With his own hands, and the help of
Grasshopper, who did little but hold the nails and
look on, Horace made a box for Pincher, while Abner
dug his grave under a tree in the grove.
It was evening when they all followed
Pincher to his last resting-place.
“He was a sugar-plum of a dog,”
said Prudy, “and I can’t help crying.”
“I don’t want to help it,” said
Grace; “we ought to cry.”
“What makes me feel the worst,”
said sober little Susy, “he won’t go to
heaven.”
“Not forever’n ever amen?”
gasped Prudy, in a low voice: “wouldn’t
he if he had a nice casket, and a plate on it neither?”
The sky and earth were very lovely
that evening, and it seemed as if everybody ought
to be heart-glad. I doubt if Horace had ever thought
before what a beautiful world he lived in, and how
glorious a thing it is to be alive! He could
run about and do what he pleased with himself; but
alas, poor Pincher!
The sun was setting, and the river
looked uncommonly full of little sparkles. The
soft sky, and the twinkling water, seemed to be smiling
at each other, while a great way off you could see
the dim blue mountains rising up like clouds.
Such a lovely world! Ah! poor Pincher.
It looked very much as if Horace were
really turning over a new leaf. He was still
quite trying sometimes, leaving the milk-room door
open when puss was watching for the cream-pot, or
slamming the kitchen door with a bang when everybody
needed fresh air. He still kept his chamber in
a state of confusion, “muss,”
Grace called it, pulling the drawers out
of the bureau, and scattering the contents over the
floor; dropping his clothes anywhere it happened,
and carrying quantities of gravel up stairs in his
shoes.
Aunt Louise still scolded about him;
but even she could not help seeing that on the whole
he was improving. He “cared” more
and “forgot” less. He could always
learn easily, and now he really tried to learn.
His lessons, instead of going through his head “threading
my grandmother’s needle,” went in and
staid there. The blue book got a few marks, it
is true, but not so many as at first.
You may be sure there was not a good
thing said or done by Horace which did not give pleasure
to his mother. She felt now as if she lived only
for her children; if God would bless her by making
them good, she had nothing more to desire. Grace
had always been a womanly, thoughtful little girl,
but at this time she was a greater comfort than ever;
and Horace had grown so tender and affectionate, that
it gratified her very much. He was not content
now with “canary kisses;” but threw his
arms around her neck very often, saying, with his
lips close to her cheek,
“Don’t feel bad, ma: I’m going
to take care of you.”
For his mother’s grief called forth his manliness.
She meant to be cheerful; but Horace
knew she did not look or seem like herself: he
thought he ought to try to make her happy.
Whenever he asked for money, as he
too often did, she told him that now his father was
gone, there was no one to earn anything, and it was
best to be rather prudent. He wanted a drum;
but she thought he must wait a while for that.
They were far from being poor, and
Mrs. Clifford had no idea of deceiving her little
son. Yet he was deceived, for he supposed
that his mother’s pretty little porte-monnaie
held all the bank-bills and all the silver she had
in the world.
“O, Grace!” said Horace,
coming down stairs with a very grave face, “I
wish I was grown a man: then I’d earn money
like sixty.”
Grace stopped her singing long enough
to ask what he meant to do, and then continued in
a high key,
“Where, O where are the Hebrew children?”
“O, I’m going as a soldier,”
replied Horace: “I thought everybody knew
that! The colonels make a heap of money!”
“But, Horace, you might get shot just
think!”
“Then I’d dodge when they
fired, for I don’t know what you and ma would
do if I was killed.”
“Well, please step out of the
way, Horace; don’t you see I’m sweeping
the piazza?”
“I can’t tell,”
pursued he, taking a seat on one of the stairs in the
hall: “I can’t tell certain sure;
but I may be a minister.”
This was such a funny idea, that Grace
made a dash with her broom, and sent the dirt flying
the wrong way.
“Why, Horace, you’ll never
be good enough for a minister!”
“What’ll you bet?”
replied he, looking a little mortified.
“You’re getting to be
a dear good little boy, Horace,” said Grace,
soothingly; “but I don’t think you’ll
ever be a minister.”
“Perhaps I’d as soon be
a shoemaker,” continued Horace, thoughtfully;
“they get a great deal for tappin’ boots.”
His sister made no reply.
“See here, now, Grace:
perhaps you’d rather I’d be a tin-pedler;
then I’d always keep a horse, and you could
ride.”
“Ride in a cart!” cried
Grace, laughing. “Can’t you think
of anything else? Have you forgotten papa?”
“O, now I know,” exclaimed
Horace, with shining eyes: “it’s a
lawyer I’ll be, just like father was. I’ll
have a ‘sleepy partner,’ the way Judge
Ingle has, and by and by I’ll be a judge.”
“I know that would please ma,
Horace,” replied Grace, looking at her little
brother with a good deal of pride.
Who knew but he might yet be
a judge? She liked to order him about, and have
him yield to her: still she had great faith in
Horace.
“But, Grace, after all that
I’ll go to war, and turn out a general; now
you see if I don’t.”
“That’ll be a great while yet,”
said Grace, sighing.
“So it will,” replied
Horace, sadly; “and ma needs the money now.
I wish I could earn something right off while I’m
a little boy.”
It was not two days before he thought
he had found out how to get rich; in what way you
shall see.