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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60457 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60457)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of When I Was a Little Girl, by Zona Gale
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: When I Was a Little Girl
-
-Author: Zona Gale
-
-Illustrator: Agnes Pelton
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2019 [EBook #60457]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN I WAS A LITTLE GIRL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-WHEN I WAS A LITTLE GIRL
-
-
-
-
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS
- ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO
-
- MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
- LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
- MELBOURNE
-
- THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
- TORONTO
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: SOMEWHERE BEYOND SEALED DOORS]
-
-
-
-
- WHEN I WAS A LITTLE
- GIRL
-
- BY
- ZONA GALE
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE LOVES OF PELLEAS AND ETARRE,”
- “FRIENDSHIP VILLAGE,” ETC.
-
- WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
- AGNES PELTON
-
- New York
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- 1913
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1911, by The Curtis Publishing Company.
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1913,
- BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
-
- Set up and electrotyped. Published October, 1913.
-
- Norwood Press
- J. B. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
- Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
- To
-
- THE LITTLE GIRL ON CONANT STREET
- AND TO THE
- MEMORY OF HER GRANDMOTHER
- HARRIET BEERS
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. IN THOSE DAYS 1
-
- II. IN NO TIME 16
-
- III. ONE FOR THE MONEY 35
-
- IV. THE PICNIC 53
-
- V. THE KING’S TRUMPETER 77
-
- VI. MY LADY OF THE APPLE TREE 103
-
- VII. THE PRINCESS ROMANCIA 118
-
- VIII. TWO FOR THE SHOW 147
-
- IX. NEXT DOOR 159
-
- X. WHAT’S PROPER 173
-
- XI. DOLLS 192
-
- XII. BIT-BIT 211
-
- XIII. WHY 228
-
- XIV. KING 247
-
- XV. KING (_continued_) 281
-
- XVI. THE WALK 307
-
- XVII. THE GREAT BLACK HUSH 315
-
- XVIII. THE DECORATION OF INDEPENDENCE 329
-
- XIX. EARTH-MOTHER 354
-
- XX. THREE TO MAKE READY 375
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Somewhere beyond sealed doors _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING PAGE
-
- Sat on a rock in the landscape and practised 32
-
- Little by little she grew silent and refused to join in
- the games 128
-
- But the minute folk left the room--ah, then! 168
-
- She settled everything in that way; she counted the
- petals of fennel daisies and blew thistle from
- dandelions 196
-
- Then out of the valley a great deev arose 216
-
- To see what running away is really like 316
-
-
-
-
-There used to be a little girl who does not come here any more. She is
-not dead, for when certain things happen, she stirs slightly where she
-is, perhaps deep within the air. When the sun falls in a particular
-way, when graham griddle cakes are baking, when the sky laughs
-sudden blue after a storm, or the town clock points in its clearest
-you-will-be-late way at nine in the morning, when the moonlight is on
-the midnight and nothing moves--then, somewhere beyond sealed doors,
-the little girl says something, and it is plain that she is here all
-the time.
-
-You little child who never have died, in these stories I am trying
-to tell you that now I come near to understanding you. I see you
-still, with your over-long hair and your over-much chattering, your
-naughtiness and your dreams. I know the qualities that made you
-disagreeable and those that made you dear, and I look on you somewhat
-as spirit looks on spirit, understanding from within. I wish that
-we could live it again, you and I--not all of it, by any means, and
-not for a serious business; but now and then, for a joy and for an
-idleness. And this book is a way of trying to do it over again,
-together.
-
-Will you care to come from the quiet where you are, near to me and
-yet remote? I think that you will come, for you were wont untiringly
-to wonder about me. And now here I am, come true, so faintly like her
-whom you dreamed, yet so like you yourself, your child, fruit of your
-spirit, you little shadowy mother....
-
- If only words were moments
- And I knew where they fly,
- I’d make a tale of time itself
- To tell you by and bye.
-
- If only words were fathoms
- That let us by for pearls,
- I’d make a story ocean-strange
- For little boys and girls.
-
- But words are only shadow things.
- I summon all I may.
- Oh, see--they try to spell out Life!
- Let’s act it, like a play.
-
-
-
-
-When I was a Little Girl
-
-I
-
-IN THOSE DAYS
-
-
-In those days time always bothered us. It went fast or it went slow,
-with no one interfering. It was impossible to hurry it or to hold it
-back.
-
-“Only ten weeks more,” we invariably said glibly, when the Spring term
-began.
-
-“Just think! We’ve--got--t-e-n--weeks!” we told one another at the
-beginning of vacation, what time we came home with our books, chanting
-it:--
-
- “_No more Latin,
- No more French,
- No more sitting on a hard wood bench._”
-
---both chorally and antiphonally chanting it.
-
-Yet, in spite of every encouragement, the Spring term lasted
-immeasurably and the Summer vacation melted. It was the kindred
-difference of experience respectively presented by a bowl of hot
-ginger tea and an equal bulk of ice-cream.
-
-In other ways time was extraordinary. We used to play with it: “Now is
-now. But now that other Now is gone and a Then is now. How did it do
-it? How do all the Nows begin?”
-
-“When is the party?” we had sometimes inquired.
-
-“To-morrow,” we would be told.
-
-Next morning, “Now it’s to-morrow!” we would joyfully announce, only
-to be informed that it was, on the contrary, to-day. But there was no
-cause for alarm, for now the party, it seemed, had changed too, and
-that would be to-day. It was frightfully confusing.
-
-“_When_ is to-morrow?” we demanded.
-
-“When to-day stops being,” they said.
-
-But never, never once did to-day stop that much. Gradually we
-understood and humoured the pathetic delusion of the Grown-ups: _To-day
-lasted always and yet the poor things kept right on forever waiting for
-to-morrow._
-
-As for me, I had been born without the time sense. If I was told that
-we would go to drive in ten minutes, I always assumed that I could
-finish dressing my doll, tidy my play-house, put her in it with all
-her family disposed about her down to the penny black-rubber baby
-dressed in yarn, wash my face and hands, smooth my hair (including
-the protests that these were superfluous), make sure that the kitten
-was shut in the woodshed ... long before most of which the family
-was following me, haling me away, chiding me for keeping older folk
-waiting, and the ten minutes were gone far by. Who would have thought
-it? Ten minutes seem so much.
-
-And if I went somewhere with permission to stay an hour! Then the
-hour stretched invitingly before me, a vista lined with crowding
-possibilities.
-
-“How long can you stay?” we always promptly asked our guests, for there
-was a feeling that the quality of the game to be entered on depended
-on the time at our disposal. But when they asked me, it never was
-conceivable that anything so real as a game should be dependent on
-anything so hazy as time.
-
-“Oh, a whole hour!” I would say royally. “Let’s play City.”
-
-With this attitude Delia Dart, who lived across the street, had no
-patience. Delia was definite. Her evenly braided hair, her square
-finger tips, her blunt questions, her sense of what was due to
-Delia--all these were definite.
-
-“City!” she would burst out. “You can’t play City unless you’ve got all
-afternoon.”
-
-And Margaret Amelia and Betty Rodman, who were pretty definite too,
-would back Delia up; but since they usually had permission to stay all
-afternoon, they would acquiesce when I urged: “Oh, well, let’s start
-in anyhow.” Then about the time the outside wall had been laid up in
-the sand-pile and we had selected our building sites, the town clock
-would strike my hour, which would be brought home to me only by Delia
-saying:--
-
-“Don’t you go. Will she care if you’re late?”
-
-On such occasions we never used the substantive, but merely “she.”
-It is worth being a child to have a sense of values so simple and
-unassailable as that.
-
-“I’m going to do just this much. I can run all the way home,” I would
-answer; and I would begin on my house walls. But when these were
-done, and the rooms defined by moist sand partitions, there was all
-the fascination of its garden, with walks to be outlined with a
-shingle and sprays of Old Man and cedar to be stuck in for trees, and
-single stems of Fever-few and Sweet Alyssum or Flowering-currant and
-Bleeding-heart for the beds, and Catnip for the borders, and a chick
-from Old-Hen-and-Chickens for a tropical plant. We would be just begun
-on the stones for the fountain when some alien consciousness, some
-plucking at me, would recall the moment. And it would be half an hour
-past my hour.
-
-“You were to come home at four o’clock,” Mother would say, when I
-reached there panting.
-
-“_Why_ did I have to come home at four o’clock?” I would finally give
-way to the sense of great and arbitrary wrong.
-
-She always told me. I think that never in my life was I bidden to
-do a thing, or not to do it, “because I tell you to.” But never
-once did a time-reason seem sufficient. What were company, a
-nap-because-I-was-to-sit-up-late, or having-to-go-somewhere-else beside
-the reality of that house which I would never occupy, that garden where
-I would never walk?
-
-“You can make it the next time you go to Delia’s,” Mother would say.
-But I knew that this was impossible. I might build another house,
-adventure in another garden; this one was forever lost to me.
-
-“... only,” Mother would add, “you can not go to Delia’s for ...” she
-would name a period that yawned to me as black as the abyss. “...
-because you did not come home to-day when you were told.” And still
-time seemed to me indefinite. For now it appeared that I should never
-go to Delia’s again.
-
-I thought about it more and more. What was this time that was laid on
-us so heavy? Why did I have to get up _because_ it was seven o’clock,
-go to school _because_ it was nine, come home from Delia’s _because_
-the clock struck something else ... above all, why did I have to go to
-bed _because_ it was eight o’clock?
-
-I laid it before my little council.
-
-“Why do we have to go to bed because it’s bed-time?” I asked them.
-“Which started first--bed-time or us?”
-
-None of us could tell. Margaret Amelia Rodman, however, was of opinion
-that bed-time started first.
-
-“Nearly everything was here before we were,” she said gloomily. “We
-haven’t got anything in the house but the piano and the rabbits that
-wasn’t first before us. Mother told father this morning that we’d had
-our stair-carpet fifteen years.”
-
-We faced that. Fifteen years. Nearly twice as long as we had lived. If
-a stair-carpet had lasted like that, what was the use of thinking that
-we could find anything to control on the ground of our having been here
-first?
-
-Delia Dart, however, was a free soul. “_I_ think we begun before
-bed-time did,” she said decidedly. “Because when we were babies,
-we didn’t have any bed-time. Look at babies now. They don’t have
-bed-times. They sleep all the while.”
-
-It was true. Bed-time must have started after we did. Besides, we
-remembered that it was movable. Once it had been half past seven. Now
-it was eight. Delia often sat up, according to her own accounts, much
-later even than this.
-
-“Grown-ups don’t have any bed-time either,” Betty took it up. “They’re
-like babies.”
-
-This was a new thought. How strange that Grown-ups and babies should
-share this immunity, and only we be bound.
-
-“Who _made_ bed-time?” I inquired irritably.
-
-“S-h-h!” said Delia. “God did.”
-
-“I don’t believe it,” I announced flatly.
-
-“Well,” said Delia, “anyway, he makes us sleepy.”
-
-This I also challenged. “Then why am I sleepier when I go to church
-evenings than when I play Hide-and-go-seek in the Brice’s barn
-evenings?” I submitted.
-
-This was getting into theology, and Delia used the ancient method.
-
-“We aren’t supposed to know all those things,” she said with
-superiority, and the council broke up.
-
-That night I brought my revolt into the open. At eight o’clock I was
-disposing the articles in my play-house so that they all touched,
-in order that they might be able to talk during the night. It was
-well-known to me that inanimate objects must touch if they would
-carry on conversation. The little red chair and the table, the blue
-paper-weight with a little trembling figure inside, the silver vase,
-the mug with “Remember me” in blue letters, the china goat, all must be
-safely settled so that they might while away the long night in talk.
-The blue-glass paper weight with the horse and rider within, however,
-was uncertain what he wanted to companion. I tried him with the china
-horse and with the treeful of birds and with the duck in a boat, but
-somehow he would not group. While he was still hesitating, it came:--
-
-“Bed-time, dear,” they said.
-
-I faced them at last. I had often objected, but I had never reasoned it
-out.
-
-“I’m not sleepy,” I announced serenely.
-
-“But it’s bed-time,” they pressed it mildly.
-
-“Bed-time is when you’re sleepy,” I explained. “I’m not sleepy. So it
-can’t be bed-time.”
-
-“Bed-time is eight o’clock,” they said with a hint of firmness, and
-picked me up strongly and carried me off; and to my expostulation that
-the horse and his rider in the blue paper-weight would have nobody to
-talk to all night, they said that he wouldn’t care about that; and when
-I wept, they said I was cross, and that proved it was Bed-time.
-
-There seemed no escape. But once--once I came near to understanding.
-Once the door into Unknown-about Things nearly opened for me, and just
-for a moment I caught a glimpse.
-
-I had been told to tidy my top bureau drawer. I have always loathed
-tidying my top bureau drawer. It is so unlike a real task. It is made
-up of odds and ends of tasks that ought to have been despatched long
-ago and gradually, by process of throwing away, folding, putting in
-boxes, hanging up, and other utterly uninteresting operations. I can
-create a thing, I can destroy a thing, I can keep a thing as it was;
-but to face a top bureau drawer is none of these things. It is a motley
-task, unclassified, without honour, a very tag-end and bobtail of a
-task, fit for nobody.
-
-I was thinking things that meant this, and hanging out the window. It
-was a gentle day, like a perfectly natural human being who wants to
-make friends and will not pretend one iota in order to be your friend.
-I remember that it was a still day, that I loved, not as I loved Uncle
-Linas and Aunt Frances, who always played with me and gave me things,
-but as I loved Mother and father when they took me somewhere with them,
-on Sunday afternoons.... I had a row of daffodils coming up in the
-garden. I began pretending that they were marching down the border,
-down the border, down the border to the big rock by the cooking-apple
-tree--why of course! I had never thought of it, but that rock was where
-they got their gold....
-
-A house-wren came out of a niche in the porch and flew down to the
-platform in the boxalder, where father was accustomed to feed the
-birds. The platform was spread with muffin crumbs. The little wren ate,
-and flew to the clothes-line and poured forth his thankful exquisite
-song. I had always felt regret that we had no clothes reel that
-would whirl like a witch in the wind, but instead merely a system of
-clothes-lines, duly put up on Mondays; but the little wren evidently
-did not know the difference.
-
-“Abracadabra, make me sing like that....” I told him. But I hadn’t said
-the right thing, and he flew away and left me not singing. I began
-thinking what if he _had_ made me sing, and what if I had put back my
-head and gone downstairs singing like a wren, and gone to arithmetic
-class singing like a wren, and nobody could have stopped me, and nobody
-would have wanted to stop me....
-
-... I leaned over the sill, holding both arms down and feeling the
-blood flow down and weight my fingers like a pulse. What if I should
-fall out the window and instead of striking the ground hard, as folk do
-when they fall out of windows, I should go softly through the earth,
-and feel it pressing back from my head and closing together behind my
-heels, and pretty soon I should come out, plump ... before the Root of
-Everything and sit there for a long time and watch it grow....
-
-... I looked up at the blue, glad that I was so near to it, and thought
-how much pleasanter it would be to fly right away through the blue and
-see what colour it was lined with. Pink, maybe--rose-pink, which showed
-through at sunset when the sun leaped at last through the blue and it
-closed behind him. Rose-pink, like my best sash and hair-ribbons....
-
-That brought me back. My best sash and hair-ribbons were in my top
-drawer. Moreover, there were foot-steps on the stairs and at the very
-door.
-
-“Have you finished?” Mother asked.
-
-I had not even opened the drawer.
-
-“You have been up here one hour,” Mother said, and came and stood
-beside me. “What have you been doing?”
-
-I began to tell her. I do not envy her her quandary. She knew that I
-was not to be too heavily chided and yet--the top drawers of this world
-must be tidied.
-
-“Think!” she said. “That Hour has gone out the window without its work
-being done. And now this Hour, that was meant for play, has got to
-work. But not you! You’ve lost your turn. Now it’s Mother’s turn.”
-
-She made me sit by the window while she tidied the drawer. I was not to
-touch it--I had lost my turn. While she worked, she talked to me about
-the things she knew I liked to talk about. But I could not listen. It
-is the only time in my life that I have ever really frantically wanted
-to tidy a top bureau drawer of anybody’s.
-
-“Now,” she said when she had done, “this last Hour will meet the
-Hour-before-the-last, and each of them will look the way the other
-ought to have looked, and they will be all mixed up. And all day I
-think they will keep trying to come back to you to straighten them out.
-But you can’t do it. And they’ll have to be each other forever and ever
-and ever.”
-
-She went away again, and I was left face to face with the very heart of
-this whole perplexing Time business: those two Hours that would always
-be somewhere trying to be each other, forever and ever, and always
-trying to come back for me to straighten them out.
-
-Were there Hours out in the world that were sick hours, sick because we
-had treated them badly, and always trying to come back for folk to make
-them well?
-
-And were there Hours that were busy and happy somewhere because they
-had been well used and they didn’t have to try to come back for us to
-patch them up?
-
-Were Hours like that? Was Time like that?
-
-When I told Delia of the incident, she at once characteristically
-settled it.
-
-“Why, if they wasn’t any time,” she said, “we’d all just wait and wait
-and wait. They couldn’t have that. So they set something going to get
-us going to keep things going.”
-
-Sometimes, in later life, when I have seen folk lunch because it is one
-o’clock, worship because it is the seventh day, go to Europe because it
-is Summer, and marry because it is high time, I wonder whether Delia
-was not right. Often and often I have been convinced that what Mother
-told me about the Hours trying to come back to get one to straighten
-them out is true with truth undying. And I wish, that morning by the
-window, and at those grim, inevitable Bed-times, that I, as I am now,
-might have told that Little Me this story about how, just possibly,
-they first noticed time and about what, just possibly, it is.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-IN NO TIME
-
-
-Before months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds were counted
-and named, consider how peculiar it all must have seemed. For example,
-when the Unknown-about Folk of those prehistoric times wished to know
-_when_ a thing would happen, of course they can have had no word
-_when_, and no answer. If a little Prehistoric Girl gave a party, she
-cannot have known when to tell her guests to come, so she must have
-had to wait until the supper was ready and then invite them; and if
-they were not perfectly-bred little guests, they may have been offended
-because they hadn’t been invited before--only they would not have known
-how to say or to think “before,” so they cannot have been quite sure
-what they were offended at; but they may have been offended anyway, as
-happens now with that same kind of guest. And if a little Prehistoric
-Boy asked his father to bring him a new eagle or a new leopard for a
-pet, and his father came home night after night and didn’t bring it,
-the Prehistoric Boy could not say, “_When_ will you bring it, sir?”
-because there was no when, so he may have asked a great many other
-questions, and been told to sit in the back of the cave until he could
-do better. Nobody can have known how long to boil eggs or to bake
-bread, and people must have had to come to breakfast and just sit and
-wait and wait until things were done. Worst of all, nobody can have
-known that time is a thing to use and not to waste. Since they could
-not measure it, they could not of course tell how fast it was slipping
-away, and they must have thought that time was theirs to do with what
-they pleased, instead of turning it all into different things--this
-piece into sleep, this piece into play, this piece into tasks and
-exercise and fun. Just as, in those days, they probably thought that
-food is to be eaten because it tastes good and not because it makes
-the body grow, so they thought that time was a thing to be thrown away
-and not to be used, every bit--which is, of course, a prehistoric way
-to think. And nobody can have known about birthdays, and no story can
-have started “Once upon a time,” and everything must have been quite
-different.
-
-About then,--only of course they didn’t know it was then--a Prehistoric
-Mother said one morning to her Prehistoric Little Daughter:--
-
-“Now, Vertebrata, get your practising done and then you may go to
-play.” (It wasn’t a piano and it wasn’t an organ, but it was a lovely,
-reedy, blow-on-it thing, like a pastoral pipe, and little girls always
-sat about on rocks in the landscape, as soon as they had had their
-breakfasts, and practised.)
-
-So Vertebrata took her reed pipes and sat on a rock in the landscape
-and practised--all of what we now know (but she did not know) would be
-five minutes. Then she came in the cave, and tossed the pipes on her
-bed of skins, and then remembered and hung them in their place above
-the fireplace, and turned toward the doorway. But her mother, who was
-roasting flesh at the fire, called her back.
-
-“Vertebrata,” she said, “did I not tell you to practise?”
-
-“I did practise,” said Vertebrata.
-
-“Then practise and practise,” said her mother, not knowing how else to
-tell her to do her whole hour. Her mother didn’t know hours, but she
-knew by the feel of her feelings when Vertebrata had done enough.
-
-So Vertebrata sat on a rock and did five minutes more, and came and
-threw her pipes on her bed of skins, and remembered and hung them up,
-and then turned toward the door of the cave. But her mother looked up
-from the flesh-pot and called her back again.
-
-“Vertebrata,” she said, “do you want mother to have to speak to you
-again?”
-
-“No, _indeed_, muvver,” said her little daughter.
-
-“Then practise and practise and practise,” said her mother. “If you
-can’t play when you grow up, what will people think?”
-
-So Vertebrata went back to her landscape rock, and this thing was
-repeated until Vertebrata had practised what we now know (but she did
-not know) to have been a whole hour. And you can easily see that in
-order to bring this about, what her mother must have said to her the
-last time of all was this:--
-
-“I want you to practise and practise and practise and practise and
-practise and practise and practise and practise and practise and
-practise and practise and practise--” _or_ something almost as long.
-
-Now of course it was very hard for her mother to say all this besides
-roasting the flesh and tidying the cave, so she made up her mind that
-when her Prehistoric Husband came home, he must be told about it. And
-when the sun was at the top of the sky and cast no shadow, and the
-flesh was roasted brown and fragrant, she dressed it with pungent
-herbs, and raked the vegetables out of the ashes and hid the dessert in
-the cool wall of the cave--_that_ was a surprise--and spread the flat
-rock at the door of the cave and put vine-leaves in her hair and, with
-Vertebrata, set herself to wait.
-
-There went by what we now know to have been noon, and another hour, and
-more hours, and all afternoon, and all early twilight, and still her
-Prehistoric Husband did not come home to dinner. Vertebrata was crying
-with hunger, and the flesh and the vegetables were ice-cold, and the
-Prehistoric Wife and Mother sat looking straight before her without
-smiling. And then, just as the moon was rising red over the soft breast
-of the distant wood, the Prehistoric Father appeared, not looking as if
-he had done anything.
-
-“Is dinner ready?” he asked pleasantly.
-
-Now this was the last straw, and the Prehistoric Wife and Mother said
-so, standing at the door of the cave, with Vertebrata crying in the
-offing.
-
-“Troglodyte,” she said sadly (that was what she called him), “dinner
-has been ready and ready and ready and ready and ready and ready and
-ready ...” and she showed him the ice-cold roasted flesh and vegetables.
-
-“I’m _so_ sorry, dearest. I never knew,” said the Troglodyte,
-contritely, and did everything in the world that he could do to show
-her how sorry he was. He made haste to open his game-bag, and he drew
-out what food he had killed, and showed her a soft, cock-of-the-rock
-skin for a cap for her and a white ptarmigan breast to trim it with,
-and at last she said--because nobody can stay offended when the
-offender is sorry:--
-
-“Well, dear, say no more about it. We’ll slice up the meat and it will
-do very well cold, and I’ll warm up the potatoes with some brown butter
-(or the like). But hurry and bathe or I’ll be ready first _again_.”
-
-So he hurried and bathed in the brook, and the cave smelled savoury
-of the hot brown butter, and Vertebrata had a Grogan tail stuck in her
-hair, and presently they sat down to supper. And it was nearly eight
-o’clock, but they didn’t know anything about _that_.
-
-When the serious part of supper was done, and the dessert that was a
-surprise had been brought and had surprised and gone, Vertebrata’s
-mother sat up very straight and looked before her without smiling. And
-she said:--
-
-“Now, something must be done.”
-
-“About what, Leaf Butterfly?” her husband asked.
-
-“Vertebrata doesn’t practise enough and you don’t come home to dinner
-enough,” she answered, “and something must be done.”
-
-“I did practise--wunst,” said Vertebrata.
-
-“But you should practise once and once and once and once and once and
-once, and so on, and not have to be told each once,” said her mother.
-
-“I did come home to dinner,” said the Prehistoric Husband, waving his
-hand at his empty platter.
-
-“But you should come first and first and first and first and first, and
-so on, and not let the dinner get ice-cold,” said his wife. “Hear a
-thing,” said she.
-
-She sprinkled some salt all thick on the table and took the stick on
-which the flesh had been roasted, and in the salt she drew a circle.
-
-“This,” she said, “is the sky. And this place, at the top, is the top
-of the sky. And when the sun is at the top of the sky and there is no
-shadow, I will have ready the dinner, hot and sweet in the pot, and
-dessert--for a surprise. And when the sun is at the top of the sky
-and there is no shadow, do you come to eat it, _always_. That will be
-dinner.”
-
-“That is well,” said the Troglodyte, like a true knight--for in those
-first days even true knights were willing that women should cook and
-cave-tidy for them all day long and do little else. But that was long
-ago and we must forgive it.
-
-Then she made a mark in the salt at the edge of the circle a little way
-around from the first mark.
-
-“When the sun is at the edge of the sky and all red, and the shadows
-are long, and the dark is coming, I will have ready berries and nuts
-and green stuffs and sweet syrups and other things that I shall think
-of--for you. And when the sun is at the edge of the sky and all red,
-and the shadows are long, and the dark is coming, do you hurry to us,
-_always_. That will be supper.”
-
-“That is well,” said the Troglodyte, like a true knight.
-
-Then she drew the stick a long way round.
-
-“This is sleep,” she said. “This place here is waking, and breakfast.
-And then next the sun will be at the top of the sky again. And we will
-have dinner in the same fashion. And this is right for you. But what to
-do with the child I don’t know, unless I keep her practising from the
-time the sun is at the top of the sky until it is at the bottom. For if
-she can’t play when she grows up, what will people think?”
-
-Now, while she said this, the Prehistoric Woman had been sitting with
-the stick on which the flesh had been roasted held straight up in her
-fingers, resting in the middle of the ring which she had made in the
-salt. And by now the moon was high and white in the sky. And the Man
-saw that the moon-shadow of the stick fell on the circle from its
-centre to beyond its edge. And presently he stretched out his hand and
-took the stick from her, and held it so and sat very still, thinking,
-thinking, thinking....
-
-“Faddie,” said Vertebrata--she called him that for loving--“Faddie,
-will you make me a little bow and arrow and scrape ’em white?”
-
-But her father did not hear her, and instead of answering he sprang
-up and began drawing on the soft earth before the cave a deep, deep
-circle, and he ran for the long stick that had carried his game-bag
-over his shoulder, and in the middle of the earth circle he set the
-stick.
-
-“Watch a thing!” he cried.
-
-Vertebrata and her mother, understanding little but trusting much, sat
-by his side. And together in the hot, white night the three watched the
-shadow of the stick travel on the dial that they had made. Of course
-there was no such thing as bed-time then, and Vertebrata usually sat
-up until she fell over asleep, when her mother carried her off to her
-little bed of skins; but this night she was so excited that she didn’t
-fall over. For the stick-shadow moved like a finger; like, indeed, a
-living thing that had been in the world all the time without their
-knowing. And they watched it while it went a long way round the circle.
-Then her mother said, “Nonsense, Vertebrata, you must be sleepy now
-whether you know it or not,” and she put her to bed, Vertebrata saying
-all the way that she was wide awake, just like in the daytime. And
-when her mother went back outside the cave, the Man looked up at her
-wonderfully.
-
-“Trachystomata,” said he (which is to say “siren”), “if the sun-shadow
-will do the same thing as the moon-shadow, we have found a way to make
-Vertebrata practise enough.”
-
-In the morning when Vertebrata came out of the cave--she woke alone and
-dressed alone, just like being grown-up--she found her mother and her
-father down on their hands and knees, studying the circle in the soft
-earth and the long sun-shadow of the stick. And her mother called her
-and she went running to her. And her mother said:--
-
-“Now we will have breakfast, dear, and then you get your pipes and come
-here and practise. And when you begin, we will lay a piece of bone
-where the shadow stands, and when I feel the feeling of enough, I will
-tell you, and you will stop practising, and we will lay another piece
-of bone on that shadow. And after this you will always practise from
-one bone to another, forever.”
-
-Vertebrata could hardly wait to have breakfast before she tried it,
-and then she ran and brought her pipes and sat down beside the circle.
-And her father did not go to his hunting, or her mother to her cooking
-and cave-tidying, but they both sat there with Vertebrata, hearing her
-pipe and watching the shadow finger move, and waiting till her mother
-should feel the feeling of enough.
-
-_Now!_ Since the world began, the Hours, Minutes, and Seconds had been
-hanging over it, waiting patiently until people should understand
-about them. But nobody before had ever, ever thought about them, and
-Vertebrata and her mother and her father were the very first ones who
-had even begun to understand.
-
-So it chanced that in the second that Vertebrata began to pipe and the
-bone was laid on the circle, _that_ Second (deep in the air and yet
-as near as time is to us) knew that it was being marked off at last
-on the soft circle of the earth, and so did the next Second, and the
-next, and the next, and the next, until sixty of them knew--and there
-was the first Minute, measured in the circle before the cave. And other
-Minutes knew what was happening, and they all came hurrying likewise,
-and they filled the air with exquisite, invisible presences--all to
-the soft sound of little Vertebrata’s piping. And she piped, and piped,
-on the lovely, reedy, blow-on-it instrument, and she made sweet music.
-And for the first time in her little life, her practising became to her
-not merely practising, but music-making--there, while she watched the
-strange Time-shadow move.
-
-“J--o--y!” cried the Seconds, talking among themselves. “People are
-beginning to know about us. It is _time_ that they should.”
-
-“Ah!” they cried again. “We can go faster than anything.”
-
-“Think of all of our poor brothers and sisters that have gone, without
-anybody knowing they were here,” they mourned.
-
-“Pipe, pipe, pipe,” went Vertebrata, and the little Seconds danced by
-almost as if she were making them with her piping.
-
-The Minutes, too, said things to one another--who knows if Time is so
-silent as we imagine? May not all sorts of delicate conversations go on
-in the heart of time about which we never know anything--Second talking
-with Second, and Minute answering to Minute; and the grave Hours,
-listening to everything we say and seeing everything we do, confiding
-things to the Day about us and about Eternity from which they have
-come. I cannot tell you what they say about you--you will know that, if
-you try to think, and especially if you stand close to a great clock
-or hear it boom out in the night. And I cannot tell you what they say
-about Eternity. But I think that this may be one of the songs that they
-sing:--
-
-SONG OF THE MINUTES
-
- We are a garland for men,
- We are flung from the first gate of Time,
- From the touch that opened the minds of men
- Down to the breath of this rhyme.
-
- We are the measure of things,
- The rule of their sweep and stir,
- But whenever a little girl pipes and sings,
- We will keep time for her.
-
- We are a touching of hands
- From those in the murk of the earth,
- Through all who have garnered life in their hands
- And wrought it from death unto birth.
-
- We are the measure of things,
- The rule of their stir and sweep,
- And wherever a little child weeps or sings
- It is his soul we keep.
-
-At last, when sixty Minutes had danced and chorussed past, there was,
-of course, the first rosy Hour ever to have her coming and passing
-marked since earth began. And when the Hour was gone, Vertebrata’s
-mother felt the feeling of enough, and she said to Vertebrata:--
-
-“That will do, dear. Now you may go and play.”
-
-That was the first exact hour’s practising that ever any little girl
-did by any sort of clock.
-
-“Ribbon-fish mine,” said the Prehistoric Man to his wife, when
-Vertebrata had finished, “I have been thinking additional thoughts. Why
-could we not use the circle in other ways?”
-
-“What ways, besides for your coming home and for Vertebrata’s
-practising?” asked the Prehistoric Woman; but we must forgive her for
-knowing about only those two things, for she was a very Prehistoric
-Woman indeed.
-
-“Little bones might be laid between the big bones,” said the Man--and
-by that of course he meant measuring off minutes. “By certain of them
-you could roast flesh and not kneel continually beside the fire. By
-certain of them you could boil eggs, make meet the cakes, and not be in
-peril of burning the beans. Also....”
-
-He was silent for a moment, looking away over the soft breast of the
-wood where the sun was shining its utmost, because it has so many
-reasons.
-
-“When I look at that moving finger on the circle thing,” he said
-slowly, “it feels as if whoever made the sun were saying things to me,
-but with no words. For his sun moves, and the finger on the circle
-thing moves with it--as if it were telling us how long to do this
-thing, and how long to do that thing--you and me and Vertebrata. And
-we must use every space between the bones--and whoever made the sun is
-telling us this, but with no words.”
-
-The Prehistoric Woman looked up at her husband wonderfully.
-
-“You are a great man, Troglodyte!” she told him.
-
-At which he went away to hunt, feeling for the first time in his
-prehistoric life as if there were a big reason, somewhere out in the
-air, why he should get as much done as he could. And the Prehistoric
-Woman went at her baking and cave-tidying, but always she ran to the
-door of the cave to look at the circle thing, as if it bore a great
-message for her to make haste, a message with no words.
-
-As for Vertebrata, she had taken her pipes and danced away where,
-on rocks in the landscape, the other little Prehistorics sat about,
-getting their practising done. She tried to tell them all about the
-circle thing, waving her pipes and jumping up and down to make them
-understand, and drawing circles and trying to play to them about it on
-her pipes; and at last they understood a little, like understanding a
-new game, and they joined her and piped on their rocks all over the
-green, green place. And the Seconds and Minutes and Hours, being fairly
-started to be measured, all came trooping on, to the sound of the
-children’s piping.
-
-When the sun was at the top of the sky, Vertebrata remembered, and she
-stuck a stick in the ground and saw that there was almost no shadow.
-So she left the other children and ran very hard toward her own cave.
-And when she had nearly reached it, somebody overtook her, also running
-very hard.
-
-[Illustration: SAT ON A ROCK IN THE LANDSCAPE AND PRACTISED.]
-
-“Faddie!” she called, as she called when she meant loving--and he swung
-her up on his shoulder and ran on with her. And they burst into the
-open space before the cave just as the shadow-stick pointed straight to
-the top of the circle thing.
-
-There, before the door of the cave, was the flat rock, all set with
-hot baked meat and toothsome piles of roast vegetables and beans that
-were not burned. And the Prehistoric Woman, with vine-leaves in her
-hair, was looking straight before her and smiling. And that was the
-first dinner of the world that was ever served on time, and since that
-day, to be late for dinner is one of the things which nobody may do;
-and perhaps in memory of the Prehistoric Woman, when this occurs, the
-politest ladies may always look straight before them _without smiling_.
-
-“Is dinner ready, Sea Anemone?” asked the Man.
-
-“On the bone,” replied his wife, pleasantly.
-
-“What’s for ’sert?” asked Vertebrata.
-
-“It’s a surprise,” said her mother--which is always the proper answer
-to that question.
-
-And while they sat there, the Days and Weeks and Months and Years
-were coming toward them, faster than anything, to be marked off on the
-circle thing before the door, _and to be used_. And they are coming
-yet, like a message--but with no words.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-ONE FOR THE MONEY
-
-
-We were burying snow. Calista Waters had told us about it, when, late
-in April, snow was found under a pile of wood in our yard. We wondered
-why we had never thought of it before when snow was plentiful. We had
-two long tins which had once contained ginger wafers. These were to be
-packed with snow, fastened tight as to covers, and laid deep in the
-earth at a distance which, by means of spoons and hot water, we were
-now fast approaching.
-
-It was Spring-in-earnest. The sun was warm, robins were running on the
-grass, already faintly greened where the snow had but just melted;
-a clear little stream flowed down the garden path and out under the
-cross-walk. The Wells’s barn-doors stood open, somebody was beating
-a carpet, there was a hint of bonfire smoke in the air, there were
-little stirrings and sounds that belonged to Spring as the gasoline
-wood-cutter belonged to Fall.
-
-Calista was talking.
-
-“And then,” she said, “some hot Summer day, when they’re all sitting
-out on the lawn in the shade, with thin dresses and palm-leaf fans,
-we’ll come and dig it up, and carry ’em big plates of feathery white
-snow, with a spoon stuck in.”
-
-We were silent, picturing their delight.
-
-“Miss Messmore says,” I ventured, not without hesitation, “that snow is
-all bugs.”
-
-In fact all of us had been warned without ceasing not to eat snow--but
-there were certain spots where it was beyond human power to resist
-it: Mr. Britt’s fence, for instance, on whose pickets little squares
-of snow rested, which, eaten off by direct application of the lips,
-produced a slight illusion of partaking of caramels.
-
-Delia stopped digging. “Maybe they won’t eat it when we bring it to
-them in Summer?” she suggested.
-
-“Then we will,” said Calista, promptly. Of course they would not have
-the heart to forbid us to eat it in, say, June.
-
-About a foot down in the ground we set the two tins side by side in an
-aperture lined and packed with snow and filled in with earth. Over it
-we made a mound of all the snow we could find in the garden. Then we
-adjourned to the woodshed and sat on the sill and the sawbuck and the
-work-bench.
-
-“What makes us give it away?” said Delia Dart, abruptly. “Why don’t we
-sell it? We’d ought to get fifteen cents a dish for it by June.”
-
-We began a calculation, as rapid as might be. Each tin would hold at
-least six dishes.
-
-“Why didn’t we bury more?” said Calista, raptly. “Why didn’t we bury a
-tubful?”
-
-“It’d be an awful job to dig the hole,” I objected. “Besides, they’d
-miss the tub.”
-
-The latter objection was insurmountable, so we went off to the garden
-to hunt pig-nuts. A tree of these delicacies grew in the midst of the
-potato patch, and some of the nuts were sure to have lain winter-long
-in the earth and to be seasoned and edible.
-
-“Let’s all ask to go to the Rodmans’ this afternoon and tell Margaret
-Amelia and Betty about the snow,” Calista suggested.
-
-“I can’t,” I said. “I’ve got to go calling.”
-
-They regarded me pityingly.
-
-“Can’t you come over there afterwards?” they suggested.
-
-This, I knew, was useless. We should not start calling till late.
-Besides, I should be hopelessly dressed up.
-
-“Well,” said Delia, soothingly, “_we’ll_ go anyhow. Are you going to
-call where there’s children?”
-
-“I don’t think so,” I said, darkly. “We never do.”
-
-That afternoon was one whose warm air was almost thickened by sun. The
-maple buds were just widening into little curly leaves; shadows were
-beginning to show; and everywhere was that faint ripple of running
-water in which Spring speaks. But then there was I, in my best dress,
-my best coat, my best shoes, my new hat, and gloves, faring forth to
-make calls.
-
-This meant merely that there were houses where dwelt certain Grown-ups
-who expected me to be brought periodically to see them, an expectation
-persevered in, I believe, solely as a courtesy to my family. Twice a
-year, therefore, we set out; and the days selected were, as this one,
-invariably the crown and glory of all days: Days meet for cleaning
-out the play-house, for occupying homes scraped with a shingle in the
-softened soil, for assisting at bonfires, to say nothing of all that
-was to be done in damming up the streams of the curbs and turning aside
-the courses of rivers.
-
-The first call was on Aunt Hoyt--no true aunt, of course, but “aunt”
-by mutual compliment. She lived in a tiny house on Conant Street, set
-close to the sidewalk and shaded by an enormous mulberry tree. I sought
-out my usual seat, a little hardwood stool to whose top was neatly
-tacked a square of Brussels carpeting and whose cover, on being lifted,
-revealed a boot-jack, a shoe-brush, and a round box of blacking. The
-legs were deeply notched, and I amused myself by fitting my feet in the
-notches and occasionally coming inadvertently back to the floor with an
-echoing bump.
-
-Now and then Aunt Hoyt, who was little and wrinkled, and whose glasses
-had double lenses in the middle so that I could not keep my eyes from
-them when she spoke, would turn to address an observation at me.
-
-“How long her hair is! Do you think it is quite healthy for her to have
-such long hair? I’ll warrant you don’t like to have it combed, do you,
-dear?”
-
-If Aunt Hoyt had only known the depth of the boredom with which I had
-this inane question put to me! It was one of the wonders of my days:
-the utterly absurd questions that grown-up people could ask.
-
-For example: “How do you do to-day?” What had any reasonable child
-to answer to that? Of course one was well. If one wasn’t, one would
-be kept at home. If one wasn’t, one wasn’t going to tell anyway. Or,
-“What’s she been doing lately?” Well! Was one likely to reply: “Burying
-snow. Hunting pig-nuts. Digging up pebbles from under the eaves. Making
-a secret play-house in the currant bushes that nobody knows about?” And
-unless one did thus tell one’s inmost secrets, what was there left to
-say? And if one kept a dignified silence, one was sulky!
-
-“She’s a good little girl, I’m sure. Is she much help to you?” Aunt
-Hoyt asked that day, and patted my hair as we took leave. Dear Aunt
-Hoyt, I know now that she was lonesome and longed for children and,
-like many another, had no idea how to treat them, save by making little
-conversational dabs at them.
-
-Then there was Aunt Arthur, who lived in a square brick house that
-always smelled cool. At her house I invariably sat on a Brussels
-“kick-about” in the bay window and looked at a big leather “Wonders
-of Earth and Sea,” with illustrations. Sometimes she let me examine a
-basket of shells that she herself had gathered at the beach--I used
-to look at her hands and at her big, flat cameo ring and marvel that
-they had been so near to the ocean. Once or twice, when I wriggled too
-outrageously, she would let me go into the large, dim parlour, with
-its ostrich egg hanging from the chandelier and the stuffed blackbird
-under an oval glass case before the high mirror, and the coral piled
-under the centre-table and the huge, gilt-framed landscape which she
-herself had painted. But this day, between the lace curtains hanging
-from their cornices, I caught sight of Calista and Delia racing up the
-hill to the Rodmans, and the entire parlour was, so to say, poisoned.
-In desperation I went back and asked for a drink of water--my ancient
-recourse when things got too bad.
-
-Aunt Barker’s was better--there was a baby there. But that day ill-luck
-went before me, for he was asleep and they refused to let me look at
-him, because they said that woke him up. I disbelieved this, because I
-saw no reason in it, and nobody gave me a reason. I resolved to try it
-out the first time I was alone with a sleeping baby. I begged boldly to
-go outdoors, and Mother would have consented, but Aunt Barker said that
-a man was painting the lattice and that I would in every probability
-lean against the lattice, or brush the paint pots, or try to get a
-drink at the pump, which, I gathered, splashed everybody for miles
-around. So I sat in a patent rocker, and the only rift in a world of
-black cloud was that, by rocking far enough, the patent rocker could be
-made to give forth a wholly delectable squeak. Of course fate swiftly
-descended; I was bidden discontinue the squeak, and nothing remained to
-me.
-
-Then we went to Grandma Bard’s. I did not in the least know why, but
-the little rag-carpeted sitting-room, the singing kettle on the back of
-the coal stove, the scarlet geraniums on the window, the fascinating
-picture on the clock door, all entertained me at once. Grandma Bard
-wore a black lace cap, and she bade me sit by her and instantly gave
-me a peppermint drop from the pocket of her black sateen apron. She
-asked me no questions, but while she talked with Mother, she laid
-together two rose-coloured--rose-coloured!--bits of her patchwork and
-quietly handed them to me to baste--none of your close stitches, only
-basting! Then she folded a newspaper and asked me to cut it and scallop
-it for her cupboard shelf. Then she found a handful of hickory nuts and
-brought me the tack-hammer and a flat-iron....
-
-“Oh, Mother, let’s _not_ go yet,” I heard myself saying.
-
-Going home--a delicate business, because stepping on any crack meant
-being poisoned forthwith--I tried to think it out: What was it that
-Mother and Grandma Bard knew that the rest didn’t know? I gave it up.
-All I could think of was that they seemed to know me.
-
-“Isn’t Grandma Bard just grand?” I observed fervently.
-
-“I’m afraid,” Mother said thoughtfully, “that sometimes she has rather
-a hard time to get on.”
-
-I was still turning this in my mind as we passed the wood yard. The
-wood yard was a series of vacant lots where some mysterious person
-piled cords and cords of wood, which smelled sweet and green and gave
-out cool breaths. Sometimes the gasoline wood-cutter worked in there,
-and we would watch till it had gone, and then steal in and bring away a
-baking-powder can full of sawdust. We never knew quite what to do with
-this sawdust. It was not desirable for mud-pies, and there was nothing
-that we knew of to be stuffed with it. Yet when we could, we always
-saved it. Perhaps it gave us an excuse to go into the wood yard, at
-which we always peeped as we went by. This day, I lagged a few steps
-behind and looked in, expectant of the same vague thing that we always
-expected, and never defined--a bonfire, a robber, an open cave, some
-changed aspect, I did not know what. And over by the sawdust pile, I
-saw, stepping about, a little girl in a reddish dress--a little girl
-whom I had never seen before. She looked up and saw me stand staring at
-her; and her gaze was so clear and direct that I felt obliged to say
-something in defence of my intrusion.
-
-“Hello,” I said.
-
-Her face suddenly brightened. “Hello,” she replied, and after a moment
-she added: “I thought you was going to say ‘how de do.’”
-
-A faint spark of understanding leapt between us. Dressed-up little
-girls usually did say “how de do.” It was only in a kind of
-unconscious deference to her own appearance that I had not done so. She
-was unkempt and ragged--her sleeve was torn from cuff to elbow.
-
-“What you doing here?” I inquired, not averse to breaking the business
-of calling by a bit of gossip.
-
-At this she did for the third time what I had been vaguely conscious
-of her having done: She glanced over her shoulder toward a corner of
-the yard which the piled wood concealed from me. I stepped forward and
-looked there.
-
-On an end of wood-pile which we children had pulled down so as to
-make a slope to ascend its heights, a man was sitting. His head and
-shoulders were drooping, his legs were relaxed, and his hands were
-hanging loose, as if they were heavy. His eyes were closed and his lips
-were parted, yet about the face, with its fair hair and beard, there
-was something singularly attractive and gentle. He looked like a man
-who would tell you a story.
-
-“Who’s he?” I asked, and involuntarily I whispered.
-
-The girl began backing a little away from me, her eyes on my face, her
-finger on her lips.
-
-“It’s my father,” she said. “He’s--resting.”
-
-I had never heard of a man resting in the daytime. Save, perhaps, on
-Sunday afternoons, this was no true function of men. I longed to look
-at the man and understand better, but something in the little girl’s
-manner forbade me. I looked perplexedly after her. Then I peered round
-the fence post and saw my Mother standing under a tree, waiting for
-me. She beckoned. I took one more look inside the fence, and I saw the
-little girl sit down beside the sleeping man and fold her hands. The
-afternoon sun smote across the long wood yard, with its mysterious
-rooms made by the piling of the cords. It seemed impossible that this
-strange, still place, with its thick carpet of sawdust and its moist
-odours, should belong at all to the commonplace little street. And the
-two strange occupants gave the last touch to its enchantment.
-
-I ran to overtake Mother, and I tried to tell her something of what I
-had seen. But some way my words gave nothing of the air of the place
-and of the two who waited there for something that I could not guess.
-Already I knew this about words--that they were all very well for
-_saying_ a thing, but seldom for letting anybody _taste_ what you were
-talking about.
-
-I did not give up trying to tell it until we passed the Rodmans’.
-From the direction of their high-board fence I heard voices. Margaret
-Amelia and Betty and Delia and Calista were engaged in writing on the
-weathered boards of the fence with willows dipped in the clear-flowing
-gutter stream.
-
-“Got it done?” I called mysteriously.
-
-They turned, shaking their heads.
-
-“It was all melted,” they replied. “We couldn’t find another bit.”
-
-“Oh, well,” I cried, “you come on over after supper. I’ve got something
-to tell you.”
-
-“Something to tell you” would, of course, bring anybody anywhere.
-After supper they all came “over.” It was that hour which only village
-children know--that last bright daylight of slanting sun and driven
-cows tinkling homeward; of front-doors standing open and neighbours
-calling to one another across the streets, and the sky warm in the
-quiet surface of some little water from whose bridge lads are tossing
-stones or hanging bare-footed from the timbers. We withdrew past the
-family, sitting on the side-porch, to the garden, where the sun was
-still golden on the tops of the maples.
-
-“Mother says,” I began importantly, “that she thinks Grandma Bard has
-a hard time to get along. Well, you know our snow? Well, you know you
-said you couldn’t find any more to bury? Well, why don’t we dig up
-ours, right now, and sell it and give the money to Grandma Bard?”
-
-I must have touched some answering chord. Looking back, I cannot
-believe that this was wholly Grandma Bard. Could it be that the others
-had wanted to dig it up, independent of my suggestion? For there was
-not one dissenting voice.
-
-The occasion seemed to warrant the best dishes. I brought out six china
-plates and six spoons. These would be used for serving my own family,
-while the others took the two cans and ran home with them to their
-families.
-
-We dug rapidly now, the earth being still soft. To our surprise, the
-tops of the tins were located much nearer to the surface than we had
-supposed after our efforts of the morning to reach a great depth. The
-snow in which we had packed the cans had disappeared, but we made
-nothing of that. We drew out the cans, had off their tops, and gazed
-distressfully down into clear water.
-
-“It went and melted!” said Calista, resentfully.
-
-In a way, she regarded it as her personal failure, since the ceremony
-had been her suggestion in the first place.
-
-“Never mind, Calista,” we said, “you didn’t know.”
-
-Calista freely summed up her impressions.
-
-“How _mean_!” she said.
-
-We gravely gathered up the china plates and turned toward the
-house--and now I was possessed of a really accountable desire to get
-the plates back in their places as quickly as possible.
-
-On the way a thought struck us simultaneously. Poor Grandma Bard!
-
-“Let’s all go to see her to-morrow anyhow,” I suggested--largely, I am
-afraid, because the memory of my entertainment there was still fresh in
-my mind.
-
-When, after a little while, we came round the house where the older
-ones were sitting, and heard them discussing uninteresting affairs,
-we regarded them with real sympathy. They had so narrowly missed
-something so vastly, absorbingly interesting.
-
-From Delia’s room a voice came calling as, at intervals, other voices
-were heard calling other names throughout the neighbourhood--they were
-at one with the tinkle of the bells and the far-off yodel of the boys.
-
-“Delia!”
-
-“Good night,” said Delia, briefly, and vanished without warning, as at
-the sound of any other taps. Soon after, the others also disappeared;
-and I crept up on the porch and lay down in the hammock.
-
-“What’s she been doing _now_?” somebody instantly asked me.
-
-For a moment I thought of telling; but not seriously.
-
-Evidently they had not expected an answer, for they went on talking.
-
-“... yes, I had looked forward to it for a long while. Of course we had
-all counted on it. It was a great disappointment.”
-
-Somewhere in me the words echoed a familiar and recent emotion. So!
-They too had their disappointments ... even as we. Of course whatever
-this was could have been nothing like losing a fortune in melted snow.
-Still, I felt a new sympathy.
-
-Mother turned to me.
-
-“We are going to ask Grandma Bard to come to live with us,” she said.
-“Will you like that?”
-
-I sat up in the hammock. “All the time?” I joyfully inquired.
-
-“For the rest of the time,” Mother said soberly. “It seems as if one
-ought to take a child,” she added to the others, “when one takes
-anybody....”
-
-“Still,” said father, “till we get in our heads something of what the
-state owes to old folks, there’s nobody but us to do its work....”
-
-I hardly heard them. To make this come true at one stroke! Even to be
-able to adopt a child! How easily they could do things, these grown-up
-ones; and how magnificently they acted as if it were nothing at all ...
-like the giants planting city-seed and watching cities grow to the size
-and shape of giants’ flower beds....
-
-They went on talking. Some of the things that they said we might have
-said ourselves. In some ways they were not so very different from us.
-Yet think what they could accomplish.
-
-Watching them and listening, there in the April twilight, I began to
-understand. It was not only that they could have their own way. But for
-the sake of things that we had never yet so much as guessed or dreamed,
-it was desirable to be grown up.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-THE PICNIC
-
-
-It was Delia Dart who had suggested our Arbour Day picnic. “Let’s have
-some fun Arbour Day,” she said.
-
-We had never thought of Arbour Day in that light. Exercises, though
-they presented the open advantage of escape from the school grind, were
-no special fun. Fun was something much more intimate and intangible,
-definite and mysterious, casual and thrilling--and other anomalies.
-
-“Doing what?” we demanded.
-
-“Oh,” said Delia, restlessly, “go off somewheres. And eat things. And
-do something to tell about and make their eyes stick out.”
-
-We were not old enough really to have observed this formula for
-adventure. Hitherto we had always gone merely because we went. Yet
-all three motives appealed to us. And events fostered our faint
-intention. At the opening of school that morning, Miss Messmore made
-an announcement.... I remember her grave way of smiling and silent
-waiting, so that we hung on what she was going to say.
-
-“To-morrow,” she said, “is Arbour Day. All who wish will assemble here
-at the usual hour in the afternoon. We are to plant trees and shrubs
-and vines about the schoolhouse. There will be something for each one
-to plant. But this is not required. Any who do not wish to be present
-may remain away, and these will not be marked absent. Only those may
-plant trees who wish to plant trees. I hope that all children will take
-advantage of their opportunity. Classes will now pass to their places.”
-
-Delia telegraphed triumphantly in several directions. We could hardly
-wait to confer. At recess we met immediately in the closet under the
-stairs, a closet intended primarily for chalk, erasers, brooms, and
-maps, but by virtue of its window and its privacy put to sub-uses of
-secret committee meetings.
-
-“I told you,” said Delia. And such was Delia’s magnetism that we felt
-that she had told us. “Let’s take our lunch and start as soon as we get
-out.”
-
-“Couldn’t we go after the exercises?” Calista Waters submitted
-waveringly.
-
-“_After!_” said Delia, scornfully. “It’ll be three o’clock. _That’s_ no
-fun. We want to start by twelve, prompt, and stay till six.”
-
-Margaret Amelia Rodman bore out Delia’s contention. She and Betty had
-a dozen eggs saved up from their pullets. They would boil them and
-bring them. “The pullets?” Calista demanded aghast and was laughed
-into subjection, and found herself agreeing and planning in order to
-get back into favour. Delia and the Rodmans were, I now perceive, born
-leaders of mediæval living.
-
-“Why don’t you wait till Saturday?” I finally said, from out a silence
-that had tried to produce this earlier. “That’s only two days.”
-
-“Saturday!” said Delia. “Anybody can have a picnic Saturday. This is
-most as good as running away.”
-
-And of course it was. But....
-
-“Who wants to plant a tree?” Delia continued. “They’ll plant all
-they’ve got whether we’re here or not, won’t they?”
-
-That was true. They would do so. It was clearly a selfish wish to
-participate that was agitating Calista and me. In the end we were
-outvoted, and we went. Our families, it seemed, all took the same
-attitude: We need not plant trees if we did not wish to plant trees.
-Save in the case of Harold Rodman. He was ruled to be too small to walk
-to Prospect Hill, and he preferred going back to school to staying at
-home alone.
-
-“I won’t plant no tree, though,” he announced resentfully, as we left
-him. “I’m goin’ dig ’em all up!” he shouted after us. “Every one in the
-world!”
-
-It was when I was running round the house to get my lunch that I came
-for the second time face to face with Mary Elizabeth.
-
-Mary Elizabeth was sitting flat on the ground, cleaning knives which
-I recognized as our kitchen knives. This she was doing by a simple
-process, not unknown to me and consisting of driving the knife into the
-ground up to its black handle and shoving it rapidly up and down. It
-struck me as very strange that she should be there, in _our_ back yard,
-cleaning _our_ knives, and I somewhat resented it. For it is curious
-how much of a savage a little girl in a white apron can really be. But
-then I did not at once recognize her as the girl whom I had seen in
-the wood yard.
-
-I remember her sometimes as I saw her that day. She had straight brown
-hair the colour of my own, and her thick pig-tail, which had fallen
-over her shoulder as she worked, was tied with red yarn. Her face was a
-lovely, even cream colour, with no freckles such as diversified my own
-nose, and with no other colour in her cheek. Her hands were thin and
-veined, with long, agile fingers. The right sleeve of her reddish plaid
-dress was by now slit almost to the shoulder, and her bare arm showed,
-and it was nearly all wrist. She had on a boy’s heavy shoes, and these
-were nearly without buttons.
-
-“What you doing?” I inquired, coming to a standstill.
-
-She lifted her face and smiled, not a flash of a smile, but a slow
-smile of understanding me.
-
-“This,” she replied, and went on with her task.
-
-“What’s your name?” I demanded.
-
-“Mary Elizabeth,” she answered, and did not ask me my name. This
-was her pathetic way of deference to me because my clothing and my
-“station” were other than hers.
-
-I went on to the house, but I went, looking back.
-
-“Mother,” I said, “who is she? The little girl out there.”
-
-While she put up my lunch in the Indian basket, Mother told me how Mary
-Elizabeth had come that morning asking for something to do. She had set
-her to work, and meanwhile she was finding out who she was. “I gave
-her something to eat,” Mother said. “And I have never seen even you so
-hungry.” Hungry and having no food. I had never heard of such a thing
-at first hand--not nearer than in books and in Sunday school. But ...
-hungry that way, and in our yard!
-
-It was chiefly this that accounted for my invitation to her--this,
-and the fact that, as she came to the door to tell my Mother good-bye
-and to take what she had earned, she gave me again that slow,
-understanding-me smile. Anyway, as we walked toward the gate, I
-overtook her with my Indian basket.
-
-“Don’t you want to come to the picnic with us?” I said.
-
-She stared at me. “What do you do?” she asked.
-
-“Why,” I said, “a picnic? Eat in the woods and--and get things, and sit
-on the grass. Don’t you think they’re fun?”
-
-“I never was to one,” she answered, but I saw how she was watching me
-almost breathlessly.
-
-“Come on, then,” I insisted carelessly.
-
-“Honest?” she said. “Me?”
-
-When she understood, I remember how she walked beside me, looking at me
-as if she might at any moment find out her mistake.
-
-Delia, waiting impatiently at our gate with her own basket,--somehow I
-never waited at the gates of others, but it was always they who waited
-at mine,--bade me hurry, stared at Mary Elizabeth, and serenely turned
-her back on her.
-
-“This,” I said, “is Mary Elizabeth. I asked her to go to our picnic.
-She’s going. I’ve got enough lunch. This is Delia.”
-
-I suppose that they looked at each other furtively--so much of the
-stupidity of being a knight with one’s visor lowered yet hangs upon
-us--and then Delia plucked me, visibly, by the sleeve and addressed me,
-audibly, in the ear.
-
-“What’d you go and do that for?” said she. And I who, at an early age,
-resented being plucked by the sleeve as a bird resents being patted
-on the head, or the wall of any personality trembles away when it is
-tapped, took Mary Elizabeth by the hand and marched on to meet the
-Rodmans and Calista.
-
-Calista was a vague little soul, with no sense of facts. She was always
-promising to walk with two girls at recess, which was equivalent to
-asking two to be her partners in a quadrille. It simply could not be
-done. So Calista was forever having to promise to run errands with
-someone after school to make amends for not having walked with her at
-recess. She seldom had a grievance of her own, but she easily fell in
-with the grievances of others. When I presented Mary Elizabeth to her,
-Calista received her serenely as a part of the course of human events;
-and so I think she would have continued to regard her, without great
-attention and certainly with no criticism, had she not received the
-somewhat powerful suggestion of Delia and Margaret Amelia and Betty
-Rodman. The three fell behind Mary Elizabeth and me as we trotted down
-the long street on which the April sun smote with Summer heat.
-
-“--over across the railroad tracks and picks up tin cans and old
-rubbers and sells ’em and drinks just awful and got ten children and
-got arrested,” I heard Delia recounting.
-
-“The idea. To our picnic,” said Margaret Amelia’s thin-edged voice.
-
-“Without asking us,” Betty whispered, anxious to think of something of
-account to say.
-
-Mary Elizabeth heard. I have seen that look of dumb, unresentful
-suffering in many a human face--in the faces of those who, by the Laws
-of sport or society or of jurisprudence, find no escape. She had no
-anger, and what she felt must have been long familiar. “I’d better go
-home,” she said to me briefly.
-
-I still had her by the hand. And it was, I am bound to confess, as no
-errant but chiefly as antagonist to the others that I pulled her along.
-“You got to come,” I reminded her. “You said you would.”
-
-It was cruel treatment, by way of kindness. The others, quickly
-adapting themselves, fell into the talk of expeditions, which is never
-quite the same as any other talk; and the only further notice that they
-took of Mary Elizabeth was painstakingly to leave her out. They never
-said anything to her, and when she ventured some faint word, they
-never answered or noticed or seemed to hear. In later years I have had
-occasion to observe, among the undeveloped, these same traces of tribal
-antagonisms.
-
-As we went, I had time to digest the hints which I had overheard
-concerning Mary Elizabeth’s estate. I knew that a family having many
-children had lately come to live “across the tracks,” and that, because
-of our anxiety to classify, the father was said to be a drunkard. I
-looked stealthily at Mary Elizabeth, with a certain respect born of her
-having experience so transcending my own. Telling how many drunken men
-and how many dead persons, if any, we had seen was one of our modes
-of recreation when we foregathered. Technically Mary Elizabeth was, I
-perceived, one of the vague “poor children” for whom we had long packed
-baskets and whom we used to take for granted as barbarously as they
-used to take for granted the plague. Yet now that I knew one such,
-face to face, she seemed so much less a poor child than a little girl.
-And though she said so little, she had a priceless manner of knowing
-what I was driving at, which not even Margaret Amelia and Betty Rodman
-had, and they were the daughters of an assemblyman, and had a furnace
-in their house, and had had gold watches for Christmas. It was very
-perplexing.
-
-“First one finds a May-flower’s going to be a princess!” Delia shouted.
-Delia was singularly unimaginative; the idea of royalty was her
-single entrance to fields of fancy. The stories that I made up always
-began “Once there was a fairy”; Margaret and Betty started at gnomes
-and dwarfs; Calista usually selected a poor little match girl or a
-boot-black asleep in a piano box; but Delia invariably chose a royal
-family, with many sons.
-
-We ran, shouting, across the stretch of scrub-oak which stretched
-where the town blocks of houses and streets gave it up and reverted to
-the open country. To reach this unprepossessing green place, usually
-occupied by a decrepit wagon and a pile of cord-wood, was like passing
-through a doorway into the open. We expressed our freedom by shouting
-and scrambling to be princesses--all, that is, save Mary Elizabeth. She
-went soberly about, a little apart, and I wished with all my heart that
-she might find the first May-flower; but she did not do so.
-
-We hunted for wind-flowers. It was on Prospect Hill that these first
-flowers--wind-flowers, pasque flowers, May-flowers, however one has
-learned to say them--were found in Spring--the _anemone patens_ which,
-next to pussy-willows themselves, meant to us Spring. A week before
-Nellie Pitmouth had brought to school the first that we had seen.
-Nellie had our pity because she drove the cows to pasture before
-she came to school, but she had her reward, for it was always she
-who found the first spoils. I remember those mornings when I would
-reach school to find a little group about Nellie in whose hands would
-be pussy-willows, or the first violets, or our rarely found white
-violets. For a little while, in the light of real events like these,
-Nellie enjoyed distinction. Then she relapsed into her usual social
-obscurity and the stigma of her gingham apron which she wore even on
-half holidays. This day we pressed hard for her laurels, scrambling in
-the deep mould and dead leaves in search of the star faces on silvery,
-silken, furry stems. We hoped untiringly that we might some day find
-arbutus, which grew in abundance only eighteen miles away, on the
-hills. In Summer we patiently looked for wintergreen, which they were
-always finding farther up the river. And from the undoubted dearth
-of both we escaped with a pretence to the effect that we were under a
-spell, and that some day, the witch having died, we should walk on our
-hill and find the wintergreen come and the arbutus under the leaves.
-
-By five o’clock we had been hungry for two hours, and we spread our
-lunch on the crest. Prospect Hill was the place to which we took our
-guests when we had them. It was the wide west gateway of the town,
-where through few ventured, for it opened out on the bend of the little
-river, navigable only to rowboats and launches, and flowing toward us
-from the west. You stood at the top of a sharp declivity, and it was
-like seeing a river face to face to find it flowing straight toward
-you, out of the sky, bearing little green islands and wet yellow
-sandbars. It almost seemed as if these must come floating toward us
-and bringing us everything.... For these were the little days, when we
-still believed that everything was necessary.
-
-We quickly despatched the process of “trading off,” a sandwich for an
-apple, a cooky for a cake, and so on, occasionally trading back before
-the bargain had been tasted. Mary Elizabeth sat at one side; even after
-I had divided my lunch and given her my basket for a plate, she sat a
-very little away from us--or it may be my remembrance of her aloofness
-that makes this seem so. Each of the others gave her something from
-her basket--but it was the kind of giving which makes one know what
-a sad word is the word “bestow.” They “bestowed” these things. Since
-that time, when I have seen folk administering charity, I have always
-thought of the manner, ill-bred as is all condescension, in which we
-must have shared our picnic food with Mary Elizabeth.
-
-I believe that this is the first conversation that ever I can remember.
-Up to this time, I had talked as naturally as the night secretes
-dreams, with no sense of responsibility for either to mean anything.
-But that day I became uncomfortably conscious of the trend of the talk.
-
-“I have to have my new dress tried on before supper,” Delia announced,
-her back to the river and her mouth filled with a jam sandwich. “It’s
-blue plaid, with blue buttons and blue tassels on,” she volunteered.
-
-“My new dress Aunt Harriet brought me from the City isn’t going to be
-made up till last day of school,” Margaret Amelia informed us. “It’s
-got pink flowers in and it cost sixty cents a yard.”
-
-“Margaret and I are going to have white shoes before we go visiting,”
-Betty remembered.
-
-“I got two new dresses that ain’t made up yet. Mamma says I got so many
-I don’t need them,” observed Calista, with an indifferent manner and a
-soft, triumphant glance. Whereat we all sat silent.
-
-I struggled with the moment, but it was too much for me.
-
-“I got a white silk lining to my new dress,” I let it be known.
-“It’s made, but I haven’t had it on yet. China silk,” I added
-conscientiously. Then, moved perhaps by a common discomfort, we all
-looked toward Mary Elizabeth. I think I loved her from that moment.
-
-“None of you’s got the new style sleeves,” she said serenely, and held
-aloft the arm whose sleeve was slit from wrist to shoulder.
-
-We all laughed together, but Delia pounced upon the arm. She caught and
-held it.
-
-“What’s that on your arm?” she cried, and we all looked. From the elbow
-up the skin was mottled a dull, ugly purple, as if rough hands had
-been there.
-
-Mary Elizabeth flushed. “Ain’t you ever had any bruises on you?” she
-inquired in a tone so finely modulated that Delia actually hastened to
-defend herself from the impeachment of inexperience.
-
-“Sure,” she said heartily. “I counted ’em last night. I got seven.”
-
-“I got five and a great long skin,” Betty competed hotly.
-
-“Pooh,” said Calista, “I’ve got a scratch longer than my hand is.
-Teacher said maybe I’d get an infect,” she added importantly.
-
-Then we kept on neutral ground, such as blank-books and Fourth of July
-and planning to go bare-foot some day, until Calista attacked a pickled
-peach which she had brought.
-
-“Our whole cellar’s full of pickled peaches,” I incautiously observed.
-“I could have brought some if I’d thought.”
-
-“We got more than that,” said Delia, instantly. “We got a thousand
-glasses of jelly left over from last year.”
-
-“A thousand!” repeated Margaret Amelia, in derision. “A hundred, you
-mean.”
-
-“Well,” Delia said, “it’s a lot. And jars and jars and jars of
-preserves. And cans and cans and _cans_....”
-
-The others took it up. Why we should have boasted of the quantity of
-fruit in our parents’ cellars, I have no notion, save that it was
-for the unidentified reason which impels all boasting. When I am in
-a very new bit of country, where generalizations and multiplications
-follow every fact, I am sometimes reminded of the fashion of our talk
-whose statements tried to exceed themselves, in a kind of pyrotechnic
-pattern bursting at last into nothing and the night. We might have been
-praising climate or crops or real estate.
-
-Mary Elizabeth spoke with something like eagerness.
-
-“We got a bottle of blackberry cordial my grandmother made before she
-died,” she said. “We keep it in the top bureau drawer.”
-
-“What a funny place to keep it....” Delia began, and stopped of her own
-accord.
-
-I remember that everybody was willing enough to let Mary Elizabeth help
-pick up the dishes. Then she took a tree for Pussy-wants-a-corner,
-which always follows the picnic part of a picnic. But hardly anyone
-would change trees with her, and by the design which masks as chance,
-everyone ran to another tree. At last she casually climbed her tree,
-agile as a cat, a feat which Delia alone was shabby enough to pretend
-not to see.
-
-We started homeward when the red was flaming up in the west and falling
-deep in the heart of the river. By then Mary Elizabeth was almost at
-ease with us, but rather, I think, because of the soft evening, and
-perhaps in spite of our presence.
-
-“Oh!” she cried. “Somebody grabbed the sun and pulled it down. I saw it
-go!”
-
-Delia looked shocked. “You oughtn’t to tell such things,” she reproved
-her.
-
-Mary Elizabeth flung up the arm with the torn sleeve and ran beside us,
-laughing with abandon. We were all running down the slope in the red
-light.
-
-“We’re Indians, looking for roots for the medicine-man,” Delia called;
-“Yellow Thunder is sick. So is Red Bird. We’re hunting roots.”
-
-She was ahead and we were following. We caught at the dead mullein
-stalks and milkweed pods and threw them away, and leaped up and pulled
-at the low branches with their tender buds. We were filled with the
-flow of the Spring and seeking to express it, as in the old barbaric
-days, by means of destruction.... At the foot of the slope a little
-maple tree was growing, tentative as a sunbeam and scarcely thicker,
-left by the Spring that had last been that way. When she reached it,
-Delia laid hold on it, and had it out by its slight root, and tossed it
-on the moss.
-
-“W-h-e-e-e!” cried Delia, “I wish it was Arbour Day to-morrow too!”
-
-Mary Elizabeth stopped laughing. “I turn here,” she said. “It’s the
-short cut. Good-bye--I had a grand time. The best time I ever had.”
-
-Delia pretended not to hear. She said nothing. The others called casual
-good-byes over shoulder. Going home, they rebuked me soundly for having
-invited Mary Elizabeth. Delia rehearsed the array of reasons. If she
-came to school, we would have to _know_ her, she wound up. I remember
-feeling baffled and without argument. All that they said was true, and
-yet--
-
-“I’m going to see her,” I announced stoutly, more, I dare say, because
-I was tired and a little cross than from real loyalty.
-
-“You’ll catch some disease,” said Delia. “I know a girl that went to
-see some poor children and she caught the spinal appendicitis and died
-before she got back home.”
-
-We went round by the schoolhouse, drawn there by a curiosity that
-had in it inevitable elements of regret. There they were, little
-dead-looking trees, standing in places of wet earth, and most of them
-set somewhat slanting. Everyone was gone, and in the late light the
-grounds looked solemn and different.
-
-“Just think,” said Delia, “when we grow up and the trees grow up, we
-can tell our children how we planted ’em.”
-
-“Why, we never--” Calista began.
-
-“Our school did, didn’t it?” Delia contended. “And our school’s we,
-isn’t it?”
-
-But we overruled her. No, to the end of time, the trees that stood in
-those grounds would have been planted by other hands than ours. We
-were probably the only ones in the school who hadn’t planted a tree.
-“I don’t care, do you?” we demanded of one another, and reiterated our
-denial.
-
-“I planted a-a-a---Never-green!” Harold Rodman shouted, running to meet
-us.
-
-“So did we!” we told him merrily, and separated, laughing. It had, it
-seemed, been a great day, in spite of Mary Elizabeth.
-
-I went into the house, and hovered about the supper table. I perceived
-that I had missed hot waffles and honey, and these now held no charm.
-Grandmother Beers was talking.
-
-“When I was eight years old,” she said, “I planted it by the well. And
-when Thomas went back to England fifty years after, he couldn’t reach
-both arms round the trunk. And there was a seat there--for travellers.”
-
-I looked at her, and thought of that giant tree. Would those
-dead-looking little sticks, then, grow like that?
-
-“If fifty thousand school children each planted a tree to-day,” said my
-mother, “that would be a forest. And planting a forest is next best to
-building a city.”
-
-“Better,” said my father, “better. What kind of tree did you plant,
-daughter?” he inquired.
-
-I hung my head. “I--we--there was a picnic,” I said. “We didn’t _have_
-to plant ’em. So we had a picnic.”
-
-My father looked at me in the way that I remember.
-
-“That’s it,” he said. “For everyone who plants a tree, there are half
-a dozen that have a picnic. And two dozen that cut them down. At last
-we’ve got one in the family who belongs to the majority!”
-
-When I could, I slipped out in the garden. It was darkening; the frogs
-in the Slough were chorussing, and down on the river-bank a cat-bird
-sang at intervals, was silent long enough to make you think that he
-had ceased, and then burst forth again. The town clock struck eight,
-as if eight were an ancient thing, full of dignity. Our kitchen clock
-answered briskly, as if eight were a proud and novel experience of its
-own. The ’bus rattled past for the Eight-twenty. And away down in the
-garden, I heard a step. Someone had come in the back gate and clicked
-the pail of stones that weighted its chain.
-
-I thought that it would be one of the girls, who not infrequently chose
-this inobvious method of entrance. I ran toward her, and was amazed to
-find Mary Elizabeth kneeling quietly on the ground, as she had been
-when I came upon her at noon.
-
-“What you doing?” I demanded, before I could see what she was doing.
-
-“This,” she said.
-
-I stooped. And she had a little maple tree, for which she was hollowing
-a home with a rusty fire-shovel that she had brought with her.
-
-“It’s the one Delia Dart pulled out,” she said. “I thought it’d be kind
-of nice to put it here. In your yard. You could bring the water, if you
-want.”
-
-I brought the water. Together we bent in the dusk, and we set out the
-little tree, near the back gate, close to my play-house.
-
-“We’d ought to say a verse or something,” I said vaguely.
-
-“I can’t think of any,” Mary Elizabeth objected.
-
-Neither could I, but you had to say something when you planted a tree.
-And a line was as good as a verse.
-
-“‘God is love’ ’s good enough,” said Mary Elizabeth, stamping down the
-earth. Then we dismissed the event, and hung briefly above the back
-gate. Somehow, I was feeling a great and welcome sense of relief.
-
-“It was kind o’ nice to do that,” I observed, with some embarrassment.
-
-“No, it wasn’t either,” rejoined Mary Elizabeth, modestly.
-
-We stood kicking at the gravel for a moment. Then she went away.
-
-I faced about to the quiet garden. And suddenly, for no reason that I
-knew, I found myself skipping on the path, in the dark, just as if the
-day were only beginning.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-THE KING’S TRUMPETER
-
-
-And so it is for that night long ago when Mary Elizabeth and I stood by
-the tree and tried to think of something to say, that after all these
-years I have made the story of Peter.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Long years ago, when the world was just beginning to be, there was a
-kingdom which was not yet finished. Of course when a world has just
-stopped being nothing and is beginning to be something, it takes a
-great while to set all the kingdoms going. And this one wasn’t done.
-
-For example, in the palace garden where little Peter used to play,
-the strangest things were to be met. For the mineral kingdom was just
-beginning to be vegetable, and the vegetable was just beginning to
-be animal, and the animal was just beginning to be man,--and man was
-just, just beginning to know about his living spirit. Do you see what
-_that_ means? While you looked at a mound of earth it became a bush--or
-a very little time afterward, as time in these things is reckoned.
-While you looked at a beast-shaped bush--all bushes at night are shaped
-like beasts--it became a living animal--or, again, a _very_ little
-afterward. And men had by no means got over being apes, tigers, swine,
-and dogs, and sometimes you hardly knew which a man was, a real man or
-one of these animals. And spirits were growing in men as fast as this
-might be. Everything, you see, lay in savage angles and wild lines.
-
-Little Peter was playing one morning in the palace garden, and such
-playing as it was! He would be moulding little balls of loam and
-fashioning them with seeds, when suddenly they would break into life as
-buds and then as flowers, almost as one now sees twigs of wood break
-into life, or as quiet cocoons become living butterflies--for the world
-is not so different. Or Peter would be playing with a spongy-looking
-mass on a rock in the brook, when it would break from its rock and go
-gayly swimming about, and be a fish-thing. Or he would push at a bit of
-ooze with a cat-tail, and a little flying life would mount abruptly
-and wing away. It was exciting playing in those days, and some of the
-things you can do in these days. Only then it was all new, so Peter
-could see just how wonderful it was.
-
-Now, that morning the king was walking in his palace garden. And he was
-troubled, for everywhere that he looked there were loose ends and rough
-edges, and shapeless things waiting to be fashioned, and it was so all
-over his kingdom. There was such a great lot to do that he could not
-possibly do it all alone--no king, however industrious, could have done
-it all. And he longed for the help of all his subjects. So when the
-king came on little Peter, busily making living things where none had
-been before, he was mightily pleased, and he sat down with the little
-lad on a grassy platform in the midst of the garden.
-
-“Lo, now, little lad,” said the king, “what do you play?”
-
-Instead of playing at keeping store or keeping house or at acting or
-hunting or exploring, little Peter was playing another game.
-
-“I’m playing it’s creation, your majesty,” he answered, “and I’m
-playing help the king.”
-
-“Lo, now,” said the king, “I would that all my subjects would play as
-well as you.”
-
-The king thought for a moment, looking out on all the savage angles and
-wild lines, while little Peter watched a bit of leaf mould becoming a
-green plant.
-
-“Summon me my hundred heralds!” the king suddenly bade his servants.
-
-So the servants summoned the hundred heralds, who hurried into their
-blue velvet and silver buckles and came marching, twenty abreast,
-across the grassy plateau, where the morning sun made patterns like
-wings, and among the wings they bowed themselves and asked the king his
-will.
-
-“Hundred heralds,” said the king, “be it only that you do this
-willingly, I would that you go out into my kingdom, into its highways
-and even to its loneliest outposts, and take my people my message. Cry
-to them, until each one hears with his heart as well as his head: ‘The
-world is beginning. You must go and help the king.’”
-
-Now, little Peter, when he heard the message, rose and stood beside the
-king, and in his breast something thrilled and trembled like a smitten
-chord. But as for the hundred heralds, they were troubled as one
-man--though he not yet wholly a man.
-
-“O king,” they said, twenty at a time, “blue velvet and silver buckles
-are meet for the streets of cities and to call men to feasting
-and to honour the king. But as for the highways and the loneliest
-outposts--that is another matter.”
-
-“But what of the message?” the king asked sadly, and this none of the
-heralds knew how to answer; and presently the king sent them away, for
-he would never have unwilling service in his palace or in his kingdom.
-And as they went, little Peter looked after them, and he saw, and
-the king saw, that for all their blue velvet and silver buckles, the
-hundred heralds, marching away twenty abreast, were not yet all men,
-but partly they were apes in manner and swine at heart. And little
-Peter wondered if he fashioned them as he did his bits of mould,
-whether they would burst from a sheath, _all_ men, as burst his little
-plants.
-
-“Summon me my thousand trumpeters!” the king bade his servants next.
-
-The thousand trumpeters hurried into their purple velvet and their lace
-collars and seized their silver trumpets, and came marching fifty
-abreast across the grassy plateau, where the noon sun made a blinding
-light, like the light of another sun; and they bowed themselves in the
-brightness and asked the king his will.
-
-But when the king had told them his will and had repeated the message
-and asked them if they could go willingly, the thousand trumpeters were
-troubled as one man--and he not yet wholly a man.
-
-“O king,” said they, in fifties and one hundreds, “lo, now, these
-silver trumpets. These are meet to sound up and down the streets of
-cities and to call men to feasting and to honour the king, and never
-are they meet to sound in the lonely outposts. Pray thee, O king, keep
-us near thee.”
-
-“But what of the message?” the king asked, and none of his trumpeters
-could help him there, and he would have no unwilling service in his
-palace or in his kingdom, so he sent them all away. And as they went,
-little Peter looked after them, and he saw, and the king saw, that for
-all their purple velvet and lace collars, the thousand trumpeters,
-marching away fifty abreast, were not all men, but they were apes in
-manner and swine and hounds at heart. And little Peter almost wished
-that he could fashion them as he did his bits of mould and see if they
-would not change into something better.
-
-So then the king called a meeting of his High Council, and his
-councillors hurried into their robes of state and appeared on the
-grassy plateau when the evening was lighting the place to be a glory.
-
-“Lo, now,” said the king, “I needs must send a message to all my
-people. Let us devise or dream some way to take it.”
-
-When they heard the message, the councillors nodded, with their hands
-over their mouths, looking at the ground.
-
-Then the king said--there, in the beginning of the world:--
-
-“I have a thought about a wire which shall reach round the earth and
-oversea and undersea, on which a man may send a message. And a thought
-I have about a wire which shall stretch across the land, and upon that
-wire a voice may travel alone. And a thought about messages that shall
-pierce the air with no wire and no voice. But none of these things is
-now.”
-
-(“Nay,” said the council, murmuring among themselves, “or ever shall
-be.”)
-
-“--and if they were,” said the king, “I would have one serve me even
-better than these, to reach the head and the heart of my people. How
-shall I do this thing? For I must have help in finishing my kingdom.”
-
-The council, stepping about in the slanting light, disputed the matter,
-group by group, but there lay nowhere, it seemed, a conclusion.
-
-“You yourselves,” the king cried at last, “who know well that the
-kingdom must be completed, you yourselves gather the people in
-multitudes together and tell them the message.”
-
-But at this the High Council twitched their robes of state and would
-have none of it.
-
-“Who would sit in the high places if we did _that_?” said they.
-
-So the king sent them all away, and little Peter, standing beside the
-king, looked after them. And he saw, and the king saw, how, under their
-robes of state, the High Council had not entirely stopped being ape
-and swine and hound and tiger and, early in the world as it was, still
-there seemed no great excuse for that.
-
-“Oh, sire,” said little Peter, “I wish I could play with them as I play
-with my bits of mould and loam and could turn them into something
-better and alive.”
-
-“Well said, little Peter,” replied the king, smiling sadly.
-
-And now the west, which had been like a vast, stained-glass window,
-streaming with warm light, fell into gray opaqueness, and the grassy
-plateau became a place of shadows in which night things were born
-gently. And the king looked away to the beast-shaped bushes and to all
-the striving land.
-
-“Oh, my kingdom, my kingdom!” he cried, grieving. “Now, would that this
-little Peter here could help you in the making.”
-
-And then little Peter stood upright in the faint light.
-
-“May it please the king,” he said softly, “I will take the message to
-his people.”
-
-The king stared down at him.
-
-“You?” he said. “_You_, little man? And how, pray, would you take my
-message?”
-
-“May it please the king,” said little Peter, “I would tell everyone in
-the kingdom till all should have been told.”
-
-“Little man,” said the king, “you are no bigger than a trumpet.”
-
-“Ay,” said the little lad, “I think that is what I am. I would that I
-be not Peter, but Trumpeter. So send me forth.”
-
-At this the king laughed, and for the laughter his heart was the
-lighter. He touched the boy’s brow.
-
-“See, then, I touch your brow, little Trumpeter,” he said. “Go
-forth--and do you know my message?”
-
-“You had first touched my heart, your majesty,” said the little boy,
-“and the message is there.”
-
-You would think, perhaps, that Peter would have waited till the
-morning, but he would not wait an hour. He made a little packet
-of linen and of food, and just as the folk within the palace were
-beginning their evening revelry, he stepped out on the highway and
-fared forth under the moon.
-
-But fancy walking on such a highway as that! At first glance it looked
-like any other night road, stretching between mysterious green. But not
-anything there could be depended upon to stay as it was. A hillock,
-lying a little way ahead, became, as he reached it, a plumy shrub,
-trembling with amazement at its transformation from dead earth to
-living green. At a turn in the road, a low bush suddenly walked away
-into the wood, a four-footed animal. Everything changed as he looked at
-it, as if nothing were meant to be merely what it was. The world was
-beginning!
-
-At the foot of a hill, where the shadows were thick, Peter met the
-first one to whom he could give his message. The man was twisted and
-ragged and a beggar, and he peered down in Peter’s face horribly.
-
-“Sir,” said Peter, courteously, “the world is beginning. You must go
-and help the king.”
-
-“Help the king!” cried the beggar, and his voice was uneven, like a
-bark or a whine that was turning into words. “I can’t help the king
-without my supper.”
-
-“Supper is only supper,” said little Peter, who had never in his life
-been hungry. “One must help the king--that is more.”
-
-The beggar struck the ground with his staff.
-
-“I’m hungry,” he said like a bark. “I want some supper and some dinner
-and all the way back to breakfast before I help the king, world or no
-world!”
-
-And suddenly little Peter understood what it is to be hungry, and
-that, if folk were hungry, they must first find means of feeding
-themselves before they could listen. So he gave the beggar all that he
-had of food in his packet, which was the least that he could do, and
-sent him on his way, charging him with the message.
-
-At the top of the hill, Peter came on another man, sitting under a
-sycamore tree. The man was a youth, and very beautiful, and he was
-making a little song, which went like this:--
-
- “_Open, world, your trembling petals slowly,
- Here one, there one, natal to its hour,
- Toward the time when, holden in a vessel holy,
- You shall be a flower._”
-
-Though Peter did not know what the song might mean, yet it fell sweetly
-upon the night, and he liked to listen. And when it was done, he went
-and stood before the youth.
-
-“Sir,” he said, “the world is beginning. You must go and help the king.”
-
-“I know, I know, little lad,” said the youth, and his voice was clear,
-like bird-notes that were turning into words. “I, too, tell the
-message, making it in a song.”
-
-And these words made Peter glad, so that his strength was new, and he
-ran on with the poet’s gentle music in his ears.
-
-I cannot tell you how far Peter went, but he went very far, and to
-many a lonely outpost, and away and away on a drear frontier. It was
-long to go and hard to do, but that is the way the world is made; and
-little Peter went on, now weary, now frightened, now blithe, now in
-good company, now alone and in the dark. I cannot tell you all the
-adventures he had and all the things he did--perhaps you will know
-these in some other way, sometime. And there were those to whom he
-told the message who listened, or set out in haste for the king’s
-palace; and some promised that they would go another day, and a few ran
-to tell others. But many and many were like the hundred heralds and
-the thousand trumpeters and the king’s High Council, and found many
-a reason why they might not set out. And some there were who mocked
-Peter, saying that the world indeed was doing very well without their
-help and would work itself out if only one would wait; and others would
-not even listen to the little lad.
-
-At last, one morning when the whole world seemed glad that it was
-beginning and seemed to long to tell about it, little Peter entered a
-city, decorated for a festival. Everywhere were garlands of vines and
-of roses, bright rugs and fluttering pennons and gilded things, as if
-the world had been long enough begun so that already there were time
-to take holidays. The people were flooding the streets and crowding
-the windows, and through their holiday dress Peter could see how some
-minced and mocked a little like apes, and others peered about like
-giraffes, and others ravened for food and joy, like the beggar or the
-bear or the tiger, and others kept the best, like swine, or skulked
-like curs, or plodded like horses, or prattled like parrots. Animals
-ran about, dumb like the vegetables they had eaten. Vegetables were
-heaped in the stalls, mysterious as the earth which they had lately
-been. The buildings were piled up to resemble the hills from whose
-substance they had been created, and their pillars were fashioned like
-trees. Everywhere were the savage angles and wild lines of one thing
-turning into another. And Peter longed to help to fashion them all, as
-he fashioned his little balls of mould and loam.
-
-“There is so much yet to do,” thought little Peter, “I wonder that
-they take so much time for holidays.”
-
-So he ran quickly to a high, white place in the midst of the town,
-where they were making ready to erect the throne of the king of the
-carnival, and on that he stood and cried:--
-
-“Hear me--hear me! The world is beginning. You must go and help the
-king.”
-
-Now, if those about the carnival throne had only said: “What is that to
-us? Go away!” Peter would have been warned. But they only nodded, and
-they said kindly: “Yes, so it is--and we mean to help presently. Come
-and help us first!” And one of the revellers, seeing Peter, how little
-he was, picked him up and held him at arm’s length and cried:--
-
-“Lo, now, this little lad. He is no bigger than a trumpet....”
-
-(That was what the king had said, and it pleased Peter to hear it said
-again.)
-
-“... Let us take him,” the revellers went on, “and _have_ him for a
-trumpet. And take him with us in our great procession. What think ye?”
-
-“And may I cry out what message I please?” little Peter asked eagerly.
-
-“Surely,” answered all the revellers, gayly. “What is that to us, so
-that you come with us?”
-
-They picked him up and tossed him on their shoulders--for he was of
-about a brazen trumpet’s weight, no more;--and Peter clapped his hands
-for joy, for he was a boy and he loved to think that he would be a part
-of that gorgeous procession. And they took him away to the great tent
-on the city green where everyone was dressing for the carnival.
-
-Peter never had seen anything so strange and wonderful as what was
-within that tent. In it everything and everybody had just been or was
-just going to be something or somebody else. Not only had the gay
-garments piled on the floor just been sheep’s and silkworm’s coats,
-not only had the colours laid upon them just been roots and stems and
-herb-leaves, not only had the staves been tree’s boughs and elephant’s
-tusks, but the very coal burning in the braziers and the oil in the
-torches had once been sunshine, and the very flames had been air, and
-before that water, and so on. But, most of all, the people showed what
-they had been, for in any merry-making the kinds of animals in folk
-can_not_ be covered up; and it was a regular menagerie.
-
-They took little Peter and dressed him like a trumpet. They thrust both
-his legs into one long cloth-of-gold stocking, and he held his arms
-tightly at his sides while they wound his little body in ruffles of
-gold-coloured silk, growing broader and broader into a full-gathered
-ruff from which his laughing face peeped out. And he was so slender and
-graceful that you could hardly have told him from a real, true, golden
-trumpet.
-
-Then the procession was ready to start, all lined up in the great
-tent. And the heralds and the music all burst out at once as the green
-curtain of the tent was drawn aside, and the long, glittering line
-began to move. Little heralds, darting about for all the world like
-squirrels and chipmunks; a great elephant of a master of ceremonies,
-bellowing out the order of the day as if he had been presiding over
-the jungle; a group of men high in the town’s confidence, whose spots
-proclaimed them once to have been leopards, and other things; long,
-lithe harlequins descended from serpents; little, fat clowns still
-showing the magpie; prominent citizens, unable as yet to conceal the
-fox and the wolf in their faces; the mayor of the town, revealing the
-chameleon in his blood; little donkey men; and a fine old gentleman or
-two made like eagles--all of them getting done into men as quickly as
-possible. In the midst rode the king of the carnival, who had evidently
-not long since been a lion, and that no doubt was why they picked him
-out. He rode on a golden car from which sprays of green sprang out to
-reach from side to side of the broad street. And at his lips, held like
-a trumpet, he carried little Peter, one hand on Peter’s feet set to the
-kingly lips, and the other stretched out to Peter’s breast.
-
-Then Peter lifted up his shrill little voice and shouted loud his
-message:--
-
-“_The world is beginning! The world is beginning! The world is
-beginning! You must go and help the king. You must go-o-o and help the
-king!_”
-
-But just as he cried that, the carnival band struck into a merry march,
-and all the heralds were calling, and the people were shouting, and
-Peter’s little voice did not reach very far.
-
-“Shout again!” bade the king of the carnival, who did not care in the
-least what Peter said, so long only as he acted like a trumpet.
-
-So Peter shouted again--shouted his very best. He shouted as loudly
-as he did at play, as loudly as when he swam and raced in the water,
-as loudly as any boy could shout. But it seemed to him that his voice
-carried hardly farther than the little chipmunk-and-squirrel heralds
-before him, and that nobody heard him.
-
-Still, it was all such fun! The glitter of the procession, the
-eagerness of the people, the lilt and rhythm of the music. And fun
-over all was it to be carried by the carnival king himself, high above
-everyone and dressed like a golden trumpet. Surely, surely no boy
-ever had more fun than that! Surely, surely it was no great marvel
-that after a little time, so loud was the clamour and so fast the
-excitement, that Peter stopped crying his message, and merely watched
-and laughed and delighted with the rest.
-
-Up and down through the thronged streets they went, that great,
-glittering procession, winding its mile or more of spangles and gilding
-and gay dress and animals richly caparisoned. Everywhere the crowded
-walks and windows and balconies sent cheers into the air, everywhere
-flowers were thrown and messages tossed and melody flooded. And
-wherever that long line passed, everyone noted the king’s trumpet and
-pointed it out and clapped hands and tried to throw upon it garlands.
-And there was so much to see, and so much excitement there was in the
-hour, that at last little Peter did not even think of his message, and
-only jested and made merry. For it was the most wonderful game that
-ever he had played.
-
-“How now, my little trumpeter?” the king of the carnival would say
-sometimes, when he rested his arms and held Peter at his side.
-
-“Oh, _well_, your majesty!” Peter would cry, laughing up at him.
-
-“This is all a fine game and nothing more,” the king of the carnival
-would tell him. “Is this not so?”
-
-Then he would toss the boy on high again, away above the golden car,
-and Peter would cry out with the delight of it. And though there were
-no wings and no great brightness in the air, yet the hour was golden
-and joy was abroad like a person.
-
-Presently, a band of mountebanks, dressed like ploughmen and
-harvesters, came tumbling and racing by the procession, and calling to
-everyone to come to a corn husking on the city green.
-
-“Husks! Husks! A corn husking on the city green. Husks--husks--husks!”
-they cried.
-
-But there was such a tumult that no one could well hear what they said,
-and presently they appealed to the carnival king to tell the people.
-
-“Nay, O king, they hear us not for the noise of thy passing,” said
-they. “Prithee tell the people what we would say.”
-
-“Tell the people, my little trumpeter!” cried the king, and lifted
-Peter to his lips.
-
-And Peter shouted out with all his might.
-
-“Husks! Husks! A corn husking on the city green. Husks--husks--husks!”
-
-“Bravely done!” called the mountebanks, in delight, and ran alongside
-the car, leaping and tumbling and grotesquely showing their delight.
-“Bravely done! Tell the people--bid the people come!”
-
-So Peter called again, and yet again, at the full strength of his
-little voice. And it seemed to him that the people surely listened,
-and it was a delight and a flattery to be the one voice in the great
-procession, save only the music’s voice.
-
-At last, for one moment it chanced that the bands ceased altogether
-their playing, so that there was an instant of almost silence.
-
-“_Husks, husks, husks!_” he cried, with all his might.
-
-And as he did that, thin and clear through the silence, vexed somewhat
-by the voices of the people,--now barks, now whines, now bellows, now
-words,--Peter caught a little wandering melody, as though a bird’s
-singing were turning into words:--
-
- “_Open, world, your trembling petals slowly,
- Here one, there one, natal to its hour_....”
-
-and in the midst of that motley throng, Peter, looking down, saw the
-poet whom he had left on the hill-top, now wandering alone and singing
-his message to his lute.
-
-“Oh, the king! Oh, _my_ king!” cried little Peter, as if he had had a
-great wound.
-
-“What now, my little trumpeter?” asked the carnival king.
-
-“Not you--_not_ you!” cried Peter. “Oh, set me down,--set me down. Oh,
-what have I done?”
-
-“How _now_, little Trumpet?” cried the carnival king. But Peter,
-instead of stretching out his little body, slim and trumpet-graceful,
-turned and fell at the king’s feet in the car and slipped from his
-grasp and scrambled through the branching green and reached the street.
-
-There, in the wonder and then the mockery of the people, he began
-struggling to free himself from the ruffles of cloth-of-gold about his
-body. Some laughed, some ran from him as if he were mad, and some,
-wishing for themselves the golden ruffles, helped him to pull them off
-and to strip down the clinging golden stocking that bound his limbs.
-And then, being close to the city gates, little Peter ran, all naked as
-he was, without the gates and on to the empty road. And he ran sobbing
-out his heart:--
-
-“Oh, my king! I would have told them that the world is beginning--but,
-instead I have told them only to get them husks!”
-
-Now the poet, who had seen it all--and who understood--ceased his song
-and made his way as quickly as might be for the press of the people,
-and ran after Peter, and fared along the road beside him, trying to
-comfort him. But the little lad might not be comforted, and he only
-cried out again:--
-
-“The king--the king! I would have given them his message--and I bade
-them only to get them husks!”
-
-So the poet--who understood--said no word at all, but he shielded Peter
-with his mantle; and then he took his lute and walked beside the little
-lad, singing.
-
-They had gone but a short distance when they reached the top of a hill,
-where the sun shone with exceeding brightness, and the poet noted
-that the light fell almost like little wings. Peter saw none of this,
-for his hands were still covering his face. But he heard the poet’s
-singing interrupted by a voice. The voice was uneven--like a bark or
-a whine that is turning into words--but yet its words were clear and
-unmistakable. And they were:--
-
-“_Sirs, the world is beginning. You must go and help the king._”
-
-Peter looked up and he saw the man who had spoken, a man twisted and
-ragged, but who smiled down into the little boy’s face so gently that,
-for a moment, Peter did not know him; and then he recognized that
-beggar to whom, on that night long ago, he had given food and the
-message.
-
-“Ay, friend!” the poet was answering him ringingly, “and we go!”
-
-The beggar hurried on, and the poet touched Peter’s hand.
-
-“Nay, now, little Peter,” he said, “grieve not your heart too much.
-For you it was who told the beggar the message--from the top of the
-hill I heard--and I saw you give him food. Can you tell any man without
-some good coming true of the tidings? Then it may well be that there
-are those in the town to whom you told the king’s message who will
-remember, too. Go we forth together to try again!”
-
-Peter looked down the long highway, stretching between the mysterious
-green, where shrubs changed to animals in so little a space; and
-then he looked away to the king’s kingdom and saw how it was not
-finished--because the world had just stopped being nothing and was
-beginning to be something--and he looked back towards the city where,
-as at the court, men had not yet done being animals. Everything
-was changing, as if nothing were meant to be merely what it is.
-And everything was in savage angles and wild lines. The world was
-beginning. The people _must_ be told to go and help the king.
-
-“Go we forth together to try again,” the poet repeated.
-
-He touched his lute, and its melody slipped into the sunshine.
-
- “_Toward the time when, holden in a vessel holy,
- You shall be a flower._”
-
-Then Peter stretched out his arms, and his whole slender little body
-became like one trumpet voice, and that voice strong and clear to reach
-round the world itself.
-
-“I try once again!” he answered. “The world is beginning. _I must go
-and help the king._”
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-MY LADY OF THE APPLE TREE
-
-
-Our lawn was nine apple trees large. There were none in front, where
-only Evergreens grew, and two silver Lombardy poplars, heaven-tall. The
-apple trees began with the Cooking-apple tree by the side porch. This
-was, of course, no true tree except in apple-blossom time, and at other
-times hardly counted. The length of twenty jumping ropes--they call
-them skipping ropes now, but we never called them so--laid one after
-another along the path would have brought one to the second tree, the
-Eating-apple tree, whose fruit was red without and pink-white within.
-To this day I do not know what kind of apples those were, whether
-Duchess, Gilliflower, Russet, Sweet, or Snow. But after all, these only
-name the body of the apple, as Jasper or Edith names the body of you.
-The soul of you, like the real sense of Apple, lives nameless all its
-days. Sometime we must play the game of giving us a secret name--the
-Pathfinder, the Lamplighter, the Starseeker, and so on. But colours and
-flavours are harder to name and must wait longer than we.
-
-... Under this Nameless tree, then, the swing hung, and to sit in the
-swing and have one’s head touch apple-blossoms, and mind, not touch
-them with one’s foot, was precisely like having one’s swing knotted to
-the sky, so that one might rise in rhythm, head and toe, up among the
-living stars. I can think of no difference worth the mentioning, so
-high it seemed. And if one does not know what rhythm is, one has only
-to say it over: Spring, Summer, apple-blossom, apple; new moon, old
-moon, running river, echo--and then one will know.
-
-“I would pick some,” said Mother, looking up at the apple-blossoms, “if
-I only knew which ones will never be apples.”
-
-So some of the blossoms would never be apples! Which ones? _And why?_
-
-“Why will some be apples and some others never be apples?” I inquired.
-
-But Mother was singing and swinging me, and she did not tell.
-
-“Why will you be apples and you not be apples, and me not know which,
-and you not know which?” I said to the apple-blossoms when next my head
-touched them. Of course, you never really speak to things with your
-throat voice, but you think it at them with your head voice. Perhaps
-that is the way they answer, and that is why one does not always hear
-what they say....
-
-The apple-blossoms did not say anything that I could hear. The
-stillness of things never ceased to surprise me. It would have been far
-less wonderful to me if the apple-blossoms and the Lombardy poplars and
-my new shoes had answered me sometimes than that they always kept their
-unfriendly silence. One’s new shoes _look_ so friendly, with their
-winking button eyes and their placid noses! And yet they act as cross
-about answering as do some little boys who move into the neighbourhood.
-
-... Indeed, if one comes to think of it, one’s shoes are rather like
-the sturdy little boys among one’s clothes. One’s slippers are more
-like little girls, all straps and bows and tiptoes. Then one’s aprons
-must be the babies, long and white and dainty. And one’s frocks and
-suits--that is to say, one’s _new_ frocks and suits--are the ladies
-and gentlemen, important and elegant; and one’s everyday things are
-the men and women, neither important nor elegant, but best of all; and
-one’s oldest garments are the witches, shapeless and sad and haunted.
-This leaves ribbons and sashes and beads to be fairies--both good and
-bad.
-
-The silence of the Nameless tree was to lift a little that very day.
-When Mother had gone in the house,--something seemed always to be
-pulling at Mother to be back in the house as, in the house, something
-always pulled at me to be back out-of-doors,--I remember that I was
-twisting the rope and then lying back over the board, head down,
-for the untwisting. And while my head was whirling and my feet were
-guiding, I looked up at the tree and saw it as I had never seen it
-before: soft falling skirts of white with lacy edges and flowery
-patterns, drooping and billowing all about a pedestal, which was the
-tree trunk, and up-tapering at the top like a waist--why, the tree was
-a lady! Leaning in the air there above the branches, surely I could
-see her beautiful shoulders and her white arms, her calm face and her
-bright hair against the blue. She had risen out of the trunk at the
-tree’s blossoming and was waiting for someone to greet her.
-
-I struggled out of the swing and scrambled, breathless, back from the
-tree and looked where she should be. Already I knew her. Nearly, I knew
-the things that she would say to me--sometimes now I know the things
-that she would have said if we had not been interrupted.
-
-The interruption came from four girls who lived, as I thought, outside
-my world,--for those were the little days when I did not yet know
-that this cannot be. They were the Eversley sisters, in full-skirted,
-figured calico, and they all had large, chapped hands and wide teeth
-and stout shoes. For a year they had been wont to pass our house on the
-way to the public school, but they had spoken to me no more than if
-I had been invisible--until the day when I had first entered school.
-After that, it was as if I had been born into their air, or thrown in
-the same cage, or had somehow become one of them. And I was in terror
-of them.
-
-“Come ’ere once!” they commanded, their voices falling like sharp
-pebbles about the Apple-blossom lady and me.
-
-Obediently I ran to the front fence, though my throat felt sick when
-I saw them coming. “Have an apple core? Give us some of them flowers.
-Shut your eyes so’s you’ll look just like you was dead.” These were
-the things that they always said. Something kept telling me that I
-ought not to tell them about my lady, but I was always wanting to win
-their approval and to let them know that I was really more one of them
-than they thought. So I disobeyed, and I told them. Mysteriously,
-breathlessly I led them back to the tree; and feeling all the time that
-I was not keeping faith, I pointed her out to them. I showed them just
-where to look, beginning with the skirts, which surely anybody could
-see.... I used often to dream that a crowd of apish, impish little folk
-was making fun of me, and that afternoon I lived it, standing out alone
-against those four who fell to instant jeering. If they had stooped and
-put their hands on their knees and hopped about making faces, it would
-have been no more horrible to me than their laughter. It held for me
-all the sense of bad dreams, and then of waking alone, in the middle of
-the night. The worst was that I could find no words to make them know.
-I could only keep saying, “She is there, she is there, she is there.”
-By some means I managed not to cry, not even when they each broke a
-great branch of blossoms from the Eating-apple tree and ran away,
-flat-footed, down the path; not indeed until the gate had slammed and I
-turned back to the tree and saw that my lady had gone.
-
-There was no doubt about it. Here were no longer soft skirts, but only
-flowery branches where the sunlight thickened and the bees drowsed.
-My lady was gone. Try as I might, I could not bring her back. So she
-had been mocking me too! Otherwise, why had she let me see her so that
-I should be laughed at, and then herself vanished? Yet, even then, I
-remember that I did not doubt her, or for a moment cease to believe
-that she was really there; only I felt a kind of shame that I could
-see her, and that the others could not see her. I had felt the same
-kind of shame before, never when I was alone, but always when I was
-with people. We played together well enough,--Pom, pom, pullaway,
-Minny-minny motion, Crack-the-whip, London Bridge, and the rest, save
-that I could not run as fast as nearly everybody. But the minute we
-stopped playing and _talked_, then I was always saying something so
-that the same kind of shame came over me.
-
-I saw Delia crossing the street. In one hand she held two cookies which
-she was biting down sandwich-wise, and in the other hand two cookies,
-as yet unbitten. The latter she shook at me.
-
-“I knew I’d see you,” she called resentfully. “I says I’d give ’em to
-you if I saw you, and if I didn’t see you--”
-
-She left it unfinished at a point which gave no doubt as to whose
-cookies they might have been had I not been offensively about. But
-the cookies were fresh, and I felt no false delicacy. However, after
-deliberation, I ate my own, one at a time, rejecting the sandwich
-method.
-
-“It lasts them longest,” I explained.
-
-“The other way they bite thicker,” Delia contended.
-
-“Your teeth don’t taste,” I objected scientifically.
-
-Delia opened her eyes. “Why, they do too!” she cried.
-
-I considered. I had always had great respect for the strange chorus
-of my teeth, and I was perfectly ready to regard them as having
-independent powers.
-
-“Oh, not when you eat tipsy-toes like that,” said Delia, scornfully.
-“Lemme show you....” She leaned for my cooky, her own being gone. I ran
-shamelessly down the path toward the swing, and by the time the swing
-was reached I had frankly abandoned serial bites.
-
-I sat on the grass, giving Delia the swing as a peace-offering. She
-took it, as a matter of course, and did not scruple to press her
-advantage.
-
-“Don’t you want to swing me?” she said.
-
-I particularly disliked being asked in that way to do things. Grown-ups
-were always doing it, and what could be more absurd: “Don’t you want
-to pick up your things now?” “Don’t you want to let auntie have that
-chair?” “Don’t you want to take this over to Mrs. Rodman?” The form of
-the query always struck me as quite shameless. I truthfully shook my
-head.
-
-“I’m company,” Delia intimated.
-
-“When you’re over to my house, I have to let you swing because you’re
-company,” I said speculatively, “and when I’m over to your house, I
-have to let you swing because it’s your swing.”
-
-“I don’t care about being company,” said Delia, loftily, and started
-home.
-
-“I’ll swing you. I was only fooling!” I said, scrambling up.
-
-It worked--as Delia knew it would and always did work. All the same,
-as I pushed Delia, with my eyes on the blue-check gingham strap
-buttoned across the back of her apron, I reflected on the truth and
-its parallels: How, when Delia came to see me, I had to “pick up” the
-playthings and set in order store or ship or den or cave or county fair
-or whatnot because Delia had to go home early; and when I was over to
-Delia’s, I had to help put things away because they were hers and she
-had got them out.
-
-Low-swing, high-swing, now-I’m-going-to-run-under-swing--I gave them
-all to Delia and sank on the grass to watch the old cat die. As it
-died, Delia suddenly twisted the rope and then dropped back and lay
-across the board and loosed her hands. I never dared “let go,” as we
-said, but Delia did and lay whirling, her hair falling out like a sun’s
-rays, and her eyes shut.
-
-I watched her, fascinated. If she opened her eyes, I knew how the
-picket fence would swim for her, no longer a line but a circle. Then
-I remembered what I had seen in the tree when I was twisting, and I
-looked back....
-
-There she was! Quite as I had fleetingly seen her, with lacy skirts
-and vague, sweeping sleeves and bending line of shoulder, my Lady of
-the Tree was there again. I looked at her breathlessly, unsurprised at
-the gracious movement of her, so skilfully concealed by the disguises
-of the wind. Oh, was she there all the time, or only in apple-blossom
-time? Would she be there not only in white Spring but in green Summer
-and yellow Fall--why, perhaps all those times came only because she
-changed her gown. Perhaps night came only because she put on something
-dusky, made of veils. Maybe the stars that I had thought looked to be
-caught in the branches were the jewels in her hair. And the wind might
-be her voice! I listened with all my might. What if she should tell me
-her name ... and know my name!...
-
-“Seventeen un-twists,” announced Delia. “Did you ever get that many out
-of such a little stingy swing as you gave me?”
-
-I did not question the desirability of telling Delia. The four Eversley
-girls had been barbarians (so I thought). Delia I had known always. To
-be sure, she had sometimes failed me, but these times were not real. My
-eyes were on the tree, and Delia came curiously toward me.
-
-“Bird?” she whispered.
-
-I shook my head and beckoned her. Still looking at my lady, I drew
-Delia down beside me, brought her head close to mine.
-
-“Look,” I said, “her skirt is all branches--and her face is turned the
-other way. See her?”
-
-Delia looked faithfully. She scanned the tree long and impartially.
-
-“See her? See her?” I insisted, under the impression that I was
-defining her. “It’s a lady,” I breathed it finally.
-
-“Oh,” said Delia, “you mean that side of the tree is the shape of one.
-Yes, it is--kind of. I’m going home. We got chocolate layer cake for
-supper. Good-bye. Last tag.”
-
-I turned to Delia for a second. When she went, I looked back for my
-lady--but she had gone. Only--now I did not try to bring her back.
-Neither did I doubt her, even then. But there came back a certain
-loneliness that I had felt before, only never so much as now. Why was
-it that the others could not see?
-
-I lay face downward in the grass under the tree. There were other
-things like this lady that I had been conscious of, which nobody else
-seemed to care about. Sometimes I had tried to tell. More often I had
-instinctively kept still. Now slowly I thought that I understood: I was
-different. Different from the whole world. Did I not remember how, when
-I walked on the street, groups of children would sometimes whisper:
-“There she is--there she is!” Or, “Here she comes!” I had thought, poor
-child, that this would be because my hair was long, like little Eva’s
-in the only play that most of us had seen. But now I thought I knew
-what they had known and I had not known: That I was different.
-
-I dropped my face in the crook of my arm and cried--silently, because
-to cry aloud seemed always to have about it a kind of nakedness; but I
-cried sorely, pantingly, with aching throat, and tried to think it out.
-
-What was this difference? I had heard them say in the house that my
-head was large, my hair too long to let me be healthy; and the four
-Eversleys always wanted me to shut my eyes so that I should look dead.
-But it was something other than these. Maybe--I shall never forget the
-grip of that fear--maybe I was not human. Maybe I was Adopted. I had no
-clear idea what Adopted meant, but my impression was that it meant not
-to have been born at all. That was it. I was like the apple-blossoms
-that would never be apples. I was just a Pretend little girl, a kind of
-secret one, somebody who could never, never be the same as the rest.
-
-I turned from that deep afternoon and ran for the wood-pile where I had
-a hiding-place. Down the path I met Mother and clung to her.
-
-“Mother, Mother!” I sobbed. “Am I adopted?”
-
-“No, dear,” she said seriously. “You are mine. What is it?”
-
-“Promise me I’m not!” I begged.
-
-“I promise,” she said. “Who has been talking to you? You little lamb,
-come in the house,” she added. “You’re tired out, playing.”
-
-I went with her. But the moment had entered me. I was not like the
-rest. I said it over, and every time it hurt. There is no more
-passionate believer in democracy than a child.
-
-Across the street Delia was sitting on the gate-post, ostentatiously
-eating chocolate layer cake, and with her free hand twisting into
-a curl the end of her short braid. Between us there seemed to have
-revealed itself a gulf, life-wide. Had Delia always known about me? Did
-the Rodman girls know? And Calista? The four Eversleys must know--this
-was why they laughed so.... But I remember how, most of all, I hoped
-that Mary Elizabeth did not know--yet.
-
-From that day I faced the truth: I was different. I was somehow not
-really-truly. And it seemed to me that nothing could ever be done about
-it.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-THE PRINCESS ROMANCIA
-
-
-That night I could not go to sleep with the knowledge. If only I, as I
-am now, might have sat on the edge of the bed and told a story to me
-as I was then! I am always wishing that we two might have known each
-other--I as I am now and I as I was then. We should have been so much
-more interested in each other than anybody else could ever be. I can
-picture us looking curiously at each other through the dark, and each
-would have wished to be the other--how hard we would have wished that.
-But neither of us would have got it, as sometimes happens with wishes.
-
-Looking back on that night, and knowing how much I wanted to be like
-the rest, I think this would be the story that I, as I am now, would
-have told that Little Me.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Once upon a time to the fairy king and queen there was born a little
-daughter. And the king, being a modern fairy, determined to invite to
-the christening of his daughter twelve mortals--a thing never before
-countenanced in fairy ceremony. And of course all unreal people are
-always very particular about their ceremonies being _just_ so.
-
-It was a delicate and difficult task to make out that mortal invitation
-list, for it was very hard to find in the world twelve human beings
-who, at a fairy party, would exactly fit in. After long thought and
-consultation with all his ministers and councillors, the king made out
-the following list:--
-
-A child; a poet; a scientist; a carpenter; a prophet; an artist; an
-artisan; a gardener; a philosopher; a woman who was also a mother; a
-man who was also a father; and a day labourer.
-
-“Do you think that will do _at all_?” the fairy king asked the fairy
-queen, tossing over the list.
-
-“Well, dear,” she replied, “it’s probably the best you can do. You know
-what people are.” She hesitated a mere breath--a fairy’s breath--and
-added: “I do wonder a little, though, just _why_ the day labourer.”
-
-“My dear,” said the king, “some day you will understand that, and many
-other things as well.”
-
-The christening room was a Vasty Hall, whose deep blue ceiling was as
-high as the sky and as strange as night. Lamps, dim as the stars, hung
-very high, and there was one silver central chandelier, globed like the
-moon, and there were frescoes like clouds. The furnishings of the Vasty
-Hall were most magnificent. There were pillars like trees spreading out
-into capitals of intricate and leafy design. Lengths of fair carpet ran
-here and there, as soft and shining as little streams; there were thick
-rugs as deep as moss, seats of native carved stone, and tapestries as
-splendid as vistas curtaining the distance. And the music was like the
-music of All-night, all done at once.
-
-To honour the occasion the fairy guests had all come dressed as
-something else--for by now, of course, the fairies are copying many
-human fashions. One was disguised as a Butterfly with her own wings
-prettily painted. One represented a Rose, and she could hardly be
-distinguished from an American Beauty. One was made up as a Light,
-whom nobody could recognize. One was a White Moth and one was a
-Thistle-down, and there were several fantastic toilettes, such as a
-great Tulle Bow, a Paper Doll, and an Hour-glass. As for the Human
-Beings present, they all came masked as themselves, as usual; and their
-names I cannot give you, though sometimes I see someone with dreaming
-eyes whom I think may possibly have been one of those twelve--for of
-course it must have made a difference in their looks ever afterward.
-It was a very brilliant assemblage indeed, and everyone was most
-intangible and elusive, which are fairy terms for well-behaved.
-
-While the guests were waiting for the fairy baby princess to be brought
-in, they idled about, with that delightful going-to-be-ice-cream
-feeling which you have at any party in some form or another, only
-you must _never_ say so, and they exchanged the usual pleasant
-nothing-at-alls. It is curious how very like human nothings fairy
-nothings are.
-
-For example:--
-
-“There is a great deal of night about,” said the Butterfly Fairy with a
-little shiver. “If I were a truly butterfly, I should never be able to
-find my way home.”
-
-“And there is such a fad for thunder-and-lightning this season,” added
-the Paper Doll Fairy, agreeably.
-
-“Do you remember,” asked the White Moth Fairy, “the night that we all
-dressed as white moths and went to meet the moon? We flew until we were
-all in the moonlight, and then we knew that we had met her. I wonder
-why more people do not meet the moon-rise?”
-
-“That reminds me,” said the Thistle-down Fairy, “of the day we all made
-up as snowflakes and went to find the Spring. Don’t you know how she
-surprised us, in the hollow of the lowland? And what a good talk we
-had? I wonder why more people do not go to meet the Spring?”
-
-“A charming idea!” cried the Rose Fairy to the Light Fairy, and the
-Light Fairy shone softly upon her, precisely like an answer.
-
-Then somebody observed that the wind that night was a pure soprano, and
-the guests amused themselves comparing wind-notes; how on some nights
-the wind is deep bass, like a man’s voice, raging through the world;
-and sometimes it is tenor, sweet, and singing only serenades; and
-sometimes it is all contralto and like a lullaby; and sometimes, but
-not often, it is like harp music played on the trees.
-
-Suddenly the whole dark lifted, like a garment; and moonlight flooded
-the Vasty Hall. And as if they had filtered down the air with the
-light, the fairy christening party entered--not as we enter a room, by
-thresholds and steps, but the way that a thought comes in your head and
-you don’t know how it got there.
-
-The christening party wore robes of colours that lie deep between
-the colours and may hardly be named. And, in a secret ceremony, such
-as attends the blooming of flowers, the fairy baby was christened
-Romancia. Then the fairies brought her many offerings; and these having
-been received and admired, a great hush fell on the whole assembly,
-for now the twelve Human Beings came forward with their gifts. And
-everyone, except, indeed, the princess herself, was wild with curiosity
-to see what they had brought.
-
-No one left a card with any gift, but when the fairy king came to look
-them over afterward, he felt certain who had brought each one. The
-gifts were these: A little embroidered gown which should make everyone
-love the princess while she wore it; a gazing crystal which would
-enable the princess to see one hundred times as much as anybody else
-saw; certain sea secrets and sea spells; a lyre which played itself;
-a flask containing a draught which should keep the princess young; a
-vial of colours which hardly anyone ever sees; flowers and grasses and
-leaves which could be used almost like a dictionary to spell out other
-things; an assortment of wonderful happy fancies of every variety; a
-new rainbow; a box of picture cards of the world, every one of which
-should come true if one only went far enough; and a tapestry of the
-universe, wrapped around a brand-new idea in a box.
-
-When these things had been graciously accepted by the king, there was
-a stir in the company, and sweeping into its midst came another Human
-Being, one who thought that she had every right to be invited to the
-christening, but who had not been invited. All the fairies shrank back,
-for it was an extraordinary-looking Human Being. She was tall and lithe
-and wore a sparkling gown, and her face had the look of many cities,
-and now it was like the painted cover of an empty box, and all the time
-it had the meaning only of those who never look at the stars, or walk
-in gardens, or think about others rather than themselves, or listen to
-hear what it is right for them to do. This kind of Human Being is one
-who not often has any good gift to give to anyone, and this the fairies
-knew.
-
-The Vasty Hall became very quiet to see what she had brought, for no
-one understood what she could possibly have to bestow upon a baby. And
-without asking leave of the king or the queen, she bent over the child
-and clasped on her wrist the tiniest bracelet that was ever made in the
-world, and she snapped its lock as fast as the lock on a fetter, and
-held up the tiniest key that ever was wrought.
-
-“The princess,” she cried, “shall seem _different from everyone else_.
-She shall seem like nobody who is or ever has been. As long as she
-wears her bracelet, this shall be true; and that she may never lose it,
-I shall hold her bracelet’s key. Hail to this little princess child,
-who shall seem like nobody in the world!”
-
-Now, no one present was quite certain what this might mean, but the
-lady’s robe was so beautifully embroidered and sparkling, and her voice
-was such a thing of loops and curves, that nearly everyone accepted the
-gift as something fine after all, and the queen gave her her hand to
-kiss. But the king, who was a very wise fairy, said nothing at all, and
-merely bowed and eyed the bracelet, in deep thought.
-
-His meditation was interrupted by a most awkward incident. In the
-excitement of the bestowal of gifts by the Human Beings, and in the
-confusion of the entrance of the thirteenth and uninvited Human Being,
-one of them all had been forgotten and had got himself shuffled well
-at the back of everyone. And now he came pressing forward in great
-embarrassment, to bring his gift. It was the day labourer, and several
-of the Human Beings drew hastily back as he approached the dais. But
-everyone fell still farther back in consternation when it was seen
-what he had brought. For on the delicate cobweb coverlet of the little
-princess’s bed, he cast a spadeful of earth.
-
-“It’s all I’ve got,” the man said, “or I’d brought a better.”
-
-The earth all but covered the little bed of the princess, and it was
-necessary to lift her from it, which the fairy queen did with her own
-hands, flashing a reproachful glance at her husband, the king. But
-when the party had trooped away for the dancing,--with the orchestra
-playing the way a Summer night would sound if it were to steep itself
-in music, so that it could only be heard and not seen,--then the king
-came quietly back to the christening chamber and ordered the spadeful
-of earth to be gathered up and put in a certain part of the palace
-garden.
-
-And so (the Human Beings having gone home at once and forgotten that
-they had been present), when the music lessened to silence and the
-fairies stole from note to note and at last drifted away as invisibly
-as the hours leave a dial, they passed, in the palace garden, a great
-corner of the rich black earth which the day labourer had brought to
-the princess. And it was ready for seed sowing.
-
-The Princess Romancia grew with the days and the years, and from the
-first it was easily to be seen that certainly she seemed different
-from everyone in the world. As a baby she began talking in her cradle
-without having been taught--not very plainly, to be sure, or so that
-anybody in particular excepting the fairy queen understood her--but
-still she talked. As a little girl she seemed always to be listening
-to things as if she understood them as well as she did people, or
-better. When she grew older, nobody knew quite how she differed, but
-everybody agreed that she seemed different. And this the princess knew
-better than anybody, and most of the time it made her hurt all over.
-
-When the fairies played at thistle-down ball, the princess often played
-too, but she never felt really like one of them all. She felt that they
-were obliged to have her play with them because she was the princess,
-and not because they wanted her. When they played at hide-and-go-seek
-in a flower bed, somehow the others always hid together in the big
-flowers, and the princess hid alone in a tulip or a poppy. And whenever
-they whispered among themselves, she always fancied that they were
-whispering of her. She imagined herself often looked at with a smile or
-a shrug; she began to believe that she was not wanted but only endured
-because she was the princess, and she was certain that no one liked
-her for herself alone, because she was somehow so different. Little by
-little she grew silent, and refused to join in the games, and sat apart
-alone. Presently she began to give blunt answers and to take exception
-and even to disagree. And, of course, little by little the court began
-secretly to dislike her, and to cease to try to understand her, and
-they told one another that she was hopelessly different and that that
-was all that there was to be said about her.
-
-[Illustration: LITTLE BY LITTLE SHE GREW SILENT AND REFUSED TO JOIN
-IN THE GAMES.]
-
-But in spite of all this, the Princess Romancia was very beautiful, and
-the fame of her beauty went over the whole of fairyland. When enough
-years had gone by, fairy princes from this and that dominion began to
-come to the king’s palace to see her. But though they all admired the
-princess’s great beauty, many were of course repelled by her sharp
-answers and her constant suspicions.
-
-But at last the news of the princess’s beauty and strangeness reached
-the farthest border of fairyland and came to the ears of the young
-Prince Hesperus. Now Prince Hesperus, who was the darling of his
-father’s court and beloved of everybody, was tired of everybody. “Every
-fairy is like every other fairy,” he was often heard saying wearily.
-“I do wish I could find somebody with a few new ways. One would think
-fairies were all cut from one pattern!” Therefore, when word came to
-him of the strange and beautiful Princess Romancia, who was believed
-to be different from everyone else in the world, you can imagine with
-what haste he made ready and set out for her father’s place.
-
-Prince Hesperus arrived at the palace at twilight, when the king’s
-garden was wrapped in that shadow light which no one can step through,
-_if he looks_, without feeling somewhat like a fairy himself and
-glad to be one. He sent his servants on ahead, folded his wings, and
-proceeded on foot through the silent gardens. And in a little arbour
-made of fallen petals, renewed each day, he came on the Princess
-Romancia, asleep. He, of course, did not recognize her, but never,
-since for him the world began, had the prince seen anyone so beautiful.
-
-His step roused her and she sprang to her feet. And as soon as he
-looked at her, Prince Hesperus found himself wanting to tell her of
-what he had just been thinking, and before he knew it he was doing so.
-
-“I have just been thinking,” he said, “what a delightful pet a
-leaf-shadow would make, if one could catch it and tame it. I wonder if
-one could do it? Think how it would dance for one, all day long.”
-
-The Princess Romancia stared a little.
-
-“But when the sun went down,” she was surprised into saying, “the
-shadow would be dead.”
-
-“Not at all,” the prince replied, “it would only be asleep. And it
-would never have to be fed, and it could live in one’s palace.”
-
-“I would like such a pet,” said the princess, thoughtfully.
-
-“If I may walk with you,” said the prince, “we will talk more about it.”
-
-They walked together toward the palace and talked more about it, so
-that the Princess Romancia quite forgot to be more different than she
-was, and the prince forgot all about everything save his companion.
-And he saw about her all the gifts of tenderness and vision and magic,
-of sea secrets and sea spells, of music and colours and knowledge and
-charming notions which the Human Beings had brought her at her birth,
-though these hardly ever were visible _because_ the princess seemed
-so different from everybody else. And when, as they drew near the
-palace, their servants came hastening to escort them, the two looked at
-each other in the greatest surprise to find that they were prince and
-princess. For all other things had seemed so much more important.
-
-Their formal meeting took place that evening in the Vasty Hall, where,
-years before, the princess had been christened. Prince Hesperus was
-filled with the most joyous anticipation and awaited his presentation
-to the princess with the feeling that fairyland was just beginning. But
-the princess, on the other hand, was no sooner back in the palace among
-her ladies than the curse of her terrible christening present descended
-upon her as she had never felt it before. How, the poor princess
-thought, could the prince possibly like her, who was so different from
-everybody in the world? While she was being dressed, every time that
-her ladies spoke in a low tone, she imagined that they were speaking of
-her; every time that one smiled and shook her head, the princess was
-certain that it was in pity of her. She fancied that they knew that
-her walk was awkward, her voice harsh, her robe in bad taste, and an
-old fear came upon her that the palace mirrors had all been changed
-to conceal from her that she was really very ugly. In short, by the
-time that she was expected to descend, poor Princess Romancia had made
-herself utterly miserable.
-
-Therefore, when, in her gown of fresh cobweb, the princess entered the
-hall and the prince hastened eagerly forward, she hardly looked at him.
-And when, at the banquet that followed, he sat beside her and tried to
-continue their talk of the arbour and the walk, she barely replied at
-all.
-
-“How beautiful you are,” he murmured.
-
-“So is the night,” said the princess, “and you do not tell the night
-that it is beautiful.”
-
-“Your eyes are like stars,” the prince said.
-
-“There are real stars above,” said the princess.
-
-“You are like no one else!” cried the prince.
-
-“At least you need not charge me with that,” said the poor princess.
-
-Nor would she dance with him or with anyone else. For she imagined that
-they did not wish to dance with her, and that her dancing was worse
-than anyone’s. And as soon as she was able, and long before cock-crow,
-she slipped away from them all and went to sleep in a handy crocus cup.
-
-Now at all this the king and queen were nearly as distressed as the
-prince, and they were obliged to tell Prince Hesperus the whole story
-of the christening. When he heard about the uninvited Human Being who
-had given the baby princess this dreadful present and had kept the key
-to the bracelet which was its bond, he sprang up and grasped his tiny
-sword.
-
-“I will go out in the world and find this Human Being,” he cried, “and
-I will bring back the bracelet key.”
-
-Without again seeing the princess, Prince Hesperus left the palace and
-fared forth on his quest. And when she found that he was gone, she was
-more wretched than ever before. For in her life no one had ever talked
-to her as he had talked, speaking his inmost fancies, and when she had
-lost him, she wanted more than ever to talk with him. But the king, who
-was a very wise fairy, did not tell her where the prince had gone.
-
-And now the Princess Romancia did not know what to do with herself. The
-court was unbearable; all her trivial occupations bored her; and the
-whole world seemed to have been made different from all other worlds.
-Worst to endure was the presence of her companions, who all seemed to
-love and to understand one another, while she only was alone and out of
-their sympathy.
-
-“Oh,” she cried, “if only I had a game or a task to do with somebody or
-something that didn’t know I am different--that wouldn’t know who I am!”
-
-And she thought longingly of the prince’s fancy about the leaf-shadow
-for a pet which should dance with one all day long.
-
-“A leaf-shadow would not know that I am not like everybody else!” the
-poor princess thought.
-
-One night, when a fairy ring had been formed in an open grassy space
-among old oaks, the princess could bear it all no longer. When the
-music was at its merriest and a band of strolling goblin musicians were
-playing their maddest, she slipped away and returned to the palace by
-an unfrequented path and entered a long-disused part of the garden.
-And there, in a corner where she had never before walked, she came on
-a great place of rich, black earth, which, in the sweet Spring air,
-lay ready for the sowing. It was the spadeful of earth which the day
-labourer had brought to her christening; and there, for all these
-years, the king had caused it to remain untouched, its own rank weed
-growth enriching its richness, until but a touch would now turn it
-to fruitage. And seeing it so, and being filled with her wish for
-something which should take her thought away from herself and from her
-difference from all the world, the Princess Romancia was instantly
-minded to make a garden.
-
-Night being the work time and play time of the fairies, the princess
-went at once to the palace granaries and selected seeds of many kinds,
-flower and vegetable and fern seeds, and she brought them to this
-corner of rich earth, and there she planted them, under the moon. She
-would call no servants to help her, fearing lest they would smile among
-themselves at her strange doing. All night she worked at the planting,
-and when morning came, she fell asleep in a mandrake blossom, and woke
-hungry for a breakfast of honeydew and thinking of nothing save getting
-back to her new gardening.
-
-The Wind helped her, and as the days passed, the Sun and the Rain
-helped her, and she used certain magic which she knew, so that
-presently her garden was a glory. Poppies and corn, beans and berries,
-green peas and sweet peas, pinks and potatoes, celery and white phlox,
-melons and cardinal flowers--all these grew wonderfully together, as
-it were, hand in hand, as they will grow for fairy folk, and in such
-great luxuriance that the princess wrought early and late to keep them
-ordered and watered. She would have no servants to help her, for she
-grew more and more to love her task. For here at last in her garden
-she had found those whom she could not imagine to be smiling among
-themselves at anything that she said or did; but all the green things
-responded to her hands like friends answering to a hand clasp, and when
-the flowers nodded to one another, this meant only that a company of
-little leaf-shadows were set dancing on the earth, almost as if they
-had been tamed to be her pets, according to the prince’s fancy.
-
-Up at the palace the queen and the ladies-in-waiting to the queen and
-the princess regarded all this as but another sign of poor Romancia’s
-strangeness. From her tower window the queen peered anxiously down at
-her daughter toiling away at sunrise.
-
-“Now she is raising carrots and beets,” cried the queen, wringing her
-hands. “She grows more different from us every moment of her life!”
-
-“She seems to do so,” admitted the king; but he was very wise; and,
-“Let her be,” he commanded everybody. “We may see what this all means,
-and a great many other things as well.”
-
-Meanwhile Prince Hesperus, journeying from land to land and from height
-to valley, was seeking in vain for the one person who, as he thought,
-could remove from the princess the curse of her difference from all the
-rest of the world. And it was very strange how love had changed him;
-for now, instead of his silly complaint that every fairy is like every
-other fairy, and his silly longing for a different pattern in fairies,
-he sought only for the charm which should make his beloved princess
-like everybody else. Where should he find this terrible Human Being,
-this uninvited one who held the key to the princess’s bracelet that was
-so like a fetter?
-
-He went first to the town nearest to fairyland. The people of the town,
-having no idea how near to fairyland they really were, were going
-prosaically about their occupations, and though they could have looked
-up into the magic garden itself, they remained serenely indifferent.
-There he found the very mother who had been at the christening of the
-princess; and alighting close to a great task that she was doing
-for the whole world, he tried to ask her who it was who makes folk
-different from all the rest. But she could not hear his tiny, tiny
-voice which came to her merely as a thought about something which could
-not possibly be true. In a pleasant valley he came on that one who,
-at the christening, had brought the lyre which played of itself, but
-when the prince asked him his question, he fancied it to be merely
-the wandering of his own melody, with a note about something new to
-his thought. The poet by the stream singing of the brotherhood of
-man, the prophet on a mountain foreseeing the brotherhood as in a
-gazing crystal, the scientist weaving the brotherhood in a tapestry
-of the universe--none of these knew anyone who can possibly make folk
-different from everybody else, nor did any of the others on whom Prince
-Hesperus chanced.
-
-When one day he thought that he had found her, because he met one whose
-face had the look of many cities and was like the painted cover of an
-empty box, straightway he saw another and another and still others, men
-and women both, who were like her, with only the meaning of those who
-never look at the stars, or walk in gardens, or think about others
-rather than themselves, or listen to hear what is right for them to do.
-And then he saw that these are many and many, who believe themselves to
-be different from everybody else and who try to make others so, and he
-saw that it would be useless to look further among them for that one
-who had the key for which he sought.
-
-So at last Prince Hesperus turned sadly back toward the palace of the
-princess.
-
-“Alas,” said the prince, “it is for her own happiness that I seek to
-have her like other people. For myself I would love her anyway. But
-yet, what am I to do--for she seems so different that she will never
-believe that I love her!”
-
-It was already late at night when the prince found himself in the
-neighbourhood of the palace, and being tired and travel-worn, he
-resolved to take shelter in the cup of some flower and wait until the
-palace revelries were done. Accordingly he entered the garden of an
-humble cottage and crept within the petals of a wild lily growing in
-the long, untended grass.
-
-He had hardly settled himself to sleep when he heard from the cottage
-the sound of bitter crying. Now this is a sound which no fairy will
-ever pass by or ever so much as hear about without trying to comfort,
-and at once Prince Hesperus rose and flew to the sill of an open
-lattice.
-
-He looked in on a poor room, with the meanest furnishings. On a
-comfortless bed lay the father of the house, ill and helpless. His wife
-sat by his side, and the children clung about her, crying with hunger
-and mingling their tears with her own. The man turned and looked at
-her, making a motion to speak, and Prince Hesperus flew into the room
-and alighted on the handle of a great spade, covered with earth, which
-stood in a corner.
-
-“Wife,” the man said, “I’ve brought you little but sorrow and hunger.
-I would have brought you more if I had had better. And now I see you
-starve.”
-
-“I am not _too_ hungry,” the wife said--but the children sobbed.
-
-Prince Hesperus waited not a moment. He flew into the night and away
-toward the palace, and missing the fairy ring where among old oaks the
-fairies were dancing, he reached the palace by an unfrequented path and
-entered a disused part of the palace garden. And there, in a corner
-which he had never visited, Prince Hesperus saw a marvellous mass of
-bloom and fruit--poppies and corn, beans and berries, green peas and
-sweet peas, pinks and potatoes, celery and white phlox, melons and
-cardinal flowers--all growing wonderfully together, as it were, hand in
-hand. And above them, in a moon-flower clinging to the wall, sat the
-Princess Romancia, rocking in the wind and brooding upon her garden.
-
-“Come!” cried Prince Hesperus. “There is a thing to do!”
-
-The princess looked at him a little fearfully, but he paid almost no
-attention to her, so absorbed he was in what he wished to have done.
-
-“Hard by is a family,” said the prince, “dying of hunger. Here is food.
-Hale in these idlers dancing in the light of the moon, and let us carry
-the family the means to stay alive.”
-
-Without a word the princess went with him, and they appeared together
-in the fairy ring and haled away the dancers. And when these understood
-the need, they all joined together, fairies, goblin musicians and all,
-and hurried away to the garden of the princess.
-
-They wove a litter of sweet stems and into this they piled all the food
-of the princess’s tending. And when the queen would have had them send
-to the palace kitchen for supplies, the king, who was a wise fairy,
-would not permit it and commanded that all should be done as the prince
-wished. So when the garden was ravaged of its sweets, they all bore
-them away, and trooped to the cottage, and cast them on the threshold.
-And then they perched about the room, or hovered in the path of the
-moonlight to hear what should be said. And Prince Hesperus and Princess
-Romancia listened together upon the handle of the poor man’s spade.
-
-At sight of the gifts the wife sprang up joyfully and cried out to her
-husband, and the children wakened with happy shouts.
-
-“Here is food--food!” they cried. “Oh, it must be from the fairies.”
-
-The sick man looked and smiled.
-
-“Ay,” he said, “the Little Folk have remembered us. They have brought
-us rich store in return for my poor spadeful of earth.”
-
-Then the prince and princess and all the court understood that this
-poor man whom they had helped was that very day labourer who had
-come to the christening of the princess. And swift as a moonbeam--and
-not unlike one--Prince Hesperus darted from beside the princess and
-alighted on the man’s pillow.
-
-“Ah,” he cried, “can you not, then, tell me who it is who has the power
-to make one different from everybody else in the world?”
-
-In half delirium the day labourer heard the voice of the prince and
-caught the question. But he did not know that it was the voice of the
-prince, and he fancied it to be the voice of the whole world, as it
-were throbbing with the prince’s question. And he cried out loudly in
-answer:--
-
-“No one has that power! No one is different! Those who seem different
-hold no truth. We are all alike, all of us that live!”
-
-Swiftly the prince turned to the king and the queen and the court.
-
-“The uninvited Human Being,” he cried, “did she say that the princess
-should _be_ different from all the world, or that she should merely
-_seem_ different?”
-
-The queen and the court could not remember, but the king, who was a
-wise fairy, instantly remembered.
-
-“She said that she should _seem_ different,” he said.
-
-Then the prince laughed out joyfully.
-
-“Ay,” he cried, “seem different, indeed! There are many and many who
-may do that. But this man speaks truth and out of his spadeful of earth
-we have learned it, _We are all alike, all of us who live!_”
-
-With that he grasped his tiny sword and flew to the side of the
-princess and lifted her hand in his. And with a swift, deft stroke he
-cut from her wrist the bracelet that was like a fetter, and he took her
-in his arms.
-
-“Ah, my princess,” he cried. “You have seemed different from us all
-only because you would have it so!”
-
-The Princess Romancia looked round on the court, and suddenly she saw
-only the friendliness which had always been there if she could have
-believed. She looked on her father and mother, the king and the queen,
-and she saw only tenderness. She looked on the day labourer and his
-family and understood that, fairy and princess though she was, she was
-like them and they were like her. Last, she looked in the face of the
-prince--and she did not look away.
-
-Invisibly, as the hours leave a dial, the fairies drifted from the
-little room and back to the fairy ring among the old oaks to dance
-for very joyousness. The labourer and his family, hearing them go,
-were conscious of a faint lifting of the dark, as if morning were
-coming, bringing a new day. And to the Princess Romancia, beside Prince
-Hesperus, the world itself was a new world, where she did not walk
-alone as she had thought, but where all folk who will have it so walk
-together.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-TWO FOR THE SHOW
-
-
-First of all there was Every Day, with breakfast, lunch, outdoors,
-dinner, and evenings.
-
-Then there were Sundays, which were quite another kind of time,
-as different as layer cake from sponge cake: With breakfast late,
-and mustn’t-jump-rope, and the living-room somehow different, the
-Out-of-doors moved farther off, our play-house not waiting for us
-but acting busy at something else in which we had no part; the swing
-hanging useless as it did when we were away from home and thought about
-it in the night; bells ringing as if it were _their_ day; until we were
-almost homesick to hear the grocer’s cart rattle behind the white horse.
-
-There were school half holidays when the sun shone as it never shone
-before, and we could not decide how to spend the time, and to look
-ahead seemed a glorious year before dark.
-
-There were the real holidays--Christmas and the Fourth and Birthdays,
-which didn’t seem like days of time at all, but were like fairies of
-time, not living in any clock.
-
-And Company-time, when we were not to go in certain rooms, or sing in
-the hall, and when all downstairs seemed unable to romp with us.
-
-And Vacation-time, when 9 o’clock and 1 o’clock and 4 o’clock meant
-nothing, and the face of the clock never warned or threatened and the
-hands never dragged, and Saturday no longer stood out but sank into
-insignificance, and the days ran like sands.
-
-All these times there were when life grew different and either let us
-in farther than ever before or else left us out altogether. But almost
-the strangest and best of these was house-cleaning time.
-
-Screens out, so that the windows looked like faces and not like masks!
-The couch under the Cooking-apple tree! We used to lie on the couch and
-look up in the boughs and wish that they would leave it there forever.
-What was the rule that made them take it in? Mattresses in the backyard
-to jump on and lie on and stare up from, so differently, into the blue.
-Rugs like rooms, opening out into an adjoining pansy bed. Chairs set
-about on the grass, as if at last people had come to understand, as we
-had always understood, that the Outdoors is a real place to be in, and
-not just a place to pass through to get somewhere else. If only, if
-only some day they had brought the piano out on the lawn! To have done
-one’s practising out there, just as if a piano were born, not made!
-But they never did that, and we were thankful enough for the things
-that they did do. When Saturday came, I found with relief that they had
-still the parlour and one bedroom left to do. I had been afraid that by
-then these would be restored to the usual dry and dustless order.
-
-In the open window of the empty sitting-room I was sitting negligently
-that morning, when I saw Mr. Britt going by. He was as old as anyone I
-knew in the world--Mr. Britt must have been fifty. I never thought of
-him as _folks_ at all. There were the other neighbours, all dark-haired
-and quick and busy at the usual human errands; and then there was Mr.
-Britt, leaving his fruit trees and his rose bushes to go down to his
-office in the Court House. He had white hair, a long square white
-beard, and he carried a stick with a crook in the handle. I watched
-him pityingly. His life was all done, as tidy as a sewed seam, as
-sure as a learned lesson. All lived out, a piece at a time, just as
-I planned mine. How immeasurably long it had taken him; what a slow
-business it must have seemed to him; how very old he was!
-
-At our gate he stopped. Mr. Britt’s face was pink, and there were
-pleasant wrinkles at the corners of his eyes, and when he talked, he
-seemed to think about you.
-
-“Moving?” he inquired.
-
-“House-cleaning,” I explained with importance.
-
-“Fine day of it,” he commented and went on. He always sighed a little
-when he spoke, not in sorrow; but in a certain weariness.
-
-_In forty-two years I should be as old as that._ Forty-two years--more
-than five life-times, as I knew them.
-
-I was still looking after him, trying to think it through--a number as
-vast as the sky of stars was vast--when round the corner, across the
-street, the Rodman girls appeared. (“Margaret and Betty Rodman?” my
-mother used to inquire pointedly when I said “the Rodman girls.”) In
-their wake was their little brother, Harold. I hailed them joyously.
-
-“Come on over! It’s house-cleaning.”
-
-“We were,” admitted Betty, as they ran. “We saw the things out in the
-yard, and we asked right off. We can stay a whole hour.”
-
-“Can’t we get Mary Gilbraith to tell us when it’s an hour?” Margaret
-Amelia suggested as they came in at the gate. “Then we won’t have to
-remember.”
-
-Mary Gilbraith stood beating a curtain, and we called to her. She
-nodded her head, wound in a brown veil.
-
-“Sure,” she said. “And don’t you children track up them clean floors
-inside there.”
-
-I glanced over my shoulder into the empty room.
-
-“Shall I get down,” I inquired of my guests, “or will you get up?”
-
-They would get up, and they did so. We three just fitted the sill, with
-Harold looking wistfully upward.
-
-“Go find a nice stick,” Margaret Amelia advised him maternally.
-
-“What’ll we play?” I was pursuing politely. “Pretend?” I intimated.
-Because of course there is nothing that is quite so much fun as
-pretend. “Or real?” I conceded the alternative its second place.
-
-“Pretend what?” Betty wanted to know.
-
-“Well, what difference does that make?” I inquired scornfully. “We can
-decide that after.”
-
-However, we duly weighed the respective merits of Lost-in-the-Woods,
-Cave-in-the Middle-of-the-World, and Invisible, a selection always
-involving ceremony.
-
-“Harold can’t play any of them,” Margaret Amelia remembered
-regretfully. “He don’t stay lost nor invisible--he wriggles. And Cave
-scares him.”
-
-We considered what to do with Harold, and at last mine was the
-inspiration--no doubt because I was on the home field. In a fence
-corner I had a play-house, roofed level with the fence top. From my
-sand-pile (sand boxes came later--mine was a corner of the garden
-sacred to me) we brought tin pails of earth which we emptied about the
-little boy, gradually covering his fat legs and nicely packing his
-plaid skirt. Then we got him a baking-powder can cover for a cutter and
-a handleless spoon, and we went away. He was infinitely content.
-
-“Makin’ a meat pie,” he confided, as we left him.
-
-Free, we were drawn irresistibly back to the out-of-doors furniture. We
-jumped in the middle of the mattresses lying in the grass, we hung the
-comforters and quilts in long overlapping rows on the clothes line and
-ran from one end to the other within that tent-like enclosure. Margaret
-Amelia arranged herself languidly on the Brussels couch that ordinarily
-stood in the upstairs hall piled with leather-bound reports, but now,
-scales falling from our eyes, we saw to be the bank of a stream whereon
-Maid Marian reclined; but while Betty and I were trying to decide which
-should be Robin Hood and which Alan-a-dale (alas, for our chivalry ...
-we were both holding out to be Robin) Maid Marian settled it by dancing
-down the stair carpet which made a hallway half across the lawn. We
-followed her. The terminus brought us back to the parlour window. We
-stepped on the coping and stared inside. This was our parlour! Yet
-it looked no more like the formal room which we seldom entered than
-a fairy looks like a mortal. Many and many a time an empty room is
-so much more a suggestive, haunted, beckoning place than ever it
-becomes after its furniture gets it into bondage. Rooms are often free,
-beautiful creatures before they are saddled and bridled with alien
-lives and with upholstery, and hitched for lumbering, permanent uses. I
-felt this vaguely even then.
-
-“It’s like the cloth in the store,” I observed, balancing on my stomach
-on the sill. “It’s heaps prettier before it’s made up into clothes.”
-
-“How funny,” said Margaret Amelia. “I like the trimming on, and the
-pretty buttons.”
-
-“Let’s play,” I said hurriedly; for I had seen in her eyes that look
-which always comes into eyes whose owners have just called an idea
-“funny.”
-
-“Very well. But,” said Betty, frankly, “I’m awful sick of playing
-Pretend. You always want to play that. We played that last time anyhow.
-Let’s play Store. Let’s play,” she said, with sudden zest, “Furniture
-Store, outdoors.”
-
-The whole lawn became the ground floor for our shop. Forthwith we
-arranged the aisles of chairs, stopping to sit in this one and that “to
-taste the difference.” To sit in the patent upholstered rocker, close
-to the flowering currant bush fragrant with spicy, yellow buds was like
-being somewhere else.
-
-“This looks like the pictures of greenhouses,” said Margaret Amelia,
-dragging a willow chair to the Bridal Wreath at the fork in the brick
-walk. She idled there for a moment.
-
-“Emily Broom says that when they moved she rode right through town on
-their velvet lounge on the dray,” she volunteered.
-
-We pictured it mutely. Something like that had been a dream of mine.
-Now and then, I had walked backward on the street to watch a furniture
-wagon delivering a new chair that rocked idle and unoccupied in the
-box. I always marvelled at the unimaginativeness of the driver which
-kept him on the wagon seat.
-
-“We’ve never moved,” I confessed regretfully.
-
-“We did,” said Betty, “but they piled everything up so good there
-wasn’t anything left to sit on. I rode with the driver--but his seat
-wasn’t very high,” she added, less in the interest of truth than with a
-lingering resentment.
-
-“Stitchy Branchett told me,” contributed Margaret Amelia, “once he set
-on the top step of the step ladder on one of their dray loads.”
-
-“I don’t believe it,” I announced flatly. “It’d tip and pitch him off.”
-
-“He _said_ he did,” Margaret Amelia held. “Betty heard him. Didn’t he,
-Betty? Who I don’t believe is Joe Richmond. He says he went to sleep on
-a mattress on the dray when they moved. He couldn’t of.”
-
-“Course he couldn’t of,” we all affirmed.
-
-“Delia says they’ve moved six times that she can remember of and she’s
-rode on every load,” I repeated.
-
-We all looked enviously across at Delia’s house. Then, moved by
-a common impulse, we scrambled back to make the most of our own
-advantages, such as they were.
-
-At last the ground floor of the furniture store was all arranged, and
-the two show windows set with the choicest pieces to face the street.
-And when we were ready to open the place to the general public, we sat
-on the edge of the well curb and surveyed our results.
-
-“Now let’s start,” said Margaret Amelia.
-
-At that instant--the precision with which these things happen is almost
-conscious--Mary Gilbraith briefly put her head out the kitchen window.
-
-“It’s just edgin’ on ’leven,” she announced. “You children keep your
-feet off them mattresses.”
-
-We stared at one another. This was incredible. Margaret Amelia and
-Betty had just come. We had hardly tasted what the morning might have
-held. Our place of business was only at this moment ready for us. We
-had just meant to begin.
-
-There was no appeal. We went down the garden path for Harold. He sat
-where we had left him, somewhat drowsy in the warm sun, patting an
-enormous mound of moist earth. Busy with our own wrongs, we picked him
-up and stood him on his feet without warning him. An indignant roar
-broke from him.
-
-“Just goin’ frost my meat pie!” he wailed. “Wiv chocolate on!”
-
-Some stirring of pity for our common plight may have animated us--I do
-not remember. But he was hurried off. I went with them to the fence,
-gave them last tag as became an hostess, stood on the gate as it swung
-shut, experienced the fine jar and bang of its closing, and then hung
-wistfully across it, looking for the unknown.
-
-The elm and maple shadows moved pleasantly on the cream-coloured brick
-walk whose depths of tone were more uneven than the shadows. An oriole
-was calling, hanging back downward from a little bough. Somebody’s dog
-came by, looked up at me, wagged his tail, and hurried on about his
-business. Looking after him, I saw Mr. Britt coming slowly home with
-his mail. At our gate he stopped.
-
-“Playing something?” he inquired.
-
-Welcoming any sympathy, I told him how we had just got ready to play
-when it was time to stop. He nodded with some unexpected understanding,
-closing his eyes briefly.
-
-“That’s it,” he said. “We all just get ready when it’s time to stop.
-Fine day of it,” he added, and sighed and went on.
-
-I stared after him. Could it be possible that his life had not seemed
-long to him? That he felt as if he had hardly begun? I dismissed this
-as utterly improbable. Fifty years!
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-NEXT DOOR
-
-
-The house next door had been vacant for two months when the New Family
-moved in. We had looked forward with excitement, not unmodified by
-unconscious aversion, to the arrival of the New Family.
-
-“Have they any girls?” we had inquired when the To Rent sign had come
-down.
-
-They had, it appeared, one girl. We saw her, with wavy hair worn “let
-down” in the morning, though we ourselves wore let-down hair only for
-occasions, pig-tails denoting mornings. She had on new soles--we saw
-them showing clean as she was setting her feet daintily; and when we,
-who were walking the fence between the two houses, crossed glances with
-her, we all looked instantly away, and though it was with regret that
-we saw her put into the ’bus next day to go, we afterward learned, to
-spend the Spring with her grandmother in a dry climate, we still felt
-a certain satisfaction that our social habits were not to be disquieted.
-
-Nothing at all had been suspected of a New Boy. Into that experience I
-came without warning.
-
-I was sitting on the flat roof of my play-house in the fence corner,
-laboriously writing on the weathered boards with a bit of a picket,
-which, as everybody knows, will make very clear brown letters, when the
-woodshed door of the house next door opened, and the New Boy came out.
-He came straight up to the fence and looked up at me, the sun shining
-in his eyes beneath the rimless plush cap which he was still wearing.
-He was younger than I, so I was not too afraid of him.
-
-“What you got?” he inquired.
-
-I showed him my writing material.
-
-“I wrote on a window with a diamond ring a’ready,” he submitted.
-
-I had heard of this, but I had never wholly credited it and I said
-so. Besides, it would wear the ring out and who wanted to wear out a
-diamond ring to write on a window?
-
-“It don’t wear it out,” the New Boy said. “It can keep right on writing
-forever and ever.”
-
-“Nothing can keep right on forever,” I contended.
-
-He cast about for an argument.
-
-“Trees does,” he produced it.
-
-I glanced up at them. They certainly seemed to bear him out. I decided
-to abandon the controversy, and I switched with some abruptness to
-a subject not unconnected with trees, and about which I had often
-wondered.
-
-“If you was dirt,” I observed, “how could you decide to be into a
-potato when you could be into an apple just as well?”
-
-The New Boy was plainly taken aback. Here he was, as I see now, doing
-his best to be friendly and to make conversation personal, to say
-nothing of his having condescended to parley with a girl at all, and I
-was rewarding him with an abstraction.
-
-Said he: “Huh?”
-
-“If you was dirt--” I began a little doubtfully, but still sticking to
-the text.
-
-“I ain’t dirt,” denied the New Boy, with some heat.
-
-“I says, if you _was_ dirt--” I tried to tell him, in haste and some
-discomfort.
-
-He climbed down from the fence on which he had been socially
-contriving to stick, though his was the “plain” side.
-
-“There ain’t any girl,” he observed with dignity, “going to call me
-dirt, nor call me if-I-was-dirt, either,” and stalked back into the
-woodshed.
-
-I looked after him in the utmost distress. I had been dealing in what I
-had considered the amenities, and it had come to this. Already the New
-Boy hated me.
-
-I slipped to the ground and waited, watching through the cracks in the
-fence. Ages passed. At length I heard him call his dog and go whistling
-down the street. I climbed on the fence and sat looking over in the
-deserted garden.
-
-Round the corner of the house next door somebody came. I saw a long,
-gray plaid shawl, with torn and flapping tassels, pinned about a small
-figure, with long legs. As she put her hand on the latch, she flashed
-me her smile, and it was Mary Elizabeth. She went immediately inside
-the shed door, and left me staring. What was she doing there? What
-unexpected places I was always seeing her. Why should she go in the
-woodshed of the New Family whom we didn’t even know ourselves?
-
-After due thought, I dropped to the other side of the fence, and
-proceeded to the woodshed door myself. It was unlatched, and as I
-peered in, I caught the sweet, moist smell of green wood, like the
-cool breath of the wood yard, where I had first seen her. When my
-eyes became used to the dimness, I perceived Mary Elizabeth standing
-at the end of a pile of wood, of the sort which we used to denominate
-“chunks,” which are what folk now call fireplace logs, though they are
-not properly fireplace logs at all--only “chunks” for sitting-room
-stoves--and trying to look meet to new estates. They were evenly piled,
-and they presented a wonderful presence, much more human than a wall.
-
-“See,” said Mary Elizabeth, absorbedly, “every end of one is pictures.
-Here’s a wheel with a wing on, and here’s a griffin eating a lemon.”
-
-I stared over her shoulder, fascinated. There they were. And there were
-grapes and a chandelier and a crooked street....
-
-Some moments later we were aware that the kitchen door had opened, and
-that somebody was standing there. It was the woman of the New Family,
-with a black veil wound round her head and the ends dangling. She shook
-a huge purple dust-cloth, and I do not seem to recall that there was
-anything else to her, save her face and veil and the cloth.
-
-“Now then!” she said briskly, and in a tone of dreadful warning. “_Now_
-then!”
-
-Mary Elizabeth turned in the utmost eagerness and contrition.
-
-“Oh,” she said, “I come to see about the work.”
-
-The New Family Woman towered at us from the top of the three steps.
-
-“How much work,” she inquired with majesty, “do you think I’d get out
-of you, young miss, at this rate?”
-
-Mary Elizabeth drew nearer to her and stood before her, down in the
-chips, in the absurd shawl.
-
-“If you’ll leave me come,” she said earnestly, “I’ll promise not to see
-pictures. Well,” she added conscientiously, “I’ll promise not to stop
-to look at ’em.”
-
-How much weight this would have carried, I do not know; but at that
-moment the woman chanced to touch with her foot a mouse-trap that
-stood on the top step, and it “sprung” and shed its cheese. In an
-instant Mary Elizabeth had deftly reset and restored it. This made an
-impression on the arbiter.
-
-“You’re kind of a handy little thing, I see,” she said. “And of course
-you’re _all_ lazy, for that matter. And I do need somebody. Well, I’ve
-got a woman coming for to-day. You can begin in the morning. Dishes,
-vegetables, and general cleaning, and anything else I think you can do.
-Board and clothes only, mind you--and _them_ only as long as you suit.”
-
-“Yes’m. No’m. Yes’m.” Mary Elizabeth tried to agree right and left.
-
-Outside I skipped in the sun.
-
-“We’re going to be next-yard neighbours,” I cried, and that reminded
-me of the New Boy. I told her about him as we went round by the gate,
-there being no cross piece for a foothold on that side the fence.
-
-“Oh,” said Mary Elizabeth, “I know him. He’s drove me home by my
-braids. He doesn’t mean anything.”
-
-“Well,” I said earnestly, “when you get a chance, you tell him that I
-wasn’t calling him dirt. I says if he _was_ dirt, how could he tell to
-be a potato or an apple.”
-
-Mary Elizabeth nodded. “Lots of boys pretend mad,” she said
-philosophically, “to get you to run after them.”
-
-This was new to me. Could it be possible that you had to imagine
-folks, and what they really meant, as well as tending to all the other
-imagining?
-
-“Can’t you stay over?” I extended hospitality to Mary Elizabeth.
-
-She could “stay over,” it seemed, and without asking. This freedom of
-hers used to fill me with longing. To “stay over” without asking, to go
-down town, to eat unexpected offerings of food, to climb a new tree,
-as Mary Elizabeth could do, and all without asking! It was almost like
-being boys.
-
-Now that Mary Elizabeth was to be a neighbour, a new footing was
-established. This I did not reason about, nor did I wonder why this
-footing might not be everybody’s footing. We merely set to work on the
-accepted basis.
-
-This comprised: Name, including middle name, if any, and for whom
-named; age, and birthday, and particulars about the recent or
-approaching birthday; brothers and sisters, together with their names,
-ages, and birthdays; birthstones; grade; did we comb our own hair;
-voluntary information concerning tastes in flowers, colours, and food;
-and finally an examination and trying on of each other’s rings. The
-stone had come out of Mary Elizabeth’s ring, and she had found a clear
-pink pebble to insert in its place. She had, she said, grated the
-pebble on a brick to make it fit and she herself thought that it looked
-better than the one that she had lost, “but,” she added modestly, “I
-s’pose it can’t be.”
-
-Then came the revelation. To finish comparing notes we sat down
-together in my swing. And partly because, when I made a new friend, I
-was nervously eager to give her the best I had and at once, and partly
-because I was always wanting to see if somebody _would_ understand,
-and chiefly because I never could learn wisdom, I looked up in the
-apple tree, now forsaken of all its pink, and fallen in a great green
-stillness, and I told her about my lady in the tree. I told her,
-expecting now no more than I had received from Delia and the Eversley
-girls. But Mary Elizabeth looked up and nodded.
-
-“I know,” she said. “I’ve seen lots of ’em. They’s a lady in the willow
-out in our alley. I see her when I empty the ashes and I pour ’em so’s
-they won’t blow on her.”
-
-I looked at her speechlessly. To this day I can remember how the little
-curls were caught up above Mary Elizabeth’s ear that morning. Struck by
-my silence she turned and regarded me. I think I must have blushed and
-stammered like a boy.
-
-“Can _you_ see them too?” I asked. “In trees and places?”
-
-“Why, yes,” she said in surprise. “Can’t everybody?”
-
-Suddenly I was filled with a great sense of protection for Mary
-Elizabeth. I felt incalculably older. She had not yet found out, and I
-must never let her know, that everybody does not see all that there is
-to be seen in the world!
-
-One at a time I brought out my treasures that morning and shared them
-with her, as treasures; and she brought out hers as matters of course.
-I remember that I told her about the Theys that lived in our house.
-They were very friendly and wistful. They never presumed or frightened
-one or came in the room when anyone was there. But the minute folk
-left the room--ah, then! They slipped out from everywhere and did
-their living. I was always trying to catch them. I would leave a room
-innocently, and then whirl and fling it open in the hope of surprising
-them. But always They were too quick for me. In the times when the
-family was in the rooms and They were waiting for us to go, They used
-to watch us, still friendly and wistful, but also a little critical.
-Sometimes a whole task, or a mood, could be got through pleasantly
-because They were looking on.
-
-[Illustration: “BUT THE MINUTE FOLK LEFT THE ROOM--AH THEN!”]
-
-Mary Elizabeth nodded. “They like our parlour best,” she said. “They
-ain’t any furniture in there. They don’t come much in the kitchen.”
-
-It was the same at our house. They were always lurking in the curtained
-parlour, but the cheery, busy kitchen seldom knew them--except when one
-went out for a drink of water late at night. Then They barely escaped
-one.
-
-How she understood! Delia I loved with all the loyalties, but I could
-not help remembering a brief conversation that I had once held with her.
-
-“Do you have Theys at your house?” I had asked her, at the beginning of
-our acquaintance.
-
-“Yes,” she admitted readily. “Company all this week. From Oregon. They
-do their hairs on kids.”
-
-“I don’t mean them,” I explained. “I mean Theys, that live in between
-your rooms.”
-
-“We don’t let mice get in _our_ house,” she replied loftily. “Only
-sometimes one gets in the woodshed. Do you use Choke-’em traps, or
-Catch-’em-alive traps and have the cat there?”
-
-“Catch-them-alive-and-let-them-out-in-the-alley traps,” I told her, and
-gave up hope, I remember, and went on grating more sugar-stone for the
-mud-pie icing.
-
-Mary Elizabeth and I made mud pies that morning too, but all the time
-we made them we pretended. Not House-keep, or Store, or Bakery, or
-Church-sale--none of these pale pretendings to which I had chiefly
-been bound, save when I played alone. But now every pie and cake
-that we finished we two carried carefully and laid here and there,
-under raspberry bushes, in the crotch of the apple tree, on the
-wood-chopper’s block.
-
-“For Them to get afterwards,” we said briefly. We did not explain--I
-do not think that we could have explained. And we knew nothing of the
-old nights in the motherland when from cottage supper tables scraps of
-food were flung through open doors for One Waiting Without. But this
-business made an even more excellent thing of mud-pie baking, always a
-delectable pastime.
-
-When the noon whistle was blowing up at the brick yard, a shadow
-darkened our pine board. It was the New Boy. One of his cheeks
-protruded extravagantly. Silently he held out to me a vast pink
-substance of rock-like hardness, impaled on a stick. Then, with an
-obvious effort, more spiritual than physical, he extracted from his
-pocket a third of the kind, for Mary Elizabeth, on whose presence he
-had not counted. We accepted gratefully, I in the full spirit of the
-offer. Three minutes later he and I were at our respective dinner
-tables, trying, I suppose, to discuss this surreptitious first course
-simultaneously with our soup; and Mary Elizabeth, on her way home, was
-blissfully partaking of her _hors d’œuvre_, unviolated by any soup.
-
-“What are the new children like, I wonder?” said Somebody Grown. “I see
-there are two. I don’t know a thing about the people, but we can’t
-call till the woman at least gets her curtains up.”
-
-I pondered this. “Why?” I ventured at last.
-
-“Because she wouldn’t want to see us,” was the reply.
-
-Were curtains, then, so important that one might neither call nor be
-called on without them? What other possible explanation could there be?
-Perhaps Mary Elizabeth’s mother had no curtains and that was why our
-mothers did not know her.
-
-“Mary Elizabeth is going to help do the work for the New Family, and
-live there,” I said at last. “Won’t it be nice to have her to play
-with?”
-
-“You must be very kind to her,” somebody said.
-
-“_Kind to her!_” It was my first horrified look into the depths of the
-social condescensions. _Kind to her_--when I remembered what we shared!
-I thought of saying hotly that she was my best friend. But I was
-silent. There was, after all, no way to make anybody understand what
-had opened to me that morning.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-WHAT’S PROPER
-
-
-Delia and Calista and Margaret Amelia and Betty Rodman I loved with
-devotion. And Mary Elizabeth I likewise loved with devotion. Therefore,
-the fact that my four friends would not, in the language of the
-wise and grown world, “receive” Mary Elizabeth was to me bitter and
-unbelievable.
-
-This astounding situation, more than intimated on the day of the
-picnic, had its confirmation a few days after the advent of Mary
-Elizabeth in the New Family, when the six of us were seated on the
-edge of the board walk before our house. It was the middle of a June
-afternoon, a joyous, girlish day, with sun and wind in that feminine
-mood which is the frequent inheritance of all created things.
-
-“I could ’most spread this day on my bread like honey, and eat it
-up, and not know the difference,” said Mary Elizabeth, idly. “The
-queen’s honey--the queen’s honey--the queen’s honey,” she repeated
-luxuriously, looking up into the leaves.
-
-Delia leaned forward. It particularly annoyed her to have Mary
-Elizabeth in this mood.
-
-“One, two, three, four, five of us,” Delia said, deliberately omitting
-Mary Elizabeth as, for no reason, she counted us.
-
-Mary Elizabeth, released from tasks for an hour or two before time to
-“help with the supper,” gave no sign that she understood, save that
-delicate flush of hers which I knew.
-
-“Yes,” she assented lazily, “one, two, three, four, five of us--” and
-she so contrived that five was her own number, and no one could tell
-whom of us she had omitted.
-
-“Let’s play something,” I hurriedly intervened. “Let’s play Banquet.”
-
-Action might have proved the solvent, but I had made an ill-starred
-choice. For having selected the rectangle of lawn where the feast was
-to be spread, Mary Elizabeth promptly announced that she had never
-heard of a banquet for five people, and that we must have more.
-
-“We’ve got six,” corrected Delia, unwarily.
-
-“Five,” Mary Elizabeth persisted tranquilly, “and it’s not enough. We
-ought to have thirty.”
-
-“Where you going to get your thirty?” demanded the exasperated Delia.
-
-“Why,” said Mary Elizabeth, “_that’s_ always easy!” And told us.
-
-The king would sit at the head, with his prime minister and a
-lord or two. At the foot would be the queen with her principal
-ladies-in-waiting (at _this_ end, so as to leave room for their
-trains). In between would be the fool, the discoverer of the new land,
-the people from the other planets, us, and the animals.
-
-“‘The animals!’” burst out Delia. “Whoever heard of animals at the
-table?”
-
-Oh, but it was the animals that the banquet was for. They were talking
-animals, and everyone was scrambling to entertain them, and every place
-in which they ate they changed their shapes and their skins.
-
-“I never heard of such a game,” said Delia, outright, already
-sufficiently grown-up to regard this as a reason.
-
-“Let’s not play it,” said Margaret Amelia Rodman, languidly, and,
-though Delia had the most emphasis among us, Margaret Amelia was our
-leader, and we abandoned the game. I cannot recall why Margaret Amelia
-was our leader, unless it was because she had so many hair-ribbons and,
-when we had pin fairs, always came with a whole paper, whereas the rest
-of us merely had some collected in a box, or else rows torn off. But I
-suppose that we must have selected her for some potentiality; or else
-it was that a talent for tyranny was hers, since this, like the habit
-of creeping on all fours and other survivals of prehistoric man, will
-often mark one of the early stages of individual growth.
-
-This time Calista was peace-maker.
-
-“Let’s go for a walk,” she said. “We can do that before supper.”
-
-“You’ll have to be back in time to help _get_ supper, won’t you?” Delia
-asked Mary Elizabeth pointedly.
-
-Again Mary Elizabeth was unperturbed, save for that faint flush.
-
-“Yes,” she said, “I will. So let’s hurry.”
-
-We ran toward the school ground, by common consent the destination for
-short walks, with supper imminent, as Prospect Hill was dedicated to
-real walks, with nothing pressing upon us.
-
-“It says ‘Quick, quick, quick, quick,’” Mary Elizabeth cried, dragging
-a stick on the pickets of, so to say, a passing fence.
-
-“Why, that’s nothing but the stick noise hitting on the fence noise,”
-Delia explained loftily.
-
-“Which makes the loudest noise--the stick or the fence?” Mary Elizabeth
-put it to her.
-
-“Why--” said Delia, and Mary Elizabeth and I both laughed, like little
-demons, and made our sticks say, “Quick, quick, quick, quick” as far as
-the big post, that was so like a man standing there to stop us.
-
-“See the poor tree. The walk’s stepping on its feet!” cried Mary
-Elizabeth when we passed the Branchett’s great oak, that had forced
-up the bricks of the walk. (They must already have been talking of
-taking it down, that hundred-year oak, to preserve the dignity of the
-side-walk, for they did so shortly after.)
-
-This time it was Margaret Amelia who revolted.
-
-“Trees can’t walk,” she said. “There aren’t any _feet_ there.”
-
-I took a hand. “You don’t know sure,” I reminded her. “When it’s dark,
-maybe they do walk. I’ll ask it.”
-
-By the time I had done whispering to the bark, Delia said she was going
-to tell her mother. “Such _lies_,” she put it bluntly. “You’ll never
-write a book, I don’t care what you say. You got to tell the truth to
-write books.”
-
-“Everybody that tells the truth don’t write a book,” I contended--but
-sobered. I wanted passionately to write a book. What if this business
-of pretending, which Delia called lies should be in the way of truthful
-book-writing? But the habit was too strong for me. In that very moment
-we came upon a huge new ant-hill.
-
-“Don’t step on that ant-hill. See all the ants--they say to step over
-it!” I cried, and pushed Delia round it with some violence.
-
-“Well--what makes you always so--_religious_!” she burst out, at the
-end of her patience.
-
-I was still hotly denying this implication when we entered the school
-yard, and broke into running; for no reason, save that entrances and
-beginnings always made us want to run and shout.
-
-The school yard, quite an ordinary place during school hours, became
-at the end of school a place no longer to be shunned, but wholly
-desirable. Next to the wood yard, it was the most mysterious place
-that we knew. In the school yard were great cords of wood, suitable
-for hiding; a basement door, occasionally left open, from which at any
-moment the janitor might appear to drive us away; a band-stand, covered
-with names and lacking enough boards so that one might climb up without
-use of the steps; a high-board fence on which one always longed to
-walk at recess; a high platform from which one had unavailingly pined
-to jump; outside banisters down which, in school-time, no one might
-slide, trees which no one might climb, corner brick-work affording
-excellent steps, which, then, none might scale; broad outside window
-ledges on which none might sit, loose bricks in the walks ripe for
-the prying-up, but penalty attended; a pump on whose iron handle the
-lightest of us might ride save that, in school-time, this was forbidden
-too. In school-time this yard, so rich in possibilities, was compact
-of restrictions. None of these things might be done. Once a boy had
-been expelled for climbing on the schoolhouse roof; and thereupon his
-father, a painter by trade, had taken the boy to work with him, and
-when we saw him in overalls wheeling his father’s cart, we were told
-that _that_ was what came of disobedience, although this boy might,
-easily no doubt, otherwise have become President of the United States.
-
-But after school! Toward supper-time, or in vacation-time, we used to
-love to linger about the yard and snatch at these forbidden pleasures.
-That is, the girls loved it. The boys had long ago had them all, and
-were off across the tracks on new adventures unguessed of us.
-
-If anybody found us here--we were promptly driven off. The principal
-did this as a matter of course, but the janitor had the same power
-and much more emphasis. If one of the board was seen passing, we hid
-behind everything and, as we were never clear just who belonged to the
-board, we hid when nearly all grown-folk passed. That the building and
-grounds were ours, paid for by our father’s taxes, and that the school
-officials and even the tyrannical janitor were town servants to help us
-to make good use of our own, no more occurred to us than it occurred
-to us to find a ring in the ground, lift it, and descend steps. Nor
-as much, for we were always looking for a ring to lift. To be sure,
-we might easily fall into serious mischief in this stolen use of our
-property; but that it was the function of one of these grown-ups, whom
-we were forever dodging, to be there with us, paid by the town to play
-with us, was as wild an expectation as that fairies should arrive with
-golden hoops and balls and wings. Wilder, for we were always expecting
-the fairies and, secretly, the wings.
-
-That afternoon we did almost all these forbidden things--swings and
-seesaws and rings would have done exactly as well, only these had
-not been provided--and then we went to rest in the band-stand. Mary
-Elizabeth and I were feeling somewhat subdued--neither of us shone much
-in feats of skill, and here Delia and Margaret Amelia easily put us in
-our proper places. Calista was not daring, but she was a swift runner,
-and this entitled her to respect. Mary Elizabeth and I were usually
-the first ones caught, and the others were not above explaining to us
-frankly that this was why we preferred to play Pretend.
-
-“Let’s tell a story--you start it, Mary Elizabeth,” I proposed, anxious
-for us two to return to standing, for in collaborations of this kind
-Mary Elizabeth and I frankly shone--and the wish to shine, like the
-wish to cry out, is among the primitive phases of individual growth.
-
-“Let Margaret Amelia start it,” Delia tried to say, but already the
-story was started, Mary Elizabeth leaning far back, and beginning to
-braid and unbraid her long hair--not right away to the top of the
-braid, which was a serious matter and not to be lightly attempted with
-heavy hair, but just near the curling end.
-
-“Once,” she said, “a big gold sun was going along up in the sky,
-wondering what in the world--no, what in All-of-it to do with himself.
-For he was all made and done, nice and bright and shiny, and he wanted
-a place to be. So he knocked at all the worlds and said, ‘Don’t you
-want to hire a sun to do your urrants, take care of your garden, and
-behave like a fire and like a lamp?’ But all the worlds didn’t want
-him, because they all had engaged a sun first and they could only
-use one apiece, account of the climate. So one morning--he _knew_ it
-was morning because he was shining, and when it was night he never
-shone--one morning....”
-
-“Now leave somebody else,” Delia suggested restlessly. “Leave Margaret
-Amelia tell.”
-
-So we turned to her. Margaret Amelia considered solemnly--perhaps it
-was her faculty for gravity that made us always look up to her--and
-took up the tale:
-
-“One morning he met a witch. And he said, ‘Witch, I wish you
-would--would give me something to eat. I’m very hungry.’ So the witch
-took him to her kitchen and gave him a bowl of porridge, and it was hot
-and burned his mouth, and he asked for a drink of water, and--and--”
-
-“What was the use of having her a witch if _that_ was all he was going
-to ask her?” demanded Mary Elizabeth.
-
-“They _always_ have witches in the best stories,” Margaret Amelia
-contended, “and anyway, that’s all I’m going to tell.”
-
-Delia took up the tale uninvited.
-
-“And he got his drink of water, pumped up polite by the witch herself,
-and she was going to put a portion in it. But while she was looking in
-the top drawer for the portion, the sun went away. And--”
-
-This time it was I who intervened.
-
-“‘Portion!’” I said with superiority. “Who ever heard of anybody
-drinking a _portion_? That word is _potient_.”
-
-Delia was plainly taken aback.
-
-“You’re thinking of long division,” she said feebly.
-
-“I’m thinking of ‘Romeo and Juliet,’” I responded with dignity. “They
-had one, in the tomb, where Tybalt, all bloody--”
-
-“Don’t say that one--don’t say it!” cried Margaret Amelia. “I can see
-that one awful after the light is out. Go on, somebody, quick.”
-
-To take up her share of the story, Betty Rodman refused, point-blank. I
-think that her admission to our group must have been principally on the
-credentials of sistership to one of us, a basis at once pathetic and
-lovely.
-
-“I never can think of anything to have happen,” Betty complained, “and
-if I make something happen, then it ends up the story.”
-
-Calista had a nail in her shoe, and was too much absorbed in pounding
-it down with a stone to be approached; so, when we had all minutely
-examined the damage which the nail had wrought, it was my turn to take
-up the tale. And then the thing happened which was always happening
-to me: I could think of nothing to have the story do. At night, and
-when I was alone, I could dream out the most fascinating adventures,
-but with expectant faces--or a clean pad--before me, I was dumb and
-powerless.
-
-“I don’t feel like telling one just now,” said I, the proposer of the
-game, and went on digging leaves out of a crevice in the rotting rail.
-So Mary Elizabeth serenely took up the tale where she had left it.
-
-“One morning he looked over a high sky mountain--that’s what suns like
-to do best because it is so becoming--and he shone in a room of the sky
-where a little black star was sleeping. And he thought he would ask it
-what to do. So he said to it, ‘Little Black Star, where shall I be, now
-that I am all done and finished, nice and shiny?’ And the Little Black
-Star said: ‘You’re not done. What made you think you were done? Hardly
-anybody is ever done. I’ll tell you what to be. Be like a carriage
-and take all us little dark stars in, and whirl and whirl for about a
-million years, and make us all get bright too, and _then_ maybe you’ll
-be a true sun--but not all done, even then.’ So that’s what he decided
-to do, and he’s up there now, only you can’t see him, because he’s so
-far, and our sun is so bright, and he’s whirling and whirling, and lots
-more like him, getting to be made.”
-
-Delia followed Mary Elizabeth’s look into the blue.
-
-“I don’t believe it,” said she. “The sun is biggest and the moon is
-next. How could there be any other sun? And it don’t whirl. It don’t
-even rise and set. It stands still. Miss Messmore said so.”
-
-We looked at Mary Elizabeth, probably I alone having any impulse to
-defend her. And we became aware that she was quite white and trembling.
-In the same moment we understood that we were hearing something which
-we had been hearing without knowing that we heard. It was a thin,
-wavering strain of singing, in a man’s voice. We scrambled up, and
-looked over the edge of the band-stand. Coming unevenly down the broken
-brick walk that cut the schoolhouse grounds was Mary Elizabeth’s
-father. His hat was gone. It was he who was singing. He looked as he
-had looked that first day that I had seen him in the wood yard. We knew
-what was the matter. And all of us unconsciously did the cruel thing of
-turning and staring at Mary Elizabeth.
-
-In a moment she was over the side of the band-stand and running to
-him. She took him by the hand, and we saw that she meant to lead him
-home. Her little figure looked very tiny beside his gaunt frame, in its
-loosely hanging coat. I remember how the sun was pouring over them, and
-over the brilliant green beyond where blackbirds were walking. I have
-no knowledge of what made me do it--perhaps it was merely an attitude,
-created by the afternoon, of standing up for Mary Elizabeth no matter
-what befell; or it may have been a child’s crude will to challenge
-things; at any rate, without myself really deciding it, I suddenly took
-the way that she had taken, and caught up with the two.
-
-“Mary Elizabeth,” I meant to say, “I’m going.”
-
-But in fact I said nothing, and only kept along beside her. She looked
-at me mutely, and made a motion to me to turn back. When her father
-took our hands and stumblingly ran with us, I heartily wished that I
-had turned back. But nearly all the way he went peaceably enough. Long
-before we reached their home across the tracks, however, I heard the
-six o’clock whistles blow, and pictured the wrath of the mistress of
-the New Family when Mary Elizabeth had not returned in time to “help
-with the supper.” Very likely now they would not let her stay, and this
-new companionship of ours would have to end. Mary Elizabeth’s home
-was on the extreme edge of the town, and ordinarily I was not allowed
-to cross the tracks. Mary Elizabeth might even move away--that had
-happened to some of us, and the night had descended upon such as these
-and we had never heard of them again: Hattie Schenck, whom I had loved
-with unequalled devotion, where, for example, was she? Was it, then, to
-be the same with Mary Elizabeth?
-
-Her mother saw us coming. She hurried down to the gateway--the gate
-was detached and lying in the weeds within--and even then I was
-struck by the way of maternity with which she led her husband to the
-house. I remember her as large-featured, with the two bones of her
-arms sharply defined by a hollow running from wrist to elbow, and she
-constantly held her face as if the sun were shining in her eyes, but
-there was no sun shining there. And somehow, at the gate she had a
-way of receiving him, and of taking him with her. Hardly anything
-was said. The worst of it was that no one had to explain anything.
-Two of the little children ran away and hid. Someone dodged behind an
-open door. The man’s wife led him to the broken couch, and he lay down
-there like a little child. Standing in the doorway of that forlorn,
-disordered, ill-smelling room, I first dimly understood what I never
-have forgotten: That the man was not poor because he drank, as the
-village thought, but that he drank because he was poor. Instead of the
-horror at a drunken man which the village had laid it upon me to feel,
-I suddenly saw Mary Elizabeth’s father as her mother saw him when she
-folded her gingham apron and spread it across his shoulders and said:
-
-“Poor lad.”
-
-And when, in a few minutes, Mary Elizabeth and I were out on the street
-again, running silently, I remember feeling a great blind rage against
-the whole village and against the whole world that couldn’t seem to
-think what to do any more than Mary Elizabeth and I could think.
-
-The man of the New Family was watering the lawn, which meant that
-supper was done. We slipped in our back gate,--the New Family had
-none,--climbed the fence by my play-house, dropped down into the New
-Family’s garden, and entered their woodshed. In my own mind I had
-settled that I was of small account if I could not give the New Lady
-such a picture of what had happened that Mary Elizabeth should not lose
-her place, and I should not lose her.
-
-The kitchen door was ajar. The dish-pan was in the sink, the kettle was
-steaming on the stove. And from out the dining-room abruptly appeared
-Calista and _Delia_, bearing plates.
-
-“Girls!” I cried, but Mary Elizabeth was dumb.
-
-Delia carefully set down her plate in the dish-pan and addressed me:
-
-“Well, you needn’t think you’re the only one that knows what’s proper,
-miss,” she said.
-
-Calista was more simple.
-
-“We wanted to get ’em all done before you got back,” she owned. “We
-would, if Margaret Amelia and Betty had of come. They wanted to, but
-they wouldn’t let ’em.”
-
-Back of Delia and Calista appeared the mistress of the house. She had
-on her afternoon dress, and her curl papers were out, and she actually
-smiled at Mary Elizabeth and me.
-
-“_Now_ then!” she said to us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If I could have made a dream for that night, I think it would have been
-that ever and ever so many of us were sitting in rows, waiting to be
-counted. And a big sun came by, whirling and growing, to take us, and
-we thought we couldn’t all get in. But there was room, whether we had
-been counted or not.
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-DOLLS
-
-
-The advent of the New Boy changed the face of the neighbourhood.
-Formerly I had been accustomed to peep through cracks in the fence
-only to look into a field of corn that grew at the side; or, on the
-other side, into raspberry bushes, where at any moment raspberries
-might be gathered and dropped over the fence to me. Also, there was
-one place in the deep green before those bushes where blue-eyed grass
-grew, and I had to watch for that. Then there was a great spotted dog
-that sometimes came, and when he had passed, I used to wait long by the
-high boards lest he should return and leap at me to whom, so far, he
-had never paid the slightest attention. As a child, my mother had once
-jumped down into a manger where a great spotted dog was inadvertently
-lying and, though from all accounts he was far more frightened than
-she, yet I feared his kind more than any other.... The only real
-excitement that we had been wont to know in the neighbourhood occurred
-whenever there was a Loose Horse. Somebody would give the alarm, and
-then we would all make sure that the gates were latched and we would
-retire to watch him fearfully, where he was quietly cropping the
-roadside grass. But sometimes, too, a Loose Horse would run--and then I
-was terrified by the sound of his hoofs galloping on the sidewalk and
-striking on the bricks and boards. I was always afraid that a Loose
-Horse would see me, and nights, after one had disturbed our peace, I
-would dream that he was trying to find me, and that he had come peering
-between the dining-room blinds; and though I hid under the red cotton
-spread that was used “between-meals,” it never came down far enough,
-and he always stood there interminably waiting, and found me, through
-the fringe.
-
-But all these excitements were become as nothing. A new occupation
-presented itself. A dozen times a day now I had to watch through the
-fence-cracks, or through the knot-hole, or boldly between the pickets
-of the front fence, at the fascinating performances of the New Boy
-and his troops of friends. At any moment both Mary Elizabeth and I
-would abandon what we were doing to go to stare at the unaccountable
-activities which were forever agitating them. They were always
-producing something from their pockets and examining it, with their
-heads together, or manufacturing something or burying something, or
-disputing about something unguessed and alluring. Their whole world
-was filled with doing, doing, doing, whereas ours was made wholly of
-watching things get done.
-
-On an afternoon Mary Elizabeth and I were playing together in our side
-yard. It was the day for Delia’s music lesson, and as she usually did
-her whole week’s practising in the time immediately preceding that
-event, the entire half day was virtually wasted. We could hear her
-going drearily over and over the first and last movements of “At Home,”
-which she had memorized and could play like lightning, while the entire
-middle of the piece went with infinite deliberation. Calista was, we
-understood (because of some matter pertaining to having filled the
-bath-tub and waded in it and ruined the dining-room ceiling), spending
-the day in her bed. And Margaret Amelia and Betty Rodman were being
-kept at home because the family had company; and such was the prestige
-of the Rodmans that the two contrived to make this circumstance seem
-enviable, and the day before had pictured to us their embroidered white
-dresses and blue ribbons, and blue stockings, and the Charlotte Russe
-for supper, until we felt left out, and not in the least as if their
-company were of a kind with events of the sort familiar to us. Since I
-have grown up, I have observed this variety of genius in others. There
-is one family which, when it appears in afternoon gowns on occasions
-when I have worn a street dress, has power to make me wonder how I
-can have failed to do honour to the day; but who, when they wear
-street gowns and I am dressed for afternoon, invariably cause me to
-feel inexcusably overdressed. It is a kind of genius for the fit, and
-we must believe that it actually designates the atmosphere which an
-occasion shall breathe.
-
-Mary Elizabeth and I were playing Dolls. We rarely did this on a
-pleasant day in Summer, Dolls being an indoor game, matched with
-carpets and furniture and sewing baskets rather than with blue sky and
-with the soft brilliance of the grass. But that day we had brought
-everything out in the side yard under the little catalpa tree, and my
-eleven dolls (counting the one without any face, and Irene Helena, the
-home-made one, and the two penny ones) were in a circle on chairs and
-boxes and their backs, getting dressed for the tea-party. There was
-always going to be a tea-party when you played Dolls--you of course had
-to lead up to something, and what else was there to lead up to save
-a tea-party? To be sure, there might be an occasional marriage, but
-boy-dolls were never very practical; they were invariably smaller than
-the bride-doll, and besides we had no mosquito-netting suitable for a
-veil. Sometimes we had them go for a walk, and once or twice we had
-tried playing that they were house-cleaning; but these operations were
-not desirable, because in neither of them could the dolls dress up, and
-the desirable part of playing dolls is, as everybody knows, to dress
-them in their best. That is the game. That, and the tea-party.
-
-“Blue or rose-pink?” Mary Elizabeth inquired, indicating the two best
-gowns of the doll she was dressing.
-
-It was a difficult question. We had never been able to decide which
-of these two colours we preferred. There was the sky for precedent of
-blue, but then rose-pink we loved so to say!
-
-[Illustration: SHE SETTLED EVERYTHING IN THAT WAY; SHE COUNTED THE
-PETALS OF FENNEL DAISIES AND BLEW THISTLE FROM DANDELIONS.]
-
-“If they’s one cloud in the sky, we’ll put on the rose-pink one,” said
-Mary Elizabeth. “And if there isn’t any, that’ll mean blue.”
-
-She settled everything that way--she counted the petals of fennel
-daisies, blew the thistle from dandelions, did one thing if she could
-find twelve acorns and another if they were lacking. Even then Mary
-Elizabeth seemed always to be watching for a guiding hand, to be
-listening for a voice to tell her what to do, and trying to find these
-in things of Nature.
-
-We dressed the Eleven in their best frocks, weighing each choice long,
-and seated them about a table made of a box covered with a towel. We
-sliced a doughnut and with it filled two small baskets for each end of
-the table, on which rested my toy castor and such of my dishes as had
-survived the necessity which I had felt for going to bed with the full
-set, on the night of the day, some years before, when I had acquired
-them. We picked all the flowers suitable for doll decorations--clover,
-sorrel, candytuft, sweet alyssum. We observed the unities by retiring
-for a time sufficient to occupy the tea-party in disposing of the
-feast; and then we came back and sat down and stared at them. Irene
-Helena, I remember, had slipped under the table in a heap, a proceeding
-which always irritated me, as nakedly uncovering the real depths of
-our pretence--and I jerked her up and set her down, like some maternal
-Nemesis.
-
-In that moment a wild, I may almost say _thick_, shriek sounded through
-our block, and there came that stimulating thud-thud of feet on earth
-that accompanies all the best diversions, and also there came the
-cracking of things,--whips, or pistols, or even a punch, which rapidly
-operated will do almost as well. And down the yards of the block and
-over the fences and over the roof of my play-house came tumbling and
-shrieking the New Boy, and in his wake were ten of his kind.
-
-Usually they raced by with a look in their eyes which we knew well,
-though we never could distinguish whether it meant robbers or pirates
-or dragons or the enemy. Usually they did not even see us. But that
-day something in our elaborate preparation to receive somebody or to
-welcome something, and our eternal moment of suspended animation at
-which they found us, must have caught the fancy of the New Boy.
-
-“Halt!” he roared with the force and effect of a steam whistle, and in
-a moment they were all stamping and breathing about Mary Elizabeth and
-me.
-
-We sprang up in instant alarm and the vague, pathetic, immemorial
-impulse to defence. We need not have feared. The game was still going
-forward and we were merely pawns.
-
-“Who is the lord of this castle?” demanded the New Boy.
-
-“Bindyliggs,” replied Mary Elizabeth, without a moment’s hesitation, a
-name which I believe neither of us to have heard before.
-
-“Where is this Lord of Bindyliggs?” the New Boy pressed it.
-
-Mary Elizabeth indicated the woodshed. “At meat,” she added gravely.
-
-“Forward!” the New Boy instantly commanded, and the whole troop
-disappeared in our shed. We heard wood fall, and the clash of meeting
-weapons, and the troop reappeared, two by way of the low window.
-
-“Enough!” cried the New Boy, grandly. “We have spared him, but there is
-not a moment to lose. You must come with us _immediately_. What you
-got to eat?”
-
-Raptly, we gave them, from under the wistful noses of Irene Helena and
-the doll without the face and the rest, the entire sliced doughnut, and
-two more doughnuts, dipped in sugar, which we had been saving so as to
-have something to look forward to.
-
-“Come with us,” said the New Boy, graciously. “To horse! We may reach
-the settlement by nightfall--_if_ we escape the Brigands in the Wood.
-The Black Wood,” he added.
-
-Even then, I recall, I was smitten with wonder that he who had shown
-so little imagination in that matter of dirt and apples and potatoes
-should here be teeming with fancy on his own familiar ground. It was
-years before I understood that there are almost as many varieties of
-imaginative as of religious experience.
-
-Fascinated, we dropped everything and followed. The way led, it
-appeared, to the Wells’s barn, a huge, red barn in the block, with
-doors always invitingly open and chickens pecking about, and doves on a
-little platform close to the pointed roof.
-
-“Aw, say, you ain’t goin’ to take ’em along, are you?” demanded one
-knight, below his voice. “They’ll spoil everythin’.”
-
-“You’re _rescuin’_ ’em, you geezer,” the New Boy explained. “You got to
-have ’em along till you get ’em rescued, ain’t you? Arrest that man!”
-he added. “Put him in double irons with chains and balls on. And gag
-him, to make sure.”
-
-And it was done, with hardly a moment’s loss of time.
-
-We went round by the walk--a course to which the arrested one had time
-to refer in further support of his claim as to our undesirability.
-But he was drowned in the important topics that were afoot: the new
-cave to be explored where the Branchetts were putting a cellar under
-the dining-room, mysterious boxes suspected to contain dynamite being
-unloaded into the Wells’s cellar, and the Court of the Seven Kings, to
-which, it seemed, we were being conveyed in the red barn.
-
-“Shall we give ’em the password?” the New Boy asked, _sotto voce_, as
-we approached the rendezvous. And Mary Elizabeth and I trembled as we
-realized that he was thinking of sharing the password with us.
-
-“_Naw!_” cried the Arrested One violently. “It’ll be all over town.”
-
-The New Boy drew himself up--he must have been good to look at, for I
-recall his compact little figure and his pink cheeks.
-
-“Can’t you tell when you’re gagged?” he inquired with majesty. “You’re
-playin’ like a girl yourself. I can give the password for ’em, though,”
-he added reasonably. So we all filed in the red barn, to the Court of
-the Seven Kings, and each boy whispered the password into the first
-manger, but Mary Elizabeth and I had it whispered for us.
-
-What the Court of the Seven Kings might have held for us we were never
-to know. At that instant there appeared lumbering down the alley a load
-of hay. Seated in the midst was a small figure whom we recognized as
-Stitchy Branchett; and he rose and uttered a roar.
-
-“Come on, fellows!” he said. “We dast ride over to the Glen. I was
-lookin’ for you. Father said so.” And Stitchy threw himself on his
-back, and lifted and waved his heels.
-
-Already our liberators were swarming up the hay-rack, which had halted
-for them. In a twinkling they were sunk in that fragrance, kicking
-their heels even as their host. Already they had forgotten Mary
-Elizabeth and me, nor did they give us good-bye.
-
-We two turned and went through the Wells’s yard, back to the street.
-Almost at once we were again within range of the sounds of Delia,
-practising interminably on her “At Home.”
-
-“I never rode on a load of hay,” said Mary Elizabeth at length.
-
-Neither had I, though I almost always walked backward to watch one when
-it passed me.
-
-“What do you _s’pose_ the password was?” said Mary Elizabeth.
-
-It was days before we gave over wondering. And sometimes in later years
-I have caught myself speculating on that lost word.
-
-“I wonder what we were rescued from,” said Mary Elizabeth when we
-passed our woodshed door.
-
-We stopped and peered within. No Lord of Bindyliggs, though we had
-almost expected to see him stretched there, bound and helpless.
-
-What were we rescued from? _We should never know._
-
-We rounded the corner by the side yard. There sat our staring dolls,
-drawn up about the tea-table, static all. As I looked at them I was
-seized and possessed by an unreasoning fury. And I laid hold on Irene
-Helena, and had her by the heels, and with all my strength I pounded
-her head against the trunk of the catalpa tree.
-
-Mary Elizabeth understood--when did she not understand?
-
-“Which one can I--which one can I?” she cried excitedly.
-
-“All of ’em!” I shouted, and one after another we picked up the Eleven
-by their skirts, and we threw them far and wide in the grass, and the
-penny dolls we hurled into the potato patch.
-
-Then Mary Elizabeth looked at me aghast.
-
-“Your dolls!” she said.
-
-“I don’t care!” I cried savagely. “I’ll never play ’em again. I hate
-’em!” And I turned to Mary Elizabeth with new eyes. “Let’s go down town
-after supper,” I whispered.
-
-“I could,” she said, “but you won’t be let.”
-
-“I won’t ask,” I said. “I’ll go. When you get done, come on over.”
-
-I scorned to gather up the dolls. They were in the angle below the
-parlour windows, and no one saw them. As soon as supper was finished,
-I went to my room and put on my best shoes, which I was not allowed to
-wear for everyday. Then I tipped my birthday silver dollar out of my
-bank and tied it in the corner of my handkerchief. Down in the garden I
-waited for Mary Elizabeth.
-
-It was hardly dusk when she came. We had seen nothing of Delia, and we
-guessed that she was to stay in the house for the rest of the day as
-penance for having, without doubt, played “At Home” too badly.
-
-“You better not do it,” Mary Elizabeth whispered. “They might....”
-
-“Come on,” I said only.
-
-“Let’s try a June grass,” she begged. “If the seeds all come off in my
-teeth, we’ll go. But if they don’t--”
-
-“Come on,” said I, “I’m not going to monkey with signs any more.”
-
-We climbed the back fence, partly so that the chain, weighted with a
-pail of stones, might not creak, and partly because to do so seemed
-more fitting to the business in hand. We ran crouching, thereby
-arousing the attention of old Mr. Branchett, who was training a
-Virginia creeper along his back fence.
-
-“Hello, hello,” said he. “Pretty good runners for girls, seems to me.”
-
-Neither of us replied. Our souls were suddenly sickened at this sort of
-dealing.
-
-Wisconsin Street was a blaze of light. The ’buses were on their way
-from the “depots” to the hotels--nobody knew who might be in those
-’buses. They were the nexus between us and the unguessed world.
-Strangers were on the streets. Everything was in motion. Before
-Morrison’s grocery they were burning rubbish, some boys from the other
-end of town were running unconcernedly through the flames, and the
-smell of the smoke set us tingling. At the corner a man was pasting
-a circus bill--we stopped a moment to look down the throat of the
-hippopotamus. Away up the street a band struck up, and we took hold of
-hands again, and ran.
-
-We crossed the big square by the City Bank, under the hissing arc lamp.
-By the post-office a crowd of men and boys was standing, and between
-the files young women whom we knew, wearing ribbons and feathers, were
-passing in and out of the office and laughing. Bard’s jewellery store
-was brilliant--it looked lighter than any other store with its window
-of dazzling cut glass and its wonderful wall of clocks whose pendulums
-never kept pace. In a saloon a piano was playing--we glanced in with a
-kind of joyous fear at the green screen beyond the door. We saw Alma
-Fremont, whose father kept a grocery store, standing in the store door
-with a stick of pink candy thrust in a lemon, and we thought on the
-joy of having a father who was a grocer. We longed to stare in the
-barber-shop window, and looked away. But our instinctive destination
-was the place before the Opera House, where the band was playing. We
-reached it, and stood packed in the crowd, close to the blare of the
-music, and shivered with delight.
-
-“If only the fire-engine would come,” Mary Elizabeth breathed in my ear.
-
-But in a little while the guffaws, the jostling, the proximity of dirty
-coats, the odour of stale tobacco must have disturbed us, because
-gradually we edged a little away, and stood on the edge of the crowd,
-against an iron rail outside a billiard room. The band ceased, and went
-up into the hall. We had a distinct impulse to do the next thing. What
-was there to do next? What was it that the boys did when they went
-down town evenings? What else did they do while we were tidying our
-play-houses for the night? For here we were, longing for play, if only
-we could think what to do.
-
-I felt a hand beneath my chin, lifting my face. There, in the press,
-stood my Father. Over his arm he carried my black jacket with the
-Bedford cord.
-
-“Mother thought you might be cold,” he said.
-
-I put on the jacket, and he took Mary Elizabeth and me by the hand, and
-we walked slowly back down Wisconsin Street.
-
-“We will see Mary Elizabeth safely home first,” my Father said, and we
-accompanied her to the New Family’s door.
-
-Once in our house, it was I who proposed going to bed, and the
-suggestion met with no opposition. Upstairs, I slipped the screen
-from my window and leaned out in the dusk. The night, warm, fragrant,
-significant, was inviting me to belong to it, was asking me, even as
-bright day had asked me, what it had in common with the stuffiness and
-dulness of forever watching others do things. Something hard touched my
-hand. It was my birthday dollar. It had not occurred to me to spend it.
-
-I saw my Father stroll back down the street, lighting a cigar. Below
-stairs I could hear my Mother helping to put away the supper dishes.
-A dozen boys raced through the alley, just on their way down town.
-So long as they came home at a stated hour at night, and turned up
-at table with their hands clean, who asked them where they had been?
-“Where have you been?” they said to me, the moment I entered the
-house--and to Delia and Calista and Margaret Amelia and Betty. We had
-often talked about it. And none of us had even ridden on a load of hay.
-We had a vague expectation that it would be different when we grew up.
-A sickening thought came to me: _Would it be different, or was this to
-be forever?_
-
-I ran blindly down the stairs where my Mother was helping to put away
-the supper dishes--in the magic of the night, helping to put away the
-supper dishes.
-
-“Mother!” I cried, “Mother! Who made it so much harder to be a girl?”
-
-She turned and looked at me, her face startled, and touched me--I
-remember how gently she touched me.
-
-“Before you die,” she said, “it will be easier.”
-
-I thought then that she meant that I would grow used to it. Now I know
-that she meant what I meant when I woke that night, and remembered my
-dolls lying out in the grass and the dew, and was not sorry, but glad:
-Glad that the time was almost come--for real playthings.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-BIT-BIT
-
-
-At the Rodmans’, who lived in a huge house on a hill, some of
-the rooms had inscriptions in them--or what I should have called
-mottoes--cunningly lettered and set about. Some of these were in
-Margaret Amelia’s and Betty’s room, above the mirror, the bed, the
-window; and there was one downstairs on a panel above the telephone.
-The girls said that they had an aunt who had written them “on purpose,”
-an aunt who had had stories in print. In my heart I doubted the part
-about the printed stories, and so did Mary Elizabeth, but we loved
-Margaret Amelia and Betty too well to let this stand between us. Also,
-we were caught by the inscriptions. They were these:
-
-FOR A CRADLE[A]
-
- I cannot tell you who I am
- Nor what I’m going to be.
- You who are wise and know your ways
- Tell me.
-
-[A] Copyright, 1908, by Harper & Brothers.
-
-FOR THE MIRROR
-
- Look in the deep of me. What are we going to do?
- If I am I, as I am, who in the world are you?
-
-FOR AN IVORY COMB
-
- Use me and think of spirit, and spirit yet to be.
- This is the jest: Could soul touch soul if it were not for me?
-
-FOR THE DOLL’S HOUSE
-
- Girl-doll would be a little lamp
- And shine like something new.
- Boy-doll would be a telephone
- And have the world speak through.
- The Poet-doll would like to be
- A tocsin with a tongue
- To other little dolls like bells
- Most sensitively rung.
- The Baby-doll would be a flower,
- The Dinah-doll a star,
- And all--how ignominious!
- Are only what they are.
-
-WHERE THE BOUGHS TOUCH THE WINDOW
-
- We lap on the indoor shore--the waves of the leaf mere,
- We try to tell you as well as we can: We wonder what you hear?
-
-FOR ANOTHER WINDOW
-
- I see the stones, I see the stars,
- I know not what they be.
- They always say things to themselves
- And now and then to me.
- But when I try to look between
- Big stones and little stars,
- I almost know ... but what I know
- Flies through the window-bars.
-
-And downstairs, on the Telephone:
-
- I, the absurdity,
- Proving what cannot be.
- Come, when you talk with me
- Does it become you well
- To doubt a miracle?
-
-We did not understand all of them, but we liked them. And I am sure now
-that the inscriptions were partly responsible for the fact that in a
-little time, with Mary Elizabeth and me to give them encouragement,
-everything, indoors and out, had something to say to us. These things
-we did not confide to the others, not even to Margaret Amelia and
-Betty who, when we stood still to spell out the inscriptions, waited
-a respectful length of time and then plucked at our aprons and said:
-“Come on till we show you something,” which was usually merely a crass
-excuse to get us away.
-
-So Mary Elizabeth and I discovered, by comparing notes, that at night
-our Clothes on the chair by the bed would say: “We are so tired. Don’t
-look at us--we feel so limp.”
-
-And the Night would say: “What a long time the Day had you, and how he
-made you work. Now rest and forget and stop being you, till morning.”
-
-Sleep would say: “Here I come. Let me in your brain and I will pull
-your eyes shut, like little blinds.”
-
-And in the morning the Stairs would say: “Come! We are all here,
-stooping, ready for you to step down on our shoulders.”
-
-Breakfast would say: “Now I’m going to be you--now I’m going to be you!
-And I have to be cross or nice, just as you are.”
-
-Every fire that warmed us, every tree that shaded us, every path that
-we took, all these “answered back” and were familiars. Everything spoke
-to us, save only one. And this one thing was Work. Our playthings in
-the cupboard would talk to us all day long _until_ the moment that we
-were told to put them in order, and then instantly they all fell into
-silence. Pulling weeds in the four o’clock bed, straightening books,
-tidying the outdoor play-house--it was always the same. Whatever we
-worked at kept silent.
-
-It was on a June morning, when the outdoors was so busy and beautiful
-that it was like a golden bee buried in a golden rose, that I finally
-refused outright to pick up a brown sunhat and some other things in
-the middle of the floor. Everything outdoors and in was smiling and
-calling, and to do a task was like going to bed, so far as the joy of
-the day was concerned. This I could not explain, but I said that I
-would not do the task, and this was high treason.
-
-Sitting in a straight-backed chair all alone for half an hour
-thereafter--the usual capital punishment--was like cutting off the head
-of the beautiful Hour that I had meant to have. And I tried to think
-it out. Why, in an otherwise wonderful world, did Work have to come and
-spoil everything?
-
-I do not recall that I came to any conclusion. How could I, at a time
-that was still teaching the Hebraic doctrine that work is a curse,
-instead of the new gospel--always dimly divined by children before our
-teaching has corrupted them,--that being busy is being alive, and that
-all work may be play if only we are shown how to pick out the kind that
-is play to us, and that doing nothing is a kind of death.
-
-And while I sat there alone on that straight-backed chair, I wish that
-I, as I am now, might have called in Mary Elizabeth, whom I could see
-drearily polishing the New Family’s lamp-chimneys, and that I might
-have told the story of Bit-bit.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Bit-bit, the smallest thing in the world, sat on the slipperiest edge
-of the highest mountain in the farthest land, weaving a little garment
-of sweet-grass. Then out of the valley a great Deev arose and leaned
-his elbows on the highest mountain and said what he thought--which is
-always a dangerous business.
-
-[Illustration: “THEN OUT OF THE VALLEY A GREAT DEEV AROSE.”]
-
-“Bit-bit,” said the Deev, “how dare you make up my sweet-grass so
-disgustin’ extravagant?”
-
-(It is almost impossible for a Deev to say his _ing’s_.)
-
-“Deevy dear,” said Bit-bit, without looking up from his work, “I have
-to make a garment to help clothe the world. Don’t wrinkle up my plan.
-And _don’t_ put your elbows on the table.”
-
-“About my elbows,” said the Deev, “you are perfectly right, though
-Deevs always do that with their elbows. But as to that garment,” he
-added, “I’d like to know why you have to help clothe the world?”
-
-“Deevy dear,” said Bit-bit, still not looking up from his work, “I have
-to do so, because it’s this kind of a world. _Please_ don’t wrinkle up
-things.”
-
-“I,” said the Deev, plainly, “will now show you what kind of a world
-this really is. And I rather think I’ll destroy you with a great
-destruction.”
-
-Then the Deev took the highest mountain and he tied its streams and
-cataracts together to make a harness, and he named the mountain new,
-and he drove it all up and down the earth. And he cried behind it:
-
-“Ho, Rhumbthumberland, steed of the clouds, trample the world into
-trifles and plough it up for play. Bit-bit is being taught his lesson.”
-
-From dawn he did this until the sky forgot pink and remembered only
-blue and until the sun grew so hot that it took even the sky’s
-attention, and the Deev himself was ready to drop. And then he pulled
-on the reins and Rhumbthumberland, steed of the clouds, stopped
-trampling and let the Deev lean his elbows on his back. And there,
-right between the Deev’s elbows, sat Bit-bit, weaving his garment of
-sweet-grass.
-
-“Thunders of spring,” cried the Deev, “aren’t you destroyed with a
-great destruction?”
-
-But Bit-bit never looked up, he was so busy.
-
-“Has anything happened?” he asked politely, however, not wishing to
-seem indifferent to the Deev’s agitation--though secretly, in his
-little head, he hated having people plunge at him with their eyebrows
-up and expect him to act surprised too. When they did that, it always
-made him savage-calm.
-
-“The world is trampled into trifles and ploughed up for play,” said
-the exasperated Deev, “_that’s_ what’s happened. How dare you pay no
-attention?”
-
-“Deevy dear,” said Bit-bit, still not looking up from his task, “I
-have to work, whether it’s this kind of a world or not. I _wish_ you
-wouldn’t wrinkle up things.”
-
-Then the Deev’s will ran round and round in his own head like a fly
-trying to escape from a dark hole--that is the way of the will of all
-Deevs--and pretty soon his will got out and went buzzle-buzzle-buzzle,
-which is no proper sound for anybody’s will to make. And when it did
-that, the Deev went off and got a river, and he climbed up on top of
-Rhumbthumberland and he swung the river about his head like a ribbon
-and then let it fall from the heights like a lady’s scarf, and then he
-held down one end with his great boot and the other end he emptied into
-the horizon. From the time of the heat of the sun he did this until
-the shadows were set free from the west and lengthened over the land,
-shaking their long hair, and then he lifted his foot and let the river
-slip and it trailed off into the horizon and flowed each way.
-
-“_Now_ then!” said the Deev, disgustingly pompous.
-
-But when he looked down, there, sitting on his own great foot, high and
-dry and pleasant, was Bit-bit, weaving his garment of sweet-grass and
-saying:
-
-“Deevy dear, a river washed me up here and I was so busy I didn’t have
-time to get down.”
-
-The Deev stood still, thinking, and his thoughts flew in and out like
-birds, but always they seemed to fly against window-panes in the air,
-through which there was no passing. And the Deev said, in his head:
-
-“Is there nothing in this created cosmos that will stop this little
-scrap from working to clothe the world? Or must I play Deev in earnest?”
-
-And that was what he finally decided to do. So he said things to his
-arms, and his arms hardened into stuff like steel, and spread out like
-mighty wings. And with these the Deev began to beat the air. And he
-beat it and beat it until it frothed. It frothed like white-of-egg and
-like cream and like the mid-waters of torrents, frothed a mighty froth,
-such as I supposed could never be. And when the froth was stiff enough
-to stand alone, the Deev took his steel-wing arm for a ladle, and he
-began to spread the froth upon the earth. And he spread and spread
-until the whole earth was like an enormous chocolate cake, thick with
-white frosting--one layer, two layers, three layers, disgustingly
-extravagant, so that the little Deevs, if there had been any, would
-never have got the dish scraped. Only there wasn’t any dish, so they
-needn’t have minded.
-
-And when he had it all spread on, the Deev stood up and dropped his
-steel arms down--and even they were tired at the elbow, like any true,
-egg-beating arm--and he looked down at the great cake he had made.
-And there, on the top of the frosting, which was already beginning to
-harden, was sitting Bit-bit, weaving his garment of sweet-grass and
-talking about the weather:
-
-“I think there is going to be a storm,” said Bit-bit, “the air around
-here has been so disgustingly hard to breathe.”
-
-Then, very absently, the Deev let the steel out of his arms and made
-them get over being wings, and, in a place so deep in his own head that
-nothing had ever been thought there before, he _thought_:
-
-“There is more to this than I ever knew there is to anything.”
-
-So he leaned over, all knee-deep in the frosting as he was, and he said:
-
-“Bit-bit, say a great truth and a real answer: What is the reason that
-my little ways don’t bother you? Or kill you? Or keep you from making
-your garment of sweet-grass?”
-
-“Why,” said Bit-bit, in surprise, but never looking up from his work,
-“Deevy dear, that’s easy. I’m much, much, _much_ too busy.”
-
-“Scrap of a thing,” said the Deev, “too busy to mind cataracts and an
-earth trampled to trifles and then frosted with all the air there is?”
-
-“Too busy,” assented Bit-bit, snapping off his thread. “And now I _do_
-hope you are not going to wrinkle up things any more.”
-
-“No,” said the Deev, with decision, “I ain’t.” (Deevs are always
-ungrammatical when you take them by surprise.) And he added very
-shrewdly, for he was a keen Deev and if he saw that he could learn,
-he was willing to learn, which is three parts of all wisdom: “Little
-scrap, teach me to do a witchcraft. Teach me to work.”
-
-At that Bit-bit laid down his task in a minute.
-
-“What do you want to make?” he asked.
-
-The Deev thought for a moment.
-
-“I want to make a palace and a garden and a moat for _me_,” said he.
-“I’m tired campin’ around in the air.”
-
-“If that’s all,” said Bit-bit, “I’m afraid I can’t help you. I thought
-you wanted to work. Out of all the work there is in the world I should
-think of another one if I were you, Deevy.”
-
-“Well, then, I want to make a golden court dress for _me_, all
-embroidered and flowered and buttoned and gored and spliced,” said the
-Deev, or whatever these things are called in the clothing of Deevs;
-“I want to make one. I’m tired goin’ around in rompers.” (It wasn’t
-rompers, really, but it was what Deevs wear instead, and you wouldn’t
-know the name, even if I told you.)
-
-“Excuse me,” said Bit-bit, frankly, “I won’t waste time like that.
-Don’t you want to _work_?”
-
-“Yes,” said the Deev, “I do. Maybe I don’t know what work is.”
-
-“Maybe you don’t,” agreed Bit-bit. “But I can fix that. I’m going for a
-walk now, and there’s just room for you. Come along.”
-
-So they started off, and it was good walking, for by now the sun had
-dried up all the frosting; and the Deev trotted at Bit-bit’s heels,
-and they made a very funny pair. So funny that Almost Everything
-watched them go by, and couldn’t leave off watching them go by, and so
-followed them all the way. Which was what Bit-bit had _thought_ would
-happen. And when he got to a good place, Bit-bit stood still and told
-the Deev to turn round. And there they were, staring face to face with
-Almost Everything: Deserts and towns and men and women and children and
-laws and governments and railroads and factories and forests and food
-and drink.
-
-“There’s your work,” said Bit-bit, carelessly.
-
-“Where?” asked the Deev, just like other folks.
-
-“_Where?_” repeated Bit-bit, nearly peevish. “Look at this desert
-that’s come along behind us. Why don’t you swing a river over your
-head--you _could_ do that, couldn’t you, Deevy?--and make things grow
-on that desert, and let people live on it, and turn ’em into folks? Why
-don’t you?”
-
-“It ain’t amusin’ enough,” said the Deev.
-
-(Deevs are often ungrammatical when they don’t take pains; and this
-Deev wasn’t taking _any_ pains.)
-
-“Well,” said Bit-bit, “then look at this town that has come along
-behind us, full of dirt and disease and laziness and worse. Why
-don’t you harness up a mountain--you _could_ do that, couldn’t you,
-Deevy?--and plough up the earth and trample it down and let people live
-as they were meant to live, and turn them into folks? Why don’t you?”
-
-“It couldn’t be done that way,” said the Deev, very much excited and
-disgustingly certain.
-
-“Well,” said Bit-bit, “then look at the men and women and children that
-have come along behind us. What about them--what about _them_? Why
-don’t you make your arms steel and act as if you had wings, and beat
-the world into a better place for them to live, instead of making a
-cake of it. You could do it, Deevy--_anybody_ could do that.”
-
-“Yes,” said the Deev, “I could do that. But it don’t appeal to me.”
-
-(Deevs are always ungrammatical when they are being emphatic, and now
-the Deev was being very emphatic. He was a keen Deev, but he would only
-learn what he wanted to learn.)
-
-“Deevy _dear_,” cried Bit-bit, in distress because the Deev was such a
-disgusting creature, “then at least do get some sweet-grass and make a
-little garment to help clothe the world?”
-
-“What’s the use?” said the Deev. “Let it go naked. It’s always been
-that way.”
-
-So, since the Deev would not learn the work witchcraft, Bit-bit,
-very sorrowful, stood up and said a great truth and made a real
-answer--which is always a dangerous business.
-
-“You will, you will, you will do these things,” he cried, “because it’s
-that kind of a world.”
-
-And then the Deev, who had all along been getting more and more
-annoyed, pieced together his will and his ideas and his annoyance, and
-they all went buzzle-buzzle-buzzle together till they made an act. And
-the act was that he stepped sidewise into space, and he picked up the
-earth and put it between his knees, and he cracked it hard enough so
-that it should have fallen into uncountable bits.
-
-“It’s my nut,” said the Deev, “and now I’m going to eat it up.”
-
-But lo, from the old shell there came out a fair new kernel of a world,
-so lustrous and lovely that the Deev was blinded and hid his eyes.
-Only first he had seen how the deserts were flowing with rivers and
-the towns were grown fair under willing hands for men and women and
-children to live there. And there, with Almost Everything, sat Bit-bit
-in his place, weaving a little garment of sweet-grass to clothe some
-mite of the world.
-
-“Now this time try not to wrinkle things all up, Deev,” said Bit-bit.
-“I must say, you’ve been doing things disgustingly inhuman.”
-
-So after that the Deev was left camping about in the air, trying to
-make for himself new witchcrafts. And there he is to this day, being
-a disgusting creature generally, and _only_ those who are as busy as
-Bit-bit are safe from him.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-WHY
-
-
-There was a day when Mary Elizabeth and Delia and Calista and Betty
-and I sat under the Eating Apple tree and had no spirit to enter upon
-anything. Margaret Amelia was not with us, and her absence left us
-relaxed and without initiative; for it was not as if she had gone to
-the City, or to have her dress tried on, or her hair washed, or as if
-she were absorbed in any real occupation. Her absence was due to none
-of these things. Margaret Amelia was in disgrace. She was, in fact,
-confined in her room with every expectation of remaining there until
-supper time.
-
-“What’d she do?” we had breathlessly inquired of Betty when she had
-appeared alone with her tidings.
-
-“Well,” replied Betty, “it’s her paper dolls and her button-house. She
-always leaves ’em around. She set up her button-house all over the rug
-in the parlour--you know, the rug that its patterns make rooms? An’
-she had her paper dolls living in it. That was this morning--and we
-forgot ’em. And after dinner, while we’re outdoors, the minister came.
-And he walked into the buttons and onto the glass dangler off the lamp
-that we used for a folding-doors. And he slid a long ways on it. And he
-scrushed it,” Betty concluded resentfully. “And now she’s in her room.”
-
-We pondered it. There was justice there, we saw that. But shut Margaret
-Amelia in a room! It was as ignominious as caging a captain.
-
-“Did she cry?” we indelicately demanded.
-
-“Awful,” said Betty. “She wouldn’t of cared if it had only been
-raining,” she added.
-
-We looked hard at the sky. We should have been willing to have it rain
-to make lighter Margaret Amelia’s durance, and sympathy could go no
-further. But there was not a cloud.
-
-It was Mary Elizabeth who questioned the whole matter.
-
-“How,” said she, “does it do any good to shut her up in her room?”
-
-We had never thought of this. We stared wonderingly at Mary Elizabeth.
-Being shut in your room was a part of the state of not being grown up.
-When you grew up, you shut others in their rooms or let them out, as
-you ruled the occasion to require. There was Grandmother Beers, for
-instance, coming out the door with scissors in her hands and going
-toward her sweet-pea bed. Once she must have shut Mother in her room.
-Mother!
-
-Delia was incurably a defender of things as they are. Whenever I am
-tempted to feel that guardians of an out-worn order must know better
-than they seem to know, I remember Delia. Delia was born reactionary,
-even as she was born brunette.
-
-“Why,” said she with finality, “that’s the way they punish you.”
-
-Taken as a fact and not as a philosophy, there was no question about
-this.
-
-“I was shut in one for pinching Frankie Ames,” I acknowledged.
-
-“I was in one for getting iron-rust on my skirt,” said Calista, “and
-for being awful cross when my bath was, and for putting sugar on the
-stove to get the nice smell.”
-
-“I was in one for telling a lie,” Betty admitted reluctantly. “And
-Margaret Amelia was in one for wading in the creek. She was in a
-downstairs one. And I took a chair round outside to help her out--but
-she wouldn’t do it.”
-
-“Pooh! I was in one lots of times,” Delia capped it. And, as usual,
-we looked at her with respect as having experiences far transcending
-our own. “I’ll be in one again if I don’t go home and take care of my
-canary,” she added. “Mamma said I would.”
-
-“Putting sugar on the stove isn’t as wicked as telling a lie, is it?”
-Mary Elizabeth inquired.
-
-We weighed it. On the whole, we were inclined to think that it was not
-so wicked, “though,” Delia put in, “you do notice the sugar more.”
-
-“Why do they shut you in the same way for the different wickeds?” Mary
-Elizabeth demanded.
-
-None of us knew, but it was Delia who had the theory.
-
-“Well,” she said, “you’ve _got_ to know you’re wicked. It don’t make
-any difference how wicked. Because you stop anyhow.”
-
-“No, you don’t,” Betty said decidedly, “you’re always getting a new
-thing to be shut in about. Before you mean to,” she added perplexedly.
-
-Mary Elizabeth looked away at Grandmother Beers, snipping sweet-peas.
-Abruptly, Mary Elizabeth threw herself on the grass and stared up
-through the branches of the Eating Apple tree, and then laid her arms
-straight along her sides, and began luxuriously to roll down a little
-slope. The inquiry was too complex to continue.
-
-“Let’s go see if the horse-tail hair is a snake yet,” she proposed,
-sitting up at the foot of the slope.
-
-“I’ll have to do my canary,” said Delia, but she sprang up with the
-rest of us, and we went round to the rain-water barrel.
-
-The rain-water barrel stood at the corner of the house, and reflected
-your face most satisfyingly, save that the eaves-spout got in the way.
-Also, you always inadvertently joggled the side with your knee, which
-set the water wavering and wrinkled away the image. At the bottom of
-this barrel invisibly rested sundry little “doll” pie-tins of clay,
-a bottle, a broken window-catch, a stray key, and the bowl of a
-soap-bubble pipe, cast in at odd intervals, for no reason. There were a
-penny doll and a marble down there too, thrown in for sheer bravado and
-bitterly regretted.
-
-Into this dark water there had now been dropped, two days ago, a long
-black hair from the tail of Mr. Branchett’s horse, Fanny. We had been
-credibly informed that if you did this to a hair from a horse’s tail
-and left it untouched for twenty-four hours or, to be _perfectly_ safe,
-for forty-eight hours, the result would inevitably be a black snake.
-We had gone to the Branchetts’ barn for the raw material and, finding
-none available on the floor, we were about to risk jerking it from the
-source when Delia had perceived what we needed caught in a crack of the
-stall. We had abstracted the hair, and duly immersed it. Why we wished
-to create a black snake, or what we purposed doing with him when we
-got him created, I cannot now recall. I believe the intention to have
-been primarily to see whether or not they had told us the truth--“they”
-standing for the universe at large. For my part, I was still smarting
-from having been detected sitting in patience with a handful of salt,
-by the mouse-hole in the shed, in pursuance of another recipe which I
-had picked up and trusted. Now if this new test failed....
-
-We got an old axe-handle from the barn wherewith to probe the water.
-If, however, the black snake were indeed down there, our weapon,
-offensive and defensive, would hardly be long enough; so we substituted
-the clothes-prop. Then we drew cuts to see who should wield it, and
-the lot fell to Betty. Gentle little Betty turned quite pale with the
-responsibility, but she resolutely seized the clothes-prop, and Delia
-stood behind her with the axe-handle.
-
-“Now if he comes out,” said Betty, “run for your lives. He might be a
-blue racer.”
-
-None of us knew what a blue racer might be, but we had always heard of
-it as the fastest of all the creatures. A black snake, it seemed, might
-easily be a blue racer. As Betty raised the clothes-prop, I, who had
-instigated the experiment, weakened.
-
-“Maybe he won’t be ready yet,” I conceded.
-
-“If he isn’t there, I’ll never believe anything anybody tells me
-again--ever,” said Delia firmly.
-
-The clothes-prop Betty plunged to the bottom, and lifted. No struggling
-black shape writhed about it. She repeated the movement, and this time
-we all cried out, for she brought up the dark discoloured rag of a
-sash of the penny doll, the penny doll clinging to it and immediately
-dropping sullenly back again. Grown brave, Betty stirred the water, and
-Delia, advancing, did the same with her axe-handle. Again and again
-these were lifted, revealing nothing. At last we faced it: No snake was
-there.
-
-“So that’s a lie, too,” said Delia, brutally.
-
-We stared at one another. I, as the one chiefly disappointed, looked
-away. I looked down the street: Mr. Branchett was hoeing in his garden.
-Delivery wagons were rattling by. The butter-man came whistling round
-the house. Everybody seemed so busy and so _sure_. They looked as if
-they knew why everything was. And to us, truth and justice and reason
-and the results to be expected in this grown-up world were all a
-confusion and a thorn.
-
-As we went round the house, talking of what had happened, our eyes were
-caught by a picture which should have been, and was not, of quite
-casual and domestic import. On the side-porch of Delia’s house appeared
-her mother, hanging out Delia’s canary.
-
-“Good-bye,” said Delia, briefly, and fared from us, running.
-
-We lingered for a little in the front yard. In five minutes the
-curtains in Delia’s room stirred, and we saw her face appear, and
-vanish. She had not waved to us--there was no need. It had overtaken
-her. She, too, was “in her room.”
-
-Delicacy dictated that we withdraw from sight, and we returned to the
-back yard. As we went, Mary Elizabeth was asking:
-
-“Is telling a lie and not feeding your canary as wicked as each other?”
-
-It seemed incredible, and we said so.
-
-“Well, you get shut up just as hard for both of ’em,” Mary Elizabeth
-reminded us.
-
-“Then I don’t believe any of ’em’s wicked,” said I, flatly. On which we
-came back to the garden and met Grandmother Beers, with a great bunch
-of sweet-peas in her hand, coming to the house.
-
-“Wicked?” she said, in her way of soft surprise. “I didn’t know you
-knew such a word.”
-
-“It’s a word you learn at Sunday school,” I explained importantly.
-
-“Come over here and tell me about it,” she invited, and led the way
-toward the Eating Apple tree. And she sat down in the swing! Of course
-whatever difference of condition exists between your grandmother and
-yourself vanishes when she sits down casually in your swing.
-
-My Grandmother Beers was a little woman, whose years, in England, in
-“New York state,” and in her adopted Middle West, had brought her
-only peace within, though much had beset her from without. She loved
-Four-o’clocks, and royal purple. When she said “royal purple,” it was
-as if the words were queens. She was among the few who sympathized
-with my longing to own a blue or red or green jar from a drug store
-window. We had first understood each other in a matter of window-sill
-food: This would be a crust, or a bit of baked apple, or a cracker
-which I used to lay behind the dining-room window-shutter--the
-closed one. For in the house at evening it was warm and light and
-Just-had-your-supper, while outside it was dark and damp and big, and I
-conceived that it must be lonely and hungry. The Dark was like a great
-helpless something, filling the air and not wanting particularly to
-be there. Surely It would much rather be light, with voices and three
-meals, than the Dark, with nobody and no food. So I used to set out a
-little offering, and once my Grandmother Beers had caught me paying
-tribute.
-
-“Once something _did_ come and get it,” I defended myself over my
-shoulder, and before she could say a word.
-
-“Likely enough, likely enough, child,” she assented, and did not chide
-me.
-
-Neither did she chide me when once she surprised me into mentioning the
-Little Things, who had the use of my playthings when I was not there.
-It was one dusk when she had come upon me setting my toy cupboard to
-rights, and had commended me. And I had explained that it was so the
-Little Things could find the toys when they came, that night and every
-night, to play with them. I remember that all she did was to squeeze my
-hand; but I felt that I was wholly understood.
-
-What child of us--of Us Who Were--will ever forget the joy of having
-an older one enter into our games? I used to sit in church and tell
-off the grown folk by this possibility in them--“She’d play with
-you--she wouldn’t--she would--he would--they wouldn’t”--an ancient
-declension of the human race, perfectly recognized by children, but
-never given its proper due.... I shall never forget the out-door romps
-with my Father, when he stooped, with his hands on his knees, and then
-ran _at_ me; or when he held me while I walked the picket fence; or
-set me in the Eating Apple tree; nor can I forget the delight of the
-play-house that he built for me, _with a shelf around_.... And always I
-shall remember, too, how my Mother would play “Lost.” We used to curl
-on the sofa, taking with us some small store of fruit and cookies,
-wrap up in blankets and shawls, put up an umbrella--possibly two of
-them--and there we were, lost in the deep woods. We had been crossing
-the forest--night had overtaken us--we had climbed in a thick-leaved
-tree--it was raining--the woods were infested by bears and wolves--we
-had a little food, possibly enough to stave off starvation till
-daylight. Then came by the beasts of the forest, wonderful, human
-beasts, who passed at the foot of our tree, and with whom we talked
-long and friendly--and differently for each one--and ended by sharing
-with them our food. We scraped acquaintance with birds in neighbouring
-nests, the stars were only across a street of sky, the Dark did its
-part by hiding us. Sometimes, yet, when I see a fat, idle sofa in, say,
-an hotel corridor, I cannot help thinking as I pass: “What a wonderful
-place to play Lost.” I daresay that some day I shall put up my umbrella
-and sit down and play it.
-
-Well--Grandmother Beers was one who knew how to play with us, and I was
-always half expecting her to propose a new game. But that day, as she
-sat in the swing, her eyes were not twinkling at the corners.
-
-“What does it mean?” she asked us. “What does ‘wicked’ mean?”
-
-“It’s what you aren’t to be,” I took the brunt of the reply, because I
-was the relative of the questioner.
-
-“Why not?” asked Grandmother.
-
-Why not? Oh, we all knew that. We responded instantly, and out came
-the results of the training of all the families.
-
-“Because your mother and father say you can’t,” said Betty Rodman.
-
-“Because it makes your mother feel bad,” said Calista.
-
-“Because God don’t want us to,” said I.
-
-“Delia says,” Betty added, “it’s because, if you are, when you grow up
-people won’t think anything of you.”
-
-Grandmother Beers held her sweet-peas to her face.
-
-“If,” she said after a moment, “you wanted to do something wicked more
-than you ever wanted to do anything in the world--as much as you’d want
-a drink to-morrow if you hadn’t had one to-day--and if nobody ever
-knew--would any of those reasons keep you from doing it?”
-
-We consulted one another’s look, and shifted. We knew how thirsty that
-would be. Already we were thirsty, in thinking about it.
-
-“If I were in your places,” Grandmother said, “I’m not sure those
-reasons would keep me. I rather think they wouldn’t,--always.”
-
-We stared at her. It was true that they didn’t always keep us. Were
-not two of us “in our rooms” even now?
-
-Grandmother leaned forward--I know how the shadows of the apple leaves
-fell on her black lace cap and how the pink sweet-peas were reflected
-in her delicate face.
-
-“Suppose,” she said, “that instead of any of those reasons, somebody
-gave you this reason: That the earth is a great flower--a flower that
-has never _really_ blossomed yet. And that when it blossoms, life is
-going to be more beautiful than we have ever dreamed, or than fairy
-stories have ever pretended. And suppose our doing one way, and not
-another, makes the flower come a little nearer to blossoming. But our
-doing the other way puts back the time when it can blossom. _Then_
-which would you want to do?”
-
-Oh, make it grow, make it grow, we all cried--and I felt a secret
-relief: Grandmother was playing a game with us, after all.
-
-“And suppose that everything made a difference to it,” she went on,
-“every little thing--from telling a lie, on down to going to get a
-drink for somebody and drinking first yourself out in the kitchen.
-Suppose that everything made a difference, from hurting somebody on
-purpose, down to making up the bed and pulling the bed-spread tight so
-that the wrinkles in the blanket won’t show....”
-
-At this we looked at one another in some consternation. How did
-Grandmother know....
-
-“Until after a while,” she said, “you should find out that
-everything--loving, going to school, playing, working, bathing,
-sleeping, were all just to make this flower grow. Wouldn’t it be fun to
-help?”
-
-Yes. Oh, yes, we were all agreed about that. It would be great fun to
-help.
-
-“Well, then suppose,” said Grandmother, “that as you helped, you found
-out something else: That in each of you, say, where your heart is, or
-where your breath is, there was a flower trying to blossom too! And
-that only as you helped the earth flower to blossom could your flower
-blossom. And that your doing one way would make your flower droop its
-head and grow dark and shrivel up. But your doing the other way would
-make it grow, and turn beautiful colours--so that bye and bye every one
-of your bodies would be just a sheath for this flower. Which way _then_
-would you rather do?”
-
-Oh, make it grow, make it grow, we said again.
-
-And Mary Elizabeth added longingly:--
-
-“Wouldn’t it be fun if it was true?”
-
-“It is true,” said Grandmother Beers.
-
-She sat there, softly smiling over her pink sweet-peas. We looked at
-her silently. Then I remembered that her face had always seemed to me
-to be somehow _light within_. Maybe it was her flower showing through!
-
-“Grandmother!” I cried, “is it true--is it true?”
-
-“It is true,” she repeated. “And whether the earth flower and other
-people’s flowers and your flower are to bloom or not is what living is
-about. And everything makes a difference. Isn’t that a good reason for
-not being ‘wicked’?”
-
-We all looked up in her face, something in us leaping and answering to
-what she said. And I know that we understood.
-
-“Oh,” Mary Elizabeth whispered presently to Betty, “hurry home and tell
-Margaret Amelia. It’ll make it so much easier when she comes out to her
-supper.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-That night, on the porch alone with Mother and Father, I inquired into
-something that still was not clear.
-
-“But how can you _tell_ which things are wicked? And which ones are
-wrong and which things are right?”
-
-Father put out his hand and touched my hand. He was looking at me with
-a look that I knew--and his smile for me is like no other smile that I
-have ever known.
-
-“Something will tell you,” he said, “always.”
-
-“Always?” I doubted.
-
-“Always,” he said. “There will be other voices. But if you listen,
-something will tell you always. And it is all you need.”
-
-I looked at Mother. And by her nod and her quiet look I perceived that
-all this had been known about for a long time.
-
-“That is why Grandma Bard is coming to live with us,” she said, “not
-just because we wanted her, but because--_that_ said so.”
-
-In us all a flower--and something saying something! And the earth
-flower trying to blossom.... I looked down the street: At Mr. Branchett
-walking in his garden, at the lights shining from windows, at the
-folk sauntering on the sidewalk, and toward town where the band
-was playing. We all knew about this together then. _This_ was why
-everything was! And there were years and years to make it come true.
-
-What if I, alone among them all, had never found out?
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-KING
-
-
-There was a certain white sugar bear and a red candy strawberry which
-we had been charged not to eat, because the strawberry was a nameless
-scarlet and the bear, left from Christmas, was a very soiled bear. We
-had all looked at these two things longingly, had even on occasion
-nibbled them a bit. There came a day when I crept under my bed and ate
-them both.
-
-It was a bed with slats. In the slat immediately above my head there
-was a knot-hole. Knot-hole, slat, the pattern of the ticking on the
-mattress, all remain graven on the moment. It was the first time that
-I had actually been conscious of--indeed, had almost _heard_--the
-fighting going on within me.
-
-Something was saying: “Oh, eat it, eat it. What do you care? It won’t
-kill you. It may not even make you sick. It is good. Eat it.”
-
-And something else, something gentle, insistent, steady, kept saying
-over and over in exactly the same tone, and so that I did not know
-whether the warning came from within or without:--
-
-“It must not be eaten. It must not be eaten. It must not be eaten.”
-
-But after a little, as I ate, this voice ceased.
-
-Nobody knew that I had eaten the forbidden bear and strawberry.
-Grandmother Beers squeezed my hand just the same. Mother was as tender
-as always. And Father--his kind eyes and some little jest with me were
-almost more than I could bear. I remember spending the evening near
-them, with something sore about the whole time. From the moment that it
-began to get dark the presence of bear and strawberry came and fastened
-themselves upon me, so that I delayed bed-going even more than usual,
-and interminably prolonged undressing.
-
-Then there came the moment when Mother sat beside me.
-
-“Don’t ask God for anything,” she always said to me. “Just shut
-your eyes and think of his lovingness being here, close, close,
-close--breathing with you like your breath. Don’t ask him for anything.”
-
-But that night I scrambled into bed.
-
-“Not to-night, Mother,” I said.
-
-She never said anything when I said that. She kissed me and went away.
-
-_Then!_
-
-There I was, face to face with it at last. What was it that had told me
-to eat the bear and the strawberry? What was it that had told me that
-these must not be eaten? What had made me obey one and not the other?
-Who was it that spoke to me like that?
-
-I shut my eyes and thought of the voice that had told me to eat, and it
-felt like the sore feeling in me and like the lump in my throat, and
-like unhappiness.
-
-I thought of the other gentle voice that had spoken and had kept
-speaking and at last had gone away--and suddenly, with my eyes shut, I
-was thinking of something like lovingness, close, close, breathing with
-me like my breath.
-
-So now I have made a story for that night. It is late, I know. But
-perhaps it is not too late.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Once upon a time a beautiful present was given to a little boy named
-Hazen. It was not a tent or a launch or a tree-top house or a pretend
-aeroplane, but it was a little glass casket. And it was the most
-wonderful little casket of all the kinds of caskets that there are.
-
-For in the casket was a little live thing, somewhat like a fairy and
-somewhat like a spirit, and so beautiful that everyone wanted one too.
-
-Now the little fairy (that was like a spirit) was held fast in the
-casket, which was tightly sealed. And when the casket was given to
-Hazen, the Giver said:--
-
-“Hazen dear, until you get that little spirit free, you cannot be wise
-or really good or loved or beautiful. But after you get her free you
-shall be all four. And nobody can free her but you yourself, though you
-may ask anybody and everybody to tell you how.”
-
-Now Hazen’s father was a king. And it chanced that while Hazen was yet
-a little boy, the king of a neighbour country came and took Hazen’s
-father’s kingdom, and killed all the court--for that was the way
-neighbour countries did in those days, not knowing that neighbours are
-nearly one’s own family. They took little Hazen prisoner and carried
-him to the conquering king’s court, and they did it in such a hurry
-that he had not time to take anything with him. All his belongings--his
-tops, his football, his books, and his bank, had to be left behind,
-and among the things that were left was Hazen’s little glass casket,
-forgotten on a closet shelf, upstairs in the castle. And the castle
-was shut up and left as it was, because the conquering king thought
-that maybe he might like sometime to give to his little daughter,
-the Princess Vista, this castle, which stood on the very summit of a
-sovereign mountain and commanded a great deal of the world.
-
-In the court of the conquering king poor little Hazen grew up, and he
-was not wise or _really_ good or loved or beautiful, and he forgot
-about the casket or thought of it only as a dream, and he did not know
-that he was a prince. He was a poor little furnace boy and kitchen-fire
-builder in the king’s palace, and he slept in the basement and did
-nothing from morning till night but attend to drafts and dampers. He
-did not see the king at all, and he had never even caught a glimpse of
-the king’s little daughter, the Princess Vista.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One morning before daylight Hazen was awakened by the alarm-in-a-basin
-at the head of his cot--for he was always so tired that just an alarm
-never wakened him at all, but set in a brazen basin an alarm would
-waken _anybody_. He dressed and hurried through the long, dim passages
-that led to the kitchens, and there he kindled the fires and tended the
-drafts and shovelled the coal that should cook the king’s breakfast.
-
-Suddenly a Thought spoke to him. It said:--
-
-“Hazen, you are not wise, or _really_ good, or loved, or beautiful. Why
-don’t you become so?”
-
-“I,” Hazen thought back sadly, “_I_ become these things? Impossible!”
-and he went on shovelling coal.
-
-But still the Thought spoke to him, and said the same thing over and
-over so many times that at last he was obliged to listen and even to
-answer.
-
-“What would I do to be like that?” he asked almost impatiently.
-
-“First go up in the king’s library,” said the Thought.
-
-So when the fires were roaring and the dampers were right, Hazen went
-softly up the stair and through the quiet lower rooms of the palace,
-for it was very early in the morning, and no one was stirring. Hazen
-had been so seldom above stairs that he did not even know where the
-library was and by mistake he opened successively the doors to the
-great banquet room, the state drawing rooms, a morning room, and even
-the king’s audience chamber before at last he chanced on the door of
-the library.
-
-The king’s library was a room as wide as a lawn and as high as a tree,
-and it was filled with books, and the shelves were thrown out to make
-alcoves, so that the books were as thick as leaves on branches, and the
-whole room was pleasant, like something good to do. It was impossible
-for little Hazen, furnace boy though he was, to be in that great place
-of books without taking one down. So he took at random a big leather
-book with a picture on the cover, and he went toward a deep window-seat.
-
-Nothing could have exceeded his surprise and terror when he perceived
-the window-seat to be occupied. And nothing could have exceeded his
-wonder and delight when he saw who occupied it. She was a little girl
-of barely his own age, and her lovely waving hair fell over her soft
-blue gown from which her little blue slippers were peeping. She, too,
-had a great book in her arms, and over the top of this she was looking
-straight at Hazen in extreme disapproval.
-
-“Will you have the goodness,” she said--speaking very slowly and most
-_freezing_ cold--“to ’splain what you are doing in my father’s library?”
-
-At these words Hazen’s little knees should have shaken, for he
-understood that this was the Princess Vista herself. But instead, he
-was so possessed by the beauty and charm of the little princess that
-there was no room for fear. Though he had never in his life been taught
-to bow, yet the blood of his father the king, and of _his_ father the
-king, and of _his_ father the king, and so on, over and over, stirred
-in him and he bowed like the prince he was-but-didn’t-know-it.
-
-“Oh, princess,” he said, “I want to be wise and _really_ good and loved
-and beautiful, and I have come to the king’s library to find out how to
-do it.”
-
-“Who are you, that want so many ’surd things?” asked the princess,
-curiously.
-
-“I am the furnace boy,” said the poor prince, “and my other name is
-Hazen.”
-
-At this the princess laughed aloud--for when he had bowed she had
-fancied that he might be at least the servant to some nobleman at the
-court, too poor to keep his foot-page in livery.
-
-“The furnace boy indeed!” she cried. “And handling my father’s books.
-If you had what you ’serve, you’d be put in pwison.”
-
-At that Hazen bowed again very sadly, and was about to put back his
-book when footsteps sounded in the hall, and nursery governesses and
-chamberlains and foot-pages and lackeys and many whose names are as
-dust came running down the stairs, all looking for the princess. And
-the princess, who was not frightened, was suddenly sorry for little
-Hazen, who was.
-
-“Listen,” she said, “you bow so nicely that you may hide in that alcove
-and I will not tell them that you are there. But don’t you come here
-to-morrow morning when I come to read my book, or I can’t tell _what_
-will happen.”
-
-Hazen had just time to slip in the alcove when all the nursery
-governesses, chamberlains, foot-pages, and those whose names are as
-dust burst in the room.
-
-“I was just coming,” said the princess, haughtily.
-
-But when she was gone, Hazen, in his safe alcove, did not once look at
-his big leather book. He did not even open it. Instead he sat staring
-at the floor, and thinking and thinking and thinking of the princess.
-And it was as if his mind were opened, and as if all the princess
-thoughts in the world were running in, one after another.
-
-Presently, when it was time for the palace to be awake, he stirred
-and rose and returned the book to its place, and in the midst of his
-princess thoughts he found himself face to face with a great mirror.
-And there he saw that, not only was he not beautiful, but that his
-cheek and his clothes were all blackened from the coal. And then he
-thought that he would die of shame; first, because the princess had
-seen him looking so, and second, because he looked so, whether she had
-seen him or not.
-
-He went back to the palace kitchen, and waited only to turn off the
-biggest drafts and the longest dampers before he began to wash his
-face and give dainty care to his hands. In fact, he did this all day
-long and sat up half the night trying to think how he could be as
-exquisitely neat as the little princess. And at last when daylight came
-and he had put coal in the kitchen ranges and had left the drafts right
-and had taken another bath after, he dressed himself in his poor best
-which he had most carefully brushed, and he ran straight back up the
-stair and into the king’s library.
-
-The Princess Vista was not there. But it was very, very early this time
-and the sun was still playing about outside, and so he set himself to
-wait, looking up at the window-seat where he had first seen her. As
-soon as the sun began to slant in the latticed windows in earnest, the
-door opened and the princess entered, her waving hair falling on her
-blue gown, and the little blue slippers peeping.
-
-When she saw Hazen, she stood still and spoke most _freezing_ cold.
-
-“Didn’t I tell you on no ’count to come here this morning?” she wished
-to know.
-
-Generations of kings for ages back bowed in a body in little Hazen.
-
-“Did your Highness not know that I would come?” he asked simply.
-
-“Yes,” said the princess to that, and sat down on the window-seat. “I
-will punish you,” said she, “but you bow so nicely that I will help you
-first. Why do you wish to be wise?”
-
-“I thought that I had another reason,” said Hazen, “but it is because
-you are wise.”
-
-“I’m not so very wise,” said the princess, modestly. “But I could make
-you as wise as I am,” she suggested graciously. “What do you want to
-know?”
-
-There was so much that he wanted to know! Down in the dark furnace room
-he had been forever wondering about the fires that he kindled, about
-the light that he did not have, about everything. He threw out his arms.
-
-“I want to know about the whole world!” he cried.
-
-The princess considered.
-
-“Perhaps they haven’t teached me everything yet,” she said. “What do
-you want to know about the world?”
-
-Hazen looked out the window and across the palace garden, lying all
-golden-green in the slow opening light, with fountains and flowers and
-parks and goldfish everywhere.
-
-“What makes it get day?” he asked. For since he had been a furnace boy,
-Hazen had been taught nothing at all.
-
-“Why, the sun comes,” answered the princess.
-
-“Is it the same sun every day?” Hazen asked.
-
-“I don’t think so,” said the princess. “No--sometimes it is a red sun.
-Sometimes it is a hot sun. Sometimes it is big, big, when it goes
-down. Oh, no. I am quite sure a different sun comes up every day.”
-
-“Where do they get ’em all?” Hazen asked wonderingly.
-
-“Well,” the princess said thoughtfully, “suns must be like cwort (she
-never could say “court”) processions. I think they always have them
-ready somewheres. What else do you want to know about?”
-
-“About the Spring,” said Hazen. “Where does that come from? Where do
-they get it?”
-
-“They never teached me that,” said the princess, “but _I_ think Summer
-is the mother, and Winter the father, and Autumn is the noisy little
-boy, and Spring is the little girl, with violets on.”
-
-“Of course,” cried Hazen, joyfully. “I never thought of that. Why can’t
-they talk?” he asked.
-
-“They ’most can,” said the princess. “Some day maybe I can teach you
-what they say. What else do you want to know?”
-
-“About people,” said Hazen. “Why are some folks good and some folks
-bad? Why is the king kind and the cook cross?”
-
-“Oh, they never teached me that!” the princess cried, impatiently.
-“What a lot of things you ask!”
-
-“One more question, your Highness,” said Hazen, instantly. “Why are you
-so beautiful?”
-
-The princess smiled. “Now I’ll teach you my picture-book through,” she
-said.
-
-She opened the picture-book and showed him pictures of castles and
-beasts and lawns and towers and ladies and mountains and bright birds
-and pillars and cataracts and wild white horses and, last, a picture of
-a prince setting forth on a quest. “Prince Living sets out to make his
-fortune,” it said under the picture, and Hazen stared at it.
-
-“Why shouldn’t I set out to make _my_ fortune?” he cried.
-
-The princess laughed.
-
-“You are a furnace boy,” she explained. “_They_ don’t make fortunes.
-Who would mind the furnace if they did?”
-
-Hazen sprang to his feet.
-
-“That can’t be the way the world is!” he cried. “Not when it’s so
-pretty and all stuck full of goldfish and fountains and flowers and
-parks. If I went, I _would_ make my fortune!”
-
-The princess crossed her little slippered feet and looked at him. And
-when he met her eyes, he was ashamed of his anger, though not of his
-earnestness, and he bowed again; and all the kings of all the courts of
-his ancestors were in the bow.
-
-“After all,” said the princess, “we don’t have the furnace in Summer.
-And you bow so nicely that I b’lieve I will help you to make your
-fortune. _Anyhow_, I can help you to set out.”
-
-Hazen was in the greatest joy. The princess bade him wait where he was,
-and she ran away and found somewhere a cast-off page boy’s dress and
-a cap with a plume and a little silver horn and a wallet, with some
-bread. These she brought to Hazen just as footsteps sounded on the
-stairs, and nursery governesses and chamberlains and foot-pages and
-many whose names are as dust came running pell-mell down the stairs,
-all looking for the princess.
-
-“Hide in that alcove,” said the princess, “till I am gone. Then put on
-this dress and go out at the east gate which no one can lock. And as
-you go by the east wing, do not look up at my window or I will wave my
-hand and somebody may see you going. Now good-bye.”
-
-But at that Hazen was suddenly wretched.
-
-“I can’t leave _you_!” he said. “How can I leave _you_?”
-
-“People always leave people,” said the princess, with superiority.
-“Play that’s one of the things I teached you.”
-
-At this Hazen suddenly dropped on one knee--the kings, his fathers,
-did that for him too--and kissed the princess’s little hand. And as
-suddenly she wished very much that she had something to give him.
-
-“Here,” she said, “here’s my picture-book. Take it with you and learn
-it through. _Now_ good-bye.”
-
-And Hazen had just time to slip in the alcove when all the n. g.’s,
-c.’s, f. p.’s, and l.’s, whom there wasn’t time to spell out, as well
-as all those whose names are now dust, burst in the room.
-
-“I was just coming,” said the princess, and went.
-
-Hazen dressed himself in the foot-page’s livery and fastened the
-wallet at one side and the little silver horn at the other, and put on
-the cap with a plume; and he stole into the king’s garden, with the
-picture-book of the princess fast in his hand.
-
-He had not been in a garden since he had left his father’s garden,
-which he could just remember, and to be outdoors now seemed as
-wonderful as bathing in the ocean, or standing on a high mountain,
-or seeing the dawn. He hastened along between the flowering shrubs
-and hollyhocks; he heard the fountains plashing and the song-sparrows
-singing and the village bells faintly sounding; he saw the goldfish and
-the water-lilies gleam in the pool and the horses cantering about the
-paddock. And all at once it seemed that the day was his, to do with
-what he would, and he felt as if already that were a kind of fortune in
-his hand. So he hurried round the east wing of the palace and looked
-up eagerly toward the princess’s window. And there stood the Princess
-Vista, watching, with her hair partly brushed.
-
-When she saw him, she leaned far out.
-
-“I told you not to look,” she said. “Somebody will see you going.”
-
-“I don’t care if anyone does,” cried Hazen. “I _had_ to!”
-
-“How fine you look now,” the princess could not help saying.
-
-“You are beautiful as the whole picture-book!” he could not help saying
-back.
-
-“_Now_, good-bye!” she called softly, and waved her hand.
-
-“Good-bye--oh, good-bye!” he cried, and waved his plumed cap.
-
-And then he left her, looking after him with her hair partly brushed,
-and he ran out the east gate which was never locked, and fared as fast
-as he could along the king’s highway, in all haste to grow wise and
-_really_ good and loved and beautiful.
-
-Hazen went a day’s journey in the dust of the highway, and toward
-nightfall he came to a deep wood. To him the wood seemed like a great
-hospitable house, with open doors between the trees and many rooms
-through which he might wander at will, the whole fair in the light of
-the setting sun. And he entered the gloom as he might have entered a
-palace, expecting to meet someone.
-
-Immediately he was aware of an old man seated under a plane tree, and
-the old man addressed him with:--
-
-“Good even, little lad. Do you travel far?”
-
-“Not very, sir,” Hazen replied. “I am only going to find my fortune and
-to become wise, _really_ good, beautiful, and loved.”
-
-“So!” said the old man. “Rest here a little and let us talk about it.”
-
-Hazen sat beside him and they talked about it. Now, I wish very much
-that I might tell you all that they said, but the old man was so old
-and wise that his thoughts came chiefly as pictures, or in other form
-without words, so that it was not so much what he said that held his
-meaning as what he made Hazen feel by merely being with him. Indeed, I
-do not know whether he talked about the stars or the earth or the ways
-of men, but he made little Hazen somehow know fascinating things about
-them all. And when time had passed and the dusk was nearly upon them,
-the old man lightly touched Hazen’s forehead:--
-
-“Little lad,” he said, “have you ever looked in there?”
-
-“In my own head?” said Hazen, staring.
-
-“Even so,” said the old man. “No? But that might well be a pleasant
-thing to do. Will you not do that, for a little while?”
-
-This was the strangest thing that ever Hazen had heard. But next
-moment, under the old man’s guidance, he found himself, as it were,
-turned about and seeing things that he had never seen, and looking
-back into his own head as if there were a window that way. And he did
-it with no great surprise, for it seemed quite natural to him, and he
-wondered why he had never done it before.
-
-Of the actual construction of things in there Hazen was not more
-conscious than he would have been of the bricks and mortar of a palace
-filled with wonderful music and voices and with all sorts of surprises.
-Here there were both surprises and voices. For instantly he could see
-a company of little people, _every one of whom looked almost like
-himself_. And it was as it is when one stands between two mirrors set
-opposite, and the reflections reflect the reflections until one is
-dizzy; only now it was as if all the reflections were suddenly to be
-free of the mirror and be little living selves, ready to say different
-things.
-
-One little Self had just made a small opening in things, and several
-Selves were peering into it. Hazen looked too, and he saw to his
-amazement that it was a kind of picture of his plans for making his
-fortune. There were cities, seas, ships, men, forests, water-falls,
-leaping animals, glittering things, all the adventures that he had
-been imagining. And the Selves were talking it over.
-
-“Consider the work it will be,” one was distinctly grumbling, “before
-we can get anything. _Is_ it worth it?”
-
-He was a discouraged, discontented-looking Self, and though he had
-Hazen’s mouth, it was drooping, and though he had Hazen’s forehead, it
-was frowning.
-
-A breezy little Self, all merry and fluffy and light as lace,
-answered:--
-
-“O-o-o-o!” it breathed. “I think it will be fun. That’s all I care
-about it--it will be fun and _nothing else_.”
-
-Then a strange, fascinating Self, from whom Hazen could not easily look
-away, spoke, half singing.
-
-“Remember the beauty that we shall see as we go--as we go,” he chanted.
-“We can live for the beauty everywhere and for _nothing else_.”
-
-“Think of the things we shall learn!” cried another Self.
-“Knowledge--knowledge all the way--and _nothing else_.”
-
-Then a soft voice spoke, which was sweeter than any voice that Hazen
-had ever heard, and the Self to whom it belonged looked like Hazen
-when he was asleep.
-
-“Nay,” it said sighing, “there are many dangers. But to meet dangers
-bravely and to overcome them finely is the way to grow strong.”
-
-At this a little voice laughed and cracked as it laughed, so that it
-sounded like something being broken which could never be mended.
-
-“Being strong and wise don’t mean making one’s fortune,” it said. “Just
-one thing means fortune, and that is being rich. To be rich--rich!
-That’s what we want and it is all we want. And I am ready to fight with
-everyone of you to get riches.”
-
-Hazen looked where the voice sounded, and to his horror he saw a little
-Self made in his own image, but hideously bent and distorted, so that
-he knew exactly how he would look if he were a dwarf.
-
-“Not me!” cried the breezy little Fun Self then. “You wouldn’t fight
-me!”
-
-“Yes, I would,” said the dwarf. “I’d fight everybody, and when we were
-rich, you’d thank me for it.”
-
-“Ah, no,” said the Knowledge Self. “I am the only proper ruler in this
-fortune affair. Knowledge is enough for us to have. Knowledge is what
-we want.”
-
-“Beauty is all you need!” cried the fascinating Beauty Self. “I am the
-one who should rule you all.”
-
-“Well, rich, rich, rich! Do I not say so? Will not riches bring beauty
-and fun and leisure for knowledge?” said the dwarf. “Riches do it all.
-Do as I say. Take me for your guide.”
-
-“Strength is the thing!” said a great voice, suddenly. “We want to be
-big and strong and _nothing else_. I am going to rule in this.” And the
-voice of the Strong Self seemed to be everywhere.
-
-“Not without me ... not without me!” said the Wise Self. But it spoke
-faintly, and could hardly be heard in the clamour of all the others who
-now all began talking at once, with the little Fun Self dancing among
-them and crying, “I’m the one--you all want me to rule, _really_, but
-you don’t know it.”
-
-And suddenly, in the midst of all this, Hazen began to see strange
-little shadows appearing and lurking about, somewhat slyly, and often
-running away, but always coming back. They were tiny and faintly
-outlined--less like reflections in a mirror than like reflections
-which had not yet found a mirror for their home. And they spoke in thin
-little voices which Hazen could hear, and said:--
-
-“We’ll help you, Rich! We’ll help you, Strength! We’ll help you, Fun!
-Only let us be one of you and we’ll help you win, and you shall reign.
-Here are Envy Self and Lying Self and Hate Self and Cruel Self--we’ll
-help, if you’ll let us in!”
-
-And when he heard this, Hazen suddenly called out, with all his might:--
-
-“Stop!” he cried, “I’m the ruler here! I’m Hazen!”
-
-And of course he was the ruler--because it was the inside of his own
-head.
-
-Instantly there was complete silence there, as when a bell is suddenly
-struck in the midst of whisperings. And all the Selves shrank back.
-
-“Hazen!” they said, “we didn’t know you were listening. You be king.
-We’ll help--we’ll help.”
-
-“As long as I live,” said little Hazen then, “not one of you shall rule
-in here without me. I shall want many of you to help me, but only as
-much as I tell you to, and no more. I’m only a furnace boy, but I tell
-you that I am king of the inside of my own head, and I’m going to rule
-here and nobody else!”
-
-Then, nearer than any of the rest--and he could not tell just where it
-came from, but he knew how near it was--another voice spoke to him. And
-somewhat it was like the Thought that had spoken to him in the king’s
-kitchen and bidden him go up to the king’s library--but yet it was
-nearer than that had been.
-
-“Bravely done, Hazen,” it said. “Be king--be king, even as you have
-said!”
-
-With the voice came everywhere sweet music, sounding all about Hazen
-and in him and through him; and everywhere was air of dreams--he
-could hardly tell whether he was watching these or was really among
-them. There were sweet voices, dim figures, gestures of dancing,
-soft colours, lights, wavy, wonderful lines, little stars suddenly
-appearing, flowers, kindly faces, and then one face--the exquisite,
-watching face of the Princess Vista at the window, with her hair partly
-brushed ... and then darkness....
-
-... When he woke, it was early morning. The sun was pricking through
-the leaves of the forest, the birds were singing so sweetly and
-swiftly that it was as if their notes overlapped and made one sound on
-which everything was threaded like curious and beautiful beads on a
-silver cord. The old man was gone; and before Hazen, the way, empty and
-green, led on with promise of surprise.
-
-And now as he went forward, eating his bread and gathering berries,
-Hazen had never felt so able to make his future. It was as if he were
-not one boy but many boys in one, and they all ready to do his bidding.
-Surely, he thought, his fortune must lie at the first turn of the path!
-
-But at the first turn of the path he met a little lad no older than
-himself, who was drawing a handcart filled with something covered, and
-he was singing merrily.
-
-“Hello,” said the Merry Lad. “Where are _you_ going?”
-
-“Nowhere in particular,” said Hazen. And though he had readily confided
-to the old man what he was hoping to find, someway Hazen felt that if
-he told the Merry Lad, he would laugh at him. And that no one likes,
-though it is never a thing to fear.
-
-“Come on with me,” said the Merry Lad. “I am going in the town to sell
-my images. There will be great sport.”
-
-And, without stopping to think whether his fortune lay that way, Hazen,
-whose blood leapt at the idea of the town and its sports, turned and
-went with him.
-
-The Merry Lad was very merry. He told Hazen more games and riddles
-than ever he had heard. He sang him songs, did little dances for him
-in the open glades, raced with him, and when they reached the dusty
-highway, got him in happy talk with the other wayfarers. And by the
-time they gained the town, they were a gay little company. There the
-Merry Lad took his images to the market-place and spread them under a
-tree--little figures made to represent Mirth, Merriment, Laughter, Fun,
-Fellowship, and Delight--no end there was to the variety and charm of
-the little images, and no end to all that the Merry Lad did to attract
-the people to them. He sang and danced and whistled and even stood on
-his head, and everyone crowded about him and was charmed.
-
-“Pass my cap about,” he said, while he danced, to Hazen. “They will
-give us money.”
-
-So Hazen passed the Merry Lad’s cap, and the people gave them money.
-They filled the cap, indeed, with clinking coins, and went away
-carrying the images. And by nightfall the Merry Lad and Hazen had more
-money than they knew how to use.
-
-“Oh,” the Merry Lad cried, “we shall have a glorious time. Come!”
-
-Now Hazen had never been in the town at night, and he had never been
-in any town at any time without some of the king’s servants for whom
-he had had to fetch and carry. To him the streets were strange and
-wonderful, blazing with lights, filled with gayly dressed folk, and
-sounding now and again to strains of music. But the Merry Lad seemed
-wholly at home, and he went here and there like a painted moth,
-belonging to the night and a part of it. They feasted and jested and
-joyed, and most of all they spent the money that they had earned, and
-they spent it on themselves. I cannot tell you the things that they
-bought. They bought a wonderful, tropical, talking bird; they bought a
-little pony on which they both could ride, with the bird on the pony’s
-neck; they bought a tiny trick monkey and a suit of Indian clothes with
-fringed leggings and head-feathers; and a music-box that played like
-a whole band. And when the evening with its lights and pantomimes was
-over, they pitched their tent on the edge of the town, picketed the
-pony outside, brought the other things safely within, and lay down to
-sleep.
-
-Now, since they had no pillows, Hazen took the picture-book which
-the princess had given him and made his pillow of that. And as soon
-as everything was quiet, and the Merry Lad and the talking bird
-were asleep and the pony was dozing at its picket, the princess’s
-picture-book began to talk to Hazen. I do not mean that it said
-words--it is a great mistake to think that everything that is said must
-be said in words--but it talked to him none the less, and better than
-with words. It showed him the princess in her blue gown sitting in the
-window-seat with her little blue slippers crossed. It showed him her
-face as she taught him about the sun and the world, and taught him
-her picture-book through. It reminded him that his page-boy’s dress
-was worn because, in his heart, he was her page. It brought back the
-picture of her standing at the window, with her hair partly brushed,
-to wave him a good-bye--“_Now_, good-bye,” he could hear her little
-voice. He remembered now that he had started out to find his fortune
-and to become wise, _really_ good, loved, and beautiful. And lo, all
-this that he had done all day with the Merry Lad--was it helping him to
-any of these?
-
-As soon as he knew this, he rose softly and, emptying his pockets of
-his share of the money earned that day, he laid it near the Merry Lad’s
-pillow, took the picture-book, and slipped away.
-
-The Merry Lad did not wake, but the talking bird stirred on his perch
-and called after him: “Stay where you are! Stay where you are!” And
-the words seemed to echo in Hazen’s head and were repeated there as if
-another voice had said them, and while he hesitated at the door of the
-tent, he knew what that other voice was: It was within his head indeed,
-and it was the voice of that breezy little Self, all merry and fluffy
-and light as lace--the Fun Self itself!
-
-And then he knew that all day long that was the voice that he had been
-obeying when he went with the Merry Lad, and all day long that Self had
-been guiding him, and had been his ruler. And he himself had not been
-king of the Selves at all!
-
-Hazen slipped out into the night and ran as fast as he could. Nearly
-all that night he travelled without stopping, lest when day came the
-Merry Lad should overtake him. And when day did come, Hazen found
-himself far away, and passing the gate of a garden where, in the dawn,
-a youth was walking, reading a book. Him Hazen asked if he might come
-in the garden and rest for a little.
-
-This Bookman, who was pleasant and gentle and seemed half dreaming,
-welcomed him in, and gave him fruit to eat, and Hazen fell asleep in
-the arbour. When he awoke, the Bookman sat beside him, still reading,
-and seeing that the boy was awake, he began reading to him.
-
-He read a wonderful story about the elements of which everything
-in the world is made. He read that they are a great family of more
-than seventy, and so magically arranged that they make a music, done
-in octaves like the white keys of a piano. So that a man, if he is
-skilful, can play with these octaves as he might with octaves of sound,
-and with a thousand variations can make what he will, and almost play
-for himself a strain of the heavenly harmony in which things began. You
-see what wonderful music that would be? Hazen saw, and he could not
-listen enough.
-
-Until dark he was in the garden, eating fruit and listening; and the
-Bookman, seeing how he loved to listen, asked him if he would not stay
-on in the garden, and live there awhile. And without stopping to think
-whether his fortune lay that way, Hazen said that he would stay.
-
-Everything that the Bookman read to him was like magic, and it taught
-Hazen to do wonderful things. For example, he learned marvellous ways
-with sentences and with words. The Bookman showed him how to get inside
-of words, as if they had doors, so that Hazen could look from out the
-words that were spoken almost as if they had been little boxes, and he
-inside. The Bookman showed him how to look behind the words on a page
-and to see how different they seemed that way. He would say a sentence,
-and instantly it would become solid, and he would set it up, and Hazen
-could hang to it, or turn upon it like a turning-bar. It was all great
-sport. For sentences were not the only things with which he could
-juggle. He showed Hazen how to think a thing and have _that_ become
-solid in the air, too. Just as one might think, “Now I will plant my
-garden,” and presently there the garden is, solid; or, “Now I will get
-my lesson,” and presently, sure enough, there the lesson _is_, in one’s
-head, _so_ the Bookman taught Hazen to do with nearly all his thoughts,
-making many and many of them into actions or else into a solid, so that
-it could be handled as a garden can.
-
-And at last, one night, Hazen thought of the Princess Vista, hoping
-that that thought would become solid too, and that the princess would
-be there before him, for he wished very much to see her. But it did not
-do so, and he asked the Bookman the reason.
-
-“Why does not my thought about the Princess Vista become solid, and the
-princess be here beside me?” he asked wistfully.
-
-“Some thoughts take a very long time to become solid,” said the
-Bookman, gently, “and sometimes we have to travel a long way to make
-them so. If you think of the princess long and hard enough, I daresay
-that you will go to her some day--and there she will be, solid.”
-
-But of course as soon as Hazen began thinking of the princess long and
-hard, he wanted, more than anything else in the world, to be doing
-something that should hasten the time of seeing her, which could not
-well be until he had made his fortune. So thereupon he told the Bookman
-that he must be leaving the garden.
-
-“I knew that the day must come,” said the Bookman, sadly. “_Could_ you
-not stay?”
-
-And when he said that, Hazen wanted so very much to stay there in the
-enchantment of the place, that it seemed as if a voice in his own
-head were echoing the words. And while he hesitated at the gate of
-the garden, he knew what that other voice was! It was within his head
-indeed, and it was the voice of that strange, fascinating Self from
-which he had found that he could hardly look away--the Knowledge Self
-itself. And then he knew that all this time in this garden, it was
-this voice that he had been obeying and it had been guiding him. He
-himself had not been king of the Selves at all. So when he knew that,
-he hesitated not a moment, for he saw that although the Bookman was
-far finer than the Merry Lad, still neither must be king, but only he
-himself must be king.
-
-“Alas!” he cried, as he left the garden, “I am not nearer to making my
-fortune now than I was at the beginning!”
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-KING (_continued_)
-
-
-So Hazen left the garden and the gentle Bookman, who was loath to let
-him go, and hurried out into the world again.
-
-He travelled now for many days, hearing often of far countries which
-held what he sought, but never reaching any of them. Always he did what
-tasks came to his hand, for this seemed a good way toward fortune. But
-sometimes the Envy Self and the Discontented Self spoke loudly in his
-head so that he thought that it was he himself who was speaking, and
-he obeyed them, and stopped his work, and until the chance to finish
-it was lost, he did not know that it was these Selves who had made
-him cease his task and lose his chance and be that much farther from
-fortune. For that was the way of all the Selves--they had a clever
-fashion of making Hazen think that their voices were his own voice, and
-sometimes he could hardly tell the difference.
-
-At last, one night, he came to a hill, sloping gently as if something
-beautiful were overflowing. Its trees looked laid upon the mellow
-west beyond. The turf was like some Titan woman’s embroidery, sheared
-and flowered. Hazen looked at it all, and at the great sky and the
-welcoming distance, and before he knew whether it came as a thought or
-as a song, he had made a little rhyme:--
-
- Do you wish you had a world of gold
- With a turquoise roof on high,
- And a coral east and a ruby west
- And diamonds in the sky?
-
- Do you wish there were little doors of air
- That a child might open wide,
- Where were emerald chairs and a tourmaline rug
- And a moonstone moon beside?
-
- Do you wish the lakes were silver plates
- And the sea a sapphire dish?
- What a wonderful, wonderful world it is--
- For haven’t you got your wish?
-
-He liked to sing this, and he loved the hill and the evening. He lay
-there a long time, making little rhymes and loving everything. Next
-day he wandered away in the woods, and asked for food at a hut, and
-offered the bewildered woman a rhyme in payment, and at night he
-returned to his hill, and there he lived for days, playing that he
-was living all alone in the world--that there was not another person
-anywhere on the earth.
-
-But one night when he was lying on the hillside, composing a song to
-the Littlest Leaf in the Wood, suddenly the voice of his song was not
-so loud as a voice within him which seemed to say how much he delighted
-to be singing. And then he knew the voice--that it was the voice of the
-Beauty Self in his own head, that it was that voice that had made him
-linger on the hillside and had commanded him to sing about the beauty
-in the world _and to do nothing else_. And all this time it had been
-king of the Selves, and not he!
-
-He rose and fled down the hillside, and for days he wandered alone,
-sick at heart because this fair Beauty Self had tricked him into
-following her _and no other_, even as the Fun Self and the Knowledge
-Self had done. But even while he wandered, grieving, again and again
-the Idle Self, the Strong Self, the Discontented Self, deceived him
-for a little while and succeeded in making their own voices heard, and
-now and again the little shadowy Selves--the Malice and Cruel and Envy
-Selves drew very near him and tried to speak for him. And they all
-fought to keep him from being king and to deceive him into thinking
-that they spoke for him.
-
-One brooding noonday, as Hazen was travelling, alone and tired, on the
-highroad, a carriage overtook him, and the gentleman within, looking
-sharply at him, ordered the carriage stopped, and asked him courteously
-if he was not the poet whose songs he had sometimes heard, and of whose
-knowledge and good-fellowship others had told him. It proved that it
-was no other than Hazen whom he meant, and he took him with him in
-his carriage to a great, wonderful house overlooking the valley, and
-commanding a sovereign mountain on whose very summit stood a deserted
-castle. It seemed as if merely looking on that wonderful prospect would
-help one to be wise and _really_ good and beautiful and worthy to be
-loved.
-
-At once Hazen’s host, the Gentleman of the Carriage, began showing
-him his treasures and all that made life for him. The house was
-filled with curious and beautiful things, pictures, ivories, marbles,
-and tapestries, and with many friends. In the evenings there were
-always festivities; mirth and laughter were everywhere, and Hazen
-was laden with gifts of these and other things, and delighted in the
-entertainment. But by day, in a high-ceiled library and a cool study,
-the two spent hours pouring over letters and science, finding out
-the secrets of the world, getting on the other side of words, saying
-sentences, and thinking thoughts that became solid; or they would
-wander on the hillsides and carry rare books and dream of the beauty in
-the world and weave little songs. Now they would be idle, now absorbed
-in feats of strength, and now they would descend into the town and
-there delight in its great sport. And in all this Hazen had some part
-and earned his own way, because of his cleverness and willingness to
-enter in the life and belong to it.
-
-One day, standing on a balcony of the beautiful house, looking across
-at the mountain and the deserted castle, Hazen said aloud:--
-
-“This is the true life. This is fortune. For now I hear all the voices
-of all my Selves, and I give good things to each, and I am king of
-them all!”
-
-But even as he spoke he heard another voice sounding within his own,
-and it laughed, and cracked as it laughed, so that it sounded like
-something being broken that could never be mended.
-
-“I told you so, Hazen! I told you so!” it cried. “Being loved and
-_really_ good do not mean making our fortune. Just one thing means
-fortune, and that is being rich. To be rich, _rich_, means good times
-and learning and beauty and idleness. I’ve fought every one of the
-others, and now you’ve got all that they had to offer, because you have
-let me be king--_me and no other_.”
-
-To his horror, Hazen recognized the voice of the dwarf, the Riches
-Self, and knew that he was deceived again, that he himself was ruler of
-nothing, and that the dwarf was now king of all his Selves.
-
-When he realized this, it seemed to Hazen that his heart was pierced
-and that he could not live any longer. Suppose--ah, suppose that he did
-get back to the Princess Vista now--what had he to take to her? Could
-he give her himself--a Self of which not he but the dwarf was the
-owner?
-
-Somehow, in spite of their protestations and persuadings, Hazen said
-good-bye to them all, to his host and to those who had detained him,
-and he was off down into the valley alone--not knowing where he was
-going or what he was going to do, or what hope now remained that he
-should ever be any nearer the fortune for which he had so hopefully set
-out.
-
-It was bright moonlight when he came to the edge of a fair, green,
-valley meadow. The whiteness was flooding the world, as if it would
-wash away everything that had ever been and would begin it all over
-again. And in the centre of the meadow, all the brightness seemed to
-gather and thicken and glitter, as if something mysterious were there.
-It drew Hazen to itself, as if it were so pure that it must be what
-he was seeking, and he broke through the hedge and stepped among the
-flowers of the lush grass, and he stood before it.
-
-It was a fountain of water, greater than any fountain that Hazen had
-ever seen or conceived. It rose from the green in pure strands of
-exquisite firmness, in almost the slim lines and spirals of a stair;
-and its high, curving spray and its plash and murmur made it rather
-like a gigantic white tree, with music in its boughs--the tree of life
-itself.
-
-Hazen could no more have helped leaping in the fountain than he could
-have helped his joy in its beauty. He sprang in the soft waters as
-if he were springing into arms, and it drew him to itself as if he
-belonged to it. The waters flowed over him, and he felt purified, and
-as if a healing light had shone through him, body and mind.
-
-But to his amazement, he did not remain in the fountain’s basin.
-Gently, as if he were upborne by unseen hands, he mounted with the rise
-of the fountain, in its slim lines and spirals, until he found himself
-high above the meadow in a silvery tower that was thrown out from the
-fountain itself. And there, alone in that lofty silence, it was as if
-he were face to face with himself and could see his own heart.
-
-Then the Thought spoke to him which had spoken to him long ago that
-morning in the king’s kitchen, and again on that first night in the
-wood.
-
-“Hazen!” it said, “you are not wise or _really_ good or loved or
-beautiful. Why don’t you become so?”
-
-“I!” said Hazen, sadly. “I have lost my chance. I came out to find my
-fortune and I have thrown it away.”
-
-But still the Thought spoke to him, and said the same thing over and
-over so many times that at last he answered:--
-
-“What, then, must I do?” he asked.
-
-And then he listened, there in the night and the stillness, to hear
-what it was that he must do. And this was the first time that ever he
-had listened like this, or questioned carefully his course. Always
-before he had done what seemed to him the thing that he wished to do,
-without questioning whether his fortune lay that way.
-
-“Bravely spoken, Hazen,” said the Thought, then. “Someone near is in
-great need. Find him and help him.”
-
-Instantly Hazen leaped lightly to the ground, and ran away through
-the moonlit meadow, and he sought as never in his life had he sought
-anything before, for the one near, in great need, whom he was to find
-and help. All through the night he sought, and with the setting of
-the moon he was struggling up the mountain, because it seemed to him
-that he must do some hard thing, and this was hard. In the early dawn
-he stood on the mountain’s very summit, and knocked at the gate of the
-deserted castle there. And it was the forsaken castle of his father,
-the king, whom the Princess Vista’s father had conquered; but this
-Hazen did not know.
-
-No sound answered his summons, so he swung the heavy gate on its broken
-hinges and stepped within. The court yard was vacant and echoing and
-grass-grown. Rabbits scuttled away at his approach, and about the
-sightless eyes of the windows, bats were clinging and moving. The clock
-in the tower was still and pointed to an hour long-spent. The whole
-place breathed of things forgotten and of those who, having loved them,
-were forgotten too.
-
-Hazen mounted the broad, mossy steps leading to the portals, and he
-found one door slightly ajar. Wondering greatly, he touched it open,
-and the groined hall appeared like a grim face from behind a mask.
-On the stone floor, not far beyond the threshold, lay an old man,
-motionless. And when, uttering a little cry of pity and amazement,
-Hazen stooped over him, he knew him at once to be that old man who had
-greeted him at the entrance to the wood on the evening of the day on
-which he himself had left the king’s palace.
-
-What with bringing him water and bathing his face and chafing his
-hands, Hazen at last enabled the old man to speak, and found that he
-had been nearly all his life-time the keeper of the castle and for
-some years its only occupant. He was not ill, but he had fallen and
-was hurt, and he had lain for several days without food. So Hazen, who
-knew well how to do it, kindled a fire of fagots in the great, echoing
-castle kitchen, and, from the scanty store which he found there,
-prepared broth and eggs, and then helped the old man to his bed in the
-little room which had once been a king’s cabinet.
-
-“Lad, lad!” said the old man, when he had remembered Hazen. “And
-have you found your fortune? And are you by now wise, _really_ good,
-beautiful, and loved?”
-
-“Alas!” said Hazen, only, and could say no more.
-
-The old man nodded. “I know, I know,” he said sadly. “The little
-Selves have been about, ruling here and ruling there. Is it not so? Sit
-here a little, and let us talk about it.”
-
-Then Hazen told him all that had befallen since that night when they
-sat together in the wood. And though his adventures seemed to Hazen
-very wonderful, the old man merely nodded, as if he were not hearing
-but only remembering.
-
-“Ay,” he said, at the last, “I have met them all--the Merry Lad, the
-Bookman, and all the rest, and have dwelt a space with some. And I,
-too, have come to the fountain in the night, and have asked what it was
-that I should do.”
-
-“But tell me, sir,” said Hazen, eagerly, “how was it that I was told at
-the fountain that there was one near in great need. Did the fountain
-know you? Or did my Thought? And how could that be?”
-
-“Nay, lad,” said the old man, “but always, for everyone, there is
-someone near in need--yet. One has only to look.”
-
-Then he talked to Hazen more about his fortune, and again the old man’s
-meaning was in his mere presence, so that whether he talked about the
-stars or the earth or the ways of men, he made Hazen know fascinating
-things about them all. And now Hazen listened far differently from the
-way that he had listened that other time when they had talked, and it
-was as if the words had grown, and as if they meant more than once they
-had meant.
-
-Now, whoever has stood for the first time in a great, empty castle
-knows that there is one thing that he longs to do above all other
-things, and this is to explore. And when the afternoon lay brooding
-upon the air, and slanting sun fell through the dusty lattices, Hazen
-asked the old man eagerly if he might wander through the rooms.
-
-“As freely,” answered the old man, willingly, “as if you were the
-castle’s prince.”
-
-Thus it chanced that, after all the years, Hazen, though he was far
-from dreaming the truth, was once more roaming through the rooms of his
-birthplace and treading the floors that had once echoed the step of his
-father, the king.
-
-It was a wonderful place, the like of which Hazen thought he had never
-seen before, save only in the palace of the father of the princess.
-Above stairs the rooms had hardly been disturbed since that old day of
-the hurried flight of all his father’s court. There was a great room
-of books, as rich in precious volumes as the king’s library which he
-already knew, and there, though this he could not guess, his own father
-had been wont to sit late in the night, consulting learned writers and
-dreaming of the future of his little son. There was the chapel, where
-they had brought Hazen himself to be christened, in the presence of all
-the court; there the long banqueting room to which he had once been
-carried so that the nobles might pledge him their fealty, the arched
-roof echoing their shouts. The throne room, the council room, the state
-drawing rooms--through all these, with their dim, dusty hangings and
-rich, faded furnishings, Hazen footed; and at last, up another stair,
-he came to the private apartments of the king and queen themselves.
-
-Breathing the life of another time the rooms lay, as if partly
-remembering and partly expecting. In the king’s room was the hunting
-suit that he had thrown off just before the attack, the book that he
-had been reading, the chart that he had consulted. In the queen’s
-room were tarnished golden toilet articles and ornaments, and in her
-wardrobe her very robes hung, dusty and mouldering, the gold thread and
-gold fringes showing black and sad.
-
-And then Hazen entered a room which seemed to have been a child’s
-room--and it was his room, of his first babyhood. Something in him
-stirred and kindled, almost as if his body remembered, though his mind
-could not do so. Toys lay scattered about--tops, a football, books, and
-a bank. The pillow of the small white bed was indented as if from the
-pressure of a little head, and a pair of tiny shoes, one upright, one
-overturned, were on the floor. Hazen picked up one little shoe and held
-it for a minute in his hand. He wondered if some of the little garments
-of the child, whoever he was, might not be in the hanging room. And he
-opened the closed door.
-
-The door led to a closet and, as he had guessed, little garments were
-hanging there. But it was not these that caught his eye and held him
-breathless and spellbound on the threshold. On the high shelf of the
-closet stood a small glass casket. And in the casket was a little bit
-of live thing that fluttered piteously, as if begging to be released,
-and frantic with joy at the coming of light from without.
-
-Hazen’s heart beat as he took the casket in his hand. It was the most
-wonderful little box that ever he had seen. And the little living thing
-was something like a fairy and something like a spirit and so beautiful
-that it seemed to Hazen that he must have it for his own. Something
-stirred and kindled in his mind so that it was almost a memory, and he
-said to himself:--
-
-“I have seen a casket like this. I have _had_ a casket like this. Nay,
-but the very earliest thing that ever I can remember is a casket like
-this from which no one knew how to release this little living spirit.”
-
-For the little spirit was fast in the crystal prison, and if one broke
-the casket, one would almost certainly harm the spirit--but what other
-way was there to do?
-
-With the casket in his hand and the little spirit fluttering within,
-Hazen ran back below stairs to the old man.
-
-“Look!” Hazen cried. “This casket! It is from the closet shelf of some
-child’s room. I remember a casket such as this, and within it a little
-living spirit. I have _had_ a casket such as this! What does it mean?”
-
-Then the old man, who had been keeper there when the castle was taken,
-trembled and peered into Hazen’s face.
-
-“Who are you?” the old man cried. “Who are you--and what is your name?”
-
-“Alas,” said Hazen, sadly, “I was but the furnace boy to the king of a
-neighbouring country, and who I am I do not know. But as for my name,
-that is Hazen, and I know not what else.”
-
-Then the old man cried out, and tried to bow himself, and to kiss
-Hazen’s hand.
-
-“Prince Hazen!” cried he. “You are no other. Ah, God be praised. You
-are the son of my own beloved king.”
-
-As well as he could for his joy and agitation, the old man told Hazen
-everything: how the castle had been taken by that king of a neighbour
-country--who did _not_ know that neighbours are nearly one’s own
-family--how Hazen had been made prisoner, and how he was really heir
-to this kingdom and to all its ample lands. And how the magic casket,
-which after all these years the old man now remembered, was to make
-Hazen, and no other, wise and _really_ good and loved and beautiful,
-if only the little spirit could be freed.
-
-“But how am I to do that?” Hazen cried. “For to break the casket would
-be to harm the spirit. And what other way is there to do?”
-
-“Alas,” answered the old man, “that I do not know. I think that this
-you must do alone. As for me, my life is almost spent. And now that I
-have seen you, my prince, the son of my dear sovereign, there is left
-to me but to die in peace.”
-
-At this, Hazen, remembering how much he owed the wonderful old man for
-that enchanted talk in the wood, when he had taught him fascinating
-things about the stars and the earth and the ways of men, and had shown
-him the inside of his own head and all those Selves of his and he their
-king if he would be so--remembering all these things Hazen longed to do
-something for him in return. But what could he do for him, he the heir
-of a conquered kingdom and a desolate palace? Yet the old man had been
-his father’s servant; and it was he whom the Thought at the fountain
-had bidden him to help; but chiefly Hazen’s heart overflowed with
-simple pity and tenderness for the helpless one. And in that pity the
-Thought spoke again:--
-
-“Give him the casket,” it said.
-
-Hazen hesitated--and in an instant his head was a chaos of voices. It
-was as if all the little Selves, even those which had now long been
-silent, were listening, were suddenly fighting among themselves in open
-combat to see what they could make Hazen do.
-
-“That beautiful thing!” cried the Beauty Self. “Keep it--keep it,
-Hazen!”
-
-“You will never have another chance at a fortune if you give it up!”
-cried the Discontented Self.
-
-“If you throw away your chance at a fortune, your life will be a life
-of hard work--and where will your good time come in?” cried the little
-Fun Self, anxiously.
-
-“You will have only labour and no leisure for learning--” warned the
-Knowledge Self.
-
-“What of the Princess Vista? Do you not owe it to her to keep the
-casket? And is it not _right_ that you should keep the casket and grow
-wise and _really_ good and loved and beautiful?” they all argued in
-turn. And above them all sounded the terrible, cracked voice of the
-dwarf, not laughing now, but fighting for his life:--
-
-“Fool! Nothing counts but your chance at fortune. If you part with the
-casket, you part with _me!_”
-
-But sweet and clear through the clamour sounded the solemn insisting of
-the Thought:--
-
-“Give him the casket--give him the casket, Hazen.”
-
-Quickly Hazen knelt beside the old man, and placed the magic casket in
-his hands.
-
-“Lo,” said Prince Hazen, “I have nothing to give you, save only this.
-But it may be that we can yet find some way to release the spirit and
-that then you can have the good fortune that this will give. Take the
-casket--it is yours.”
-
-In an instant, and noiselessly, the magic casket fell in pieces in
-Hazen’s hands, and vanished. And with a soft sound of escaping wings
-the little spirit rose joyously and fluttered toward Hazen, and
-alighted on his breast. There were sudden sweetness and light in all
-the place, and a happiness that bewildered Hazen--and when he looked
-again, the little spirit had disappeared--but his own breast was filled
-with something new and marvellous, as if strange doors to himself had
-opened, and as if the spirit had found lodging there forever.
-
-In the clear silence following upon the babel of the little voices
-of all the mean and petty Selves, Hazen was aware of a voice echoing
-within him like music; and he knew the Thought now better than he knew
-himself, who had so many Selves, and he knew that when it spoke to him
-softly, softly, he would always hear.
-
-“If you had kept the magic casket for yourself,” it said, “the spirit
-would have drooped and died. _It was only by giving the casket away
-that the spirit could ever be free._ It was only when the spirit became
-yours that you could hope to be wise and good and beautiful and worthy
-to be loved. And now where is the Princess Vista’s picture-book?”
-
-All this time Hazen had not lost the picture-book of the princess,
-and now it was lying on the floor near where he was that night
-to have slept. He caught it up and turned the pages, and the old
-familiar pictures which the princess had shown him that morning in the
-window-seat made him long, as he had not longed since he had left the
-palace, to see her again.
-
-He turned to the old man.
-
-“There is a certain princess--” he began.
-
-“Ay,” said the old man, gently, “so there is always, my prince. Go to
-her.”
-
-The mere exquisite presence of that spirit in the room seemed to have
-healed and invigorated the old man, and he had risen to his feet,
-clothed with a new strength. He set about searching in the king’s
-wardrobe for suitable garments for his young prince, and in a cedar
-chest he found vestments of somewhat ancient pattern, but of so rich
-material and so delicately made that the ancient style did but add to
-their beauty.
-
-When he had made Hazen ready, there was never a fairer prince in the
-world. Then the old man led him below stairs and showed him in a
-forgotten room, of which he himself only had the key, a box containing
-the jewels of the queen, his mother. So, bearing these, save one with
-which he purchased a horse for his needs, Prince Hazen set out for the
-palace of the princess.
-
-It chanced that it was early morning when Prince Hazen entered the
-palace grounds which he had left as a furnace boy. And you must know
-that, since his leaving, years had elapsed; for though he had believed
-himself to have stayed with the Merry Lad but one day, and with the
-Bookman but a few days, and but a little time on the hills singing
-songs, and in byways listening to the voices of Idleness, Strength, and
-the rest, and lingering in that fair home where the Dwarf had sent him,
-yet in reality with each one he had spent a year and more, so that now
-he was like someone else.
-
-But the princess’s father’s palace garden was just the same, and Hazen
-entered by the east gate, which still no one could lock; and to be back
-within the garden was as wonderful as bathing in the ocean or standing
-on a high mountain or seeing the dawn. His horse bore him along between
-the flowering shrubs and the hollyhocks; he heard the fountains
-plashing and the song-sparrows singing and the village bells faintly
-sounding; he saw the goldfish and the water-lilies gleam in the pool,
-and the horses cantering about the paddock. And all at once it seemed
-to him that the day was his and the world was his, to do with them what
-he would.
-
-So he galloped round the east wing of the palace, and looked up
-eagerly and longingly toward the princess’s window. And there stood the
-Princess Vista, watching. But when she saw him, she drew far back as if
-she were afraid. And Prince Hazen, as he bowed low in his saddle, could
-think of no word to say to her that seemed a word to be said. He could
-only cry up to her:--
-
-“Oh, Princess Vista. Come down! Come down! Come down--and teach me
-about the whole world.”
-
-He galloped straight to the great entrance way, and leaped from his
-horse, and no one questioned him, for they all knew by his look that he
-came with great authority. And he went to the king’s library, to that
-room which was as wide as a lawn and as high as a tree, and filled with
-mystery, and waited for her, knowing that she would come.
-
-She entered the room almost timidly, as, once upon a time, the little
-furnace boy had entered. And when she saw him waiting for her before
-the window-seat, nothing could have exceeded her terror and her wonder
-and her delight. And now her eyes were looking down, and she did _not_
-ask him what he was doing there.
-
-“Oh, Princess Vista,” he said softly, “I love you. I want to be loved!”
-
-“Who are you--that want so much?” the princess asked--but her eyes
-knew, and her smile knew.
-
-“Someone who has brought back your picture-book,” said Prince Hazen. “I
-pray you, teach it to me again.”
-
-“Nay,” said the princess, softly, “I have taught you a wrong thing. For
-I have taught you that there are many suns. And instead there is only
-one sun, and it brings only one day--and that day is this day!”
-
-It was so that she welcomed him back.
-
-They went to the king, her father, and told him everything. And when he
-knew that his daughter loved Prince Hazen, he restored his kingdom to
-him, and named him his own successor. And Hazen was crowned king, with
-much magnificence, and his father’s courtiers, who were living, were
-returned to his court, and that wise, wonderful old man, who had shown
-him the inside of his own head, was given a place of honour near the
-king.
-
-But on the day of the coronation, louder than the shouts of the people,
-and nearer even than the voice of his queen, sounded that voice of the
-wise and good Self, which was but the Thought, deep within the soul of
-the king:--
-
-“Hail to Hazen--King of All His Selves!”
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-THE WALK
-
-
-“What’s the latest you ever stayed up?” Delia demanded of Mary
-Elizabeth and me.
-
-“I sat up till ten o’clock once when my aunt was coming,” I boasted.
-
-“Once I was on a train that got in at twelve o’clock,” said Mary
-Elizabeth, thoughtfully, “but I was asleep till the train got in. Would
-you call that sitting up till twelve o’clock?”
-
-On the whole, Delia and I decided that you could not impartially call
-it so, and Mary Elizabeth conceded the point. Her next best experience
-was dated at only half past nine.
-
-“I was up till eleven o’clock lots of times.” Delia threw out
-carelessly.
-
-We regarded her with awe. Here was another glory for her list. Already
-we knew that she had slept in a sleeping car, patted an elephant, and
-swum four strokes.
-
-“What’s the earliest you ever got up?” Delia pursued.
-
-Here, too, we proved to have nothing to compete with the order of
-Delia’s risings. However, this might yet be mended. There seemed never
-to be the same household ban on getting up early that there was on
-staying up late.
-
-“Let’s get up some morning before four o’clock and take a walk,” I
-suggested.
-
-“My brother got up at half past three once,” Mary Elizabeth announced.
-
-“Well,” I said, “let’s get up at half past three. Let’s do it to-morrow
-morning.”
-
-Mary Elizabeth and I had stretched a string from a little bell at
-the head of her bed to a little bell at the head of my bed. This the
-authorities permitted us to ring so long as there was discernible a
-light, or any other fixed signal, at the two windows; and also after
-seven o’clock in the morning. But of course the time when we both
-longed most frantically to pull the cord was when either woke at night
-and lay alone in the darkness. In the night I used to put my hand on
-the string and think how, by a touch, I could waken Mary Elizabeth,
-just as if she were in my room, just as if we were hand in hand. I
-used to think what joy it would be if all little children on the same
-side of the ocean were similarly provided, and if no one interfered.
-A little code of signals arose in my mind, a kind of secret code which
-should be heard by nobody save those for whom they were intended--for
-sick children, for frightened children, for children just having a bad
-dream, for motherless children, for cold or tired or lonely children,
-for all children sleepless for any cause. I used to wish that little
-signals like this could be rung for all unhappy children, night or day.
-Why, with all their inventions, had not grown people invented this? Of
-course they would never make things any harder for us than they could
-help (we thought). But why had they not done this thing to make things
-easier?
-
-The half past three proposal was unanimously vetoed within doors: We
-might rise at five o’clock, no earlier. This somewhat took edge from
-the adventure, but we accepted it as next best. Delia was to be waked
-by an alarm clock. Mary Elizabeth and I felt that, by some mysterious
-means, we could waken ourselves; and we two agreed to call each other,
-so to say, by the bells.
-
-When I did waken, it was still quite dark, and when I had found light
-and a clock, I saw that it was only a little after three. As I had
-gone to bed at seven, I was wide awake at three; and it occurred to me
-that I would stay up till time to call Mary Elizabeth. This would be
-at half past four. Besides, stopping up then presented an undoubted
-advantage: It enabled me to skip my bath. Clearly I could not, with
-courtesy, risk rousing the household with many waters.
-
-I dressed in the dark, braided my own hair in the dark--by now I could
-do this save that the plait, when I brought it over my shoulder, still
-would assume a jog--and sat down by the open window. It was one of the
-large nights ... for some nights are undeniably larger than others.
-When I was on the street with my hand in a grown-up hand, the night
-was invariably bounded by trees, fences, houses, lawns, horse-blocks,
-and the like. But when I stepped to the door alone at night, I always
-noticed that it stretched endlessly away. So it was now. I could slip
-out the screen, as I had discovered earlier in the season when I had
-felt the need of feeding a nest of house-wrens in the bird-house below
-my sill--and I took out the screen now, and leaned out in the darkness.
-The stars seemed very near--I am always glad that I did not know how
-far away they are, for they looked so friendly near. If only, I used
-to think, the clouds would form _behind_ the stars and leave them all
-shiny and blurry bright in the rain. What were they? How came they to
-be in our world’s sky?
-
-I suppose that I had been ten minutes at the window that morning when
-I saw a light briefly flash in Mary Elizabeth’s window. Instantly, I
-softly pulled my bell. She answered, and then I could see her, dim in
-the window once more dark.
-
-“It isn’t time yet!” she called softly--our houses were very near.
-
-“Not yet,” I answered, “but I’m going to stay up.”
-
-Mary Elizabeth briefly considered this.
-
-“What for?” she propounded.
-
-I had not thought what for.
-
-“To--why to be up early,” I answered confidently. “I’m all dressed.”
-
-The defence must have carried conviction.
-
-“I will, too,” Mary Elizabeth concluded.
-
-She disappeared and, after a suitable time, reappeared at the window,
-presumably fully clothed. I detached the bell from my bed and sat with
-it in my hand, and I found afterward that she had done the same. From
-time to time we each gave the cord a slight, ecstatic pull. The whole
-mystery of the great night lay in those gentle signals.
-
-It is unfortunate to have to confess that, after a time, the mystery
-palled. But it did. Stars, wide, dark, moonless lawn, empty street,
-all these blurred and merged in a single impression. This was one of
-chilliness. Even calling through the night at intervals, and at the
-imminent risk of being heard, lost its charm, because after a little
-while there was nothing left to call. “How still it is!” and “Nobody
-but us is up in town,” and “Won’t Delia be mad?” lose their edge when
-repeated for about the third time each. Moreover, I was obliged to face
-a new foe: I was getting sleepy.
-
-Without undue disturbance of the cord, I managed to consult the clock
-once more. It was five minutes of four. There remained more than an
-hour to wait! It was I who capitulated.
-
-“Mary Elizabeth,” I said waveringly, “would you care very much if I was
-to lay down just a little to rest my eyes?”
-
-“No, I wouldn’t care,” came with significant alacrity. “I will, too.”
-
-I lay down on the covers and pulled a comforter about me. As I drifted
-off I remember wondering how the dark ever kept awake all night. For it
-was awake. To know that one had only to listen.
-
-We all had a signal which we called a “trill,” made by tongue and
-teeth, with almost the force of a boy and a blade of grass. This,
-produced furiously beneath my window, was what wakened me. Delia stood
-between the two houses, engaged with such absorption in manufacturing
-this sound that she failed to see me at the window. A moment after
-I had hailed her, Mary Elizabeth appeared at her window, looking
-distinctly distraught.
-
-Seeing us fully dressed, Delia’s indignation increased.
-
-“Why didn’t you leave me know you were up?” she demanded shrilly. “It’s
-a quarter past five. I been out here fifteen minutes.”
-
-We were assuring her guiltily that we would be right down when there
-came an interruption.
-
-“_Delia!_”
-
-Delia’s father, in a gray bath-robe, stood at an upper window of their
-house across the street.
-
-“What do you mean by waking up the whole neighbourhood?” he inquired,
-not without reason. “Now I want you to come home.”
-
-“We were going walking,” Delia reminded him.
-
-“You are coming home at once after this proceeding,” Delia’s father
-assured her. “No more words please, Delia.”
-
-He disappeared from the window. Delia moved reluctantly across the
-street. As she went, she threw a resentful glance at Mary Elizabeth and
-me, each.
-
-“I’m sorry, Delia!” we called softly in chorus. She made no reply. Mary
-Elizabeth and I were left staring at each other down our bell-rope,
-no longer taut, but limp, as we had left it earlier.... Even in that
-stress, the unearthly sweetness of the morning smote me--the early sun,
-the early shadows. It all looked so exactly as if it had expected you
-not to be looking. This is the look of outdoors that, _now_, will most
-quickly take me back.
-
-“It wouldn’t be fair to go walking without Delia,” said Mary Elizabeth,
-abruptly and positively.
-
-“No,” I agreed, with equal decision. Then, “We might as well go back to
-bed,” I pursued the subject further.
-
-“Let’s,” said Mary Elizabeth.
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-THE GREAT BLACK HUSH
-
-
-On that special night, which somehow I remember with tenderness, I
-sometimes think now--all these years after--that I should like to have
-been with those solitary, sleepy little figures, trying so hard to get
-near to mystery. I should think that a Star Story must have come in
-anybody’s head to tell them. Like this:--
-
- * * * * *
-
-Once, when it didn’t matter to anybody whether you were late or early,
-or quick or slow, not only because there wasn’t anybody and there
-wasn’t any you, but because it was back in the beginning when there
-were no lates and earlies and quicks and slows, _then_ things began to
-happen in the middle of the Great Black Hush which was all there was to
-everything.
-
-The Great Black Hush reached all the way around the Universe and in
-directions without any names, and it was huge and humble and superior
-and helpless and mighty and in other ways it was very much indeed like
-a man. And as there was nothing to do, the Great Black Hush was bored
-past extinction and almost to creation. For there wasn’t anything else
-about save only the Wind, and the Wind would have nothing whatever to
-do with him and always blew right by.
-
-Now, inasmuch as everything that is now was then going to be created,
-it was all waiting somewhere to be created; and nothing is clearer than
-that. Lines and colours and musics and tops and blocks and flame and
-Noah’s arks and mechanical toys and mountains and paints and planets
-and air and water and alphabets and jumping-jacks, all, all, were
-waiting to be created, and among them waited people. I cannot tell you
-where they waited, because there was no where; but they were waiting,
-as anybody can see, for time to be begun.
-
-Among the people who were waiting about was one special baby, who was
-just big enough to reach out after everything and to try to put it in
-his mouth, and they had an awful time with him. He put his little hands
-on coloured things and on flame things and on air and on water and on
-musics, and he wanted to know what they all were, and he tried to put
-them in his mouth. And his mother was perfectly distracted, and she
-told him so, openly.
-
-[Illustration: “TO SEE WHAT RUNNING AWAY IS REALLY LIKE.”]
-
-“Special Baby,” she said to him openly, “I don’t see why every hair
-in my head is not pure white. And if you don’t stop making so much
-trouble, I’ll run away.”
-
-“Run away,” thought the Special Baby. “Now what thing is that?”
-
-And he stretched out his little hand to see, but there wasn’t anything
-there, and he couldn’t put it in his mouth; so without letting anybody
-know, he started off all by himself to see what running away is really
-like.
-
-He ran and he ran, past lines and colours and blocks and flame and
-music and paint and planets, all waiting about to begin, till he began
-to notice the Great Black Hush, where it lay all humble and important,
-and bored past extinction and almost to creation.
-
-“What thing is that?” thought the Special Baby, and put out his little
-hand to get it and put it in his mouth.
-
-So he touched the Great Black Hush, and under the little hand the Great
-Black Hush felt as never he had felt before. For the Special Baby’s
-hand was soft and wandering and most clinging--any General Baby’s hand
-will give you the idea if you care to try. And it made it seem as if
-there were something to do.
-
-All through his huge, helpless, superior, and mighty being the Great
-Black Hush was stirred, and when the Special Baby was frightened and
-would have gone back, the Great Black Hush did the most astonishing
-things to try to keep him. He plaited the darkness up like a ruffle
-and waved it like a flag and opened it like a flower and shut it like
-a door and poured it about like water, all to keep the Special Baby
-amused. But though the Special Baby tried to put most of these and
-_all_ the dark in his mouth, still on the whole he was badly frightened
-and wanted his mother, and he began to cry to show how much he wanted
-her. And then the Great Black Hush was at his wits’ end.
-
-“Now, who is there to be the mother of this Special Baby?” he cried in
-despair, for there wasn’t anything else anywhere around, save only the
-Wind, and the Wind always blew right by. But the blowing by must have
-been because the Great Black Hush had never spoken before, for these
-were the first words that ever he had said; and the Wind, on hearing
-them, stopped still as a stone, and listened.
-
-“Would I do?” the Wind asked, and the Great Black Hush was so
-astonished that he almost dropped the Special Baby.
-
-“Would I do?” asked the Wind again, and made the dark like blown
-garments and like long, blown hair and tender motions, such as women
-make. And she took the Special Baby in her arms and rocked him as
-gently as boughs, so that he laughed with delight and tried to put the
-wind in his mouth and finally went to sleep, with his beads on.
-
-“_Now_ what’ll we do?” said the Great Black Hush, hanging about, all
-helpless and mighty.
-
-“We can get along without a cradle,” said the Wind, “because I will
-rock him to sleep in my arms.” (This was before time began and before
-they laid them down to go to sleep alone in a dark room.) “But we
-ought, we _ought_,” she added, “to have something for him to play with
-when he wakes up.” (This was before time began and before anybody ate.
-But they always played. That came first.)
-
-“If he had something to play with, what would that look like?” asked
-the Great Black Hush, all helpless.
-
-“It musn’t have points like scissors, or ends like string, and the
-paint mustn’t come off. I think,” said the Wind, “it ought to look like
-a shining ball.”
-
-“By my distance,” said the Great Black Hush, all mighty, “that’s what
-it shall look like.”
-
-Then he began to make a plaything, and he worked all over him and all
-over everywhere at the fashioning. I don’t know how he did it, because
-I wasn’t there, and I can’t reckon how long it took him, because there
-wasn’t any time, but I know some things about it all, and one is that
-he finally got it done.
-
-“Look!” the Great Black Hush cried to the Wind,--for she paid more
-attention to the Special Baby now than she did to him. And when she
-looked, there hung in the sky, a great, enormous, shining ball.
-
-“That’s big enough so he can’t get it in his mouth,” she said
-approvingly. “It’s really ginginatic.”
-
-“You mean gigantic, dear,” said the Great Black Hush, all superior. But
-the Wind didn’t care because words hadn’t been used long enough to fit
-closely, and besides he had said “dear” and she knew what _that_ meant.
-“Dear” came before “gigantic.”
-
-“Now wake him up,” said the Great Black Hush, “to play with it.”
-
-But this the Wind would by no means do. She said the Special Baby must
-have his sleep out or he’d be cross. And the Great Black Hush wondered
-however she knew that, and he went away, all humble, and amused himself
-making more playthings till the baby woke up. And all the playthings
-looked like shining balls, because that was the only kind of plaything
-the Wind had told him to make and he didn’t know whether anything
-else would do. So he made them by the thousands and started them all
-swinging because he thought the Special Baby would like them to do that.
-
-By-and-by--there was always by-and-by before there was any time, and
-that is why so many people prefer it--when he couldn’t stay any longer,
-he went back where the Wind waited, cuddling the Special Baby close.
-
-“Sh-h-h-h,” said the Wind, but she was too late, and the Special Baby
-woke up, with wide eyes and a smile in them.
-
-But he wasn’t cross. For the minute he opened his eyes he saw all
-the thousands of shining balls hanging in the darkness and swinging,
-swinging, and he crowed with delight and stretched out his little hands
-for them, but they were so big he couldn’t put them in his mouth and so
-he might reach out all he pleased.
-
-“_Ho_,” said the Great Black Hush, “now everything is as it never was
-before.”
-
-But the Wind sighed a little.
-
-“I wish everything were more so,” she said. “I ought to have a place to
-take the Special Baby and make his clothes and mend his socks and tie
-on his shoes and rub his little back. Also, I want to learn a lullaby,
-and this is so public.”
-
-Then the Great Black Hush thought and thought, and remembered that away
-back on the Outermost Way and beneath the Wild Wing of Things, there
-was a tidy little place that might be just the thing. It was _not_ up
-to date, because there wasn’t any date, but still he thought it might
-be just the thing.
-
-“By the welkin,” he said, “I know a place that is the place. I’ll go
-and sweep it out.”
-
-“Not so fast,” said the Wind, gently. “I go also. I want to be sure
-that there are enough closets--” or whatever would have corresponded to
-that before there was any Modern at all.
-
-So the three went away together and groped about on the Outermost Way
-and beneath the Wild Wing of Things, and there the Wind swept it out
-tidily and there they made their home. And when it was all done,--which
-took a great while because the Wind kept wanting additions put
-on,--they came out and sat at the door of the place, the Great Black
-Hush and the Wind and the Special Baby between.
-
-And as they did that a wonderful thing was true. For now that the
-Great Black Hush had withdrawn to his new home, lo, all the swinging
-plaything balls were shining through space, and there was light. And
-the man and the woman and the child at the door of the first home
-looked in one another’s faces. And the man and the woman were afraid of
-the light and their look clung each to the other’s in that fear; but
-the Special Baby stretched out his little hands and tried to put the
-light in his mouth.
-
-“Don’t, dear,” said the woman, and her voice sounded quite natural.
-
-“Pay attention to me and not to the Baby,” said the man, and _his_
-voice sounded quite natural, and very mighty, so that the woman
-obeyed--until the Special Baby wanted her again.
-
-And that was when she made her lullaby, and it was the first song:--
-
-WIND SONG[B]
-
- Horn of the morning!
- And the little night pipings fail.
- The day is launched like a hollow ship
- With the sun for a sail.
- The way is wide and blue and lone
- With all its miles inviolate
- Save for the swinging stars we’ve sown
- And a thistle of cloud remote and blown.
- Oh, I passion for something nearer than these!
- How shall I know that this live thing is I
- With only the morning for proof and the sky?
- I long for a music more soft to its keys,
- For a touch that shall teach me the new sureties.
- Give me some griefs and some loyalties
- And a child’s mouth on my own!
-
- Lullaby, lullaby,
- Babe of the world, swing high,
- Swing low.
- I am a mother you never may know,
- But oh
- And oh, how long the wind will know you,
- With lullabies for the dead night through.
- Babe of the earth, as I blow ...
- Swing high,
- To touch at the sky,
- And at last lie low.
- Lullaby....
-
-[B] Reproduced by permission of _The Craftsman_.
-
-But meanwhile the Special Baby’s real mother--the one who had told him
-about running away--was hunting and hunting and _hunting_ for him and
-going nearly distracted and expecting every hair in her head to turn
-pure white. She went about among all the rest, asking and calling and
-wanting to know, and finally she made up her mind that she would not
-stay where she was, but that she would run away and hunt for him. And
-she did. And when all the things that were waiting to be born heard
-about it, there was no holding them back either. So out they came,
-lines and colours and musics and tops and blocks and flame and Noah’s
-arks and mechanical toys and mountains and planets and paints and air
-and water and alphabets and jumping-jacks, all, all came out in the
-wake of the lost Special Baby. And some came early and some came late,
-some hurried and some hung back. And among all these came people, and
-many and many of the to-be-born things were hidden in peoples’ hearts
-and did not appear till long after; and this was true of some things
-which I have not mentioned at all, and of some that have not appeared
-even yet. But some people did not bring anything in their hearts, and
-they merely observed that it was a shameful waste, so many shining
-balls swinging about and only the Special Baby to play with them, and
-_he_ evidently eternally lost.
-
-But the Special Baby’s real mother didn’t say a word. She only ran and
-ran on, asking and calling and wanting to know. And at last she came
-to the Outermost Way and near the Wild Wing of Things, and the Special
-Baby heard her coming. And when he heard that, he made his choicest
-coo-noise in his throat and he stretched out his arms to his real
-mother that he was used to.
-
-And when his real mother heard the coo-noise, she brushed aside the
-Wild Wing of Things and took him in her arms--and she never saw the
-Wind and the Great Black Hush at all, because they are that kind. So
-she carried the Special Baby off, kicking and crowing and catching at
-the swinging, shining balls--but they were too big to put in his mouth
-so there was no danger--and _she_ hunted up a place where she could
-make his clothes and mend his socks and tie on his shoes and rub his
-little back. But about them all things were going on, and everybody
-else was doing the same thing, so nobody noticed.
-
-Then, all alone before their home on the Outermost Way and beneath the
-Wild Wing of Things that was all brushed aside, the Great Black Hush
-and the Wind looked at each other. And their look clung, as when they
-had first found light, and they were afraid. For now all space was
-glowing and shining with swinging balls, and all the things were being
-born and making homes, and time was rushing by so fast that it awed
-them who had never seen such a thing before.
-
-“_What_ have we done?” demanded the Great Black Hush.
-
-But the Wind was not so much concerned with that. She only grieved and
-grieved for the Special Baby. And the Great Black Hush comforted her,
-and I think he comforts her unto this day.
-
-Only at night. Then, as you know, the Great Black Hush comes from the
-Outermost Way and fills the air, and with him often and often comes the
-Wind. And together they wander among all the shining balls--you will
-know this, if you listen, on many a night--and together they look for
-the Special Baby. But _he_ has grown up, long and long ago, only he
-still stretches out his hands to everything, for he is the way he was
-made.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-THE DECORATION OF INDEPENDENCE
-
-
-That year we celebrated Fourth of July in the Wood Yard.
-
-The town had decided not to have a celebration, though we did not know
-who had done the actual deciding, and this we used to talk about.
-
-“How can the _town_ decide anything?” Delia asked sceptically. “When
-does it do it?”
-
-“Why,” said Margaret Amelia--to whom, her father being a judge, we
-always turned to explain matters of state, “its principal folks say so.”
-
-“Who are its principal folks?” I demanded.
-
-“Why,” said Margaret Amelia, “I should think you could tell that. They
-have the stores and offices and live in the residence part.”
-
-I pondered this, for most of the folk in the little town did neither of
-these things.
-
-“Why don’t they have another Fourth of July for the rest, then,” I
-suggested, “and leave them settle on their own celebration?”
-
-Margaret Amelia looked shocked.
-
-“I guess you don’t know much about the Decoration of Independence,”
-said she.
-
-The Decoration of Independence--we all called it this--was, then, to go
-by without attention because the Town said so.
-
-“The Town,” said Mary Elizabeth, dreamily, “the Town. It sounds like
-somebody tall, very high, and pointed at the top, with the rest of her
-dark and long and flowy--don’t it?”
-
-“City,” she and I were agreed, sounded like somebody light and sitting
-down with her skirts spread out.
-
-“Village” sounded like a little soft hollow, not much of any colour,
-with a steeple to it.
-
-“I like ‘Town’ best,” Mary Elizabeth said. “It sounds more like a
-mother-woman. ‘City’ sounds like a lady-woman. And ‘Village’ sounds
-like a grandma-woman. I like ‘Town’ best.”
-
-“What I want to do,” Margaret Amelia said restlessly, “is to spend
-my Fourth of July dollar. I had a Fourth of July dollar ever since
-Christmas. It’s no fun spending it with no folks and bands and wagons.”
-
-“I’ve got my birthday dollar yet,” I contributed. “If I spent it for
-Fourth of July, I’d be glad of it, but if I spend it for anything else,
-I’ll want it back.”
-
-“I had a dollar,” said Calista, gloomily, “but I used a quarter of
-it up on the circus. Now I’m glad I did. I wish’t I’d stayed to the
-sideshow.”
-
-“Stitchy Branchitt says,” Betty offered, “that the boys are all going
-to Poynette and spend their money there. Poynette’s got exercises.”
-
-Oh, the boys would get a Fourth. Trust them. But what about us? We
-could not go to Poynette. We could not rise at three A.M. and
-fire off fire-crackers. No fascinating itinerant hucksters would come
-the way of a town that held no celebration. We had nowhere to spend our
-substance, and to do that was to us what Fourth of July implied.
-
-The New Boy came wandering by, eating something. Boys were always
-eating something that looked better than anything we saw in the
-candy-shop. Where did they get it? This that he had was soft and pink
-and chewy, and it rapidly disappeared as he approached us.
-
-Margaret Amelia Rodman threw back her curls and flashed a sudden
-radiant smile at the New Boy. She became quite another person from the
-judicious, somewhat haughty creature whom we knew.
-
-“Let’s us get up a Fourth of July celebration,” she said.
-
-We held our breath. It never would have occurred to us. But now that
-she suggested it, why not?
-
-The New Boy leaped up on a gate-post and sat looking down at us,
-chewing.
-
-“How?” he inquired.
-
-“Get up a partition,” said Margaret Amelia. “Circulate it like for
-take-a-walk at school or teacher’s present, and all sign.”
-
-“And take it to who?” asked the New Boy.
-
-Margaret Amelia considered.
-
-“My father,” she proposed.
-
-The scope of the idea was enormous. Her father was a judge and wore
-very black clothes every day, and never spoke to any of us. Therefore
-he must be a great man. Doubtless he could do anything.
-
-Boys, as we knew them, usually flouted everything that we
-said, but--possibly because of Margaret Amelia’s manner of
-presentation--this suggestion seemed to strike the New Boy favourably.
-Afterward we learned that this was probably partly owing to the fact
-that the fare to Poynette was going to eat distressingly into the boys’
-Fourth money, unless they walked the ten miles.
-
-By common consent we had Margaret Amelia and the New Boy draw up the
-“partition.” But we all spent a long time on it, and at length it
-read:--
-
- * * * * *
-
- “We the Undersigned want there should be a July 4 this year.
- We the Undersigned would like a big one. But if it can’t be so
- very big account of no money, We the Undersigned would like one
- anyway, and hereby respectfully partition about this in the
- name of the Decoration of Independence.”
-
-There was some doubt whether or not to close this document with “Always
-sincerely” but we decided to add only the names, and these we set out
-to secure, the New Boy carrying one copy and Margaret Amelia another. I
-remember that, to honour the occasion, she put on a pale blue crocheted
-shawl of her mother’s and we all trailed in her wake, worshipfully.
-
-The lists grew amazingly. Long before noon we had to get new papers. By
-night we had every child that we knew, save Stitchy Branchitt. He had a
-railroad pass to Poynette, and he favoured the out-of-town celebration.
-But the personal considerations of economic conditions were as usual
-sufficient to swing the event, and the next morning I suppose that
-twenty-five or thirty of us, bearing the names of three or four times
-as many, marched into Judge Rodman’s office.
-
-On the stairs Margaret Amelia had a thought.
-
-“Does your father pay taxes?” she inquired of Mary Elizabeth--who was
-with us, having been sent down town for starch.
-
-“On his watch--he used to,” said Mary Elizabeth, doubtfully. “But he
-hasn’t got that any more.”
-
-“Well, I don’t know,” said Margaret Amelia, “whether we’d really
-ought to of put down any names that their fathers don’t pay taxes. It
-may make a difference. I guess you’re the only one we got that their
-fathers don’t--that he ain’t--”
-
-I fancy that what Margaret Amelia had in mind was that Mary Elizabeth’s
-father was the only one who lived meanly; for many of the others must
-have gone untaxed, but they lived in trim, rented houses, and we knew
-no difference.
-
-Mary Elizabeth was visibly disturbed.
-
-“I never thought of that,” she said. “Maybe I better scratch me off.”
-
-But there seemed to me to be something indefinably the matter with this.
-
-“The Fourth of July is for everybody, isn’t it?” I said. “Didn’t the
-whole country think of it?”
-
-“I think it’s like a town though,” said Margaret Amelia. “The principal
-folks decided it, I’m sure. And they _always_ pay taxes.”
-
-We appealed to the New Boy, as authority superior even to Margaret
-Amelia. How was this--did the Decoration of Independence mean
-everybody, or not? Could Mary Elizabeth sign the partition since her
-father paid no taxes?
-
-“Well,” said the New Boy, “it _says_ everybody, don’t it? But nobody
-ever gets to ride in the parade but distinguished citizens--it always
-says them, you know. I s’pose maybe it meant the folks that pays the
-taxes, only it didn’t like to put it in.”
-
-“I better take my name off,” said Mary Elizabeth, decidedly. “It might
-hurt.”
-
-So the New Boy produced a stump of pencil, and we found the right
-paper, and held it up against the wall of the stairway, and Mary
-Elizabeth scratched her name off.
-
-“I won’t come up, then,” she whispered to me, and made her way down the
-stairs, her head held very high.
-
-Judge Rodman was in his office--he makes, I find, my eternal picture
-of “judge,” short, thick, frock-coated, bearded, bald, spectacled,
-square-toed, and with his hands full of loose papers and his
-watch-chain shining.
-
-“Bless us,” he said, too, as a judge should.
-
-Margaret Amelia was ahead,--still in the pale blue crocheted
-shawl,--and she and the New Boy laid down the papers, and the judge
-picked them up, and read. His big pink face flushed the more, and
-he took off his spectacles and brushed his eyes, and he cleared his
-throat, and beamed down on us, and stood nodding.... I remember that he
-had an editorial in his paper the next night called “A Lesson to the
-Community,” and another, later, “Out of the Mouths of Babes”--for Judge
-Rodman was a very great man, and owned the newspaper and the brewery
-and the principal department store, and had been to the legislature;
-and his newspaper was always thick with editorials about honouring the
-flag and reverencing authority and the beauties of home life--Miss
-Messmore used to cut them out and read them to us at General Exercises.
-
-So Judge Rodman called a Town meeting in the Engine House, and we all
-hung about the door downstairs, because they said that if children
-went to the meeting, they would scrape their feet on the bare floor
-so that nobody could hear a sound; and so we waited outside until we
-heard hands clapped and the Doxology sung, and then we knew that it had
-passed.
-
-We were having a new Court House that year, so the Court House yard
-was not available for exercises: and the school grounds had been sown
-with grass seed in the beginning of vacation, and the market-place was
-nothing but a small vacant lot. So there was only one place to have
-the exercises: the Wood Yard. And as there was very little money to
-do anything with, it was voted to ask the women to take charge of the
-celebration and arrange something “tasty, up-to-date, and patriotic,”
-as Judge Rodman put it. They set themselves to do it. And none of
-us who were the children then will ever forget that Fourth of July
-celebration--yet this is not because of what the women planned, nor of
-anything that the committee of which Judge Rodman was chairman thought
-to do for the sake of the day.
-
-Our discussion of their plans was not without pessimism.
-
-“Of course what they get up won’t be any _real_ good,” the New Boy
-advanced. “They’ll stick the school organ up on the platform, and
-that sounds awful skimpy outdoors. And the church choirs’ll sing. And
-somebody’ll stand up and scold and go on about nothing. But it’ll get
-folks here, and balloon men, and stuff to sell, and a band; so I s’pose
-we can stand the other doin’s.”
-
-“And there’s fireworks on the canal bank in the evening,” we reminded
-him.
-
-Fourth of July morning began as usual before it dawned. The New Boy and
-the ten of his tribe assembled at half past three on the lawn between
-our house and that of the New Family, and, at a rough estimate, each
-fired off the cost of his fare to Poynette and return. Mary Elizabeth
-and I awoke and listened, giving occasional ecstatic pulls at our bell.
-Then we rose and watched the boys go ramping on toward other fields,
-and, we breathed the dim beauty of the hour, and, I think, wondered if
-it knew that it was Fourth of July, and we went back to bed, conscious
-that we were missing a good sixth of the day, a treasure which, as
-usual, the boys were sharing.
-
-After her work was done, Mary Elizabeth and I took our bags of
-torpedoes and popped them off on the front bricks. Delia was allowed
-to have fire-crackers if she did not shoot them off by herself, and
-she was ardently absorbed in them on their horse-block, with her
-father. Calista had brothers, and had put her seventy-five cents in
-with their money on condition that she be allowed to stay with them
-through the day. Margaret Amelia and Betty always stopped at home until
-annual giant crackers were fired from before their piazza, with Judge
-Rodman officiating in his shirt-sleeves, and Mrs. Rodman watching in
-a starched white “wrapper” on the veranda and uttering little cries,
-all under the largest flag that there was in the town, floating from
-the highest flagpole. Mary Elizabeth and I had glimpses of them all in
-a general survey which we made, resulting in satisfactory proof that
-the expected merry-go-round, the pop-corn wagon, a chocolate cart, an
-ice-cream cone man, and a balloon man and woman were already posted
-expectantly about.
-
-“If it wasn’t for them, though,” observed Mary Elizabeth to me, “the
-town wouldn’t be really acting like Fourth of July, do you think so? It
-just kind of lazes along, like a holiday.”
-
-We looked critically at the sunswept street. The general aspect of the
-time was that people had seized upon it to do a little extra watering,
-or some postponed weeding, or to tinker at the screens.
-
-“How could it act, though?” I inquired.
-
-“Well,” said Mary Elizabeth, “a river flows, don’t it? And I s’pose a
-mountain towers. And the sea keeps a-coming in ... and they all act
-like themselves. Only just a Town don’t take any notice of itself--even
-on the Fourth.”
-
-That afternoon we were all dressed in our white dresses--“Mine used
-to have a sprig in it,” said Mary Elizabeth, “but it’s so faded out
-anybody’d ’most say it was white, don’t you think so?”--and we
-children met at the Rodmans’--where Margaret Amelia and Betty appeared
-in white embroidered dresses and blue ribbons and blue stockings, and
-we marched down the hill, behind the band, to the Wood Yard. The Wood
-Yard had great flags and poles set at intervals, with bunting festooned
-between, and the platform was covered with bunting, and the great
-open space of the yard was laid with board benches. Place in front
-was reserved for us, and already the rest of the town packed the Yard
-and hung about the fences. Stitchy Branchitt had given up his journey
-to Poynette after all, and had established a lemonade stand at the
-Wood Yard gate--“a fool thing to do,” the New Boy observed plainly.
-“He knows we’ve spent all we had, and the big folks never think
-your stuff’s clean.” But Stitchy was enormously enjoying himself by
-deafeningly shouting:--
-
-“Here’s what you get--here’s what you get--here’s what you get.
-Cheap--cheap--_cheap_!”
-
-“Quit cheepin’ like some kind o’ bir-r-rd,” said the New Boy, out of
-one corner of his mouth, as he passed him.
-
-Just inside the Wood Yard gate I saw, with something of a shock, Mary
-Elizabeth’s father standing. He was leaning against the fence, with
-his arms folded, and as he caught the look of Mary Elizabeth, who was
-walking with me, he smiled, and I was further surprised to see how
-kind his eyes were. They were almost like my own father’s eyes. This
-seemed to me somehow a very curious thing, and I turned and looked at
-Mary Elizabeth, and thought: “Why, it’s her _father_--just the same as
-mine.” It surprised me, too, to see him there. When I came to think of
-it, I had never before seen him where folk were. Always, unless Mary
-Elizabeth were with him, he had been walking alone, or sitting down
-where other people never sat.
-
-Judge Rodman was on the platform, and as soon as the band and the
-choirs would let him--he made several false starts at rhetorical pauses
-in the music--he introduced a clergyman who had always lived in the
-town and who prayed for the continuance of peace and the safe conquest
-of all our enemies. Then Judge Rodman himself made the address, having
-generously consented to do so when it was proposed to keep the money
-in the town by hiring a local speaker. He began with the Norsemen and
-descended through Queen Isabella and Columbus and the Colonies, making
-a détour of Sir Walter Raleigh and his cloak, Benedict Arnold, Israel
-Putnam and Pocahontas, and so by way of Valley Forge and the Delaware
-to Faneuil Hall and the spirit of 1776. It was a grand flight, filled
-with what were afterward freely referred to as magnificent passages
-about the storm, the glory of war, and the love of our fellow-men.
-
-(“Supposing you happen to love the enemy,” said Mary Elizabeth,
-afterward.
-
-“Well, a pretty thing that would be to do,” said the New Boy, shocked.
-
-“We had it in the Sunday school lesson,” Mary Elizabeth maintained.
-
-“Oh, well,” said the New Boy. “I don’t mean about such things. I mean
-about what you _do_.”
-
-But I remember that Mary Elizabeth still looked puzzled.)
-
-Especially was Judge Rodman’s final sentence generally repeated for
-days afterward:--
-
-“At Faneuil Hall,” said the judge, “the hour at last had struck. The
-hands on the face of the clock stood still. ‘The force of Nature could
-no further go.’ The supreme thing had been accomplished. Henceforth
-we were embalmed in the everlasting and unchangeable essence of
-freedom--freedom--_freedom_.”
-
-Indeed, he held our attention from the first, both because he did not
-read what he said, and because the ice in the pitcher at his elbow had
-melted before he began and did not require watching.
-
-Then came the moment when, having completed his address, he took up
-the Decoration of Independence, to read it; and began the hunt for his
-spectacles. We watched him go through his pockets, but we did so with
-an interest which somewhat abated when he began the second round.
-
-“What _is_ the Decoration of Independence, anyhow?” I whispered to Mary
-Elizabeth, our acquaintance with it having been limited to learning it
-“by heart” in school.
-
-“Why, don’t you know?” Mary Elizabeth returned. “It’s that thing Miss
-Messmore can say so fast. It’s when we was the British.”
-
-“Who decorated it?” I wanted to know.
-
-“George Washington,” replied Mary Elizabeth.
-
-“How?” I pressed it. “How’d he do it?”
-
-“I don’t know--but I think that’s what he wanted of the cherry
-blossoms,” said she.
-
-At this point Judge Rodman gave up the search.
-
-“I deeply regret,” said he, “that I shall be obliged to forego my
-reading of our national document which, next to the Constitution
-itself, best embodies our unchanging principles.”
-
-And then he added something which smote the front rows suddenly
-breathless:--
-
-“However, it occurs to me, since this is preeminently the children’s
-celebration and since I am given to understand that our public schools
-now bestow due and proper attention upon the teaching of civil
-government, that it will be a fitting thing, a moving thing even, to
-hear these words of our great foundation spoken in childish tones. Miss
-Messmore, can you, as teacher of the city schools, in the grades where
-the idea of our celebration so fittingly originated, among the tender
-young, can you recommend, madam, perhaps, one of your bright pupils
-to repeat for us these undying utterances whose commitment has now
-become, as I understand it, a part of our public school curriculum?”
-
-There was an instant’s pause, and then I heard Margaret Amelia Rodman’s
-name spoken. Miss Messmore had uttered it. Judge Rodman was repeating
-it, smiling blandly down with a pleased diffidence.
-
-“There can be no one more fitted to do this, Judge Rodman,” Miss
-Messmore had promptly said, “than your daughter, Margaret Amelia, at
-whose suggestion this celebration, indeed, has come about.”
-
-Poor Margaret Amelia. In spite of her embroidered gown, her blue
-ribbons, and her blue stockings, I have seldom seen anyone look so
-wretched as did she when they made her mount that platform. To give her
-courage her father met her, and took her hand. And then, in his pride
-and confidence, something else occurred to him.
-
-“Tell us, Margaret Amelia,” he said with a gesture infinitely paternal,
-“how came the children to think of demanding of us wise-heads that we
-give observance to this day which we had already voted to let slip past
-unattended? What spirit moved the children to this act?”
-
-At first Margaret Amelia merely twisted, and fingered her sash at
-the side. Margaret Amelia was always called on for visitors’ days,
-and the like. She could usually command her faculties and give a
-straightforward answer, not so much because of what she knew as because
-of her unfailing self-confidence. Of this her father was serenely
-aware; but, aware also that the situation made unusual demands, he
-concluded to help her somewhat.
-
-“How came the children,” he encouragingly put it, “to think of making
-this fine effort to save our National holiday this year?”
-
-Margaret Amelia straightened slightly. She faced her audience with
-something of her native confidence, and told them:--
-
-“Why,” she said, “we all had some Fourth of July money, and there
-wasn’t going to be any way to spend it.”
-
-A ripple of laughter ran round, and Judge Rodman’s placid pink turned
-to purple.
-
-“I fear,” he observed gravely, “that the immediate nature of the event
-has somewhat obscured the real significance of the children’s most
-superior movement. Now, my child! Miss Messmore thinks that you should
-recite for us at least a portion of the Declaration of Independence.
-Will you do so?”
-
-Margaret Amelia looked at him, down at us, away toward the waiting Wood
-Yard, and then at Miss Messmore.
-
-“Is it that about ‘The shades of night were falling fast’?” she
-demanded.
-
-In the roar of laughter that followed, Margaret Amelia ran down, poor
-child, and sobbed on Miss Messmore’s shoulder. I never think of that
-moment without something of a return of my swelling sympathy for her
-who suffered this species of martyrdom, and so needlessly. I have seen,
-out of schools and out of certain of our superstitions, many martyrdoms
-result, but never one that has touched me more.
-
-I do not know whether something of this feeling was in the voice that
-we next heard speaking, or whether that which animated it was only its
-own bitterness. That voice sounded, clear and low-pitched, through the
-time’s confusion.
-
-“I will read the Declaration of Independence,” it said.
-
-And making his way through the crowd, and mounting the platform steps,
-we saw Mary Elizabeth’s father.
-
-Instinctively I put out my hand to her. But he was wholly himself,
-and this I think that she knew from the first. He was neatly dressed,
-and he laid his shabby hat on the table and picked up the book with a
-tranquil air of command. I remember how frail he looked as he buttoned
-his worn coat, and began to read.
-
-“‘We, the people of the United States--’”
-
-It was the first time that I had ever thought of Mary Elizabeth’s
-father as to be classed with anybody. He had never had employment, he
-belonged to no business, to no church, to no class of any sort. He
-merely lived over across the tracks, and he went and came alone. And
-here he was saying “_We_, the people of the United States,” just as if
-he belonged.
-
-When my vague fear had subsided lest they might stop his reading
-because he was not a taxpayer, I listened for the first time in my life
-to what he read. To be sure, I had--more or less--learned it. Now I
-listened.
-
-“Free and equal,” I heard him say, and I wondered what this meant.
-“Free and equal.” But there were Mary Elizabeth and I, were we equal?
-Perhaps, though, it didn’t mean little girls--only grown-ups. But there
-were Mary Elizabeth’s father and mother, and all the other fathers
-and mothers, they were grown up, and were they equal? And what were
-they free from, I wondered. Perhaps, though, I didn’t know what these
-words meant. “Free and equal” sounded like fairies, but folks I was
-accustomed to think of as burdened, and as different from one another,
-as Judge Rodman was different from Mary Elizabeth’s father. This,
-however, was the first time that ever I had caught the word right: Not
-Decoration, but Declaration of Independence, it seemed!
-
-Mary Elizabeth’s father finished, and closed the book, and stood for
-a moment looking over the Wood Yard. He was very tall and pale, and
-seeing him with something of dignity in his carriage I realized with
-astonishment that, if he were “dressed up,” he would look just like
-the men in the choir, just like the minister himself. Then suddenly
-he smiled round at us all, and even broke into a moment of soft and
-pleasant laughter.
-
-“It has been a long time,” he said, “since I have had occasion to
-remember the Declaration of Independence. I am glad to have had it
-called to my attention. We are in danger of forgetting about it--some
-of us. May I venture to suggest that, when it is taught in the schools,
-it be made quite clear to whom this document refers. And for the rest,
-my friends, God bless us all--some day.”
-
-“Bless us,” was what Judge Rodman had said. I remember wondering if
-they meant the same thing.
-
-He turned and went down the steps, and at the foot he staggered a
-little, and I saw with something of pride that it was my father who
-went to him and led him away.
-
-At once the band struck gayly into a patriotic air, and the people on
-all the benches got to their feet, and the men took off their hats. And
-above the music I heard Stitchy Branchitt beginning to shout again:--
-
-“Here’s what you get--here’s what you get--here’s what you get!
-Something cheap--cheap--_cheap!_”
-
- * * * * *
-
-When I came home from the fireworks with Delia’s family and Mary
-Elizabeth, my father and mother were sitting on the veranda.
-
-“It’s we who are to blame,” I heard my father saying, “though we’re
-fine at glossing it over.”
-
-I wondered what had happened, and I sat down on the top step and began
-to untie my last torpedo from the corner of my handkerchief. Mary
-Elizabeth had one left, too, and we had agreed to throw them on the
-stone window-sills of our rooms as a final salute.
-
-“Let’s ask her now,” said father.
-
-Mother leaned toward me.
-
-“Dear,” she said, “father has been having a talk with Mary Elizabeth’s
-father and mother. And--when her father isn’t here any more--which may
-not be long now, we think ... would you like us to have Mary Elizabeth
-come and live here?”
-
-“With us?” I cried. “_With us?_”
-
-Yes, they meant with us.
-
-“To work?” I demanded.
-
-“To be,” mother said.
-
-“Oh, yes, _yes!_” I welcomed it. “But her father--where will he be?”
-
-“In a little while now,” father said, “he will be free--and perhaps
-even equal.”
-
-I did not understand this wholly. Besides, there was far too much to
-think about. I turned toward the house of the New Family. A light
-glowed in Mary Elizabeth’s room. I brought down my torpedo on the
-brick walk, and it exploded merrily, and from Mary Elizabeth’s window
-came an answering pop.
-
-“Then Mary Elizabeth will get free and equal too!” I cried joyously.
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-EARTH-MOTHER
-
-
-And for that day and that night, and for all the days and all the
-nights, I should like to tell a story about the Earth, and about some
-of the things that it keeps expecting.
-
-And if it were Sometime Far Away--say 1950--or 2050--or 3050--I should
-like to meet some Children of Then, and tell them this story about Now,
-and hear them all talk of what a curious place the earth must have been
-long ago, and of how many things it did not yet do.
-
-And their Long Ago is our Now!
-
- * * * * *
-
-For ages and ages (I should say to the Children of Then) the Earth was
-a great round place of land and water, with trees, fields, cities,
-mountains, and the like dotted about on it in a pattern; and it spun
-and spun, out in space, like an enormous engraved ball tossed up in the
-air from somewhere. And many people thought that this was all there was
-to know about it, and after school they shut up their geographies and
-went about engraving new trees, fields, cities, and such things on the
-outside of the earth. And they truly thought that this was All, and
-they kept on doing it, rather tired but very independent.
-
-Now the Earth had a friend and companion whom nobody thought much
-about. It was Earth’s Shadow, cast by the sun in the way that any other
-shadow is cast, but it was such a big shadow that of course it fell
-far, far out in space. And as Earth went round, naturally its Shadow
-went round, and if one could have looked down, one would have seen the
-Shadow sticking out and out, so that the Earth and its Shadow-handle
-would have seemed almost like a huge saucepan filled with cities and
-people, all being held out over the sun, to get them done.
-
-Among the cities was one very beautiful City. She wore robes of
-green or of white, delicately embroidered with streets in a free and
-exquisite pattern, and her hair was like a flowing river, and at night
-she put on many glorious jewels. And she had the power to change
-herself at will into a woman. This was a power, however, which she had
-never yet used, and indeed she did not yet know wholly that she had
-this power, but she used to dream about it, and sometimes she used to
-sing about the dream, softly, to herself. Men thought that this song
-was the roar of the City’s traffic, but it was not so.
-
-Now the Earth was most anxious for this City to become a woman because,
-although the Earth whirled like an enormous engraved ball and seemed
-like a saucepan held over the sun, still all the time it was really
-just the Earth, and it was very human and tired and discouraged, and
-it needed a woman to rest it and to sing to it and to work with it, in
-her way. But there were none, because all the ordinary women were busy
-with _their_ children. So the only way seemed to be for the City to be
-a woman, as she knew how to be; and the Earth was most anxious to have
-this happen. And it tried to see how it could bring this about.
-
-I think that the Earth may have asked the Moon, because she is a woman
-and might be expected to know something about it. But the Moon, as
-usual, was asleep on the sky, with a fine mosquito-netting of mist all
-about her, and she said not a word. (If you look at the Moon, you
-can see how like a beautiful, sleeping face she seems.) I think that
-the Earth may have asked Mars, too, because he is so very near that
-it would be only polite to consult him. But he said: “I’m only a few
-million years old yet. Don’t expect me to understand either cities or
-people.” And finally the Earth asked its Shadow.
-
-“Shadow, dear,” it said, “you are pretty deep. Can’t you tell me how to
-make this City turn into a woman? For I want her to work with me, in
-_her_ way.”
-
-The Shadow, who did nothing but run to keep up with the Earth, let a
-few thousand miles sweep by, and then it said:--
-
-“Really, I wouldn’t know. I’m not up on much but travel.”
-
-“Well,” said the Earth, “then please just ask the Uttermost Spaces. You
-continually pass by that way and somebody ought to know something.”
-
-So the Shadow swept along the Uttermost Spaces and made an
-abyss-to-abyss canvass.
-
-“The Uttermost Spaces want to know,” the Shadow reported next day,
-“whether in all that City there is a child. They said if there is, it
-could probably do what you want.”
-
-“A child,” said the Earth. “Well, sea caves and firmaments. Of course
-there is. What do the Uttermost Spaces think I’m in the Earth business
-for if it isn’t for the Children?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said its Shadow, rather sulkily. “I’m only telling you
-what I heard. If you’re cross with me, I won’t keep up with you. I’m
-about tired of it anyway.”
-
-“Oh, I beg your pardon,” said the Earth, “You mustn’t mind me. I’m
-always a little sunstruck. A thousand thanks. Come along, do.”
-
-“A child,” thought the Earth, “a child. How could a child change a City
-into a woman? And _what_ child?”
-
-But it was a very wise old Earth, and to its mind all children are
-valuable. So after a time it concluded that one child in that City
-would be as good as another, and perhaps any child could work the
-miracle. So it said: “I choose to work the miracle that child who is
-thinking about the most beautiful thing in the world.”
-
-Then it listened.
-
-Now, since the feet of people are pressed all day long to earth, it
-is true that the Earth can talk with everyone and, by listening, can
-know what is in each heart. When it listened this time, it chanced that
-it was the middle of the night, when nearly every little child was
-sleeping and dreaming. But there was one little girl lying wide awake
-and staring out her bedroom window up at the stars, and as soon as the
-Earth listened to her thoughts, it knew that she was the one.
-
-Of what do you suppose she was thinking? She was thinking of her
-mother, who had died before she could remember her, and wondering
-where she was; and she was picturing what her mother had looked like,
-and what her mother would have said to her, and how her mother’s
-arms would have felt about her, and her mother’s good-night kiss;
-and she was wondering how it would be to wake in the night, a little
-frightened, and turn and stretch out her arms and find her mother
-breathing there beside her, ready to wake her and give her an
-in-the-middle-of-the-night kiss and send her back to sleep again. And
-she thought about it all so longingly that her little heart was like
-nothing in the world so much as the one word “Mother.”
-
-“It will be you,” said the Earth.
-
-So the Earth spoke to its Shadow who was, of course, just then fastened
-to that same side, it being night.
-
-“Shadow, dear,” Earth said, like a prescription, “fold closely about
-her and drop out a dream or two. But do not let her forget.”
-
-So Shadow folded about her and dropped out a dream or two. And all
-night Earth lapped her in its silences, but they did not let her
-forget. And Shadow left word with Morning, telling Morning what to do,
-and she kissed the little girl’s eyelids so that the first thing she
-thought when she waked was how wonderful it would be to be kissed awake
-by her mother. And her little heart beat _Mother_ in her breast.
-
-As soon as she was dressed (“Muvvers wouldn’t pinch your feet with the
-button-hook, or tie your ribbon too tight, or get your laxtixs short
-so’s they pull,” she thought), as soon as she was dressed, and had
-pressed her feet to Earth, Earth began to talk to her.
-
-“Go out and find a mother,” it said to her.
-
-“My muvver is dead,” thought the little girl.
-
-Earth said: “I am covered with mothers and with those who ought to be
-mothers. Go to them. Tell them you haven’t any mother. Wouldn’t one of
-those be next best?”
-
-And the Earth said so much, and the little girl’s heart so strongly
-beat _Mother_, that she could not help going to see.
-
-On the street she looked very little and she felt--oh, _much_ littler
-than in the house with furniture. For the street seemed to be merely a
-world of Skirts--skirts everywhere and also the bottoms of men’s coats
-with impersonal Legs below. And these said nothing. Away up above were
-Voices, talking very fast, and to one another, and entirely leaving
-her out. She was out of the conversations and out of account, and it
-felt far more lonely than it did with just furniture. Now and then
-another child would pass who would look at her as if she really were
-there; but everyone was hanging on its mother’s hand or her Skirt, or
-else, if the child were alone, a Voice from ahead or behind was saying:
-“Hurry, dear. Mother won’t wait. Come and see what’s in _this_ window.”
-Littlegirl thought how wonderful that would be, to have somebody ahead
-looking back for her, and she waited on purpose, by a hydrant, and
-pretended that she was going to hear somebody saying: “_Do_ come on,
-dear. Mother’ll be late for her fitting.” But nobody said anything.
-Only an automobile stood close by the hydrant and in it was a little
-yellow-haired girl, and just at that moment a lady came from a shop and
-got in the automobile and handed the little girl a white tissue-paper
-parcel and said: “Sit farther over--there’s a dear. Now, that’s for
-you, but don’t open it till we get home.” _What_ was in the parcel,
-Littlegirl wondered, and stood looking after the automobile until it
-was lost. One little boy passed her, holding tightly to his mother’s
-hand, and she stooping over him and he _crying_. Littlegirl tried to
-think what could be bad enough to cry about when you had hold of your
-mother’s hand and she was bending over you. A stone in your shoe? Or
-a pin in your neck? Or because you’d lost your locket? But would any
-of those things matter enough to cry when your mother had hold of your
-hand? She looked up at the place beside her where her own mother would
-be walking and tried to see where her face would be.
-
-And as she looked up, she saw the tops of the high buildings across
-the street, and below them the windows hung thick as pictures on a
-wall, and thicker. The shop doors were open like doors to wonderful,
-mysterious palaces where you went in with your mother and she picked
-out your dresses and said: “Wouldn’t you like this one, dear? Mother
-used to have one like this when _she_ was a little girl.” And
-Littlegirl saw, too, one of the side streets, and how it was all lined
-with homes, whose doors were shut, like closed lips with nothing to say
-to anybody save those who lived there--the children who were promised
-Christmas trees--and _got_ them, too. And between shops and homes was
-the world of Skirts and Voices, mothers whose little girls were at
-home, daddys who would run up the front steps at night and cry: “Come
-here, Puss. Did you grow any since morning?” Or, “_Where’s my son?_”
-(Littlegirl knew how it went--she had heard them.) Shops and homes and
-crowds--a City! A City for everybody but her.
-
-When the Earth--who all this time was listening--heard her think that,
-it made to flow up into her little heart the longing to belong to
-somebody. And Littlegirl ran straight up to a lady in blue linen, who
-was passing.
-
-“Are you somebody’s muvver?” she asked.
-
-The lady looked down in the little face and stood still.
-
-“No,” she said soberly.
-
-Littlegirl slipped her hand in her white glove.
-
-“I aren’t anybody’s little girl,” she said. “Let’s trade each other.”
-
-And the Earth, who was listening, made to flow in the lady’s heart an
-old longing.
-
-“Let’s go in here, at any rate,” said the Lady, “and talk it over.”
-
-So they went in a wonderful place, all made of mirrors, and jars of
-bonbons, and long trays, as big as doll cradles, and filled with
-bonbons too. And they sat at a cool table, under a whirry fan, and had
-before them thick, foamy, frozen chocolate. And the Blue Linen Lady
-said:--
-
-“But whose little girl are you, really?”
-
-“I’m _my_ little girl, I think,” said Littlegirl. “I don’t know who
-else’s.”
-
-“With whom do you live?” asked the Lady.
-
-“Some peoples,” said Littlegirl, “that’s other people’s muvvers. Don’t
-let’s say about them.”
-
-“What shall we say about?” asked the Lady, smiling.
-
-“Let’s pretend you was my muvver,” said Littlegirl.
-
-The lady looked startled, but she nodded slowly.
-
-“Very well,” she said. “I’ll play that. How do you play it?”
-
-Littlegirl hesitated and looked down in her chocolate.
-
-“I don’t know berry well,” she said soberly. “_You_ say how.”
-
-“Well,” said the Lady, “if you were my little girl, I should probably
-be saying to you, ‘Do you like this, dear? Don’t eat it fast. And take
-little bits of bites.’ And you would say, ‘Yes, mother.’ And then what?”
-
-Littlegirl looked deep down her chocolate. She was making a cave in one
-side of it, with the foamy part on top for snow. And while she looked
-the snow suddenly seemed to melt and brim over, and she looked at the
-lady mutely.
-
-“I don’t know how,” she said; “I don’t know how!”
-
-“Never mind!” said the Lady, very quickly and a little unsteadily,
-“I’ll tell you a story instead--shall I?”
-
-So the Blue Linen Lady told her a really wonderful story. It was about
-a dwarf who was made of gold, all but his heart, and about what a
-terrible time he had trying to pretend that he was a truly, flesh and
-blood person. It made him so unhappy to have to pretend all the time
-that he got _scandalous_ cross to everybody, and nothing could please
-him. His gold kept getting harder and harder till he could move only
-with the greatest difficulty, and it looked as if his heart were going
-golden too. And if it did, of course he would die. But one night, just
-as the soft outside edges of his heart began to take on a shining
-tinge, a little boy ran out in the road where the dwarf was passing,
-and in the dark mistook him for his father, and jumped up and threw
-his arms about the dwarf’s neck and hugged him. And of a sudden the
-dwarf’s heart began to beat, and when he got in the house, he saw that
-he wasn’t gold any more, and he wasn’t a dwarf--but he was straight
-and strong and real. “And so,” the Lady ended it, “you must love every
-grown-up you can, because maybe their hearts are turning into gold and
-you can stop it that way.”
-
-“An’ must _you_ love every children?” asked Littlegirl, very low.
-
-“Yes,” said the Lady, “I must.”
-
-“An’ will you love me an’ be my muvver?” asked Littlegirl.
-
-The Blue Linen Lady sighed.
-
-“You dear little thing,” she said, “I’d love it--I’d love it. But I
-truly haven’t any place for you to live--or any time to give you.
-Come now--I’m going to get you some candy and take you back where you
-belong--_in an automobile_. Won’t that be fun?”
-
-But when she turned for the candy, Littlegirl slipped out the door and
-ran and ran as fast as she could. (She had thanked the lady, first
-thing, for the thick, frozen, foamy chocolate, so _that_ part was
-all right.) And Littlegirl went round a corner and lost herself in a
-crowd--in which it is far easier to lose yourself than in the woods.
-And there she was again, worse off than before, because she had felt
-how it would feel to feel that she had a mother.
-
-The Earth--who would have shaken its head if it could without
-disarranging everything on it--said things instead to its Shadow--who
-was by now on the other side of the world from the City.
-
-“Shadow, dear,” said the Earth, “what _do_ you think of that?”
-
-“The very Uttermost Spaces are ashamed for her,” said the Shadow.
-
-But of course the Blue Linen Lady had no idea that the Earth and its
-Shadow and the Uttermost Spaces had been watching to see what she did.
-
-Littlegirl ran on, many a weary block, and though she met
-mother-looking women she dared speak to none of them for fear they
-would offer to take her back in an automobile, with some candy, to the
-people with whom she lived-without-belonging. And of late, these people
-had said things in her presence about the many mouths to feed, and she
-had heard, and had understood, and it had made her heart beat _Mother_,
-as it had when she wakened that day.
-
-At last, when she was most particularly tired, she came to the park
-where it was large and cool and woodsy and wonderful. But in the park
-the un-motherness of things was worse than ever. To be sure, there
-were no mothers there, only nurse-maids. But the nurse-maids and the
-children and the covers-to-baby-carriages were all so ruffly or lacy
-or embroidery or starchy and so white that _mother_ was written all
-over them. Nobody else could have cared to have them like that. How
-wonderful it would be, Littlegirl thought, to be paid attention to as
-if you were a really person and not just hanging on the edges. Even
-the squirrels were coaxed and beckoned. She sat down on the edge of
-a bench on which an old gentleman was feeding peanuts to a squirrel
-perched on his knee, and she thought it would be next best to having
-a Christmas tree to be a squirrel and have somebody taking pains like
-that to keep her near by.
-
-“Where’s your nurse, my dear?” the old gentleman asked her finally, and
-she ran away so that he should not guess that she was her own little
-girl and nobody else’s.
-
-Wherever she saw a policeman, she lingered beside a group of children
-so that he would think that she belonged to them. And once, for a long
-way, she trotted behind two nurses and five children, pretending that
-she belonged. Once a thin, stooped youth in spectacles called her and
-gave her an orange. He was sitting alone on a bench with his chin in
-his chest, and he looked ill and unhappy. Littlegirl wondered if this
-was because he didn’t have any mother either, and she longed to ask
-him; but she was afraid he would not want to own to not having any, in
-a world where nearly everyone seemed to have one. So she played through
-the long hours of the morning. So, having lunched on the orange, she
-played through the long hours of the afternoon. And then Dusk began to
-come--and Dusk meant that Earth’s Shadow had run round again, and was
-coming on the side where the City lay.
-
-And when the Shadow reached the park, there, on a knoll beside a
-barberry bush, he found Littlegirl lying fast asleep.
-
-In a great flutter he questioned the Earth.
-
-“Listen,” said Shadow, “what _are_ you thinking of? Here is the child
-who was to work the miracle and make the City turn into a woman. And
-she is lying alone in the park. And I’m coming on and I’ll have to make
-it all dark and frighten her. What does this mean?”
-
-But the Earth, who is closer to people than is its Shadow, merely
-said:--
-
-“Wait, Shadow. I am listening. I can hear the speeding of many feet.
-And I think that the miracle has begun.”
-
-It was true that all through the City there was the speeding of many
-feet, and on one errand. Wires and messengers were busy, automobiles
-were busy, blue-coated men were busy, and all of them were doing the
-same thing: Looking for Littlegirl. Busiest of all was the Blue Linen
-Lady, who felt herself and nobody else responsible for Littlegirl’s
-loss.
-
-“It is too dreadful,” she kept saying over and over, “I had her with
-me. She gave me my chance, and I didn’t take it. If anything has
-happened to her, I shall never forgive myself.”
-
-“That’s the way people always talk _afterward_,” said the Earth’s
-Shadow. “Why don’t they ever talk that way before? I’d ask the
-Uttermost Spaces, but I know they don’t know.”
-
-But the wise Earth only listened and made to flow to the Blue Linen
-Lady’s heart an old longing. And when they had traced Littlegirl as far
-as the park--for it seemed that many of the busy Skirts and Coats and
-Voices had noticed her, only they were so very busy--the Blue Linen
-Lady herself went into the park, and it was the light of her automobile
-that flashed white on the glimmering frock of Littlegirl.
-
-Littlegirl was wakened, as never before within her memory she had been
-wakened, by tender arms about her, lifting her, and soft lips kissing
-her, many and many a time. And waking so, in the strange, great Dark,
-with the new shapes of trees above her and tenderness wrapping her
-round, and an in-the-middle-of-the-night kiss on her lips, Littlegirl
-could think of but one thing that had happened:--
-
-“Oh, I’m _glad_ I died--I’m _glad_ I died!” she said.
-
-“You haven’t died, you little thing!” cried the Blue Linen Lady.
-“You’re alive--and if they’ll let you stay, you’re never going to leave
-me. I’ve made up my mind to _that_. Come--come, dear.”
-
-Littlegirl lay quite still, too happy to speak or think. For somebody
-had said “dear,” had even said “Come, dear.” And it didn’t mean a
-little girl away ahead, or away back, or in an automobile. _It meant
-her._
-
-The Earth’s Shadow brooded over the two and helped them to be very near.
-
-“It’s worth keeping up with you all this time,” Shadow said to the
-Earth, “to see things like this. Even the Uttermost Spaces are touched.”
-
-But the Earth was silent, listening. For the City, the beautiful,
-green-robed City lying in her glorious night jewels, knew what was
-happening too. And when the Lady lifted Littlegirl, to carry her
-away, it was as if something had happened which had touched the life
-of the City herself. She listened, as the Earth was listening, and the
-soft crooning which men thought was the roar of her traffic was really
-her song about what she heard. For the story of Littlegirl spread and
-echoed, and other children’s stories like hers were in the song, and it
-was one of the times when the heart of the City was stirred to a great,
-new measure. At last the City understood the homelessness of children,
-and their labour, and their suffering, and the waste of them; and she
-brooded above them like a mother.... And suddenly she knew herself,
-that she _was_ the mother of all little children, and that she must
-care for them like a mother _if she was to keep herself alive_. And if
-they were to grow up to be her Family, and not just her pretend family,
-with nobody looking out for anybody else--as no true family would do.
-
-“Is it well?” asked the Shadow, softly, of the Earth.
-
-“It is well,” said the Earth, in deep content. “Don’t you hear the
-human voices beginning to sing with her? Don’t you see the other
-Cities watching? Oh, it is well indeed.”
-
-“I’ll go and mention it to the Uttermost Spaces,” said the Shadow.
-
-And, in time, so he did.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-THREE TO MAKE READY
-
-
-Red mosquito-netting, preferably from peach baskets, was best for
-bottles of pink water. You soaked the netting for a time depending in
-length on the shade of pink you desired--light, deep, or plain. A very
-little red ink produced a beautiful red water, likewise of a superior
-tint. Violet ink, diluted, remained true to type. Cold coffee gave the
-browns and yellows. Green tissue paper dissolved into somewhat dull
-emerald. Pure blue and orange, however, had been almost impossible to
-obtain save by recourse to our paint boxes, too choice to be used in
-this fashion, or to a chance artificial flower on an accessible hat--of
-which we were not at all too choice, but whose utilization might be
-followed, not to say attended, by consequences.
-
-That August afternoon we were at work on a grand scale. At the Rodmans,
-who lived on the top of the hill overlooking the town and the peaceful
-westward-lying valley of the river, we had chosen to set up a great
-Soda Fountain, the like of which had never been.
-
-“It’s the kind of a fountain,” Margaret Amelia Rodman explained, “that
-knights used to drink at. That kind.”
-
-We classified it instantly.
-
-“Now,” she went on, “us damsels are getting this thing up for the
-knights that are tourmeying. If the king knew it, he wouldn’t leave
-us do it, because he’d think it’s beneath our dignity. But he don’t
-know it. He’s off. He’s to the chase. But all the king’s household is
-inside the palace, and us damsels have to be secret, getting up our
-preparations. Now we must divide up the--er--responsibility.”
-
-I listened, spellbound.
-
-“I thought you and Betty didn’t like to play Pretend,” I was surprised
-into saying.
-
-“Why, we’ll pretend if there’s anything to pretend _about_ that’s
-real,” said Margaret Amelia, haughtily.
-
-They told us where in the palace the various ingredients were likely to
-be found. Red mosquito-netting, perhaps, in the cellar--at this time
-of day fairly safe. Red and violet ink in the library--very dangerous
-indeed at this hour. Cold coffee--almost unobtainable. Green tissue
-paper, to be taken from the flower-pots in the dining-room--exceedingly
-dangerous. Blue and orange, if discoverable at all, then in the
-Christmas tree box in the trunk room--attended by few perils as to
-meetings en route, but in respect to appropriating what was desired, by
-the greatest perils of all.
-
-This last adventure the Rodmans themselves heroically undertook. It was
-also conceded that, on their return from their quest--provided they
-ever did return alive--it would be theirs to procure the necessary
-cold coffee. The other adventures were distributed, and Mary Elizabeth
-and I were told off together to penetrate the cellar in search of red
-mosquito-netting. The bottles had already been collected, and these
-little Harold Rodman was left to guard and luxuriously to fill with
-water and luxuriously to empty.
-
-There was an outside cellar door, and it was closed. This invited
-Mary Elizabeth and me to an expedition or two before we even entered.
-We slid from the top to the bottom, sitting, standing, and backward.
-Then, since Harold was beginning to observe us with some attention, we
-lifted the ring--_the ring_--in the door and descended.
-
-“Aladdin immediately beheld bags of inexhaustible riches,” said Mary
-Elizabeth, almost reverently.
-
-First, there was a long, narrow passage lined with ash barrels, a
-derelict coal scuttle, starch boxes, mummies of brooms, and the like.
-But at this point if we had chanced on the red mosquito-netting, we
-should have felt distinctly cheated of some right. A little farther on,
-however, the passage branched, and we stood in delighted uncertainty.
-If the giant lived one way and the gorgon the other, which was our way?
-
-The way that we did choose led into a small round cellar, lighted
-by a narrow, dusty window, now closed. Formless things stood
-everywhere--crates, tubs, shelves whose ghostly contents were shrouded
-by newspapers. It occurred to me that I had never yet told Mary
-Elizabeth about our cellar. I decided to do so then and there. She
-backed up against the wall to listen, manifestly so that there should
-be nothing over her shoulder.
-
-Our cellar was a round, bricked-in place under the dining-room.
-Sometimes I had been down there while they had been selecting preserves
-by candle-light. And I had long ago settled that the curved walls
-were set with little sealed doors behind each of which _He_ sat.
-These _He’s_ were not in the least unfriendly--they merely sat there
-close to the wall, square shouldered and very still, looking neither
-to right nor left, waiting. Probably, I thought, it might happen
-some day--whatever they waited for; and then they would all go away.
-Meanwhile, there they were; and they evidently knew that I knew they
-were there, but they evidently did not expect me to mention it; for
-once, when I did so, they all stopped doing nothing and looked at me,
-all together, as if something used their eyes for them at a signal.
-It was to Mary Gilbraith that I had spoken, while she was at our
-house-cleaning, and the moment I had chosen was when she was down in
-the cellar without a candle and I was lying flat on the floor above
-her, peering down the trap doorway.
-
-“Mary,” I said, “they’s a big row of _He’s_ sitting close together
-inside the wall. They’ve got big foreheads. Bang on the wall and see
-if they’ll answer--” for I had always longed to bang and had never
-quite dared.
-
-“Oh, my great Scotland!” said Mary Gilbraith, and was up the ladder
-in a second. That was when they looked at me, and then I knew that I
-should not have spoken to her about them, and I began to see that there
-are some things that must not be said. And I felt a kind of shame, too,
-when Mary turned on me. “You little Miss,” she said wrathfully, “with
-your big eyes. An’ myself bitin’ on my own nerves for fear of picking
-up a lizard for a potato. Go play.”
-
-“I _was_ playing,” I tried to explain.
-
-“Play playthings, then, and not ha’nts,” said Mary.
-
-So I never said anything more to her, save about plates and fritters
-and such things.
-
-To this recital Mary Elizabeth listened sympathetically.
-
-“There’s just one great big one lives down in our cellar,” she confided
-in turn. “Not in the wall--but out loose. When the apples and stuff go
-down there, I always think how glad he is.”
-
-“Are you afraid of him?” I asked.
-
-“Afraid!” Mary Elizabeth repeated. “Why, no. Once, when I was down
-there, I tried to pretend there wasn’t anything lived there--and _then_
-it was frightening and I was scared.”
-
-I understood. It would indeed be a great, lonely, terrifying world if
-these little friendly folk did not live in cellars, walls, attics,
-stair-closets and the like. Of course they were friendly. Why should
-they be otherwise?
-
-“R-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-t,” something went, close by Mary Elizabeth’s head.
-
-We looked up. The dimness of the ceiling was miles deep. We could not
-see a ceiling.
-
-“St-t-t-t-t-t-t-t-t,” it went again. And this time it did not stop, and
-it began to be accompanied by a rumbling sound as from the very cave
-inside the world.
-
-Mary Elizabeth and I took hold of hands and ran. We scrambled up the
-steps and escaped to the sultry welcome of bright day. Out there
-everything was as before. Little Harold was crossing the lawn carrying
-a flower-pot of water which was running steadily from the hole in the
-bottom. With the maternal importance of little girls, we got the jar
-from him and undertook to bring him more water. And when he led us to
-the source of supply, this was a faucet in the side of the house just
-beyond a narrow, dusty, cellar window. When he turned the faucet, we
-were, so to speak, face to face with that R-s-t-t-t-t-t.
-
-Mary Elizabeth and I looked at each other and looked away. Then we
-looked back and braved it through.
-
-“Anyway,” she said, “we were afraid of a truly thing, and not of a
-pretend thing.”
-
-There seemed to us, I recall, a certain loyalty in this as to a creed.
-
-Already Delia had returned from the library. The authorities refused
-the ink. One might come in there and write with it, but one must
-not take it from the table. Calista arrived from the dining-room. A
-waiting-woman to the queen, she reported, was engaged in dusting the
-sideboard and she herself had advanced no farther than the pantry door.
-It remained only for Margaret Amelia and Betty to come from their
-farther quest bearing a green handbill which they thought might take
-the place of Calista’s quarry if she returned empty-handed; but we were
-no nearer than before to blue and orange materials, or to any other.
-
-We took counsel and came to a certain ancient conclusion that in union
-there is strength. We must, we thought we saw, act the aggressor. We
-moved on the stronghold together. Armed with a spoon and two bottles,
-we found a keeper of properties within who spooned us out the necessary
-ink; tea was promised to take the place of coffee if we would keep out
-of the house and not bother anybody any more, indefinitely; shoe-polish
-was conceded in a limited quantity, briefly, and under inspection; and
-we all descended into Aladdin’s cave and easily found baskets to which
-red mosquito-netting was clinging in sufficient measure. Then we sat in
-the shade of the side lawn and proceeded to colour many waters.
-
-It was a delicate task to cloud the clear liquid to this tint and that,
-to watch it change expression under our hands, pale, deepen, vary to
-our touch; in its heart to set jewels and to light fires. We worked
-with deep deliberation, testing by old standards of taste set up by
-at least two or three previous experiences, consulting one another’s
-soberest judgment, occasionally inventing a new liquid. I remember that
-it was on that day that we first thought of bluing. Common washing
-bluing, the one substance really intended for colouring water, had so
-far escaped our notice.
-
-“Somebody,” observed Margaret Amelia, as we worked, “ought to keep
-keeping a look-out to see if they’re coming back.”
-
-Delia, who was our man of action, ran to the clothes-reel, which stood
-on the highest land of the castle grounds, and looked away over the
-valley.
-
-“There’s a cloud of dust on the horizon,” she reported, “but I think
-it’s Mr. Wells getting home from Caledonia.”
-
-“Wouldn’t they blare their horns before they got here?” Mary Elizabeth
-wanted to know.
-
-“What was a knight _for_, anyway?” Delia demanded.
-
-“_For?_” Margaret Amelia repeated, in a kind of personal indignation.
-“Why, to--to--to right wrongs, of course.”
-
-Delia surveyed the surrounding scene through the diluted red ink in a
-glass-stoppered bottle.
-
-“I guess I know that,” she said. “But I mean, what was his job?”
-
-We had never thought of that. Did one, then, have to have a job other
-than righting wrongs?
-
-Margaret Amelia undertook to explain.
-
-“Why,” she said, “it was this way: Knights liberated damsels and razed
-down strongholds and took robber chieftains and got into adventures.
-And they lived off the king and off hermits.”
-
-“But what was the end of ’em?” Delia wanted to know. “They never
-married and lived happily ever after. They married and just kept right
-on going.”
-
-“That was on account of the Holy Grail,” said Mary Elizabeth. It
-was wonderful, as I look back, to remember how her face would light
-sometimes; as just then, and as when somebody came to school with the
-first violets.
-
-“The what?” said Delia.
-
-“They woke up in the night sometimes,” Mary Elizabeth recited softly,
-“and they saw it, in light, right there inside their dark cell. And
-they looked and looked, and it was all shiny and near-to. And when
-they saw it, they knew about all the principal things. And those that
-never woke up and saw it, always kept trying to, because they knew they
-weren’t _really_ ones till they saw. Most everybody wasn’t really,
-because only a few saw it. Most of them died and never saw it at all.”
-
-“What did it look like?” demanded Delia.
-
-“Hush!” said Calista, with a shocked glance, having somewhere picked up
-the impression that very sacred things, like very wicked things, must
-never be mentioned. But Mary Elizabeth did not heed her.
-
-“It was all shining and near to,” she repeated. “It was in a great,
-dark sky, with great, bright worlds falling all around it, but it was
-in the centre and it didn’t fall. It was all still, and brighter than
-anything; and when you saw it, you never forgot.”
-
-There was a moment’s pause, which Delia broke.
-
-“How do you know?” she demanded.
-
-Mary Elizabeth was clouding red mosquito-netting water by shaking soap
-in it, an effect much to be desired. She went on shaking the corked
-bottle, and looking away toward the sun slanting to late afternoon.
-
-“I don’t know how I know,” she said in manifest surprise. “But I know.”
-
-We sat silent for a minute.
-
-“Well, I’m going back to see if they’re coming home from the hunt
-_now_,” said Delia, scrambling up.
-
-“From the _chase_,” Margaret Amelia corrected her loftily, “and from
-the tourmey. I b’lieve,” she corrected herself conscientiously, “that
-had ought to be tourmament.”
-
-This time Delia thought that she saw them coming, the king and his
-knights, with pennons and plumes, just entering Conant Street down by
-the Brices. As we must be ready by the time the party dismounted, there
-was need for the greatest haste. But we found that the clothes-reel,
-which was to be the fountain, must have a rug and should have flowing
-curtains if it were to grace a castle courtyard; so, matters having
-been further delayed by the discovery of Harold about to drink the
-vanilla water, we concluded that we had been mistaken about the
-approach of the knights; and that they were by now only on the bridge.
-
-A journey to the attic for the rug and curtains resulted in delays,
-the sight of some cast-off garments imperatively suggesting the
-fitness of our dressing for the rôle we were to assume. This took some
-time and was accompanied by the selection of new names all around.
-At last, however, we were back in the yard with the rugs and the
-muslin curtains in place, and the array of coloured bottles set up
-in rows at the top of the carpeted steps. Then we arranged ourselves
-behind these delicacies, in our bravery of old veils and scarves and
-tattered sequins. Harold was below, as a page, in a red sash. “A little
-foot-page,” Margaret Amelia had wanted him called, but this he himself
-vetoed.
-
-“Mine feet _big_ feet,” he defended himself.
-
-Then we waited.
-
-We waited, chatted amiably, as court ladies will. Occasionally we rose
-and scanned the street, and reported that they were almost here. Then
-we resumed our seats and waited. This business had distinctly palled on
-us all when Delia faced it.
-
-“Let’s have them get here if they’re going to,” she said.
-
-So we sat and told each other that they were entering the yard, that
-they were approaching the dais, that they were kneeling at our feet.
-But it was unconvincing. None of us really wanted them to kneel or
-knew what to do with them when they did kneel. The whole pretence was
-lacking in action, and very pale.
-
-“It was lots more fun getting ready than this is,” said Calista,
-somewhat brutally.
-
-We stared in one another’s faces, feeling guilty of a kind of
-disloyalty, yet compelled to acknowledge this great truth. In our
-hearts we remembered to have noticed this thing before: That getting
-ready for a thing was more fun than doing that thing.
-
-“Why couldn’t we get a quest?” inquired Margaret Amelia. “Then it
-wouldn’t have to stop. It’d last every day.”
-
-That was the obvious solution: We would get a quest.
-
-“Girls can’t quest, can they?” Betty suggested doubtfully.
-
-We looked in one another’s faces. Could it be true? Did the damsels sit
-at home? Was it only the knights who quested?
-
-Delia was a free soul. Forthwith she made a precedent.
-
-“Well,” she said, “I don’t know whether they did quest. But they can
-quest. So let’s do it.”
-
-The reason in this appealed to us all. Immediately we confronted the
-problem: What should we quest for?
-
-We stared off over the valley through which the little river ran
-shining and slipped beyond our horizon.
-
-“I wonder,” said Mary Elizabeth, “if it would be wrong to quest for the
-Holy Grail _now_.”
-
-We stood there against the west, where bright doors seemed opening in
-the pouring gold of the sun, thick with shining dust. The glory seemed
-very near. Why not do something beautiful? Why not--why not....
-
-
-
-
-The following pages contain advertisements of Macmillan books by the
-same author, and new fiction
-
-
-
-
-_By the Same Author_
-
-
-Christmas
-
-BY ZONA GALE
-
-Author of “Mothers to Men,” “The Loves of Pelleas and Etarre.”
-Illustrated in colors by LEON SOLON.
-
-_Decorated cloth, 12mo, $1.30 net; postpaid, $1.42_
-
-A town in the Middle West, pinched with poverty, decides that it will
-have no Christmas, as no one can afford to buy gifts. They perhaps
-foolishly reckon that the heart-burnings and the disappointments of
-the children will be obviated by passing the holiday season over with
-no observance. How this was found to be simply and wholly impossible,
-how the Christmas joys and Christmas spirit crept into the little town
-and into the hearts of its most positive objectors, and how Christmas
-cannot be arbitrated about, make up the basis of a more than ordinarily
-appealing novel. Incidentally it is a little boy who really makes
-possible a delightful outcome. A thread of romance runs through it all
-with something of the meaning of Christmas for the individual human
-being and for the race.
-
- “A fine story of Yuletide impulses in Miss Gale’s best
- style.”--_N. Y. World._
-
- “No living writer more thoroughly understands the true spirit
- of Christmas than does Zona Gale.”--_Chicago Record-Herald._
-
- “‘Christmas’ is that rare thing, a Yuletide tale, with a touch
- of originality about it.”--_N. Y. Press._
-
- “The book is just the thing for a gift.”--_Chicago Tribune._
-
-
-
-
-_The Other Books of Miss Gale_
-
-
-Mothers to Men
-
-_Decorated cloth, 12mo, $1.50 net; by mail, $1.62 net_
-
-The author is singularly successful in detaching herself from all
-the wear and tear of modern life and has produced a book filled with
-sweetness, beautiful in ideas, charming in characterizations, highly
-contemplative, and evidencing a philosophy of life all her own.
-
- “One of the most widely read of our writers of short
- fiction.”--_The Bookman._
-
-
-Friendship Village
-
-_Cloth, 12mo, $1.50 net_
-
- “As charming as an April day, all showers and sunshine, and sometimes
- both together, so that the delighted reader hardly knows whether
- laughter or tears are fittest.”--_The New York Times._
-
-
-The Loves of Pelleas and Etarre
-
-_Cloth, 12mo, $1.50 net_
-
-_Macmillan Fiction Library_
-
-_12mo, $.50 net_
-
- “It contains the sort of message that seems to set the world right
- for even the most depressed, and can be depended upon to sweeten
- every moment spent over it.”--_San Francisco Chronicle._
-
-
-Friendship Village Love Stories
-
-_Decorated cloth, gilt top, 12mo, $1.50 net_
-
- Miss Gale’s pleasant and highly individual outlook upon life has
- never been revealed to better advantage than in these charming
- stories of the heart affairs of the young people of Friendship
- Village.
-
-
-
-
-_New Macmillan Fiction_
-
-
-MRS. WATTS’S NEW NOVEL
-
- Van Cleve
-
- BY MARY S. WATTS
-
- Author of “Nathan Burke,” “The Legacy,” etc.
-
- _Cloth, 12mo._
-
- Never has the author of “Nathan Burke” and “The Legacy” written
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- of the past, will welcome this book of the present in which she
- demonstrates that her skill is no less in handling scenes and
- types of people with which we are familiar than in the so-called
- “historical” novel. “Van Cleve” is about a young man who, while
- still in his early twenties, is obliged to support a family of
- foolish, good-hearted, ill-balanced women, and one shiftless,
- pompous old man, his grandmother, aunt, cousin, and uncle. Van
- Cleve proves himself equal to the obligation--and equal, too, to
- many other severe tests that are put upon him by his friends.
- Besides him there is one character which it is doubtful whether
- the reader will ever forget--Bob. His life not only shapes Van
- Cleve’s to a large extent, but that of several other people,
- notably his sister, the girl whom Van Cleve loves in his patient
- way.
-
-
-The Valley of the Moon
-
- BY JACK LONDON
-
- With Frontispiece in Colors by GEORGE HARPER
-
- _Decorated cloth, 12mo, $1.35 net_
-
- A love story in Mr. London’s most powerful style, strikingly
- contrasted against a background of present-day economic
- problems--that is what “The Valley of the Moon” is. The hero,
- teamster, prize-fighter, adventurer, man of affairs, is one of
- Mr. London’s unforgettable big men. The romance which develops
- out of his meeting with a charming girl and which does not end
- with their marriage is absorbingly told. The action of the plot
- is most rapid, one event following another in a fashion which
- does not allow the reader to lose interest even temporarily. “The
- Valley of the Moon” is, in other words, an old-fashioned London
- novel, with all of the entertainment that such a description
- implies.
-
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-Robin Hood’s Barn
-
- BY ALICE BROWN
-
- Author of “Vanishing Points,” “The Secret of the Clan,” “The
- Country Road,” etc.
-
- With Illustrations in Colors and in Black and White by
- H. M. CARPENTER
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- _Decorated cloth, 12mo, $0.00 net_
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- Miss Brown’s previous books have given her a distinguished
- reputation as an interpreter of New England life. The idealism,
- the quaint humor, the skill in character drawing, and the
- dramatic force which have always marked her work are evident in
- this charming story of a dream that came true. The illustrations,
- the frontispiece being in colors, the others in black and white,
- are by Mr. Horace Carpenter, whose sympathetic craftsmanship is
- widely known and appreciated.
-
-
-Deering at Princeton
-
- BY LATTA GRISWOLD
-
- Author of “Deering of Deal”
-
- With Illustrations by E. C. CASWELL
-
- _Decorated cloth, 12mo; preparing_
-
- This is a college story that reads as a college story should.
- Here Mr. Griswold tells of Deering’s Princeton years from
- his freshman days to his graduation. A hazing adventure of
- far-reaching importance, a football game or two in which Deering
- has a hand, a reform in the eating club system, the fraternity
- régime of Princeton, initiated by Deering and carried through
- at the sacrifice of much that he values, a touch of sentiment
- centering around a pretty girl who later marries Deering’s
- roommate, besides many lively college happenings which only one
- familiar with the life could have chronicled, go to the making of
- an intensely interesting tale.
-
-
-Tide Marks
-
- BY MARGARET WESTRUP
-
- _Decorated cloth, 12mo; preparing_
-
- A novel of unusual interest and power told in a style both
- convincing and distinctive. Margaret Westrup promises to be one
- of the literary finds of the season.
-
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-The Will to Live
-
- BY M. P. WILLCOCKS
-
- Author of “The Wingless Victory,” etc.
-
- _Cloth, 12mo; preparing_
-
- In description, in vividness of character depiction, in
- cleverness of dialogue, and in skill of plot construction, Miss
- Willcocks’ previous books have displayed her rare ability. “The
- Will to Live” is perhaps her most mature work; it is a story with
- which one is sure to be satisfied when the last page is turned.
-
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note:
-
-In the advertisements at the end of the book, the price of $0.00 is as
-published.
-
-Variations in spelling, hyphenation and punctuation have been retained
-as they appear in the original publication except as follows:
-
- Page 145
- “_We are all alike, all of us who live!_ _changed to_
- _We are all alike, all of us who live!_
-
- Page 229
- resentfully “And now she’s in her _changed to_
- resentfully. “And now she’s in her
-
- Page 281
- for this seemed a a good way _changed to_
- for this seemed a good way
-
- Page 286
- I’ve fought everyone of _changed to_
- I’ve fought every one of
-
- Page 289
- him and help him. _changed to_
- him and help him.”
-
- Page 396
- London’s unforgetable big men _changed to_
- London’s unforgettable big men
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of When I Was a Little Girl, by Zona Gale
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of When I Was a Little Girl, by Zona Gale
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: When I Was a Little Girl
-
-Author: Zona Gale
-
-Illustrator: Agnes Pelton
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2019 [EBook #60457]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN I WAS A LITTLE GIRL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<hr class="divider" />
-<h1>WHEN I WAS A LITTLE GIRL</h1>
-
-
-<div class="hidehand">
-<hr class="divider2" />
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<img src="images/cover2.jpg" width="400" height="584" alt="Cover" />
-</div></div>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider2" />
-
-<div class="figcenter width200">
-<img src="images/colophon.png" width="200" height="65" alt="Colophon" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center p120">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
-<small>NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS<br />
-ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO</small></p>
-
-<p class="center p120">MACMILLAN &amp; CO., <span class="smcap">Limited</span><br />
-<small>LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA<br />
-MELBOURNE</small></p>
-
-<p class="center p120">THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, <span class="smcap">Ltd.</span><br />
-<small>TORONTO</small></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider2" />
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<a name="frontispiece" id="frontispiece"></a>
-<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="400" height="644" alt="Frontispiece" /><br />
-SOMEWHERE BEYOND SEALED DOORS
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-<p class="center p180">WHEN I WAS A LITTLE<br />
-GIRL</p>
-
-<p class="center p140 mt3"><small>BY</small><br />
-ZONA GALE</p>
-
-<p class="center mt3">AUTHOR OF “THE LOVES OF PELLEAS AND ETARRE,”<br />
-“FRIENDSHIP VILLAGE,” ETC.</p>
-
-<p class="center mt3 p120"><small>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</small><br />
-AGNES PELTON</p>
-
-<p class="center ornate p140">New York</p>
-<p class="center p130">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
-<small>1913</small></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<p class="center">Copyright, 1911, by The Curtis Publishing Company.</p>
-
-<hr class="small" />
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1913,<br />
-By</span> THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.</p>
-
-<hr class="small" />
-
-<p class="center">Set up and electrotyped. Published October, 1913.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center ornate">Norwood Press</p>
-<p class="center">J. B. Cushing Co.&mdash;Berwick &amp; Smith Co.<br />
-Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<p class="center ornate p140">To</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE LITTLE GIRL ON CONANT STREET<br />
-AND TO THE<br />
-MEMORY OF HER GRANDMOTHER<br />
-HARRIET BEERS</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">vii</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="contents" id="contents"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
-<tr>
-<th class="tdr">CHAPTER</th>
-<th class="tdl">&nbsp;</th>
-<th class="tdr2">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">I.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">In Those Days</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#i">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">II.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">In No Time</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#ii">16</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">III.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">One for the Money</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#iii">35</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">IV.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The Picnic</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#iv">53</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">V.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The King’s Trumpeter</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#v">77</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VI.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">My Lady of the Apple Tree</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#vi">103</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VII.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The Princess Romancia</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#vii">118</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">Two for the Show</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#viii">147</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">IX.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">Next Door</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#ix">159</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">X.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">What’s Proper</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#x">173</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XI.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">Dolls</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xi">192</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XII.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">Bit-Bit</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xii">211</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">Why</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xiii">228</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XIV.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">King</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xiv">247</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">King</span> (<i>continued</i>)</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xv">281</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XVI.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The Walk</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xvi">307</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XVII.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The Great Black Hush</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xvii">315</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XVIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The Decoration of Independence</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xviii">329</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XIX.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">Earth-Mother</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xix">354</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XX.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">Three to Make Ready</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xx">375</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">viii</a></span></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">ix</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="illustrations" id="illustrations"></a>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<table summary="List of Illustrations">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Somewhere beyond sealed doors</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<th class="tdl">&nbsp;</th>
-<th class="tdr">FACING PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Sat on a rock in the landscape and practised</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#sat">32</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Little by little she grew silent and refused to join in
-the games</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#little">128</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">But the minute folk left the room&mdash;ah, then!</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#but">168</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">She settled everything in that way; she counted the
-petals of fennel daisies and blew thistle from
-dandelions</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#she">196</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Then out of the valley a great deev arose</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#then">216</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">To see what running away is really like</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#to">316</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">x</a></span></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> used to be a little girl who does not come here any more. She is
-not dead, for when certain things happen, she stirs slightly where she
-is, perhaps deep within the air. When the sun falls in a particular
-way, when graham griddle cakes are baking, when the sky laughs
-sudden blue after a storm, or the town clock points in its clearest
-you-will-be-late way at nine in the morning, when the moonlight is on
-the midnight and nothing moves&mdash;then, somewhere beyond sealed doors,
-the little girl says something, and it is plain that she is here all
-the time.</p>
-
-<p>You little child who never have died, in these stories I am trying
-to tell you that now I come near to understanding you. I see you
-still, with your over-long hair and your over-much chattering, your
-naughtiness and your dreams. I know the qualities that made you
-disagreeable and those that made you dear, and I look on you somewhat
-as spirit looks on spirit, understanding from within. I wish that
-we could live it again, you and I&mdash;not all of it, by any means, and
-not for a serious business; but now and then, for a joy and for an
-idleness. And this book is a way of trying to do it over again,
-together.</p>
-
-<p class="nmb">Will you care to come from the quiet where you are, near to me and
-yet remote? I think that you will come, for you were wont untiringly
-to wonder about me. And now here I am, come true, so faintly like her
-whom you dreamed, yet so like you yourself, your child, fruit of your
-spirit, you little shadowy mother....</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">xii</a></span>
-If only words were moments</div>
-<div class="line">And I knew where they fly,</div>
-<div class="line">I’d make a tale of time itself</div>
-<div class="line">To tell you by and bye.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">If only words were fathoms</div>
-<div class="line">That let us by for pearls,</div>
-<div class="line">I’d make a story ocean-strange</div>
-<div class="line">For little boys and girls.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">But words are only shadow things.</div>
-<div class="line">I summon all I may.</div>
-<div class="line">Oh, see&mdash;they try to spell out Life!</div>
-<div class="line">Let’s act it, like a play.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</a></span>
-
-<p class="center p180">When I was a Little Girl</p>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="no-break"><a name="i" id="i"></a>I<br />
-<span>IN THOSE DAYS</span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> those days time always bothered us. It went fast or it went slow,
-with no one interfering. It was impossible to hurry it or to hold it
-back.</p>
-
-<p>“Only ten weeks more,” we invariably said glibly, when the Spring term
-began.</p>
-
-<p class="nmb">“Just think! We’ve&mdash;got&mdash;t-e-n&mdash;weeks!” we told one another at the
-beginning of vacation, what time we came home with our books, chanting
-it:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line outdent">“<em>No more Latin,</em></div>
-<div class="line"><em>No more French,</em></div>
-<div class="line"><em>No more sitting on a hard wood bench.</em>”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="noi">&mdash;both chorally and antiphonally chanting it.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, in spite of every encouragement, the Spring term lasted
-immeasurably and the Summer vacation melted. It was the kindred
-difference of experience respectively presented<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">2</a></span> by a bowl of hot
-ginger tea and an equal bulk of ice-cream.</p>
-
-<p>In other ways time was extraordinary. We used to play with it: “Now is
-now. But now that other Now is gone and a Then is now. How did it do
-it? How do all the Nows begin?”</p>
-
-<p>“When is the party?” we had sometimes inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow,” we would be told.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, “Now it’s to-morrow!” we would joyfully announce, only
-to be informed that it was, on the contrary, to-day. But there was no
-cause for alarm, for now the party, it seemed, had changed too, and
-that would be to-day. It was frightfully confusing.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>When</em> is to-morrow?” we demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“When to-day stops being,” they said.</p>
-
-<p>But never, never once did to-day stop that much. Gradually we
-understood and humoured the pathetic delusion of the Grown-ups: <em>To-day
-lasted always and yet the poor things kept right on forever waiting for
-to-morrow.</em></p>
-
-<p>As for me, I had been born without the time sense. If I was told that
-we would go to drive in ten minutes, I always assumed that I could
-finish dressing my doll, tidy my play-house, put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</a></span> her in it with all
-her family disposed about her down to the penny black-rubber baby
-dressed in yarn, wash my face and hands, smooth my hair (including
-the protests that these were superfluous), make sure that the kitten
-was shut in the woodshed ... long before most of which the family
-was following me, haling me away, chiding me for keeping older folk
-waiting, and the ten minutes were gone far by. Who would have thought
-it? Ten minutes seem so much.</p>
-
-<p>And if I went somewhere with permission to stay an hour! Then the
-hour stretched invitingly before me, a vista lined with crowding
-possibilities.</p>
-
-<p>“How long can you stay?” we always promptly asked our guests, for there
-was a feeling that the quality of the game to be entered on depended
-on the time at our disposal. But when they asked me, it never was
-conceivable that anything so real as a game should be dependent on
-anything so hazy as time.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a whole hour!” I would say royally. “Let’s play City.”</p>
-
-<p>With this attitude Delia Dart, who lived across the street, had no
-patience. Delia was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</a></span> definite. Her evenly braided hair, her square
-finger tips, her blunt questions, her sense of what was due to
-Delia&mdash;all these were definite.</p>
-
-<p>“City!” she would burst out. “You can’t play City unless you’ve got all
-afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>And Margaret Amelia and Betty Rodman, who were pretty definite too,
-would back Delia up; but since they usually had permission to stay all
-afternoon, they would acquiesce when I urged: “Oh, well, let’s start
-in anyhow.” Then about the time the outside wall had been laid up in
-the sand-pile and we had selected our building sites, the town clock
-would strike my hour, which would be brought home to me only by Delia
-saying:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you go. Will she care if you’re late?”</p>
-
-<p>On such occasions we never used the substantive, but merely “she.”
-It is worth being a child to have a sense of values so simple and
-unassailable as that.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to do just this much. I can run all the way home,” I would
-answer; and I would begin on my house walls. But when these were
-done, and the rooms defined by moist sand partitions, there was all
-the fascination of its garden, with walks to be outlined with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-shingle and sprays of Old Man and cedar to be stuck in for trees, and
-single stems of Fever-few and Sweet Alyssum or Flowering-currant and
-Bleeding-heart for the beds, and Catnip for the borders, and a chick
-from Old-Hen-and-Chickens for a tropical plant. We would be just begun
-on the stones for the fountain when some alien consciousness, some
-plucking at me, would recall the moment. And it would be half an hour
-past my hour.</p>
-
-<p>“You were to come home at four o’clock,” Mother would say, when I
-reached there panting.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Why</em> did I have to come home at four o’clock?” I would finally give
-way to the sense of great and arbitrary wrong.</p>
-
-<p>She always told me. I think that never in my life was I bidden to
-do a thing, or not to do it, “because I tell you to.” But never
-once did a time-reason seem sufficient. What were company, a
-nap-because-I-was-to-sit-up-late, or having-to-go-somewhere-else beside
-the reality of that house which I would never occupy, that garden where
-I would never walk?</p>
-
-<p>“You can make it the next time you go to Delia’s,” Mother would say.
-But I knew that this was impossible. I might build another<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</a></span> house,
-adventure in another garden; this one was forever lost to me.</p>
-
-<p>“... only,” Mother would add, “you can not go to Delia’s for ...” she
-would name a period that yawned to me as black as the abyss. “...
-because you did not come home to-day when you were told.” And still
-time seemed to me indefinite. For now it appeared that I should never
-go to Delia’s again.</p>
-
-<p>I thought about it more and more. What was this time that was laid on
-us so heavy? Why did I have to get up <em>because</em> it was seven o’clock,
-go to school <em>because</em> it was nine, come home from Delia’s <em>because</em>
-the clock struck something else ... above all, why did I have to go to
-bed <em>because</em> it was eight o’clock?</p>
-
-<p>I laid it before my little council.</p>
-
-<p>“Why do we have to go to bed because it’s bed-time?” I asked them.
-“Which started first&mdash;bed-time or us?”</p>
-
-<p>None of us could tell. Margaret Amelia Rodman, however, was of opinion
-that bed-time started first.</p>
-
-<p>“Nearly everything was here before we were,” she said gloomily. “We
-haven’t got anything in the house but the piano and the rabbits that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-wasn’t first before us. Mother told father this morning that we’d had
-our stair-carpet fifteen years.”</p>
-
-<p>We faced that. Fifteen years. Nearly twice as long as we had lived. If
-a stair-carpet had lasted like that, what was the use of thinking that
-we could find anything to control on the ground of our having been here
-first?</p>
-
-<p>Delia Dart, however, was a free soul. “<em>I</em> think we begun before
-bed-time did,” she said decidedly. “Because when we were babies,
-we didn’t have any bed-time. Look at babies now. They don’t have
-bed-times. They sleep all the while.”</p>
-
-<p>It was true. Bed-time must have started after we did. Besides, we
-remembered that it was movable. Once it had been half past seven. Now
-it was eight. Delia often sat up, according to her own accounts, much
-later even than this.</p>
-
-<p>“Grown-ups don’t have any bed-time either,” Betty took it up. “They’re
-like babies.”</p>
-
-<p>This was a new thought. How strange that Grown-ups and babies should
-share this immunity, and only we be bound.</p>
-
-<p>“Who <em>made</em> bed-time?” I inquired irritably.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-“S-h-h!” said Delia. “God did.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe it,” I announced flatly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Delia, “anyway, he makes us sleepy.”</p>
-
-<p>This I also challenged. “Then why am I sleepier when I go to church
-evenings than when I play Hide-and-go-seek in the Brice’s barn
-evenings?” I submitted.</p>
-
-<p>This was getting into theology, and Delia used the ancient method.</p>
-
-<p>“We aren’t supposed to know all those things,” she said with
-superiority, and the council broke up.</p>
-
-<p>That night I brought my revolt into the open. At eight o’clock I was
-disposing the articles in my play-house so that they all touched,
-in order that they might be able to talk during the night. It was
-well-known to me that inanimate objects must touch if they would
-carry on conversation. The little red chair and the table, the blue
-paper-weight with a little trembling figure inside, the silver vase,
-the mug with “Remember me” in blue letters, the china goat, all must be
-safely settled so that they might while away the long night in talk.
-The blue-glass paper weight with the horse and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">9</a></span> rider within, however,
-was uncertain what he wanted to companion. I tried him with the china
-horse and with the treeful of birds and with the duck in a boat, but
-somehow he would not group. While he was still hesitating, it came:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Bed-time, dear,” they said.</p>
-
-<p>I faced them at last. I had often objected, but I had never reasoned it
-out.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sleepy,” I announced serenely.</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s bed-time,” they pressed it mildly.</p>
-
-<p>“Bed-time is when you’re sleepy,” I explained. “I’m not sleepy. So it
-can’t be bed-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bed-time is eight o’clock,” they said with a hint of firmness, and
-picked me up strongly and carried me off; and to my expostulation that
-the horse and his rider in the blue paper-weight would have nobody to
-talk to all night, they said that he wouldn’t care about that; and when
-I wept, they said I was cross, and that proved it was Bed-time.</p>
-
-<p>There seemed no escape. But once&mdash;once I came near to understanding.
-Once the door into Unknown-about Things nearly opened for me, and just
-for a moment I caught a glimpse.</p>
-
-<p>I had been told to tidy my top bureau drawer.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span> I have always loathed
-tidying my top bureau drawer. It is so unlike a real task. It is made
-up of odds and ends of tasks that ought to have been despatched long
-ago and gradually, by process of throwing away, folding, putting in
-boxes, hanging up, and other utterly uninteresting operations. I can
-create a thing, I can destroy a thing, I can keep a thing as it was;
-but to face a top bureau drawer is none of these things. It is a motley
-task, unclassified, without honour, a very tag-end and bobtail of a
-task, fit for nobody.</p>
-
-<p>I was thinking things that meant this, and hanging out the window. It
-was a gentle day, like a perfectly natural human being who wants to
-make friends and will not pretend one iota in order to be your friend.
-I remember that it was a still day, that I loved, not as I loved Uncle
-Linas and Aunt Frances, who always played with me and gave me things,
-but as I loved Mother and father when they took me somewhere with them,
-on Sunday afternoons.... I had a row of daffodils coming up in the
-garden. I began pretending that they were marching down the border,
-down the border, down the border to the big rock by the cooking-apple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-tree&mdash;why of course! I had never thought of it, but that rock was where
-they got their gold....</p>
-
-<p>A house-wren came out of a niche in the porch and flew down to the
-platform in the boxalder, where father was accustomed to feed the
-birds. The platform was spread with muffin crumbs. The little wren ate,
-and flew to the clothes-line and poured forth his thankful exquisite
-song. I had always felt regret that we had no clothes reel that
-would whirl like a witch in the wind, but instead merely a system of
-clothes-lines, duly put up on Mondays; but the little wren evidently
-did not know the difference.</p>
-
-<p>“Abracadabra, make me sing like that....” I told him. But I hadn’t said
-the right thing, and he flew away and left me not singing. I began
-thinking what if he <em>had</em> made me sing, and what if I had put back my
-head and gone downstairs singing like a wren, and gone to arithmetic
-class singing like a wren, and nobody could have stopped me, and nobody
-would have wanted to stop me....</p>
-
-<p>... I leaned over the sill, holding both arms down and feeling the
-blood flow down and weight my fingers like a pulse. What if I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span> should
-fall out the window and instead of striking the ground hard, as folk do
-when they fall out of windows, I should go softly through the earth,
-and feel it pressing back from my head and closing together behind my
-heels, and pretty soon I should come out, plump ... before the Root of
-Everything and sit there for a long time and watch it grow....</p>
-
-<p>... I looked up at the blue, glad that I was so near to it, and thought
-how much pleasanter it would be to fly right away through the blue and
-see what colour it was lined with. Pink, maybe&mdash;rose-pink, which showed
-through at sunset when the sun leaped at last through the blue and it
-closed behind him. Rose-pink, like my best sash and hair-ribbons....</p>
-
-<p>That brought me back. My best sash and hair-ribbons were in my top
-drawer. Moreover, there were foot-steps on the stairs and at the very
-door.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you finished?” Mother asked.</p>
-
-<p>I had not even opened the drawer.</p>
-
-<p>“You have been up here one hour,” Mother said, and came and stood
-beside me. “What have you been doing?”</p>
-
-<p>I began to tell her. I do not envy her her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span> quandary. She knew that I
-was not to be too heavily chided and yet&mdash;the top drawers of this world
-must be tidied.</p>
-
-<p>“Think!” she said. “That Hour has gone out the window without its work
-being done. And now this Hour, that was meant for play, has got to
-work. But not you! You’ve lost your turn. Now it’s Mother’s turn.”</p>
-
-<p>She made me sit by the window while she tidied the drawer. I was not to
-touch it&mdash;I had lost my turn. While she worked, she talked to me about
-the things she knew I liked to talk about. But I could not listen. It
-is the only time in my life that I have ever really frantically wanted
-to tidy a top bureau drawer of anybody’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” she said when she had done, “this last Hour will meet the
-Hour-before-the-last, and each of them will look the way the other
-ought to have looked, and they will be all mixed up. And all day I
-think they will keep trying to come back to you to straighten them out.
-But you can’t do it. And they’ll have to be each other forever and ever
-and ever.”</p>
-
-<p>She went away again, and I was left face to face with the very heart of
-this whole perplexing Time business: those two Hours that would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span> always
-be somewhere trying to be each other, forever and ever, and always
-trying to come back for me to straighten them out.</p>
-
-<p>Were there Hours out in the world that were sick hours, sick because we
-had treated them badly, and always trying to come back for folk to make
-them well?</p>
-
-<p>And were there Hours that were busy and happy somewhere because they
-had been well used and they didn’t have to try to come back for us to
-patch them up?</p>
-
-<p>Were Hours like that? Was Time like that?</p>
-
-<p>When I told Delia of the incident, she at once characteristically
-settled it.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, if they wasn’t any time,” she said, “we’d all just wait and wait
-and wait. They couldn’t have that. So they set something going to get
-us going to keep things going.”</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes, in later life, when I have seen folk lunch because it is one
-o’clock, worship because it is the seventh day, go to Europe because it
-is Summer, and marry because it is high time, I wonder whether Delia
-was not right. Often and often I have been convinced that what Mother
-told me about the Hours trying to come back to get one to straighten
-them out is true<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span> with truth undying. And I wish, that morning by the
-window, and at those grim, inevitable Bed-times, that I, as I am now,
-might have told that Little Me this story about how, just possibly,
-they first noticed time and about what, just possibly, it is.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="ii" id="ii"></a>II<br />
-<span>IN NO TIME</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Before</span> months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds were counted
-and named, consider how peculiar it all must have seemed. For example,
-when the Unknown-about Folk of those prehistoric times wished to know
-<em>when</em> a thing would happen, of course they can have had no word
-<em>when</em>, and no answer. If a little Prehistoric Girl gave a party, she
-cannot have known when to tell her guests to come, so she must have
-had to wait until the supper was ready and then invite them; and if
-they were not perfectly-bred little guests, they may have been offended
-because they hadn’t been invited before&mdash;only they would not have known
-how to say or to think “before,” so they cannot have been quite sure
-what they were offended at; but they may have been offended anyway, as
-happens now with that same kind of guest. And if a little Prehistoric
-Boy asked his father<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span> to bring him a new eagle or a new leopard for a
-pet, and his father came home night after night and didn’t bring it,
-the Prehistoric Boy could not say, “<em>When</em> will you bring it, sir?”
-because there was no when, so he may have asked a great many other
-questions, and been told to sit in the back of the cave until he could
-do better. Nobody can have known how long to boil eggs or to bake
-bread, and people must have had to come to breakfast and just sit and
-wait and wait until things were done. Worst of all, nobody can have
-known that time is a thing to use and not to waste. Since they could
-not measure it, they could not of course tell how fast it was slipping
-away, and they must have thought that time was theirs to do with what
-they pleased, instead of turning it all into different things&mdash;this
-piece into sleep, this piece into play, this piece into tasks and
-exercise and fun. Just as, in those days, they probably thought that
-food is to be eaten because it tastes good and not because it makes
-the body grow, so they thought that time was a thing to be thrown away
-and not to be used, every bit&mdash;which is, of course, a prehistoric way
-to think. And nobody can have known about birthdays, and no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span> story can
-have started “Once upon a time,” and everything must have been quite
-different.</p>
-
-<p>About then,&mdash;only of course they didn’t know it was then&mdash;a Prehistoric
-Mother said one morning to her Prehistoric Little Daughter:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Vertebrata, get your practising done and then you may go to
-play.” (It wasn’t a piano and it wasn’t an organ, but it was a lovely,
-reedy, blow-on-it thing, like a pastoral pipe, and little girls always
-sat about on rocks in the landscape, as soon as they had had their
-breakfasts, and practised.)</p>
-
-<p>So Vertebrata took her reed pipes and sat on a rock in the landscape
-and practised&mdash;all of what we now know (but she did not know) would be
-five minutes. Then she came in the cave, and tossed the pipes on her
-bed of skins, and then remembered and hung them in their place above
-the fireplace, and turned toward the doorway. But her mother, who was
-roasting flesh at the fire, called her back.</p>
-
-<p>“Vertebrata,” she said, “did I not tell you to practise?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did practise,” said Vertebrata.</p>
-
-<p>“Then practise and practise,” said her mother,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span> not knowing how else to
-tell her to do her whole hour. Her mother didn’t know hours, but she
-knew by the feel of her feelings when Vertebrata had done enough.</p>
-
-<p>So Vertebrata sat on a rock and did five minutes more, and came and
-threw her pipes on her bed of skins, and remembered and hung them up,
-and then turned toward the door of the cave. But her mother looked up
-from the flesh-pot and called her back again.</p>
-
-<p>“Vertebrata,” she said, “do you want mother to have to speak to you
-again?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, <em>indeed</em>, muvver,” said her little daughter.</p>
-
-<p>“Then practise and practise and practise,” said her mother. “If you
-can’t play when you grow up, what will people think?”</p>
-
-<p>So Vertebrata went back to her landscape rock, and this thing was
-repeated until Vertebrata had practised what we now know (but she did
-not know) to have been a whole hour. And you can easily see that in
-order to bring this about, what her mother must have said to her the
-last time of all was this:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I want you to practise and practise and practise and practise and
-practise and practise and practise and practise and practise and
-practise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span> and practise and practise&mdash;” <em>or</em> something almost as long.</p>
-
-<p>Now of course it was very hard for her mother to say all this besides
-roasting the flesh and tidying the cave, so she made up her mind that
-when her Prehistoric Husband came home, he must be told about it. And
-when the sun was at the top of the sky and cast no shadow, and the
-flesh was roasted brown and fragrant, she dressed it with pungent
-herbs, and raked the vegetables out of the ashes and hid the dessert in
-the cool wall of the cave&mdash;<em>that</em> was a surprise&mdash;and spread the flat
-rock at the door of the cave and put vine-leaves in her hair and, with
-Vertebrata, set herself to wait.</p>
-
-<p>There went by what we now know to have been noon, and another hour, and
-more hours, and all afternoon, and all early twilight, and still her
-Prehistoric Husband did not come home to dinner. Vertebrata was crying
-with hunger, and the flesh and the vegetables were ice-cold, and the
-Prehistoric Wife and Mother sat looking straight before her without
-smiling. And then, just as the moon was rising red over the soft breast
-of the distant wood, the Prehistoric Father appeared, not looking as if
-he had done anything.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-“Is dinner ready?” he asked pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>Now this was the last straw, and the Prehistoric Wife and Mother said
-so, standing at the door of the cave, with Vertebrata crying in the
-offing.</p>
-
-<p>“Troglodyte,” she said sadly (that was what she called him), “dinner
-has been ready and ready and ready and ready and ready and ready and
-ready ...” and she showed him the ice-cold roasted flesh and vegetables.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m <em>so</em> sorry, dearest. I never knew,” said the Troglodyte,
-contritely, and did everything in the world that he could do to show
-her how sorry he was. He made haste to open his game-bag, and he drew
-out what food he had killed, and showed her a soft, cock-of-the-rock
-skin for a cap for her and a white ptarmigan breast to trim it with,
-and at last she said&mdash;because nobody can stay offended when the
-offender is sorry:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Well, dear, say no more about it. We’ll slice up the meat and it will
-do very well cold, and I’ll warm up the potatoes with some brown butter
-(or the like). But hurry and bathe or I’ll be ready first <em>again</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>So he hurried and bathed in the brook, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span> the cave smelled savoury
-of the hot brown butter, and Vertebrata had a Grogan tail stuck in her
-hair, and presently they sat down to supper. And it was nearly eight
-o’clock, but they didn’t know anything about <em>that</em>.</p>
-
-<p>When the serious part of supper was done, and the dessert that was a
-surprise had been brought and had surprised and gone, Vertebrata’s
-mother sat up very straight and looked before her without smiling. And
-she said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Now, something must be done.”</p>
-
-<p>“About what, Leaf Butterfly?” her husband asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Vertebrata doesn’t practise enough and you don’t come home to dinner
-enough,” she answered, “and something must be done.”</p>
-
-<p>“I did practise&mdash;wunst,” said Vertebrata.</p>
-
-<p>“But you should practise once and once and once and once and once and
-once, and so on, and not have to be told each once,” said her mother.</p>
-
-<p>“I did come home to dinner,” said the Prehistoric Husband, waving his
-hand at his empty platter.</p>
-
-<p>“But you should come first and first and first and first and first, and
-so on, and not let the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span> dinner get ice-cold,” said his wife. “Hear a
-thing,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>She sprinkled some salt all thick on the table and took the stick on
-which the flesh had been roasted, and in the salt she drew a circle.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” she said, “is the sky. And this place, at the top, is the top
-of the sky. And when the sun is at the top of the sky and there is no
-shadow, I will have ready the dinner, hot and sweet in the pot, and
-dessert&mdash;for a surprise. And when the sun is at the top of the sky
-and there is no shadow, do you come to eat it, <em>always</em>. That will be
-dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is well,” said the Troglodyte, like a true knight&mdash;for in those
-first days even true knights were willing that women should cook and
-cave-tidy for them all day long and do little else. But that was long
-ago and we must forgive it.</p>
-
-<p>Then she made a mark in the salt at the edge of the circle a little way
-around from the first mark.</p>
-
-<p>“When the sun is at the edge of the sky and all red, and the shadows
-are long, and the dark is coming, I will have ready berries and nuts
-and green stuffs and sweet syrups and other things that I shall think
-of&mdash;for you. And when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span> sun is at the edge of the sky and all red,
-and the shadows are long, and the dark is coming, do you hurry to us,
-<em>always</em>. That will be supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is well,” said the Troglodyte, like a true knight.</p>
-
-<p>Then she drew the stick a long way round.</p>
-
-<p>“This is sleep,” she said. “This place here is waking, and breakfast.
-And then next the sun will be at the top of the sky again. And we will
-have dinner in the same fashion. And this is right for you. But what to
-do with the child I don’t know, unless I keep her practising from the
-time the sun is at the top of the sky until it is at the bottom. For if
-she can’t play when she grows up, what will people think?”</p>
-
-<p>Now, while she said this, the Prehistoric Woman had been sitting with
-the stick on which the flesh had been roasted held straight up in her
-fingers, resting in the middle of the ring which she had made in the
-salt. And by now the moon was high and white in the sky. And the Man
-saw that the moon-shadow of the stick fell on the circle from its
-centre to beyond its edge. And presently he stretched out his hand and
-took the stick from her, and held it so and sat very still, thinking,
-thinking, thinking....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-“Faddie,” said Vertebrata&mdash;she called him that for loving&mdash;“Faddie,
-will you make me a little bow and arrow and scrape ’em white?”</p>
-
-<p>But her father did not hear her, and instead of answering he sprang
-up and began drawing on the soft earth before the cave a deep, deep
-circle, and he ran for the long stick that had carried his game-bag
-over his shoulder, and in the middle of the earth circle he set the
-stick.</p>
-
-<p>“Watch a thing!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>Vertebrata and her mother, understanding little but trusting much, sat
-by his side. And together in the hot, white night the three watched the
-shadow of the stick travel on the dial that they had made. Of course
-there was no such thing as bed-time then, and Vertebrata usually sat
-up until she fell over asleep, when her mother carried her off to her
-little bed of skins; but this night she was so excited that she didn’t
-fall over. For the stick-shadow moved like a finger; like, indeed, a
-living thing that had been in the world all the time without their
-knowing. And they watched it while it went a long way round the circle.
-Then her mother said, “Nonsense, Vertebrata, you must be sleepy now
-whether you know it or not,” and she put her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span> to bed, Vertebrata saying
-all the way that she was wide awake, just like in the daytime. And
-when her mother went back outside the cave, the Man looked up at her
-wonderfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Trachystomata,” said he (which is to say “siren”), “if the sun-shadow
-will do the same thing as the moon-shadow, we have found a way to make
-Vertebrata practise enough.”</p>
-
-<p>In the morning when Vertebrata came out of the cave&mdash;she woke alone and
-dressed alone, just like being grown-up&mdash;she found her mother and her
-father down on their hands and knees, studying the circle in the soft
-earth and the long sun-shadow of the stick. And her mother called her
-and she went running to her. And her mother said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Now we will have breakfast, dear, and then you get your pipes and come
-here and practise. And when you begin, we will lay a piece of bone
-where the shadow stands, and when I feel the feeling of enough, I will
-tell you, and you will stop practising, and we will lay another piece
-of bone on that shadow. And after this you will always practise from
-one bone to another, forever.”</p>
-
-<p>Vertebrata could hardly wait to have breakfast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span> before she tried it,
-and then she ran and brought her pipes and sat down beside the circle.
-And her father did not go to his hunting, or her mother to her cooking
-and cave-tidying, but they both sat there with Vertebrata, hearing her
-pipe and watching the shadow finger move, and waiting till her mother
-should feel the feeling of enough.</p>
-
-<p><em>Now!</em> Since the world began, the Hours, Minutes, and Seconds had been
-hanging over it, waiting patiently until people should understand
-about them. But nobody before had ever, ever thought about them, and
-Vertebrata and her mother and her father were the very first ones who
-had even begun to understand.</p>
-
-<p>So it chanced that in the second that Vertebrata began to pipe and the
-bone was laid on the circle, <em>that</em> Second (deep in the air and yet
-as near as time is to us) knew that it was being marked off at last
-on the soft circle of the earth, and so did the next Second, and the
-next, and the next, and the next, until sixty of them knew&mdash;and there
-was the first Minute, measured in the circle before the cave. And other
-Minutes knew what was happening, and they all came hurrying likewise,
-and they filled the air with exquisite,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span> invisible presences&mdash;all to
-the soft sound of little Vertebrata’s piping. And she piped, and piped,
-on the lovely, reedy, blow-on-it instrument, and she made sweet music.
-And for the first time in her little life, her practising became to her
-not merely practising, but music-making&mdash;there, while she watched the
-strange Time-shadow move.</p>
-
-<p>“J&mdash;o&mdash;y!” cried the Seconds, talking among themselves. “People are
-beginning to know about us. It is <em>time</em> that they should.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” they cried again. “We can go faster than anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think of all of our poor brothers and sisters that have gone, without
-anybody knowing they were here,” they mourned.</p>
-
-<p>“Pipe, pipe, pipe,” went Vertebrata, and the little Seconds danced by
-almost as if she were making them with her piping.</p>
-
-<p>The Minutes, too, said things to one another&mdash;who knows if Time is so
-silent as we imagine? May not all sorts of delicate conversations go on
-in the heart of time about which we never know anything&mdash;Second talking
-with Second, and Minute answering to Minute; and the grave Hours,
-listening to everything we say and seeing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span> everything we do, confiding
-things to the Day about us and about Eternity from which they have
-come. I cannot tell you what they say about you&mdash;you will know that, if
-you try to think, and especially if you stand close to a great clock
-or hear it boom out in the night. And I cannot tell you what they say
-about Eternity. But I think that this may be one of the songs that they
-sing:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center nmb">SONG OF THE MINUTES</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">We are a garland for men,</div>
-<div class="line">We are flung from the first gate of Time,</div>
-<div class="line">From the touch that opened the minds of men</div>
-<div class="line">Down to the breath of this rhyme.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">We are the measure of things,</div>
-<div class="line">The rule of their sweep and stir,</div>
-<div class="line">But whenever a little girl pipes and sings,</div>
-<div class="line">We will keep time for her.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">We are a touching of hands</div>
-<div class="line">From those in the murk of the earth,</div>
-<div class="line">Through all who have garnered life in their hands</div>
-<div class="line">And wrought it from death unto birth.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">We are the measure of things,</div>
-<div class="line">The rule of their stir and sweep,</div>
-<div class="line">And wherever a little child weeps or sings</div>
-<div class="line">It is his soul we keep.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>At last, when sixty Minutes had danced and chorussed past, there was,
-of course, the first rosy Hour ever to have her coming and passing
-marked since earth began. And when the Hour was gone, Vertebrata’s
-mother felt the feeling of enough, and she said to Vertebrata:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“That will do, dear. Now you may go and play.”</p>
-
-<p>That was the first exact hour’s practising that ever any little girl
-did by any sort of clock.</p>
-
-<p>“Ribbon-fish mine,” said the Prehistoric Man to his wife, when
-Vertebrata had finished, “I have been thinking additional thoughts. Why
-could we not use the circle in other ways?”</p>
-
-<p>“What ways, besides for your coming home and for Vertebrata’s
-practising?” asked the Prehistoric Woman; but we must forgive her for
-knowing about only those two things, for she was a very Prehistoric
-Woman indeed.</p>
-
-<p>“Little bones might be laid between the big bones,” said the Man&mdash;and
-by that of course<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span> he meant measuring off minutes. “By certain of them
-you could roast flesh and not kneel continually beside the fire. By
-certain of them you could boil eggs, make meet the cakes, and not be in
-peril of burning the beans. Also....”</p>
-
-<p>He was silent for a moment, looking away over the soft breast of the
-wood where the sun was shining its utmost, because it has so many
-reasons.</p>
-
-<p>“When I look at that moving finger on the circle thing,” he said
-slowly, “it feels as if whoever made the sun were saying things to me,
-but with no words. For his sun moves, and the finger on the circle
-thing moves with it&mdash;as if it were telling us how long to do this
-thing, and how long to do that thing&mdash;you and me and Vertebrata. And
-we must use every space between the bones&mdash;and whoever made the sun is
-telling us this, but with no words.”</p>
-
-<p>The Prehistoric Woman looked up at her husband wonderfully.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a great man, Troglodyte!” she told him.</p>
-
-<p>At which he went away to hunt, feeling for the first time in his
-prehistoric life as if there were a big reason, somewhere out in the
-air, why he should get as much done as he could.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span> And the Prehistoric
-Woman went at her baking and cave-tidying, but always she ran to the
-door of the cave to look at the circle thing, as if it bore a great
-message for her to make haste, a message with no words.</p>
-
-<p>As for Vertebrata, she had taken her pipes and danced away where,
-on rocks in the landscape, the other little Prehistorics sat about,
-getting their practising done. She tried to tell them all about the
-circle thing, waving her pipes and jumping up and down to make them
-understand, and drawing circles and trying to play to them about it on
-her pipes; and at last they understood a little, like understanding a
-new game, and they joined her and piped on their rocks all over the
-green, green place. And the Seconds and Minutes and Hours, being fairly
-started to be measured, all came trooping on, to the sound of the
-children’s piping.</p>
-
-<p>When the sun was at the top of the sky, Vertebrata remembered, and she
-stuck a stick in the ground and saw that there was almost no shadow.
-So she left the other children and ran very hard toward her own cave.
-And when she had nearly reached it, somebody overtook her, also running
-very hard.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<a name="sat" id="sat"></a>
-<img src="images/i_032fp.jpg" width="400" height="536" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><span class="smcap">Sat on a rock in the landscape and practised.</span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-“Faddie!” she called, as she called when she meant loving&mdash;and he swung
-her up on his shoulder and ran on with her. And they burst into the
-open space before the cave just as the shadow-stick pointed straight to
-the top of the circle thing.</p>
-
-<p>There, before the door of the cave, was the flat rock, all set with
-hot baked meat and toothsome piles of roast vegetables and beans that
-were not burned. And the Prehistoric Woman, with vine-leaves in her
-hair, was looking straight before her and smiling. And that was the
-first dinner of the world that was ever served on time, and since that
-day, to be late for dinner is one of the things which nobody may do;
-and perhaps in memory of the Prehistoric Woman, when this occurs, the
-politest ladies may always look straight before them <em>without smiling</em>.</p>
-
-<p>“Is dinner ready, Sea Anemone?” asked the Man.</p>
-
-<p>“On the bone,” replied his wife, pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s for ’sert?” asked Vertebrata.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a surprise,” said her mother&mdash;which is always the proper answer
-to that question.</p>
-
-<p>And while they sat there, the Days and Weeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span> and Months and Years
-were coming toward them, faster than anything, to be marked off on the
-circle thing before the door, <em>and to be used</em>. And they are coming
-yet, like a message&mdash;but with no words.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="iii" id="iii"></a>III<br />
-<span>ONE FOR THE MONEY</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> were burying snow. Calista Waters had told us about it, when, late
-in April, snow was found under a pile of wood in our yard. We wondered
-why we had never thought of it before when snow was plentiful. We had
-two long tins which had once contained ginger wafers. These were to be
-packed with snow, fastened tight as to covers, and laid deep in the
-earth at a distance which, by means of spoons and hot water, we were
-now fast approaching.</p>
-
-<p>It was Spring-in-earnest. The sun was warm, robins were running on the
-grass, already faintly greened where the snow had but just melted;
-a clear little stream flowed down the garden path and out under the
-cross-walk. The Wells’s barn-doors stood open, somebody was beating
-a carpet, there was a hint of bonfire smoke in the air, there were
-little stirrings and sounds that belonged to Spring as the gasoline
-wood-cutter belonged to Fall.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-Calista was talking.</p>
-
-<p>“And then,” she said, “some hot Summer day, when they’re all sitting
-out on the lawn in the shade, with thin dresses and palm-leaf fans,
-we’ll come and dig it up, and carry ’em big plates of feathery white
-snow, with a spoon stuck in.”</p>
-
-<p>We were silent, picturing their delight.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Messmore says,” I ventured, not without hesitation, “that snow is
-all bugs.”</p>
-
-<p>In fact all of us had been warned without ceasing not to eat snow&mdash;but
-there were certain spots where it was beyond human power to resist
-it: Mr. Britt’s fence, for instance, on whose pickets little squares
-of snow rested, which, eaten off by direct application of the lips,
-produced a slight illusion of partaking of caramels.</p>
-
-<p>Delia stopped digging. “Maybe they won’t eat it when we bring it to
-them in Summer?” she suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“Then we will,” said Calista, promptly. Of course they would not have
-the heart to forbid us to eat it in, say, June.</p>
-
-<p>About a foot down in the ground we set the two tins side by side in an
-aperture lined and packed with snow and filled in with earth.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span> Over it
-we made a mound of all the snow we could find in the garden. Then we
-adjourned to the woodshed and sat on the sill and the sawbuck and the
-work-bench.</p>
-
-<p>“What makes us give it away?” said Delia Dart, abruptly. “Why don’t we
-sell it? We’d ought to get fifteen cents a dish for it by June.”</p>
-
-<p>We began a calculation, as rapid as might be. Each tin would hold at
-least six dishes.</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t we bury more?” said Calista, raptly. “Why didn’t we bury a
-tubful?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’d be an awful job to dig the hole,” I objected. “Besides, they’d
-miss the tub.”</p>
-
-<p>The latter objection was insurmountable, so we went off to the garden
-to hunt pig-nuts. A tree of these delicacies grew in the midst of the
-potato patch, and some of the nuts were sure to have lain winter-long
-in the earth and to be seasoned and edible.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s all ask to go to the Rodmans’ this afternoon and tell Margaret
-Amelia and Betty about the snow,” Calista suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t,” I said. “I’ve got to go calling.”</p>
-
-<p>They regarded me pityingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you come over there afterwards?” they suggested.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-This, I knew, was useless. We should not start calling till late.
-Besides, I should be hopelessly dressed up.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Delia, soothingly, “<em>we’ll</em> go anyhow. Are you going to
-call where there’s children?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so,” I said, darkly. “We never do.”</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon was one whose warm air was almost thickened by sun. The
-maple buds were just widening into little curly leaves; shadows were
-beginning to show; and everywhere was that faint ripple of running
-water in which Spring speaks. But then there was I, in my best dress,
-my best coat, my best shoes, my new hat, and gloves, faring forth to
-make calls.</p>
-
-<p>This meant merely that there were houses where dwelt certain Grown-ups
-who expected me to be brought periodically to see them, an expectation
-persevered in, I believe, solely as a courtesy to my family. Twice a
-year, therefore, we set out; and the days selected were, as this one,
-invariably the crown and glory of all days: Days meet for cleaning
-out the play-house, for occupying homes scraped with a shingle in the
-softened soil, for assisting at bonfires,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span> to say nothing of all that
-was to be done in damming up the streams of the curbs and turning aside
-the courses of rivers.</p>
-
-<p>The first call was on Aunt Hoyt&mdash;no true aunt, of course, but “aunt”
-by mutual compliment. She lived in a tiny house on Conant Street, set
-close to the sidewalk and shaded by an enormous mulberry tree. I sought
-out my usual seat, a little hardwood stool to whose top was neatly
-tacked a square of Brussels carpeting and whose cover, on being lifted,
-revealed a boot-jack, a shoe-brush, and a round box of blacking. The
-legs were deeply notched, and I amused myself by fitting my feet in the
-notches and occasionally coming inadvertently back to the floor with an
-echoing bump.</p>
-
-<p>Now and then Aunt Hoyt, who was little and wrinkled, and whose glasses
-had double lenses in the middle so that I could not keep my eyes from
-them when she spoke, would turn to address an observation at me.</p>
-
-<p>“How long her hair is! Do you think it is quite healthy for her to have
-such long hair? I’ll warrant you don’t like to have it combed, do you,
-dear?”</p>
-
-<p>If Aunt Hoyt had only known the depth of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span> the boredom with which I had
-this inane question put to me! It was one of the wonders of my days:
-the utterly absurd questions that grown-up people could ask.</p>
-
-<p>For example: “How do you do to-day?” What had any reasonable child
-to answer to that? Of course one was well. If one wasn’t, one would
-be kept at home. If one wasn’t, one wasn’t going to tell anyway. Or,
-“What’s she been doing lately?” Well! Was one likely to reply: “Burying
-snow. Hunting pig-nuts. Digging up pebbles from under the eaves. Making
-a secret play-house in the currant bushes that nobody knows about?” And
-unless one did thus tell one’s inmost secrets, what was there left to
-say? And if one kept a dignified silence, one was sulky!</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a good little girl, I’m sure. Is she much help to you?” Aunt
-Hoyt asked that day, and patted my hair as we took leave. Dear Aunt
-Hoyt, I know now that she was lonesome and longed for children and,
-like many another, had no idea how to treat them, save by making little
-conversational dabs at them.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was Aunt Arthur, who lived in a square brick house that
-always smelled cool.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span> At her house I invariably sat on a Brussels
-“kick-about” in the bay window and looked at a big leather “Wonders
-of Earth and Sea,” with illustrations. Sometimes she let me examine a
-basket of shells that she herself had gathered at the beach&mdash;I used
-to look at her hands and at her big, flat cameo ring and marvel that
-they had been so near to the ocean. Once or twice, when I wriggled too
-outrageously, she would let me go into the large, dim parlour, with
-its ostrich egg hanging from the chandelier and the stuffed blackbird
-under an oval glass case before the high mirror, and the coral piled
-under the centre-table and the huge, gilt-framed landscape which she
-herself had painted. But this day, between the lace curtains hanging
-from their cornices, I caught sight of Calista and Delia racing up the
-hill to the Rodmans, and the entire parlour was, so to say, poisoned.
-In desperation I went back and asked for a drink of water&mdash;my ancient
-recourse when things got too bad.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Barker’s was better&mdash;there was a baby there. But that day ill-luck
-went before me, for he was asleep and they refused to let me look at
-him, because they said that woke him up.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span> I disbelieved this, because I
-saw no reason in it, and nobody gave me a reason. I resolved to try it
-out the first time I was alone with a sleeping baby. I begged boldly to
-go outdoors, and Mother would have consented, but Aunt Barker said that
-a man was painting the lattice and that I would in every probability
-lean against the lattice, or brush the paint pots, or try to get a
-drink at the pump, which, I gathered, splashed everybody for miles
-around. So I sat in a patent rocker, and the only rift in a world of
-black cloud was that, by rocking far enough, the patent rocker could be
-made to give forth a wholly delectable squeak. Of course fate swiftly
-descended; I was bidden discontinue the squeak, and nothing remained to
-me.</p>
-
-<p>Then we went to Grandma Bard’s. I did not in the least know why, but
-the little rag-carpeted sitting-room, the singing kettle on the back of
-the coal stove, the scarlet geraniums on the window, the fascinating
-picture on the clock door, all entertained me at once. Grandma Bard
-wore a black lace cap, and she bade me sit by her and instantly gave
-me a peppermint drop from the pocket of her black sateen apron. She
-asked me no questions, but while she talked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span> with Mother, she laid
-together two rose-coloured&mdash;rose-coloured!&mdash;bits of her patchwork and
-quietly handed them to me to baste&mdash;none of your close stitches, only
-basting! Then she folded a newspaper and asked me to cut it and scallop
-it for her cupboard shelf. Then she found a handful of hickory nuts and
-brought me the tack-hammer and a flat-iron....</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mother, let’s <em>not</em> go yet,” I heard myself saying.</p>
-
-<p>Going home&mdash;a delicate business, because stepping on any crack meant
-being poisoned forthwith&mdash;I tried to think it out: What was it that
-Mother and Grandma Bard knew that the rest didn’t know? I gave it up.
-All I could think of was that they seemed to know me.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t Grandma Bard just grand?” I observed fervently.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid,” Mother said thoughtfully, “that sometimes she has rather
-a hard time to get on.”</p>
-
-<p>I was still turning this in my mind as we passed the wood yard. The
-wood yard was a series of vacant lots where some mysterious person
-piled cords and cords of wood, which smelled sweet and green and gave
-out cool breaths. Sometimes the gasoline wood-cutter worked in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span> there,
-and we would watch till it had gone, and then steal in and bring away a
-baking-powder can full of sawdust. We never knew quite what to do with
-this sawdust. It was not desirable for mud-pies, and there was nothing
-that we knew of to be stuffed with it. Yet when we could, we always
-saved it. Perhaps it gave us an excuse to go into the wood yard, at
-which we always peeped as we went by. This day, I lagged a few steps
-behind and looked in, expectant of the same vague thing that we always
-expected, and never defined&mdash;a bonfire, a robber, an open cave, some
-changed aspect, I did not know what. And over by the sawdust pile, I
-saw, stepping about, a little girl in a reddish dress&mdash;a little girl
-whom I had never seen before. She looked up and saw me stand staring at
-her; and her gaze was so clear and direct that I felt obliged to say
-something in defence of my intrusion.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>Her face suddenly brightened. “Hello,” she replied, and after a moment
-she added: “I thought you was going to say ‘how de do.’”</p>
-
-<p>A faint spark of understanding leapt between us. Dressed-up little
-girls usually did say “how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span> de do.” It was only in a kind of
-unconscious deference to her own appearance that I had not done so. She
-was unkempt and ragged&mdash;her sleeve was torn from cuff to elbow.</p>
-
-<p>“What you doing here?” I inquired, not averse to breaking the business
-of calling by a bit of gossip.</p>
-
-<p>At this she did for the third time what I had been vaguely conscious
-of her having done: She glanced over her shoulder toward a corner of
-the yard which the piled wood concealed from me. I stepped forward and
-looked there.</p>
-
-<p>On an end of wood-pile which we children had pulled down so as to
-make a slope to ascend its heights, a man was sitting. His head and
-shoulders were drooping, his legs were relaxed, and his hands were
-hanging loose, as if they were heavy. His eyes were closed and his lips
-were parted, yet about the face, with its fair hair and beard, there
-was something singularly attractive and gentle. He looked like a man
-who would tell you a story.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s he?” I asked, and involuntarily I whispered.</p>
-
-<p>The girl began backing a little away from me, her eyes on my face, her
-finger on her lips.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-“It’s my father,” she said. “He’s&mdash;resting.”</p>
-
-<p>I had never heard of a man resting in the daytime. Save, perhaps, on
-Sunday afternoons, this was no true function of men. I longed to look
-at the man and understand better, but something in the little girl’s
-manner forbade me. I looked perplexedly after her. Then I peered round
-the fence post and saw my Mother standing under a tree, waiting for
-me. She beckoned. I took one more look inside the fence, and I saw the
-little girl sit down beside the sleeping man and fold her hands. The
-afternoon sun smote across the long wood yard, with its mysterious
-rooms made by the piling of the cords. It seemed impossible that this
-strange, still place, with its thick carpet of sawdust and its moist
-odours, should belong at all to the commonplace little street. And the
-two strange occupants gave the last touch to its enchantment.</p>
-
-<p>I ran to overtake Mother, and I tried to tell her something of what I
-had seen. But some way my words gave nothing of the air of the place
-and of the two who waited there for something that I could not guess.
-Already I knew this about words&mdash;that they were all very well for
-<em>saying</em> a thing, but seldom for letting anybody <em>taste</em> what you were
-talking about.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-I did not give up trying to tell it until we passed the Rodmans’.
-From the direction of their high-board fence I heard voices. Margaret
-Amelia and Betty and Delia and Calista were engaged in writing on the
-weathered boards of the fence with willows dipped in the clear-flowing
-gutter stream.</p>
-
-<p>“Got it done?” I called mysteriously.</p>
-
-<p>They turned, shaking their heads.</p>
-
-<p>“It was all melted,” they replied. “We couldn’t find another bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well,” I cried, “you come on over after supper. I’ve got something
-to tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Something to tell you” would, of course, bring anybody anywhere.
-After supper they all came “over.” It was that hour which only village
-children know&mdash;that last bright daylight of slanting sun and driven
-cows tinkling homeward; of front-doors standing open and neighbours
-calling to one another across the streets, and the sky warm in the
-quiet surface of some little water from whose bridge lads are tossing
-stones or hanging bare-footed from the timbers. We withdrew past the
-family, sitting on the side-porch, to the garden, where the sun was
-still golden on the tops of the maples.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-“Mother says,” I began importantly, “that she thinks Grandma Bard has
-a hard time to get along. Well, you know our snow? Well, you know you
-said you couldn’t find any more to bury? Well, why don’t we dig up
-ours, right now, and sell it and give the money to Grandma Bard?”</p>
-
-<p>I must have touched some answering chord. Looking back, I cannot
-believe that this was wholly Grandma Bard. Could it be that the others
-had wanted to dig it up, independent of my suggestion? For there was
-not one dissenting voice.</p>
-
-<p>The occasion seemed to warrant the best dishes. I brought out six china
-plates and six spoons. These would be used for serving my own family,
-while the others took the two cans and ran home with them to their
-families.</p>
-
-<p>We dug rapidly now, the earth being still soft. To our surprise, the
-tops of the tins were located much nearer to the surface than we had
-supposed after our efforts of the morning to reach a great depth. The
-snow in which we had packed the cans had disappeared, but we made
-nothing of that. We drew out the cans,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span> had off their tops, and gazed
-distressfully down into clear water.</p>
-
-<p>“It went and melted!” said Calista, resentfully.</p>
-
-<p>In a way, she regarded it as her personal failure, since the ceremony
-had been her suggestion in the first place.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind, Calista,” we said, “you didn’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>Calista freely summed up her impressions.</p>
-
-<p>“How <em>mean!</em>” she said.</p>
-
-<p>We gravely gathered up the china plates and turned toward the
-house&mdash;and now I was possessed of a really accountable desire to get
-the plates back in their places as quickly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>On the way a thought struck us simultaneously. Poor Grandma Bard!</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s all go to see her to-morrow anyhow,” I suggested&mdash;largely, I am
-afraid, because the memory of my entertainment there was still fresh in
-my mind.</p>
-
-<p>When, after a little while, we came round the house where the older
-ones were sitting, and heard them discussing uninteresting affairs,
-we regarded them with real sympathy. They had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span> so narrowly missed
-something so vastly, absorbingly interesting.</p>
-
-<p>From Delia’s room a voice came calling as, at intervals, other voices
-were heard calling other names throughout the neighbourhood&mdash;they were
-at one with the tinkle of the bells and the far-off yodel of the boys.</p>
-
-<p>“Delia!”</p>
-
-<p>“Good night,” said Delia, briefly, and vanished without warning, as at
-the sound of any other taps. Soon after, the others also disappeared;
-and I crept up on the porch and lay down in the hammock.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s she been doing <em>now</em>?” somebody instantly asked me.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment I thought of telling; but not seriously.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently they had not expected an answer, for they went on talking.</p>
-
-<p>“... yes, I had looked forward to it for a long while. Of course we had
-all counted on it. It was a great disappointment.”</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere in me the words echoed a familiar and recent emotion. So!
-They too had their disappointments ... even as we. Of course whatever
-this was could have been nothing like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span> losing a fortune in melted snow.
-Still, I felt a new sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>Mother turned to me.</p>
-
-<p>“We are going to ask Grandma Bard to come to live with us,” she said.
-“Will you like that?”</p>
-
-<p>I sat up in the hammock. “All the time?” I joyfully inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“For the rest of the time,” Mother said soberly. “It seems as if one
-ought to take a child,” she added to the others, “when one takes
-anybody....”</p>
-
-<p>“Still,” said father, “till we get in our heads something of what the
-state owes to old folks, there’s nobody but us to do its work....”</p>
-
-<p>I hardly heard them. To make this come true at one stroke! Even to be
-able to adopt a child! How easily they could do things, these grown-up
-ones; and how magnificently they acted as if it were nothing at all ...
-like the giants planting city-seed and watching cities grow to the size
-and shape of giants’ flower beds....</p>
-
-<p>They went on talking. Some of the things that they said we might have
-said ourselves. In some ways they were not so very different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span> from us.
-Yet think what they could accomplish.</p>
-
-<p>Watching them and listening, there in the April twilight, I began to
-understand. It was not only that they could have their own way. But for
-the sake of things that we had never yet so much as guessed or dreamed,
-it was desirable to be grown up.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="iv" id="iv"></a>IV<br />
-<span>THE PICNIC</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was Delia Dart who had suggested our Arbour Day picnic. “Let’s have
-some fun Arbour Day,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>We had never thought of Arbour Day in that light. Exercises, though
-they presented the open advantage of escape from the school grind, were
-no special fun. Fun was something much more intimate and intangible,
-definite and mysterious, casual and thrilling&mdash;and other anomalies.</p>
-
-<p>“Doing what?” we demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said Delia, restlessly, “go off somewheres. And eat things. And
-do something to tell about and make their eyes stick out.”</p>
-
-<p>We were not old enough really to have observed this formula for
-adventure. Hitherto we had always gone merely because we went. Yet
-all three motives appealed to us. And events fostered our faint
-intention. At the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span> opening of school that morning, Miss Messmore made
-an announcement.... I remember her grave way of smiling and silent
-waiting, so that we hung on what she was going to say.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow,” she said, “is Arbour Day. All who wish will assemble here
-at the usual hour in the afternoon. We are to plant trees and shrubs
-and vines about the schoolhouse. There will be something for each one
-to plant. But this is not required. Any who do not wish to be present
-may remain away, and these will not be marked absent. Only those may
-plant trees who wish to plant trees. I hope that all children will take
-advantage of their opportunity. Classes will now pass to their places.”</p>
-
-<p>Delia telegraphed triumphantly in several directions. We could hardly
-wait to confer. At recess we met immediately in the closet under the
-stairs, a closet intended primarily for chalk, erasers, brooms, and
-maps, but by virtue of its window and its privacy put to sub-uses of
-secret committee meetings.</p>
-
-<p>“I told you,” said Delia. And such was Delia’s magnetism that we felt
-that she had told us. “Let’s take our lunch and start as soon as we get
-out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-“Couldn’t we go after the exercises?” Calista Waters submitted
-waveringly.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>After!</em>” said Delia, scornfully. “It’ll be three o’clock. <em>That’s</em> no
-fun. We want to start by twelve, prompt, and stay till six.”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Amelia Rodman bore out Delia’s contention. She and Betty had
-a dozen eggs saved up from their pullets. They would boil them and
-bring them. “The pullets?” Calista demanded aghast and was laughed
-into subjection, and found herself agreeing and planning in order to
-get back into favour. Delia and the Rodmans were, I now perceive, born
-leaders of mediæval living.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you wait till Saturday?” I finally said, from out a silence
-that had tried to produce this earlier. “That’s only two days.”</p>
-
-<p>“Saturday!” said Delia. “Anybody can have a picnic Saturday. This is
-most as good as running away.”</p>
-
-<p>And of course it was. But....</p>
-
-<p>“Who wants to plant a tree?” Delia continued. “They’ll plant all
-they’ve got whether we’re here or not, won’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>That was true. They would do so. It was clearly a selfish wish to
-participate that was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span> agitating Calista and me. In the end we were
-outvoted, and we went. Our families, it seemed, all took the same
-attitude: We need not plant trees if we did not wish to plant trees.
-Save in the case of Harold Rodman. He was ruled to be too small to walk
-to Prospect Hill, and he preferred going back to school to staying at
-home alone.</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t plant no tree, though,” he announced resentfully, as we left
-him. “I’m goin’ dig ’em all up!” he shouted after us. “Every one in the
-world!”</p>
-
-<p>It was when I was running round the house to get my lunch that I came
-for the second time face to face with Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth was sitting flat on the ground, cleaning knives which
-I recognized as our kitchen knives. This she was doing by a simple
-process, not unknown to me and consisting of driving the knife into the
-ground up to its black handle and shoving it rapidly up and down. It
-struck me as very strange that she should be there, in <em>our</em> back yard,
-cleaning <em>our</em> knives, and I somewhat resented it. For it is curious
-how much of a savage a little girl in a white apron can really be. But
-then I did not at once recognize<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span> her as the girl whom I had seen in
-the wood yard.</p>
-
-<p>I remember her sometimes as I saw her that day. She had straight brown
-hair the colour of my own, and her thick pig-tail, which had fallen
-over her shoulder as she worked, was tied with red yarn. Her face was a
-lovely, even cream colour, with no freckles such as diversified my own
-nose, and with no other colour in her cheek. Her hands were thin and
-veined, with long, agile fingers. The right sleeve of her reddish plaid
-dress was by now slit almost to the shoulder, and her bare arm showed,
-and it was nearly all wrist. She had on a boy’s heavy shoes, and these
-were nearly without buttons.</p>
-
-<p>“What you doing?” I inquired, coming to a standstill.</p>
-
-<p>She lifted her face and smiled, not a flash of a smile, but a slow
-smile of understanding me.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” she replied, and went on with her task.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your name?” I demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary Elizabeth,” she answered, and did not ask me my name. This
-was her pathetic way of deference to me because my clothing and my
-“station” were other than hers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-I went on to the house, but I went, looking back.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother,” I said, “who is she? The little girl out there.”</p>
-
-<p>While she put up my lunch in the Indian basket, Mother told me how Mary
-Elizabeth had come that morning asking for something to do. She had set
-her to work, and meanwhile she was finding out who she was. “I gave
-her something to eat,” Mother said. “And I have never seen even you so
-hungry.” Hungry and having no food. I had never heard of such a thing
-at first hand&mdash;not nearer than in books and in Sunday school. But ...
-hungry that way, and in our yard!</p>
-
-<p>It was chiefly this that accounted for my invitation to her&mdash;this,
-and the fact that, as she came to the door to tell my Mother good-bye
-and to take what she had earned, she gave me again that slow,
-understanding-me smile. Anyway, as we walked toward the gate, I
-overtook her with my Indian basket.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you want to come to the picnic with us?” I said.</p>
-
-<p>She stared at me. “What do you do?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-“Why,” I said, “a picnic? Eat in the woods and&mdash;and get things, and sit
-on the grass. Don’t you think they’re fun?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never was to one,” she answered, but I saw how she was watching me
-almost breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, then,” I insisted carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Honest?” she said. “Me?”</p>
-
-<p>When she understood, I remember how she walked beside me, looking at me
-as if she might at any moment find out her mistake.</p>
-
-<p>Delia, waiting impatiently at our gate with her own basket,&mdash;somehow I
-never waited at the gates of others, but it was always they who waited
-at mine,&mdash;bade me hurry, stared at Mary Elizabeth, and serenely turned
-her back on her.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” I said, “is Mary Elizabeth. I asked her to go to our picnic.
-She’s going. I’ve got enough lunch. This is Delia.”</p>
-
-<p>I suppose that they looked at each other furtively&mdash;so much of the
-stupidity of being a knight with one’s visor lowered yet hangs upon
-us&mdash;and then Delia plucked me, visibly, by the sleeve and addressed me,
-audibly, in the ear.</p>
-
-<p>“What’d you go and do that for?” said she. And I who, at an early age,
-resented being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span> plucked by the sleeve as a bird resents being patted
-on the head, or the wall of any personality trembles away when it is
-tapped, took Mary Elizabeth by the hand and marched on to meet the
-Rodmans and Calista.</p>
-
-<p>Calista was a vague little soul, with no sense of facts. She was always
-promising to walk with two girls at recess, which was equivalent to
-asking two to be her partners in a quadrille. It simply could not be
-done. So Calista was forever having to promise to run errands with
-someone after school to make amends for not having walked with her at
-recess. She seldom had a grievance of her own, but she easily fell in
-with the grievances of others. When I presented Mary Elizabeth to her,
-Calista received her serenely as a part of the course of human events;
-and so I think she would have continued to regard her, without great
-attention and certainly with no criticism, had she not received the
-somewhat powerful suggestion of Delia and Margaret Amelia and Betty
-Rodman. The three fell behind Mary Elizabeth and me as we trotted down
-the long street on which the April sun smote with Summer heat.</p>
-
-<p>“&mdash;over across the railroad tracks and picks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span> up tin cans and old
-rubbers and sells ’em and drinks just awful and got ten children and
-got arrested,” I heard Delia recounting.</p>
-
-<p>“The idea. To our picnic,” said Margaret Amelia’s thin-edged voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Without asking us,” Betty whispered, anxious to think of something of
-account to say.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth heard. I have seen that look of dumb, unresentful
-suffering in many a human face&mdash;in the faces of those who, by the Laws
-of sport or society or of jurisprudence, find no escape. She had no
-anger, and what she felt must have been long familiar. “I’d better go
-home,” she said to me briefly.</p>
-
-<p>I still had her by the hand. And it was, I am bound to confess, as no
-errant but chiefly as antagonist to the others that I pulled her along.
-“You got to come,” I reminded her. “You said you would.”</p>
-
-<p>It was cruel treatment, by way of kindness. The others, quickly
-adapting themselves, fell into the talk of expeditions, which is never
-quite the same as any other talk; and the only further notice that they
-took of Mary Elizabeth was painstakingly to leave her out. They never
-said anything to her, and when she ventured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span> some faint word, they
-never answered or noticed or seemed to hear. In later years I have had
-occasion to observe, among the undeveloped, these same traces of tribal
-antagonisms.</p>
-
-<p>As we went, I had time to digest the hints which I had overheard
-concerning Mary Elizabeth’s estate. I knew that a family having many
-children had lately come to live “across the tracks,” and that, because
-of our anxiety to classify, the father was said to be a drunkard. I
-looked stealthily at Mary Elizabeth, with a certain respect born of her
-having experience so transcending my own. Telling how many drunken men
-and how many dead persons, if any, we had seen was one of our modes
-of recreation when we foregathered. Technically Mary Elizabeth was, I
-perceived, one of the vague “poor children” for whom we had long packed
-baskets and whom we used to take for granted as barbarously as they
-used to take for granted the plague. Yet now that I knew one such,
-face to face, she seemed so much less a poor child than a little girl.
-And though she said so little, she had a priceless manner of knowing
-what I was driving at, which not even Margaret Amelia and Betty Rodman
-had, and they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span> the daughters of an assemblyman, and had a furnace
-in their house, and had had gold watches for Christmas. It was very
-perplexing.</p>
-
-<p>“First one finds a May-flower’s going to be a princess!” Delia shouted.
-Delia was singularly unimaginative; the idea of royalty was her
-single entrance to fields of fancy. The stories that I made up always
-began “Once there was a fairy”; Margaret and Betty started at gnomes
-and dwarfs; Calista usually selected a poor little match girl or a
-boot-black asleep in a piano box; but Delia invariably chose a royal
-family, with many sons.</p>
-
-<p>We ran, shouting, across the stretch of scrub-oak which stretched
-where the town blocks of houses and streets gave it up and reverted to
-the open country. To reach this unprepossessing green place, usually
-occupied by a decrepit wagon and a pile of cord-wood, was like passing
-through a doorway into the open. We expressed our freedom by shouting
-and scrambling to be princesses&mdash;all, that is, save Mary Elizabeth. She
-went soberly about, a little apart, and I wished with all my heart that
-she might find the first May-flower; but she did not do so.</p>
-
-<p>We hunted for wind-flowers. It was on Prospect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span> Hill that these first
-flowers&mdash;wind-flowers, pasque flowers, May-flowers, however one has
-learned to say them&mdash;were found in Spring&mdash;the <em>anemone patens</em> which,
-next to pussy-willows themselves, meant to us Spring. A week before
-Nellie Pitmouth had brought to school the first that we had seen.
-Nellie had our pity because she drove the cows to pasture before
-she came to school, but she had her reward, for it was always she
-who found the first spoils. I remember those mornings when I would
-reach school to find a little group about Nellie in whose hands would
-be pussy-willows, or the first violets, or our rarely found white
-violets. For a little while, in the light of real events like these,
-Nellie enjoyed distinction. Then she relapsed into her usual social
-obscurity and the stigma of her gingham apron which she wore even on
-half holidays. This day we pressed hard for her laurels, scrambling in
-the deep mould and dead leaves in search of the star faces on silvery,
-silken, furry stems. We hoped untiringly that we might some day find
-arbutus, which grew in abundance only eighteen miles away, on the
-hills. In Summer we patiently looked for wintergreen, which they were
-always finding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span> farther up the river. And from the undoubted dearth
-of both we escaped with a pretence to the effect that we were under a
-spell, and that some day, the witch having died, we should walk on our
-hill and find the wintergreen come and the arbutus under the leaves.</p>
-
-<p>By five o’clock we had been hungry for two hours, and we spread our
-lunch on the crest. Prospect Hill was the place to which we took our
-guests when we had them. It was the wide west gateway of the town,
-where through few ventured, for it opened out on the bend of the little
-river, navigable only to rowboats and launches, and flowing toward us
-from the west. You stood at the top of a sharp declivity, and it was
-like seeing a river face to face to find it flowing straight toward
-you, out of the sky, bearing little green islands and wet yellow
-sandbars. It almost seemed as if these must come floating toward us
-and bringing us everything.... For these were the little days, when we
-still believed that everything was necessary.</p>
-
-<p>We quickly despatched the process of “trading off,” a sandwich for an
-apple, a cooky for a cake, and so on, occasionally trading back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span> before
-the bargain had been tasted. Mary Elizabeth sat at one side; even after
-I had divided my lunch and given her my basket for a plate, she sat a
-very little away from us&mdash;or it may be my remembrance of her aloofness
-that makes this seem so. Each of the others gave her something from
-her basket&mdash;but it was the kind of giving which makes one know what
-a sad word is the word “bestow.” They “bestowed” these things. Since
-that time, when I have seen folk administering charity, I have always
-thought of the manner, ill-bred as is all condescension, in which we
-must have shared our picnic food with Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>I believe that this is the first conversation that ever I can remember.
-Up to this time, I had talked as naturally as the night secretes
-dreams, with no sense of responsibility for either to mean anything.
-But that day I became uncomfortably conscious of the trend of the talk.</p>
-
-<p>“I have to have my new dress tried on before supper,” Delia announced,
-her back to the river and her mouth filled with a jam sandwich. “It’s
-blue plaid, with blue buttons and blue tassels on,” she volunteered.</p>
-
-<p>“My new dress Aunt Harriet brought me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span> from the City isn’t going to be
-made up till last day of school,” Margaret Amelia informed us. “It’s
-got pink flowers in and it cost sixty cents a yard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Margaret and I are going to have white shoes before we go visiting,”
-Betty remembered.</p>
-
-<p>“I got two new dresses that ain’t made up yet. Mamma says I got so many
-I don’t need them,” observed Calista, with an indifferent manner and a
-soft, triumphant glance. Whereat we all sat silent.</p>
-
-<p>I struggled with the moment, but it was too much for me.</p>
-
-<p>“I got a white silk lining to my new dress,” I let it be known.
-“It’s made, but I haven’t had it on yet. China silk,” I added
-conscientiously. Then, moved perhaps by a common discomfort, we all
-looked toward Mary Elizabeth. I think I loved her from that moment.</p>
-
-<p>“None of you’s got the new style sleeves,” she said serenely, and held
-aloft the arm whose sleeve was slit from wrist to shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>We all laughed together, but Delia pounced upon the arm. She caught and
-held it.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that on your arm?” she cried, and we all looked. From the elbow
-up the skin was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span> mottled a dull, ugly purple, as if rough hands had
-been there.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth flushed. “Ain’t you ever had any bruises on you?” she
-inquired in a tone so finely modulated that Delia actually hastened to
-defend herself from the impeachment of inexperience.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” she said heartily. “I counted ’em last night. I got seven.”</p>
-
-<p>“I got five and a great long skin,” Betty competed hotly.</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh,” said Calista, “I’ve got a scratch longer than my hand is.
-Teacher said maybe I’d get an infect,” she added importantly.</p>
-
-<p>Then we kept on neutral ground, such as blank-books and Fourth of July
-and planning to go bare-foot some day, until Calista attacked a pickled
-peach which she had brought.</p>
-
-<p>“Our whole cellar’s full of pickled peaches,” I incautiously observed.
-“I could have brought some if I’d thought.”</p>
-
-<p>“We got more than that,” said Delia, instantly. “We got a thousand
-glasses of jelly left over from last year.”</p>
-
-<p>“A thousand!” repeated Margaret Amelia, in derision. “A hundred, you
-mean.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-“Well,” Delia said, “it’s a lot. And jars and jars and jars of
-preserves. And cans and cans and <em>cans</em>....”</p>
-
-<p>The others took it up. Why we should have boasted of the quantity of
-fruit in our parents’ cellars, I have no notion, save that it was
-for the unidentified reason which impels all boasting. When I am in
-a very new bit of country, where generalizations and multiplications
-follow every fact, I am sometimes reminded of the fashion of our talk
-whose statements tried to exceed themselves, in a kind of pyrotechnic
-pattern bursting at last into nothing and the night. We might have been
-praising climate or crops or real estate.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth spoke with something like eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>“We got a bottle of blackberry cordial my grandmother made before she
-died,” she said. “We keep it in the top bureau drawer.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a funny place to keep it....” Delia began, and stopped of her own
-accord.</p>
-
-<p>I remember that everybody was willing enough to let Mary Elizabeth help
-pick up the dishes. Then she took a tree for Pussy-wants-a-corner,
-which always follows the picnic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span> part of a picnic. But hardly anyone
-would change trees with her, and by the design which masks as chance,
-everyone ran to another tree. At last she casually climbed her tree,
-agile as a cat, a feat which Delia alone was shabby enough to pretend
-not to see.</p>
-
-<p>We started homeward when the red was flaming up in the west and falling
-deep in the heart of the river. By then Mary Elizabeth was almost at
-ease with us, but rather, I think, because of the soft evening, and
-perhaps in spite of our presence.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” she cried. “Somebody grabbed the sun and pulled it down. I saw it
-go!”</p>
-
-<p>Delia looked shocked. “You oughtn’t to tell such things,” she reproved
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth flung up the arm with the torn sleeve and ran beside us,
-laughing with abandon. We were all running down the slope in the red
-light.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re Indians, looking for roots for the medicine-man,” Delia called;
-“Yellow Thunder is sick. So is Red Bird. We’re hunting roots.”</p>
-
-<p>She was ahead and we were following. We caught at the dead mullein
-stalks and milkweed pods and threw them away, and leaped up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span> and pulled
-at the low branches with their tender buds. We were filled with the
-flow of the Spring and seeking to express it, as in the old barbaric
-days, by means of destruction.... At the foot of the slope a little
-maple tree was growing, tentative as a sunbeam and scarcely thicker,
-left by the Spring that had last been that way. When she reached it,
-Delia laid hold on it, and had it out by its slight root, and tossed it
-on the moss.</p>
-
-<p>“W-h-e-e-e!” cried Delia, “I wish it was Arbour Day to-morrow too!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth stopped laughing. “I turn here,” she said. “It’s the
-short cut. Good-bye&mdash;I had a grand time. The best time I ever had.”</p>
-
-<p>Delia pretended not to hear. She said nothing. The others called casual
-good-byes over shoulder. Going home, they rebuked me soundly for having
-invited Mary Elizabeth. Delia rehearsed the array of reasons. If she
-came to school, we would have to <em>know</em> her, she wound up. I remember
-feeling baffled and without argument. All that they said was true, and
-yet&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to see her,” I announced stoutly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span> more, I dare say, because
-I was tired and a little cross than from real loyalty.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll catch some disease,” said Delia. “I know a girl that went to
-see some poor children and she caught the spinal appendicitis and died
-before she got back home.”</p>
-
-<p>We went round by the schoolhouse, drawn there by a curiosity that
-had in it inevitable elements of regret. There they were, little
-dead-looking trees, standing in places of wet earth, and most of them
-set somewhat slanting. Everyone was gone, and in the late light the
-grounds looked solemn and different.</p>
-
-<p>“Just think,” said Delia, “when we grow up and the trees grow up, we
-can tell our children how we planted ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, we never&mdash;” Calista began.</p>
-
-<p>“Our school did, didn’t it?” Delia contended. “And our school’s we,
-isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>But we overruled her. No, to the end of time, the trees that stood in
-those grounds would have been planted by other hands than ours. We
-were probably the only ones in the school who hadn’t planted a tree.
-“I don’t care, do you?” we demanded of one another, and reiterated our
-denial.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-“I planted a-a-a&mdash;-Never-green!” Harold Rodman shouted, running to meet
-us.</p>
-
-<p>“So did we!” we told him merrily, and separated, laughing. It had, it
-seemed, been a great day, in spite of Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>I went into the house, and hovered about the supper table. I perceived
-that I had missed hot waffles and honey, and these now held no charm.
-Grandmother Beers was talking.</p>
-
-<p>“When I was eight years old,” she said, “I planted it by the well. And
-when Thomas went back to England fifty years after, he couldn’t reach
-both arms round the trunk. And there was a seat there&mdash;for travellers.”</p>
-
-<p>I looked at her, and thought of that giant tree. Would those
-dead-looking little sticks, then, grow like that?</p>
-
-<p>“If fifty thousand school children each planted a tree to-day,” said my
-mother, “that would be a forest. And planting a forest is next best to
-building a city.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better,” said my father, “better. What kind of tree did you plant,
-daughter?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>I hung my head. “I&mdash;we&mdash;there was a picnic,” I said. “We didn’t <em>have</em>
-to plant ’em. So we had a picnic.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-My father looked at me in the way that I remember.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” he said. “For everyone who plants a tree, there are half
-a dozen that have a picnic. And two dozen that cut them down. At last
-we’ve got one in the family who belongs to the majority!”</p>
-
-<p>When I could, I slipped out in the garden. It was darkening; the frogs
-in the Slough were chorussing, and down on the river-bank a cat-bird
-sang at intervals, was silent long enough to make you think that he
-had ceased, and then burst forth again. The town clock struck eight,
-as if eight were an ancient thing, full of dignity. Our kitchen clock
-answered briskly, as if eight were a proud and novel experience of its
-own. The ’bus rattled past for the Eight-twenty. And away down in the
-garden, I heard a step. Someone had come in the back gate and clicked
-the pail of stones that weighted its chain.</p>
-
-<p>I thought that it would be one of the girls, who not infrequently chose
-this inobvious method of entrance. I ran toward her, and was amazed to
-find Mary Elizabeth kneeling quietly on the ground, as she had been
-when I came upon her at noon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-“What you doing?” I demanded, before I could see what she was doing.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>I stooped. And she had a little maple tree, for which she was hollowing
-a home with a rusty fire-shovel that she had brought with her.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the one Delia Dart pulled out,” she said. “I thought it’d be kind
-of nice to put it here. In your yard. You could bring the water, if you
-want.”</p>
-
-<p>I brought the water. Together we bent in the dusk, and we set out the
-little tree, near the back gate, close to my play-house.</p>
-
-<p>“We’d ought to say a verse or something,” I said vaguely.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t think of any,” Mary Elizabeth objected.</p>
-
-<p>Neither could I, but you had to say something when you planted a tree.
-And a line was as good as a verse.</p>
-
-<p>“‘God is love’ ’s good enough,” said Mary Elizabeth, stamping down the
-earth. Then we dismissed the event, and hung briefly above the back
-gate. Somehow, I was feeling a great and welcome sense of relief.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-“It was kind o’ nice to do that,” I observed, with some embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it wasn’t either,” rejoined Mary Elizabeth, modestly.</p>
-
-<p>We stood kicking at the gravel for a moment. Then she went away.</p>
-
-<p>I faced about to the quiet garden. And suddenly, for no reason that I
-knew, I found myself skipping on the path, in the dark, just as if the
-day were only beginning.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="v" id="v"></a>V<br />
-<span>THE KING’S TRUMPETER</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">And</span> so it is for that night long ago when Mary Elizabeth and I stood by
-the tree and tried to think of something to say, that after all these
-years I have made the story of Peter.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Long years ago, when the world was just beginning to be, there was a
-kingdom which was not yet finished. Of course when a world has just
-stopped being nothing and is beginning to be something, it takes a
-great while to set all the kingdoms going. And this one wasn’t done.</p>
-
-<p>For example, in the palace garden where little Peter used to play,
-the strangest things were to be met. For the mineral kingdom was just
-beginning to be vegetable, and the vegetable was just beginning to
-be animal, and the animal was just beginning to be man,&mdash;and man was
-just, just beginning to know about his living<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span> spirit. Do you see what
-<em>that</em> means? While you looked at a mound of earth it became a bush&mdash;or
-a very little time afterward, as time in these things is reckoned.
-While you looked at a beast-shaped bush&mdash;all bushes at night are shaped
-like beasts&mdash;it became a living animal&mdash;or, again, a <em>very</em> little
-afterward. And men had by no means got over being apes, tigers, swine,
-and dogs, and sometimes you hardly knew which a man was, a real man or
-one of these animals. And spirits were growing in men as fast as this
-might be. Everything, you see, lay in savage angles and wild lines.</p>
-
-<p>Little Peter was playing one morning in the palace garden, and such
-playing as it was! He would be moulding little balls of loam and
-fashioning them with seeds, when suddenly they would break into life as
-buds and then as flowers, almost as one now sees twigs of wood break
-into life, or as quiet cocoons become living butterflies&mdash;for the world
-is not so different. Or Peter would be playing with a spongy-looking
-mass on a rock in the brook, when it would break from its rock and go
-gayly swimming about, and be a fish-thing. Or he would push at a bit of
-ooze with a cat-tail, and a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span> flying life would mount abruptly
-and wing away. It was exciting playing in those days, and some of the
-things you can do in these days. Only then it was all new, so Peter
-could see just how wonderful it was.</p>
-
-<p>Now, that morning the king was walking in his palace garden. And he was
-troubled, for everywhere that he looked there were loose ends and rough
-edges, and shapeless things waiting to be fashioned, and it was so all
-over his kingdom. There was such a great lot to do that he could not
-possibly do it all alone&mdash;no king, however industrious, could have done
-it all. And he longed for the help of all his subjects. So when the
-king came on little Peter, busily making living things where none had
-been before, he was mightily pleased, and he sat down with the little
-lad on a grassy platform in the midst of the garden.</p>
-
-<p>“Lo, now, little lad,” said the king, “what do you play?”</p>
-
-<p>Instead of playing at keeping store or keeping house or at acting or
-hunting or exploring, little Peter was playing another game.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m playing it’s creation, your majesty,” he answered, “and I’m
-playing help the king.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-“Lo, now,” said the king, “I would that all my subjects would play as
-well as you.”</p>
-
-<p>The king thought for a moment, looking out on all the savage angles and
-wild lines, while little Peter watched a bit of leaf mould becoming a
-green plant.</p>
-
-<p>“Summon me my hundred heralds!” the king suddenly bade his servants.</p>
-
-<p>So the servants summoned the hundred heralds, who hurried into their
-blue velvet and silver buckles and came marching, twenty abreast,
-across the grassy plateau, where the morning sun made patterns like
-wings, and among the wings they bowed themselves and asked the king his
-will.</p>
-
-<p>“Hundred heralds,” said the king, “be it only that you do this
-willingly, I would that you go out into my kingdom, into its highways
-and even to its loneliest outposts, and take my people my message. Cry
-to them, until each one hears with his heart as well as his head: ‘The
-world is beginning. You must go and help the king.’”</p>
-
-<p>Now, little Peter, when he heard the message, rose and stood beside the
-king, and in his breast something thrilled and trembled like a smitten
-chord. But as for the hundred heralds, they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span> were troubled as one
-man&mdash;though he not yet wholly a man.</p>
-
-<p>“O king,” they said, twenty at a time, “blue velvet and silver buckles
-are meet for the streets of cities and to call men to feasting
-and to honour the king. But as for the highways and the loneliest
-outposts&mdash;that is another matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what of the message?” the king asked sadly, and this none of the
-heralds knew how to answer; and presently the king sent them away, for
-he would never have unwilling service in his palace or in his kingdom.
-And as they went, little Peter looked after them, and he saw, and
-the king saw, that for all their blue velvet and silver buckles, the
-hundred heralds, marching away twenty abreast, were not yet all men,
-but partly they were apes in manner and swine at heart. And little
-Peter wondered if he fashioned them as he did his bits of mould,
-whether they would burst from a sheath, <em>all</em> men, as burst his little
-plants.</p>
-
-<p>“Summon me my thousand trumpeters!” the king bade his servants next.</p>
-
-<p>The thousand trumpeters hurried into their purple velvet and their lace
-collars and seized their silver trumpets, and came marching fifty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-abreast across the grassy plateau, where the noon sun made a blinding
-light, like the light of another sun; and they bowed themselves in the
-brightness and asked the king his will.</p>
-
-<p>But when the king had told them his will and had repeated the message
-and asked them if they could go willingly, the thousand trumpeters were
-troubled as one man&mdash;and he not yet wholly a man.</p>
-
-<p>“O king,” said they, in fifties and one hundreds, “lo, now, these
-silver trumpets. These are meet to sound up and down the streets of
-cities and to call men to feasting and to honour the king, and never
-are they meet to sound in the lonely outposts. Pray thee, O king, keep
-us near thee.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what of the message?” the king asked, and none of his trumpeters
-could help him there, and he would have no unwilling service in his
-palace or in his kingdom, so he sent them all away. And as they went,
-little Peter looked after them, and he saw, and the king saw, that for
-all their purple velvet and lace collars, the thousand trumpeters,
-marching away fifty abreast, were not all men, but they were apes in
-manner and swine and hounds at heart. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span> little Peter almost wished
-that he could fashion them as he did his bits of mould and see if they
-would not change into something better.</p>
-
-<p>So then the king called a meeting of his High Council, and his
-councillors hurried into their robes of state and appeared on the
-grassy plateau when the evening was lighting the place to be a glory.</p>
-
-<p>“Lo, now,” said the king, “I needs must send a message to all my
-people. Let us devise or dream some way to take it.”</p>
-
-<p>When they heard the message, the councillors nodded, with their hands
-over their mouths, looking at the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king said&mdash;there, in the beginning of the world:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I have a thought about a wire which shall reach round the earth and
-oversea and undersea, on which a man may send a message. And a thought
-I have about a wire which shall stretch across the land, and upon that
-wire a voice may travel alone. And a thought about messages that shall
-pierce the air with no wire and no voice. But none of these things is
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>(“Nay,” said the council, murmuring among themselves, “or ever shall
-be.”)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-“&mdash;and if they were,” said the king, “I would have one serve me even
-better than these, to reach the head and the heart of my people. How
-shall I do this thing? For I must have help in finishing my kingdom.”</p>
-
-<p>The council, stepping about in the slanting light, disputed the matter,
-group by group, but there lay nowhere, it seemed, a conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>“You yourselves,” the king cried at last, “who know well that the
-kingdom must be completed, you yourselves gather the people in
-multitudes together and tell them the message.”</p>
-
-<p>But at this the High Council twitched their robes of state and would
-have none of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Who would sit in the high places if we did <em>that</em>?” said they.</p>
-
-<p>So the king sent them all away, and little Peter, standing beside the
-king, looked after them. And he saw, and the king saw, how, under their
-robes of state, the High Council had not entirely stopped being ape
-and swine and hound and tiger and, early in the world as it was, still
-there seemed no great excuse for that.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, sire,” said little Peter, “I wish I could play with them as I play
-with my bits of mould<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span> and loam and could turn them into something
-better and alive.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well said, little Peter,” replied the king, smiling sadly.</p>
-
-<p>And now the west, which had been like a vast, stained-glass window,
-streaming with warm light, fell into gray opaqueness, and the grassy
-plateau became a place of shadows in which night things were born
-gently. And the king looked away to the beast-shaped bushes and to all
-the striving land.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my kingdom, my kingdom!” he cried, grieving. “Now, would that this
-little Peter here could help you in the making.”</p>
-
-<p>And then little Peter stood upright in the faint light.</p>
-
-<p>“May it please the king,” he said softly, “I will take the message to
-his people.”</p>
-
-<p>The king stared down at him.</p>
-
-<p>“You?” he said. “<em>You</em>, little man? And how, pray, would you take my
-message?”</p>
-
-<p>“May it please the king,” said little Peter, “I would tell everyone in
-the kingdom till all should have been told.”</p>
-
-<p>“Little man,” said the king, “you are no bigger than a trumpet.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-“Ay,” said the little lad, “I think that is what I am. I would that I
-be not Peter, but Trumpeter. So send me forth.”</p>
-
-<p>At this the king laughed, and for the laughter his heart was the
-lighter. He touched the boy’s brow.</p>
-
-<p>“See, then, I touch your brow, little Trumpeter,” he said. “Go
-forth&mdash;and do you know my message?”</p>
-
-<p>“You had first touched my heart, your majesty,” said the little boy,
-“and the message is there.”</p>
-
-<p>You would think, perhaps, that Peter would have waited till the
-morning, but he would not wait an hour. He made a little packet
-of linen and of food, and just as the folk within the palace were
-beginning their evening revelry, he stepped out on the highway and
-fared forth under the moon.</p>
-
-<p>But fancy walking on such a highway as that! At first glance it looked
-like any other night road, stretching between mysterious green. But not
-anything there could be depended upon to stay as it was. A hillock,
-lying a little way ahead, became, as he reached it, a plumy shrub,
-trembling with amazement at its transformation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span> from dead earth to
-living green. At a turn in the road, a low bush suddenly walked away
-into the wood, a four-footed animal. Everything changed as he looked at
-it, as if nothing were meant to be merely what it was. The world was
-beginning!</p>
-
-<p>At the foot of a hill, where the shadows were thick, Peter met the
-first one to whom he could give his message. The man was twisted and
-ragged and a beggar, and he peered down in Peter’s face horribly.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir,” said Peter, courteously, “the world is beginning. You must go
-and help the king.”</p>
-
-<p>“Help the king!” cried the beggar, and his voice was uneven, like a
-bark or a whine that was turning into words. “I can’t help the king
-without my supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Supper is only supper,” said little Peter, who had never in his life
-been hungry. “One must help the king&mdash;that is more.”</p>
-
-<p>The beggar struck the ground with his staff.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m hungry,” he said like a bark. “I want some supper and some dinner
-and all the way back to breakfast before I help the king, world or no
-world!”</p>
-
-<p>And suddenly little Peter understood what it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span> is to be hungry, and
-that, if folk were hungry, they must first find means of feeding
-themselves before they could listen. So he gave the beggar all that he
-had of food in his packet, which was the least that he could do, and
-sent him on his way, charging him with the message.</p>
-
-<p class="nmb">At the top of the hill, Peter came on another man, sitting under a
-sycamore tree. The man was a youth, and very beautiful, and he was
-making a little song, which went like this:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line outdent">“<em>Open, world, your trembling petals slowly,</em></div>
-<div class="line"><em>Here one, there one, natal to its hour,</em></div>
-<div class="line"><em>Toward the time when, holden in a vessel holy,</em></div>
-<div class="line"><em>You shall be a flower.</em>”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Though Peter did not know what the song might mean, yet it fell sweetly
-upon the night, and he liked to listen. And when it was done, he went
-and stood before the youth.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir,” he said, “the world is beginning. You must go and help the king.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know, I know, little lad,” said the youth, and his voice was clear,
-like bird-notes that were turning into words. “I, too, tell the
-message, making it in a song.”</p>
-
-<p>And these words made Peter glad, so that his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span> strength was new, and he
-ran on with the poet’s gentle music in his ears.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot tell you how far Peter went, but he went very far, and to
-many a lonely outpost, and away and away on a drear frontier. It was
-long to go and hard to do, but that is the way the world is made; and
-little Peter went on, now weary, now frightened, now blithe, now in
-good company, now alone and in the dark. I cannot tell you all the
-adventures he had and all the things he did&mdash;perhaps you will know
-these in some other way, sometime. And there were those to whom he
-told the message who listened, or set out in haste for the king’s
-palace; and some promised that they would go another day, and a few ran
-to tell others. But many and many were like the hundred heralds and
-the thousand trumpeters and the king’s High Council, and found many
-a reason why they might not set out. And some there were who mocked
-Peter, saying that the world indeed was doing very well without their
-help and would work itself out if only one would wait; and others would
-not even listen to the little lad.</p>
-
-<p>At last, one morning when the whole world seemed glad that it was
-beginning and seemed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span> long to tell about it, little Peter entered a
-city, decorated for a festival. Everywhere were garlands of vines and
-of roses, bright rugs and fluttering pennons and gilded things, as if
-the world had been long enough begun so that already there were time
-to take holidays. The people were flooding the streets and crowding
-the windows, and through their holiday dress Peter could see how some
-minced and mocked a little like apes, and others peered about like
-giraffes, and others ravened for food and joy, like the beggar or the
-bear or the tiger, and others kept the best, like swine, or skulked
-like curs, or plodded like horses, or prattled like parrots. Animals
-ran about, dumb like the vegetables they had eaten. Vegetables were
-heaped in the stalls, mysterious as the earth which they had lately
-been. The buildings were piled up to resemble the hills from whose
-substance they had been created, and their pillars were fashioned like
-trees. Everywhere were the savage angles and wild lines of one thing
-turning into another. And Peter longed to help to fashion them all, as
-he fashioned his little balls of mould and loam.</p>
-
-<p>“There is so much yet to do,” thought little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span> Peter, “I wonder that
-they take so much time for holidays.”</p>
-
-<p>So he ran quickly to a high, white place in the midst of the town,
-where they were making ready to erect the throne of the king of the
-carnival, and on that he stood and cried:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Hear me&mdash;hear me! The world is beginning. You must go and help the
-king.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, if those about the carnival throne had only said: “What is that to
-us? Go away!” Peter would have been warned. But they only nodded, and
-they said kindly: “Yes, so it is&mdash;and we mean to help presently. Come
-and help us first!” And one of the revellers, seeing Peter, how little
-he was, picked him up and held him at arm’s length and cried:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Lo, now, this little lad. He is no bigger than a trumpet....”</p>
-
-<p>(That was what the king had said, and it pleased Peter to hear it said
-again.)</p>
-
-<p>“... Let us take him,” the revellers went on, “and <em>have</em> him for a
-trumpet. And take him with us in our great procession. What think ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“And may I cry out what message I please?” little Peter asked eagerly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-“Surely,” answered all the revellers, gayly. “What is that to us, so
-that you come with us?”</p>
-
-<p>They picked him up and tossed him on their shoulders&mdash;for he was of
-about a brazen trumpet’s weight, no more;&mdash;and Peter clapped his hands
-for joy, for he was a boy and he loved to think that he would be a part
-of that gorgeous procession. And they took him away to the great tent
-on the city green where everyone was dressing for the carnival.</p>
-
-<p>Peter never had seen anything so strange and wonderful as what was
-within that tent. In it everything and everybody had just been or was
-just going to be something or somebody else. Not only had the gay
-garments piled on the floor just been sheep’s and silkworm’s coats,
-not only had the colours laid upon them just been roots and stems and
-herb-leaves, not only had the staves been tree’s boughs and elephant’s
-tusks, but the very coal burning in the braziers and the oil in the
-torches had once been sunshine, and the very flames had been air, and
-before that water, and so on. But, most of all, the people showed what
-they had been, for in any merry-making the kinds of animals in folk
-can<em>not</em> be covered up; and it was a regular menagerie.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-They took little Peter and dressed him like a trumpet. They thrust both
-his legs into one long cloth-of-gold stocking, and he held his arms
-tightly at his sides while they wound his little body in ruffles of
-gold-coloured silk, growing broader and broader into a full-gathered
-ruff from which his laughing face peeped out. And he was so slender and
-graceful that you could hardly have told him from a real, true, golden
-trumpet.</p>
-
-<p>Then the procession was ready to start, all lined up in the great
-tent. And the heralds and the music all burst out at once as the green
-curtain of the tent was drawn aside, and the long, glittering line
-began to move. Little heralds, darting about for all the world like
-squirrels and chipmunks; a great elephant of a master of ceremonies,
-bellowing out the order of the day as if he had been presiding over
-the jungle; a group of men high in the town’s confidence, whose spots
-proclaimed them once to have been leopards, and other things; long,
-lithe harlequins descended from serpents; little, fat clowns still
-showing the magpie; prominent citizens, unable as yet to conceal the
-fox and the wolf in their faces; the mayor of the town, revealing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span> the
-chameleon in his blood; little donkey men; and a fine old gentleman or
-two made like eagles&mdash;all of them getting done into men as quickly as
-possible. In the midst rode the king of the carnival, who had evidently
-not long since been a lion, and that no doubt was why they picked him
-out. He rode on a golden car from which sprays of green sprang out to
-reach from side to side of the broad street. And at his lips, held like
-a trumpet, he carried little Peter, one hand on Peter’s feet set to the
-kingly lips, and the other stretched out to Peter’s breast.</p>
-
-<p>Then Peter lifted up his shrill little voice and shouted loud his
-message:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“<em>The world is beginning! The world is beginning! The world is
-beginning! You must go and help the king. You must go-o-o and help the
-king!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>But just as he cried that, the carnival band struck into a merry march,
-and all the heralds were calling, and the people were shouting, and
-Peter’s little voice did not reach very far.</p>
-
-<p>“Shout again!” bade the king of the carnival, who did not care in the
-least what Peter said, so long only as he acted like a trumpet.</p>
-
-<p>So Peter shouted again&mdash;shouted his very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span> best. He shouted as loudly
-as he did at play, as loudly as when he swam and raced in the water,
-as loudly as any boy could shout. But it seemed to him that his voice
-carried hardly farther than the little chipmunk-and-squirrel heralds
-before him, and that nobody heard him.</p>
-
-<p>Still, it was all such fun! The glitter of the procession, the
-eagerness of the people, the lilt and rhythm of the music. And fun
-over all was it to be carried by the carnival king himself, high above
-everyone and dressed like a golden trumpet. Surely, surely no boy
-ever had more fun than that! Surely, surely it was no great marvel
-that after a little time, so loud was the clamour and so fast the
-excitement, that Peter stopped crying his message, and merely watched
-and laughed and delighted with the rest.</p>
-
-<p>Up and down through the thronged streets they went, that great,
-glittering procession, winding its mile or more of spangles and gilding
-and gay dress and animals richly caparisoned. Everywhere the crowded
-walks and windows and balconies sent cheers into the air, everywhere
-flowers were thrown and messages tossed and melody flooded. And
-wherever that long line passed, everyone noted the king’s trumpet and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-pointed it out and clapped hands and tried to throw upon it garlands.
-And there was so much to see, and so much excitement there was in the
-hour, that at last little Peter did not even think of his message, and
-only jested and made merry. For it was the most wonderful game that
-ever he had played.</p>
-
-<p>“How now, my little trumpeter?” the king of the carnival would say
-sometimes, when he rested his arms and held Peter at his side.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, <em>well</em>, your majesty!” Peter would cry, laughing up at him.</p>
-
-<p>“This is all a fine game and nothing more,” the king of the carnival
-would tell him. “Is this not so?”</p>
-
-<p>Then he would toss the boy on high again, away above the golden car,
-and Peter would cry out with the delight of it. And though there were
-no wings and no great brightness in the air, yet the hour was golden
-and joy was abroad like a person.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, a band of mountebanks, dressed like ploughmen and
-harvesters, came tumbling and racing by the procession, and calling to
-everyone to come to a corn husking on the city green.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-“Husks! Husks! A corn husking on the city green. Husks&mdash;husks&mdash;husks!”
-they cried.</p>
-
-<p>But there was such a tumult that no one could well hear what they said,
-and presently they appealed to the carnival king to tell the people.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, O king, they hear us not for the noise of thy passing,” said
-they. “Prithee tell the people what we would say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell the people, my little trumpeter!” cried the king, and lifted
-Peter to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>And Peter shouted out with all his might.</p>
-
-<p>“Husks! Husks! A corn husking on the city green. Husks&mdash;husks&mdash;husks!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bravely done!” called the mountebanks, in delight, and ran alongside
-the car, leaping and tumbling and grotesquely showing their delight.
-“Bravely done! Tell the people&mdash;bid the people come!”</p>
-
-<p>So Peter called again, and yet again, at the full strength of his
-little voice. And it seemed to him that the people surely listened,
-and it was a delight and a flattery to be the one voice in the great
-procession, save only the music’s voice.</p>
-
-<p>At last, for one moment it chanced that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span> bands ceased altogether
-their playing, so that there was an instant of almost silence.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Husks, husks, husks!</em>” he cried, with all his might.</p>
-
-<p class="nmb">And as he did that, thin and clear through the silence, vexed somewhat
-by the voices of the people,&mdash;now barks, now whines, now bellows, now
-words,&mdash;Peter caught a little wandering melody, as though a bird’s
-singing were turning into words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line outdent">“<em>Open, world, your trembling petals slowly,</em></div>
-<div class="line"><em>Here one, there one, natal to its hour</em>....”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="noi">and in the midst of that motley throng, Peter, looking down,
-saw the poet whom he had left on the hill-top, now wandering alone and
-singing his message to his lute.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the king! Oh, <em>my</em> king!” cried little Peter, as if he had had a
-great wound.</p>
-
-<p>“What now, my little trumpeter?” asked the carnival king.</p>
-
-<p>“Not you&mdash;<em>not</em> you!” cried Peter. “Oh, set me down,&mdash;set me down. Oh,
-what have I done?”</p>
-
-<p>“How <em>now</em>, little Trumpet?” cried the carnival king. But Peter,
-instead of stretching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span> out his little body, slim and trumpet-graceful,
-turned and fell at the king’s feet in the car and slipped from his
-grasp and scrambled through the branching green and reached the street.</p>
-
-<p>There, in the wonder and then the mockery of the people, he began
-struggling to free himself from the ruffles of cloth-of-gold about his
-body. Some laughed, some ran from him as if he were mad, and some,
-wishing for themselves the golden ruffles, helped him to pull them off
-and to strip down the clinging golden stocking that bound his limbs.
-And then, being close to the city gates, little Peter ran, all naked as
-he was, without the gates and on to the empty road. And he ran sobbing
-out his heart:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my king! I would have told them that the world is beginning&mdash;but,
-instead I have told them only to get them husks!”</p>
-
-<p>Now the poet, who had seen it all&mdash;and who understood&mdash;ceased his song
-and made his way as quickly as might be for the press of the people,
-and ran after Peter, and fared along the road beside him, trying to
-comfort him. But the little lad might not be comforted, and he only
-cried out again:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-“The king&mdash;the king! I would have given them his message&mdash;and I bade
-them only to get them husks!”</p>
-
-<p>So the poet&mdash;who understood&mdash;said no word at all, but he shielded Peter
-with his mantle; and then he took his lute and walked beside the little
-lad, singing.</p>
-
-<p>They had gone but a short distance when they reached the top of a hill,
-where the sun shone with exceeding brightness, and the poet noted
-that the light fell almost like little wings. Peter saw none of this,
-for his hands were still covering his face. But he heard the poet’s
-singing interrupted by a voice. The voice was uneven&mdash;like a bark or
-a whine that is turning into words&mdash;but yet its words were clear and
-unmistakable. And they were:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Sirs, the world is beginning. You must go and help the king.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Peter looked up and he saw the man who had spoken, a man twisted and
-ragged, but who smiled down into the little boy’s face so gently that,
-for a moment, Peter did not know him; and then he recognized that
-beggar to whom, on that night long ago, he had given food and the
-message.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-“Ay, friend!” the poet was answering him ringingly, “and we go!”</p>
-
-<p>The beggar hurried on, and the poet touched Peter’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, now, little Peter,” he said, “grieve not your heart too much.
-For you it was who told the beggar the message&mdash;from the top of the
-hill I heard&mdash;and I saw you give him food. Can you tell any man without
-some good coming true of the tidings? Then it may well be that there
-are those in the town to whom you told the king’s message who will
-remember, too. Go we forth together to try again!”</p>
-
-<p>Peter looked down the long highway, stretching between the mysterious
-green, where shrubs changed to animals in so little a space; and
-then he looked away to the king’s kingdom and saw how it was not
-finished&mdash;because the world had just stopped being nothing and was
-beginning to be something&mdash;and he looked back towards the city where,
-as at the court, men had not yet done being animals. Everything
-was changing, as if nothing were meant to be merely what it is.
-And everything was in savage angles and wild lines. The world was
-beginning. The people <em>must</em> be told to go and help the king.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-“Go we forth together to try again,” the poet repeated.</p>
-
-<p class="nmb">He touched his lute, and its melody slipped into the sunshine.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line outdent">“<em>Toward the time when, holden in a vessel holy,</em></div>
-<div class="line"><em>You shall be a flower.</em>”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Then Peter stretched out his arms, and his whole slender little body
-became like one trumpet voice, and that voice strong and clear to reach
-round the world itself.</p>
-
-<p>“I try once again!” he answered. “The world is beginning. <em>I must go
-and help the king.</em>”</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="vi" id="vi"></a>VI<br />
-<span>MY LADY OF THE APPLE TREE</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Our</span> lawn was nine apple trees large. There were none in front, where
-only Evergreens grew, and two silver Lombardy poplars, heaven-tall. The
-apple trees began with the Cooking-apple tree by the side porch. This
-was, of course, no true tree except in apple-blossom time, and at other
-times hardly counted. The length of twenty jumping ropes&mdash;they call
-them skipping ropes now, but we never called them so&mdash;laid one after
-another along the path would have brought one to the second tree, the
-Eating-apple tree, whose fruit was red without and pink-white within.
-To this day I do not know what kind of apples those were, whether
-Duchess, Gilliflower, Russet, Sweet, or Snow. But after all, these only
-name the body of the apple, as Jasper or Edith names the body of you.
-The soul of you, like the real sense of Apple, lives nameless all its
-days. Sometime we must play<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span> the game of giving us a secret name&mdash;the
-Pathfinder, the Lamplighter, the Starseeker, and so on. But colours and
-flavours are harder to name and must wait longer than we.</p>
-
-<p>... Under this Nameless tree, then, the swing hung, and to sit in the
-swing and have one’s head touch apple-blossoms, and mind, not touch
-them with one’s foot, was precisely like having one’s swing knotted to
-the sky, so that one might rise in rhythm, head and toe, up among the
-living stars. I can think of no difference worth the mentioning, so
-high it seemed. And if one does not know what rhythm is, one has only
-to say it over: Spring, Summer, apple-blossom, apple; new moon, old
-moon, running river, echo&mdash;and then one will know.</p>
-
-<p>“I would pick some,” said Mother, looking up at the apple-blossoms, “if
-I only knew which ones will never be apples.”</p>
-
-<p>So some of the blossoms would never be apples! Which ones? <em>And why?</em></p>
-
-<p>“Why will some be apples and some others never be apples?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>But Mother was singing and swinging me, and she did not tell.</p>
-
-<p>“Why will you be apples and you not be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span> apples, and me not know which,
-and you not know which?” I said to the apple-blossoms when next my head
-touched them. Of course, you never really speak to things with your
-throat voice, but you think it at them with your head voice. Perhaps
-that is the way they answer, and that is why one does not always hear
-what they say....</p>
-
-<p>The apple-blossoms did not say anything that I could hear. The
-stillness of things never ceased to surprise me. It would have been far
-less wonderful to me if the apple-blossoms and the Lombardy poplars and
-my new shoes had answered me sometimes than that they always kept their
-unfriendly silence. One’s new shoes <em>look</em> so friendly, with their
-winking button eyes and their placid noses! And yet they act as cross
-about answering as do some little boys who move into the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>... Indeed, if one comes to think of it, one’s shoes are rather like
-the sturdy little boys among one’s clothes. One’s slippers are more
-like little girls, all straps and bows and tiptoes. Then one’s aprons
-must be the babies, long and white and dainty. And one’s frocks and
-suits&mdash;that is to say, one’s <em>new</em> frocks and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span> suits&mdash;are the ladies
-and gentlemen, important and elegant; and one’s everyday things are
-the men and women, neither important nor elegant, but best of all; and
-one’s oldest garments are the witches, shapeless and sad and haunted.
-This leaves ribbons and sashes and beads to be fairies&mdash;both good and
-bad.</p>
-
-<p>The silence of the Nameless tree was to lift a little that very day.
-When Mother had gone in the house,&mdash;something seemed always to be
-pulling at Mother to be back in the house as, in the house, something
-always pulled at me to be back out-of-doors,&mdash;I remember that I was
-twisting the rope and then lying back over the board, head down,
-for the untwisting. And while my head was whirling and my feet were
-guiding, I looked up at the tree and saw it as I had never seen it
-before: soft falling skirts of white with lacy edges and flowery
-patterns, drooping and billowing all about a pedestal, which was the
-tree trunk, and up-tapering at the top like a waist&mdash;why, the tree was
-a lady! Leaning in the air there above the branches, surely I could
-see her beautiful shoulders and her white arms, her calm face and her
-bright hair against the blue. She had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span> risen out of the trunk at the
-tree’s blossoming and was waiting for someone to greet her.</p>
-
-<p>I struggled out of the swing and scrambled, breathless, back from the
-tree and looked where she should be. Already I knew her. Nearly, I knew
-the things that she would say to me&mdash;sometimes now I know the things
-that she would have said if we had not been interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>The interruption came from four girls who lived, as I thought, outside
-my world,&mdash;for those were the little days when I did not yet know
-that this cannot be. They were the Eversley sisters, in full-skirted,
-figured calico, and they all had large, chapped hands and wide teeth
-and stout shoes. For a year they had been wont to pass our house on the
-way to the public school, but they had spoken to me no more than if
-I had been invisible&mdash;until the day when I had first entered school.
-After that, it was as if I had been born into their air, or thrown in
-the same cage, or had somehow become one of them. And I was in terror
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>“Come ’ere once!” they commanded, their voices falling like sharp
-pebbles about the Apple-blossom lady and me.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span>
-Obediently I ran to the front fence, though my throat felt sick when
-I saw them coming. “Have an apple core? Give us some of them flowers.
-Shut your eyes so’s you’ll look just like you was dead.” These were
-the things that they always said. Something kept telling me that I
-ought not to tell them about my lady, but I was always wanting to win
-their approval and to let them know that I was really more one of them
-than they thought. So I disobeyed, and I told them. Mysteriously,
-breathlessly I led them back to the tree; and feeling all the time that
-I was not keeping faith, I pointed her out to them. I showed them just
-where to look, beginning with the skirts, which surely anybody could
-see.... I used often to dream that a crowd of apish, impish little folk
-was making fun of me, and that afternoon I lived it, standing out alone
-against those four who fell to instant jeering. If they had stooped and
-put their hands on their knees and hopped about making faces, it would
-have been no more horrible to me than their laughter. It held for me
-all the sense of bad dreams, and then of waking alone, in the middle of
-the night. The worst was that I could find no words to make them know.
-I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span> could only keep saying, “She is there, she is there, she is there.”
-By some means I managed not to cry, not even when they each broke a
-great branch of blossoms from the Eating-apple tree and ran away,
-flat-footed, down the path; not indeed until the gate had slammed and I
-turned back to the tree and saw that my lady had gone.</p>
-
-<p>There was no doubt about it. Here were no longer soft skirts, but only
-flowery branches where the sunlight thickened and the bees drowsed.
-My lady was gone. Try as I might, I could not bring her back. So she
-had been mocking me too! Otherwise, why had she let me see her so that
-I should be laughed at, and then herself vanished? Yet, even then, I
-remember that I did not doubt her, or for a moment cease to believe
-that she was really there; only I felt a kind of shame that I could
-see her, and that the others could not see her. I had felt the same
-kind of shame before, never when I was alone, but always when I was
-with people. We played together well enough,&mdash;Pom, pom, pullaway,
-Minny-minny motion, Crack-the-whip, London Bridge, and the rest, save
-that I could not run as fast as nearly everybody. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span> the minute we
-stopped playing and <em>talked</em>, then I was always saying something so
-that the same kind of shame came over me.</p>
-
-<p>I saw Delia crossing the street. In one hand she held two cookies which
-she was biting down sandwich-wise, and in the other hand two cookies,
-as yet unbitten. The latter she shook at me.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew I’d see you,” she called resentfully. “I says I’d give ’em to
-you if I saw you, and if I didn’t see you&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She left it unfinished at a point which gave no doubt as to whose
-cookies they might have been had I not been offensively about. But
-the cookies were fresh, and I felt no false delicacy. However, after
-deliberation, I ate my own, one at a time, rejecting the sandwich
-method.</p>
-
-<p>“It lasts them longest,” I explained.</p>
-
-<p>“The other way they bite thicker,” Delia contended.</p>
-
-<p>“Your teeth don’t taste,” I objected scientifically.</p>
-
-<p>Delia opened her eyes. “Why, they do too!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>I considered. I had always had great respect for the strange chorus
-of my teeth, and I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span> perfectly ready to regard them as having
-independent powers.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, not when you eat tipsy-toes like that,” said Delia, scornfully.
-“Lemme show you....” She leaned for my cooky, her own being gone. I ran
-shamelessly down the path toward the swing, and by the time the swing
-was reached I had frankly abandoned serial bites.</p>
-
-<p>I sat on the grass, giving Delia the swing as a peace-offering. She
-took it, as a matter of course, and did not scruple to press her
-advantage.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you want to swing me?” she said.</p>
-
-<p>I particularly disliked being asked in that way to do things. Grown-ups
-were always doing it, and what could be more absurd: “Don’t you want
-to pick up your things now?” “Don’t you want to let auntie have that
-chair?” “Don’t you want to take this over to Mrs. Rodman?” The form of
-the query always struck me as quite shameless. I truthfully shook my
-head.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m company,” Delia intimated.</p>
-
-<p>“When you’re over to my house, I have to let you swing because you’re
-company,” I said speculatively, “and when I’m over to your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</a></span> house, I
-have to let you swing because it’s your swing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care about being company,” said Delia, loftily, and started
-home.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll swing you. I was only fooling!” I said, scrambling up.</p>
-
-<p>It worked&mdash;as Delia knew it would and always did work. All the same,
-as I pushed Delia, with my eyes on the blue-check gingham strap
-buttoned across the back of her apron, I reflected on the truth and
-its parallels: How, when Delia came to see me, I had to “pick up” the
-playthings and set in order store or ship or den or cave or county fair
-or whatnot because Delia had to go home early; and when I was over to
-Delia’s, I had to help put things away because they were hers and she
-had got them out.</p>
-
-<p>Low-swing, high-swing, now-I’m-going-to-run-under-swing&mdash;I gave them
-all to Delia and sank on the grass to watch the old cat die. As it
-died, Delia suddenly twisted the rope and then dropped back and lay
-across the board and loosed her hands. I never dared “let go,” as we
-said, but Delia did and lay whirling, her hair falling out like a sun’s
-rays, and her eyes shut.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-I watched her, fascinated. If she opened her eyes, I knew how the
-picket fence would swim for her, no longer a line but a circle. Then
-I remembered what I had seen in the tree when I was twisting, and I
-looked back....</p>
-
-<p>There she was! Quite as I had fleetingly seen her, with lacy skirts
-and vague, sweeping sleeves and bending line of shoulder, my Lady of
-the Tree was there again. I looked at her breathlessly, unsurprised at
-the gracious movement of her, so skilfully concealed by the disguises
-of the wind. Oh, was she there all the time, or only in apple-blossom
-time? Would she be there not only in white Spring but in green Summer
-and yellow Fall&mdash;why, perhaps all those times came only because she
-changed her gown. Perhaps night came only because she put on something
-dusky, made of veils. Maybe the stars that I had thought looked to be
-caught in the branches were the jewels in her hair. And the wind might
-be her voice! I listened with all my might. What if she should tell me
-her name ... and know my name!...</p>
-
-<p>“Seventeen un-twists,” announced Delia. “Did you ever get that many out
-of such a little stingy swing as you gave me?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-I did not question the desirability of telling Delia. The four Eversley
-girls had been barbarians (so I thought). Delia I had known always. To
-be sure, she had sometimes failed me, but these times were not real. My
-eyes were on the tree, and Delia came curiously toward me.</p>
-
-<p>“Bird?” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>I shook my head and beckoned her. Still looking at my lady, I drew
-Delia down beside me, brought her head close to mine.</p>
-
-<p>“Look,” I said, “her skirt is all branches&mdash;and her face is turned the
-other way. See her?”</p>
-
-<p>Delia looked faithfully. She scanned the tree long and impartially.</p>
-
-<p>“See her? See her?” I insisted, under the impression that I was
-defining her. “It’s a lady,” I breathed it finally.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said Delia, “you mean that side of the tree is the shape of one.
-Yes, it is&mdash;kind of. I’m going home. We got chocolate layer cake for
-supper. Good-bye. Last tag.”</p>
-
-<p>I turned to Delia for a second. When she went, I looked back for my
-lady&mdash;but she had gone. Only&mdash;now I did not try to bring her back.
-Neither did I doubt her, even then.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</a></span> But there came back a certain
-loneliness that I had felt before, only never so much as now. Why was
-it that the others could not see?</p>
-
-<p>I lay face downward in the grass under the tree. There were other
-things like this lady that I had been conscious of, which nobody else
-seemed to care about. Sometimes I had tried to tell. More often I had
-instinctively kept still. Now slowly I thought that I understood: I was
-different. Different from the whole world. Did I not remember how, when
-I walked on the street, groups of children would sometimes whisper:
-“There she is&mdash;there she is!” Or, “Here she comes!” I had thought, poor
-child, that this would be because my hair was long, like little Eva’s
-in the only play that most of us had seen. But now I thought I knew
-what they had known and I had not known: That I was different.</p>
-
-<p>I dropped my face in the crook of my arm and cried&mdash;silently, because
-to cry aloud seemed always to have about it a kind of nakedness; but I
-cried sorely, pantingly, with aching throat, and tried to think it out.</p>
-
-<p>What was this difference? I had heard them say in the house that my
-head was large, my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</a></span> hair too long to let me be healthy; and the four
-Eversleys always wanted me to shut my eyes so that I should look dead.
-But it was something other than these. Maybe&mdash;I shall never forget the
-grip of that fear&mdash;maybe I was not human. Maybe I was Adopted. I had no
-clear idea what Adopted meant, but my impression was that it meant not
-to have been born at all. That was it. I was like the apple-blossoms
-that would never be apples. I was just a Pretend little girl, a kind of
-secret one, somebody who could never, never be the same as the rest.</p>
-
-<p>I turned from that deep afternoon and ran for the wood-pile where I had
-a hiding-place. Down the path I met Mother and clung to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother, Mother!” I sobbed. “Am I adopted?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, dear,” she said seriously. “You are mine. What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Promise me I’m not!” I begged.</p>
-
-<p>“I promise,” she said. “Who has been talking to you? You little lamb,
-come in the house,” she added. “You’re tired out, playing.”</p>
-
-<p>I went with her. But the moment had entered me. I was not like the
-rest. I said it over, and every time it hurt. There is no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</a></span> more
-passionate believer in democracy than a child.</p>
-
-<p>Across the street Delia was sitting on the gate-post, ostentatiously
-eating chocolate layer cake, and with her free hand twisting into
-a curl the end of her short braid. Between us there seemed to have
-revealed itself a gulf, life-wide. Had Delia always known about me? Did
-the Rodman girls know? And Calista? The four Eversleys must know&mdash;this
-was why they laughed so.... But I remember how, most of all, I hoped
-that Mary Elizabeth did not know&mdash;yet.</p>
-
-<p>From that day I faced the truth: I was different. I was somehow not
-really-truly. And it seemed to me that nothing could ever be done about
-it.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="vii" id="vii"></a>VII<br />
-<span>THE PRINCESS ROMANCIA</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">That</span> night I could not go to sleep with the knowledge. If only I, as I
-am now, might have sat on the edge of the bed and told a story to me
-as I was then! I am always wishing that we two might have known each
-other&mdash;I as I am now and I as I was then. We should have been so much
-more interested in each other than anybody else could ever be. I can
-picture us looking curiously at each other through the dark, and each
-would have wished to be the other&mdash;how hard we would have wished that.
-But neither of us would have got it, as sometimes happens with wishes.</p>
-
-<p>Looking back on that night, and knowing how much I wanted to be like
-the rest, I think this would be the story that I, as I am now, would
-have told that Little Me.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Once upon a time to the fairy king and queen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</a></span> there was born a little
-daughter. And the king, being a modern fairy, determined to invite to
-the christening of his daughter twelve mortals&mdash;a thing never before
-countenanced in fairy ceremony. And of course all unreal people are
-always very particular about their ceremonies being <em>just</em> so.</p>
-
-<p>It was a delicate and difficult task to make out that mortal invitation
-list, for it was very hard to find in the world twelve human beings
-who, at a fairy party, would exactly fit in. After long thought and
-consultation with all his ministers and councillors, the king made out
-the following list:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>A child; a poet; a scientist; a carpenter; a prophet; an artist; an
-artisan; a gardener; a philosopher; a woman who was also a mother; a
-man who was also a father; and a day labourer.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think that will do <em>at all</em>?” the fairy king asked the fairy
-queen, tossing over the list.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, dear,” she replied, “it’s probably the best you can do. You know
-what people are.” She hesitated a mere breath&mdash;a fairy’s breath&mdash;and
-added: “I do wonder a little, though, just <em>why</em> the day labourer.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-“My dear,” said the king, “some day you will understand that, and many
-other things as well.”</p>
-
-<p>The christening room was a Vasty Hall, whose deep blue ceiling was as
-high as the sky and as strange as night. Lamps, dim as the stars, hung
-very high, and there was one silver central chandelier, globed like the
-moon, and there were frescoes like clouds. The furnishings of the Vasty
-Hall were most magnificent. There were pillars like trees spreading out
-into capitals of intricate and leafy design. Lengths of fair carpet ran
-here and there, as soft and shining as little streams; there were thick
-rugs as deep as moss, seats of native carved stone, and tapestries as
-splendid as vistas curtaining the distance. And the music was like the
-music of All-night, all done at once.</p>
-
-<p>To honour the occasion the fairy guests had all come dressed as
-something else&mdash;for by now, of course, the fairies are copying many
-human fashions. One was disguised as a Butterfly with her own wings
-prettily painted. One represented a Rose, and she could hardly be
-distinguished from an American Beauty. One was made up as a Light,
-whom nobody could recognize.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</a></span> One was a White Moth and one was a
-Thistle-down, and there were several fantastic toilettes, such as a
-great Tulle Bow, a Paper Doll, and an Hour-glass. As for the Human
-Beings present, they all came masked as themselves, as usual; and their
-names I cannot give you, though sometimes I see someone with dreaming
-eyes whom I think may possibly have been one of those twelve&mdash;for of
-course it must have made a difference in their looks ever afterward.
-It was a very brilliant assemblage indeed, and everyone was most
-intangible and elusive, which are fairy terms for well-behaved.</p>
-
-<p>While the guests were waiting for the fairy baby princess to be brought
-in, they idled about, with that delightful going-to-be-ice-cream
-feeling which you have at any party in some form or another, only
-you must <em>never</em> say so, and they exchanged the usual pleasant
-nothing-at-alls. It is curious how very like human nothings fairy
-nothings are.</p>
-
-<p>For example:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“There is a great deal of night about,” said the Butterfly Fairy with a
-little shiver. “If I were a truly butterfly, I should never be able to
-find my way home.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-“And there is such a fad for thunder-and-lightning this season,” added
-the Paper Doll Fairy, agreeably.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember,” asked the White Moth Fairy, “the night that we all
-dressed as white moths and went to meet the moon? We flew until we were
-all in the moonlight, and then we knew that we had met her. I wonder
-why more people do not meet the moon-rise?”</p>
-
-<p>“That reminds me,” said the Thistle-down Fairy, “of the day we all made
-up as snowflakes and went to find the Spring. Don’t you know how she
-surprised us, in the hollow of the lowland? And what a good talk we
-had? I wonder why more people do not go to meet the Spring?”</p>
-
-<p>“A charming idea!” cried the Rose Fairy to the Light Fairy, and the
-Light Fairy shone softly upon her, precisely like an answer.</p>
-
-<p>Then somebody observed that the wind that night was a pure soprano, and
-the guests amused themselves comparing wind-notes; how on some nights
-the wind is deep bass, like a man’s voice, raging through the world;
-and sometimes it is tenor, sweet, and singing only serenades; and
-sometimes it is all contralto and like a lullaby;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</a></span> and sometimes, but
-not often, it is like harp music played on the trees.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the whole dark lifted, like a garment; and moonlight flooded
-the Vasty Hall. And as if they had filtered down the air with the
-light, the fairy christening party entered&mdash;not as we enter a room, by
-thresholds and steps, but the way that a thought comes in your head and
-you don’t know how it got there.</p>
-
-<p>The christening party wore robes of colours that lie deep between
-the colours and may hardly be named. And, in a secret ceremony, such
-as attends the blooming of flowers, the fairy baby was christened
-Romancia. Then the fairies brought her many offerings; and these having
-been received and admired, a great hush fell on the whole assembly,
-for now the twelve Human Beings came forward with their gifts. And
-everyone, except, indeed, the princess herself, was wild with curiosity
-to see what they had brought.</p>
-
-<p>No one left a card with any gift, but when the fairy king came to look
-them over afterward, he felt certain who had brought each one. The
-gifts were these: A little embroidered gown which should make everyone
-love the princess<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</a></span> while she wore it; a gazing crystal which would
-enable the princess to see one hundred times as much as anybody else
-saw; certain sea secrets and sea spells; a lyre which played itself;
-a flask containing a draught which should keep the princess young; a
-vial of colours which hardly anyone ever sees; flowers and grasses and
-leaves which could be used almost like a dictionary to spell out other
-things; an assortment of wonderful happy fancies of every variety; a
-new rainbow; a box of picture cards of the world, every one of which
-should come true if one only went far enough; and a tapestry of the
-universe, wrapped around a brand-new idea in a box.</p>
-
-<p>When these things had been graciously accepted by the king, there was
-a stir in the company, and sweeping into its midst came another Human
-Being, one who thought that she had every right to be invited to the
-christening, but who had not been invited. All the fairies shrank back,
-for it was an extraordinary-looking Human Being. She was tall and lithe
-and wore a sparkling gown, and her face had the look of many cities,
-and now it was like the painted cover of an empty box, and all the time
-it had the meaning only of those who never look<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</a></span> at the stars, or walk
-in gardens, or think about others rather than themselves, or listen to
-hear what it is right for them to do. This kind of Human Being is one
-who not often has any good gift to give to anyone, and this the fairies
-knew.</p>
-
-<p>The Vasty Hall became very quiet to see what she had brought, for no
-one understood what she could possibly have to bestow upon a baby. And
-without asking leave of the king or the queen, she bent over the child
-and clasped on her wrist the tiniest bracelet that was ever made in the
-world, and she snapped its lock as fast as the lock on a fetter, and
-held up the tiniest key that ever was wrought.</p>
-
-<p>“The princess,” she cried, “shall seem <em>different from everyone else</em>.
-She shall seem like nobody who is or ever has been. As long as she
-wears her bracelet, this shall be true; and that she may never lose it,
-I shall hold her bracelet’s key. Hail to this little princess child,
-who shall seem like nobody in the world!”</p>
-
-<p>Now, no one present was quite certain what this might mean, but the
-lady’s robe was so beautifully embroidered and sparkling, and her voice
-was such a thing of loops and curves, that nearly everyone accepted the
-gift as something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</a></span> fine after all, and the queen gave her her hand to
-kiss. But the king, who was a very wise fairy, said nothing at all, and
-merely bowed and eyed the bracelet, in deep thought.</p>
-
-<p>His meditation was interrupted by a most awkward incident. In the
-excitement of the bestowal of gifts by the Human Beings, and in the
-confusion of the entrance of the thirteenth and uninvited Human Being,
-one of them all had been forgotten and had got himself shuffled well
-at the back of everyone. And now he came pressing forward in great
-embarrassment, to bring his gift. It was the day labourer, and several
-of the Human Beings drew hastily back as he approached the dais. But
-everyone fell still farther back in consternation when it was seen
-what he had brought. For on the delicate cobweb coverlet of the little
-princess’s bed, he cast a spadeful of earth.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all I’ve got,” the man said, “or I’d brought a better.”</p>
-
-<p>The earth all but covered the little bed of the princess, and it was
-necessary to lift her from it, which the fairy queen did with her own
-hands, flashing a reproachful glance at her husband, the king. But
-when the party had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</a></span> trooped away for the dancing,&mdash;with the orchestra
-playing the way a Summer night would sound if it were to steep itself
-in music, so that it could only be heard and not seen,&mdash;then the king
-came quietly back to the christening chamber and ordered the spadeful
-of earth to be gathered up and put in a certain part of the palace
-garden.</p>
-
-<p>And so (the Human Beings having gone home at once and forgotten that
-they had been present), when the music lessened to silence and the
-fairies stole from note to note and at last drifted away as invisibly
-as the hours leave a dial, they passed, in the palace garden, a great
-corner of the rich black earth which the day labourer had brought to
-the princess. And it was ready for seed sowing.</p>
-
-<p>The Princess Romancia grew with the days and the years, and from the
-first it was easily to be seen that certainly she seemed different
-from everyone in the world. As a baby she began talking in her cradle
-without having been taught&mdash;not very plainly, to be sure, or so that
-anybody in particular excepting the fairy queen understood her&mdash;but
-still she talked. As a little girl she seemed always to be listening<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-to things as if she understood them as well as she did people, or
-better. When she grew older, nobody knew quite how she differed, but
-everybody agreed that she seemed different. And this the princess knew
-better than anybody, and most of the time it made her hurt all over.</p>
-
-<p>When the fairies played at thistle-down ball, the princess often played
-too, but she never felt really like one of them all. She felt that they
-were obliged to have her play with them because she was the princess,
-and not because they wanted her. When they played at hide-and-go-seek
-in a flower bed, somehow the others always hid together in the big
-flowers, and the princess hid alone in a tulip or a poppy. And whenever
-they whispered among themselves, she always fancied that they were
-whispering of her. She imagined herself often looked at with a smile or
-a shrug; she began to believe that she was not wanted but only endured
-because she was the princess, and she was certain that no one liked
-her for herself alone, because she was somehow so different. Little by
-little she grew silent, and refused to join in the games, and sat apart
-alone. Presently she began to give blunt answers and to take exception
-and even to disagree. And, of course, little by little the court began
-secretly to dislike her, and to cease to try to understand her, and
-they told one another that she was hopelessly different and that that
-was all that there was to be said about her.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<a name="little" id="little"></a>
-<img src="images/i_128fp.jpg" width="400" height="625" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><span class="smcap">Little by little she grew silent and refused to join
-in the games.</span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-But in spite of all this, the Princess Romancia was very beautiful, and
-the fame of her beauty went over the whole of fairyland. When enough
-years had gone by, fairy princes from this and that dominion began to
-come to the king’s palace to see her. But though they all admired the
-princess’s great beauty, many were of course repelled by her sharp
-answers and her constant suspicions.</p>
-
-<p>But at last the news of the princess’s beauty and strangeness reached
-the farthest border of fairyland and came to the ears of the young
-Prince Hesperus. Now Prince Hesperus, who was the darling of his
-father’s court and beloved of everybody, was tired of everybody. “Every
-fairy is like every other fairy,” he was often heard saying wearily.
-“I do wish I could find somebody with a few new ways. One would think
-fairies were all cut from one pattern!” Therefore, when word came to
-him of the strange and beautiful Princess Romancia, who was believed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</a></span>
-to be different from everyone else in the world, you can imagine with
-what haste he made ready and set out for her father’s place.</p>
-
-<p>Prince Hesperus arrived at the palace at twilight, when the king’s
-garden was wrapped in that shadow light which no one can step through,
-<em>if he looks</em>, without feeling somewhat like a fairy himself and
-glad to be one. He sent his servants on ahead, folded his wings, and
-proceeded on foot through the silent gardens. And in a little arbour
-made of fallen petals, renewed each day, he came on the Princess
-Romancia, asleep. He, of course, did not recognize her, but never,
-since for him the world began, had the prince seen anyone so beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>His step roused her and she sprang to her feet. And as soon as he
-looked at her, Prince Hesperus found himself wanting to tell her of
-what he had just been thinking, and before he knew it he was doing so.</p>
-
-<p>“I have just been thinking,” he said, “what a delightful pet a
-leaf-shadow would make, if one could catch it and tame it. I wonder if
-one could do it? Think how it would dance for one, all day long.”</p>
-
-<p>The Princess Romancia stared a little.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-“But when the sun went down,” she was surprised into saying, “the
-shadow would be dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” the prince replied, “it would only be asleep. And it
-would never have to be fed, and it could live in one’s palace.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would like such a pet,” said the princess, thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“If I may walk with you,” said the prince, “we will talk more about it.”</p>
-
-<p>They walked together toward the palace and talked more about it, so
-that the Princess Romancia quite forgot to be more different than she
-was, and the prince forgot all about everything save his companion.
-And he saw about her all the gifts of tenderness and vision and magic,
-of sea secrets and sea spells, of music and colours and knowledge and
-charming notions which the Human Beings had brought her at her birth,
-though these hardly ever were visible <em>because</em> the princess seemed
-so different from everybody else. And when, as they drew near the
-palace, their servants came hastening to escort them, the two looked at
-each other in the greatest surprise to find that they were prince and
-princess. For all other things had seemed so much more important.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-Their formal meeting took place that evening in the Vasty Hall, where,
-years before, the princess had been christened. Prince Hesperus was
-filled with the most joyous anticipation and awaited his presentation
-to the princess with the feeling that fairyland was just beginning. But
-the princess, on the other hand, was no sooner back in the palace among
-her ladies than the curse of her terrible christening present descended
-upon her as she had never felt it before. How, the poor princess
-thought, could the prince possibly like her, who was so different from
-everybody in the world? While she was being dressed, every time that
-her ladies spoke in a low tone, she imagined that they were speaking of
-her; every time that one smiled and shook her head, the princess was
-certain that it was in pity of her. She fancied that they knew that
-her walk was awkward, her voice harsh, her robe in bad taste, and an
-old fear came upon her that the palace mirrors had all been changed
-to conceal from her that she was really very ugly. In short, by the
-time that she was expected to descend, poor Princess Romancia had made
-herself utterly miserable.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, when, in her gown of fresh cobweb,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</a></span> the princess entered the
-hall and the prince hastened eagerly forward, she hardly looked at him.
-And when, at the banquet that followed, he sat beside her and tried to
-continue their talk of the arbour and the walk, she barely replied at
-all.</p>
-
-<p>“How beautiful you are,” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“So is the night,” said the princess, “and you do not tell the night
-that it is beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your eyes are like stars,” the prince said.</p>
-
-<p>“There are real stars above,” said the princess.</p>
-
-<p>“You are like no one else!” cried the prince.</p>
-
-<p>“At least you need not charge me with that,” said the poor princess.</p>
-
-<p>Nor would she dance with him or with anyone else. For she imagined that
-they did not wish to dance with her, and that her dancing was worse
-than anyone’s. And as soon as she was able, and long before cock-crow,
-she slipped away from them all and went to sleep in a handy crocus cup.</p>
-
-<p>Now at all this the king and queen were nearly as distressed as the
-prince, and they were obliged to tell Prince Hesperus the whole story
-of the christening. When he heard about the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</a></span> uninvited Human Being who
-had given the baby princess this dreadful present and had kept the key
-to the bracelet which was its bond, he sprang up and grasped his tiny
-sword.</p>
-
-<p>“I will go out in the world and find this Human Being,” he cried, “and
-I will bring back the bracelet key.”</p>
-
-<p>Without again seeing the princess, Prince Hesperus left the palace and
-fared forth on his quest. And when she found that he was gone, she was
-more wretched than ever before. For in her life no one had ever talked
-to her as he had talked, speaking his inmost fancies, and when she had
-lost him, she wanted more than ever to talk with him. But the king, who
-was a very wise fairy, did not tell her where the prince had gone.</p>
-
-<p>And now the Princess Romancia did not know what to do with herself. The
-court was unbearable; all her trivial occupations bored her; and the
-whole world seemed to have been made different from all other worlds.
-Worst to endure was the presence of her companions, who all seemed to
-love and to understand one another, while she only was alone and out of
-their sympathy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</a></span>
-“Oh,” she cried, “if only I had a game or a task to do with somebody or
-something that didn’t know I am different&mdash;that wouldn’t know who I am!”</p>
-
-<p>And she thought longingly of the prince’s fancy about the leaf-shadow
-for a pet which should dance with one all day long.</p>
-
-<p>“A leaf-shadow would not know that I am not like everybody else!” the
-poor princess thought.</p>
-
-<p>One night, when a fairy ring had been formed in an open grassy space
-among old oaks, the princess could bear it all no longer. When the
-music was at its merriest and a band of strolling goblin musicians were
-playing their maddest, she slipped away and returned to the palace by
-an unfrequented path and entered a long-disused part of the garden.
-And there, in a corner where she had never before walked, she came on
-a great place of rich, black earth, which, in the sweet Spring air,
-lay ready for the sowing. It was the spadeful of earth which the day
-labourer had brought to her christening; and there, for all these
-years, the king had caused it to remain untouched, its own rank weed
-growth enriching its richness, until but a touch would now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</a></span> turn it
-to fruitage. And seeing it so, and being filled with her wish for
-something which should take her thought away from herself and from her
-difference from all the world, the Princess Romancia was instantly
-minded to make a garden.</p>
-
-<p>Night being the work time and play time of the fairies, the princess
-went at once to the palace granaries and selected seeds of many kinds,
-flower and vegetable and fern seeds, and she brought them to this
-corner of rich earth, and there she planted them, under the moon. She
-would call no servants to help her, fearing lest they would smile among
-themselves at her strange doing. All night she worked at the planting,
-and when morning came, she fell asleep in a mandrake blossom, and woke
-hungry for a breakfast of honeydew and thinking of nothing save getting
-back to her new gardening.</p>
-
-<p>The Wind helped her, and as the days passed, the Sun and the Rain
-helped her, and she used certain magic which she knew, so that
-presently her garden was a glory. Poppies and corn, beans and berries,
-green peas and sweet peas, pinks and potatoes, celery and white phlox,
-melons and cardinal flowers&mdash;all these grew wonderfully together, as
-it were, hand in hand,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</a></span> as they will grow for fairy folk, and in such
-great luxuriance that the princess wrought early and late to keep them
-ordered and watered. She would have no servants to help her, for she
-grew more and more to love her task. For here at last in her garden
-she had found those whom she could not imagine to be smiling among
-themselves at anything that she said or did; but all the green things
-responded to her hands like friends answering to a hand clasp, and when
-the flowers nodded to one another, this meant only that a company of
-little leaf-shadows were set dancing on the earth, almost as if they
-had been tamed to be her pets, according to the prince’s fancy.</p>
-
-<p>Up at the palace the queen and the ladies-in-waiting to the queen and
-the princess regarded all this as but another sign of poor Romancia’s
-strangeness. From her tower window the queen peered anxiously down at
-her daughter toiling away at sunrise.</p>
-
-<p>“Now she is raising carrots and beets,” cried the queen, wringing her
-hands. “She grows more different from us every moment of her life!”</p>
-
-<p>“She seems to do so,” admitted the king;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</a></span> but he was very wise; and,
-“Let her be,” he commanded everybody. “We may see what this all means,
-and a great many other things as well.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Prince Hesperus, journeying from land to land and from height
-to valley, was seeking in vain for the one person who, as he thought,
-could remove from the princess the curse of her difference from all the
-rest of the world. And it was very strange how love had changed him;
-for now, instead of his silly complaint that every fairy is like every
-other fairy, and his silly longing for a different pattern in fairies,
-he sought only for the charm which should make his beloved princess
-like everybody else. Where should he find this terrible Human Being,
-this uninvited one who held the key to the princess’s bracelet that was
-so like a fetter?</p>
-
-<p>He went first to the town nearest to fairyland. The people of the town,
-having no idea how near to fairyland they really were, were going
-prosaically about their occupations, and though they could have looked
-up into the magic garden itself, they remained serenely indifferent.
-There he found the very mother who had been at the christening of the
-princess; and alighting close<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</a></span> to a great task that she was doing
-for the whole world, he tried to ask her who it was who makes folk
-different from all the rest. But she could not hear his tiny, tiny
-voice which came to her merely as a thought about something which could
-not possibly be true. In a pleasant valley he came on that one who,
-at the christening, had brought the lyre which played of itself, but
-when the prince asked him his question, he fancied it to be merely
-the wandering of his own melody, with a note about something new to
-his thought. The poet by the stream singing of the brotherhood of
-man, the prophet on a mountain foreseeing the brotherhood as in a
-gazing crystal, the scientist weaving the brotherhood in a tapestry
-of the universe&mdash;none of these knew anyone who can possibly make folk
-different from everybody else, nor did any of the others on whom Prince
-Hesperus chanced.</p>
-
-<p>When one day he thought that he had found her, because he met one whose
-face had the look of many cities and was like the painted cover of an
-empty box, straightway he saw another and another and still others, men
-and women both, who were like her, with only the meaning of those who
-never look at the stars, or walk in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</a></span> gardens, or think about others
-rather than themselves, or listen to hear what is right for them to do.
-And then he saw that these are many and many, who believe themselves to
-be different from everybody else and who try to make others so, and he
-saw that it would be useless to look further among them for that one
-who had the key for which he sought.</p>
-
-<p>So at last Prince Hesperus turned sadly back toward the palace of the
-princess.</p>
-
-<p>“Alas,” said the prince, “it is for her own happiness that I seek to
-have her like other people. For myself I would love her anyway. But
-yet, what am I to do&mdash;for she seems so different that she will never
-believe that I love her!”</p>
-
-<p>It was already late at night when the prince found himself in the
-neighbourhood of the palace, and being tired and travel-worn, he
-resolved to take shelter in the cup of some flower and wait until the
-palace revelries were done. Accordingly he entered the garden of an
-humble cottage and crept within the petals of a wild lily growing in
-the long, untended grass.</p>
-
-<p>He had hardly settled himself to sleep when he heard from the cottage
-the sound of bitter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</a></span> crying. Now this is a sound which no fairy will
-ever pass by or ever so much as hear about without trying to comfort,
-and at once Prince Hesperus rose and flew to the sill of an open
-lattice.</p>
-
-<p>He looked in on a poor room, with the meanest furnishings. On a
-comfortless bed lay the father of the house, ill and helpless. His wife
-sat by his side, and the children clung about her, crying with hunger
-and mingling their tears with her own. The man turned and looked at
-her, making a motion to speak, and Prince Hesperus flew into the room
-and alighted on the handle of a great spade, covered with earth, which
-stood in a corner.</p>
-
-<p>“Wife,” the man said, “I’ve brought you little but sorrow and hunger.
-I would have brought you more if I had had better. And now I see you
-starve.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not <em>too</em> hungry,” the wife said&mdash;but the children sobbed.</p>
-
-<p>Prince Hesperus waited not a moment. He flew into the night and away
-toward the palace, and missing the fairy ring where among old oaks the
-fairies were dancing, he reached the palace by an unfrequented path and
-entered a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</a></span> disused part of the palace garden. And there, in a corner
-which he had never visited, Prince Hesperus saw a marvellous mass of
-bloom and fruit&mdash;poppies and corn, beans and berries, green peas and
-sweet peas, pinks and potatoes, celery and white phlox, melons and
-cardinal flowers&mdash;all growing wonderfully together, as it were, hand in
-hand. And above them, in a moon-flower clinging to the wall, sat the
-Princess Romancia, rocking in the wind and brooding upon her garden.</p>
-
-<p>“Come!” cried Prince Hesperus. “There is a thing to do!”</p>
-
-<p>The princess looked at him a little fearfully, but he paid almost no
-attention to her, so absorbed he was in what he wished to have done.</p>
-
-<p>“Hard by is a family,” said the prince, “dying of hunger. Here is food.
-Hale in these idlers dancing in the light of the moon, and let us carry
-the family the means to stay alive.”</p>
-
-<p>Without a word the princess went with him, and they appeared together
-in the fairy ring and haled away the dancers. And when these understood
-the need, they all joined together, fairies, goblin musicians and all,
-and hurried away to the garden of the princess.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-They wove a litter of sweet stems and into this they piled all the food
-of the princess’s tending. And when the queen would have had them send
-to the palace kitchen for supplies, the king, who was a wise fairy,
-would not permit it and commanded that all should be done as the prince
-wished. So when the garden was ravaged of its sweets, they all bore
-them away, and trooped to the cottage, and cast them on the threshold.
-And then they perched about the room, or hovered in the path of the
-moonlight to hear what should be said. And Prince Hesperus and Princess
-Romancia listened together upon the handle of the poor man’s spade.</p>
-
-<p>At sight of the gifts the wife sprang up joyfully and cried out to her
-husband, and the children wakened with happy shouts.</p>
-
-<p>“Here is food&mdash;food!” they cried. “Oh, it must be from the fairies.”</p>
-
-<p>The sick man looked and smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” he said, “the Little Folk have remembered us. They have brought
-us rich store in return for my poor spadeful of earth.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the prince and princess and all the court understood that this
-poor man whom they had helped was that very day labourer who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</a></span>
-come to the christening of the princess. And swift as a moonbeam&mdash;and
-not unlike one&mdash;Prince Hesperus darted from beside the princess and
-alighted on the man’s pillow.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” he cried, “can you not, then, tell me who it is who has the power
-to make one different from everybody else in the world?”</p>
-
-<p>In half delirium the day labourer heard the voice of the prince and
-caught the question. But he did not know that it was the voice of the
-prince, and he fancied it to be the voice of the whole world, as it
-were throbbing with the prince’s question. And he cried out loudly in
-answer:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“No one has that power! No one is different! Those who seem different
-hold no truth. We are all alike, all of us that live!”</p>
-
-<p>Swiftly the prince turned to the king and the queen and the court.</p>
-
-<p>“The uninvited Human Being,” he cried, “did she say that the princess
-should <em>be</em> different from all the world, or that she should merely
-<em>seem</em> different?”</p>
-
-<p>The queen and the court could not remember, but the king, who was a
-wise fairy, instantly remembered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-“She said that she should <em>seem</em> different,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Then the prince laughed out joyfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” he cried, “seem different, indeed! There are many and many who
-may do that. But this man speaks truth and out of his spadeful of earth
-we have learned it,
-<a name="quote" id="quote"></a><ins title="Original has extraneous open quote"><em>We</em></ins><em> are all alike, all of us who
-live!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>With that he grasped his tiny sword and flew to the side of the
-princess and lifted her hand in his. And with a swift, deft stroke he
-cut from her wrist the bracelet that was like a fetter, and he took her
-in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, my princess,” he cried. “You have seemed different from us all
-only because you would have it so!”</p>
-
-<p>The Princess Romancia looked round on the court, and suddenly she saw
-only the friendliness which had always been there if she could have
-believed. She looked on her father and mother, the king and the queen,
-and she saw only tenderness. She looked on the day labourer and his
-family and understood that, fairy and princess though she was, she was
-like them and they were like her. Last, she looked in the face of the
-prince&mdash;and she did not look away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</a></span>
-Invisibly, as the hours leave a dial, the fairies drifted from the
-little room and back to the fairy ring among the old oaks to dance
-for very joyousness. The labourer and his family, hearing them go,
-were conscious of a faint lifting of the dark, as if morning were
-coming, bringing a new day. And to the Princess Romancia, beside Prince
-Hesperus, the world itself was a new world, where she did not walk
-alone as she had thought, but where all folk who will have it so walk
-together.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="viii" id="viii"></a>VIII<br />
-<span>TWO FOR THE SHOW</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">First</span> of all there was Every Day, with breakfast, lunch, outdoors,
-dinner, and evenings.</p>
-
-<p>Then there were Sundays, which were quite another kind of time,
-as different as layer cake from sponge cake: With breakfast late,
-and mustn’t-jump-rope, and the living-room somehow different, the
-Out-of-doors moved farther off, our play-house not waiting for us
-but acting busy at something else in which we had no part; the swing
-hanging useless as it did when we were away from home and thought about
-it in the night; bells ringing as if it were <em>their</em> day; until we were
-almost homesick to hear the grocer’s cart rattle behind the white horse.</p>
-
-<p>There were school half holidays when the sun shone as it never shone
-before, and we could not decide how to spend the time, and to look
-ahead seemed a glorious year before dark.</p>
-
-<p>There were the real holidays&mdash;Christmas<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</a></span> and the Fourth and Birthdays,
-which didn’t seem like days of time at all, but were like fairies of
-time, not living in any clock.</p>
-
-<p>And Company-time, when we were not to go in certain rooms, or sing in
-the hall, and when all downstairs seemed unable to romp with us.</p>
-
-<p>And Vacation-time, when 9 o’clock and 1 o’clock and 4 o’clock meant
-nothing, and the face of the clock never warned or threatened and the
-hands never dragged, and Saturday no longer stood out but sank into
-insignificance, and the days ran like sands.</p>
-
-<p>All these times there were when life grew different and either let us
-in farther than ever before or else left us out altogether. But almost
-the strangest and best of these was house-cleaning time.</p>
-
-<p>Screens out, so that the windows looked like faces and not like masks!
-The couch under the Cooking-apple tree! We used to lie on the couch and
-look up in the boughs and wish that they would leave it there forever.
-What was the rule that made them take it in? Mattresses in the backyard
-to jump on and lie on and stare up from, so differently, into the blue.
-Rugs like rooms, opening out into an adjoining pansy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</a></span> bed. Chairs set
-about on the grass, as if at last people had come to understand, as we
-had always understood, that the Outdoors is a real place to be in, and
-not just a place to pass through to get somewhere else. If only, if
-only some day they had brought the piano out on the lawn! To have done
-one’s practising out there, just as if a piano were born, not made!
-But they never did that, and we were thankful enough for the things
-that they did do. When Saturday came, I found with relief that they had
-still the parlour and one bedroom left to do. I had been afraid that by
-then these would be restored to the usual dry and dustless order.</p>
-
-<p>In the open window of the empty sitting-room I was sitting negligently
-that morning, when I saw Mr. Britt going by. He was as old as anyone I
-knew in the world&mdash;Mr. Britt must have been fifty. I never thought of
-him as <em>folks</em> at all. There were the other neighbours, all dark-haired
-and quick and busy at the usual human errands; and then there was Mr.
-Britt, leaving his fruit trees and his rose bushes to go down to his
-office in the Court House. He had white hair, a long square white
-beard, and he carried a stick with a crook in the handle. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</a></span> watched
-him pityingly. His life was all done, as tidy as a sewed seam, as
-sure as a learned lesson. All lived out, a piece at a time, just as
-I planned mine. How immeasurably long it had taken him; what a slow
-business it must have seemed to him; how very old he was!</p>
-
-<p>At our gate he stopped. Mr. Britt’s face was pink, and there were
-pleasant wrinkles at the corners of his eyes, and when he talked, he
-seemed to think about you.</p>
-
-<p>“Moving?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“House-cleaning,” I explained with importance.</p>
-
-<p>“Fine day of it,” he commented and went on. He always sighed a little
-when he spoke, not in sorrow; but in a certain weariness.</p>
-
-<p><em>In forty-two years I should be as old as that.</em> Forty-two years&mdash;more
-than five life-times, as I knew them.</p>
-
-<p>I was still looking after him, trying to think it through&mdash;a number as
-vast as the sky of stars was vast&mdash;when round the corner, across the
-street, the Rodman girls appeared. (“Margaret and Betty Rodman?” my
-mother used to inquire pointedly when I said “the Rodman girls.”) In
-their wake was their little brother, Harold. I hailed them joyously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-“Come on over! It’s house-cleaning.”</p>
-
-<p>“We were,” admitted Betty, as they ran. “We saw the things out in the
-yard, and we asked right off. We can stay a whole hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t we get Mary Gilbraith to tell us when it’s an hour?” Margaret
-Amelia suggested as they came in at the gate. “Then we won’t have to
-remember.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary Gilbraith stood beating a curtain, and we called to her. She
-nodded her head, wound in a brown veil.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” she said. “And don’t you children track up them clean floors
-inside there.”</p>
-
-<p>I glanced over my shoulder into the empty room.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I get down,” I inquired of my guests, “or will you get up?”</p>
-
-<p>They would get up, and they did so. We three just fitted the sill, with
-Harold looking wistfully upward.</p>
-
-<p>“Go find a nice stick,” Margaret Amelia advised him maternally.</p>
-
-<p>“What’ll we play?” I was pursuing politely. “Pretend?” I intimated.
-Because of course there is nothing that is quite so much fun as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-pretend. “Or real?” I conceded the alternative its second place.</p>
-
-<p>“Pretend what?” Betty wanted to know.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what difference does that make?” I inquired scornfully. “We can
-decide that after.”</p>
-
-<p>However, we duly weighed the respective merits of Lost-in-the-Woods,
-Cave-in-the Middle-of-the-World, and Invisible, a selection always
-involving ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>“Harold can’t play any of them,” Margaret Amelia remembered
-regretfully. “He don’t stay lost nor invisible&mdash;he wriggles. And Cave
-scares him.”</p>
-
-<p>We considered what to do with Harold, and at last mine was the
-inspiration&mdash;no doubt because I was on the home field. In a fence
-corner I had a play-house, roofed level with the fence top. From my
-sand-pile (sand boxes came later&mdash;mine was a corner of the garden
-sacred to me) we brought tin pails of earth which we emptied about the
-little boy, gradually covering his fat legs and nicely packing his
-plaid skirt. Then we got him a baking-powder can cover for a cutter and
-a handleless spoon, and we went away. He was infinitely content.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-“Makin’ a meat pie,” he confided, as we left him.</p>
-
-<p>Free, we were drawn irresistibly back to the out-of-doors furniture. We
-jumped in the middle of the mattresses lying in the grass, we hung the
-comforters and quilts in long overlapping rows on the clothes line and
-ran from one end to the other within that tent-like enclosure. Margaret
-Amelia arranged herself languidly on the Brussels couch that ordinarily
-stood in the upstairs hall piled with leather-bound reports, but now,
-scales falling from our eyes, we saw to be the bank of a stream whereon
-Maid Marian reclined; but while Betty and I were trying to decide which
-should be Robin Hood and which Alan-a-dale (alas, for our chivalry ...
-we were both holding out to be Robin) Maid Marian settled it by dancing
-down the stair carpet which made a hallway half across the lawn. We
-followed her. The terminus brought us back to the parlour window. We
-stepped on the coping and stared inside. This was our parlour! Yet
-it looked no more like the formal room which we seldom entered than
-a fairy looks like a mortal. Many and many a time an empty room is
-so much more a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</a></span> suggestive, haunted, beckoning place than ever it
-becomes after its furniture gets it into bondage. Rooms are often free,
-beautiful creatures before they are saddled and bridled with alien
-lives and with upholstery, and hitched for lumbering, permanent uses. I
-felt this vaguely even then.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s like the cloth in the store,” I observed, balancing on my stomach
-on the sill. “It’s heaps prettier before it’s made up into clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“How funny,” said Margaret Amelia. “I like the trimming on, and the
-pretty buttons.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s play,” I said hurriedly; for I had seen in her eyes that look
-which always comes into eyes whose owners have just called an idea
-“funny.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well. But,” said Betty, frankly, “I’m awful sick of playing
-Pretend. You always want to play that. We played that last time anyhow.
-Let’s play Store. Let’s play,” she said, with sudden zest, “Furniture
-Store, outdoors.”</p>
-
-<p>The whole lawn became the ground floor for our shop. Forthwith we
-arranged the aisles of chairs, stopping to sit in this one and that “to
-taste the difference.” To sit in the patent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</a></span> upholstered rocker, close
-to the flowering currant bush fragrant with spicy, yellow buds was like
-being somewhere else.</p>
-
-<p>“This looks like the pictures of greenhouses,” said Margaret Amelia,
-dragging a willow chair to the Bridal Wreath at the fork in the brick
-walk. She idled there for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Emily Broom says that when they moved she rode right through town on
-their velvet lounge on the dray,” she volunteered.</p>
-
-<p>We pictured it mutely. Something like that had been a dream of mine.
-Now and then, I had walked backward on the street to watch a furniture
-wagon delivering a new chair that rocked idle and unoccupied in the
-box. I always marvelled at the unimaginativeness of the driver which
-kept him on the wagon seat.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve never moved,” I confessed regretfully.</p>
-
-<p>“We did,” said Betty, “but they piled everything up so good there
-wasn’t anything left to sit on. I rode with the driver&mdash;but his seat
-wasn’t very high,” she added, less in the interest of truth than with a
-lingering resentment.</p>
-
-<p>“Stitchy Branchett told me,” contributed Margaret Amelia, “once he set
-on the top step of the step ladder on one of their dray loads.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</a></span>
-“I don’t believe it,” I announced flatly. “It’d tip and pitch him off.”</p>
-
-<p>“He <em>said</em> he did,” Margaret Amelia held. “Betty heard him. Didn’t he,
-Betty? Who I don’t believe is Joe Richmond. He says he went to sleep on
-a mattress on the dray when they moved. He couldn’t of.”</p>
-
-<p>“Course he couldn’t of,” we all affirmed.</p>
-
-<p>“Delia says they’ve moved six times that she can remember of and she’s
-rode on every load,” I repeated.</p>
-
-<p>We all looked enviously across at Delia’s house. Then, moved by
-a common impulse, we scrambled back to make the most of our own
-advantages, such as they were.</p>
-
-<p>At last the ground floor of the furniture store was all arranged, and
-the two show windows set with the choicest pieces to face the street.
-And when we were ready to open the place to the general public, we sat
-on the edge of the well curb and surveyed our results.</p>
-
-<p>“Now let’s start,” said Margaret Amelia.</p>
-
-<p>At that instant&mdash;the precision with which these things happen is almost
-conscious&mdash;Mary Gilbraith briefly put her head out the kitchen window.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</a></span>
-“It’s just edgin’ on ’leven,” she announced. “You children keep your
-feet off them mattresses.”</p>
-
-<p>We stared at one another. This was incredible. Margaret Amelia and
-Betty had just come. We had hardly tasted what the morning might have
-held. Our place of business was only at this moment ready for us. We
-had just meant to begin.</p>
-
-<p>There was no appeal. We went down the garden path for Harold. He sat
-where we had left him, somewhat drowsy in the warm sun, patting an
-enormous mound of moist earth. Busy with our own wrongs, we picked him
-up and stood him on his feet without warning him. An indignant roar
-broke from him.</p>
-
-<p>“Just goin’ frost my meat pie!” he wailed. “Wiv chocolate on!”</p>
-
-<p>Some stirring of pity for our common plight may have animated us&mdash;I do
-not remember. But he was hurried off. I went with them to the fence,
-gave them last tag as became an hostess, stood on the gate as it swung
-shut, experienced the fine jar and bang of its closing, and then hung
-wistfully across it, looking for the unknown.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-The elm and maple shadows moved pleasantly on the cream-coloured brick
-walk whose depths of tone were more uneven than the shadows. An oriole
-was calling, hanging back downward from a little bough. Somebody’s dog
-came by, looked up at me, wagged his tail, and hurried on about his
-business. Looking after him, I saw Mr. Britt coming slowly home with
-his mail. At our gate he stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“Playing something?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>Welcoming any sympathy, I told him how we had just got ready to play
-when it was time to stop. He nodded with some unexpected understanding,
-closing his eyes briefly.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” he said. “We all just get ready when it’s time to stop.
-Fine day of it,” he added, and sighed and went on.</p>
-
-<p>I stared after him. Could it be possible that his life had not seemed
-long to him? That he felt as if he had hardly begun? I dismissed this
-as utterly improbable. Fifty years!</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="ix" id="ix"></a>IX<br />
-<span>NEXT DOOR</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> house next door had been vacant for two months when the New Family
-moved in. We had looked forward with excitement, not unmodified by
-unconscious aversion, to the arrival of the New Family.</p>
-
-<p>“Have they any girls?” we had inquired when the To Rent sign had come
-down.</p>
-
-<p>They had, it appeared, one girl. We saw her, with wavy hair worn “let
-down” in the morning, though we ourselves wore let-down hair only for
-occasions, pig-tails denoting mornings. She had on new soles&mdash;we saw
-them showing clean as she was setting her feet daintily; and when we,
-who were walking the fence between the two houses, crossed glances with
-her, we all looked instantly away, and though it was with regret that
-we saw her put into the ’bus next day to go, we afterward learned, to
-spend the Spring with her grandmother in a dry climate,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</a></span> we still felt
-a certain satisfaction that our social habits were not to be disquieted.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing at all had been suspected of a New Boy. Into that experience I
-came without warning.</p>
-
-<p>I was sitting on the flat roof of my play-house in the fence corner,
-laboriously writing on the weathered boards with a bit of a picket,
-which, as everybody knows, will make very clear brown letters, when the
-woodshed door of the house next door opened, and the New Boy came out.
-He came straight up to the fence and looked up at me, the sun shining
-in his eyes beneath the rimless plush cap which he was still wearing.
-He was younger than I, so I was not too afraid of him.</p>
-
-<p>“What you got?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>I showed him my writing material.</p>
-
-<p>“I wrote on a window with a diamond ring a’ready,” he submitted.</p>
-
-<p>I had heard of this, but I had never wholly credited it and I said
-so. Besides, it would wear the ring out and who wanted to wear out a
-diamond ring to write on a window?</p>
-
-<p>“It don’t wear it out,” the New Boy said. “It can keep right on writing
-forever and ever.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</a></span>
-“Nothing can keep right on forever,” I contended.</p>
-
-<p>He cast about for an argument.</p>
-
-<p>“Trees does,” he produced it.</p>
-
-<p>I glanced up at them. They certainly seemed to bear him out. I decided
-to abandon the controversy, and I switched with some abruptness to
-a subject not unconnected with trees, and about which I had often
-wondered.</p>
-
-<p>“If you was dirt,” I observed, “how could you decide to be into a
-potato when you could be into an apple just as well?”</p>
-
-<p>The New Boy was plainly taken aback. Here he was, as I see now, doing
-his best to be friendly and to make conversation personal, to say
-nothing of his having condescended to parley with a girl at all, and I
-was rewarding him with an abstraction.</p>
-
-<p>Said he: “Huh?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you was dirt&mdash;” I began a little doubtfully, but still sticking to
-the text.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t dirt,” denied the New Boy, with some heat.</p>
-
-<p>“I says, if you <em>was</em> dirt&mdash;” I tried to tell him, in haste and some
-discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>He climbed down from the fence on which he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</a></span> had been socially
-contriving to stick, though his was the “plain” side.</p>
-
-<p>“There ain’t any girl,” he observed with dignity, “going to call me
-dirt, nor call me if-I-was-dirt, either,” and stalked back into the
-woodshed.</p>
-
-<p>I looked after him in the utmost distress. I had been dealing in what I
-had considered the amenities, and it had come to this. Already the New
-Boy hated me.</p>
-
-<p>I slipped to the ground and waited, watching through the cracks in the
-fence. Ages passed. At length I heard him call his dog and go whistling
-down the street. I climbed on the fence and sat looking over in the
-deserted garden.</p>
-
-<p>Round the corner of the house next door somebody came. I saw a long,
-gray plaid shawl, with torn and flapping tassels, pinned about a small
-figure, with long legs. As she put her hand on the latch, she flashed
-me her smile, and it was Mary Elizabeth. She went immediately inside
-the shed door, and left me staring. What was she doing there? What
-unexpected places I was always seeing her. Why should she go in the
-woodshed of the New Family whom we didn’t even know ourselves?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-After due thought, I dropped to the other side of the fence, and
-proceeded to the woodshed door myself. It was unlatched, and as I
-peered in, I caught the sweet, moist smell of green wood, like the
-cool breath of the wood yard, where I had first seen her. When my
-eyes became used to the dimness, I perceived Mary Elizabeth standing
-at the end of a pile of wood, of the sort which we used to denominate
-“chunks,” which are what folk now call fireplace logs, though they are
-not properly fireplace logs at all&mdash;only “chunks” for sitting-room
-stoves&mdash;and trying to look meet to new estates. They were evenly piled,
-and they presented a wonderful presence, much more human than a wall.</p>
-
-<p>“See,” said Mary Elizabeth, absorbedly, “every end of one is pictures.
-Here’s a wheel with a wing on, and here’s a griffin eating a lemon.”</p>
-
-<p>I stared over her shoulder, fascinated. There they were. And there were
-grapes and a chandelier and a crooked street....</p>
-
-<p>Some moments later we were aware that the kitchen door had opened, and
-that somebody was standing there. It was the woman of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</a></span> New Family,
-with a black veil wound round her head and the ends dangling. She shook
-a huge purple dust-cloth, and I do not seem to recall that there was
-anything else to her, save her face and veil and the cloth.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then!” she said briskly, and in a tone of dreadful warning. “<em>Now</em>
-then!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth turned in the utmost eagerness and contrition.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” she said, “I come to see about the work.”</p>
-
-<p>The New Family Woman towered at us from the top of the three steps.</p>
-
-<p>“How much work,” she inquired with majesty, “do you think I’d get out
-of you, young miss, at this rate?”</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth drew nearer to her and stood before her, down in the
-chips, in the absurd shawl.</p>
-
-<p>“If you’ll leave me come,” she said earnestly, “I’ll promise not to see
-pictures. Well,” she added conscientiously, “I’ll promise not to stop
-to look at ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>How much weight this would have carried, I do not know; but at that
-moment the woman chanced to touch with her foot a mouse-trap that
-stood on the top step, and it “sprung” and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</a></span> shed its cheese. In an
-instant Mary Elizabeth had deftly reset and restored it. This made an
-impression on the arbiter.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re kind of a handy little thing, I see,” she said. “And of course
-you’re <em>all</em> lazy, for that matter. And I do need somebody. Well, I’ve
-got a woman coming for to-day. You can begin in the morning. Dishes,
-vegetables, and general cleaning, and anything else I think you can do.
-Board and clothes only, mind you&mdash;and <em>them</em> only as long as you suit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes’m. No’m. Yes’m.” Mary Elizabeth tried to agree right and left.</p>
-
-<p>Outside I skipped in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re going to be next-yard neighbours,” I cried, and that reminded
-me of the New Boy. I told her about him as we went round by the gate,
-there being no cross piece for a foothold on that side the fence.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said Mary Elizabeth, “I know him. He’s drove me home by my
-braids. He doesn’t mean anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I said earnestly, “when you get a chance, you tell him that I
-wasn’t calling him dirt. I says if he <em>was</em> dirt, how could he tell to
-be a potato or an apple.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-Mary Elizabeth nodded. “Lots of boys pretend mad,” she said
-philosophically, “to get you to run after them.”</p>
-
-<p>This was new to me. Could it be possible that you had to imagine
-folks, and what they really meant, as well as tending to all the other
-imagining?</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you stay over?” I extended hospitality to Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>She could “stay over,” it seemed, and without asking. This freedom of
-hers used to fill me with longing. To “stay over” without asking, to go
-down town, to eat unexpected offerings of food, to climb a new tree,
-as Mary Elizabeth could do, and all without asking! It was almost like
-being boys.</p>
-
-<p>Now that Mary Elizabeth was to be a neighbour, a new footing was
-established. This I did not reason about, nor did I wonder why this
-footing might not be everybody’s footing. We merely set to work on the
-accepted basis.</p>
-
-<p>This comprised: Name, including middle name, if any, and for whom
-named; age, and birthday, and particulars about the recent or
-approaching birthday; brothers and sisters, together with their names,
-ages, and birthdays;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</a></span> birthstones; grade; did we comb our own hair;
-voluntary information concerning tastes in flowers, colours, and food;
-and finally an examination and trying on of each other’s rings. The
-stone had come out of Mary Elizabeth’s ring, and she had found a clear
-pink pebble to insert in its place. She had, she said, grated the
-pebble on a brick to make it fit and she herself thought that it looked
-better than the one that she had lost, “but,” she added modestly, “I
-s’pose it can’t be.”</p>
-
-<p>Then came the revelation. To finish comparing notes we sat down
-together in my swing. And partly because, when I made a new friend, I
-was nervously eager to give her the best I had and at once, and partly
-because I was always wanting to see if somebody <em>would</em> understand,
-and chiefly because I never could learn wisdom, I looked up in the
-apple tree, now forsaken of all its pink, and fallen in a great green
-stillness, and I told her about my lady in the tree. I told her,
-expecting now no more than I had received from Delia and the Eversley
-girls. But Mary Elizabeth looked up and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” she said. “I’ve seen lots of ’em. They’s a lady in the willow
-out in our alley. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</a></span> see her when I empty the ashes and I pour ’em so’s
-they won’t blow on her.”</p>
-
-<p>I looked at her speechlessly. To this day I can remember how the little
-curls were caught up above Mary Elizabeth’s ear that morning. Struck by
-my silence she turned and regarded me. I think I must have blushed and
-stammered like a boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Can <em>you</em> see them too?” I asked. “In trees and places?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes,” she said in surprise. “Can’t everybody?”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly I was filled with a great sense of protection for Mary
-Elizabeth. I felt incalculably older. She had not yet found out, and I
-must never let her know, that everybody does not see all that there is
-to be seen in the world!</p>
-
-<p>One at a time I brought out my treasures that morning and shared them
-with her, as treasures; and she brought out hers as matters of course.
-I remember that I told her about the Theys that lived in our house.
-They were very friendly and wistful. They never presumed or frightened
-one or came in the room when anyone was there. But the minute folk
-left the room&mdash;ah, then! They slipped out from everywhere and did
-their living. I was always trying to catch them. I would leave a room
-innocently, and then whirl and fling it open in the hope of surprising
-them. But always They were too quick for me. In the times when the
-family was in the rooms and They were waiting for us to go, They used
-to watch us, still friendly and wistful, but also a little critical.
-Sometimes a whole task, or a mood, could be got through pleasantly
-because They were looking on.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<a name="but" id="but"></a>
-<img src="images/i_168fp.jpg" width="400" height="525" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">“<span class="smcap">But the minute folk left the room&mdash;ah then!</span>”</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</a></span>
-Mary Elizabeth nodded. “They like our parlour best,” she said. “They
-ain’t any furniture in there. They don’t come much in the kitchen.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the same at our house. They were always lurking in the curtained
-parlour, but the cheery, busy kitchen seldom knew them&mdash;except when one
-went out for a drink of water late at night. Then They barely escaped
-one.</p>
-
-<p>How she understood! Delia I loved with all the loyalties, but I could
-not help remembering a brief conversation that I had once held with her.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you have Theys at your house?” I had asked her, at the beginning of
-our acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-“Yes,” she admitted readily. “Company all this week. From Oregon. They
-do their hairs on kids.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mean them,” I explained. “I mean Theys, that live in between
-your rooms.”</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t let mice get in <em>our</em> house,” she replied loftily. “Only
-sometimes one gets in the woodshed. Do you use Choke-’em traps, or
-Catch-’em-alive traps and have the cat there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Catch-them-alive-and-let-them-out-in-the-alley traps,” I told her, and
-gave up hope, I remember, and went on grating more sugar-stone for the
-mud-pie icing.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth and I made mud pies that morning too, but all the time
-we made them we pretended. Not House-keep, or Store, or Bakery, or
-Church-sale&mdash;none of these pale pretendings to which I had chiefly
-been bound, save when I played alone. But now every pie and cake
-that we finished we two carried carefully and laid here and there,
-under raspberry bushes, in the crotch of the apple tree, on the
-wood-chopper’s block.</p>
-
-<p>“For Them to get afterwards,” we said briefly. We did not explain&mdash;I
-do not think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</a></span> that we could have explained. And we knew nothing of the
-old nights in the motherland when from cottage supper tables scraps of
-food were flung through open doors for One Waiting Without. But this
-business made an even more excellent thing of mud-pie baking, always a
-delectable pastime.</p>
-
-<p>When the noon whistle was blowing up at the brick yard, a shadow
-darkened our pine board. It was the New Boy. One of his cheeks
-protruded extravagantly. Silently he held out to me a vast pink
-substance of rock-like hardness, impaled on a stick. Then, with an
-obvious effort, more spiritual than physical, he extracted from his
-pocket a third of the kind, for Mary Elizabeth, on whose presence he
-had not counted. We accepted gratefully, I in the full spirit of the
-offer. Three minutes later he and I were at our respective dinner
-tables, trying, I suppose, to discuss this surreptitious first course
-simultaneously with our soup; and Mary Elizabeth, on her way home, was
-blissfully partaking of her <em>hors d’œuvre</em>, unviolated by any soup.</p>
-
-<p>“What are the new children like, I wonder?” said Somebody Grown. “I see
-there are two. I don’t know a thing about the people, but we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</a></span> can’t
-call till the woman at least gets her curtains up.”</p>
-
-<p>I pondered this. “Why?” I ventured at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Because she wouldn’t want to see us,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>Were curtains, then, so important that one might neither call nor be
-called on without them? What other possible explanation could there be?
-Perhaps Mary Elizabeth’s mother had no curtains and that was why our
-mothers did not know her.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary Elizabeth is going to help do the work for the New Family, and
-live there,” I said at last. “Won’t it be nice to have her to play
-with?”</p>
-
-<p>“You must be very kind to her,” somebody said.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Kind to her!</em>” It was my first horrified look into the depths of the
-social condescensions. <em>Kind to her</em>&mdash;when I remembered what we shared!
-I thought of saying hotly that she was my best friend. But I was
-silent. There was, after all, no way to make anybody understand what
-had opened to me that morning.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="x" id="x"></a>X<br />
-<span>WHAT’S PROPER</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Delia</span> and Calista and Margaret Amelia and Betty Rodman I loved with
-devotion. And Mary Elizabeth I likewise loved with devotion. Therefore,
-the fact that my four friends would not, in the language of the
-wise and grown world, “receive” Mary Elizabeth was to me bitter and
-unbelievable.</p>
-
-<p>This astounding situation, more than intimated on the day of the
-picnic, had its confirmation a few days after the advent of Mary
-Elizabeth in the New Family, when the six of us were seated on the
-edge of the board walk before our house. It was the middle of a June
-afternoon, a joyous, girlish day, with sun and wind in that feminine
-mood which is the frequent inheritance of all created things.</p>
-
-<p>“I could ’most spread this day on my bread like honey, and eat it
-up, and not know the difference,” said Mary Elizabeth, idly. “The
-queen’s honey&mdash;the queen’s honey&mdash;the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</a></span> queen’s honey,” she repeated
-luxuriously, looking up into the leaves.</p>
-
-<p>Delia leaned forward. It particularly annoyed her to have Mary
-Elizabeth in this mood.</p>
-
-<p>“One, two, three, four, five of us,” Delia said, deliberately omitting
-Mary Elizabeth as, for no reason, she counted us.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth, released from tasks for an hour or two before time to
-“help with the supper,” gave no sign that she understood, save that
-delicate flush of hers which I knew.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she assented lazily, “one, two, three, four, five of us&mdash;” and
-she so contrived that five was her own number, and no one could tell
-whom of us she had omitted.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s play something,” I hurriedly intervened. “Let’s play Banquet.”</p>
-
-<p>Action might have proved the solvent, but I had made an ill-starred
-choice. For having selected the rectangle of lawn where the feast was
-to be spread, Mary Elizabeth promptly announced that she had never
-heard of a banquet for five people, and that we must have more.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got six,” corrected Delia, unwarily.</p>
-
-<p>“Five,” Mary Elizabeth persisted tranquilly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</a></span> “and it’s not enough. We
-ought to have thirty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where you going to get your thirty?” demanded the exasperated Delia.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said Mary Elizabeth, “<em>that’s</em> always easy!” And told us.</p>
-
-<p>The king would sit at the head, with his prime minister and a
-lord or two. At the foot would be the queen with her principal
-ladies-in-waiting (at <em>this</em> end, so as to leave room for their
-trains). In between would be the fool, the discoverer of the new land,
-the people from the other planets, us, and the animals.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The animals!’” burst out Delia. “Whoever heard of animals at the
-table?”</p>
-
-<p>Oh, but it was the animals that the banquet was for. They were talking
-animals, and everyone was scrambling to entertain them, and every place
-in which they ate they changed their shapes and their skins.</p>
-
-<p>“I never heard of such a game,” said Delia, outright, already
-sufficiently grown-up to regard this as a reason.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s not play it,” said Margaret Amelia Rodman, languidly, and,
-though Delia had the most emphasis among us, Margaret Amelia was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</a></span> our
-leader, and we abandoned the game. I cannot recall why Margaret Amelia
-was our leader, unless it was because she had so many hair-ribbons and,
-when we had pin fairs, always came with a whole paper, whereas the rest
-of us merely had some collected in a box, or else rows torn off. But I
-suppose that we must have selected her for some potentiality; or else
-it was that a talent for tyranny was hers, since this, like the habit
-of creeping on all fours and other survivals of prehistoric man, will
-often mark one of the early stages of individual growth.</p>
-
-<p>This time Calista was peace-maker.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s go for a walk,” she said. “We can do that before supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have to be back in time to help <em>get</em> supper, won’t you?” Delia
-asked Mary Elizabeth pointedly.</p>
-
-<p>Again Mary Elizabeth was unperturbed, save for that faint flush.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she said, “I will. So let’s hurry.”</p>
-
-<p>We ran toward the school ground, by common consent the destination for
-short walks, with supper imminent, as Prospect Hill was dedicated to
-real walks, with nothing pressing upon us.</p>
-
-<p>“It says ‘Quick, quick, quick, quick,’” Mary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</a></span> Elizabeth cried, dragging
-a stick on the pickets of, so to say, a passing fence.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that’s nothing but the stick noise hitting on the fence noise,”
-Delia explained loftily.</p>
-
-<p>“Which makes the loudest noise&mdash;the stick or the fence?” Mary Elizabeth
-put it to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Why&mdash;” said Delia, and Mary Elizabeth and I both laughed, like little
-demons, and made our sticks say, “Quick, quick, quick, quick” as far as
-the big post, that was so like a man standing there to stop us.</p>
-
-<p>“See the poor tree. The walk’s stepping on its feet!” cried Mary
-Elizabeth when we passed the Branchett’s great oak, that had forced
-up the bricks of the walk. (They must already have been talking of
-taking it down, that hundred-year oak, to preserve the dignity of the
-side-walk, for they did so shortly after.)</p>
-
-<p>This time it was Margaret Amelia who revolted.</p>
-
-<p>“Trees can’t walk,” she said. “There aren’t any <em>feet</em> there.”</p>
-
-<p>I took a hand. “You don’t know sure,” I reminded her. “When it’s dark,
-maybe they do walk. I’ll ask it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</a></span>
-By the time I had done whispering to the bark, Delia said she was going
-to tell her mother. “Such <em>lies</em>,” she put it bluntly. “You’ll never
-write a book, I don’t care what you say. You got to tell the truth to
-write books.”</p>
-
-<p>“Everybody that tells the truth don’t write a book,” I contended&mdash;but
-sobered. I wanted passionately to write a book. What if this business
-of pretending, which Delia called lies should be in the way of truthful
-book-writing? But the habit was too strong for me. In that very moment
-we came upon a huge new ant-hill.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t step on that ant-hill. See all the ants&mdash;they say to step over
-it!” I cried, and pushed Delia round it with some violence.</p>
-
-<p>“Well&mdash;what makes you always so&mdash;<em>religious!</em>” she burst out, at the
-end of her patience.</p>
-
-<p>I was still hotly denying this implication when we entered the school
-yard, and broke into running; for no reason, save that entrances and
-beginnings always made us want to run and shout.</p>
-
-<p>The school yard, quite an ordinary place during school hours, became
-at the end of school a place no longer to be shunned, but wholly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</a></span>
-desirable. Next to the wood yard, it was the most mysterious place
-that we knew. In the school yard were great cords of wood, suitable
-for hiding; a basement door, occasionally left open, from which at any
-moment the janitor might appear to drive us away; a band-stand, covered
-with names and lacking enough boards so that one might climb up without
-use of the steps; a high-board fence on which one always longed to
-walk at recess; a high platform from which one had unavailingly pined
-to jump; outside banisters down which, in school-time, no one might
-slide, trees which no one might climb, corner brick-work affording
-excellent steps, which, then, none might scale; broad outside window
-ledges on which none might sit, loose bricks in the walks ripe for
-the prying-up, but penalty attended; a pump on whose iron handle the
-lightest of us might ride save that, in school-time, this was forbidden
-too. In school-time this yard, so rich in possibilities, was compact
-of restrictions. None of these things might be done. Once a boy had
-been expelled for climbing on the schoolhouse roof; and thereupon his
-father, a painter by trade, had taken the boy to work with him, and
-when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</a></span> we saw him in overalls wheeling his father’s cart, we were told
-that <em>that</em> was what came of disobedience, although this boy might,
-easily no doubt, otherwise have become President of the United States.</p>
-
-<p>But after school! Toward supper-time, or in vacation-time, we used to
-love to linger about the yard and snatch at these forbidden pleasures.
-That is, the girls loved it. The boys had long ago had them all, and
-were off across the tracks on new adventures unguessed of us.</p>
-
-<p>If anybody found us here&mdash;we were promptly driven off. The principal
-did this as a matter of course, but the janitor had the same power
-and much more emphasis. If one of the board was seen passing, we hid
-behind everything and, as we were never clear just who belonged to the
-board, we hid when nearly all grown-folk passed. That the building and
-grounds were ours, paid for by our father’s taxes, and that the school
-officials and even the tyrannical janitor were town servants to help us
-to make good use of our own, no more occurred to us than it occurred
-to us to find a ring in the ground, lift it, and descend steps. Nor
-as much, for we were always looking for a ring to lift. To be sure,
-we might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</a></span> easily fall into serious mischief in this stolen use of our
-property; but that it was the function of one of these grown-ups, whom
-we were forever dodging, to be there with us, paid by the town to play
-with us, was as wild an expectation as that fairies should arrive with
-golden hoops and balls and wings. Wilder, for we were always expecting
-the fairies and, secretly, the wings.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon we did almost all these forbidden things&mdash;swings and
-seesaws and rings would have done exactly as well, only these had
-not been provided&mdash;and then we went to rest in the band-stand. Mary
-Elizabeth and I were feeling somewhat subdued&mdash;neither of us shone much
-in feats of skill, and here Delia and Margaret Amelia easily put us in
-our proper places. Calista was not daring, but she was a swift runner,
-and this entitled her to respect. Mary Elizabeth and I were usually
-the first ones caught, and the others were not above explaining to us
-frankly that this was why we preferred to play Pretend.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s tell a story&mdash;you start it, Mary Elizabeth,” I proposed, anxious
-for us two to return to standing, for in collaborations of this kind
-Mary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</a></span> Elizabeth and I frankly shone&mdash;and the wish to shine, like the
-wish to cry out, is among the primitive phases of individual growth.</p>
-
-<p>“Let Margaret Amelia start it,” Delia tried to say, but already the
-story was started, Mary Elizabeth leaning far back, and beginning to
-braid and unbraid her long hair&mdash;not right away to the top of the
-braid, which was a serious matter and not to be lightly attempted with
-heavy hair, but just near the curling end.</p>
-
-<p>“Once,” she said, “a big gold sun was going along up in the sky,
-wondering what in the world&mdash;no, what in All-of-it to do with himself.
-For he was all made and done, nice and bright and shiny, and he wanted
-a place to be. So he knocked at all the worlds and said, ‘Don’t you
-want to hire a sun to do your urrants, take care of your garden, and
-behave like a fire and like a lamp?’ But all the worlds didn’t want
-him, because they all had engaged a sun first and they could only
-use one apiece, account of the climate. So one morning&mdash;he <em>knew</em> it
-was morning because he was shining, and when it was night he never
-shone&mdash;one morning....”</p>
-
-<p>“Now leave somebody else,” Delia suggested restlessly. “Leave Margaret
-Amelia tell.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</a></span>
-So we turned to her. Margaret Amelia considered solemnly&mdash;perhaps it
-was her faculty for gravity that made us always look up to her&mdash;and
-took up the tale:</p>
-
-<p>“One morning he met a witch. And he said, ‘Witch, I wish you
-would&mdash;would give me something to eat. I’m very hungry.’ So the witch
-took him to her kitchen and gave him a bowl of porridge, and it was hot
-and burned his mouth, and he asked for a drink of water, and&mdash;and&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“What was the use of having her a witch if <em>that</em> was all he was going
-to ask her?” demanded Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>“They <em>always</em> have witches in the best stories,” Margaret Amelia
-contended, “and anyway, that’s all I’m going to tell.”</p>
-
-<p>Delia took up the tale uninvited.</p>
-
-<p>“And he got his drink of water, pumped up polite by the witch herself,
-and she was going to put a portion in it. But while she was looking in
-the top drawer for the portion, the sun went away. And&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>This time it was I who intervened.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Portion!’” I said with superiority. “Who ever heard of anybody
-drinking a <em>portion</em>? That word is <em>potient</em>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-Delia was plainly taken aback.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re thinking of long division,” she said feebly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m thinking of ‘Romeo and Juliet,’” I responded with dignity. “They
-had one, in the tomb, where Tybalt, all bloody&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say that one&mdash;don’t say it!” cried Margaret Amelia. “I can see
-that one awful after the light is out. Go on, somebody, quick.”</p>
-
-<p>To take up her share of the story, Betty Rodman refused, point-blank. I
-think that her admission to our group must have been principally on the
-credentials of sistership to one of us, a basis at once pathetic and
-lovely.</p>
-
-<p>“I never can think of anything to have happen,” Betty complained, “and
-if I make something happen, then it ends up the story.”</p>
-
-<p>Calista had a nail in her shoe, and was too much absorbed in pounding
-it down with a stone to be approached; so, when we had all minutely
-examined the damage which the nail had wrought, it was my turn to take
-up the tale. And then the thing happened which was always happening
-to me: I could think of nothing to have the story do. At night, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">185</a></span>
-when I was alone, I could dream out the most fascinating adventures,
-but with expectant faces&mdash;or a clean pad&mdash;before me, I was dumb and
-powerless.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t feel like telling one just now,” said I, the proposer of the
-game, and went on digging leaves out of a crevice in the rotting rail.
-So Mary Elizabeth serenely took up the tale where she had left it.</p>
-
-<p>“One morning he looked over a high sky mountain&mdash;that’s what suns like
-to do best because it is so becoming&mdash;and he shone in a room of the sky
-where a little black star was sleeping. And he thought he would ask it
-what to do. So he said to it, ‘Little Black Star, where shall I be, now
-that I am all done and finished, nice and shiny?’ And the Little Black
-Star said: ‘You’re not done. What made you think you were done? Hardly
-anybody is ever done. I’ll tell you what to be. Be like a carriage
-and take all us little dark stars in, and whirl and whirl for about a
-million years, and make us all get bright too, and <em>then</em> maybe you’ll
-be a true sun&mdash;but not all done, even then.’ So that’s what he decided
-to do, and he’s up there now, only you can’t see him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">186</a></span> because he’s so
-far, and our sun is so bright, and he’s whirling and whirling, and lots
-more like him, getting to be made.”</p>
-
-<p>Delia followed Mary Elizabeth’s look into the blue.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe it,” said she. “The sun is biggest and the moon is
-next. How could there be any other sun? And it don’t whirl. It don’t
-even rise and set. It stands still. Miss Messmore said so.”</p>
-
-<p>We looked at Mary Elizabeth, probably I alone having any impulse to
-defend her. And we became aware that she was quite white and trembling.
-In the same moment we understood that we were hearing something which
-we had been hearing without knowing that we heard. It was a thin,
-wavering strain of singing, in a man’s voice. We scrambled up, and
-looked over the edge of the band-stand. Coming unevenly down the broken
-brick walk that cut the schoolhouse grounds was Mary Elizabeth’s
-father. His hat was gone. It was he who was singing. He looked as he
-had looked that first day that I had seen him in the wood yard. We knew
-what was the matter. And all of us unconsciously did the cruel thing of
-turning and staring at Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">187</a></span>
-In a moment she was over the side of the band-stand and running to
-him. She took him by the hand, and we saw that she meant to lead him
-home. Her little figure looked very tiny beside his gaunt frame, in its
-loosely hanging coat. I remember how the sun was pouring over them, and
-over the brilliant green beyond where blackbirds were walking. I have
-no knowledge of what made me do it&mdash;perhaps it was merely an attitude,
-created by the afternoon, of standing up for Mary Elizabeth no matter
-what befell; or it may have been a child’s crude will to challenge
-things; at any rate, without myself really deciding it, I suddenly took
-the way that she had taken, and caught up with the two.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary Elizabeth,” I meant to say, “I’m going.”</p>
-
-<p>But in fact I said nothing, and only kept along beside her. She looked
-at me mutely, and made a motion to me to turn back. When her father
-took our hands and stumblingly ran with us, I heartily wished that I
-had turned back. But nearly all the way he went peaceably enough. Long
-before we reached their home across the tracks, however, I heard the
-six o’clock whistles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">188</a></span> blow, and pictured the wrath of the mistress of
-the New Family when Mary Elizabeth had not returned in time to “help
-with the supper.” Very likely now they would not let her stay, and this
-new companionship of ours would have to end. Mary Elizabeth’s home
-was on the extreme edge of the town, and ordinarily I was not allowed
-to cross the tracks. Mary Elizabeth might even move away&mdash;that had
-happened to some of us, and the night had descended upon such as these
-and we had never heard of them again: Hattie Schenck, whom I had loved
-with unequalled devotion, where, for example, was she? Was it, then, to
-be the same with Mary Elizabeth?</p>
-
-<p>Her mother saw us coming. She hurried down to the gateway&mdash;the gate
-was detached and lying in the weeds within&mdash;and even then I was
-struck by the way of maternity with which she led her husband to the
-house. I remember her as large-featured, with the two bones of her
-arms sharply defined by a hollow running from wrist to elbow, and she
-constantly held her face as if the sun were shining in her eyes, but
-there was no sun shining there. And somehow, at the gate she had a
-way of receiving him, and of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">189</a></span> taking him with her. Hardly anything
-was said. The worst of it was that no one had to explain anything.
-Two of the little children ran away and hid. Someone dodged behind an
-open door. The man’s wife led him to the broken couch, and he lay down
-there like a little child. Standing in the doorway of that forlorn,
-disordered, ill-smelling room, I first dimly understood what I never
-have forgotten: That the man was not poor because he drank, as the
-village thought, but that he drank because he was poor. Instead of the
-horror at a drunken man which the village had laid it upon me to feel,
-I suddenly saw Mary Elizabeth’s father as her mother saw him when she
-folded her gingham apron and spread it across his shoulders and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Poor lad.”</p>
-
-<p>And when, in a few minutes, Mary Elizabeth and I were out on the street
-again, running silently, I remember feeling a great blind rage against
-the whole village and against the whole world that couldn’t seem to
-think what to do any more than Mary Elizabeth and I could think.</p>
-
-<p>The man of the New Family was watering the lawn, which meant that
-supper was done.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">190</a></span> We slipped in our back gate,&mdash;the New Family had
-none,&mdash;climbed the fence by my play-house, dropped down into the New
-Family’s garden, and entered their woodshed. In my own mind I had
-settled that I was of small account if I could not give the New Lady
-such a picture of what had happened that Mary Elizabeth should not lose
-her place, and I should not lose her.</p>
-
-<p>The kitchen door was ajar. The dish-pan was in the sink, the kettle was
-steaming on the stove. And from out the dining-room abruptly appeared
-Calista and <em>Delia</em>, bearing plates.</p>
-
-<p>“Girls!” I cried, but Mary Elizabeth was dumb.</p>
-
-<p>Delia carefully set down her plate in the dish-pan and addressed me:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you needn’t think you’re the only one that knows what’s proper,
-miss,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Calista was more simple.</p>
-
-<p>“We wanted to get ’em all done before you got back,” she owned. “We
-would, if Margaret Amelia and Betty had of come. They wanted to, but
-they wouldn’t let ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>Back of Delia and Calista appeared the mistress of the house. She had
-on her afternoon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">191</a></span> dress, and her curl papers were out, and she actually
-smiled at Mary Elizabeth and me.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Now</em> then!” she said to us.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If I could have made a dream for that night, I think it would have been
-that ever and ever so many of us were sitting in rows, waiting to be
-counted. And a big sun came by, whirling and growing, to take us, and
-we thought we couldn’t all get in. But there was room, whether we had
-been counted or not.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">192</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xi" id="xi"></a>XI<br />
-<span>DOLLS</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> advent of the New Boy changed the face of the neighbourhood.
-Formerly I had been accustomed to peep through cracks in the fence
-only to look into a field of corn that grew at the side; or, on the
-other side, into raspberry bushes, where at any moment raspberries
-might be gathered and dropped over the fence to me. Also, there was
-one place in the deep green before those bushes where blue-eyed grass
-grew, and I had to watch for that. Then there was a great spotted dog
-that sometimes came, and when he had passed, I used to wait long by the
-high boards lest he should return and leap at me to whom, so far, he
-had never paid the slightest attention. As a child, my mother had once
-jumped down into a manger where a great spotted dog was inadvertently
-lying and, though from all accounts he was far more frightened than
-she, yet I feared his kind more than any other.... The only real
-excitement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</a></span> that we had been wont to know in the neighbourhood occurred
-whenever there was a Loose Horse. Somebody would give the alarm, and
-then we would all make sure that the gates were latched and we would
-retire to watch him fearfully, where he was quietly cropping the
-roadside grass. But sometimes, too, a Loose Horse would run&mdash;and then I
-was terrified by the sound of his hoofs galloping on the sidewalk and
-striking on the bricks and boards. I was always afraid that a Loose
-Horse would see me, and nights, after one had disturbed our peace, I
-would dream that he was trying to find me, and that he had come peering
-between the dining-room blinds; and though I hid under the red cotton
-spread that was used “between-meals,” it never came down far enough,
-and he always stood there interminably waiting, and found me, through
-the fringe.</p>
-
-<p>But all these excitements were become as nothing. A new occupation
-presented itself. A dozen times a day now I had to watch through the
-fence-cracks, or through the knot-hole, or boldly between the pickets
-of the front fence, at the fascinating performances of the New Boy
-and his troops of friends. At any moment both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</a></span> Mary Elizabeth and I
-would abandon what we were doing to go to stare at the unaccountable
-activities which were forever agitating them. They were always
-producing something from their pockets and examining it, with their
-heads together, or manufacturing something or burying something, or
-disputing about something unguessed and alluring. Their whole world
-was filled with doing, doing, doing, whereas ours was made wholly of
-watching things get done.</p>
-
-<p>On an afternoon Mary Elizabeth and I were playing together in our side
-yard. It was the day for Delia’s music lesson, and as she usually did
-her whole week’s practising in the time immediately preceding that
-event, the entire half day was virtually wasted. We could hear her
-going drearily over and over the first and last movements of “At Home,”
-which she had memorized and could play like lightning, while the entire
-middle of the piece went with infinite deliberation. Calista was, we
-understood (because of some matter pertaining to having filled the
-bath-tub and waded in it and ruined the dining-room ceiling), spending
-the day in her bed. And Margaret Amelia and Betty Rodman were being
-kept at home because the family<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</a></span> had company; and such was the prestige
-of the Rodmans that the two contrived to make this circumstance seem
-enviable, and the day before had pictured to us their embroidered white
-dresses and blue ribbons, and blue stockings, and the Charlotte Russe
-for supper, until we felt left out, and not in the least as if their
-company were of a kind with events of the sort familiar to us. Since I
-have grown up, I have observed this variety of genius in others. There
-is one family which, when it appears in afternoon gowns on occasions
-when I have worn a street dress, has power to make me wonder how I
-can have failed to do honour to the day; but who, when they wear
-street gowns and I am dressed for afternoon, invariably cause me to
-feel inexcusably overdressed. It is a kind of genius for the fit, and
-we must believe that it actually designates the atmosphere which an
-occasion shall breathe.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth and I were playing Dolls. We rarely did this on a
-pleasant day in Summer, Dolls being an indoor game, matched with
-carpets and furniture and sewing baskets rather than with blue sky and
-with the soft brilliance of the grass. But that day we had brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</a></span>
-everything out in the side yard under the little catalpa tree, and my
-eleven dolls (counting the one without any face, and Irene Helena, the
-home-made one, and the two penny ones) were in a circle on chairs and
-boxes and their backs, getting dressed for the tea-party. There was
-always going to be a tea-party when you played Dolls&mdash;you of course had
-to lead up to something, and what else was there to lead up to save
-a tea-party? To be sure, there might be an occasional marriage, but
-boy-dolls were never very practical; they were invariably smaller than
-the bride-doll, and besides we had no mosquito-netting suitable for a
-veil. Sometimes we had them go for a walk, and once or twice we had
-tried playing that they were house-cleaning; but these operations were
-not desirable, because in neither of them could the dolls dress up, and
-the desirable part of playing dolls is, as everybody knows, to dress
-them in their best. That is the game. That, and the tea-party.</p>
-
-<p>“Blue or rose-pink?” Mary Elizabeth inquired, indicating the two best
-gowns of the doll she was dressing.</p>
-
-<p>It was a difficult question. We had never been able to decide which
-of these two colours we preferred. There was the sky for precedent of
-blue, but then rose-pink we loved so to say!</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<a name="she" id="she"></a>
-<img src="images/i_196fp.jpg" width="400" height="585" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><span class="smcap">She settled everything in that way; she counted
-the petals of fennel daisies and blew thistle from dandelions.</span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</a></span>
-“If they’s one cloud in the sky, we’ll put on the rose-pink one,” said
-Mary Elizabeth. “And if there isn’t any, that’ll mean blue.”</p>
-
-<p>She settled everything that way&mdash;she counted the petals of fennel
-daisies, blew the thistle from dandelions, did one thing if she could
-find twelve acorns and another if they were lacking. Even then Mary
-Elizabeth seemed always to be watching for a guiding hand, to be
-listening for a voice to tell her what to do, and trying to find these
-in things of Nature.</p>
-
-<p>We dressed the Eleven in their best frocks, weighing each choice long,
-and seated them about a table made of a box covered with a towel. We
-sliced a doughnut and with it filled two small baskets for each end of
-the table, on which rested my toy castor and such of my dishes as had
-survived the necessity which I had felt for going to bed with the full
-set, on the night of the day, some years before, when I had acquired
-them. We picked all the flowers suitable for doll decorations&mdash;clover,
-sorrel, candytuft, sweet alyssum. We observed the unities<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</a></span> by retiring
-for a time sufficient to occupy the tea-party in disposing of the
-feast; and then we came back and sat down and stared at them. Irene
-Helena, I remember, had slipped under the table in a heap, a proceeding
-which always irritated me, as nakedly uncovering the real depths of
-our pretence&mdash;and I jerked her up and set her down, like some maternal
-Nemesis.</p>
-
-<p>In that moment a wild, I may almost say <em>thick</em>, shriek sounded through
-our block, and there came that stimulating thud-thud of feet on earth
-that accompanies all the best diversions, and also there came the
-cracking of things,&mdash;whips, or pistols, or even a punch, which rapidly
-operated will do almost as well. And down the yards of the block and
-over the fences and over the roof of my play-house came tumbling and
-shrieking the New Boy, and in his wake were ten of his kind.</p>
-
-<p>Usually they raced by with a look in their eyes which we knew well,
-though we never could distinguish whether it meant robbers or pirates
-or dragons or the enemy. Usually they did not even see us. But that
-day something in our elaborate preparation to receive somebody or to
-welcome something, and our eternal moment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</a></span> of suspended animation at
-which they found us, must have caught the fancy of the New Boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Halt!” he roared with the force and effect of a steam whistle, and in
-a moment they were all stamping and breathing about Mary Elizabeth and
-me.</p>
-
-<p>We sprang up in instant alarm and the vague, pathetic, immemorial
-impulse to defence. We need not have feared. The game was still going
-forward and we were merely pawns.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is the lord of this castle?” demanded the New Boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Bindyliggs,” replied Mary Elizabeth, without a moment’s hesitation, a
-name which I believe neither of us to have heard before.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is this Lord of Bindyliggs?” the New Boy pressed it.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth indicated the woodshed. “At meat,” she added gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“Forward!” the New Boy instantly commanded, and the whole troop
-disappeared in our shed. We heard wood fall, and the clash of meeting
-weapons, and the troop reappeared, two by way of the low window.</p>
-
-<p>“Enough!” cried the New Boy, grandly. “We have spared him, but there is
-not a moment to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</a></span> lose. You must come with us <em>immediately</em>. What you
-got to eat?”</p>
-
-<p>Raptly, we gave them, from under the wistful noses of Irene Helena and
-the doll without the face and the rest, the entire sliced doughnut, and
-two more doughnuts, dipped in sugar, which we had been saving so as to
-have something to look forward to.</p>
-
-<p>“Come with us,” said the New Boy, graciously. “To horse! We may reach
-the settlement by nightfall&mdash;<em>if</em> we escape the Brigands in the Wood.
-The Black Wood,” he added.</p>
-
-<p>Even then, I recall, I was smitten with wonder that he who had shown
-so little imagination in that matter of dirt and apples and potatoes
-should here be teeming with fancy on his own familiar ground. It was
-years before I understood that there are almost as many varieties of
-imaginative as of religious experience.</p>
-
-<p>Fascinated, we dropped everything and followed. The way led, it
-appeared, to the Wells’s barn, a huge, red barn in the block, with
-doors always invitingly open and chickens pecking about, and doves on a
-little platform close to the pointed roof.</p>
-
-<p>“Aw, say, you ain’t goin’ to take ’em along,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</a></span> are you?” demanded one
-knight, below his voice. “They’ll spoil everythin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re <em>rescuin’</em> ’em, you geezer,” the New Boy explained. “You got to
-have ’em along till you get ’em rescued, ain’t you? Arrest that man!”
-he added. “Put him in double irons with chains and balls on. And gag
-him, to make sure.”</p>
-
-<p>And it was done, with hardly a moment’s loss of time.</p>
-
-<p>We went round by the walk&mdash;a course to which the arrested one had time
-to refer in further support of his claim as to our undesirability.
-But he was drowned in the important topics that were afoot: the new
-cave to be explored where the Branchetts were putting a cellar under
-the dining-room, mysterious boxes suspected to contain dynamite being
-unloaded into the Wells’s cellar, and the Court of the Seven Kings, to
-which, it seemed, we were being conveyed in the red barn.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we give ’em the password?” the New Boy asked, <em>sotto voce</em>, as
-we approached the rendezvous. And Mary Elizabeth and I trembled as we
-realized that he was thinking of sharing the password with us.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-“<em>Naw!</em>” cried the Arrested One violently. “It’ll be all over town.”</p>
-
-<p>The New Boy drew himself up&mdash;he must have been good to look at, for I
-recall his compact little figure and his pink cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you tell when you’re gagged?” he inquired with majesty. “You’re
-playin’ like a girl yourself. I can give the password for ’em, though,”
-he added reasonably. So we all filed in the red barn, to the Court of
-the Seven Kings, and each boy whispered the password into the first
-manger, but Mary Elizabeth and I had it whispered for us.</p>
-
-<p>What the Court of the Seven Kings might have held for us we were never
-to know. At that instant there appeared lumbering down the alley a load
-of hay. Seated in the midst was a small figure whom we recognized as
-Stitchy Branchett; and he rose and uttered a roar.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, fellows!” he said. “We dast ride over to the Glen. I was
-lookin’ for you. Father said so.” And Stitchy threw himself on his
-back, and lifted and waved his heels.</p>
-
-<p>Already our liberators were swarming up the hay-rack, which had halted
-for them. In a twinkling they were sunk in that fragrance,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</a></span> kicking
-their heels even as their host. Already they had forgotten Mary
-Elizabeth and me, nor did they give us good-bye.</p>
-
-<p>We two turned and went through the Wells’s yard, back to the street.
-Almost at once we were again within range of the sounds of Delia,
-practising interminably on her “At Home.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never rode on a load of hay,” said Mary Elizabeth at length.</p>
-
-<p>Neither had I, though I almost always walked backward to watch one when
-it passed me.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you <em>s’pose</em> the password was?” said Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>It was days before we gave over wondering. And sometimes in later years
-I have caught myself speculating on that lost word.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder what we were rescued from,” said Mary Elizabeth when we
-passed our woodshed door.</p>
-
-<p>We stopped and peered within. No Lord of Bindyliggs, though we had
-almost expected to see him stretched there, bound and helpless.</p>
-
-<p>What were we rescued from? <em>We should never know.</em></p>
-
-<p>We rounded the corner by the side yard. There sat our staring dolls,
-drawn up about the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</a></span> tea-table, static all. As I looked at them I was
-seized and possessed by an unreasoning fury. And I laid hold on Irene
-Helena, and had her by the heels, and with all my strength I pounded
-her head against the trunk of the catalpa tree.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth understood&mdash;when did she not understand?</p>
-
-<p>“Which one can I&mdash;which one can I?” she cried excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“All of ’em!” I shouted, and one after another we picked up the Eleven
-by their skirts, and we threw them far and wide in the grass, and the
-penny dolls we hurled into the potato patch.</p>
-
-<p>Then Mary Elizabeth looked at me aghast.</p>
-
-<p>“Your dolls!” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care!” I cried savagely. “I’ll never play ’em again. I hate
-’em!” And I turned to Mary Elizabeth with new eyes. “Let’s go down town
-after supper,” I whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“I could,” she said, “but you won’t be let.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t ask,” I said. “I’ll go. When you get done, come on over.”</p>
-
-<p>I scorned to gather up the dolls. They were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</a></span> in the angle below the
-parlour windows, and no one saw them. As soon as supper was finished,
-I went to my room and put on my best shoes, which I was not allowed to
-wear for everyday. Then I tipped my birthday silver dollar out of my
-bank and tied it in the corner of my handkerchief. Down in the garden I
-waited for Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>It was hardly dusk when she came. We had seen nothing of Delia, and we
-guessed that she was to stay in the house for the rest of the day as
-penance for having, without doubt, played “At Home” too badly.</p>
-
-<p>“You better not do it,” Mary Elizabeth whispered. “They might....”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” I said only.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s try a June grass,” she begged. “If the seeds all come off in my
-teeth, we’ll go. But if they don’t&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” said I, “I’m not going to monkey with signs any more.”</p>
-
-<p>We climbed the back fence, partly so that the chain, weighted with a
-pail of stones, might not creak, and partly because to do so seemed
-more fitting to the business in hand. We ran crouching, thereby
-arousing the attention of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</a></span> old Mr. Branchett, who was training a
-Virginia creeper along his back fence.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, hello,” said he. “Pretty good runners for girls, seems to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Neither of us replied. Our souls were suddenly sickened at this sort of
-dealing.</p>
-
-<p>Wisconsin Street was a blaze of light. The ’buses were on their way
-from the “depots” to the hotels&mdash;nobody knew who might be in those
-’buses. They were the nexus between us and the unguessed world.
-Strangers were on the streets. Everything was in motion. Before
-Morrison’s grocery they were burning rubbish, some boys from the other
-end of town were running unconcernedly through the flames, and the
-smell of the smoke set us tingling. At the corner a man was pasting
-a circus bill&mdash;we stopped a moment to look down the throat of the
-hippopotamus. Away up the street a band struck up, and we took hold of
-hands again, and ran.</p>
-
-<p>We crossed the big square by the City Bank, under the hissing arc lamp.
-By the post-office a crowd of men and boys was standing, and between
-the files young women whom we knew, wearing ribbons and feathers, were
-passing in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</a></span> and out of the office and laughing. Bard’s jewellery store
-was brilliant&mdash;it looked lighter than any other store with its window
-of dazzling cut glass and its wonderful wall of clocks whose pendulums
-never kept pace. In a saloon a piano was playing&mdash;we glanced in with a
-kind of joyous fear at the green screen beyond the door. We saw Alma
-Fremont, whose father kept a grocery store, standing in the store door
-with a stick of pink candy thrust in a lemon, and we thought on the
-joy of having a father who was a grocer. We longed to stare in the
-barber-shop window, and looked away. But our instinctive destination
-was the place before the Opera House, where the band was playing. We
-reached it, and stood packed in the crowd, close to the blare of the
-music, and shivered with delight.</p>
-
-<p>“If only the fire-engine would come,” Mary Elizabeth breathed in my ear.</p>
-
-<p>But in a little while the guffaws, the jostling, the proximity of dirty
-coats, the odour of stale tobacco must have disturbed us, because
-gradually we edged a little away, and stood on the edge of the crowd,
-against an iron rail outside a billiard room. The band ceased, and went
-up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</a></span> into the hall. We had a distinct impulse to do the next thing. What
-was there to do next? What was it that the boys did when they went
-down town evenings? What else did they do while we were tidying our
-play-houses for the night? For here we were, longing for play, if only
-we could think what to do.</p>
-
-<p>I felt a hand beneath my chin, lifting my face. There, in the press,
-stood my Father. Over his arm he carried my black jacket with the
-Bedford cord.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother thought you might be cold,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>I put on the jacket, and he took Mary Elizabeth and me by the hand, and
-we walked slowly back down Wisconsin Street.</p>
-
-<p>“We will see Mary Elizabeth safely home first,” my Father said, and we
-accompanied her to the New Family’s door.</p>
-
-<p>Once in our house, it was I who proposed going to bed, and the
-suggestion met with no opposition. Upstairs, I slipped the screen
-from my window and leaned out in the dusk. The night, warm, fragrant,
-significant, was inviting me to belong to it, was asking me, even as
-bright day had asked me, what it had in common with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</a></span> the stuffiness and
-dulness of forever watching others do things. Something hard touched my
-hand. It was my birthday dollar. It had not occurred to me to spend it.</p>
-
-<p>I saw my Father stroll back down the street, lighting a cigar. Below
-stairs I could hear my Mother helping to put away the supper dishes.
-A dozen boys raced through the alley, just on their way down town.
-So long as they came home at a stated hour at night, and turned up
-at table with their hands clean, who asked them where they had been?
-“Where have you been?” they said to me, the moment I entered the
-house&mdash;and to Delia and Calista and Margaret Amelia and Betty. We had
-often talked about it. And none of us had even ridden on a load of hay.
-We had a vague expectation that it would be different when we grew up.
-A sickening thought came to me: <em>Would it be different, or was this to
-be forever?</em></p>
-
-<p>I ran blindly down the stairs where my Mother was helping to put away
-the supper dishes&mdash;in the magic of the night, helping to put away the
-supper dishes.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother!” I cried, “Mother! Who made it so much harder to be a girl?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</a></span>
-She turned and looked at me, her face startled, and touched me&mdash;I
-remember how gently she touched me.</p>
-
-<p>“Before you die,” she said, “it will be easier.”</p>
-
-<p>I thought then that she meant that I would grow used to it. Now I know
-that she meant what I meant when I woke that night, and remembered my
-dolls lying out in the grass and the dew, and was not sorry, but glad:
-Glad that the time was almost come&mdash;for real playthings.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xii" id="xii"></a>XII<br />
-<span>BIT-BIT</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">At</span> the Rodmans’, who lived in a huge house on a hill, some of
-the rooms had inscriptions in them&mdash;or what I should have called
-mottoes&mdash;cunningly lettered and set about. Some of these were in
-Margaret Amelia’s and Betty’s room, above the mirror, the bed, the
-window; and there was one downstairs on a panel above the telephone.
-The girls said that they had an aunt who had written them “on purpose,”
-an aunt who had had stories in print. In my heart I doubted the part
-about the printed stories, and so did Mary Elizabeth, but we loved
-Margaret Amelia and Betty too well to let this stand between us. Also,
-we were caught by the inscriptions. They were these:</p>
-
-<p class="center mt2 nmb">FOR A CRADLE<a name="FNanchor_A" id="FNanchor_A"></a><a href="#Footnote_A" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">I cannot tell you who I am</div>
-<div class="line">Nor what I’m going to be.</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</a></span>
-<div class="line">You who are wise and know your ways</div>
-<div class="line">Tell me.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_A" id="Footnote_A"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A"><span class="label">[A]</span></a>
-Copyright, 1908, by Harper &amp; Brothers.</p>
-</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="center mt2 nmb">FOR THE MIRROR</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">Look in the deep of me. What are we going to do?</div>
-<div class="line">If I am I, as I am, who in the world are you?</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="center mt2 nmb">FOR AN IVORY COMB</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">Use me and think of spirit, and spirit yet to be.</div>
-<div class="line">This is the jest: Could soul touch soul if it were not for me?</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="center mt2 nmb">FOR THE DOLL’S HOUSE</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">Girl-doll would be a little lamp</div>
-<div class="line">And shine like something new.</div>
-<div class="line">Boy-doll would be a telephone</div>
-<div class="line">And have the world speak through.</div>
-<div class="line">The Poet-doll would like to be</div>
-<div class="line">A tocsin with a tongue</div>
-<div class="line">To other little dolls like bells</div>
-<div class="line">Most sensitively rung.</div>
-<div class="line">The Baby-doll would be a flower,</div>
-<div class="line">The Dinah-doll a star,</div>
-<div class="line">And all&mdash;how ignominious!</div>
-<div class="line">Are only what they are.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</a></span></p>
-<p class="center mt2 nmb">WHERE THE BOUGHS TOUCH THE WINDOW</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">We lap on the indoor shore&mdash;the waves of the leaf mere,</div>
-<div class="line">We try to tell you as well as we can: We wonder what you hear?</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="center mt2 nmb">FOR ANOTHER WINDOW</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">I see the stones, I see the stars,</div>
-<div class="line">I know not what they be.</div>
-<div class="line">They always say things to themselves</div>
-<div class="line">And now and then to me.</div>
-<div class="line">But when I try to look between</div>
-<div class="line">Big stones and little stars,</div>
-<div class="line">I almost know ... but what I know</div>
-<div class="line">Flies through the window-bars.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="nmb">And downstairs, on the Telephone:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">I, the absurdity,</div>
-<div class="line">Proving what cannot be.</div>
-<div class="line">Come, when you talk with me</div>
-<div class="line">Does it become you well</div>
-<div class="line">To doubt a miracle?</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>We did not understand all of them, but we liked them. And I am sure now
-that the inscriptions were partly responsible for the fact<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</a></span> that in a
-little time, with Mary Elizabeth and me to give them encouragement,
-everything, indoors and out, had something to say to us. These things
-we did not confide to the others, not even to Margaret Amelia and
-Betty who, when we stood still to spell out the inscriptions, waited
-a respectful length of time and then plucked at our aprons and said:
-“Come on till we show you something,” which was usually merely a crass
-excuse to get us away.</p>
-
-<p>So Mary Elizabeth and I discovered, by comparing notes, that at night
-our Clothes on the chair by the bed would say: “We are so tired. Don’t
-look at us&mdash;we feel so limp.”</p>
-
-<p>And the Night would say: “What a long time the Day had you, and how he
-made you work. Now rest and forget and stop being you, till morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Sleep would say: “Here I come. Let me in your brain and I will pull
-your eyes shut, like little blinds.”</p>
-
-<p>And in the morning the Stairs would say: “Come! We are all here,
-stooping, ready for you to step down on our shoulders.”</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast would say: “Now I’m going to be you&mdash;now I’m going to be you!
-And I have to be cross or nice, just as you are.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</a></span>
-Every fire that warmed us, every tree that shaded us, every path that
-we took, all these “answered back” and were familiars. Everything spoke
-to us, save only one. And this one thing was Work. Our playthings in
-the cupboard would talk to us all day long <em>until</em> the moment that we
-were told to put them in order, and then instantly they all fell into
-silence. Pulling weeds in the four o’clock bed, straightening books,
-tidying the outdoor play-house&mdash;it was always the same. Whatever we
-worked at kept silent.</p>
-
-<p>It was on a June morning, when the outdoors was so busy and beautiful
-that it was like a golden bee buried in a golden rose, that I finally
-refused outright to pick up a brown sunhat and some other things in
-the middle of the floor. Everything outdoors and in was smiling and
-calling, and to do a task was like going to bed, so far as the joy of
-the day was concerned. This I could not explain, but I said that I
-would not do the task, and this was high treason.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting in a straight-backed chair all alone for half an hour
-thereafter&mdash;the usual capital punishment&mdash;was like cutting off the head
-of the beautiful Hour that I had meant to have.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">216</a></span> And I tried to think
-it out. Why, in an otherwise wonderful world, did Work have to come and
-spoil everything?</p>
-
-<p>I do not recall that I came to any conclusion. How could I, at a time
-that was still teaching the Hebraic doctrine that work is a curse,
-instead of the new gospel&mdash;always dimly divined by children before our
-teaching has corrupted them,&mdash;that being busy is being alive, and that
-all work may be play if only we are shown how to pick out the kind that
-is play to us, and that doing nothing is a kind of death.</p>
-
-<p>And while I sat there alone on that straight-backed chair, I wish that
-I, as I am now, might have called in Mary Elizabeth, whom I could see
-drearily polishing the New Family’s lamp-chimneys, and that I might
-have told the story of Bit-bit.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Bit-bit, the smallest thing in the world, sat on the slipperiest edge
-of the highest mountain in the farthest land, weaving a little garment
-of sweet-grass. Then out of the valley a great Deev arose and leaned
-his elbows on the highest mountain and said what he thought&mdash;which is
-always a dangerous business.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<a name="then" id="then"></a>
-<img src="images/i_216fp.jpg" width="400" height="587" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">“<span class="smcap">Then out of the valley a great Deev arose.</span>”</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</a></span>
-“Bit-bit,” said the Deev, “how dare you make up my sweet-grass so
-disgustin’ extravagant?”</p>
-
-<p>(It is almost impossible for a Deev to say his <em>ing’s</em>.)</p>
-
-<p>“Deevy dear,” said Bit-bit, without looking up from his work, “I have
-to make a garment to help clothe the world. Don’t wrinkle up my plan.
-And <em>don’t</em> put your elbows on the table.”</p>
-
-<p>“About my elbows,” said the Deev, “you are perfectly right, though
-Deevs always do that with their elbows. But as to that garment,” he
-added, “I’d like to know why you have to help clothe the world?”</p>
-
-<p>“Deevy dear,” said Bit-bit, still not looking up from his work, “I have
-to do so, because it’s this kind of a world. <em>Please</em> don’t wrinkle up
-things.”</p>
-
-<p>“I,” said the Deev, plainly, “will now show you what kind of a world
-this really is. And I rather think I’ll destroy you with a great
-destruction.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the Deev took the highest mountain and he tied its streams and
-cataracts together to make a harness, and he named the mountain new,
-and he drove it all up and down the earth. And he cried behind it:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</a></span>
-“Ho, Rhumbthumberland, steed of the clouds, trample the world into
-trifles and plough it up for play. Bit-bit is being taught his lesson.”</p>
-
-<p>From dawn he did this until the sky forgot pink and remembered only
-blue and until the sun grew so hot that it took even the sky’s
-attention, and the Deev himself was ready to drop. And then he pulled
-on the reins and Rhumbthumberland, steed of the clouds, stopped
-trampling and let the Deev lean his elbows on his back. And there,
-right between the Deev’s elbows, sat Bit-bit, weaving his garment of
-sweet-grass.</p>
-
-<p>“Thunders of spring,” cried the Deev, “aren’t you destroyed with a
-great destruction?”</p>
-
-<p>But Bit-bit never looked up, he was so busy.</p>
-
-<p>“Has anything happened?” he asked politely, however, not wishing to
-seem indifferent to the Deev’s agitation&mdash;though secretly, in his
-little head, he hated having people plunge at him with their eyebrows
-up and expect him to act surprised too. When they did that, it always
-made him savage-calm.</p>
-
-<p>“The world is trampled into trifles and ploughed up for play,” said
-the exasperated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">219</a></span> Deev, “<em>that’s</em> what’s happened. How dare you pay no
-attention?”</p>
-
-<p>“Deevy dear,” said Bit-bit, still not looking up from his task, “I
-have to work, whether it’s this kind of a world or not. I <em>wish</em> you
-wouldn’t wrinkle up things.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the Deev’s will ran round and round in his own head like a fly
-trying to escape from a dark hole&mdash;that is the way of the will of all
-Deevs&mdash;and pretty soon his will got out and went buzzle-buzzle-buzzle,
-which is no proper sound for anybody’s will to make. And when it did
-that, the Deev went off and got a river, and he climbed up on top of
-Rhumbthumberland and he swung the river about his head like a ribbon
-and then let it fall from the heights like a lady’s scarf, and then he
-held down one end with his great boot and the other end he emptied into
-the horizon. From the time of the heat of the sun he did this until
-the shadows were set free from the west and lengthened over the land,
-shaking their long hair, and then he lifted his foot and let the river
-slip and it trailed off into the horizon and flowed each way.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Now</em> then!” said the Deev, disgustingly pompous.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">220</a></span>
-But when he looked down, there, sitting on his own great foot, high and
-dry and pleasant, was Bit-bit, weaving his garment of sweet-grass and
-saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Deevy dear, a river washed me up here and I was so busy I didn’t have
-time to get down.”</p>
-
-<p>The Deev stood still, thinking, and his thoughts flew in and out like
-birds, but always they seemed to fly against window-panes in the air,
-through which there was no passing. And the Deev said, in his head:</p>
-
-<p>“Is there nothing in this created cosmos that will stop this little
-scrap from working to clothe the world? Or must I play Deev in earnest?”</p>
-
-<p>And that was what he finally decided to do. So he said things to his
-arms, and his arms hardened into stuff like steel, and spread out like
-mighty wings. And with these the Deev began to beat the air. And he
-beat it and beat it until it frothed. It frothed like white-of-egg and
-like cream and like the mid-waters of torrents, frothed a mighty froth,
-such as I supposed could never be. And when the froth was stiff enough
-to stand alone, the Deev took his steel-wing arm for a ladle, and he
-began to spread the froth upon the earth. And he spread and spread
-until<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">221</a></span> the whole earth was like an enormous chocolate cake, thick with
-white frosting&mdash;one layer, two layers, three layers, disgustingly
-extravagant, so that the little Deevs, if there had been any, would
-never have got the dish scraped. Only there wasn’t any dish, so they
-needn’t have minded.</p>
-
-<p>And when he had it all spread on, the Deev stood up and dropped his
-steel arms down&mdash;and even they were tired at the elbow, like any true,
-egg-beating arm&mdash;and he looked down at the great cake he had made.
-And there, on the top of the frosting, which was already beginning to
-harden, was sitting Bit-bit, weaving his garment of sweet-grass and
-talking about the weather:</p>
-
-<p>“I think there is going to be a storm,” said Bit-bit, “the air around
-here has been so disgustingly hard to breathe.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, very absently, the Deev let the steel out of his arms and made
-them get over being wings, and, in a place so deep in his own head that
-nothing had ever been thought there before, he <em>thought</em>:</p>
-
-<p>“There is more to this than I ever knew there is to anything.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">222</a></span>
-So he leaned over, all knee-deep in the frosting as he was, and he said:</p>
-
-<p>“Bit-bit, say a great truth and a real answer: What is the reason that
-my little ways don’t bother you? Or kill you? Or keep you from making
-your garment of sweet-grass?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said Bit-bit, in surprise, but never looking up from his work,
-“Deevy dear, that’s easy. I’m much, much, <em>much</em> too busy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Scrap of a thing,” said the Deev, “too busy to mind cataracts and an
-earth trampled to trifles and then frosted with all the air there is?”</p>
-
-<p>“Too busy,” assented Bit-bit, snapping off his thread. “And now I <em>do</em>
-hope you are not going to wrinkle up things any more.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the Deev, with decision, “I ain’t.” (Deevs are always
-ungrammatical when you take them by surprise.) And he added very
-shrewdly, for he was a keen Deev and if he saw that he could learn,
-he was willing to learn, which is three parts of all wisdom: “Little
-scrap, teach me to do a witchcraft. Teach me to work.”</p>
-
-<p>At that Bit-bit laid down his task in a minute.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">223</a></span>
-“What do you want to make?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>The Deev thought for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to make a palace and a garden and a moat for <em>me</em>,” said he.
-“I’m tired campin’ around in the air.”</p>
-
-<p>“If that’s all,” said Bit-bit, “I’m afraid I can’t help you. I thought
-you wanted to work. Out of all the work there is in the world I should
-think of another one if I were you, Deevy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, I want to make a golden court dress for <em>me</em>, all
-embroidered and flowered and buttoned and gored and spliced,” said the
-Deev, or whatever these things are called in the clothing of Deevs;
-“I want to make one. I’m tired goin’ around in rompers.” (It wasn’t
-rompers, really, but it was what Deevs wear instead, and you wouldn’t
-know the name, even if I told you.)</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse me,” said Bit-bit, frankly, “I won’t waste time like that.
-Don’t you want to <em>work</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Deev, “I do. Maybe I don’t know what work is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you don’t,” agreed Bit-bit. “But I can fix that. I’m going for a
-walk now, and there’s just room for you. Come along.”</p>
-
-<p>So they started off, and it was good walking, for by now the sun had
-dried up all the frosting;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">224</a></span> and the Deev trotted at Bit-bit’s heels,
-and they made a very funny pair. So funny that Almost Everything
-watched them go by, and couldn’t leave off watching them go by, and so
-followed them all the way. Which was what Bit-bit had <em>thought</em> would
-happen. And when he got to a good place, Bit-bit stood still and told
-the Deev to turn round. And there they were, staring face to face with
-Almost Everything: Deserts and towns and men and women and children and
-laws and governments and railroads and factories and forests and food
-and drink.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s your work,” said Bit-bit, carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Where?” asked the Deev, just like other folks.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Where?</em>” repeated Bit-bit, nearly peevish. “Look at this desert
-that’s come along behind us. Why don’t you swing a river over your
-head&mdash;you <em>could</em> do that, couldn’t you, Deevy?&mdash;and make things grow
-on that desert, and let people live on it, and turn ’em into folks? Why
-don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t amusin’ enough,” said the Deev.</p>
-
-<p>(Deevs are often ungrammatical when they don’t take pains; and this
-Deev wasn’t taking <em>any</em> pains.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">225</a></span>
-“Well,” said Bit-bit, “then look at this town that has come along
-behind us, full of dirt and disease and laziness and worse. Why
-don’t you harness up a mountain&mdash;you <em>could</em> do that, couldn’t you,
-Deevy?&mdash;and plough up the earth and trample it down and let people live
-as they were meant to live, and turn them into folks? Why don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“It couldn’t be done that way,” said the Deev, very much excited and
-disgustingly certain.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Bit-bit, “then look at the men and women and children that
-have come along behind us. What about them&mdash;what about <em>them</em>? Why
-don’t you make your arms steel and act as if you had wings, and beat
-the world into a better place for them to live, instead of making a
-cake of it. You could do it, Deevy&mdash;<em>anybody</em> could do that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Deev, “I could do that. But it don’t appeal to me.”</p>
-
-<p>(Deevs are always ungrammatical when they are being emphatic, and now
-the Deev was being very emphatic. He was a keen Deev, but he would only
-learn what he wanted to learn.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">226</a></span>
-“Deevy <em>dear</em>,” cried Bit-bit, in distress because the Deev was such a
-disgusting creature, “then at least do get some sweet-grass and make a
-little garment to help clothe the world?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the use?” said the Deev. “Let it go naked. It’s always been
-that way.”</p>
-
-<p>So, since the Deev would not learn the work witchcraft, Bit-bit,
-very sorrowful, stood up and said a great truth and made a real
-answer&mdash;which is always a dangerous business.</p>
-
-<p>“You will, you will, you will do these things,” he cried, “because it’s
-that kind of a world.”</p>
-
-<p>And then the Deev, who had all along been getting more and more
-annoyed, pieced together his will and his ideas and his annoyance, and
-they all went buzzle-buzzle-buzzle together till they made an act. And
-the act was that he stepped sidewise into space, and he picked up the
-earth and put it between his knees, and he cracked it hard enough so
-that it should have fallen into uncountable bits.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s my nut,” said the Deev, “and now I’m going to eat it up.”</p>
-
-<p>But lo, from the old shell there came out a fair new kernel of a world,
-so lustrous and lovely that the Deev was blinded and hid his eyes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">227</a></span>
-Only first he had seen how the deserts were flowing with rivers and
-the towns were grown fair under willing hands for men and women and
-children to live there. And there, with Almost Everything, sat Bit-bit
-in his place, weaving a little garment of sweet-grass to clothe some
-mite of the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Now this time try not to wrinkle things all up, Deev,” said Bit-bit.
-“I must say, you’ve been doing things disgustingly inhuman.”</p>
-
-<p>So after that the Deev was left camping about in the air, trying to
-make for himself new witchcrafts. And there he is to this day, being
-a disgusting creature generally, and <em>only</em> those who are as busy as
-Bit-bit are safe from him.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">228</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xiii" id="xiii"></a>XIII<br />
-<span>WHY</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> was a day when Mary Elizabeth and Delia and Calista and Betty
-and I sat under the Eating Apple tree and had no spirit to enter upon
-anything. Margaret Amelia was not with us, and her absence left us
-relaxed and without initiative; for it was not as if she had gone to
-the City, or to have her dress tried on, or her hair washed, or as if
-she were absorbed in any real occupation. Her absence was due to none
-of these things. Margaret Amelia was in disgrace. She was, in fact,
-confined in her room with every expectation of remaining there until
-supper time.</p>
-
-<p>“What’d she do?” we had breathlessly inquired of Betty when she had
-appeared alone with her tidings.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” replied Betty, “it’s her paper dolls and her button-house. She
-always leaves ’em around. She set up her button-house all over the rug
-in the parlour&mdash;you know,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">229</a></span> the rug that its patterns make rooms? An’
-she had her paper dolls living in it. That was this morning&mdash;and we
-forgot ’em. And after dinner, while we’re outdoors, the minister came.
-And he walked into the buttons and onto the glass dangler off the lamp
-that we used for a folding-doors. And he slid a long ways on it. And he
-scrushed it,” Betty concluded
-<a name="resentfully" id="resentfully"></a><ins title="Original omits period/fullstop">resentfully.</ins>
-“And now she’s in her room.”</p>
-
-<p>We pondered it. There was justice there, we saw that. But shut Margaret
-Amelia in a room! It was as ignominious as caging a captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Did she cry?” we indelicately demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Awful,” said Betty. “She wouldn’t of cared if it had only been
-raining,” she added.</p>
-
-<p>We looked hard at the sky. We should have been willing to have it rain
-to make lighter Margaret Amelia’s durance, and sympathy could go no
-further. But there was not a cloud.</p>
-
-<p>It was Mary Elizabeth who questioned the whole matter.</p>
-
-<p>“How,” said she, “does it do any good to shut her up in her room?”</p>
-
-<p>We had never thought of this. We stared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">230</a></span> wonderingly at Mary Elizabeth.
-Being shut in your room was a part of the state of not being grown up.
-When you grew up, you shut others in their rooms or let them out, as
-you ruled the occasion to require. There was Grandmother Beers, for
-instance, coming out the door with scissors in her hands and going
-toward her sweet-pea bed. Once she must have shut Mother in her room.
-Mother!</p>
-
-<p>Delia was incurably a defender of things as they are. Whenever I am
-tempted to feel that guardians of an out-worn order must know better
-than they seem to know, I remember Delia. Delia was born reactionary,
-even as she was born brunette.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said she with finality, “that’s the way they punish you.”</p>
-
-<p>Taken as a fact and not as a philosophy, there was no question about
-this.</p>
-
-<p>“I was shut in one for pinching Frankie Ames,” I acknowledged.</p>
-
-<p>“I was in one for getting iron-rust on my skirt,” said Calista, “and
-for being awful cross when my bath was, and for putting sugar on the
-stove to get the nice smell.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was in one for telling a lie,” Betty admitted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">231</a></span> reluctantly. “And
-Margaret Amelia was in one for wading in the creek. She was in a
-downstairs one. And I took a chair round outside to help her out&mdash;but
-she wouldn’t do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh! I was in one lots of times,” Delia capped it. And, as usual,
-we looked at her with respect as having experiences far transcending
-our own. “I’ll be in one again if I don’t go home and take care of my
-canary,” she added. “Mamma said I would.”</p>
-
-<p>“Putting sugar on the stove isn’t as wicked as telling a lie, is it?”
-Mary Elizabeth inquired.</p>
-
-<p>We weighed it. On the whole, we were inclined to think that it was not
-so wicked, “though,” Delia put in, “you do notice the sugar more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do they shut you in the same way for the different wickeds?” Mary
-Elizabeth demanded.</p>
-
-<p>None of us knew, but it was Delia who had the theory.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” she said, “you’ve <em>got</em> to know you’re wicked. It don’t make
-any difference how wicked. Because you stop anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you don’t,” Betty said decidedly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">232</a></span> “you’re always getting a new
-thing to be shut in about. Before you mean to,” she added perplexedly.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth looked away at Grandmother Beers, snipping sweet-peas.
-Abruptly, Mary Elizabeth threw herself on the grass and stared up
-through the branches of the Eating Apple tree, and then laid her arms
-straight along her sides, and began luxuriously to roll down a little
-slope. The inquiry was too complex to continue.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s go see if the horse-tail hair is a snake yet,” she proposed,
-sitting up at the foot of the slope.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have to do my canary,” said Delia, but she sprang up with the
-rest of us, and we went round to the rain-water barrel.</p>
-
-<p>The rain-water barrel stood at the corner of the house, and reflected
-your face most satisfyingly, save that the eaves-spout got in the way.
-Also, you always inadvertently joggled the side with your knee, which
-set the water wavering and wrinkled away the image. At the bottom of
-this barrel invisibly rested sundry little “doll” pie-tins of clay,
-a bottle, a broken window-catch, a stray key, and the bowl of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">233</a></span>
-soap-bubble pipe, cast in at odd intervals, for no reason. There were a
-penny doll and a marble down there too, thrown in for sheer bravado and
-bitterly regretted.</p>
-
-<p>Into this dark water there had now been dropped, two days ago, a long
-black hair from the tail of Mr. Branchett’s horse, Fanny. We had been
-credibly informed that if you did this to a hair from a horse’s tail
-and left it untouched for twenty-four hours or, to be <em>perfectly</em> safe,
-for forty-eight hours, the result would inevitably be a black snake.
-We had gone to the Branchetts’ barn for the raw material and, finding
-none available on the floor, we were about to risk jerking it from the
-source when Delia had perceived what we needed caught in a crack of the
-stall. We had abstracted the hair, and duly immersed it. Why we wished
-to create a black snake, or what we purposed doing with him when we
-got him created, I cannot now recall. I believe the intention to have
-been primarily to see whether or not they had told us the truth&mdash;“they”
-standing for the universe at large. For my part, I was still smarting
-from having been detected sitting in patience with a handful of salt,
-by the mouse-hole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">234</a></span> in the shed, in pursuance of another recipe which I
-had picked up and trusted. Now if this new test failed....</p>
-
-<p>We got an old axe-handle from the barn wherewith to probe the water.
-If, however, the black snake were indeed down there, our weapon,
-offensive and defensive, would hardly be long enough; so we substituted
-the clothes-prop. Then we drew cuts to see who should wield it, and
-the lot fell to Betty. Gentle little Betty turned quite pale with the
-responsibility, but she resolutely seized the clothes-prop, and Delia
-stood behind her with the axe-handle.</p>
-
-<p>“Now if he comes out,” said Betty, “run for your lives. He might be a
-blue racer.”</p>
-
-<p>None of us knew what a blue racer might be, but we had always heard of
-it as the fastest of all the creatures. A black snake, it seemed, might
-easily be a blue racer. As Betty raised the clothes-prop, I, who had
-instigated the experiment, weakened.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe he won’t be ready yet,” I conceded.</p>
-
-<p>“If he isn’t there, I’ll never believe anything anybody tells me
-again&mdash;ever,” said Delia firmly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">235</a></span>
-The clothes-prop Betty plunged to the bottom, and lifted. No struggling
-black shape writhed about it. She repeated the movement, and this time
-we all cried out, for she brought up the dark discoloured rag of a
-sash of the penny doll, the penny doll clinging to it and immediately
-dropping sullenly back again. Grown brave, Betty stirred the water, and
-Delia, advancing, did the same with her axe-handle. Again and again
-these were lifted, revealing nothing. At last we faced it: No snake was
-there.</p>
-
-<p>“So that’s a lie, too,” said Delia, brutally.</p>
-
-<p>We stared at one another. I, as the one chiefly disappointed, looked
-away. I looked down the street: Mr. Branchett was hoeing in his garden.
-Delivery wagons were rattling by. The butter-man came whistling round
-the house. Everybody seemed so busy and so <em>sure</em>. They looked as if
-they knew why everything was. And to us, truth and justice and reason
-and the results to be expected in this grown-up world were all a
-confusion and a thorn.</p>
-
-<p>As we went round the house, talking of what had happened, our eyes were
-caught by a picture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">236</a></span> which should have been, and was not, of quite
-casual and domestic import. On the side-porch of Delia’s house appeared
-her mother, hanging out Delia’s canary.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye,” said Delia, briefly, and fared from us, running.</p>
-
-<p>We lingered for a little in the front yard. In five minutes the
-curtains in Delia’s room stirred, and we saw her face appear, and
-vanish. She had not waved to us&mdash;there was no need. It had overtaken
-her. She, too, was “in her room.”</p>
-
-<p>Delicacy dictated that we withdraw from sight, and we returned to the
-back yard. As we went, Mary Elizabeth was asking:</p>
-
-<p>“Is telling a lie and not feeding your canary as wicked as each other?”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed incredible, and we said so.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you get shut up just as hard for both of ’em,” Mary Elizabeth
-reminded us.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I don’t believe any of ’em’s wicked,” said I, flatly. On which we
-came back to the garden and met Grandmother Beers, with a great bunch
-of sweet-peas in her hand, coming to the house.</p>
-
-<p>“Wicked?” she said, in her way of soft<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">237</a></span> surprise. “I didn’t know you
-knew such a word.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a word you learn at Sunday school,” I explained importantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Come over here and tell me about it,” she invited, and led the way
-toward the Eating Apple tree. And she sat down in the swing! Of course
-whatever difference of condition exists between your grandmother and
-yourself vanishes when she sits down casually in your swing.</p>
-
-<p>My Grandmother Beers was a little woman, whose years, in England, in
-“New York state,” and in her adopted Middle West, had brought her
-only peace within, though much had beset her from without. She loved
-Four-o’clocks, and royal purple. When she said “royal purple,” it was
-as if the words were queens. She was among the few who sympathized
-with my longing to own a blue or red or green jar from a drug store
-window. We had first understood each other in a matter of window-sill
-food: This would be a crust, or a bit of baked apple, or a cracker
-which I used to lay behind the dining-room window-shutter&mdash;the
-closed one. For in the house at evening it was warm and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">238</a></span> light and
-Just-had-your-supper, while outside it was dark and damp and big, and I
-conceived that it must be lonely and hungry. The Dark was like a great
-helpless something, filling the air and not wanting particularly to
-be there. Surely It would much rather be light, with voices and three
-meals, than the Dark, with nobody and no food. So I used to set out a
-little offering, and once my Grandmother Beers had caught me paying
-tribute.</p>
-
-<p>“Once something <em>did</em> come and get it,” I defended myself over my
-shoulder, and before she could say a word.</p>
-
-<p>“Likely enough, likely enough, child,” she assented, and did not chide
-me.</p>
-
-<p>Neither did she chide me when once she surprised me into mentioning the
-Little Things, who had the use of my playthings when I was not there.
-It was one dusk when she had come upon me setting my toy cupboard to
-rights, and had commended me. And I had explained that it was so the
-Little Things could find the toys when they came, that night and every
-night, to play with them. I remember that all she did was to squeeze my
-hand; but I felt that I was wholly understood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">239</a></span>
-What child of us&mdash;of Us Who Were&mdash;will ever forget the joy of having
-an older one enter into our games? I used to sit in church and tell
-off the grown folk by this possibility in them&mdash;“She’d play with
-you&mdash;she wouldn’t&mdash;she would&mdash;he would&mdash;they wouldn’t”&mdash;an ancient
-declension of the human race, perfectly recognized by children, but
-never given its proper due.... I shall never forget the out-door romps
-with my Father, when he stooped, with his hands on his knees, and then
-ran <em>at</em> me; or when he held me while I walked the picket fence; or
-set me in the Eating Apple tree; nor can I forget the delight of the
-play-house that he built for me, <em>with a shelf around</em>.... And always I
-shall remember, too, how my Mother would play “Lost.” We used to curl
-on the sofa, taking with us some small store of fruit and cookies,
-wrap up in blankets and shawls, put up an umbrella&mdash;possibly two of
-them&mdash;and there we were, lost in the deep woods. We had been crossing
-the forest&mdash;night had overtaken us&mdash;we had climbed in a thick-leaved
-tree&mdash;it was raining&mdash;the woods were infested by bears and wolves&mdash;we
-had a little food, possibly enough to stave off starvation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">240</a></span> till
-daylight. Then came by the beasts of the forest, wonderful, human
-beasts, who passed at the foot of our tree, and with whom we talked
-long and friendly&mdash;and differently for each one&mdash;and ended by sharing
-with them our food. We scraped acquaintance with birds in neighbouring
-nests, the stars were only across a street of sky, the Dark did its
-part by hiding us. Sometimes, yet, when I see a fat, idle sofa in, say,
-an hotel corridor, I cannot help thinking as I pass: “What a wonderful
-place to play Lost.” I daresay that some day I shall put up my umbrella
-and sit down and play it.</p>
-
-<p>Well&mdash;Grandmother Beers was one who knew how to play with us, and I was
-always half expecting her to propose a new game. But that day, as she
-sat in the swing, her eyes were not twinkling at the corners.</p>
-
-<p>“What does it mean?” she asked us. “What does ‘wicked’ mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s what you aren’t to be,” I took the brunt of the reply, because I
-was the relative of the questioner.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” asked Grandmother.</p>
-
-<p>Why not? Oh, we all knew that. We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</a></span> responded instantly, and out came
-the results of the training of all the families.</p>
-
-<p>“Because your mother and father say you can’t,” said Betty Rodman.</p>
-
-<p>“Because it makes your mother feel bad,” said Calista.</p>
-
-<p>“Because God don’t want us to,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Delia says,” Betty added, “it’s because, if you are, when you grow up
-people won’t think anything of you.”</p>
-
-<p>Grandmother Beers held her sweet-peas to her face.</p>
-
-<p>“If,” she said after a moment, “you wanted to do something wicked more
-than you ever wanted to do anything in the world&mdash;as much as you’d want
-a drink to-morrow if you hadn’t had one to-day&mdash;and if nobody ever
-knew&mdash;would any of those reasons keep you from doing it?”</p>
-
-<p>We consulted one another’s look, and shifted. We knew how thirsty that
-would be. Already we were thirsty, in thinking about it.</p>
-
-<p>“If I were in your places,” Grandmother said, “I’m not sure those
-reasons would keep me. I rather think they wouldn’t,&mdash;always.”</p>
-
-<p>We stared at her. It was true that they didn’t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</a></span> always keep us. Were
-not two of us “in our rooms” even now?</p>
-
-<p>Grandmother leaned forward&mdash;I know how the shadows of the apple leaves
-fell on her black lace cap and how the pink sweet-peas were reflected
-in her delicate face.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose,” she said, “that instead of any of those reasons, somebody
-gave you this reason: That the earth is a great flower&mdash;a flower that
-has never <em>really</em> blossomed yet. And that when it blossoms, life is
-going to be more beautiful than we have ever dreamed, or than fairy
-stories have ever pretended. And suppose our doing one way, and not
-another, makes the flower come a little nearer to blossoming. But our
-doing the other way puts back the time when it can blossom. <em>Then</em>
-which would you want to do?”</p>
-
-<p>Oh, make it grow, make it grow, we all cried&mdash;and I felt a secret
-relief: Grandmother was playing a game with us, after all.</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose that everything made a difference to it,” she went on,
-“every little thing&mdash;from telling a lie, on down to going to get a
-drink for somebody and drinking first yourself out in the kitchen.
-Suppose that everything<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</a></span> made a difference, from hurting somebody on
-purpose, down to making up the bed and pulling the bed-spread tight so
-that the wrinkles in the blanket won’t show....”</p>
-
-<p>At this we looked at one another in some consternation. How did
-Grandmother know....</p>
-
-<p>“Until after a while,” she said, “you should find out that
-everything&mdash;loving, going to school, playing, working, bathing,
-sleeping, were all just to make this flower grow. Wouldn’t it be fun to
-help?”</p>
-
-<p>Yes. Oh, yes, we were all agreed about that. It would be great fun to
-help.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then suppose,” said Grandmother, “that as you helped, you found
-out something else: That in each of you, say, where your heart is, or
-where your breath is, there was a flower trying to blossom too! And
-that only as you helped the earth flower to blossom could your flower
-blossom. And that your doing one way would make your flower droop its
-head and grow dark and shrivel up. But your doing the other way would
-make it grow, and turn beautiful colours&mdash;so that bye and bye every one
-of your bodies would be just a sheath for this flower. Which way <em>then</em>
-would you rather do?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</a></span>
-Oh, make it grow, make it grow, we said again.</p>
-
-<p>And Mary Elizabeth added longingly:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t it be fun if it was true?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is true,” said Grandmother Beers.</p>
-
-<p>She sat there, softly smiling over her pink sweet-peas. We looked at
-her silently. Then I remembered that her face had always seemed to me
-to be somehow <em>light within</em>. Maybe it was her flower showing through!</p>
-
-<p>“Grandmother!” I cried, “is it true&mdash;is it true?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is true,” she repeated. “And whether the earth flower and other
-people’s flowers and your flower are to bloom or not is what living is
-about. And everything makes a difference. Isn’t that a good reason for
-not being ‘wicked’?”</p>
-
-<p>We all looked up in her face, something in us leaping and answering to
-what she said. And I know that we understood.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” Mary Elizabeth whispered presently to Betty, “hurry home and tell
-Margaret Amelia. It’ll make it so much easier when she comes out to her
-supper.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That night, on the porch alone with Mother<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">245</a></span> and Father, I inquired into
-something that still was not clear.</p>
-
-<p>“But how can you <em>tell</em> which things are wicked? And which ones are
-wrong and which things are right?”</p>
-
-<p>Father put out his hand and touched my hand. He was looking at me with
-a look that I knew&mdash;and his smile for me is like no other smile that I
-have ever known.</p>
-
-<p>“Something will tell you,” he said, “always.”</p>
-
-<p>“Always?” I doubted.</p>
-
-<p>“Always,” he said. “There will be other voices. But if you listen,
-something will tell you always. And it is all you need.”</p>
-
-<p>I looked at Mother. And by her nod and her quiet look I perceived that
-all this had been known about for a long time.</p>
-
-<p>“That is why Grandma Bard is coming to live with us,” she said, “not
-just because we wanted her, but because&mdash;<em>that</em> said so.”</p>
-
-<p>In us all a flower&mdash;and something saying something! And the earth
-flower trying to blossom.... I looked down the street: At Mr. Branchett
-walking in his garden, at the lights shining from windows, at the
-folk sauntering on the sidewalk, and toward town where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">246</a></span> the band
-was playing. We all knew about this together then. <em>This</em> was why
-everything was! And there were years and years to make it come true.</p>
-
-<p>What if I, alone among them all, had never found out?</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">247</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xiv" id="xiv"></a>XIV<br />
-<span>KING</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> was a certain white sugar bear and a red candy strawberry which
-we had been charged not to eat, because the strawberry was a nameless
-scarlet and the bear, left from Christmas, was a very soiled bear. We
-had all looked at these two things longingly, had even on occasion
-nibbled them a bit. There came a day when I crept under my bed and ate
-them both.</p>
-
-<p>It was a bed with slats. In the slat immediately above my head there
-was a knot-hole. Knot-hole, slat, the pattern of the ticking on the
-mattress, all remain graven on the moment. It was the first time that
-I had actually been conscious of&mdash;indeed, had almost <em>heard</em>&mdash;the
-fighting going on within me.</p>
-
-<p>Something was saying: “Oh, eat it, eat it. What do you care? It won’t
-kill you. It may not even make you sick. It is good. Eat it.”</p>
-
-<p>And something else, something gentle, insistent, steady, kept saying
-over and over in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">248</a></span> exactly the same tone, and so that I did not know
-whether the warning came from within or without:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It must not be eaten. It must not be eaten. It must not be eaten.”</p>
-
-<p>But after a little, as I ate, this voice ceased.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody knew that I had eaten the forbidden bear and strawberry.
-Grandmother Beers squeezed my hand just the same. Mother was as tender
-as always. And Father&mdash;his kind eyes and some little jest with me were
-almost more than I could bear. I remember spending the evening near
-them, with something sore about the whole time. From the moment that it
-began to get dark the presence of bear and strawberry came and fastened
-themselves upon me, so that I delayed bed-going even more than usual,
-and interminably prolonged undressing.</p>
-
-<p>Then there came the moment when Mother sat beside me.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ask God for anything,” she always said to me. “Just shut
-your eyes and think of his lovingness being here, close, close,
-close&mdash;breathing with you like your breath. Don’t ask him for anything.”</p>
-
-<p>But that night I scrambled into bed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">249</a></span>
-“Not to-night, Mother,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>She never said anything when I said that. She kissed me and went away.</p>
-
-<p><em>Then!</em></p>
-
-<p>There I was, face to face with it at last. What was it that had told me
-to eat the bear and the strawberry? What was it that had told me that
-these must not be eaten? What had made me obey one and not the other?
-Who was it that spoke to me like that?</p>
-
-<p>I shut my eyes and thought of the voice that had told me to eat, and it
-felt like the sore feeling in me and like the lump in my throat, and
-like unhappiness.</p>
-
-<p>I thought of the other gentle voice that had spoken and had kept
-speaking and at last had gone away&mdash;and suddenly, with my eyes shut, I
-was thinking of something like lovingness, close, close, breathing with
-me like my breath.</p>
-
-<p>So now I have made a story for that night. It is late, I know. But
-perhaps it is not too late.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Once upon a time a beautiful present was given to a little boy named
-Hazen. It was not a tent or a launch or a tree-top house or a pretend
-aeroplane, but it was a little glass casket. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">250</a></span> it was the most
-wonderful little casket of all the kinds of caskets that there are.</p>
-
-<p>For in the casket was a little live thing, somewhat like a fairy and
-somewhat like a spirit, and so beautiful that everyone wanted one too.</p>
-
-<p>Now the little fairy (that was like a spirit) was held fast in the
-casket, which was tightly sealed. And when the casket was given to
-Hazen, the Giver said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Hazen dear, until you get that little spirit free, you cannot be wise
-or really good or loved or beautiful. But after you get her free you
-shall be all four. And nobody can free her but you yourself, though you
-may ask anybody and everybody to tell you how.”</p>
-
-<p>Now Hazen’s father was a king. And it chanced that while Hazen was yet
-a little boy, the king of a neighbour country came and took Hazen’s
-father’s kingdom, and killed all the court&mdash;for that was the way
-neighbour countries did in those days, not knowing that neighbours are
-nearly one’s own family. They took little Hazen prisoner and carried
-him to the conquering king’s court, and they did it in such a hurry
-that he had not time to take anything with him. All his belongings&mdash;his
-tops, his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">251</a></span> football, his books, and his bank, had to be left behind,
-and among the things that were left was Hazen’s little glass casket,
-forgotten on a closet shelf, upstairs in the castle. And the castle
-was shut up and left as it was, because the conquering king thought
-that maybe he might like sometime to give to his little daughter,
-the Princess Vista, this castle, which stood on the very summit of a
-sovereign mountain and commanded a great deal of the world.</p>
-
-<p>In the court of the conquering king poor little Hazen grew up, and he
-was not wise or <em>really</em> good or loved or beautiful, and he forgot
-about the casket or thought of it only as a dream, and he did not know
-that he was a prince. He was a poor little furnace boy and kitchen-fire
-builder in the king’s palace, and he slept in the basement and did
-nothing from morning till night but attend to drafts and dampers. He
-did not see the king at all, and he had never even caught a glimpse of
-the king’s little daughter, the Princess Vista.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One morning before daylight Hazen was awakened by the alarm-in-a-basin
-at the head of his cot&mdash;for he was always so tired that just an alarm
-never wakened him at all, but set in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">252</a></span> a brazen basin an alarm would
-waken <em>anybody</em>. He dressed and hurried through the long, dim passages
-that led to the kitchens, and there he kindled the fires and tended the
-drafts and shovelled the coal that should cook the king’s breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a Thought spoke to him. It said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Hazen, you are not wise, or <em>really</em> good, or loved, or beautiful. Why
-don’t you become so?”</p>
-
-<p>“I,” Hazen thought back sadly, “<em>I</em> become these things? Impossible!”
-and he went on shovelling coal.</p>
-
-<p>But still the Thought spoke to him, and said the same thing over and
-over so many times that at last he was obliged to listen and even to
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>“What would I do to be like that?” he asked almost impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“First go up in the king’s library,” said the Thought.</p>
-
-<p>So when the fires were roaring and the dampers were right, Hazen went
-softly up the stair and through the quiet lower rooms of the palace,
-for it was very early in the morning, and no one was stirring. Hazen
-had been so seldom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">253</a></span> above stairs that he did not even know where the
-library was and by mistake he opened successively the doors to the
-great banquet room, the state drawing rooms, a morning room, and even
-the king’s audience chamber before at last he chanced on the door of
-the library.</p>
-
-<p>The king’s library was a room as wide as a lawn and as high as a tree,
-and it was filled with books, and the shelves were thrown out to make
-alcoves, so that the books were as thick as leaves on branches, and the
-whole room was pleasant, like something good to do. It was impossible
-for little Hazen, furnace boy though he was, to be in that great place
-of books without taking one down. So he took at random a big leather
-book with a picture on the cover, and he went toward a deep window-seat.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could have exceeded his surprise and terror when he perceived
-the window-seat to be occupied. And nothing could have exceeded his
-wonder and delight when he saw who occupied it. She was a little girl
-of barely his own age, and her lovely waving hair fell over her soft
-blue gown from which her little blue slippers were peeping. She, too,
-had a great book in her arms, and over the top of this she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">254</a></span> looking
-straight at Hazen in extreme disapproval.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you have the goodness,” she said&mdash;speaking very slowly and most
-<em>freezing</em> cold&mdash;“to ’splain what you are doing in my father’s library?”</p>
-
-<p>At these words Hazen’s little knees should have shaken, for he
-understood that this was the Princess Vista herself. But instead, he
-was so possessed by the beauty and charm of the little princess that
-there was no room for fear. Though he had never in his life been taught
-to bow, yet the blood of his father the king, and of <em>his</em> father the
-king, and of <em>his</em> father the king, and so on, over and over, stirred
-in him and he bowed like the prince he was-but-didn’t-know-it.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, princess,” he said, “I want to be wise and <em>really</em> good and loved
-and beautiful, and I have come to the king’s library to find out how to
-do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you, that want so many ’surd things?” asked the princess,
-curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“I am the furnace boy,” said the poor prince, “and my other name is
-Hazen.”</p>
-
-<p>At this the princess laughed aloud&mdash;for when he had bowed she had
-fancied that he might be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">255</a></span> at least the servant to some nobleman at the
-court, too poor to keep his foot-page in livery.</p>
-
-<p>“The furnace boy indeed!” she cried. “And handling my father’s books.
-If you had what you ’serve, you’d be put in pwison.”</p>
-
-<p>At that Hazen bowed again very sadly, and was about to put back his
-book when footsteps sounded in the hall, and nursery governesses and
-chamberlains and foot-pages and lackeys and many whose names are as
-dust came running down the stairs, all looking for the princess. And
-the princess, who was not frightened, was suddenly sorry for little
-Hazen, who was.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen,” she said, “you bow so nicely that you may hide in that alcove
-and I will not tell them that you are there. But don’t you come here
-to-morrow morning when I come to read my book, or I can’t tell <em>what</em>
-will happen.”</p>
-
-<p>Hazen had just time to slip in the alcove when all the nursery
-governesses, chamberlains, foot-pages, and those whose names are as
-dust burst in the room.</p>
-
-<p>“I was just coming,” said the princess, haughtily.</p>
-
-<p>But when she was gone, Hazen, in his safe alcove, did not once look at
-his big leather book.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">256</a></span> He did not even open it. Instead he sat staring
-at the floor, and thinking and thinking and thinking of the princess.
-And it was as if his mind were opened, and as if all the princess
-thoughts in the world were running in, one after another.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, when it was time for the palace to be awake, he stirred
-and rose and returned the book to its place, and in the midst of his
-princess thoughts he found himself face to face with a great mirror.
-And there he saw that, not only was he not beautiful, but that his
-cheek and his clothes were all blackened from the coal. And then he
-thought that he would die of shame; first, because the princess had
-seen him looking so, and second, because he looked so, whether she had
-seen him or not.</p>
-
-<p>He went back to the palace kitchen, and waited only to turn off the
-biggest drafts and the longest dampers before he began to wash his
-face and give dainty care to his hands. In fact, he did this all day
-long and sat up half the night trying to think how he could be as
-exquisitely neat as the little princess. And at last when daylight came
-and he had put coal in the kitchen ranges and had left the drafts right
-and had taken another bath after, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">257</a></span> dressed himself in his poor best
-which he had most carefully brushed, and he ran straight back up the
-stair and into the king’s library.</p>
-
-<p>The Princess Vista was not there. But it was very, very early this time
-and the sun was still playing about outside, and so he set himself to
-wait, looking up at the window-seat where he had first seen her. As
-soon as the sun began to slant in the latticed windows in earnest, the
-door opened and the princess entered, her waving hair falling on her
-blue gown, and the little blue slippers peeping.</p>
-
-<p>When she saw Hazen, she stood still and spoke most <em>freezing</em> cold.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t I tell you on no ’count to come here this morning?” she wished
-to know.</p>
-
-<p>Generations of kings for ages back bowed in a body in little Hazen.</p>
-
-<p>“Did your Highness not know that I would come?” he asked simply.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the princess to that, and sat down on the window-seat. “I
-will punish you,” said she, “but you bow so nicely that I will help you
-first. Why do you wish to be wise?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought that I had another reason,” said Hazen, “but it is because
-you are wise.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">258</a></span>
-“I’m not so very wise,” said the princess, modestly. “But I could make
-you as wise as I am,” she suggested graciously. “What do you want to
-know?”</p>
-
-<p>There was so much that he wanted to know! Down in the dark furnace room
-he had been forever wondering about the fires that he kindled, about
-the light that he did not have, about everything. He threw out his arms.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to know about the whole world!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>The princess considered.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps they haven’t teached me everything yet,” she said. “What do
-you want to know about the world?”</p>
-
-<p>Hazen looked out the window and across the palace garden, lying all
-golden-green in the slow opening light, with fountains and flowers and
-parks and goldfish everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>“What makes it get day?” he asked. For since he had been a furnace boy,
-Hazen had been taught nothing at all.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, the sun comes,” answered the princess.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it the same sun every day?” Hazen asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so,” said the princess. “No&mdash;sometimes it is a red sun.
-Sometimes it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">259</a></span> a hot sun. Sometimes it is big, big, when it goes
-down. Oh, no. I am quite sure a different sun comes up every day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where do they get ’em all?” Hazen asked wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” the princess said thoughtfully, “suns must be like cwort (she
-never could say “court”) processions. I think they always have them
-ready somewheres. What else do you want to know about?”</p>
-
-<p>“About the Spring,” said Hazen. “Where does that come from? Where do
-they get it?”</p>
-
-<p>“They never teached me that,” said the princess, “but <em>I</em> think Summer
-is the mother, and Winter the father, and Autumn is the noisy little
-boy, and Spring is the little girl, with violets on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” cried Hazen, joyfully. “I never thought of that. Why can’t
-they talk?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“They ’most can,” said the princess. “Some day maybe I can teach you
-what they say. What else do you want to know?”</p>
-
-<p>“About people,” said Hazen. “Why are some folks good and some folks
-bad? Why is the king kind and the cook cross?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">260</a></span>
-“Oh, they never teached me that!” the princess cried, impatiently.
-“What a lot of things you ask!”</p>
-
-<p>“One more question, your Highness,” said Hazen, instantly. “Why are you
-so beautiful?”</p>
-
-<p>The princess smiled. “Now I’ll teach you my picture-book through,” she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>She opened the picture-book and showed him pictures of castles and
-beasts and lawns and towers and ladies and mountains and bright birds
-and pillars and cataracts and wild white horses and, last, a picture of
-a prince setting forth on a quest. “Prince Living sets out to make his
-fortune,” it said under the picture, and Hazen stared at it.</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t I set out to make <em>my</em> fortune?” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>The princess laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a furnace boy,” she explained. “<em>They</em> don’t make fortunes.
-Who would mind the furnace if they did?”</p>
-
-<p>Hazen sprang to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“That can’t be the way the world is!” he cried. “Not when it’s so
-pretty and all stuck full of goldfish and fountains and flowers and
-parks. If I went, I <em>would</em> make my fortune!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">261</a></span>
-The princess crossed her little slippered feet and looked at him. And
-when he met her eyes, he was ashamed of his anger, though not of his
-earnestness, and he bowed again; and all the kings of all the courts of
-his ancestors were in the bow.</p>
-
-<p>“After all,” said the princess, “we don’t have the furnace in Summer.
-And you bow so nicely that I b’lieve I will help you to make your
-fortune. <em>Anyhow</em>, I can help you to set out.”</p>
-
-<p>Hazen was in the greatest joy. The princess bade him wait where he was,
-and she ran away and found somewhere a cast-off page boy’s dress and
-a cap with a plume and a little silver horn and a wallet, with some
-bread. These she brought to Hazen just as footsteps sounded on the
-stairs, and nursery governesses and chamberlains and foot-pages and
-many whose names are as dust came running pell-mell down the stairs,
-all looking for the princess.</p>
-
-<p>“Hide in that alcove,” said the princess, “till I am gone. Then put on
-this dress and go out at the east gate which no one can lock. And as
-you go by the east wing, do not look up at my window or I will wave my
-hand and somebody may see you going. Now good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p>But at that Hazen was suddenly wretched.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">262</a></span>
-“I can’t leave <em>you!</em>” he said. “How can I leave <em>you</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>“People always leave people,” said the princess, with superiority.
-“Play that’s one of the things I teached you.”</p>
-
-<p>At this Hazen suddenly dropped on one knee&mdash;the kings, his fathers,
-did that for him too&mdash;and kissed the princess’s little hand. And as
-suddenly she wished very much that she had something to give him.</p>
-
-<p>“Here,” she said, “here’s my picture-book. Take it with you and learn
-it through. <em>Now</em> good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p>And Hazen had just time to slip in the alcove when all the n. g.’s,
-c.’s, f. p.’s, and l.’s, whom there wasn’t time to spell out, as well
-as all those whose names are now dust, burst in the room.</p>
-
-<p>“I was just coming,” said the princess, and went.</p>
-
-<p>Hazen dressed himself in the foot-page’s livery and fastened the
-wallet at one side and the little silver horn at the other, and put on
-the cap with a plume; and he stole into the king’s garden, with the
-picture-book of the princess fast in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>He had not been in a garden since he had left<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">263</a></span> his father’s garden,
-which he could just remember, and to be outdoors now seemed as
-wonderful as bathing in the ocean, or standing on a high mountain,
-or seeing the dawn. He hastened along between the flowering shrubs
-and hollyhocks; he heard the fountains plashing and the song-sparrows
-singing and the village bells faintly sounding; he saw the goldfish and
-the water-lilies gleam in the pool and the horses cantering about the
-paddock. And all at once it seemed that the day was his, to do with
-what he would, and he felt as if already that were a kind of fortune in
-his hand. So he hurried round the east wing of the palace and looked
-up eagerly toward the princess’s window. And there stood the Princess
-Vista, watching, with her hair partly brushed.</p>
-
-<p>When she saw him, she leaned far out.</p>
-
-<p>“I told you not to look,” she said. “Somebody will see you going.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care if anyone does,” cried Hazen. “I <em>had</em> to!”</p>
-
-<p>“How fine you look now,” the princess could not help saying.</p>
-
-<p>“You are beautiful as the whole picture-book!” he could not help saying
-back.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">264</a></span>
-“<em>Now</em>, good-bye!” she called softly, and waved her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye&mdash;oh, good-bye!” he cried, and waved his plumed cap.</p>
-
-<p>And then he left her, looking after him with her hair partly brushed,
-and he ran out the east gate which was never locked, and fared as fast
-as he could along the king’s highway, in all haste to grow wise and
-<em>really</em> good and loved and beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>Hazen went a day’s journey in the dust of the highway, and toward
-nightfall he came to a deep wood. To him the wood seemed like a great
-hospitable house, with open doors between the trees and many rooms
-through which he might wander at will, the whole fair in the light of
-the setting sun. And he entered the gloom as he might have entered a
-palace, expecting to meet someone.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately he was aware of an old man seated under a plane tree, and
-the old man addressed him with:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Good even, little lad. Do you travel far?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not very, sir,” Hazen replied. “I am only going to find my fortune and
-to become wise, <em>really</em> good, beautiful, and loved.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">265</a></span>
-“So!” said the old man. “Rest here a little and let us talk about it.”</p>
-
-<p>Hazen sat beside him and they talked about it. Now, I wish very much
-that I might tell you all that they said, but the old man was so old
-and wise that his thoughts came chiefly as pictures, or in other form
-without words, so that it was not so much what he said that held his
-meaning as what he made Hazen feel by merely being with him. Indeed, I
-do not know whether he talked about the stars or the earth or the ways
-of men, but he made little Hazen somehow know fascinating things about
-them all. And when time had passed and the dusk was nearly upon them,
-the old man lightly touched Hazen’s forehead:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Little lad,” he said, “have you ever looked in there?”</p>
-
-<p>“In my own head?” said Hazen, staring.</p>
-
-<p>“Even so,” said the old man. “No? But that might well be a pleasant
-thing to do. Will you not do that, for a little while?”</p>
-
-<p>This was the strangest thing that ever Hazen had heard. But next
-moment, under the old man’s guidance, he found himself, as it were,
-turned about and seeing things that he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">266</a></span> never seen, and looking
-back into his own head as if there were a window that way. And he did
-it with no great surprise, for it seemed quite natural to him, and he
-wondered why he had never done it before.</p>
-
-<p>Of the actual construction of things in there Hazen was not more
-conscious than he would have been of the bricks and mortar of a palace
-filled with wonderful music and voices and with all sorts of surprises.
-Here there were both surprises and voices. For instantly he could see
-a company of little people, <em>every one of whom looked almost like
-himself</em>. And it was as it is when one stands between two mirrors set
-opposite, and the reflections reflect the reflections until one is
-dizzy; only now it was as if all the reflections were suddenly to be
-free of the mirror and be little living selves, ready to say different
-things.</p>
-
-<p>One little Self had just made a small opening in things, and several
-Selves were peering into it. Hazen looked too, and he saw to his
-amazement that it was a kind of picture of his plans for making his
-fortune. There were cities, seas, ships, men, forests, water-falls,
-leaping animals, glittering things, all the adventures that he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">267</a></span>
-been imagining. And the Selves were talking it over.</p>
-
-<p>“Consider the work it will be,” one was distinctly grumbling, “before
-we can get anything. <em>Is</em> it worth it?”</p>
-
-<p>He was a discouraged, discontented-looking Self, and though he had
-Hazen’s mouth, it was drooping, and though he had Hazen’s forehead, it
-was frowning.</p>
-
-<p>A breezy little Self, all merry and fluffy and light as lace,
-answered:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“O-o-o-o!” it breathed. “I think it will be fun. That’s all I care
-about it&mdash;it will be fun and <em>nothing else</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Then a strange, fascinating Self, from whom Hazen could not easily look
-away, spoke, half singing.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember the beauty that we shall see as we go&mdash;as we go,” he chanted.
-“We can live for the beauty everywhere and for <em>nothing else</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think of the things we shall learn!” cried another Self.
-“Knowledge&mdash;knowledge all the way&mdash;and <em>nothing else</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Then a soft voice spoke, which was sweeter than any voice that Hazen
-had ever heard, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">268</a></span> the Self to whom it belonged looked like Hazen
-when he was asleep.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay,” it said sighing, “there are many dangers. But to meet dangers
-bravely and to overcome them finely is the way to grow strong.”</p>
-
-<p>At this a little voice laughed and cracked as it laughed, so that it
-sounded like something being broken which could never be mended.</p>
-
-<p>“Being strong and wise don’t mean making one’s fortune,” it said. “Just
-one thing means fortune, and that is being rich. To be rich&mdash;rich!
-That’s what we want and it is all we want. And I am ready to fight with
-everyone of you to get riches.”</p>
-
-<p>Hazen looked where the voice sounded, and to his horror he saw a little
-Self made in his own image, but hideously bent and distorted, so that
-he knew exactly how he would look if he were a dwarf.</p>
-
-<p>“Not me!” cried the breezy little Fun Self then. “You wouldn’t fight
-me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I would,” said the dwarf. “I’d fight everybody, and when we were
-rich, you’d thank me for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, no,” said the Knowledge Self. “I am the only proper ruler in this
-fortune affair.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">269</a></span> Knowledge is enough for us to have. Knowledge is what
-we want.”</p>
-
-<p>“Beauty is all you need!” cried the fascinating Beauty Self. “I am the
-one who should rule you all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, rich, rich, rich! Do I not say so? Will not riches bring beauty
-and fun and leisure for knowledge?” said the dwarf. “Riches do it all.
-Do as I say. Take me for your guide.”</p>
-
-<p>“Strength is the thing!” said a great voice, suddenly. “We want to be
-big and strong and <em>nothing else</em>. I am going to rule in this.” And the
-voice of the Strong Self seemed to be everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>“Not without me ... not without me!” said the Wise Self. But it spoke
-faintly, and could hardly be heard in the clamour of all the others who
-now all began talking at once, with the little Fun Self dancing among
-them and crying, “I’m the one&mdash;you all want me to rule, <em>really</em>, but
-you don’t know it.”</p>
-
-<p>And suddenly, in the midst of all this, Hazen began to see strange
-little shadows appearing and lurking about, somewhat slyly, and often
-running away, but always coming back. They were tiny and faintly
-outlined&mdash;less like reflections<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">270</a></span> in a mirror than like reflections
-which had not yet found a mirror for their home. And they spoke in thin
-little voices which Hazen could hear, and said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll help you, Rich! We’ll help you, Strength! We’ll help you, Fun!
-Only let us be one of you and we’ll help you win, and you shall reign.
-Here are Envy Self and Lying Self and Hate Self and Cruel Self&mdash;we’ll
-help, if you’ll let us in!”</p>
-
-<p>And when he heard this, Hazen suddenly called out, with all his might:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Stop!” he cried, “I’m the ruler here! I’m Hazen!”</p>
-
-<p>And of course he was the ruler&mdash;because it was the inside of his own
-head.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly there was complete silence there, as when a bell is suddenly
-struck in the midst of whisperings. And all the Selves shrank back.</p>
-
-<p>“Hazen!” they said, “we didn’t know you were listening. You be king.
-We’ll help&mdash;we’ll help.”</p>
-
-<p>“As long as I live,” said little Hazen then, “not one of you shall rule
-in here without me. I shall want many of you to help me, but only as
-much as I tell you to, and no more. I’m<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">271</a></span> only a furnace boy, but I tell
-you that I am king of the inside of my own head, and I’m going to rule
-here and nobody else!”</p>
-
-<p>Then, nearer than any of the rest&mdash;and he could not tell just where it
-came from, but he knew how near it was&mdash;another voice spoke to him. And
-somewhat it was like the Thought that had spoken to him in the king’s
-kitchen and bidden him go up to the king’s library&mdash;but yet it was
-nearer than that had been.</p>
-
-<p>“Bravely done, Hazen,” it said. “Be king&mdash;be king, even as you have
-said!”</p>
-
-<p>With the voice came everywhere sweet music, sounding all about Hazen
-and in him and through him; and everywhere was air of dreams&mdash;he
-could hardly tell whether he was watching these or was really among
-them. There were sweet voices, dim figures, gestures of dancing,
-soft colours, lights, wavy, wonderful lines, little stars suddenly
-appearing, flowers, kindly faces, and then one face&mdash;the exquisite,
-watching face of the Princess Vista at the window, with her hair partly
-brushed ... and then darkness....</p>
-
-<p>... When he woke, it was early morning. The sun was pricking through
-the leaves of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">272</a></span> the forest, the birds were singing so sweetly and
-swiftly that it was as if their notes overlapped and made one sound on
-which everything was threaded like curious and beautiful beads on a
-silver cord. The old man was gone; and before Hazen, the way, empty and
-green, led on with promise of surprise.</p>
-
-<p>And now as he went forward, eating his bread and gathering berries,
-Hazen had never felt so able to make his future. It was as if he were
-not one boy but many boys in one, and they all ready to do his bidding.
-Surely, he thought, his fortune must lie at the first turn of the path!</p>
-
-<p>But at the first turn of the path he met a little lad no older than
-himself, who was drawing a handcart filled with something covered, and
-he was singing merrily.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello,” said the Merry Lad. “Where are <em>you</em> going?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nowhere in particular,” said Hazen. And though he had readily confided
-to the old man what he was hoping to find, someway Hazen felt that if
-he told the Merry Lad, he would laugh at him. And that no one likes,
-though it is never a thing to fear.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on with me,” said the Merry Lad. “I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">273</a></span> am going in the town to sell
-my images. There will be great sport.”</p>
-
-<p>And, without stopping to think whether his fortune lay that way, Hazen,
-whose blood leapt at the idea of the town and its sports, turned and
-went with him.</p>
-
-<p>The Merry Lad was very merry. He told Hazen more games and riddles
-than ever he had heard. He sang him songs, did little dances for him
-in the open glades, raced with him, and when they reached the dusty
-highway, got him in happy talk with the other wayfarers. And by the
-time they gained the town, they were a gay little company. There the
-Merry Lad took his images to the market-place and spread them under a
-tree&mdash;little figures made to represent Mirth, Merriment, Laughter, Fun,
-Fellowship, and Delight&mdash;no end there was to the variety and charm of
-the little images, and no end to all that the Merry Lad did to attract
-the people to them. He sang and danced and whistled and even stood on
-his head, and everyone crowded about him and was charmed.</p>
-
-<p>“Pass my cap about,” he said, while he danced, to Hazen. “They will
-give us money.”</p>
-
-<p>So Hazen passed the Merry Lad’s cap, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">274</a></span> the people gave them money.
-They filled the cap, indeed, with clinking coins, and went away
-carrying the images. And by nightfall the Merry Lad and Hazen had more
-money than they knew how to use.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” the Merry Lad cried, “we shall have a glorious time. Come!”</p>
-
-<p>Now Hazen had never been in the town at night, and he had never been
-in any town at any time without some of the king’s servants for whom
-he had had to fetch and carry. To him the streets were strange and
-wonderful, blazing with lights, filled with gayly dressed folk, and
-sounding now and again to strains of music. But the Merry Lad seemed
-wholly at home, and he went here and there like a painted moth,
-belonging to the night and a part of it. They feasted and jested and
-joyed, and most of all they spent the money that they had earned, and
-they spent it on themselves. I cannot tell you the things that they
-bought. They bought a wonderful, tropical, talking bird; they bought a
-little pony on which they both could ride, with the bird on the pony’s
-neck; they bought a tiny trick monkey and a suit of Indian clothes with
-fringed leggings and head-feathers; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">275</a></span> a music-box that played like
-a whole band. And when the evening with its lights and pantomimes was
-over, they pitched their tent on the edge of the town, picketed the
-pony outside, brought the other things safely within, and lay down to
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Now, since they had no pillows, Hazen took the picture-book which
-the princess had given him and made his pillow of that. And as soon
-as everything was quiet, and the Merry Lad and the talking bird
-were asleep and the pony was dozing at its picket, the princess’s
-picture-book began to talk to Hazen. I do not mean that it said
-words&mdash;it is a great mistake to think that everything that is said must
-be said in words&mdash;but it talked to him none the less, and better than
-with words. It showed him the princess in her blue gown sitting in the
-window-seat with her little blue slippers crossed. It showed him her
-face as she taught him about the sun and the world, and taught him
-her picture-book through. It reminded him that his page-boy’s dress
-was worn because, in his heart, he was her page. It brought back the
-picture of her standing at the window, with her hair partly brushed,
-to wave him a good-bye&mdash;“<em>Now</em>, good-bye,” he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">276</a></span> could hear her little
-voice. He remembered now that he had started out to find his fortune
-and to become wise, <em>really</em> good, loved, and beautiful. And lo, all
-this that he had done all day with the Merry Lad&mdash;was it helping him to
-any of these?</p>
-
-<p>As soon as he knew this, he rose softly and, emptying his pockets of
-his share of the money earned that day, he laid it near the Merry Lad’s
-pillow, took the picture-book, and slipped away.</p>
-
-<p>The Merry Lad did not wake, but the talking bird stirred on his perch
-and called after him: “Stay where you are! Stay where you are!” And
-the words seemed to echo in Hazen’s head and were repeated there as if
-another voice had said them, and while he hesitated at the door of the
-tent, he knew what that other voice was: It was within his head indeed,
-and it was the voice of that breezy little Self, all merry and fluffy
-and light as lace&mdash;the Fun Self itself!</p>
-
-<p>And then he knew that all day long that was the voice that he had been
-obeying when he went with the Merry Lad, and all day long that Self had
-been guiding him, and had been his ruler. And he himself had not been
-king of the Selves at all!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">277</a></span>
-Hazen slipped out into the night and ran as fast as he could. Nearly
-all that night he travelled without stopping, lest when day came the
-Merry Lad should overtake him. And when day did come, Hazen found
-himself far away, and passing the gate of a garden where, in the dawn,
-a youth was walking, reading a book. Him Hazen asked if he might come
-in the garden and rest for a little.</p>
-
-<p>This Bookman, who was pleasant and gentle and seemed half dreaming,
-welcomed him in, and gave him fruit to eat, and Hazen fell asleep in
-the arbour. When he awoke, the Bookman sat beside him, still reading,
-and seeing that the boy was awake, he began reading to him.</p>
-
-<p>He read a wonderful story about the elements of which everything
-in the world is made. He read that they are a great family of more
-than seventy, and so magically arranged that they make a music, done
-in octaves like the white keys of a piano. So that a man, if he is
-skilful, can play with these octaves as he might with octaves of sound,
-and with a thousand variations can make what he will, and almost play
-for himself a strain of the heavenly harmony in which things began. You
-see what wonderful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">278</a></span> music that would be? Hazen saw, and he could not
-listen enough.</p>
-
-<p>Until dark he was in the garden, eating fruit and listening; and the
-Bookman, seeing how he loved to listen, asked him if he would not stay
-on in the garden, and live there awhile. And without stopping to think
-whether his fortune lay that way, Hazen said that he would stay.</p>
-
-<p>Everything that the Bookman read to him was like magic, and it taught
-Hazen to do wonderful things. For example, he learned marvellous ways
-with sentences and with words. The Bookman showed him how to get inside
-of words, as if they had doors, so that Hazen could look from out the
-words that were spoken almost as if they had been little boxes, and he
-inside. The Bookman showed him how to look behind the words on a page
-and to see how different they seemed that way. He would say a sentence,
-and instantly it would become solid, and he would set it up, and Hazen
-could hang to it, or turn upon it like a turning-bar. It was all great
-sport. For sentences were not the only things with which he could
-juggle. He showed Hazen how to think a thing and have <em>that</em> become
-solid in the air, too. Just as one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">279</a></span> might think, “Now I will plant my
-garden,” and presently there the garden is, solid; or, “Now I will get
-my lesson,” and presently, sure enough, there the lesson <em>is</em>, in one’s
-head, <em>so</em> the Bookman taught Hazen to do with nearly all his thoughts,
-making many and many of them into actions or else into a solid, so that
-it could be handled as a garden can.</p>
-
-<p>And at last, one night, Hazen thought of the Princess Vista, hoping
-that that thought would become solid too, and that the princess would
-be there before him, for he wished very much to see her. But it did not
-do so, and he asked the Bookman the reason.</p>
-
-<p>“Why does not my thought about the Princess Vista become solid, and the
-princess be here beside me?” he asked wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Some thoughts take a very long time to become solid,” said the
-Bookman, gently, “and sometimes we have to travel a long way to make
-them so. If you think of the princess long and hard enough, I daresay
-that you will go to her some day&mdash;and there she will be, solid.”</p>
-
-<p>But of course as soon as Hazen began thinking of the princess long and
-hard, he wanted, more than anything else in the world, to be doing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">280</a></span>
-something that should hasten the time of seeing her, which could not
-well be until he had made his fortune. So thereupon he told the Bookman
-that he must be leaving the garden.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew that the day must come,” said the Bookman, sadly. “<em>Could</em> you
-not stay?”</p>
-
-<p>And when he said that, Hazen wanted so very much to stay there in the
-enchantment of the place, that it seemed as if a voice in his own
-head were echoing the words. And while he hesitated at the gate of
-the garden, he knew what that other voice was! It was within his head
-indeed, and it was the voice of that strange, fascinating Self from
-which he had found that he could hardly look away&mdash;the Knowledge Self
-itself. And then he knew that all this time in this garden, it was
-this voice that he had been obeying and it had been guiding him. He
-himself had not been king of the Selves at all. So when he knew that,
-he hesitated not a moment, for he saw that although the Bookman was
-far finer than the Merry Lad, still neither must be king, but only he
-himself must be king.</p>
-
-<p>“Alas!” he cried, as he left the garden, “I am not nearer to making my
-fortune now than I was at the beginning!”</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">281</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xv" id="xv"></a>XV<br />
-<span>KING (<em>continued</em>)</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">So</span> Hazen left the garden and the gentle Bookman, who was loath to let
-him go, and hurried out into the world again.</p>
-
-<p>He travelled now for many days, hearing often of far countries which
-held what he sought, but never reaching any of them. Always he did
-what tasks came to his hand, for this seemed
-<a name="a" id="a"></a><ins title="Original has duplicate 'a'">a</ins> good way
-toward fortune. But sometimes the Envy Self and the Discontented Self
-spoke loudly in his head so that he thought that it was he himself who
-was speaking, and he obeyed them, and stopped his work, and until the
-chance to finish it was lost, he did not know that it was these Selves
-who had made him cease his task and lose his chance and be that much
-farther from fortune. For that was the way of all the Selves&mdash;they had
-a clever fashion of making Hazen think that their voices were his own
-voice, and sometimes he could hardly tell the difference.</p>
-
-<p class="nmb">At last, one night, he came to a hill, sloping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">282</a></span> gently as if something
-beautiful were overflowing. Its trees looked laid upon the mellow
-west beyond. The turf was like some Titan woman’s embroidery, sheared
-and flowered. Hazen looked at it all, and at the great sky and the
-welcoming distance, and before he knew whether it came as a thought or
-as a song, he had made a little rhyme:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">Do you wish you had a world of gold</div>
-<div class="line">With a turquoise roof on high,</div>
-<div class="line">And a coral east and a ruby west</div>
-<div class="line">And diamonds in the sky?</div>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">Do you wish there were little doors of air</div>
-<div class="line">That a child might open wide,</div>
-<div class="line">Where were emerald chairs and a tourmaline rug</div>
-<div class="line">And a moonstone moon beside?</div>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">Do you wish the lakes were silver plates</div>
-<div class="line">And the sea a sapphire dish?</div>
-<div class="line">What a wonderful, wonderful world it is&mdash;</div>
-<div class="line">For haven’t you got your wish?</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>He liked to sing this, and he loved the hill and the evening. He lay
-there a long time, making<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">283</a></span> little rhymes and loving everything. Next
-day he wandered away in the woods, and asked for food at a hut, and
-offered the bewildered woman a rhyme in payment, and at night he
-returned to his hill, and there he lived for days, playing that he
-was living all alone in the world&mdash;that there was not another person
-anywhere on the earth.</p>
-
-<p>But one night when he was lying on the hillside, composing a song to
-the Littlest Leaf in the Wood, suddenly the voice of his song was not
-so loud as a voice within him which seemed to say how much he delighted
-to be singing. And then he knew the voice&mdash;that it was the voice of the
-Beauty Self in his own head, that it was that voice that had made him
-linger on the hillside and had commanded him to sing about the beauty
-in the world <em>and to do nothing else</em>. And all this time it had been
-king of the Selves, and not he!</p>
-
-<p>He rose and fled down the hillside, and for days he wandered alone,
-sick at heart because this fair Beauty Self had tricked him into
-following her <em>and no other</em>, even as the Fun Self and the Knowledge
-Self had done. But even while he wandered, grieving, again and again
-the Idle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">284</a></span> Self, the Strong Self, the Discontented Self, deceived him
-for a little while and succeeded in making their own voices heard, and
-now and again the little shadowy Selves&mdash;the Malice and Cruel and Envy
-Selves drew very near him and tried to speak for him. And they all
-fought to keep him from being king and to deceive him into thinking
-that they spoke for him.</p>
-
-<p>One brooding noonday, as Hazen was travelling, alone and tired, on the
-highroad, a carriage overtook him, and the gentleman within, looking
-sharply at him, ordered the carriage stopped, and asked him courteously
-if he was not the poet whose songs he had sometimes heard, and of whose
-knowledge and good-fellowship others had told him. It proved that it
-was no other than Hazen whom he meant, and he took him with him in
-his carriage to a great, wonderful house overlooking the valley, and
-commanding a sovereign mountain on whose very summit stood a deserted
-castle. It seemed as if merely looking on that wonderful prospect would
-help one to be wise and <em>really</em> good and beautiful and worthy to be
-loved.</p>
-
-<p>At once Hazen’s host, the Gentleman of the Carriage, began showing
-him his treasures and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">285</a></span> all that made life for him. The house was
-filled with curious and beautiful things, pictures, ivories, marbles,
-and tapestries, and with many friends. In the evenings there were
-always festivities; mirth and laughter were everywhere, and Hazen
-was laden with gifts of these and other things, and delighted in the
-entertainment. But by day, in a high-ceiled library and a cool study,
-the two spent hours pouring over letters and science, finding out
-the secrets of the world, getting on the other side of words, saying
-sentences, and thinking thoughts that became solid; or they would
-wander on the hillsides and carry rare books and dream of the beauty in
-the world and weave little songs. Now they would be idle, now absorbed
-in feats of strength, and now they would descend into the town and
-there delight in its great sport. And in all this Hazen had some part
-and earned his own way, because of his cleverness and willingness to
-enter in the life and belong to it.</p>
-
-<p>One day, standing on a balcony of the beautiful house, looking across
-at the mountain and the deserted castle, Hazen said aloud:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“This is the true life. This is fortune. For now I hear all the voices
-of all my Selves, and I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">286</a></span> give good things to each, and I am king of
-them all!”</p>
-
-<p>But even as he spoke he heard another voice sounding within his own,
-and it laughed, and cracked as it laughed, so that it sounded like
-something being broken that could never be mended.</p>
-
-<p>“I told you so, Hazen! I told you so!” it cried. “Being loved and
-<em>really</em> good do not mean making our fortune. Just one thing means
-fortune, and that is being rich. To be rich, <em>rich</em>, means good times
-and learning and beauty and idleness. I’ve fought
-<a name="every_one" id="every_one"></a><ins title="Original has 'everyone'">every one</ins>
-of the others, and now you’ve got all that they had to offer, because
-you have let me be king&mdash;<em>me and no other</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>To his horror, Hazen recognized the voice of the dwarf, the Riches
-Self, and knew that he was deceived again, that he himself was ruler of
-nothing, and that the dwarf was now king of all his Selves.</p>
-
-<p>When he realized this, it seemed to Hazen that his heart was pierced
-and that he could not live any longer. Suppose&mdash;ah, suppose that he did
-get back to the Princess Vista now&mdash;what had he to take to her? Could
-he give her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">287</a></span> himself&mdash;a Self of which not he but the dwarf was the
-owner?</p>
-
-<p>Somehow, in spite of their protestations and persuadings, Hazen said
-good-bye to them all, to his host and to those who had detained him,
-and he was off down into the valley alone&mdash;not knowing where he was
-going or what he was going to do, or what hope now remained that he
-should ever be any nearer the fortune for which he had so hopefully set
-out.</p>
-
-<p>It was bright moonlight when he came to the edge of a fair, green,
-valley meadow. The whiteness was flooding the world, as if it would
-wash away everything that had ever been and would begin it all over
-again. And in the centre of the meadow, all the brightness seemed to
-gather and thicken and glitter, as if something mysterious were there.
-It drew Hazen to itself, as if it were so pure that it must be what
-he was seeking, and he broke through the hedge and stepped among the
-flowers of the lush grass, and he stood before it.</p>
-
-<p>It was a fountain of water, greater than any fountain that Hazen had
-ever seen or conceived. It rose from the green in pure strands of
-exquisite firmness, in almost the slim lines and spirals<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">288</a></span> of a stair;
-and its high, curving spray and its plash and murmur made it rather
-like a gigantic white tree, with music in its boughs&mdash;the tree of life
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>Hazen could no more have helped leaping in the fountain than he could
-have helped his joy in its beauty. He sprang in the soft waters as
-if he were springing into arms, and it drew him to itself as if he
-belonged to it. The waters flowed over him, and he felt purified, and
-as if a healing light had shone through him, body and mind.</p>
-
-<p>But to his amazement, he did not remain in the fountain’s basin.
-Gently, as if he were upborne by unseen hands, he mounted with the rise
-of the fountain, in its slim lines and spirals, until he found himself
-high above the meadow in a silvery tower that was thrown out from the
-fountain itself. And there, alone in that lofty silence, it was as if
-he were face to face with himself and could see his own heart.</p>
-
-<p>Then the Thought spoke to him which had spoken to him long ago that
-morning in the king’s kitchen, and again on that first night in the
-wood.</p>
-
-<p>“Hazen!” it said, “you are not wise or <em>really</em><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">289</a></span> good or loved or
-beautiful. Why don’t you become so?”</p>
-
-<p>“I!” said Hazen, sadly. “I have lost my chance. I came out to find my
-fortune and I have thrown it away.”</p>
-
-<p>But still the Thought spoke to him, and said the same thing over and
-over so many times that at last he answered:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What, then, must I do?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>And then he listened, there in the night and the stillness, to hear
-what it was that he must do. And this was the first time that ever he
-had listened like this, or questioned carefully his course. Always
-before he had done what seemed to him the thing that he wished to do,
-without questioning whether his fortune lay that way.</p>
-
-<p>“Bravely spoken, Hazen,” said the Thought, then. “Someone near is in
-great need. Find him and help
-<a name="him" id="him"></a><ins title="Original omits closing quotation mark">him.”</ins></p>
-
-<p>Instantly Hazen leaped lightly to the ground, and ran away through
-the moonlit meadow, and he sought as never in his life had he sought
-anything before, for the one near, in great need, whom he was to find
-and help. All through the night he sought, and with the setting of
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">290</a></span> moon he was struggling up the mountain, because it seemed to him
-that he must do some hard thing, and this was hard. In the early dawn
-he stood on the mountain’s very summit, and knocked at the gate of the
-deserted castle there. And it was the forsaken castle of his father,
-the king, whom the Princess Vista’s father had conquered; but this
-Hazen did not know.</p>
-
-<p>No sound answered his summons, so he swung the heavy gate on its broken
-hinges and stepped within. The court yard was vacant and echoing and
-grass-grown. Rabbits scuttled away at his approach, and about the
-sightless eyes of the windows, bats were clinging and moving. The clock
-in the tower was still and pointed to an hour long-spent. The whole
-place breathed of things forgotten and of those who, having loved them,
-were forgotten too.</p>
-
-<p>Hazen mounted the broad, mossy steps leading to the portals, and he
-found one door slightly ajar. Wondering greatly, he touched it open,
-and the groined hall appeared like a grim face from behind a mask.
-On the stone floor, not far beyond the threshold, lay an old man,
-motionless. And when, uttering a little cry of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">291</a></span> pity and amazement,
-Hazen stooped over him, he knew him at once to be that old man who had
-greeted him at the entrance to the wood on the evening of the day on
-which he himself had left the king’s palace.</p>
-
-<p>What with bringing him water and bathing his face and chafing his
-hands, Hazen at last enabled the old man to speak, and found that he
-had been nearly all his life-time the keeper of the castle and for
-some years its only occupant. He was not ill, but he had fallen and
-was hurt, and he had lain for several days without food. So Hazen, who
-knew well how to do it, kindled a fire of fagots in the great, echoing
-castle kitchen, and, from the scanty store which he found there,
-prepared broth and eggs, and then helped the old man to his bed in the
-little room which had once been a king’s cabinet.</p>
-
-<p>“Lad, lad!” said the old man, when he had remembered Hazen. “And
-have you found your fortune? And are you by now wise, <em>really</em> good,
-beautiful, and loved?”</p>
-
-<p>“Alas!” said Hazen, only, and could say no more.</p>
-
-<p>The old man nodded. “I know, I know,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">292</a></span> he said sadly. “The little
-Selves have been about, ruling here and ruling there. Is it not so? Sit
-here a little, and let us talk about it.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Hazen told him all that had befallen since that night when they
-sat together in the wood. And though his adventures seemed to Hazen
-very wonderful, the old man merely nodded, as if he were not hearing
-but only remembering.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” he said, at the last, “I have met them all&mdash;the Merry Lad, the
-Bookman, and all the rest, and have dwelt a space with some. And I,
-too, have come to the fountain in the night, and have asked what it was
-that I should do.”</p>
-
-<p>“But tell me, sir,” said Hazen, eagerly, “how was it that I was told at
-the fountain that there was one near in great need. Did the fountain
-know you? Or did my Thought? And how could that be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, lad,” said the old man, “but always, for everyone, there is
-someone near in need&mdash;yet. One has only to look.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he talked to Hazen more about his fortune, and again the old man’s
-meaning was in his mere presence, so that whether he talked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">293</a></span> about the
-stars or the earth or the ways of men, he made Hazen know fascinating
-things about them all. And now Hazen listened far differently from the
-way that he had listened that other time when they had talked, and it
-was as if the words had grown, and as if they meant more than once they
-had meant.</p>
-
-<p>Now, whoever has stood for the first time in a great, empty castle
-knows that there is one thing that he longs to do above all other
-things, and this is to explore. And when the afternoon lay brooding
-upon the air, and slanting sun fell through the dusty lattices, Hazen
-asked the old man eagerly if he might wander through the rooms.</p>
-
-<p>“As freely,” answered the old man, willingly, “as if you were the
-castle’s prince.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus it chanced that, after all the years, Hazen, though he was far
-from dreaming the truth, was once more roaming through the rooms of his
-birthplace and treading the floors that had once echoed the step of his
-father, the king.</p>
-
-<p>It was a wonderful place, the like of which Hazen thought he had never
-seen before, save only in the palace of the father of the princess.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">294</a></span>
-Above stairs the rooms had hardly been disturbed since that old day of
-the hurried flight of all his father’s court. There was a great room
-of books, as rich in precious volumes as the king’s library which he
-already knew, and there, though this he could not guess, his own father
-had been wont to sit late in the night, consulting learned writers and
-dreaming of the future of his little son. There was the chapel, where
-they had brought Hazen himself to be christened, in the presence of all
-the court; there the long banqueting room to which he had once been
-carried so that the nobles might pledge him their fealty, the arched
-roof echoing their shouts. The throne room, the council room, the state
-drawing rooms&mdash;through all these, with their dim, dusty hangings and
-rich, faded furnishings, Hazen footed; and at last, up another stair,
-he came to the private apartments of the king and queen themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Breathing the life of another time the rooms lay, as if partly
-remembering and partly expecting. In the king’s room was the hunting
-suit that he had thrown off just before the attack, the book that he
-had been reading, the chart that he had consulted. In the queen’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">295</a></span>
-room were tarnished golden toilet articles and ornaments, and in her
-wardrobe her very robes hung, dusty and mouldering, the gold thread and
-gold fringes showing black and sad.</p>
-
-<p>And then Hazen entered a room which seemed to have been a child’s
-room&mdash;and it was his room, of his first babyhood. Something in him
-stirred and kindled, almost as if his body remembered, though his mind
-could not do so. Toys lay scattered about&mdash;tops, a football, books, and
-a bank. The pillow of the small white bed was indented as if from the
-pressure of a little head, and a pair of tiny shoes, one upright, one
-overturned, were on the floor. Hazen picked up one little shoe and held
-it for a minute in his hand. He wondered if some of the little garments
-of the child, whoever he was, might not be in the hanging room. And he
-opened the closed door.</p>
-
-<p>The door led to a closet and, as he had guessed, little garments were
-hanging there. But it was not these that caught his eye and held him
-breathless and spellbound on the threshold. On the high shelf of the
-closet stood a small glass casket. And in the casket was a little bit
-of live thing that fluttered piteously, as if begging<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">296</a></span> to be released,
-and frantic with joy at the coming of light from without.</p>
-
-<p>Hazen’s heart beat as he took the casket in his hand. It was the most
-wonderful little box that ever he had seen. And the little living thing
-was something like a fairy and something like a spirit and so beautiful
-that it seemed to Hazen that he must have it for his own. Something
-stirred and kindled in his mind so that it was almost a memory, and he
-said to himself:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen a casket like this. I have <em>had</em> a casket like this. Nay,
-but the very earliest thing that ever I can remember is a casket like
-this from which no one knew how to release this little living spirit.”</p>
-
-<p>For the little spirit was fast in the crystal prison, and if one broke
-the casket, one would almost certainly harm the spirit&mdash;but what other
-way was there to do?</p>
-
-<p>With the casket in his hand and the little spirit fluttering within,
-Hazen ran back below stairs to the old man.</p>
-
-<p>“Look!” Hazen cried. “This casket! It is from the closet shelf of some
-child’s room. I remember a casket such as this, and within it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">297</a></span> a little
-living spirit. I have <em>had</em> a casket such as this! What does it mean?”</p>
-
-<p>Then the old man, who had been keeper there when the castle was taken,
-trembled and peered into Hazen’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you?” the old man cried. “Who are you&mdash;and what is your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Alas,” said Hazen, sadly, “I was but the furnace boy to the king of a
-neighbouring country, and who I am I do not know. But as for my name,
-that is Hazen, and I know not what else.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the old man cried out, and tried to bow himself, and to kiss
-Hazen’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Prince Hazen!” cried he. “You are no other. Ah, God be praised. You
-are the son of my own beloved king.”</p>
-
-<p>As well as he could for his joy and agitation, the old man told Hazen
-everything: how the castle had been taken by that king of a neighbour
-country&mdash;who did <em>not</em> know that neighbours are nearly one’s own
-family&mdash;how Hazen had been made prisoner, and how he was really heir
-to this kingdom and to all its ample lands. And how the magic casket,
-which after all these years the old man now remembered, was to make
-Hazen, and no other, wise and <em>really</em> good and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">298</a></span> loved and beautiful,
-if only the little spirit could be freed.</p>
-
-<p>“But how am I to do that?” Hazen cried. “For to break the casket would
-be to harm the spirit. And what other way is there to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Alas,” answered the old man, “that I do not know. I think that this
-you must do alone. As for me, my life is almost spent. And now that I
-have seen you, my prince, the son of my dear sovereign, there is left
-to me but to die in peace.”</p>
-
-<p>At this, Hazen, remembering how much he owed the wonderful old man for
-that enchanted talk in the wood, when he had taught him fascinating
-things about the stars and the earth and the ways of men, and had shown
-him the inside of his own head and all those Selves of his and he their
-king if he would be so&mdash;remembering all these things Hazen longed to do
-something for him in return. But what could he do for him, he the heir
-of a conquered kingdom and a desolate palace? Yet the old man had been
-his father’s servant; and it was he whom the Thought at the fountain
-had bidden him to help; but chiefly Hazen’s heart overflowed with
-simple pity and tenderness for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">299</a></span> helpless one. And in that pity the
-Thought spoke again:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Give him the casket,” it said.</p>
-
-<p>Hazen hesitated&mdash;and in an instant his head was a chaos of voices. It
-was as if all the little Selves, even those which had now long been
-silent, were listening, were suddenly fighting among themselves in open
-combat to see what they could make Hazen do.</p>
-
-<p>“That beautiful thing!” cried the Beauty Self. “Keep it&mdash;keep it,
-Hazen!”</p>
-
-<p>“You will never have another chance at a fortune if you give it up!”
-cried the Discontented Self.</p>
-
-<p>“If you throw away your chance at a fortune, your life will be a life
-of hard work&mdash;and where will your good time come in?” cried the little
-Fun Self, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“You will have only labour and no leisure for learning&mdash;” warned the
-Knowledge Self.</p>
-
-<p>“What of the Princess Vista? Do you not owe it to her to keep the
-casket? And is it not <em>right</em> that you should keep the casket and grow
-wise and <em>really</em> good and loved and beautiful?” they all argued in
-turn. And above them all sounded the terrible, cracked voice of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">300</a></span> the
-dwarf, not laughing now, but fighting for his life:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Fool! Nothing counts but your chance at fortune. If you part with the
-casket, you part with <em>me!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>But sweet and clear through the clamour sounded the solemn insisting of
-the Thought:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Give him the casket&mdash;give him the casket, Hazen.”</p>
-
-<p>Quickly Hazen knelt beside the old man, and placed the magic casket in
-his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Lo,” said Prince Hazen, “I have nothing to give you, save only this.
-But it may be that we can yet find some way to release the spirit and
-that then you can have the good fortune that this will give. Take the
-casket&mdash;it is yours.”</p>
-
-<p>In an instant, and noiselessly, the magic casket fell in pieces in
-Hazen’s hands, and vanished. And with a soft sound of escaping wings
-the little spirit rose joyously and fluttered toward Hazen, and
-alighted on his breast. There were sudden sweetness and light in all
-the place, and a happiness that bewildered Hazen&mdash;and when he looked
-again, the little spirit had disappeared&mdash;but his own breast was filled
-with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">301</a></span> something new and marvellous, as if strange doors to himself had
-opened, and as if the spirit had found lodging there forever.</p>
-
-<p>In the clear silence following upon the babel of the little voices
-of all the mean and petty Selves, Hazen was aware of a voice echoing
-within him like music; and he knew the Thought now better than he knew
-himself, who had so many Selves, and he knew that when it spoke to him
-softly, softly, he would always hear.</p>
-
-<p>“If you had kept the magic casket for yourself,” it said, “the spirit
-would have drooped and died. <em>It was only by giving the casket away
-that the spirit could ever be free.</em> It was only when the spirit became
-yours that you could hope to be wise and good and beautiful and worthy
-to be loved. And now where is the Princess Vista’s picture-book?”</p>
-
-<p>All this time Hazen had not lost the picture-book of the princess,
-and now it was lying on the floor near where he was that night
-to have slept. He caught it up and turned the pages, and the old
-familiar pictures which the princess had shown him that morning in the
-window-seat made him long, as he had not longed since he had left the
-palace, to see her again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">302</a></span>
-He turned to the old man.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a certain princess&mdash;” he began.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” said the old man, gently, “so there is always, my prince. Go to
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>The mere exquisite presence of that spirit in the room seemed to have
-healed and invigorated the old man, and he had risen to his feet,
-clothed with a new strength. He set about searching in the king’s
-wardrobe for suitable garments for his young prince, and in a cedar
-chest he found vestments of somewhat ancient pattern, but of so rich
-material and so delicately made that the ancient style did but add to
-their beauty.</p>
-
-<p>When he had made Hazen ready, there was never a fairer prince in the
-world. Then the old man led him below stairs and showed him in a
-forgotten room, of which he himself only had the key, a box containing
-the jewels of the queen, his mother. So, bearing these, save one with
-which he purchased a horse for his needs, Prince Hazen set out for the
-palace of the princess.</p>
-
-<p>It chanced that it was early morning when Prince Hazen entered the
-palace grounds which he had left as a furnace boy. And you must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">303</a></span> know
-that, since his leaving, years had elapsed; for though he had believed
-himself to have stayed with the Merry Lad but one day, and with the
-Bookman but a few days, and but a little time on the hills singing
-songs, and in byways listening to the voices of Idleness, Strength, and
-the rest, and lingering in that fair home where the Dwarf had sent him,
-yet in reality with each one he had spent a year and more, so that now
-he was like someone else.</p>
-
-<p>But the princess’s father’s palace garden was just the same, and Hazen
-entered by the east gate, which still no one could lock; and to be back
-within the garden was as wonderful as bathing in the ocean or standing
-on a high mountain or seeing the dawn. His horse bore him along between
-the flowering shrubs and the hollyhocks; he heard the fountains
-plashing and the song-sparrows singing and the village bells faintly
-sounding; he saw the goldfish and the water-lilies gleam in the pool,
-and the horses cantering about the paddock. And all at once it seemed
-to him that the day was his and the world was his, to do with them what
-he would.</p>
-
-<p>So he galloped round the east wing of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">304</a></span> palace, and looked up
-eagerly and longingly toward the princess’s window. And there stood the
-Princess Vista, watching. But when she saw him, she drew far back as if
-she were afraid. And Prince Hazen, as he bowed low in his saddle, could
-think of no word to say to her that seemed a word to be said. He could
-only cry up to her:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Princess Vista. Come down! Come down! Come down&mdash;and teach me
-about the whole world.”</p>
-
-<p>He galloped straight to the great entrance way, and leaped from his
-horse, and no one questioned him, for they all knew by his look that he
-came with great authority. And he went to the king’s library, to that
-room which was as wide as a lawn and as high as a tree, and filled with
-mystery, and waited for her, knowing that she would come.</p>
-
-<p>She entered the room almost timidly, as, once upon a time, the little
-furnace boy had entered. And when she saw him waiting for her before
-the window-seat, nothing could have exceeded her terror and her wonder
-and her delight. And now her eyes were looking down, and she did <em>not</em>
-ask him what he was doing there.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">305</a></span>
-“Oh, Princess Vista,” he said softly, “I love you. I want to be loved!”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you&mdash;that want so much?” the princess asked&mdash;but her eyes
-knew, and her smile knew.</p>
-
-<p>“Someone who has brought back your picture-book,” said Prince Hazen. “I
-pray you, teach it to me again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay,” said the princess, softly, “I have taught you a wrong thing. For
-I have taught you that there are many suns. And instead there is only
-one sun, and it brings only one day&mdash;and that day is this day!”</p>
-
-<p>It was so that she welcomed him back.</p>
-
-<p>They went to the king, her father, and told him everything. And when he
-knew that his daughter loved Prince Hazen, he restored his kingdom to
-him, and named him his own successor. And Hazen was crowned king, with
-much magnificence, and his father’s courtiers, who were living, were
-returned to his court, and that wise, wonderful old man, who had shown
-him the inside of his own head, was given a place of honour near the
-king.</p>
-
-<p>But on the day of the coronation, louder than the shouts of the people,
-and nearer even than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">306</a></span> the voice of his queen, sounded that voice of the
-wise and good Self, which was but the Thought, deep within the soul of
-the king:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Hail to Hazen&mdash;King of All His Selves!”</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">307</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xvi" id="xvi"></a>XVI<br />
-<span>THE WALK</span></h2>
-
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">What’s</span> the latest you ever stayed up?” Delia demanded of Mary
-Elizabeth and me.</p>
-
-<p>“I sat up till ten o’clock once when my aunt was coming,” I boasted.</p>
-
-<p>“Once I was on a train that got in at twelve o’clock,” said Mary
-Elizabeth, thoughtfully, “but I was asleep till the train got in. Would
-you call that sitting up till twelve o’clock?”</p>
-
-<p>On the whole, Delia and I decided that you could not impartially call
-it so, and Mary Elizabeth conceded the point. Her next best experience
-was dated at only half past nine.</p>
-
-<p>“I was up till eleven o’clock lots of times.” Delia threw out
-carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>We regarded her with awe. Here was another glory for her list. Already
-we knew that she had slept in a sleeping car, patted an elephant, and
-swum four strokes.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the earliest you ever got up?” Delia pursued.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">308</a></span>
-Here, too, we proved to have nothing to compete with the order of
-Delia’s risings. However, this might yet be mended. There seemed never
-to be the same household ban on getting up early that there was on
-staying up late.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s get up some morning before four o’clock and take a walk,” I
-suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“My brother got up at half past three once,” Mary Elizabeth announced.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I said, “let’s get up at half past three. Let’s do it to-morrow
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth and I had stretched a string from a little bell at
-the head of her bed to a little bell at the head of my bed. This the
-authorities permitted us to ring so long as there was discernible a
-light, or any other fixed signal, at the two windows; and also after
-seven o’clock in the morning. But of course the time when we both
-longed most frantically to pull the cord was when either woke at night
-and lay alone in the darkness. In the night I used to put my hand on
-the string and think how, by a touch, I could waken Mary Elizabeth,
-just as if she were in my room, just as if we were hand in hand. I
-used to think what joy it would be if all little children on the same
-side<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">309</a></span> of the ocean were similarly provided, and if no one interfered.
-A little code of signals arose in my mind, a kind of secret code which
-should be heard by nobody save those for whom they were intended&mdash;for
-sick children, for frightened children, for children just having a bad
-dream, for motherless children, for cold or tired or lonely children,
-for all children sleepless for any cause. I used to wish that little
-signals like this could be rung for all unhappy children, night or day.
-Why, with all their inventions, had not grown people invented this? Of
-course they would never make things any harder for us than they could
-help (we thought). But why had they not done this thing to make things
-easier?</p>
-
-<p>The half past three proposal was unanimously vetoed within doors: We
-might rise at five o’clock, no earlier. This somewhat took edge from
-the adventure, but we accepted it as next best. Delia was to be waked
-by an alarm clock. Mary Elizabeth and I felt that, by some mysterious
-means, we could waken ourselves; and we two agreed to call each other,
-so to say, by the bells.</p>
-
-<p>When I did waken, it was still quite dark, and when I had found light
-and a clock, I saw that it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">310</a></span> was only a little after three. As I had
-gone to bed at seven, I was wide awake at three; and it occurred to me
-that I would stay up till time to call Mary Elizabeth. This would be
-at half past four. Besides, stopping up then presented an undoubted
-advantage: It enabled me to skip my bath. Clearly I could not, with
-courtesy, risk rousing the household with many waters.</p>
-
-<p>I dressed in the dark, braided my own hair in the dark&mdash;by now I could
-do this save that the plait, when I brought it over my shoulder, still
-would assume a jog&mdash;and sat down by the open window. It was one of the
-large nights ... for some nights are undeniably larger than others.
-When I was on the street with my hand in a grown-up hand, the night
-was invariably bounded by trees, fences, houses, lawns, horse-blocks,
-and the like. But when I stepped to the door alone at night, I always
-noticed that it stretched endlessly away. So it was now. I could slip
-out the screen, as I had discovered earlier in the season when I had
-felt the need of feeding a nest of house-wrens in the bird-house below
-my sill&mdash;and I took out the screen now, and leaned out in the darkness.
-The stars seemed very near&mdash;I am always glad that I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">311</a></span> did not know how
-far away they are, for they looked so friendly near. If only, I used
-to think, the clouds would form <em>behind</em> the stars and leave them all
-shiny and blurry bright in the rain. What were they? How came they to
-be in our world’s sky?</p>
-
-<p>I suppose that I had been ten minutes at the window that morning when
-I saw a light briefly flash in Mary Elizabeth’s window. Instantly, I
-softly pulled my bell. She answered, and then I could see her, dim in
-the window once more dark.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t time yet!” she called softly&mdash;our houses were very near.</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet,” I answered, “but I’m going to stay up.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth briefly considered this.</p>
-
-<p>“What for?” she propounded.</p>
-
-<p>I had not thought what for.</p>
-
-<p>“To&mdash;why to be up early,” I answered confidently. “I’m all dressed.”</p>
-
-<p>The defence must have carried conviction.</p>
-
-<p>“I will, too,” Mary Elizabeth concluded.</p>
-
-<p>She disappeared and, after a suitable time, reappeared at the window,
-presumably fully clothed. I detached the bell from my bed and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">312</a></span> sat with
-it in my hand, and I found afterward that she had done the same. From
-time to time we each gave the cord a slight, ecstatic pull. The whole
-mystery of the great night lay in those gentle signals.</p>
-
-<p>It is unfortunate to have to confess that, after a time, the mystery
-palled. But it did. Stars, wide, dark, moonless lawn, empty street,
-all these blurred and merged in a single impression. This was one of
-chilliness. Even calling through the night at intervals, and at the
-imminent risk of being heard, lost its charm, because after a little
-while there was nothing left to call. “How still it is!” and “Nobody
-but us is up in town,” and “Won’t Delia be mad?” lose their edge when
-repeated for about the third time each. Moreover, I was obliged to face
-a new foe: I was getting sleepy.</p>
-
-<p>Without undue disturbance of the cord, I managed to consult the clock
-once more. It was five minutes of four. There remained more than an
-hour to wait! It was I who capitulated.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary Elizabeth,” I said waveringly, “would you care very much if I was
-to lay down just a little to rest my eyes?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I wouldn’t care,” came with significant alacrity. “I will, too.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">313</a></span>
-I lay down on the covers and pulled a comforter about me. As I drifted
-off I remember wondering how the dark ever kept awake all night. For it
-was awake. To know that one had only to listen.</p>
-
-<p>We all had a signal which we called a “trill,” made by tongue and
-teeth, with almost the force of a boy and a blade of grass. This,
-produced furiously beneath my window, was what wakened me. Delia stood
-between the two houses, engaged with such absorption in manufacturing
-this sound that she failed to see me at the window. A moment after
-I had hailed her, Mary Elizabeth appeared at her window, looking
-distinctly distraught.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing us fully dressed, Delia’s indignation increased.</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you leave me know you were up?” she demanded shrilly. “It’s
-a quarter past five. I been out here fifteen minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>We were assuring her guiltily that we would be right down when there
-came an interruption.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Delia!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Delia’s father, in a gray bath-robe, stood at an upper window of their
-house across the street.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by waking up the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">314</a></span> neighbourhood?” he inquired,
-not without reason. “Now I want you to come home.”</p>
-
-<p>“We were going walking,” Delia reminded him.</p>
-
-<p>“You are coming home at once after this proceeding,” Delia’s father
-assured her. “No more words please, Delia.”</p>
-
-<p>He disappeared from the window. Delia moved reluctantly across the
-street. As she went, she threw a resentful glance at Mary Elizabeth and
-me, each.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry, Delia!” we called softly in chorus. She made no reply. Mary
-Elizabeth and I were left staring at each other down our bell-rope,
-no longer taut, but limp, as we had left it earlier.... Even in that
-stress, the unearthly sweetness of the morning smote me&mdash;the early sun,
-the early shadows. It all looked so exactly as if it had expected you
-not to be looking. This is the look of outdoors that, <em>now</em>, will most
-quickly take me back.</p>
-
-<p>“It wouldn’t be fair to go walking without Delia,” said Mary Elizabeth,
-abruptly and positively.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” I agreed, with equal decision. Then, “We might as well go back to
-bed,” I pursued the subject further.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s,” said Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">315</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xvii" id="xvii"></a>XVII<br />
-<span>THE GREAT BLACK HUSH</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On</span> that special night, which somehow I remember with tenderness, I
-sometimes think now&mdash;all these years after&mdash;that I should like to have
-been with those solitary, sleepy little figures, trying so hard to get
-near to mystery. I should think that a Star Story must have come in
-anybody’s head to tell them. Like this:&mdash;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Once, when it didn’t matter to anybody whether you were late or early,
-or quick or slow, not only because there wasn’t anybody and there
-wasn’t any you, but because it was back in the beginning when there
-were no lates and earlies and quicks and slows, <em>then</em> things began to
-happen in the middle of the Great Black Hush which was all there was to
-everything.</p>
-
-<p>The Great Black Hush reached all the way around the Universe and in
-directions without any names, and it was huge and humble and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">316</a></span> superior
-and helpless and mighty and in other ways it was very much indeed like
-a man. And as there was nothing to do, the Great Black Hush was bored
-past extinction and almost to creation. For there wasn’t anything else
-about save only the Wind, and the Wind would have nothing whatever to
-do with him and always blew right by.</p>
-
-<p>Now, inasmuch as everything that is now was then going to be created,
-it was all waiting somewhere to be created; and nothing is clearer than
-that. Lines and colours and musics and tops and blocks and flame and
-Noah’s arks and mechanical toys and mountains and paints and planets
-and air and water and alphabets and jumping-jacks, all, all, were
-waiting to be created, and among them waited people. I cannot tell you
-where they waited, because there was no where; but they were waiting,
-as anybody can see, for time to be begun.</p>
-
-<p>Among the people who were waiting about was one special baby, who was
-just big enough to reach out after everything and to try to put it in
-his mouth, and they had an awful time with him. He put his little hands
-on coloured things and on flame things and on air and on water and on
-musics, and he wanted to know what they all were, and he tried to put
-them in his mouth. And his mother was perfectly distracted, and she
-told him so, openly.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<a name="to" id="to"></a>
-<img src="images/i_316fp.jpg" width="400" height="532" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">“<span class="smcap">To see what running away is really like.</span>”</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">317</a></span>
-“Special Baby,” she said to him openly, “I don’t see why every hair
-in my head is not pure white. And if you don’t stop making so much
-trouble, I’ll run away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Run away,” thought the Special Baby. “Now what thing is that?”</p>
-
-<p>And he stretched out his little hand to see, but there wasn’t anything
-there, and he couldn’t put it in his mouth; so without letting anybody
-know, he started off all by himself to see what running away is really
-like.</p>
-
-<p>He ran and he ran, past lines and colours and blocks and flame and
-music and paint and planets, all waiting about to begin, till he began
-to notice the Great Black Hush, where it lay all humble and important,
-and bored past extinction and almost to creation.</p>
-
-<p>“What thing is that?” thought the Special Baby, and put out his little
-hand to get it and put it in his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>So he touched the Great Black Hush, and under the little hand the Great
-Black Hush felt as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">318</a></span> never he had felt before. For the Special Baby’s
-hand was soft and wandering and most clinging&mdash;any General Baby’s hand
-will give you the idea if you care to try. And it made it seem as if
-there were something to do.</p>
-
-<p>All through his huge, helpless, superior, and mighty being the Great
-Black Hush was stirred, and when the Special Baby was frightened and
-would have gone back, the Great Black Hush did the most astonishing
-things to try to keep him. He plaited the darkness up like a ruffle
-and waved it like a flag and opened it like a flower and shut it like
-a door and poured it about like water, all to keep the Special Baby
-amused. But though the Special Baby tried to put most of these and
-<em>all</em> the dark in his mouth, still on the whole he was badly frightened
-and wanted his mother, and he began to cry to show how much he wanted
-her. And then the Great Black Hush was at his wits’ end.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, who is there to be the mother of this Special Baby?” he cried in
-despair, for there wasn’t anything else anywhere around, save only the
-Wind, and the Wind always blew right by. But the blowing by must have
-been because the Great Black Hush had never spoken before,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">319</a></span> for these
-were the first words that ever he had said; and the Wind, on hearing
-them, stopped still as a stone, and listened.</p>
-
-<p>“Would I do?” the Wind asked, and the Great Black Hush was so
-astonished that he almost dropped the Special Baby.</p>
-
-<p>“Would I do?” asked the Wind again, and made the dark like blown
-garments and like long, blown hair and tender motions, such as women
-make. And she took the Special Baby in her arms and rocked him as
-gently as boughs, so that he laughed with delight and tried to put the
-wind in his mouth and finally went to sleep, with his beads on.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Now</em> what’ll we do?” said the Great Black Hush, hanging about, all
-helpless and mighty.</p>
-
-<p>“We can get along without a cradle,” said the Wind, “because I will
-rock him to sleep in my arms.” (This was before time began and before
-they laid them down to go to sleep alone in a dark room.) “But we
-ought, we <em>ought</em>,” she added, “to have something for him to play with
-when he wakes up.” (This was before time began and before anybody ate.
-But they always played. That came first.)</p>
-
-<p>“If he had something to play with, what would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">320</a></span> that look like?” asked
-the Great Black Hush, all helpless.</p>
-
-<p>“It musn’t have points like scissors, or ends like string, and the
-paint mustn’t come off. I think,” said the Wind, “it ought to look like
-a shining ball.”</p>
-
-<p>“By my distance,” said the Great Black Hush, all mighty, “that’s what
-it shall look like.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he began to make a plaything, and he worked all over him and all
-over everywhere at the fashioning. I don’t know how he did it, because
-I wasn’t there, and I can’t reckon how long it took him, because there
-wasn’t any time, but I know some things about it all, and one is that
-he finally got it done.</p>
-
-<p>“Look!” the Great Black Hush cried to the Wind,&mdash;for she paid more
-attention to the Special Baby now than she did to him. And when she
-looked, there hung in the sky, a great, enormous, shining ball.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s big enough so he can’t get it in his mouth,” she said
-approvingly. “It’s really ginginatic.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean gigantic, dear,” said the Great Black Hush, all superior. But
-the Wind didn’t care because words hadn’t been used long enough<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">321</a></span> to fit
-closely, and besides he had said “dear” and she knew what <em>that</em> meant.
-“Dear” came before “gigantic.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now wake him up,” said the Great Black Hush, “to play with it.”</p>
-
-<p>But this the Wind would by no means do. She said the Special Baby must
-have his sleep out or he’d be cross. And the Great Black Hush wondered
-however she knew that, and he went away, all humble, and amused himself
-making more playthings till the baby woke up. And all the playthings
-looked like shining balls, because that was the only kind of plaything
-the Wind had told him to make and he didn’t know whether anything
-else would do. So he made them by the thousands and started them all
-swinging because he thought the Special Baby would like them to do that.</p>
-
-<p>By-and-by&mdash;there was always by-and-by before there was any time, and
-that is why so many people prefer it&mdash;when he couldn’t stay any longer,
-he went back where the Wind waited, cuddling the Special Baby close.</p>
-
-<p>“Sh-h-h-h,” said the Wind, but she was too late, and the Special Baby
-woke up, with wide eyes and a smile in them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">322</a></span>
-But he wasn’t cross. For the minute he opened his eyes he saw all
-the thousands of shining balls hanging in the darkness and swinging,
-swinging, and he crowed with delight and stretched out his little hands
-for them, but they were so big he couldn’t put them in his mouth and so
-he might reach out all he pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ho</em>,” said the Great Black Hush, “now everything is as it never was
-before.”</p>
-
-<p>But the Wind sighed a little.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish everything were more so,” she said. “I ought to have a place to
-take the Special Baby and make his clothes and mend his socks and tie
-on his shoes and rub his little back. Also, I want to learn a lullaby,
-and this is so public.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the Great Black Hush thought and thought, and remembered that away
-back on the Outermost Way and beneath the Wild Wing of Things, there
-was a tidy little place that might be just the thing. It was <em>not</em> up
-to date, because there wasn’t any date, but still he thought it might
-be just the thing.</p>
-
-<p>“By the welkin,” he said, “I know a place that is the place. I’ll go
-and sweep it out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not so fast,” said the Wind, gently. “I go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">323</a></span> also. I want to be sure
-that there are enough closets&mdash;” or whatever would have corresponded to
-that before there was any Modern at all.</p>
-
-<p>So the three went away together and groped about on the Outermost Way
-and beneath the Wild Wing of Things, and there the Wind swept it out
-tidily and there they made their home. And when it was all done,&mdash;which
-took a great while because the Wind kept wanting additions put
-on,&mdash;they came out and sat at the door of the place, the Great Black
-Hush and the Wind and the Special Baby between.</p>
-
-<p>And as they did that a wonderful thing was true. For now that the
-Great Black Hush had withdrawn to his new home, lo, all the swinging
-plaything balls were shining through space, and there was light. And
-the man and the woman and the child at the door of the first home
-looked in one another’s faces. And the man and the woman were afraid of
-the light and their look clung each to the other’s in that fear; but
-the Special Baby stretched out his little hands and tried to put the
-light in his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, dear,” said the woman, and her voice sounded quite natural.</p>
-
-<p>“Pay attention to me and not to the Baby,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">324</a></span> said the man, and <em>his</em>
-voice sounded quite natural, and very mighty, so that the woman
-obeyed&mdash;until the Special Baby wanted her again.</p>
-
-<p>And that was when she made her lullaby, and it was the first song:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center nmb">WIND SONG<a name="FNanchor_B" id="FNanchor_B"></a><a href="#Footnote_B" class="fnanchor">[B]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">Horn of the morning!</div>
-<div class="line">And the little night pipings fail.</div>
-<div class="line">The day is launched like a hollow ship</div>
-<div class="line">With the sun for a sail.</div>
-<div class="line">The way is wide and blue and lone</div>
-<div class="line">With all its miles inviolate</div>
-<div class="line">Save for the swinging stars we’ve sown</div>
-<div class="line">And a thistle of cloud remote and blown.</div>
-<div class="line">Oh, I passion for something nearer than these!</div>
-<div class="line">How shall I know that this live thing is I</div>
-<div class="line">With only the morning for proof and the sky?</div>
-<div class="line">I long for a music more soft to its keys,</div>
-<div class="line">For a touch that shall teach me the new sureties.</div>
-<div class="line">Give me some griefs and some loyalties</div>
-<div class="line">And a child’s mouth on my own!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">Lullaby, lullaby,</div>
-<div class="line">Babe of the world, swing high,</div>
-<div class="line">Swing low.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">325</a></span>
-<div class="line">I am a mother you never may know,</div>
-<div class="line">But oh</div>
-<div class="line">And oh, how long the wind will know you,</div>
-<div class="line">With lullabies for the dead night through.</div>
-<div class="line">Babe of the earth, as I blow ...</div>
-<div class="line">Swing high,</div>
-<div class="line">To touch at the sky,</div>
-<div class="line">And at last lie low.</div>
-<div class="line">Lullaby....</div>
-</div>
-<div class="footnote">
-<a name="Footnote_B" id="Footnote_B"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B"><span class="label">[B]</span></a>
-Reproduced by permission of <em>The Craftsman</em>.
-</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p>But meanwhile the Special Baby’s real mother&mdash;the one who had told him
-about running away&mdash;was hunting and hunting and <em>hunting</em> for him and
-going nearly distracted and expecting every hair in her head to turn
-pure white. She went about among all the rest, asking and calling and
-wanting to know, and finally she made up her mind that she would not
-stay where she was, but that she would run away and hunt for him. And
-she did. And when all the things that were waiting to be born heard
-about it, there was no holding them back either. So out they came,
-lines and colours and musics and tops and blocks and flame and Noah’s
-arks and mechanical toys and mountains and planets and paints and air
-and water and alphabets<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">326</a></span> and jumping-jacks, all, all came out in the
-wake of the lost Special Baby. And some came early and some came late,
-some hurried and some hung back. And among all these came people, and
-many and many of the to-be-born things were hidden in peoples’ hearts
-and did not appear till long after; and this was true of some things
-which I have not mentioned at all, and of some that have not appeared
-even yet. But some people did not bring anything in their hearts, and
-they merely observed that it was a shameful waste, so many shining
-balls swinging about and only the Special Baby to play with them, and
-<em>he</em> evidently eternally lost.</p>
-
-<p>But the Special Baby’s real mother didn’t say a word. She only ran and
-ran on, asking and calling and wanting to know. And at last she came
-to the Outermost Way and near the Wild Wing of Things, and the Special
-Baby heard her coming. And when he heard that, he made his choicest
-coo-noise in his throat and he stretched out his arms to his real
-mother that he was used to.</p>
-
-<p>And when his real mother heard the coo-noise, she brushed aside the
-Wild Wing of Things and took him in her arms&mdash;and she never saw the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">327</a></span>
-Wind and the Great Black Hush at all, because they are that kind. So
-she carried the Special Baby off, kicking and crowing and catching at
-the swinging, shining balls&mdash;but they were too big to put in his mouth
-so there was no danger&mdash;and <em>she</em> hunted up a place where she could
-make his clothes and mend his socks and tie on his shoes and rub his
-little back. But about them all things were going on, and everybody
-else was doing the same thing, so nobody noticed.</p>
-
-<p>Then, all alone before their home on the Outermost Way and beneath the
-Wild Wing of Things that was all brushed aside, the Great Black Hush
-and the Wind looked at each other. And their look clung, as when they
-had first found light, and they were afraid. For now all space was
-glowing and shining with swinging balls, and all the things were being
-born and making homes, and time was rushing by so fast that it awed
-them who had never seen such a thing before.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>What</em> have we done?” demanded the Great Black Hush.</p>
-
-<p>But the Wind was not so much concerned with that. She only grieved and
-grieved for the Special Baby. And the Great Black Hush<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">328</a></span> comforted her,
-and I think he comforts her unto this day.</p>
-
-<p>Only at night. Then, as you know, the Great Black Hush comes from the
-Outermost Way and fills the air, and with him often and often comes the
-Wind. And together they wander among all the shining balls&mdash;you will
-know this, if you listen, on many a night&mdash;and together they look for
-the Special Baby. But <em>he</em> has grown up, long and long ago, only he
-still stretches out his hands to everything, for he is the way he was
-made.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">329</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xviii" id="xviii"></a>XVIII<br />
-<span>THE DECORATION OF INDEPENDENCE</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">That</span> year we celebrated Fourth of July in the Wood Yard.</p>
-
-<p>The town had decided not to have a celebration, though we did not know
-who had done the actual deciding, and this we used to talk about.</p>
-
-<p>“How can the <em>town</em> decide anything?” Delia asked sceptically. “When
-does it do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said Margaret Amelia&mdash;to whom, her father being a judge, we
-always turned to explain matters of state, “its principal folks say so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are its principal folks?” I demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said Margaret Amelia, “I should think you could tell that. They
-have the stores and offices and live in the residence part.”</p>
-
-<p>I pondered this, for most of the folk in the little town did neither of
-these things.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t they have another Fourth of July for the rest, then,” I
-suggested, “and leave them settle on their own celebration?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">330</a></span>
-Margaret Amelia looked shocked.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you don’t know much about the Decoration of Independence,”
-said she.</p>
-
-<p>The Decoration of Independence&mdash;we all called it this&mdash;was, then, to go
-by without attention because the Town said so.</p>
-
-<p>“The Town,” said Mary Elizabeth, dreamily, “the Town. It sounds like
-somebody tall, very high, and pointed at the top, with the rest of her
-dark and long and flowy&mdash;don’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“City,” she and I were agreed, sounded like somebody light and sitting
-down with her skirts spread out.</p>
-
-<p>“Village” sounded like a little soft hollow, not much of any colour,
-with a steeple to it.</p>
-
-<p>“I like ‘Town’ best,” Mary Elizabeth said. “It sounds more like a
-mother-woman. ‘City’ sounds like a lady-woman. And ‘Village’ sounds
-like a grandma-woman. I like ‘Town’ best.”</p>
-
-<p>“What I want to do,” Margaret Amelia said restlessly, “is to spend
-my Fourth of July dollar. I had a Fourth of July dollar ever since
-Christmas. It’s no fun spending it with no folks and bands and wagons.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got my birthday dollar yet,” I contributed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">331</a></span> “If I spent it for
-Fourth of July, I’d be glad of it, but if I spend it for anything else,
-I’ll want it back.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had a dollar,” said Calista, gloomily, “but I used a quarter of
-it up on the circus. Now I’m glad I did. I wish’t I’d stayed to the
-sideshow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stitchy Branchitt says,” Betty offered, “that the boys are all going
-to Poynette and spend their money there. Poynette’s got exercises.”</p>
-
-<p>Oh, the boys would get a Fourth. Trust them. But what about us? We
-could not go to Poynette. We could not rise at three <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> and
-fire off fire-crackers. No fascinating itinerant hucksters would come
-the way of a town that held no celebration. We had nowhere to spend our
-substance, and to do that was to us what Fourth of July implied.</p>
-
-<p>The New Boy came wandering by, eating something. Boys were always
-eating something that looked better than anything we saw in the
-candy-shop. Where did they get it? This that he had was soft and pink
-and chewy, and it rapidly disappeared as he approached us.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Amelia Rodman threw back her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">332</a></span> curls and flashed a sudden
-radiant smile at the New Boy. She became quite another person from the
-judicious, somewhat haughty creature whom we knew.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s us get up a Fourth of July celebration,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>We held our breath. It never would have occurred to us. But now that
-she suggested it, why not?</p>
-
-<p>The New Boy leaped up on a gate-post and sat looking down at us,
-chewing.</p>
-
-<p>“How?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Get up a partition,” said Margaret Amelia. “Circulate it like for
-take-a-walk at school or teacher’s present, and all sign.”</p>
-
-<p>“And take it to who?” asked the New Boy.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Amelia considered.</p>
-
-<p>“My father,” she proposed.</p>
-
-<p>The scope of the idea was enormous. Her father was a judge and wore
-very black clothes every day, and never spoke to any of us. Therefore
-he must be a great man. Doubtless he could do anything.</p>
-
-<p>Boys, as we knew them, usually flouted everything that we
-said, but&mdash;possibly because of Margaret Amelia’s manner of
-presentation&mdash;this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">333</a></span> suggestion seemed to strike the New Boy favourably.
-Afterward we learned that this was probably partly owing to the fact
-that the fare to Poynette was going to eat distressingly into the boys’
-Fourth money, unless they walked the ten miles.</p>
-
-<p>By common consent we had Margaret Amelia and the New Boy draw up the
-“partition.” But we all spent a long time on it, and at length it
-read:&mdash;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“We the Undersigned want there should be a July 4 this year.
-We the Undersigned would like a big one. But if it can’t be so
-very big account of no money, We the Undersigned would like one
-anyway, and hereby respectfully partition about this in the
-name of the Decoration of Independence.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>There was some doubt whether or not to close this document with “Always
-sincerely” but we decided to add only the names, and these we set out
-to secure, the New Boy carrying one copy and Margaret Amelia another. I
-remember that, to honour the occasion, she put on a pale blue crocheted
-shawl of her mother’s and we all trailed in her wake, worshipfully.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">334</a></span>
-The lists grew amazingly. Long before noon we had to get new papers. By
-night we had every child that we knew, save Stitchy Branchitt. He had a
-railroad pass to Poynette, and he favoured the out-of-town celebration.
-But the personal considerations of economic conditions were as usual
-sufficient to swing the event, and the next morning I suppose that
-twenty-five or thirty of us, bearing the names of three or four times
-as many, marched into Judge Rodman’s office.</p>
-
-<p>On the stairs Margaret Amelia had a thought.</p>
-
-<p>“Does your father pay taxes?” she inquired of Mary Elizabeth&mdash;who was
-with us, having been sent down town for starch.</p>
-
-<p>“On his watch&mdash;he used to,” said Mary Elizabeth, doubtfully. “But he
-hasn’t got that any more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t know,” said Margaret Amelia, “whether we’d really
-ought to of put down any names that their fathers don’t pay taxes. It
-may make a difference. I guess you’re the only one we got that their
-fathers don’t&mdash;that he ain’t&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>I fancy that what Margaret Amelia had in mind was that Mary Elizabeth’s
-father was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">335</a></span> only one who lived meanly; for many of the others must
-have gone untaxed, but they lived in trim, rented houses, and we knew
-no difference.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth was visibly disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>“I never thought of that,” she said. “Maybe I better scratch me off.”</p>
-
-<p>But there seemed to me to be something indefinably the matter with this.</p>
-
-<p>“The Fourth of July is for everybody, isn’t it?” I said. “Didn’t the
-whole country think of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think it’s like a town though,” said Margaret Amelia. “The principal
-folks decided it, I’m sure. And they <em>always</em> pay taxes.”</p>
-
-<p>We appealed to the New Boy, as authority superior even to Margaret
-Amelia. How was this&mdash;did the Decoration of Independence mean
-everybody, or not? Could Mary Elizabeth sign the partition since her
-father paid no taxes?</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the New Boy, “it <em>says</em> everybody, don’t it? But nobody
-ever gets to ride in the parade but distinguished citizens&mdash;it always
-says them, you know. I s’pose maybe it meant the folks that pays the
-taxes, only it didn’t like to put it in.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">336</a></span>
-“I better take my name off,” said Mary Elizabeth, decidedly. “It might
-hurt.”</p>
-
-<p>So the New Boy produced a stump of pencil, and we found the right
-paper, and held it up against the wall of the stairway, and Mary
-Elizabeth scratched her name off.</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t come up, then,” she whispered to me, and made her way down the
-stairs, her head held very high.</p>
-
-<p>Judge Rodman was in his office&mdash;he makes, I find, my eternal picture
-of “judge,” short, thick, frock-coated, bearded, bald, spectacled,
-square-toed, and with his hands full of loose papers and his
-watch-chain shining.</p>
-
-<p>“Bless us,” he said, too, as a judge should.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Amelia was ahead,&mdash;still in the pale blue crocheted
-shawl,&mdash;and she and the New Boy laid down the papers, and the judge
-picked them up, and read. His big pink face flushed the more, and
-he took off his spectacles and brushed his eyes, and he cleared his
-throat, and beamed down on us, and stood nodding.... I remember that he
-had an editorial in his paper the next night called “A Lesson to the
-Community,” and another, later, “Out of the Mouths of Babes”&mdash;for Judge
-Rodman was a very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">337</a></span> great man, and owned the newspaper and the brewery
-and the principal department store, and had been to the legislature;
-and his newspaper was always thick with editorials about honouring the
-flag and reverencing authority and the beauties of home life&mdash;Miss
-Messmore used to cut them out and read them to us at General Exercises.</p>
-
-<p>So Judge Rodman called a Town meeting in the Engine House, and we all
-hung about the door downstairs, because they said that if children
-went to the meeting, they would scrape their feet on the bare floor
-so that nobody could hear a sound; and so we waited outside until we
-heard hands clapped and the Doxology sung, and then we knew that it had
-passed.</p>
-
-<p>We were having a new Court House that year, so the Court House yard
-was not available for exercises: and the school grounds had been sown
-with grass seed in the beginning of vacation, and the market-place was
-nothing but a small vacant lot. So there was only one place to have
-the exercises: the Wood Yard. And as there was very little money to
-do anything with, it was voted to ask the women to take charge of the
-celebration and arrange<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">338</a></span> something “tasty, up-to-date, and patriotic,”
-as Judge Rodman put it. They set themselves to do it. And none of
-us who were the children then will ever forget that Fourth of July
-celebration&mdash;yet this is not because of what the women planned, nor of
-anything that the committee of which Judge Rodman was chairman thought
-to do for the sake of the day.</p>
-
-<p>Our discussion of their plans was not without pessimism.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course what they get up won’t be any <em>real</em> good,” the New Boy
-advanced. “They’ll stick the school organ up on the platform, and
-that sounds awful skimpy outdoors. And the church choirs’ll sing. And
-somebody’ll stand up and scold and go on about nothing. But it’ll get
-folks here, and balloon men, and stuff to sell, and a band; so I s’pose
-we can stand the other doin’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“And there’s fireworks on the canal bank in the evening,” we reminded
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Fourth of July morning began as usual before it dawned. The New Boy and
-the ten of his tribe assembled at half past three on the lawn between
-our house and that of the New Family, and, at a rough estimate, each
-fired off the cost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">339</a></span> of his fare to Poynette and return. Mary Elizabeth
-and I awoke and listened, giving occasional ecstatic pulls at our bell.
-Then we rose and watched the boys go ramping on toward other fields,
-and, we breathed the dim beauty of the hour, and, I think, wondered if
-it knew that it was Fourth of July, and we went back to bed, conscious
-that we were missing a good sixth of the day, a treasure which, as
-usual, the boys were sharing.</p>
-
-<p>After her work was done, Mary Elizabeth and I took our bags of
-torpedoes and popped them off on the front bricks. Delia was allowed
-to have fire-crackers if she did not shoot them off by herself, and
-she was ardently absorbed in them on their horse-block, with her
-father. Calista had brothers, and had put her seventy-five cents in
-with their money on condition that she be allowed to stay with them
-through the day. Margaret Amelia and Betty always stopped at home until
-annual giant crackers were fired from before their piazza, with Judge
-Rodman officiating in his shirt-sleeves, and Mrs. Rodman watching in
-a starched white “wrapper” on the veranda and uttering little cries,
-all under the largest flag that there was in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">340</a></span> town, floating from
-the highest flagpole. Mary Elizabeth and I had glimpses of them all in
-a general survey which we made, resulting in satisfactory proof that
-the expected merry-go-round, the pop-corn wagon, a chocolate cart, an
-ice-cream cone man, and a balloon man and woman were already posted
-expectantly about.</p>
-
-<p>“If it wasn’t for them, though,” observed Mary Elizabeth to me, “the
-town wouldn’t be really acting like Fourth of July, do you think so? It
-just kind of lazes along, like a holiday.”</p>
-
-<p>We looked critically at the sunswept street. The general aspect of the
-time was that people had seized upon it to do a little extra watering,
-or some postponed weeding, or to tinker at the screens.</p>
-
-<p>“How could it act, though?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Mary Elizabeth, “a river flows, don’t it? And I s’pose a
-mountain towers. And the sea keeps a-coming in ... and they all act
-like themselves. Only just a Town don’t take any notice of itself&mdash;even
-on the Fourth.”</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon we were all dressed in our white dresses&mdash;“Mine used
-to have a sprig in it,” said Mary Elizabeth, “but it’s so faded out
-anybody’d ’most say it was white, don’t you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">341</a></span> think so?”&mdash;and we
-children met at the Rodmans’&mdash;where Margaret Amelia and Betty appeared
-in white embroidered dresses and blue ribbons and blue stockings, and
-we marched down the hill, behind the band, to the Wood Yard. The Wood
-Yard had great flags and poles set at intervals, with bunting festooned
-between, and the platform was covered with bunting, and the great
-open space of the yard was laid with board benches. Place in front
-was reserved for us, and already the rest of the town packed the Yard
-and hung about the fences. Stitchy Branchitt had given up his journey
-to Poynette after all, and had established a lemonade stand at the
-Wood Yard gate&mdash;“a fool thing to do,” the New Boy observed plainly.
-“He knows we’ve spent all we had, and the big folks never think
-your stuff’s clean.” But Stitchy was enormously enjoying himself by
-deafeningly shouting:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s what you get&mdash;here’s what you get&mdash;here’s what you get.
-Cheap&mdash;cheap&mdash;<em>cheap!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“Quit cheepin’ like some kind o’ bir-r-rd,” said the New Boy, out of
-one corner of his mouth, as he passed him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">342</a></span>
-Just inside the Wood Yard gate I saw, with something of a shock, Mary
-Elizabeth’s father standing. He was leaning against the fence, with
-his arms folded, and as he caught the look of Mary Elizabeth, who was
-walking with me, he smiled, and I was further surprised to see how
-kind his eyes were. They were almost like my own father’s eyes. This
-seemed to me somehow a very curious thing, and I turned and looked at
-Mary Elizabeth, and thought: “Why, it’s her <em>father</em>&mdash;just the same as
-mine.” It surprised me, too, to see him there. When I came to think of
-it, I had never before seen him where folk were. Always, unless Mary
-Elizabeth were with him, he had been walking alone, or sitting down
-where other people never sat.</p>
-
-<p>Judge Rodman was on the platform, and as soon as the band and the
-choirs would let him&mdash;he made several false starts at rhetorical pauses
-in the music&mdash;he introduced a clergyman who had always lived in the
-town and who prayed for the continuance of peace and the safe conquest
-of all our enemies. Then Judge Rodman himself made the address, having
-generously consented to do so when it was proposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">343</a></span> to keep the money
-in the town by hiring a local speaker. He began with the Norsemen and
-descended through Queen Isabella and Columbus and the Colonies, making
-a détour of Sir Walter Raleigh and his cloak, Benedict Arnold, Israel
-Putnam and Pocahontas, and so by way of Valley Forge and the Delaware
-to Faneuil Hall and the spirit of 1776. It was a grand flight, filled
-with what were afterward freely referred to as magnificent passages
-about the storm, the glory of war, and the love of our fellow-men.</p>
-
-<p>(“Supposing you happen to love the enemy,” said Mary Elizabeth,
-afterward.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, a pretty thing that would be to do,” said the New Boy, shocked.</p>
-
-<p>“We had it in the Sunday school lesson,” Mary Elizabeth maintained.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well,” said the New Boy. “I don’t mean about such things. I mean
-about what you <em>do</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>But I remember that Mary Elizabeth still looked puzzled.)</p>
-
-<p>Especially was Judge Rodman’s final sentence generally repeated for
-days afterward:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“At Faneuil Hall,” said the judge, “the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">344</a></span> hour at last had struck. The
-hands on the face of the clock stood still. ‘The force of Nature could
-no further go.’ The supreme thing had been accomplished. Henceforth
-we were embalmed in the everlasting and unchangeable essence of
-freedom&mdash;freedom&mdash;<em>freedom</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, he held our attention from the first, both because he did not
-read what he said, and because the ice in the pitcher at his elbow had
-melted before he began and did not require watching.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the moment when, having completed his address, he took up
-the Decoration of Independence, to read it; and began the hunt for his
-spectacles. We watched him go through his pockets, but we did so with
-an interest which somewhat abated when he began the second round.</p>
-
-<p>“What <em>is</em> the Decoration of Independence, anyhow?” I whispered to Mary
-Elizabeth, our acquaintance with it having been limited to learning it
-“by heart” in school.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, don’t you know?” Mary Elizabeth returned. “It’s that thing Miss
-Messmore can say so fast. It’s when we was the British.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who decorated it?” I wanted to know.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">345</a></span>
-“George Washington,” replied Mary Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>“How?” I pressed it. “How’d he do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know&mdash;but I think that’s what he wanted of the cherry
-blossoms,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>At this point Judge Rodman gave up the search.</p>
-
-<p>“I deeply regret,” said he, “that I shall be obliged to forego my
-reading of our national document which, next to the Constitution
-itself, best embodies our unchanging principles.”</p>
-
-<p>And then he added something which smote the front rows suddenly
-breathless:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“However, it occurs to me, since this is preeminently the children’s
-celebration and since I am given to understand that our public schools
-now bestow due and proper attention upon the teaching of civil
-government, that it will be a fitting thing, a moving thing even, to
-hear these words of our great foundation spoken in childish tones. Miss
-Messmore, can you, as teacher of the city schools, in the grades where
-the idea of our celebration so fittingly originated, among the tender
-young, can you recommend, madam, perhaps, one of your bright pupils
-to repeat for us these undying utterances whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">346</a></span> commitment has now
-become, as I understand it, a part of our public school curriculum?”</p>
-
-<p>There was an instant’s pause, and then I heard Margaret Amelia Rodman’s
-name spoken. Miss Messmore had uttered it. Judge Rodman was repeating
-it, smiling blandly down with a pleased diffidence.</p>
-
-<p>“There can be no one more fitted to do this, Judge Rodman,” Miss
-Messmore had promptly said, “than your daughter, Margaret Amelia, at
-whose suggestion this celebration, indeed, has come about.”</p>
-
-<p>Poor Margaret Amelia. In spite of her embroidered gown, her blue
-ribbons, and her blue stockings, I have seldom seen anyone look so
-wretched as did she when they made her mount that platform. To give her
-courage her father met her, and took her hand. And then, in his pride
-and confidence, something else occurred to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell us, Margaret Amelia,” he said with a gesture infinitely paternal,
-“how came the children to think of demanding of us wise-heads that we
-give observance to this day which we had already voted to let slip past
-unattended? What spirit moved the children to this act?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">347</a></span>
-At first Margaret Amelia merely twisted, and fingered her sash at
-the side. Margaret Amelia was always called on for visitors’ days,
-and the like. She could usually command her faculties and give a
-straightforward answer, not so much because of what she knew as because
-of her unfailing self-confidence. Of this her father was serenely
-aware; but, aware also that the situation made unusual demands, he
-concluded to help her somewhat.</p>
-
-<p>“How came the children,” he encouragingly put it, “to think of making
-this fine effort to save our National holiday this year?”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Amelia straightened slightly. She faced her audience with
-something of her native confidence, and told them:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” she said, “we all had some Fourth of July money, and there
-wasn’t going to be any way to spend it.”</p>
-
-<p>A ripple of laughter ran round, and Judge Rodman’s placid pink turned
-to purple.</p>
-
-<p>“I fear,” he observed gravely, “that the immediate nature of the event
-has somewhat obscured the real significance of the children’s most
-superior movement. Now, my child! Miss Messmore thinks that you should
-recite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">348</a></span> for us at least a portion of the Declaration of Independence.
-Will you do so?”</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Amelia looked at him, down at us, away toward the waiting Wood
-Yard, and then at Miss Messmore.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it that about ‘The shades of night were falling fast’?” she
-demanded.</p>
-
-<p>In the roar of laughter that followed, Margaret Amelia ran down, poor
-child, and sobbed on Miss Messmore’s shoulder. I never think of that
-moment without something of a return of my swelling sympathy for her
-who suffered this species of martyrdom, and so needlessly. I have seen,
-out of schools and out of certain of our superstitions, many martyrdoms
-result, but never one that has touched me more.</p>
-
-<p>I do not know whether something of this feeling was in the voice that
-we next heard speaking, or whether that which animated it was only its
-own bitterness. That voice sounded, clear and low-pitched, through the
-time’s confusion.</p>
-
-<p>“I will read the Declaration of Independence,” it said.</p>
-
-<p>And making his way through the crowd, and mounting the platform steps,
-we saw Mary Elizabeth’s father.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">349</a></span>
-Instinctively I put out my hand to her. But he was wholly himself,
-and this I think that she knew from the first. He was neatly dressed,
-and he laid his shabby hat on the table and picked up the book with a
-tranquil air of command. I remember how frail he looked as he buttoned
-his worn coat, and began to read.</p>
-
-<p>“‘We, the people of the United States&mdash;’”</p>
-
-<p>It was the first time that I had ever thought of Mary Elizabeth’s
-father as to be classed with anybody. He had never had employment, he
-belonged to no business, to no church, to no class of any sort. He
-merely lived over across the tracks, and he went and came alone. And
-here he was saying “<em>We</em>, the people of the United States,” just as if
-he belonged.</p>
-
-<p>When my vague fear had subsided lest they might stop his reading
-because he was not a taxpayer, I listened for the first time in my life
-to what he read. To be sure, I had&mdash;more or less&mdash;learned it. Now I
-listened.</p>
-
-<p>“Free and equal,” I heard him say, and I wondered what this meant.
-“Free and equal.” But there were Mary Elizabeth and I, were we equal?
-Perhaps, though, it didn’t mean little girls&mdash;only grown-ups. But there
-were Mary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">350</a></span> Elizabeth’s father and mother, and all the other fathers
-and mothers, they were grown up, and were they equal? And what were
-they free from, I wondered. Perhaps, though, I didn’t know what these
-words meant. “Free and equal” sounded like fairies, but folks I was
-accustomed to think of as burdened, and as different from one another,
-as Judge Rodman was different from Mary Elizabeth’s father. This,
-however, was the first time that ever I had caught the word right: Not
-Decoration, but Declaration of Independence, it seemed!</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth’s father finished, and closed the book, and stood for
-a moment looking over the Wood Yard. He was very tall and pale, and
-seeing him with something of dignity in his carriage I realized with
-astonishment that, if he were “dressed up,” he would look just like
-the men in the choir, just like the minister himself. Then suddenly
-he smiled round at us all, and even broke into a moment of soft and
-pleasant laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“It has been a long time,” he said, “since I have had occasion to
-remember the Declaration of Independence. I am glad to have had it
-called to my attention. We are in danger of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">351</a></span> forgetting about it&mdash;some
-of us. May I venture to suggest that, when it is taught in the schools,
-it be made quite clear to whom this document refers. And for the rest,
-my friends, God bless us all&mdash;some day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bless us,” was what Judge Rodman had said. I remember wondering if
-they meant the same thing.</p>
-
-<p>He turned and went down the steps, and at the foot he staggered a
-little, and I saw with something of pride that it was my father who
-went to him and led him away.</p>
-
-<p>At once the band struck gayly into a patriotic air, and the people on
-all the benches got to their feet, and the men took off their hats. And
-above the music I heard Stitchy Branchitt beginning to shout again:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s what you get&mdash;here’s what you get&mdash;here’s what you get!
-Something cheap&mdash;cheap&mdash;<em>cheap!</em>”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When I came home from the fireworks with Delia’s family and Mary
-Elizabeth, my father and mother were sitting on the veranda.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s we who are to blame,” I heard my father saying, “though we’re
-fine at glossing it over.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">352</a></span>
-I wondered what had happened, and I sat down on the top step and began
-to untie my last torpedo from the corner of my handkerchief. Mary
-Elizabeth had one left, too, and we had agreed to throw them on the
-stone window-sills of our rooms as a final salute.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s ask her now,” said father.</p>
-
-<p>Mother leaned toward me.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear,” she said, “father has been having a talk with Mary Elizabeth’s
-father and mother. And&mdash;when her father isn’t here any more&mdash;which may
-not be long now, we think ... would you like us to have Mary Elizabeth
-come and live here?”</p>
-
-<p>“With us?” I cried. “<em>With us?</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Yes, they meant with us.</p>
-
-<p>“To work?” I demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“To be,” mother said.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, <em>yes!</em>” I welcomed it. “But her father&mdash;where will he be?”</p>
-
-<p>“In a little while now,” father said, “he will be free&mdash;and perhaps
-even equal.”</p>
-
-<p>I did not understand this wholly. Besides, there was far too much to
-think about. I turned toward the house of the New Family. A light
-glowed in Mary Elizabeth’s room. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">353</a></span> brought down my torpedo on the
-brick walk, and it exploded merrily, and from Mary Elizabeth’s window
-came an answering pop.</p>
-
-<p>“Then Mary Elizabeth will get free and equal too!” I cried joyously.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">354</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xix" id="xix"></a>XIX<br />
-<span>EARTH-MOTHER</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">And</span> for that day and that night, and for all the days and all the
-nights, I should like to tell a story about the Earth, and about some
-of the things that it keeps expecting.</p>
-
-<p>And if it were Sometime Far Away&mdash;say 1950&mdash;or 2050&mdash;or 3050&mdash;I should
-like to meet some Children of Then, and tell them this story about Now,
-and hear them all talk of what a curious place the earth must have been
-long ago, and of how many things it did not yet do.</p>
-
-<p>And their Long Ago is our Now!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>For ages and ages (I should say to the Children of Then) the Earth was
-a great round place of land and water, with trees, fields, cities,
-mountains, and the like dotted about on it in a pattern; and it spun
-and spun, out in space, like an enormous engraved ball tossed up in the
-air from somewhere. And many people thought that this was all there was
-to know about it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">355</a></span> and after school they shut up their geographies and
-went about engraving new trees, fields, cities, and such things on the
-outside of the earth. And they truly thought that this was All, and
-they kept on doing it, rather tired but very independent.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Earth had a friend and companion whom nobody thought much
-about. It was Earth’s Shadow, cast by the sun in the way that any other
-shadow is cast, but it was such a big shadow that of course it fell
-far, far out in space. And as Earth went round, naturally its Shadow
-went round, and if one could have looked down, one would have seen the
-Shadow sticking out and out, so that the Earth and its Shadow-handle
-would have seemed almost like a huge saucepan filled with cities and
-people, all being held out over the sun, to get them done.</p>
-
-<p>Among the cities was one very beautiful City. She wore robes of
-green or of white, delicately embroidered with streets in a free and
-exquisite pattern, and her hair was like a flowing river, and at night
-she put on many glorious jewels. And she had the power to change
-herself at will into a woman. This was a power, however, which she had
-never yet used,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">356</a></span> and indeed she did not yet know wholly that she had
-this power, but she used to dream about it, and sometimes she used to
-sing about the dream, softly, to herself. Men thought that this song
-was the roar of the City’s traffic, but it was not so.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Earth was most anxious for this City to become a woman because,
-although the Earth whirled like an enormous engraved ball and seemed
-like a saucepan held over the sun, still all the time it was really
-just the Earth, and it was very human and tired and discouraged, and
-it needed a woman to rest it and to sing to it and to work with it, in
-her way. But there were none, because all the ordinary women were busy
-with <em>their</em> children. So the only way seemed to be for the City to be
-a woman, as she knew how to be; and the Earth was most anxious to have
-this happen. And it tried to see how it could bring this about.</p>
-
-<p>I think that the Earth may have asked the Moon, because she is a woman
-and might be expected to know something about it. But the Moon, as
-usual, was asleep on the sky, with a fine mosquito-netting of mist all
-about her, and she said not a word. (If you look at the Moon,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">357</a></span> you
-can see how like a beautiful, sleeping face she seems.) I think that
-the Earth may have asked Mars, too, because he is so very near that
-it would be only polite to consult him. But he said: “I’m only a few
-million years old yet. Don’t expect me to understand either cities or
-people.” And finally the Earth asked its Shadow.</p>
-
-<p>“Shadow, dear,” it said, “you are pretty deep. Can’t you tell me how to
-make this City turn into a woman? For I want her to work with me, in
-<em>her</em> way.”</p>
-
-<p>The Shadow, who did nothing but run to keep up with the Earth, let a
-few thousand miles sweep by, and then it said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Really, I wouldn’t know. I’m not up on much but travel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Earth, “then please just ask the Uttermost Spaces. You
-continually pass by that way and somebody ought to know something.”</p>
-
-<p>So the Shadow swept along the Uttermost Spaces and made an
-abyss-to-abyss canvass.</p>
-
-<p>“The Uttermost Spaces want to know,” the Shadow reported next day,
-“whether in all that City there is a child. They said if there is, it
-could probably do what you want.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">358</a></span>
-“A child,” said the Earth. “Well, sea caves and firmaments. Of course
-there is. What do the Uttermost Spaces think I’m in the Earth business
-for if it isn’t for the Children?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” said its Shadow, rather sulkily. “I’m only telling you
-what I heard. If you’re cross with me, I won’t keep up with you. I’m
-about tired of it anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I beg your pardon,” said the Earth, “You mustn’t mind me. I’m
-always a little sunstruck. A thousand thanks. Come along, do.”</p>
-
-<p>“A child,” thought the Earth, “a child. How could a child change a City
-into a woman? And <em>what</em> child?”</p>
-
-<p>But it was a very wise old Earth, and to its mind all children are
-valuable. So after a time it concluded that one child in that City
-would be as good as another, and perhaps any child could work the
-miracle. So it said: “I choose to work the miracle that child who is
-thinking about the most beautiful thing in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>Then it listened.</p>
-
-<p>Now, since the feet of people are pressed all day long to earth, it
-is true that the Earth can talk with everyone and, by listening, can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">359</a></span>
-know what is in each heart. When it listened this time, it chanced that
-it was the middle of the night, when nearly every little child was
-sleeping and dreaming. But there was one little girl lying wide awake
-and staring out her bedroom window up at the stars, and as soon as the
-Earth listened to her thoughts, it knew that she was the one.</p>
-
-<p>Of what do you suppose she was thinking? She was thinking of her
-mother, who had died before she could remember her, and wondering
-where she was; and she was picturing what her mother had looked like,
-and what her mother would have said to her, and how her mother’s
-arms would have felt about her, and her mother’s good-night kiss;
-and she was wondering how it would be to wake in the night, a little
-frightened, and turn and stretch out her arms and find her mother
-breathing there beside her, ready to wake her and give her an
-in-the-middle-of-the-night kiss and send her back to sleep again. And
-she thought about it all so longingly that her little heart was like
-nothing in the world so much as the one word “Mother.”</p>
-
-<p>“It will be you,” said the Earth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">360</a></span>
-So the Earth spoke to its Shadow who was, of course, just then fastened
-to that same side, it being night.</p>
-
-<p>“Shadow, dear,” Earth said, like a prescription, “fold closely about
-her and drop out a dream or two. But do not let her forget.”</p>
-
-<p>So Shadow folded about her and dropped out a dream or two. And all
-night Earth lapped her in its silences, but they did not let her
-forget. And Shadow left word with Morning, telling Morning what to do,
-and she kissed the little girl’s eyelids so that the first thing she
-thought when she waked was how wonderful it would be to be kissed awake
-by her mother. And her little heart beat <em>Mother</em> in her breast.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as she was dressed (“Muvvers wouldn’t pinch your feet with the
-button-hook, or tie your ribbon too tight, or get your laxtixs short
-so’s they pull,” she thought), as soon as she was dressed, and had
-pressed her feet to Earth, Earth began to talk to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Go out and find a mother,” it said to her.</p>
-
-<p>“My muvver is dead,” thought the little girl.</p>
-
-<p>Earth said: “I am covered with mothers and with those who ought to be
-mothers. Go to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">361</a></span> them. Tell them you haven’t any mother. Wouldn’t one of
-those be next best?”</p>
-
-<p>And the Earth said so much, and the little girl’s heart so strongly
-beat <em>Mother</em>, that she could not help going to see.</p>
-
-<p>On the street she looked very little and she felt&mdash;oh, <em>much</em> littler
-than in the house with furniture. For the street seemed to be merely a
-world of Skirts&mdash;skirts everywhere and also the bottoms of men’s coats
-with impersonal Legs below. And these said nothing. Away up above were
-Voices, talking very fast, and to one another, and entirely leaving
-her out. She was out of the conversations and out of account, and it
-felt far more lonely than it did with just furniture. Now and then
-another child would pass who would look at her as if she really were
-there; but everyone was hanging on its mother’s hand or her Skirt, or
-else, if the child were alone, a Voice from ahead or behind was saying:
-“Hurry, dear. Mother won’t wait. Come and see what’s in <em>this</em> window.”
-Littlegirl thought how wonderful that would be, to have somebody ahead
-looking back for her, and she waited on purpose, by a hydrant, and
-pretended that she was going to hear somebody saying: “<em>Do</em> come<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">362</a></span> on,
-dear. Mother’ll be late for her fitting.” But nobody said anything.
-Only an automobile stood close by the hydrant and in it was a little
-yellow-haired girl, and just at that moment a lady came from a shop and
-got in the automobile and handed the little girl a white tissue-paper
-parcel and said: “Sit farther over&mdash;there’s a dear. Now, that’s for
-you, but don’t open it till we get home.” <em>What</em> was in the parcel,
-Littlegirl wondered, and stood looking after the automobile until it
-was lost. One little boy passed her, holding tightly to his mother’s
-hand, and she stooping over him and he <em>crying</em>. Littlegirl tried to
-think what could be bad enough to cry about when you had hold of your
-mother’s hand and she was bending over you. A stone in your shoe? Or
-a pin in your neck? Or because you’d lost your locket? But would any
-of those things matter enough to cry when your mother had hold of your
-hand? She looked up at the place beside her where her own mother would
-be walking and tried to see where her face would be.</p>
-
-<p>And as she looked up, she saw the tops of the high buildings across
-the street, and below them the windows hung thick as pictures on a
-wall,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">363</a></span> and thicker. The shop doors were open like doors to wonderful,
-mysterious palaces where you went in with your mother and she picked
-out your dresses and said: “Wouldn’t you like this one, dear? Mother
-used to have one like this when <em>she</em> was a little girl.” And
-Littlegirl saw, too, one of the side streets, and how it was all lined
-with homes, whose doors were shut, like closed lips with nothing to say
-to anybody save those who lived there&mdash;the children who were promised
-Christmas trees&mdash;and <em>got</em> them, too. And between shops and homes was
-the world of Skirts and Voices, mothers whose little girls were at
-home, daddys who would run up the front steps at night and cry: “Come
-here, Puss. Did you grow any since morning?” Or, “<em>Where’s my son?</em>”
-(Littlegirl knew how it went&mdash;she had heard them.) Shops and homes and
-crowds&mdash;a City! A City for everybody but her.</p>
-
-<p>When the Earth&mdash;who all this time was listening&mdash;heard her think that,
-it made to flow up into her little heart the longing to belong to
-somebody. And Littlegirl ran straight up to a lady in blue linen, who
-was passing.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you somebody’s muvver?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">364</a></span>
-The lady looked down in the little face and stood still.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she said soberly.</p>
-
-<p>Littlegirl slipped her hand in her white glove.</p>
-
-<p>“I aren’t anybody’s little girl,” she said. “Let’s trade each other.”</p>
-
-<p>And the Earth, who was listening, made to flow in the lady’s heart an
-old longing.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s go in here, at any rate,” said the Lady, “and talk it over.”</p>
-
-<p>So they went in a wonderful place, all made of mirrors, and jars of
-bonbons, and long trays, as big as doll cradles, and filled with
-bonbons too. And they sat at a cool table, under a whirry fan, and had
-before them thick, foamy, frozen chocolate. And the Blue Linen Lady
-said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“But whose little girl are you, really?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m <em>my</em> little girl, I think,” said Littlegirl. “I don’t know who
-else’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“With whom do you live?” asked the Lady.</p>
-
-<p>“Some peoples,” said Littlegirl, “that’s other people’s muvvers. Don’t
-let’s say about them.”</p>
-
-<p>“What shall we say about?” asked the Lady, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s pretend you was my muvver,” said Littlegirl.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">365</a></span>
-The lady looked startled, but she nodded slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” she said. “I’ll play that. How do you play it?”</p>
-
-<p>Littlegirl hesitated and looked down in her chocolate.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know berry well,” she said soberly. “<em>You</em> say how.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Lady, “if you were my little girl, I should probably
-be saying to you, ‘Do you like this, dear? Don’t eat it fast. And take
-little bits of bites.’ And you would say, ‘Yes, mother.’ And then what?”</p>
-
-<p>Littlegirl looked deep down her chocolate. She was making a cave in one
-side of it, with the foamy part on top for snow. And while she looked
-the snow suddenly seemed to melt and brim over, and she looked at the
-lady mutely.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know how,” she said; “I don’t know how!”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind!” said the Lady, very quickly and a little unsteadily,
-“I’ll tell you a story instead&mdash;shall I?”</p>
-
-<p>So the Blue Linen Lady told her a really wonderful story. It was about
-a dwarf who was made of gold, all but his heart, and about what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">366</a></span> a
-terrible time he had trying to pretend that he was a truly, flesh and
-blood person. It made him so unhappy to have to pretend all the time
-that he got <em>scandalous</em> cross to everybody, and nothing could please
-him. His gold kept getting harder and harder till he could move only
-with the greatest difficulty, and it looked as if his heart were going
-golden too. And if it did, of course he would die. But one night, just
-as the soft outside edges of his heart began to take on a shining
-tinge, a little boy ran out in the road where the dwarf was passing,
-and in the dark mistook him for his father, and jumped up and threw
-his arms about the dwarf’s neck and hugged him. And of a sudden the
-dwarf’s heart began to beat, and when he got in the house, he saw that
-he wasn’t gold any more, and he wasn’t a dwarf&mdash;but he was straight
-and strong and real. “And so,” the Lady ended it, “you must love every
-grown-up you can, because maybe their hearts are turning into gold and
-you can stop it that way.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ must <em>you</em> love every children?” asked Littlegirl, very low.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Lady, “I must.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ will you love me an’ be my muvver?” asked Littlegirl.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">367</a></span>
-The Blue Linen Lady sighed.</p>
-
-<p>“You dear little thing,” she said, “I’d love it&mdash;I’d love it. But I
-truly haven’t any place for you to live&mdash;or any time to give you.
-Come now&mdash;I’m going to get you some candy and take you back where you
-belong&mdash;<em>in an automobile</em>. Won’t that be fun?”</p>
-
-<p>But when she turned for the candy, Littlegirl slipped out the door and
-ran and ran as fast as she could. (She had thanked the lady, first
-thing, for the thick, frozen, foamy chocolate, so <em>that</em> part was
-all right.) And Littlegirl went round a corner and lost herself in a
-crowd&mdash;in which it is far easier to lose yourself than in the woods.
-And there she was again, worse off than before, because she had felt
-how it would feel to feel that she had a mother.</p>
-
-<p>The Earth&mdash;who would have shaken its head if it could without
-disarranging everything on it&mdash;said things instead to its Shadow&mdash;who
-was by now on the other side of the world from the City.</p>
-
-<p>“Shadow, dear,” said the Earth, “what <em>do</em> you think of that?”</p>
-
-<p>“The very Uttermost Spaces are ashamed for her,” said the Shadow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">368</a></span>
-But of course the Blue Linen Lady had no idea that the Earth and its
-Shadow and the Uttermost Spaces had been watching to see what she did.</p>
-
-<p>Littlegirl ran on, many a weary block, and though she met
-mother-looking women she dared speak to none of them for fear they
-would offer to take her back in an automobile, with some candy, to the
-people with whom she lived-without-belonging. And of late, these people
-had said things in her presence about the many mouths to feed, and she
-had heard, and had understood, and it had made her heart beat <em>Mother</em>,
-as it had when she wakened that day.</p>
-
-<p>At last, when she was most particularly tired, she came to the park
-where it was large and cool and woodsy and wonderful. But in the park
-the un-motherness of things was worse than ever. To be sure, there
-were no mothers there, only nurse-maids. But the nurse-maids and the
-children and the covers-to-baby-carriages were all so ruffly or lacy
-or embroidery or starchy and so white that <em>mother</em> was written all
-over them. Nobody else could have cared to have them like that. How
-wonderful it would be, Littlegirl thought, to be paid attention to as
-if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">369</a></span> you were a really person and not just hanging on the edges. Even
-the squirrels were coaxed and beckoned. She sat down on the edge of
-a bench on which an old gentleman was feeding peanuts to a squirrel
-perched on his knee, and she thought it would be next best to having
-a Christmas tree to be a squirrel and have somebody taking pains like
-that to keep her near by.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s your nurse, my dear?” the old gentleman asked her finally, and
-she ran away so that he should not guess that she was her own little
-girl and nobody else’s.</p>
-
-<p>Wherever she saw a policeman, she lingered beside a group of children
-so that he would think that she belonged to them. And once, for a long
-way, she trotted behind two nurses and five children, pretending that
-she belonged. Once a thin, stooped youth in spectacles called her and
-gave her an orange. He was sitting alone on a bench with his chin in
-his chest, and he looked ill and unhappy. Littlegirl wondered if this
-was because he didn’t have any mother either, and she longed to ask
-him; but she was afraid he would not want to own to not having any, in
-a world where nearly everyone seemed to have one. So she played through
-the long hours<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">370</a></span> of the morning. So, having lunched on the orange, she
-played through the long hours of the afternoon. And then Dusk began to
-come&mdash;and Dusk meant that Earth’s Shadow had run round again, and was
-coming on the side where the City lay.</p>
-
-<p>And when the Shadow reached the park, there, on a knoll beside a
-barberry bush, he found Littlegirl lying fast asleep.</p>
-
-<p>In a great flutter he questioned the Earth.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen,” said Shadow, “what <em>are</em> you thinking of? Here is the child
-who was to work the miracle and make the City turn into a woman. And
-she is lying alone in the park. And I’m coming on and I’ll have to make
-it all dark and frighten her. What does this mean?”</p>
-
-<p>But the Earth, who is closer to people than is its Shadow, merely
-said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Wait, Shadow. I am listening. I can hear the speeding of many feet.
-And I think that the miracle has begun.”</p>
-
-<p>It was true that all through the City there was the speeding of many
-feet, and on one errand. Wires and messengers were busy, automobiles
-were busy, blue-coated men were busy, and all of them were doing the
-same thing: Looking for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">371</a></span> Littlegirl. Busiest of all was the Blue Linen
-Lady, who felt herself and nobody else responsible for Littlegirl’s
-loss.</p>
-
-<p>“It is too dreadful,” she kept saying over and over, “I had her with
-me. She gave me my chance, and I didn’t take it. If anything has
-happened to her, I shall never forgive myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the way people always talk <em>afterward</em>,” said the Earth’s
-Shadow. “Why don’t they ever talk that way before? I’d ask the
-Uttermost Spaces, but I know they don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>But the wise Earth only listened and made to flow to the Blue Linen
-Lady’s heart an old longing. And when they had traced Littlegirl as far
-as the park&mdash;for it seemed that many of the busy Skirts and Coats and
-Voices had noticed her, only they were so very busy&mdash;the Blue Linen
-Lady herself went into the park, and it was the light of her automobile
-that flashed white on the glimmering frock of Littlegirl.</p>
-
-<p>Littlegirl was wakened, as never before within her memory she had been
-wakened, by tender arms about her, lifting her, and soft lips kissing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">372</a></span>
-her, many and many a time. And waking so, in the strange, great Dark,
-with the new shapes of trees above her and tenderness wrapping her
-round, and an in-the-middle-of-the-night kiss on her lips, Littlegirl
-could think of but one thing that had happened:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m <em>glad</em> I died&mdash;I’m <em>glad</em> I died!” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t died, you little thing!” cried the Blue Linen Lady.
-“You’re alive&mdash;and if they’ll let you stay, you’re never going to leave
-me. I’ve made up my mind to <em>that</em>. Come&mdash;come, dear.”</p>
-
-<p>Littlegirl lay quite still, too happy to speak or think. For somebody
-had said “dear,” had even said “Come, dear.” And it didn’t mean a
-little girl away ahead, or away back, or in an automobile. <em>It meant
-her.</em></p>
-
-<p>The Earth’s Shadow brooded over the two and helped them to be very near.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s worth keeping up with you all this time,” Shadow said to the
-Earth, “to see things like this. Even the Uttermost Spaces are touched.”</p>
-
-<p>But the Earth was silent, listening. For the City, the beautiful,
-green-robed City lying in her glorious night jewels, knew what was
-happening<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">373</a></span> too. And when the Lady lifted Littlegirl, to carry her
-away, it was as if something had happened which had touched the life
-of the City herself. She listened, as the Earth was listening, and the
-soft crooning which men thought was the roar of her traffic was really
-her song about what she heard. For the story of Littlegirl spread and
-echoed, and other children’s stories like hers were in the song, and it
-was one of the times when the heart of the City was stirred to a great,
-new measure. At last the City understood the homelessness of children,
-and their labour, and their suffering, and the waste of them; and she
-brooded above them like a mother.... And suddenly she knew herself,
-that she <em>was</em> the mother of all little children, and that she must
-care for them like a mother <em>if she was to keep herself alive</em>. And if
-they were to grow up to be her Family, and not just her pretend family,
-with nobody looking out for anybody else&mdash;as no true family would do.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it well?” asked the Shadow, softly, of the Earth.</p>
-
-<p>“It is well,” said the Earth, in deep content. “Don’t you hear the
-human voices beginning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">374</a></span> to sing with her? Don’t you see the other
-Cities watching? Oh, it is well indeed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go and mention it to the Uttermost Spaces,” said the Shadow.</p>
-
-<p>And, in time, so he did.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">375</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xx" id="xx"></a>XX<br />
-<span>THREE TO MAKE READY</span></h2>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Red</span> mosquito-netting, preferably from peach baskets, was best for
-bottles of pink water. You soaked the netting for a time depending in
-length on the shade of pink you desired&mdash;light, deep, or plain. A very
-little red ink produced a beautiful red water, likewise of a superior
-tint. Violet ink, diluted, remained true to type. Cold coffee gave the
-browns and yellows. Green tissue paper dissolved into somewhat dull
-emerald. Pure blue and orange, however, had been almost impossible to
-obtain save by recourse to our paint boxes, too choice to be used in
-this fashion, or to a chance artificial flower on an accessible hat&mdash;of
-which we were not at all too choice, but whose utilization might be
-followed, not to say attended, by consequences.</p>
-
-<p>That August afternoon we were at work on a grand scale. At the Rodmans,
-who lived on the top of the hill overlooking the town and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">376</a></span> peaceful
-westward-lying valley of the river, we had chosen to set up a great
-Soda Fountain, the like of which had never been.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the kind of a fountain,” Margaret Amelia Rodman explained, “that
-knights used to drink at. That kind.”</p>
-
-<p>We classified it instantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” she went on, “us damsels are getting this thing up for the
-knights that are tourmeying. If the king knew it, he wouldn’t leave
-us do it, because he’d think it’s beneath our dignity. But he don’t
-know it. He’s off. He’s to the chase. But all the king’s household is
-inside the palace, and us damsels have to be secret, getting up our
-preparations. Now we must divide up the&mdash;er&mdash;responsibility.”</p>
-
-<p>I listened, spellbound.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you and Betty didn’t like to play Pretend,” I was surprised
-into saying.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, we’ll pretend if there’s anything to pretend <em>about</em> that’s
-real,” said Margaret Amelia, haughtily.</p>
-
-<p>They told us where in the palace the various ingredients were likely to
-be found. Red mosquito-netting, perhaps, in the cellar&mdash;at this time
-of day fairly safe. Red and violet ink<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">377</a></span> in the library&mdash;very dangerous
-indeed at this hour. Cold coffee&mdash;almost unobtainable. Green tissue
-paper, to be taken from the flower-pots in the dining-room&mdash;exceedingly
-dangerous. Blue and orange, if discoverable at all, then in the
-Christmas tree box in the trunk room&mdash;attended by few perils as to
-meetings en route, but in respect to appropriating what was desired, by
-the greatest perils of all.</p>
-
-<p>This last adventure the Rodmans themselves heroically undertook. It was
-also conceded that, on their return from their quest&mdash;provided they
-ever did return alive&mdash;it would be theirs to procure the necessary
-cold coffee. The other adventures were distributed, and Mary Elizabeth
-and I were told off together to penetrate the cellar in search of red
-mosquito-netting. The bottles had already been collected, and these
-little Harold Rodman was left to guard and luxuriously to fill with
-water and luxuriously to empty.</p>
-
-<p>There was an outside cellar door, and it was closed. This invited
-Mary Elizabeth and me to an expedition or two before we even entered.
-We slid from the top to the bottom, sitting, standing, and backward.
-Then, since Harold was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">378</a></span> beginning to observe us with some attention, we
-lifted the ring&mdash;<em>the ring</em>&mdash;in the door and descended.</p>
-
-<p>“Aladdin immediately beheld bags of inexhaustible riches,” said Mary
-Elizabeth, almost reverently.</p>
-
-<p>First, there was a long, narrow passage lined with ash barrels, a
-derelict coal scuttle, starch boxes, mummies of brooms, and the like.
-But at this point if we had chanced on the red mosquito-netting, we
-should have felt distinctly cheated of some right. A little farther on,
-however, the passage branched, and we stood in delighted uncertainty.
-If the giant lived one way and the gorgon the other, which was our way?</p>
-
-<p>The way that we did choose led into a small round cellar, lighted
-by a narrow, dusty window, now closed. Formless things stood
-everywhere&mdash;crates, tubs, shelves whose ghostly contents were shrouded
-by newspapers. It occurred to me that I had never yet told Mary
-Elizabeth about our cellar. I decided to do so then and there. She
-backed up against the wall to listen, manifestly so that there should
-be nothing over her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">379</a></span>
-Our cellar was a round, bricked-in place under the dining-room.
-Sometimes I had been down there while they had been selecting preserves
-by candle-light. And I had long ago settled that the curved walls
-were set with little sealed doors behind each of which <em>He</em> sat.
-These <em>He’s</em> were not in the least unfriendly&mdash;they merely sat there
-close to the wall, square shouldered and very still, looking neither
-to right nor left, waiting. Probably, I thought, it might happen
-some day&mdash;whatever they waited for; and then they would all go away.
-Meanwhile, there they were; and they evidently knew that I knew they
-were there, but they evidently did not expect me to mention it; for
-once, when I did so, they all stopped doing nothing and looked at me,
-all together, as if something used their eyes for them at a signal.
-It was to Mary Gilbraith that I had spoken, while she was at our
-house-cleaning, and the moment I had chosen was when she was down in
-the cellar without a candle and I was lying flat on the floor above
-her, peering down the trap doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary,” I said, “they’s a big row of <em>He’s</em> sitting close together
-inside the wall. They’ve got big foreheads. Bang on the wall and see
-if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">380</a></span> they’ll answer&mdash;” for I had always longed to bang and had never
-quite dared.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my great Scotland!” said Mary Gilbraith, and was up the ladder
-in a second. That was when they looked at me, and then I knew that I
-should not have spoken to her about them, and I began to see that there
-are some things that must not be said. And I felt a kind of shame, too,
-when Mary turned on me. “You little Miss,” she said wrathfully, “with
-your big eyes. An’ myself bitin’ on my own nerves for fear of picking
-up a lizard for a potato. Go play.”</p>
-
-<p>“I <em>was</em> playing,” I tried to explain.</p>
-
-<p>“Play playthings, then, and not ha’nts,” said Mary.</p>
-
-<p>So I never said anything more to her, save about plates and fritters
-and such things.</p>
-
-<p>To this recital Mary Elizabeth listened sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s just one great big one lives down in our cellar,” she confided
-in turn. “Not in the wall&mdash;but out loose. When the apples and stuff go
-down there, I always think how glad he is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you afraid of him?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">381</a></span>
-“Afraid!” Mary Elizabeth repeated. “Why, no. Once, when I was down
-there, I tried to pretend there wasn’t anything lived there&mdash;and <em>then</em>
-it was frightening and I was scared.”</p>
-
-<p>I understood. It would indeed be a great, lonely, terrifying world if
-these little friendly folk did not live in cellars, walls, attics,
-stair-closets and the like. Of course they were friendly. Why should
-they be otherwise?</p>
-
-<p>“R-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-t,” something went, close by Mary Elizabeth’s head.</p>
-
-<p>We looked up. The dimness of the ceiling was miles deep. We could not
-see a ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>“St-t-t-t-t-t-t-t-t,” it went again. And this time it did not stop, and
-it began to be accompanied by a rumbling sound as from the very cave
-inside the world.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth and I took hold of hands and ran. We scrambled up the
-steps and escaped to the sultry welcome of bright day. Out there
-everything was as before. Little Harold was crossing the lawn carrying
-a flower-pot of water which was running steadily from the hole in the
-bottom. With the maternal importance of little girls, we got the jar
-from him and undertook to bring him more water. And when he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">382</a></span> led us to
-the source of supply, this was a faucet in the side of the house just
-beyond a narrow, dusty, cellar window. When he turned the faucet, we
-were, so to speak, face to face with that R-s-t-t-t-t-t.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth and I looked at each other and looked away. Then we
-looked back and braved it through.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyway,” she said, “we were afraid of a truly thing, and not of a
-pretend thing.”</p>
-
-<p>There seemed to us, I recall, a certain loyalty in this as to a creed.</p>
-
-<p>Already Delia had returned from the library. The authorities refused
-the ink. One might come in there and write with it, but one must
-not take it from the table. Calista arrived from the dining-room. A
-waiting-woman to the queen, she reported, was engaged in dusting the
-sideboard and she herself had advanced no farther than the pantry door.
-It remained only for Margaret Amelia and Betty to come from their
-farther quest bearing a green handbill which they thought might take
-the place of Calista’s quarry if she returned empty-handed; but we were
-no nearer than before to blue and orange materials, or to any other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">383</a></span>
-We took counsel and came to a certain ancient conclusion that in union
-there is strength. We must, we thought we saw, act the aggressor. We
-moved on the stronghold together. Armed with a spoon and two bottles,
-we found a keeper of properties within who spooned us out the necessary
-ink; tea was promised to take the place of coffee if we would keep out
-of the house and not bother anybody any more, indefinitely; shoe-polish
-was conceded in a limited quantity, briefly, and under inspection; and
-we all descended into Aladdin’s cave and easily found baskets to which
-red mosquito-netting was clinging in sufficient measure. Then we sat in
-the shade of the side lawn and proceeded to colour many waters.</p>
-
-<p>It was a delicate task to cloud the clear liquid to this tint and that,
-to watch it change expression under our hands, pale, deepen, vary to
-our touch; in its heart to set jewels and to light fires. We worked
-with deep deliberation, testing by old standards of taste set up by
-at least two or three previous experiences, consulting one another’s
-soberest judgment, occasionally inventing a new liquid. I remember that
-it was on that day that we first thought of bluing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">384</a></span> Common washing
-bluing, the one substance really intended for colouring water, had so
-far escaped our notice.</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody,” observed Margaret Amelia, as we worked, “ought to keep
-keeping a look-out to see if they’re coming back.”</p>
-
-<p>Delia, who was our man of action, ran to the clothes-reel, which stood
-on the highest land of the castle grounds, and looked away over the
-valley.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a cloud of dust on the horizon,” she reported, “but I think
-it’s Mr. Wells getting home from Caledonia.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t they blare their horns before they got here?” Mary Elizabeth
-wanted to know.</p>
-
-<p>“What was a knight <em>for</em>, anyway?” Delia demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>For?</em>” Margaret Amelia repeated, in a kind of personal indignation.
-“Why, to&mdash;to&mdash;to right wrongs, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>Delia surveyed the surrounding scene through the diluted red ink in a
-glass-stoppered bottle.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I know that,” she said. “But I mean, what was his job?”</p>
-
-<p>We had never thought of that. Did one, then, have to have a job other
-than righting wrongs?</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Amelia undertook to explain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">385</a></span>
-“Why,” she said, “it was this way: Knights liberated damsels and razed
-down strongholds and took robber chieftains and got into adventures.
-And they lived off the king and off hermits.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what was the end of ’em?” Delia wanted to know. “They never
-married and lived happily ever after. They married and just kept right
-on going.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was on account of the Holy Grail,” said Mary Elizabeth. It
-was wonderful, as I look back, to remember how her face would light
-sometimes; as just then, and as when somebody came to school with the
-first violets.</p>
-
-<p>“The what?” said Delia.</p>
-
-<p>“They woke up in the night sometimes,” Mary Elizabeth recited softly,
-“and they saw it, in light, right there inside their dark cell. And
-they looked and looked, and it was all shiny and near-to. And when
-they saw it, they knew about all the principal things. And those that
-never woke up and saw it, always kept trying to, because they knew they
-weren’t <em>really</em> ones till they saw. Most everybody wasn’t really,
-because only a few saw it. Most of them died and never saw it at all.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">386</a></span>
-“What did it look like?” demanded Delia.</p>
-
-<p>“Hush!” said Calista, with a shocked glance, having somewhere picked up
-the impression that very sacred things, like very wicked things, must
-never be mentioned. But Mary Elizabeth did not heed her.</p>
-
-<p>“It was all shining and near to,” she repeated. “It was in a great,
-dark sky, with great, bright worlds falling all around it, but it was
-in the centre and it didn’t fall. It was all still, and brighter than
-anything; and when you saw it, you never forgot.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a moment’s pause, which Delia broke.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Elizabeth was clouding red mosquito-netting water by shaking soap
-in it, an effect much to be desired. She went on shaking the corked
-bottle, and looking away toward the sun slanting to late afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know how I know,” she said in manifest surprise. “But I know.”</p>
-
-<p>We sat silent for a minute.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m going back to see if they’re coming home from the hunt
-<em>now</em>,” said Delia, scrambling up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">387</a></span>
-“From the <em>chase</em>,” Margaret Amelia corrected her loftily, “and from
-the tourmey. I b’lieve,” she corrected herself conscientiously, “that
-had ought to be tourmament.”</p>
-
-<p>This time Delia thought that she saw them coming, the king and his
-knights, with pennons and plumes, just entering Conant Street down by
-the Brices. As we must be ready by the time the party dismounted, there
-was need for the greatest haste. But we found that the clothes-reel,
-which was to be the fountain, must have a rug and should have flowing
-curtains if it were to grace a castle courtyard; so, matters having
-been further delayed by the discovery of Harold about to drink the
-vanilla water, we concluded that we had been mistaken about the
-approach of the knights; and that they were by now only on the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>A journey to the attic for the rug and curtains resulted in delays,
-the sight of some cast-off garments imperatively suggesting the
-fitness of our dressing for the rôle we were to assume. This took some
-time and was accompanied by the selection of new names all around.
-At last, however, we were back in the yard with the rugs and the
-muslin curtains in place, and the array<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">388</a></span> of coloured bottles set up
-in rows at the top of the carpeted steps. Then we arranged ourselves
-behind these delicacies, in our bravery of old veils and scarves and
-tattered sequins. Harold was below, as a page, in a red sash. “A little
-foot-page,” Margaret Amelia had wanted him called, but this he himself
-vetoed.</p>
-
-<p>“Mine feet <em>big</em> feet,” he defended himself.</p>
-
-<p>Then we waited.</p>
-
-<p>We waited, chatted amiably, as court ladies will. Occasionally we rose
-and scanned the street, and reported that they were almost here. Then
-we resumed our seats and waited. This business had distinctly palled on
-us all when Delia faced it.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s have them get here if they’re going to,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>So we sat and told each other that they were entering the yard, that
-they were approaching the dais, that they were kneeling at our feet.
-But it was unconvincing. None of us really wanted them to kneel or
-knew what to do with them when they did kneel. The whole pretence was
-lacking in action, and very pale.</p>
-
-<p>“It was lots more fun getting ready than this is,” said Calista,
-somewhat brutally.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">389</a></span>
-We stared in one another’s faces, feeling guilty of a kind of
-disloyalty, yet compelled to acknowledge this great truth. In our
-hearts we remembered to have noticed this thing before: That getting
-ready for a thing was more fun than doing that thing.</p>
-
-<p>“Why couldn’t we get a quest?” inquired Margaret Amelia. “Then it
-wouldn’t have to stop. It’d last every day.”</p>
-
-<p>That was the obvious solution: We would get a quest.</p>
-
-<p>“Girls can’t quest, can they?” Betty suggested doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>We looked in one another’s faces. Could it be true? Did the damsels sit
-at home? Was it only the knights who quested?</p>
-
-<p>Delia was a free soul. Forthwith she made a precedent.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” she said, “I don’t know whether they did quest. But they can
-quest. So let’s do it.”</p>
-
-<p>The reason in this appealed to us all. Immediately we confronted the
-problem: What should we quest for?</p>
-
-<p>We stared off over the valley through which the little river ran
-shining and slipped beyond our horizon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">390</a></span>
-“I wonder,” said Mary Elizabeth, “if it would be wrong to quest for the
-Holy Grail <em>now</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>We stood there against the west, where bright doors seemed opening in
-the pouring gold of the sun, thick with shining dust. The glory seemed
-very near. Why not do something beautiful? Why not&mdash;why not....</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-
-<div class="box">
-<p class="noi"><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE following pages contain advertisements of Macmillan books by the
-same author, and new fiction</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<div class="books">
-<p class="noi p120"><i>By the Same Author</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p140">Christmas</p>
-
-<p class="center p120"><span class="smcap">By</span> ZONA GALE</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="noi">Author of “Mothers to Men,” “The Loves of Pelleas and Etarre.”
-Illustrated in colors by <span class="smcap">Leon Solon</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Decorated cloth, 12mo, $1.30 net; postpaid, $1.42</i></p>
-
-<p>A town in the Middle West, pinched with poverty, decides that it will
-have no Christmas, as no one can afford to buy gifts. They perhaps
-foolishly reckon that the heart-burnings and the disappointments of
-the children will be obviated by passing the holiday season over with
-no observance. How this was found to be simply and wholly impossible,
-how the Christmas joys and Christmas spirit crept into the little town
-and into the hearts of its most positive objectors, and how Christmas
-cannot be arbitrated about, make up the basis of a more than ordinarily
-appealing novel. Incidentally it is a little boy who really makes
-possible a delightful outcome. A thread of romance runs through it all
-with something of the meaning of Christmas for the individual human
-being and for the race.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“A fine story of Yuletide impulses in Miss Gale’s best
-style.”&mdash;<cite>N. Y. World.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“No living writer more thoroughly understands the true spirit
-of Christmas than does Zona Gale.”&mdash;<cite>Chicago Record-Herald.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“‘Christmas’ is that rare thing, a Yuletide tale, with a touch
-of originality about it.”&mdash;<cite>N. Y. Press.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“The book is just the thing for a gift.”&mdash;<cite>Chicago Tribune.</cite></p>
-</blockquote>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider2" />
-<div class="books">
-
-<p class="center p120"><i>The Other Books of Miss Gale</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="noi p140">Mothers to Men</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Decorated cloth, 12mo, $1.50 net; by mail, $1.62 net</i></p>
-
-<p>The author is singularly successful in detaching herself from all
-the wear and tear of modern life and has produced a book filled with
-sweetness, beautiful in ideas, charming in characterizations, highly
-contemplative, and evidencing a philosophy of life all her own.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“One of the most widely read of our writers of short fiction.”&mdash;<cite>The
-Bookman.</cite></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noi p140">Friendship Village</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.50 net</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“As charming as an April day, all showers and sunshine, and sometimes
-both together, so that the delighted reader hardly knows whether
-laughter or tears are fittest.”&mdash;<cite>The New York Times.</cite></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="center p140">The Loves of Pelleas and Etarre</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.50 net</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p120"><i>Macmillan Fiction Library</i></p>
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-<p class="right"><i>12mo, $.50 net</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“It contains the sort of message that seems to set the world right for
-even the most depressed, and can be depended upon to sweeten every
-moment spent over it.”&mdash;<cite>San Francisco Chronicle.</cite></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="center p140">Friendship Village Love Stories</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Decorated cloth, gilt top, 12mo, $1.50 net</i></p>
-
-<p>Miss Gale’s pleasant and highly individual outlook upon life has never
-been revealed to better advantage than in these charming stories of the
-heart affairs of the young people of Friendship Village.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider2" />
-<div class="books">
-
-<p class="noi p120"><i>New Macmillan Fiction</i></p>
-
-<p class="center">MRS. WATTS’S NEW NOVEL</p>
-
-<p class="center p140">Van Cleve</p>
-
-<p class="center p120"><span class="smcap">By</span> MARY S. WATTS</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of “Nathan Burke,” “The Legacy,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo.</i></p>
-
-<p>Never has the author of “Nathan Burke” and “The Legacy” written more
-convincingly or appealingly than in this story of modern life. Those
-who have enjoyed the intense realism of Mrs. Watts’s earlier work, the
-settings of which have largely been of the past, will welcome this
-book of the present in which she demonstrates that her skill is no
-less in handling scenes and types of people with which we are familiar
-than in the so-called “historical” novel. “Van Cleve” is about a young
-man who, while still in his early twenties, is obliged to support a
-family of foolish, good-hearted, ill-balanced women, and one shiftless,
-pompous old man, his grandmother, aunt, cousin, and uncle. Van Cleve
-proves himself equal to the obligation&mdash;and equal, too, to many other
-severe tests that are put upon him by his friends. Besides him there
-is one character which it is doubtful whether the reader will ever
-forget&mdash;Bob. His life not only shapes Van Cleve’s to a large extent,
-but that of several other people, notably his sister, the girl whom Van
-Cleve loves in his patient way.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<div class="books">
-<p class="center p140">The Valley of the Moon</p>
-
-<p class="center p120"><span class="smcap">By</span> JACK LONDON</p>
-
-<p class="center">With Frontispiece in Colors by <span class="smcap">George Harper</span></p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Decorated cloth, 12mo, $1.35 net</i></p>
-
-<p>A love story in Mr. London’s most powerful style, strikingly
-contrasted against a background of present-day economic problems&mdash;that
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-prize-fighter, adventurer, man of affairs, is one of Mr. London’s
-<a name="unforgettable" id="unforgettable"></a><ins title="Original has 'unforgetable'">unforgettable</ins>
-big men. The romance which develops out
-of his meeting with a charming girl and which does not end with their
-marriage is absorbingly told. The action of the plot is most rapid, one
-event following another in a fashion which does not allow the reader to
-lose interest even temporarily. “The Valley of the Moon” is, in other
-words, an old-fashioned London novel, with all of the entertainment
-that such a description implies.</p>
-
-<p class="center p140">Robin Hood’s Barn</p>
-
-<p class="center p120"><span class="smcap">By</span> ALICE BROWN</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of “Vanishing Points,” “The Secret of the Clan,” “The Country
-Road,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class="center">With Illustrations in Colors and in Black and White by <span class="smcap">H. M.
-Carpenter</span></p>
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-<p class="right"><i>Decorated cloth, 12mo,</i>
-<a name="price" id="price"></a><ins title="Original price of 0 dollars has been retained"><i>$0.00</i></ins><i> net</i></p>
-
-<p>Miss Brown’s previous books have given her a distinguished reputation
-as an interpreter of New England life. The idealism, the quaint humor,
-the skill in character drawing, and the dramatic force which have
-always marked her work are evident in this charming story of a dream
-that came true. The illustrations, the frontispiece being in colors,
-the others in black and white, are by Mr. Horace Carpenter, whose
-sympathetic craftsmanship is widely known and appreciated.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<div class="books">
-<p class="center p140">Deering at Princeton</p>
-
-<p class="center p120"><span class="smcap">By</span> LATTA GRISWOLD</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of “Deering of Deal”</p>
-
-<p class="center">With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">E. C. Caswell</span></p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Decorated cloth, 12mo; preparing</i></p>
-
-<p>This is a college story that reads as a college story should. Here Mr.
-Griswold tells of Deering’s Princeton years from his freshman days
-to his graduation. A hazing adventure of far-reaching importance, a
-football game or two in which Deering has a hand, a reform in the
-eating club system, the fraternity régime of Princeton, initiated by
-Deering and carried through at the sacrifice of much that he values,
-a touch of sentiment centering around a pretty girl who later marries
-Deering’s roommate, besides many lively college happenings which only
-one familiar with the life could have chronicled, go to the making of
-an intensely interesting tale.</p>
-
-<p class="center p140">Tide Marks</p>
-
-<p class="center p120"><span class="smcap">By</span> MARGARET WESTRUP</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Decorated cloth, 12mo; preparing</i></p>
-
-<p>A novel of unusual interest and power told in a style both convincing
-and distinctive. Margaret Westrup promises to be one of the literary
-finds of the season.</p>
-
-<p class="center p140">The Will to Live</p>
-
-<p class="center p120"><span class="smcap">By</span> M. P. WILLCOCKS</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of “The Wingless Victory,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Cloth, 12mo; preparing</i></p>
-
-<p>In description, in vividness of character depiction, in cleverness of
-dialogue, and in skill of plot construction, Miss Willcocks’ previous
-books have displayed her rare ability. “The Will to Live” is perhaps
-her most mature work; it is a story with which one is sure to be
-satisfied when the last page is turned.</p>
-
-<hr class="divider2" />
-
-<p class="center p130">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</p>
-<p class="center">
-<span class="float-left">Publishers</span>
-64&ndash;66 Fifth Avenue
-<span class="float-right">New York</span>
-</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<div class="tn">
-<p class="center">Transcriber’s Note:</p>
-
-<p class="noi">In the advertisements at the end of the book, the price of
-<a href="#price">$0.00</a> is as published.</p>
-
-<p class="noi">Variations in spelling, hyphenation and punctuation have been retained
-as they appear in the original publication except as follows:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Page 145<br />
-“<em>We are all alike, all of us who live!</em> <i>changed to</i><br />
-<em><a href="#quote">We</a> are all alike, all of us who live!</em></li>
-
-<li>Page 229<br />
-resentfully “And now she’s in her <i>changed to</i><br />
-<a href="#resentfully">resentfully.</a> “And now she’s in her</li>
-
-<li>Page 281<br />
-for this seemed a a good way <i>changed to</i><br />
-for this seemed <a href="#a">a</a> good way</li>
-
-<li>Page 286<br />
-I’ve fought everyone of <i>changed to</i><br />
-I’ve fought <a href="#every_one">every one</a> of</li>
-
-<li>Page 289<br />
-him and help him. <i>changed to</i><br />
-him and help <a href="#him">him.”</a></li>
-
-<li>Page 396<br />
-London’s unforgetable big men <i>changed to</i><br />
-London’s <a href="#unforgettable">unforgettable</a> big men</li>
-</ul>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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