By
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
Boston And New York Houghton Mifflin Company
Copyright, 1873, 1885, and 1901
Weep with me, all you
that read
This
little story;
And know, for whom a
tear you shed,
Death’s
self is sorry.
Ben
Jonson.
This story is no invention of mine.
I could not invent anything half so lovely and pathetic
as seems to me the incident which has come ready-made
to my hand.
Some of you, doubtless, have heard
of James Speaight, the infant violinist, or Young
Americus, as he was called. He was born in London,
I believe, and was only four years old when his father
brought him to this country, less than three years
ago. Since that time he has appeared in concerts
and various entertainments in many of our principal
cities, attracting unusual attention by his musical
skill. I confess, however, that I had not heard
of him until last month, though it seems he had previously
given two or three public performances in the city
where I live. I had not heard of him, I say,
until last month; but since then I do not think a
day has passed when this child’s face has not
risen up in my memory the little half-sad
face, as I saw it once, with its large, serious eyes
and infantile mouth.
I have, I trust, great tenderness
for all children; but I know that I have a special
place in my heart for those poor little creatures who
figure in circuses and shows, or elsewhere, as “infant
prodigies.” Heaven help such little folk!
It was an unkind fate that did not make them commonplace,
stupid, happy girls and boys like our own Fannys and
Charleys and Harrys. Poor little waifs, that never
know any babyhood or childhood sad human
midges, that flutter for a moment in the glare of
the gaslights, and are gone. Pitiful little children,
whose tender limbs and minds are so torn and strained
by thoughtless task-masters, that it seems scarcely
a regrettable thing when the circus caravan halts awhile
on its route to make a small grave by the wayside.
I never witness a performance of child-acrobats,
or the exhibition of any forced talent, physical or
mental, on the part of children, without protesting,
at least in my own mind, against the blindness and
cruelty of their parents or guardians, or whoever
has care of them.
I saw at the theatre, the other night,
two tiny girls mere babies they were doing
such feats upon a bar of wood suspended from the ceiling
as made my blood run cold. They were twin sisters,
these mites, with that old young look on their faces
which all such unfortunates have. I hardly dared
glance at them, up there in the air, hanging by their
feet from the swinging bar, twisting their fragile
spines and distorting their poor little bodies, when
they ought to have been nestled in soft blankets in
a cosey chamber, with the angels that guard the sleep
of little children hovering above them. I hope
that the father of those two babies will read and
ponder this page, on which I record not alone my individual
protest, but the protest of hundreds of men and women
who took no pleasure in that performance, but witnessed
it with a pang of pity.
There is a Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Dumb Animals. There ought to be
a Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Little Children;
and a certain influential gentleman, who does some
things well and other things very badly, ought to
attend to it. The name of this gentleman is Public
Opinion.
1 This sketch was written in 1874.
The author claims for it no other merit than
that of having been among the earliest appeals
for the formation of such a Society as now exists
the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children.
But to my story.
One September morning, about five
years and a half ago, there wandered to my fireside,
hand in hand, two small personages who requested in
a foreign language, which I understood at once, to
be taken in and fed and clothed and sent to school
and loved and tenderly cared for. Very modest
of them was it not? in view of
the fact that I had never seen either of them before.
To all intents and purposes they were perfect strangers
to me. What was my surprise when it turned
out (just as if it were in a fairy legend) that these
were my own sons! When I say they came hand in
hand, it is to advise you that these two boys were
twins, like that pair of tiny girls I just mentioned.
These young gentlemen are at present
known as Charley and Talbot, in the household, and
to a very limited circle of acquaintances outside;
but as Charley has declared his intention to become
a circus-rider, and Talbot, who has not so soaring
an ambition, has resolved to be a policeman, it is
likely the world will hear of them before long.
In the mean time, and with a view to the severe duties
of the professions selected, they are learning the
alphabet, Charley vaulting over the hard letters with
an agility which promises well for his career as circus-rider,
and Talbot collaring the slippery S’s and pursuing
the suspicious X Y Z’s with the promptness and
boldness of a night-watchman.
Now it is my pleasure not only to
feed and clothe Masters Charley and Talbot as if they
were young princes or dukes, but to look to it that
they do not wear out their ingenious minds by too much
study. So I occasionally take them to a puppet-show
or a musical entertainment, and always in holiday
time to see a pantomime. This last is their especial
delight. It is a fine thing to behold the business-like
air with which they climb into their seats in the
parquet, and the gravity with which they immediately
begin to read the play-bill upside down. Then,
between the acts, the solemnity with which they extract
the juice from an orange, through a hole made with
a lead-pencil, is also a noticeable thing.
Their knowledge of the mysteries of
Fairyland is at once varied and profound. Everything
delights, but nothing astonishes them. That people
covered with spangles should dive headlong through
the floor; that fairy queens should step out of the
trunks of trees; that the poor wood-cutter’s
cottage should change, in the twinkling of an eye,
into a glorious palace or a goblin grotto under the
sea, with crimson fountains and golden staircases
and silver foliage all that is a matter
of course. This is the kind of world they live
in at present. If these things happened at home
they would not be astonished.
The other day, it was just before
Christmas, I saw the boys attentively regarding a
large pumpkin which lay on the kitchen floor, waiting
to be made into pies. If that pumpkin had suddenly
opened, if wheels had sprouted out on each side, and
if the two kittens playing with an onion-skin by the
range had turned into milk-white ponies and harnessed
themselves to this Cinderella coach, neither Charley
nor Talbot would have considered it an unusual circumstance.
The pantomime which is usually played
at the Boston Theatre during the holidays is to them
positive proof that the stories of Cinderella and
Jack of the Beanstalk and Jack the Giant-Killer have
historical solidity. They like to be reassured
on that point. So one morning last January, when
I informed Charley and Talbot, at the breakfast-table,
that Prince Rupert and his court had come to town,
“Some
in jags,
Some
in rags,
And some in velvet gown,”
the news was received with great satisfaction;
for this meant that we were to go to the play.
For the sake of the small folk, who
could not visit him at night, Prince Rupert was gracious
enough to appear every Saturday afternoon during the
month. We decided to wait upon his Highness at
one of his matinées.
You would never have dreamed that
the sun was shining brightly outside, if you had been
with us in the theatre that afternoon. All the
window-shutters were closed, and the great glass chandelier
hanging from the gayly painted dome was one blaze
of light.
But brighter even than the jets of
gas were the ruddy, eager faces of countless boys
and girls, fringing the balconies and crowded into
the seats below, longing for the play to begin.
And nowhere were there two merrier or more eager faces
than those of Charley and Talbot, pecking now and
then at a brown paper cone filled with white grapes,
which I held, and waiting for the solemn green curtain
to roll up, and disclose the coral realm of the Naiad
Queen.
I shall touch very lightly on the
literary aspects of the play. Its plot, like
that of the modern novel, was of so subtile a nature
as not to be visible to the naked eye. I doubt
if the dramatist himself could have explained it,
even if he had been so condescending as to attempt
to do so. There was a bold young prince Prince
Rupert, of course who went into Wonderland
in search of adventures. He reached Wonderland
by leaping from the castle of Drachenfels into the
Rhine. Then there was one Snaps, the prince’s
valet, who did not in the least want to go, but went,
and got terribly frightened by the Green Demons of
the Chrysolite Cavern, which made us all laugh it
being such a pleasant thing to see somebody else scared
nearly to death. Then there were knights in brave
tin armor, and armies of fair pre-Raphaelite amazons
in all the colors of the rainbow, and troops of unhappy
slave-girls, who did nothing but smile and wear beautiful
dresses, and dance continually to the most delightful
music. Now you were in an enchanted castle on
the banks of the Rhine, and now you were in a cave
of amethysts and diamonds at the bottom of the river scene
following scene with such bewildering rapidity that
finally you did not quite know where you were.
But what interested me most, and what
pleased Charley and Talbot even beyond the Naiad Queen
herself, was the little violinist who came to the
German Court, and played before Prince Rupert and his
bride.
It was such a little fellow!
He was not more than a year older than my own boys,
and not much taller. He had a very sweet, sensitive
face, with large gray eyes, in which there was a deep-settled
expression that I do not like to see in a child.
Looking at his eyes alone, you would have said he
was sixteen or seventeen, and he was merely a baby!
I do not know enough of music to assert
that he had wonderful genius, or any genius at all;
but it seemed to me he played charmingly, and with
the touch of a natural musician.
At the end of his piece, he was lifted
over the foot-lights of the stage into the orchestra,
where, with the conductor’s baton in his
hand, he directed the band in playing one or two difficult
compositions. In this he evinced a carefully
trained ear and a perfect understanding of the music.
I wanted to hear the little violin
again; but as he made his bow to the audience and
ran off, it was with a half-wearied air, and I did
not join with my neighbors in calling him back.
“There ’s another performance to-night,”
I reflected, “and the little fellow is n’t
very strong.” He came out, however, and
bowed, but did not play again.
All the way home from the theatre
my children were full of the little violinist, and
as they went along, chattering and frolicking in front
of me, and getting under my feet like a couple of
young spaniels (they did not look unlike two small
brown spaniels, with their fur-trimmed overcoats and
sealskin caps and ear-lappets), I could not help thinking
how different the poor little musician’s lot
was from theirs.
He was only six years and a half old,
and had been before the public nearly three years.
What hours of toil and weariness he must have been
passing through at the very time when my little ones
were being rocked and petted and shielded from every
ungentle wind that blows! And what an existence
was his now travelling from city to city,
practising at every spare moment, and performing night
after night in some close theatre or concert-room
when he should be drinking in that deep, refreshing
slumber which childhood needs! However much he
was loved by those who had charge of him, and they
must have treated him kindly, it was a hard life for
the child.
He ought to have been turned out into
the sunshine; that pretty violin one can
easily understand that he was fond of it himself ought
to have been taken away from him, and a kite-string
placed in his hand instead. If God had set the
germ of a great musician or a great composer in that
slight body, surely it would have been wise to let
the precious gift ripen and flower in its own good
season.
This is what I thought, walking home
In the amber glow of the wintry sunset; but my boys
saw only the bright side of the tapestry, and would
have liked nothing better than to change places with
little James Speaight. To stand in the midst
of Fairyland, and play beautiful tunes on a toy fiddle,
while all the people clapped their hands what
could quite equal that? Charley began to think
it was no such grand thing to be a circus-rider, and
the dazzling career of policeman had lost something
of its glamour in the eyes of Talbot.
It is my custom every night, after
the children are snug in their nests and the gas is
turned down, to sit on the side of the bed and chat
with them five or ten minutes. If anything has
gone wrong through the day, it is never alluded to
at this time. None but the most agreeable topics
are discussed. I make it a point that the boys
shall go to sleep with untroubled hearts. When
our chat is ended, they say their prayers. Now,
among the pleas which they offer up for the several
members of the family, they frequently intrude the
claims of rather curious objects for Divine compassion.
Sometimes it is the rocking-horse that has broken a
leg, sometimes it is Shem or Japhet, who has lost an
arm in disembarking from Noah’s ark; Pinky and
Inky, the kittens, and Bob, the dog, are never forgotten.
So it did not surprise me at all this
Saturday night when both boys prayed God to watch
over and bless the little violinist.
The next morning at the breakfast-table,
when I unfolded the newspaper, the first paragraph
my eyes fell upon was this:
“James Speaight, the infant violinist,
died in this city late on Saturday night.
At the matinee of the ’Naiad Queen’
on the afternoon of that day, when little James Speaight
came off the stage, after giving his usual violin
performance, Mr. Shewell noticed that he appeared
fatigued, and asked if he felt ill. He replied
that he had a pain in his heart, and then Mr.
Shewell suggested that he remain away from the
evening performance. He retired quite early,
and about midnight his father heard him say, ’Gracious
God, make room for another little child in Heaven.’
No sound was heard after this, and his father spoke
to him soon afterwards; he received no answer, but
found his child dead.”
1 The stage-manager.
The printed letters grew dim and melted
into each other, as I tried to re-read them.
I glanced across the table at Charley
and Talbot eating their breakfast, with the slanted
sunlight from the window turning their curls into real
gold, and I had not the heart to tell them what had
happened.
Of all the prayers that floated up
to heaven, that Saturday night, from the bedsides
of sorrowful men and women, or from the cots of innocent
children, what accents could have fallen more piteously
and tenderly upon the ear of a listening angel than
the prayer of little James Speaight! He knew
he was dying. The faith he had learned, perhaps
while running at his mother’s side, in some
green English lane, came to him then. He remembered
it was Christ who said, “Suffer the little children
to come unto me;” and the beautiful prayer rose
to his lips, “Gracious God, make room for another
little child in Heaven.”
I folded up the newspaper silently,
and throughout the day I did not speak before the
boys of the little violinist’s death; but when
the time came for our customary chat in the nursery,
I told the story to Charley and Talbot. I do
not think that they understood it very well, and still
less did they understand why I lingered so much longer
than usual by their bedside that Sunday night.
As I sat there in the dimly lighted
room, it seemed to me that I could hear, in the pauses
of the winter wind, faintly and doubtfully somewhere
in the distance, the sound of the little violin.
Ah, that little violin! a
cherished relic now. Perhaps it plays soft, plaintive
airs all by itself, in the place where it is kept,
missing the touch of the baby fingers which used to
waken it into life!