The Clifford children were very anxious
to see Susy and Prudy, and it seemed a long while
to wait; but the Portland schools had a vacation at
last, and then it was time to expect the little cousins.
The whole family were impatient to
see them and their excellent mother. Grandma
lost her spectacles very often that afternoon, and
every time she went to the window to look out, the
ball of her knitting-work followed her, as Grace said,
“like a little kitten.”
There was great joy when the stage
really drove up to the door. The cousins were
rather shy of each other at first, and Prudy hid her
face, all glowing with smiles and blushes, in her
plump little hands. But the stiffness wore away,
and they were all as well acquainted as ever they
had been, in about ten minutes.
“Ain’t that a bumpin’
stage, though?” cried Horace; “just like
a baby-jumper.”
“We came in it, you know, Susy,”
said Grace; “didn’t it shake like a corn-popper?”
“I want to go and see the piggy and ducks,”
said Prudy.
“Well,” whispered Susy, “wait till
after supper.”
The Cliffords were delighted with
their little cousins. When they had last seen
Prudy, which was the summer before, they had loved
her dearly. Now she was past five, and “a
good deal cunninger than ever;” or so Horace
thought. He liked her pretty face, her gentle
ways, and said very often, if he had such a little
sister he’d “go a lyin’.”
To be sure Susy was just his age,
and could run almost as fast as he could; still Horace
did not fancy her half as much as Prudy, who could
not run much without falling down, and who was always
sure to cry if she got hurt.
Grace and Susy were glad that Horace
liked Prudy so well, for when they were cutting out
dolls’ dresses, or playing with company, it was
pleasant to have him take her out of the way.
Prudy’s mouth was not much larger
than a button-hole, but she opened it as wide as she
could when she saw Horace whittle out such wonderful
toys.
He tried to be as much as possible
like a man; so he worked with his jacket off, whistling
all the while; and when he pounded, he drew in his
breath with a whizzing noise, such as he had heard
carpenters make.
All this was very droll to little
Prudy, who had no brothers, and supposed her “captain
cousin” must be a very remarkable boy, especially
as he told her that, if he hadn’t left his tool-box
out west, he could have done “a heap better.”
It was quite funny to see her standing over him with
such a happy, wondering little face, sometimes singing
snatches of little songs, which were sure to be wrong
somewhere, such as,
“Little kinds of deedness,
Little
words of love,
Make this earthen needn’t,
Like
the heaven above.”
She thought, as Horace did, that her
sled would look very well “crossed off with
green;” but Susy would not consent. So Horace
made a doll’s sled out of shingles, with turned-up
runners, and a tongue of string. This toy pleased
Prudy, and no one had a right to say it should not
be painted green.
But as Captain Horace was just preparing
to add this finishing touch, a lady arrived with little
twin-boys, four years old. Aunt Madge came into
the shed to call Horace and Prudy. “O, auntie,”
said Horace, “I don’t believe I care to
play with those little persons!”
His aunt smiled at hearing children
called “little persons,” but told Horace
it would not be polite to neglect his young visitors:
it would be positively rude. Horace did not wish
to be considered an ill-mannered boy, and at last
consented to have his hands and garments cleansed with
turpentine to erase the paint, and to go into the nursery
to see the “little persons.”
It seemed to him and Prudy that the
visit lasted a great while, and that it was exceedingly
hard work to be polite.
When it was well over, Prudy said,
“The next lady that comes here, I hope she won’t
bring any little double boys! What do I
love little boys for, ’thout they’re my
cousins?”
After the sled was carefully dried,
Horace printed on it the words “Lady Jane,”
in large yellow letters. His friend Gilbert found
the paint for this, and it was thought by both the
boys that the sled could not have been finer if “Lady
Jane” had been spread on with gold-leaf by a
sign-painter.
“Now, Prudy,” said Horace,
“it isn’t, everybody can make such a sled
as that! It’s right strong, too; as strong
as why, it’s strong enough to ’bear
up an egg’!”
If Horace had done only such innocent
things as to “drill” the little boys,
make sleds for Prudy, and keep store with Gilbert,
his mother might have felt happy.
But Horace was growing careless.
His father’s parting words, “Always obey
your mother, my son, and remember that God sees all
you do,” did not often ring in his ears now.
Mr. Clifford, though a kind parent, had always been
strict in discipline, and his little son had stood
in awe of him. Now that he had gone away, there
seemed to be some danger that Horace might fall into
bad ways. His mother had many serious fears about
him, for, with her feeble health, and the care of little
Katie, she could not be as watchful of him as she
wished to be. She remembered how Mr. Clifford
had often said, “He will either make something
or nothing,” and she had answered, “Yes,
there’ll never be any half-way place for Horace.”
She sighed now as she repeated her own words.
In his voyages of discovery Horace
had found some gunpowder. “Mine!”
said he to himself; “didn’t aunt Madge
say we could have everything we found up-attic?”
He knew that he was doing wrong when
he tucked the powder slyly into his pocket. He
knew he did wrong when he showed it to Gilbert, saying,
“Got any matches, Grasshopper?”
They dug holes in the ground for the
powder, and over the powder crossed some dry sticks.
When they touched it off they ran away as fast as
possible; but it was a wonder they were not both blown
up. It was pleasant, no doubt, to hear the popping
of the powder; but they dared not laugh too loud,
lest some one in the house should hear them, and come
out to ask what they could be playing that was so remarkably
funny.
Mrs. Clifford little thought what
a naughty thing Horace had been doing, when she called
him in one day, and said, with a smiling face, for
she loved to make him happy, “See,
my son, what I have bought for you! It is a present
from your father, for in his last letter he asked me
to get it.”
Horace fairly shouted with delight
when he saw the beautiful Zouave suit, gray, bordered
with red, and a cap to match. If he had any twinges
of conscience about receiving this present, nobody
knew it.
Here is the letter of thanks which
he wrote to his father:
“DEAR PAPA.
“I am sorry to
say I have not seen you since you went to the
war. Grandpa has
two pigs. I want a drum so much!
“We have lots
of squirrels: they chip. We have orioles:
they
say, ‘Here, here,
here I be!’
“I want the drum
because I am a captain! We are going to
train with paper caps.
“I get up the
cows and have a good time.
“Good-by.
From your son,
“HORACE P. CLIFFORD.
“P.S. Ma
bought me the soldier-clothes. I thank you.”
About this time Mrs. Clifford was
trying to put together a barrel of nice things to
send to her husband. Grandma and aunt Madge baked
a great many loaves of cake and hundreds of cookies,
and put in cans of fruit and boxes of jelly wherever
there was room. Aunt Louise made a nice little
dressing-case of bronze kid, lined with silk, and Grace
made a pretty pen-wiper and pin-ball. Horace
whittled out a handsome steamboat, with green
pipes, and the figure-head of an old man’s face
carved in wood. But Horace thought the face looked
like Prudy’s, and named the steamboat “The
Prudy.” He also broke open his savings-bank,
and begged his mother to lay out all the money he
had in presents for the sick soldiers.
“Horace has a kind and loving
heart,” said Margaret to Louise. “To
be sure he won’t keep still long enough to let
anybody kiss him, but he really loves his parents
dearly.”
“Well, he’s a terrible try-patience,”
said Louise.
“Wait a while! He is wilful
and naughty, but he never tells wrong stories.
I think there’s hope of a boy who scorns a
lie! See if he doesn’t come out right,
Louise. Why, I expect to be proud of our Horace
one of these days!”