not sleep very well,” she said,
at last.
“That’s the mortgage,” Pearl thought
to herself.
“And when I did sleep, I had
such dreadful dreams,” Mrs. Motherwell went
on, strangely communicative.
“That looks more like the cancer,”
Pearl thought as she stirred the porridge.
“We got bad news,” Mrs. Motherwell said.
“Polly is dead.”
Pearl stopped stirring the porridge.
“When did she die,” she asked eagerly.
“The morning before yesterday morning, about
daylight.”
Pearl made a rapid calculation.
“Oh good!” she cried, “goody-goody-goody!
They were in time.”
She saw her mistake in a moment, and
hastily put her hand over her mouth as if to prevent
the unruly member from further indiscretions.
She stirred the porridge vigorously, while her cheeks
burned.
“Yes, they were,” Mrs. Motherwell said
quietly.
Pearl set the porridge on the back
of the stove and ran out to where the poppies nodded
gaily. Never before had they seemed so beautiful.
Mrs. Motherwell watched her through the window bending
over them. Something about the poppies appealed
to her now. She had once wanted Tom to cut them
down, and she thought of it now.
She tapped on the window. Pearl looked up, startled.
“Bring in some,” she called.
When the work was done for the morning,
Mrs. Motherwell went up the narrow stair way to the
little room over the kitchen to gather together Polly’s
things.
She sat on Polly’s little straw
bed and looked at the dismal little room. Pearl
had done what she could to brighten it. The old
bags and baskets had been neatly piled in one corner,
and quilts had been spread over them to hide their
ugliness from view. The wind blew gently in the
window that the hail had broken. The floor had
been scrubbed clean and white-the window,
what was left of it-was shining.
She was reminded of Polly everywhere
she looked. The mat under her feet was one that
Polly had braided. A corduroy blouse hung at the
foot of the bed. She remembered now that Polly
had worn it the day she came.
In a little yellow tin box she found
Polly’s letters-the letters that
had given her such extravagant joy. She could
see her yet, how eagerly she would seize them and
rush up to this little room with them, transfigured.
Mrs. Motherwell would have to look
at them to find out Polly’s mother’s address.
She took out the first letter slowly, then hurriedly
put it back again in the envelope and looked guiltily
around the room. But it had to be done.
She took it out again resolutely, and read it with
some difficulty.
It was written in a straggling hand
that wandered uncertainly over the lines. It
was a pitiful letter telling of poverty bitter and
grinding, but redeemed from utter misery by a love
and faith that shone from every line:
My dearest polly i am glad you like your
plice and your misses is so kind as wot you si,
yur letters are my kumfit di an nit. bill
is a ard man and says hif the money don’t
cum i will ave to go to the workus. but i
no you will send it der polly so hi can old my
little plice hi got a start todi a hoffcer past
hi that it wos the workhus hoffcer. bill ses
he told im to cum hif hi cant pi by septmbr but
hi am trustin God der polly e asn’t
forgot us. hi ’m glad the poppies grew. ere’s
a disy hi am sendin yu hi can mike the butonoles
yet. hi do sum hevry di mrs purdy gave me fourpence
one di for sum i mide for her hi ad a cup of
tee that di. hi am appy thinkin of yu der
polly.
“And Polly is dead!” burst
from Mrs. Motherwell as something gathered in her
throat. She laid the letter down and looked straight
ahead of her.
The sloping walls of the little kitchen
loft, with its cobwebbed beams faded away, and she
was looking into a squalid little room where an old
woman, bent and feeble, sat working buttonholes with
trembling fingers. Her eyes were restless and
expectant; she listened eagerly to every sound.
A step is at the door, a hand is on the latch.
The old woman rises uncertainly, a great hope in her
eyes-it is the letter-the letter
at last. The door opens, and the old woman falls
cowering and moaning, and wringing her hands before
the man who enters. It is the officer!
Mrs. Motherwell buried her face in her hands.
“Oh God be merciful, be merciful,” she
sobbed.
Sam Motherwell, knowing nothing of
the storm that was passing through his wife’s
mind, was out in the machine house tightening up the
screws and bolts in the binders, getting ready for
the harvest. The barley was whitening already.
The nurse’s letter had disturbed
him. He tried to laugh at himself-the
idea of his boxing up those weeds to send to anybody.
Still the nurse had said how pleased Polly was.
By George, it is strange what will please people.
He remembered when he went down to Indiana buying
horses, how tired he got of the look of corn-fields,
and how the sight of the first decent sized wheat
field just went to his heart, when he was coming back.
Someway he could not laugh at anything that morning,
for Polly was dead. And Polly was a willing thing
for sure; he seemed to see her yet, how she ran after
the colt the day it broke out of the pasture, and
when the men were away she would hitch up a horse for
him as quick as anybody.
“I kind o’ wish now that
I had given her something-it would have
pleased her so-some little thing,”
he added hastily.
Mrs. Motherwell came across the yard bareheaded.
“Come into the house, Sam,”
she said gently. “I want to show you something.”
He looked up quickly, but saw something
in his wife’s face that prevented him from speaking.
He followed her into the house.
The letters were on the table, Mrs. Motherwell read
them to him, read them with tears that almost choked
her utterance.
“And Polly’s dead, Sam!”
she cried when she had finished the last one.
“Polly’s dead, and the poor old mother
will be looking, looking for that money, and it will
never come. Sam, can’t we save that poor
old woman from the poorhouse? Do you remember
what the girl said in the letter, ’Inasmuch
as ye have done it unto the least of these my little
ones, ye have done it unto Me?’ We didn’t
deserve the praise the girl gave us. We didn’t
send the flowers, we have never done anything for
anybody and we have plenty, plenty, and what is the
good of it, Sam? We’ll die some day and
leave it all behind us.”
Mrs. Motherwell hid her face in her
apron, trembling with excitement. Sam’s
face was immovable, but a mysterious Something, not
of earth, was struggling with him. Was it the
faith of that decrepit old woman in that bare little
room across the sea, mumbling to herself that God had
not forgotten? God knows. His ear is not
dulled; His arm is not shortened; His holy spirit
moves mightily.
Sam Motherwell stood up and struck
the table with his fist.
“Ettie,” he said, “I
am a hard man, a danged hard man, and as you say I’ve
never given away much, but I am not so low down yet
that I have to reach up to touch bottom, and the old
woman will not go to the poor house if I have money
enough to keep her out!”
Sam Motherwell was as good as his word.
He went to Winnipeg the next day,
but before he left he drew a check for one hundred
dollars, payable to Polly’s mother, which he
gave to the Church of England clergyman to send for
him. About two months afterwards he received
a letter from the clergyman of the parish in which
Polly’s mother lived, telling him that the money
had reached the old lady in time to save her from
the workhouse; a heart-broken letter of thanks from
Polly’s mother herself accompanied it, calling
on God to reward them for their kindness to her and
her dear dead girl.