THE GOOD CHEER DEPARTMENT
The “good cheer” department,
while ostensibly for Ben’s benefit, wrought
profit and cheer for others besides. What Dick
got of it no one but himself knew, for that young
man, with all his apparent frankness, kept the veil
over his heart drawn close. To Barney, absorbed
in his new work, with its wealth of new ideas and
his new ambitions, the “good cheer” department
was chiefly valued as an important factor in Ben’s
progress. To Iola it brought what to her was the
breath of life, admiration, gratitude, affection.
But Margaret perhaps more than any, not even excepting
Ben himself, gathered from this department what might
be called its by-products. The daily monotony
of her household duties bore hard upon her young heart.
Ambitions long cherished, though cheerfully laid aside
at the sudden call of duty, could not be quite abandoned
without a sense of pain and loss. The break offered
by the work of the department in the monotony of her
life, the companionship of its members, and, as much
as anything, the irresistible appeal to her keen sense
of humour by the genial, loquacious, dirty but irresistibly
cheery Mrs. Fallows, far more than compensated for
the extra effort which her membership in the department
rendered necessary.
It was the evening following that
of the school closing that Dick with Margaret and
Iola were making one of their customary calls at the
Fallows cottage. It would be for Iola the last
visit for some weeks, as she was about to depart to
town for her holidays.
“I have come to say good-bye,”
she announced as she shook hands with Mrs. Fallows.
“Good-bye, dear ’eart,”
said that lady, throwing up her hands aghast; “art
goin’ to leave us fer good?”
“No, nothing so bad,”
said Dick; “only for a few weeks, Mrs. Fallows.
The section couldn’t do without her, and the
trustees have decided that they wouldn’t let
her out of sight till they had put a string on her.”
“Goin’ to come back again,
be yeh? I did ’ear as ‘ow yeh was
goin’ to leave. My little Joe was that
broken-’earted, an’ ’e declared to
me as ’ow ’e wouldn’t go to school
no more.”
“I don’t wonder,”
said Dick. “Why, if the trustees hadn’t
engaged her, as ‘Maine Jabe’ said, ’there’d
be the dangdest kind of riot in the section.’”
“Don’t listen to him,
Mrs. Fallows. I’m going in to sing to Ben,
if I may.”
“An’ that yeh may, bless
yer ’eart!” said Mrs. Fallows, picking
up a twin from the doorway to allow Iola and Dick
to pass into the inner room. “Ther’
now,” she continued to Margaret, who was moving
about putting things to rights, “don’t
yeh go tirin’ of yerself. I know things
is in a muss. Some’ow by Saturday night
things piles up terr’ble, an’ I’m
that tired I don’t seem to ’ave no
’eart to straighten ’em up. Jest
look at that ’ouse! I sez to John, sez I,
’I cawn’t do no ‘ousekeepin’
with all ’em children ‘bout my feet.
An’, bless their ’earts! it’s all
I kin do to put the bread in their mouths an keep the
rags on their backs.’ But John sez to me,
sez ’e, ’Don’t yeh worry, lass, ’bout
the rags. Keep ’em full,’ sez ’e,
’a full belly never ‘eeds a bare back,’
sez ’e. That’s ’is way.
‘E’s halways a-comin’ over somethin’
cleverlike, is John. Lard save us! will yeh listen
to that, now!” she continued in an awestruck
undertone, as Iola’s voice came in full rich
melody from the next room. “An’ Ben
is fair raptured with ’er. Poor Benny! it’s
a sore calamity ’as overtaken ‘im, a-breakin’
of ‘is leg an’ a-mutilatin’ of ’isself.
It does seem as if the Lard ’ad give me som’at
more’n my share. Listen to that ther’.
Bless ’er dear ’eart; Benny fergits ’is
hamputation an’ ’is splits.”
“His splints,” cried Margaret; “are
they all right now?”
“Yes. Since the young doctor that’s
w’at Benny calls ’im change
’em. Oh, that’s a clever young man!
Benney, ’e sez, ’Give me the young doctor,’
sez ’e. Yeh see,” continued Mrs. Fallows
confidentially, and again lowering her voice impressively,
“yeh see, ’is leg ’urt most orful
at first, an’ Benny cried to me, ’It’s
in me toes, mother, it’s in me toes.’
‘Why, Benny,’ sez I to ’im, ‘yeh
hain’t got no toes, Benny.’ ’That’s
w’ere it ‘urts,’ sez ’e, ‘toes
or no toes.’ An’ father ’e wakes
right up an’ ‘erd w’at Benny was
cryin’, an’ sez ’e, ’Benny’s
right enough. ’Is toes’ll ‘urt
till they’re rotted away in the ground.’
An’ ’e tells as ’ow ’is sister’s
holdest boy got ’is leg hamputated, poor soul!
an’ ’ow ’is toes ‘urted till
they was took an’ buried an’ rotted away.
Some doctors don’t bury ’em, an’
they do say,” and here Mrs. Fallows’ voice
dropped quite to a whisper, “as ’ow that
keeps ’em sore all the longer. Well, jest
as father was speakin’ in comes the doctor ’isself,
an’ father ’e told ’im as ‘ow
Benny was feelin’ the pain in ’is toes.
‘In yer toes, Benny?’ sez the doctor surprised-like.
’Tain’t yer toes, Ben.’ ‘Well,
I guess it’s me as is doin’ the feelin’,’
sez Ben quite sharp, ‘an’ it’s in
me toes the feelin’ is.’ Then father
’e spoke up. ’E’s a terr’ble
man fer hargument, is father. ‘Doctor,’
sez ’e, ’is them toes buried, if I might
be so bold?’ ‘Cawn’t say,’
sez the doctor quite hindifferent, though ’e
must ‘a’ knowed. ‘Well, my opinion
is,’ sez father, ‘’e’ll feel
them toes till they’re took an’ buried
an’ rotted away in the ground.’ An’
then ’e tells ’bout ’is sister’s
boy. ‘Nonsense,’ sez the doctor,
’tain’t ’is toes at all. ’Is
toes ’as nothin’ to do with it.’
‘W’at then?’ asks father quite polite.
’It’s the feelin’ of ’is toes
‘e’s feelin’.’ ’’Ow
can ’e ‘ave any feelin’ of ’is
toes if ‘e hain’t got no toes?’ ‘Well,’
sez the doctor, ’’is feelin’s hain’t
in ‘is toes at all.’ ‘Well,
that’s w’ere mine is,’ sez father.
’W’en I ’urts my toes it’s
in my toes I feel ’em. W’en I ’urts
my ’and, it’s my ‘and.’
‘My dear sir,’ sez the doctor calm-like,
’it hain’t in yer ’and, nor yet
in yer toes, but in yer brain, in yer mind, yeh feel
the pain.’ ‘P’raps,’ sez
Ben quite short again. My! ’e was short!
’But the feelin’ in my mind is that my
toes is ‘urtin’ most orful, an’ I’d
like to ’ave ’em buried if it’s
goin’ to ‘elp any.’ ’Oh,
come, Benny, that’s all nonsense, yeh know,’
sez the doctor, puttin’ ’im off. But
father is terr’ble persistent, an’ ‘e
keeps on an’ sez, ’Don’t ’is
mind know ’e hain’t got no toes, doctor?
’Ow can ’is mind feel ’is toes ’urt
w’en ’is mind knows ’e hain’t
got no toes to ‘urt?’ ’It hain’t
’is toes, I tell yeh,’ sez the doctor
quite short, ‘jest the feelin’ of ’is
toes in ‘is mind.’ ‘The feelin’
of ’is toes in ‘is mind?’ sez father.
’But ’e hain’t got no toes to give
‘im the feelin’ of ’is toes in ’is
mind or henywheres else.’ ‘Dummed
old fool!’ sez the doctor, quite losin’
‘is temper, fer father is terr’ble
provokin’. ‘It’s the feelin’
’is toes used to give ‘im, an’ that
same feelin’ of toes keeps up after ’is
toes is gone.’ ‘Well,’ sez
father, an’ me tryin’ to ketch ’is
eye to make ’im stop, ‘I don’t git
no feelin’ of toes till me toes is ’urt.
If I don’t ’urt ’em, I don’t
git no feelin’ of toes. ‘Ow are yeh
goin’ to start that ther’ toe feelin’
‘thout no toes to start it?’ ’Yeh
don’t need no toes to start it,’ sez the
doctor, ‘it’s the old feelin’ of
toes a-keepin’ up.’ ‘Ther’
hain’t no ’ ’Look ‘ere,’
sez ’e, ’I tell yeh it hain’t toes,
it’s the nerves of the toes reachin’ up
to the brain. Don’t yeh see? W’en
the toes are ’urt the nerves sends word up to
the brain jest like the telegraph.’ Then
father ’e ponders aw’ile. ’W’ere’s
them nerves, doctor?’ sez ’e. ‘In
the toes.’ ’In the toes? Then
w’en them toes is gone them nerves is gone,
hain’t they?’ ‘Yes.’ ’But
the nerve feelin’ is ther’ still.’
This puzzles father some. ‘Then,’
sez ’e, ’the feelin’s in the nerves,
an’ if ther’s no nerves, no feelin’s.’
’That’s so,’ sez the doctor.
’W’en them toes is gone, doctor, the nerves
is gone. ‘Ow could ther’ be any feelin’s?’
’Look ‘ere,’ sez the doctor, an’
I was feared ‘e was gettin’ real mad, ‘jest
quit it right now.’ ’Well, well.
All right, doctor,’ sez father quite polite,
’I’ve got a terr’ble inquirin’
mind, an’ I jest wanted to know.’
Then the doctor ’e did seem a little ashamed
of ‘isself, an’ ‘e set right down
an’ sez ’e, ’Look a-’ere,
Mr. Fallows, I’ll hexplain it to yeh. It’s
like the telegraph wire. ‘Ere’s a
station we’ll call Bradford, an’ ’ere’s
a station we’ll call London. Hevery station
’as ’is own call. Bradford station,
we’ll say, ‘as a call X Y Z, an’
w’enever X Y Z sounds yeh know that’s
Bradford a-speakin’. So if yeh ’eerd
X Y Z in London yeh’d know somethin’ was
wrong with Bradford.’ ‘But if ther’
hain’t any,’ breaks in father, who was
gettin’ impatient. ‘Shut up! will
yeh?’ sez the doctor, ’till I git through.
Well; all ’long that Bradford line yeh can give
that Bradford call. D’yeh see?’ ’Can
yeh make that Bradford call houtside of Bradford?’
sez father. ‘Well,’ sez the doctor,
an’ ’e seemed quite puzzled, ’e
did, ’I suppose yeh can. Any kind of a bang’ll
do along the line. Now ther’s Benny’s
toes, w’en they git ’urt they sounds up
to the brain, “Toes! Toes! Toes!”
an’ all ’long that toe line yeh can git
the same call to the brain.’ This keeps
father quiet a long time, then sez ’e, ‘I
say, doctor, is ther’ many of them nerves?’
’’Undreds of ’em.’ ‘Hevery
part of the body got nerves?’ ‘Yes.’
’Hankles? calves? shins?’ ‘Yes,
all got nerves.’ ‘Well, doctor,’
sez father, quite triumphant, ‘w’en yeh
cut through hankles, shins, an’ heverythin’,
all them nerves begin to shout, don’t they?’
‘Yes,’ sez the doctor, not seein’
w’ere father was at. ‘Then,’
sez ’e quick-like, ’w’at makes ’em
all shout “Toes?” W’y don’t
the brain ’ear “Hankle” or “‘Eel"?’
Then the old doctor ‘e did git mad an’
’e did swear at father most orful. But
father, ’e knows ’ow to conduct ‘isself,
an’ sez ’e quite dignified, ’I ’ope
as ’ow I know ‘ow to treat a gentleman.’
This pulls the old doctor up an’ ’e sez,
‘I beg yer pardon, Mr. Fallows,’ sez ’e.
’Don’t mention it,’ sez father.
Then the doctor went on quite nice, ’Yeh see,
Mr. Fallows, the truth is, we don’t hunderstand
these things very well,’ sez ’e.
‘Well, doctor,’ sez father, ’it would
‘a’ saved a lot of trouble if yeh’d
said so at the first.’ An’ ’e
said no more, but I seed ’im thinkin’
‘ard, an’ w’en the doctor was goin’
’e speaks up sez, sez ’e, ‘I think
I know w’y it’s the shoutin’ of toes
keeps up an’ not ’eels or hankles,’
sez ’e. ‘W’en my thirteen gits
a-shoutin’ in this little ’ouse, yeh cawn’t
’ear the old woman or me. Ther’s thirteen
of ’em. An’ I suppose w’en
them toes gits a-shoutin’ yeh cawn’t ‘ear
nothin’ of hankle, or ‘eel, but it’s
all toes. Ther’s five to one. But,
doctor,’ ’e sez, as ‘e druv’
away, ‘if it’s not too bold, would yeh
mind buryin’ them toes?’”
“But,” said Mrs. Fallows,
pulling herself up, “I do talk. But poor
Benny, ‘e kep’ a-cryin’ with ‘is
toes till that ther’ blessed young lady come,
the young doctor fetched ‘er, an’ the minit
she begin to sing, poor Benny ’e fergits ‘is
toes an’ ’e soon falls off to sleep, the
first ’e ‘ad fer two days an’
two nights. Poor dear! An ’e hain’t
ever done talkin’ ‘bout that very young
lady an’ the young doctor. An’ a lovely
pair they’d make, poor souls.”
Margaret was conscious of a sudden
pang at this grouping of names by Mrs. Fallows, but
before she had time to analyse her feelings Iola reappeared.
“Well, good-bye,” said
Mrs. Fallows. “Yeh’ll come agin w’en
yeh git back. Good-bye, Miss,” she said
to Margaret. “It does seem to give me a
fresh start w’en yeh put things to rights.”
It was not till that night when she
was in her own room preparing for bed that Margaret
had time to analyse that sudden pang.
“It can’t be that I am
jealous,” she said. “Of course, she
is far more attractive than I am and why shouldn’t
everyone like her better?” She shook her fist
at her reflection in the glass. “Do you
know, you are as mean as you can be,” she said
viciously.
At that moment there came from Iola’s
room the sound of soft singing.
“It’s no wonder,”
said Margaret as she listened to the exquisite sound,
“it’s no wonder that she could catch poor
Ben and his mother with a voice like that. Yes,
and and the rest of them, too.”
In a few minutes there was a tap at
her door and Iola came in, her hair hanging like a
dusky curtain about her face. Margaret uttered
an involuntary exclamation of admiration.
“My! you are lovely!”
she cried. “No wonder everyone loves you.”
With a sudden rush of penitent feeling for her “mean
thoughts” she put her arms about Iola and kissed
her warmly.
“Lovely! Nonsense!”
she exclaimed, surprised at this display of affection
so unusual for Margaret, “I am not half so lovely
as you. When I see you at home here with all
the things to worry you and the children to care for,
I think you are just splendid and I feel myself cheap
and worthless.”
Margaret was conscious of a grateful glow in her heart.
“Indeed, my work doesn’t
amount to much, washing and dusting and mending.
Anybody could do it. No one would ever notice
me. Wherever you go the people just fall down
and worship you.” As she spoke she let
down her hair preparatory to brushing it. It fell
like a cloud, a golden-yellow cloud, about her face
and shoulders. Iola looked critically at her.
“You are beautiful,” she
said slowly. “Your hair is lovely, and your
big blue eyes, and your face has something, what is
it? I can’t tell you. But I believe
people would come to you in difficulty. Yes.
That’s it,” she continued, with her eyes
on Margaret’s face, “I can please them
in a way. I can sing. Yes, I can sing.
Some day I shall make people listen. But suppose
I couldn’t sing, suppose I lost my voice, people
would forget me. They wouldn’t forget you.”
“What nonsense!” said
Margaret brusquely. “It is not your voice
alone; it is your beauty and something I cannot describe,
something in your manner that is so fetching.
At any rate, all the young fellows are daft about
you.”
“But the women don’t care
for me,” said Iola, with the same slow, thoughtful
voice. “If I wanted very much I believe
I could make them. But they don’t.
There’s Mrs. Boyle, she doesn’t like me.”
“Now you’re talking nonsense,”
said Margaret impatiently. “You ought to
have heard old Mrs. Fallows this evening.”
“Now,” continued Iola,
ignoring her remark, “the women all like you,
and the men, too, in a way.”
“Don’t talk nonsense,”
said Margaret impatiently. “When you’re
around the boys don’t look at me.”
“Yes, they do,” said Iola,
as if pondering the question. “Ben does.”
Margaret laughed scornfully. “Ben likes
my jelly.”
“And Dick does,” continued
Iola, “and Barney.” Here she shot
a keen glance at Margaret’s face. Margaret
caught the glance, and, though enraged at herself,
she could not prevent a warm flush spreading over
her fair cheek and down her bare neck.
“Pshaw!” she cried angrily,
“those boys! Of course, they like me.
I’ve known them ever since I was a baby.
Why, I used to go swimming with them in the pond.
They think of me just like well just
like a boy, you know.”
“Do you think so? They
are nice boys, I think, that is, if they had a chance
to be anything.”
“Be anything!” cried Margaret
hotly. “Why, Dick’s going to be a
minister and ”
“Yes. Dick will do something,
though he’ll make a funny clergyman. But
Barney, what will he be? Just a miller?”
“Miller or whatever he is, he’ll
be a man, and that’s good enough,” replied
Margaret indignantly.
“Oh, yes, I suppose so.
But it’s a pity. You know in this pokey
little place no one will ever hear of him. I
mean he’ll never make any stir.”
To Iola there was no crime so deadly as the “unheard
of.” “And yet,” she went on,
“if he had a chance ”
But Margaret could bear this no longer.
“What are you talking about? There are
plenty of good men who are never heard of.”
“Oh,” cried Iola quickly,
“I didn’t mean of course your
father. Well, your father is a gentle man.
But Barney ”
“Oh, go to bed! Come, get
out of my room. Go to bed! I must get to
sleep. Seven o’clock comes mighty quick.
Good-night.”
“Don’t be cross, Margaret.
I didn’t mean to say anything offensive.
And I want you to love me. I think I want everyone
to love me. I can’t bear to have people
not love me. But more than anyone else I want
you.” As she spoke she turned impulsively
toward Margaret and put her arms around her neck.
Margaret relented.
“Of course I love you,”
she said. “There,” kissing her, “good-night.
Go to sleep or you’ll lose your beauty.”
But Iola clung to her. “Good-night,
dear Margaret,” she said, her lips trembling
pathetically. “You are the only girl friend
I ever had. I couldn’t bear you to forget
me or to give up loving me.”
“I never forget my friends,”
cried Margaret gravely. “And I never cease
to love them.”
“Oh, Margaret!” said Iola,
trembling and clinging fast to her, “don’t
turn from me. No matter what comes, don’t
stop loving me.”
“You little goose,” cried
Margaret, caressing her as if she were a child, “of
course I will always love you. Good-night now.”
She kissed Iola tenderly.
“Good-night,” said Iola.
“You know this is my last night with you for
a long time.”
“Not the very last,” said
Margaret. “We go to the Mill to-morrow night,
you remember, and you come back here with me.
Barney is going to have Ben there for nursing and
feeding.”
Next day Barney had Ben down to the
Mill, and that was the beginning of a new life to
Ben in more ways than one. The old mill became
a place of interest and delight to him. Perhaps
his happiest hours were spent in what was known as
Barney’s workroom, where were various labour-saving
machines for churning, washing, and apple-paring, which,
by Barney’s invention, were run by the mill
power. He offered to connect the sewing machine
with the same power, but his mother would have none
of it.
Before many more weeks had gone Ben
was hopping about by the aid of a crutch, eager to
make himself useful, and soon he was not only “paying
his board,” as Barney declared, but “earning
good wages as well.”
The early afternoon found Margaret
and Iola on their way to the Mill. It was with
great difficulty that Margaret had been persuaded to
leave her home for so long a time. The stern
conscience law under which she regulated her life
made her suspect those things which gave her peculiar
pleasure, and among these was a visit to the Mill and
the Mill people. It was in vain that Dick set
before her, with the completeness amounting to demonstration,
the reasons why she should make that visit. “Ben
needs you,” he argued. “And Iola
will not come unless with you. Barney and I,
weary with our day’s work, absolutely require
the cheer and refreshment of your presence. Mother
wants you. I want you. We all want you.
You must come.” It was Mrs. Boyle’s
quiet invitation and her anxious entreaty and command
that she should throw off the burden at times, that
finally weighed with her.
The hours of that afternoon, spent
partly in rowing about in the old flat-bottomed boat
seeking water lilies in the pond, and partly in the
shade of the big willows overlooking the dam, were
full of restful delight to Margaret. It was one
of those rare summer evenings that fall in harvest
weather when, after the burning heat of the day, the
cool air is beginning to blow across the fields with
long shadows. When their work was done the boys
hurried to join the little group under the big willows.
They were all there. Ben was set there in the
big armchair, Mrs. Boyle with her knitting, for there
were no idle hours for her, Margaret with a book which
she pretended to read, old Charley smoking in silent
content, Iola lazily strumming her guitar and occasionally
singing in her low, rich voice some of her old Mammy’s
songs or plantation hymns. Of these latter, however,
Mrs. Boyle was none too sure. To her they bordered
dangerously on sacrilege; nor did she ever quite fully
abandon herself to delight in the guitar. It continued
to be a “foreign” and “feckless”
sort of instrument. But in spite of her there
were times when the old lady paused in her knitting
and sat with sombre eyes looking far across the pond
and into the shady isles of the woods on the other
side while Iola sang some of her quaint Southern “baby
songs.”
Under Dick’s tuition the girl
learned some of the Highland laments and love songs
of the North, to which his mother had hushed him to
sleep through his baby years. To Barney these
songs took place with the Psalms of David, if, indeed,
they were not more sacred, and it was with a shock
at first that he heard the Southern girl with her “foreign
instrument” try over these songs that none but
his mother had ever sung to him. Listening to
Iola’s soft, thrilling voice carrying these old
Highland airs, he was conscious of a strange incongruity.
They undoubtedly took on a new beauty, but they lost
something as well.
“No one sings them like your
mother, Barney,” said Margaret after Dick had
been drilling Iola on some of their finer shadings
and cadences, “and they are quite different
with the guitar, too. They are not the same a
bit. They make me see different things and feel
different things when your mother sings.”
“Different how?” said Dick.
“I can’t tell, but somehow
they give me a different taste in my mouth, just the
difference between eating your mother’s scones
with rich creamy milk and eating fruit cake and honey
with tea to drink.”
“I know,” said Barney
gravely. “They lose the Scotch with the
guitar. They are sweet and beautiful, wonderful,
but they are a different kind altogether. To
me it’s the difference between a wood violet
and a garden rose.”
“Listen to the poetry of him.
Come, mother,” cried Dick, “sing us one
now.”
“Me sing!” cried the mother
aghast. “After yon!” nodding toward
Iola. “You would not be shaming your mother,
Richard.”
“Shaming you, indeed!” cried Margaret,
indignantly.
“Do, Mrs. Boyle,” entreated
Iola. “I have never heard you sing.
Indeed, I did not know you could sing.”
Something in her voice grated upon
Barney’s ear, but he spoke no word.
“Sing!” cried Dick.
“You ought to hear her. Now, mother, for
the honor of the heather! Give us ‘Can
Ye Sew Cushions?’ That’s a ‘baby
song,’ too.”
“No,” said Barney quietly,
“Sing ‘The Mac’Intosh,’ mother.”
And he began to play that exquisite Highland lament.
It was not her son’s entreaty
so much as something in the soft drawl of the Southern
girl that made Mrs. Boyle yield. Something in
that tone touched the pride in the old lady’s
Highland blood. When Barney reached the end of
the refrain his mother took up the verse with the violin
accompanying.
Her voice lacked fulness and power.
It was worn and thin, but she had the exquisite lilting
note of the Highland maids at their milking or of
the fisher folk at the mending of their nets.
Clear and sweet and with a penetrating pathos indescribable,
the voice rose and fell in all the quaint turns and
quavers and cadences that a tune takes on with age.
As she sang her song in the soft Gaelic tongue, with
hands lying idly in her lap, with eyes glowing in
their gloomy depths, the spell of mountain and glen
and loch fell upon her sons and upon the girl seated
at her feet, while Iola’s great lustrous eyes,
fastened upon the stranger’s face, softened
to tears.
“Oh, that is too lovely!”
cried Iola, when the song was done, clapping her hands.
“No, not lovely. That is not the word.
Sad, sad.” She hid her face in her hands
one impulsive moment, then said softly, “I could
never do that. Never! Never! What is
it you put into the song? What is it?”
she cried, turning to Barney.
“It’s the moan of the sea,” said
Barney gravely.
“It gives a feller a kind of
holler pain inside,” said Ben Fallows.
“There hain’t no words fer it.”
“Sing again,” entreated
Iola, all the lazy indifference gone from her voice.
“Sing just one more.”
“This one, mother,” said
Barney, playing the tune, “your mother used to
sing, you know, ’Fhir a Bhata’.”
“How often haunting
the highest hilltop,
I scan the ocean
thy sail to see;
Wilt come to-night,
Love? wilt come to-morrow?
Wilt ever come,
love, to comfort me?
Fhir
a bhata, na horo eile,
Fhir
a bhata, na horo eile,
Fhir
a bhata, na horo eile,
O
fare ye well, love, where’er ye be.”
For some moments they sat quiet with
the spell of the dreamy, sad music upon them.
“One more, mother,” entreated Dick.
“No, laddie. The night
is falling. There’s work to-morrow for you.
Aye, and for Margaret here.”
Iola rose and came timidly to Mrs.
Boyle. “Thank you,” she said, lifting
up her great, dark eyes to the old woman’s face,
“you have given me great pleasure to-night.”
“Indeed, and you’re welcome,
lassie,” said Mrs. Boyle, smitten with a sudden
pity for the motherless girl. “And we will
be glad to see ye when ye come back again.”
For this, too, it was that Iola as
well as Margaret could never forget that afternoon.
“And now, ladies and gentlemen,”
cried Dick, striking an attitude, “though the
‘good cheer’ department may seem to have
accomplished the purpose for which it was organised,
it cannot be said to have outlived its usefulness,
in that it appears to have created for itself a sphere
of operations from which it cannot be withdrawn without
injury to all its members. I, therefore, respectfully
suggest that the department be organised upon a permanent
basis with headquarters at the Mill and my humble
self at its head. All who agree will say ’Aye’.”
“Aye,” said Barney with prompt heartiness.
“Me, too,” cried Iola, holding up both
hands.
“Mother, what do you say?”
“Aye, laddie. There’s much need for
good cheer in the world.”
“And you?” turning to
Margaret, who stood with Mrs. Boyle’s arm thrown
about her, “how do you vote?”
“This member needs it too much” with
a somewhat uncertain smile “to say
anything but ’Aye’.”
“Then,” said Dick solemnly,
“the ‘good cheer’ department is hereby
and henceforth organised as a permanent institution
in the community here represented, and we earnestly
hope that its members will continue in their faithful
adherence thereto, believing, as we do, that loyalty
to this institution will be its highest reward.”
But none of them knew what potencies
of joy and of pain lay wrapped up for them all in
that same department of “good cheer.”