Transcribed from the 1905 Gay and Bird edition by David Price, email
ccx074@pglaf.org

                          [Picture: Book cover]





                                MARM LISA


                                    BY
                           KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN

                           The eternal-womanly
                           Ever leadeth us on.
                            GOETHE’S _Faust_.

                              SIXTH EDITION

                      [Picture: Decorative graphic]

                               GAY AND BIRD
                        22 BEDFORD STREET, STRAND
                                  LONDON
                                   1905

                          _All rights reserved_

                                * * * * *

         Edinburgh: T. and A. CONSTABLE, Printers to His Majesty




CONTENTS

                                                                 PAGE
       I.  EDEN PLACE                                               1
      II.  MISTRESS MARY’S GARDEN                                  16
     III.  A FAMILY POLYGON                                        29
      IV.  MARM LISA IS TRANSPLANTED                               46
       V.  HOW THE NEW PLANT GREW                                  59
      VI.  FROM GRUBB TO BUTTERFLY                                 77
     VII.  THE COMET AND THE FIXED STAR                            88
    VIII.  THE YOUNG MINISTER’S PSYCHOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS        106
      IX.  MARM LISA’S QUEST                                      121
       X.  THE TWINS JOIN THE CELESTIALS                          135
      XI.  RHODA FREES HER MIND                                   150
     XII.  FLOTSAM AND JETSAM                                     167
    XIII.  LEAVES FROM MISTRESS MARY’S GARDEN                     186
     XIV.  MORE LEAVES                                            202
      XV.  ‘THE FEAST O’ THE BABE’                                219
     XVI.  CLEANSING FIRES                                        231




I
EDEN PLACE


EDEN PLACE was a short street running at right angles with Eden Square, a
most unattractive and infertile triangle of ground in a most unattractive
but respectable quarter of a large city.  It was called a square, not so
much, probably, because it was triangular in shape, as because it was
hardly large enough to be designated as a park.  As to its being called
‘Eden,’ the origin of that qualifying word is enveloped in mystery; but
it is likely that the enthusiastic persons who projected it saw visions
and dreamed dreams of green benches under umbrageous trees, of a green
wire fence, ever green, and of plots of blossoming flowers filling the
grateful air with unaccustomed fragrance.

As a matter of fact, the trees had always been stunted and stubby, the
plants had never been tended, and all the paint had been worn off the
benches by successive groups of working-men out of work.  As for the wire
fence, it had been much used as a means of ingress and egress by the
children of the neighbourhood, who preferred it to any of the gateways,
which they considered hopelessly unimaginative and commonplace, offering
no resistance to the budding man of valour or woman of ambition.

Eden Place was frequented mostly by the children, who found it an
admirable spot to squabble, to fight, and to dig up the hapless earth;
and after them, by persons out of suits with fortune.  These (generally
men) adorned the shabby benches at all times, sleeping, smoking, reading
newspapers, or tracing uncertain patterns in the gravel with a
stick,—patterns as uncertain and aimless as themselves.  There were fewer
women, because the unemployed woman of this class has an old-fashioned
habit, or instinct, of seeking work by direct assault; the method of the
male being rather to sit on a bench and discuss the obstacles, the
injustices, and the unendurable insults heaped by a plutocratic
government in the path of the honest son of toil.

The corner house of Eden Place was a little larger than its neighbours in
the same row.  Its side was flanked by a sand-lot, and a bay window, with
four central panes of blue glass, was the most conspicuous feature of its
architecture.  In the small front yard was a microscopic flower-bed;
there were no flowers in it, but the stake that held up a stout plant in
the middle was surmounted by a neat wooden sign bearing the inscription,
‘No Smoking on these Premises.’  The warning seemed superfluous, as no
man standing in the garden could have put his pipe in his mouth without
grazing either the fence or the house, but the owner of the ‘premises’
possibly wished to warn the visitor at the very threshold.

All the occupied houses in Eden Place were cheerful and hospitable in
their appearance, and were marked by an air of liveliness and
good-fellowship.  Bed linen hung freely from all the windows, for there
was no hard and fast law about making up beds at any special hour, though
a remnant of superstition still existed that it was a good thing to make
up a bed before you slept in it.  There were more women on their
respective front steps, and fewer in their respective kitchens, in Eden
Place than in almost any other locality in the city.  That they lived for
the most part in close and friendly relations could be seen from the
condition of the fences between the front yards, whose upper rails fairly
sagged with the weight of gossip.

One woman, living in the middle of the row, evidently possessed somewhat
different views, for she had planted vines on each of her division
fences, rented her parlour to a lodger who only slept there, kept all her
front curtains drawn, and stayed in the hack of her house.  Such
retribution as could legally be wreaked upon this offensive and exclusive
person was daily administered by her two neighbours, who stood in their
doors on either side and conversed across her house and garden with much
freedom and exuberance.  They had begged the landlord to induce her to
take up her abode elsewhere; but as she was the only tenant who paid her
rent regularly, he refused to part with her.

Any one passing the ‘No Smoking’ sign and entering the front door of Mrs.
Grubb’s house, on the corner, would have turned off the narrow uncarpeted
hall into the principal room, and, if he were an observing person, would
have been somewhat puzzled by its appearance.  There were seven or eight
long benches on one side, yet it had not the slightest resemblance to a
schoolroom.  The walls were adorned with a variety of interesting
objects.  There was a chart showing a mammoth human hand, the palm marked
with myriads of purple lines.  There were two others displaying
respectively the interior of the human being in the pink-and-white purity
of total abstinence, and the same interior after years of intemperance
had done their fatal work; a most valuable chart this last, and one that
had quenched the thirst of many a man.

The words ‘_Poverty Must Go_’ were wrought in evergreen letters over the
bay window, and various texts were printed in red and black and tacked to
the wall in prominent places.  These were such as—

‘_To be a Flesh-Eater is to be a Shedder of Blood and a Destroyer of
God’s Innocent Creatures_.’

‘_Now that Man has Begun to Ascend in the Scale of Being_, _let Woman
Reach Down a Strong_, _Tender Hand and Aid him in his Struggle for Moral
and Spiritual Elevation_.’

‘_Let the Pleasure Field be as Large as Possible_.  _Pains and Fears
Lessen Growth_.’

‘_I Believe that to Burden_, _to Bond_, _to Tax_, _to Tribute_, _to
Impoverish_, _to Grind_, _to Pillage_, _to Oppress_, _to Afflict_, _to
Plunder_, _to Vampire the Life Labouring to Create Wealth is the
Unpardonable Sin_.’

Over the mantel-shelf was a seaweed picture in a frame of shells, bearing
the inscription, ‘_Unity Hall_, _Meeting-Place of the Order of Present
Perfection_.’  On a table, waiting to be hung in place, was an impressive
sort of map about four feet square.  This, like many of the other
ornaments in the room, was a trifle puzzling, and seemed at first, from
its plenitude of coloured spots, to be some species of moral propaganda
in a state of violent eruption.  It proved, however, on closer study, to
be an ingenious pictorial representation of the fifty largest cities of
the world, with the successful establishment of various regenerating
ideas indicated by coloured discs of paper neatly pasted on the surface.
The key in the right-hand corner read—

Temperance                 Blue.
Single Tax                 Green.
Cremation                  Orange.
Abolition of War           Red.
Vegetarianism              Purple.
Hypnotism                  Yellow.
Dress Reform               Black.
Social Purity              Blush Rose.
Theosophy                  Silver.
Religious Liberty          Magenta.
Emancipation of Woman      Crushed Strawberry.

A small gold star, added to the coloured spot, hovering over the name of
a city, was explained, in the lower left-hand corner, as denoting the
fact that the Eldorado face-powder was exclusively used there, and that
S. Cora Grubb was the sole agent for the Pacific coast.

Joseph’s coat faded into insignificance in comparison with the city of
Mrs. Grubb’s present residence, which appeared to be a perfect hot-bed of
world-saving ideas, and was surrounded by such a halo of spots that it
would have struck the unregenerate observer as an undesirable place in
which to live, unless one wished to be broken daily on the rack of social
progress.

This front room was Mrs. Grubb’s only parlour.  The seven benches were
rather in the way and seemingly unnecessary, as the lady attended
meetings morning, noon, and night in halls hired for that purpose; but
they gave her a feeling of security, as, in case one of her less
flourishing societies should be ejected from its hall, or in case she
should wake up in the middle of the night and want to hold a meeting of
any club when all the halls were closed, the benches in the parlour would
make it possible without a moment’s loss of time.

The room connecting with this was the family banquet-hall and kitchen in
one, and as Mrs. Grubb’s opinions on diet were extremely advanced, it
amply served the purpose.

There were three bedrooms upstairs, and the whole establishment was
rather untidy in its aspect; but, though it might have been much cleaner,
it is only fair to say that it might also have been much dirtier.

The house was deserted.  The only sound came from the back yard, and it
was the echo of children’s voices.  It was not at all a merry prattle; it
was a steady uproar interrupted by occasional shrieks and yells, a
clatter of falling blocks, beatings of a tin pan, a scramble of feet, a
tussle, with confusion of blows and thumps, and then generally a
temporary lull in the proceedings, evidently brought about by some sort
of outside interference.  If you had pushed open the wire door, you would
have seen two children of four or five years disporting themselves in a
sand-heap.  One was a boy and one a girl; and though they were not at all
alike in feature or complexion, there was an astonishing resemblance
between them in size, in figure, in voice, in expression, and,
apparently, in disposition.

Sitting on a bench, watching them as a dog watches its master’s coat, was
a girl of some undeterminable age,—perhaps of ten or twelve years.  She
wore a shapeless stout gingham garment, her shoes were many sizes too
large for her, and the laces were dangling.  Her nerveless hands and long
arms sprawled in her lap as if they had no volition in them.  She sat
with her head slightly drooping, her knees apart, and her feet aimlessly
turned in.  Her lower lip hung a little, but only a little, loosely.  She
looked neither at earth nor at sky, but straight at the two belligerents,
with whose bloodthirsty play she was obliged to interfere at intervals.
She held in her lap a doll made of a roll of brown paper, with a waist
and a neck indicated by gingham strings.  Pieces of ravelled rope were
pinned on the head part, but there was no other attempt to assist the
imagination.  She raised her dull eyes; they seemed to hold in their
depths a knowledge of aloofness from the happier world, and their dumb
sorrow pierced your very heart, while it gave you an irresistible sense
of aversion.  She smiled, but the smile only gave you a new thrill; it
was vacant and had no joy in it, rather an uncommunicable grief.  As she
sat there with her battered doll, she was to the superficial eye
repulsive, but to the eye that pierces externals she was almost majestic
in her mysterious loneliness and separation.

The steam-whistle of a factory near by blew a long note for twelve
o’clock, and she rose from her bench, took the children by the hand, and
dragged them, kindly but firmly, up the steps into the kitchen.  She laid
her doll under a towel, but, with a furtive look at the boy, rolled it in
a cloth and tucked it under her skirt at the waist-line.  She then washed
the children’s faces, tied on their calico bibs, and pushed them up to
the pine table.  While they battered the board and each other with spoons
and tin mugs, she went automatically to a closet, took a dish of cold
porridge and turned it into three bowls, poured milk over it, spread
three thick slices of wheat bread with molasses from a cup, and sat down
at the table.  After the simple repast was over, she led the still
reluctant (constitutionally reluctant) twins up the staircase and put
them, shrieking, on a bed; left the room, locking the door behind her in
a perfunctory sort of way as if it were an everyday occurrence, crouched
down on the rug outside, and, leaning her head back against the wall,
took her doll from under her skirt, for this was her playtime, her hour
of ease.

Poor little ‘Marm Lisa,’ as the neighbours called her!  She had all the
sorrows and cares of maternity with none of its compensating joys.



II
MISTRESS MARY’S GARDEN


    ‘“Mistress Mary, quite contrary,
       How does your garden grow?”
    “With silver bells and cockle shells,
       And little maids all in a row.”’

MISTRESS MARY’S Garden did grow remarkably well, and it was wonderfully
attractive considering the fact that few persons besides herself saw
anything but weeds in it.

She did not look in the least a ‘contrary’ Miss Mary, as she stood on a
certain flight of broad wooden steps on a sunshiny morning; yet she was
undoubtedly having her own way and living her own life in spite of
remonstrances from bevies of friends, who saw no shadow of reason or
common-sense in her sort of gardening.  It would have been foolish enough
for a young woman with a small living income to cultivate roses or
violets or lavender, but this would at least have been poetic, while the
arduous tilling of a soil where the only plants were little people ‘all
in a row’ was something beyond credence.

The truth about Mistress Mary lay somewhere in the _via media_ between
the criticisms of her sceptical friends and the encomiums of her
enthusiastic admirers.  In forsaking society temporarily she had no
rooted determination to forsake it eternally, and if the incense of love
which her neophytes for ever burned at her shrine savoured somewhat of
adoration, she disarmed jealousy by frankly avowing her unworthiness and
lack of desire to wear the martyr’s crown.  Her happiness in her chosen
vocation made it impossible, she argued, to regard her as a person worthy
of canonisation; though the neophytes were always sighing to

                ‘have that little head of hers
    Painted upon a background of pale gold.’

She had been born with a capacity for helping lame dogs over stiles;
accordingly, her pathway, from a very early age, had been bestrewn with
stiles, and processions of lame dogs ever limping towards them.  Her
vocation had called her so imperiously that disobedience was impossible.
It is all very well if a certain work asks one in a quiet and courteous
manner to come and do it, when one has time and inclination; but it is
quite another matter if it coaxes one so insistently that one can do
nothing else properly, and so succumbs finally to the persuasive voice.
Still, the world must be mothered somehow, and there are plenty of women
who lack the time or the strength, the gift or the desire, the love or
the patience, to do their share.  This gap seems to be filled now and
then by some inspired little creature like Mistress Mary, with enough
potential maternity to mother an orphan asylum; too busy, too absorbed,
too radiantly absent-minded to see a husband in any man, but claiming
every child in the universe as her very own.  There was never anywhere an
urchin so dirty, so ragged, so naughty, that it could not climb into
Mistress Mary’s lap, and from thence into her heart.  The neophytes
partook of her zeal in greater or less degree, and, forsaking all
probability of lovers (though every one of them was young and pretty),
they tied on their white aprons and clave only unto her.  Daily
intercourse with a couple of hundred little street Arabs furnished a
field for the practice of considerable feminine virtue, and in reality
the woman’s kingdom at the top of the broad wooden steps was a great
‘culture engine’ of spiritual motherhood.

It certainly was a very merry place, and if its presiding geniuses were
engaged in conscious philanthropy, the blighting hallmark was conspicuous
by its absence.  Peals of laughter rang through the rooms; smiling faces
leaned from the upstairs windows, bowing greeting to the ashman, the
scissors-grinder, the Italian and Chinese vegetable-vendors, the
rag-sack-and-bottle man, and the other familiar figures of the
neighbourhood.

It was at the end of a happy, helpful day that Mistress Mary stood in the
front door and looked out over her kingdom.

There was a rosy Swedish girl sitting on the floor of a shop window
opposite and washing the glass.  She had moved the fresh vegetables aside
and planted herself in the midst of them.  There she sat among the
cabbages and turnips and other sweet things just out of the earth; piles
of delicate green lettuce buds, golden carrots bursting into feathery
tops, ruddy beets, and pink-checked.  It was pretty to see the honest joy
of her work and the interest of her parted lips, when, after polishing
the glass, it shone as crystal clear as her own eyes.  A milkman stopping
to look at her (and small wonder that he did) poured nearly a quart of
cream on the ground, and two children ran squabbling under the cart to
see if they could catch the drippings in their mouths.  They were
Atlantic and Pacific Simonson with Marm Lisa, as usual, at their heels.
She had found her way to this corner twice of late, because things
happened there marvellous enough to stir even her heavy mind.  There was
a certain flight of narrow, rickety steps leading to a rickety shanty,
and an adjacent piece of fence with a broad board on top.  Flower-pots
had once stood there, but they were now lying on the ground below, broken
into fragments.  Marm Lisa could push the twins up to this
vantage-ground, and crawl up after them.  Once ensconced, if they had
chosen the right time of day, interesting events were sure to be
forthcoming.  In a large playground within range of vision, there were
small children, as many in number as the sands of the seashore.  At a
given moment, a lovely angel with black hair and a scarlet apron would
ring a large bell.  Simultaneously, a lovely angel with brown hair and a
white apron would fly to the spot, and the children would go through a
mysterious process like the swarming of bees around a queen.  Slowly,
reluctantly, painfully, the swarm settled itself into lines in
conformance with some hidden law or principle unknown to Marm Lisa.
Then, when comparative order had been evolved from total chaos, the most
beautiful angel of all would appear in a window; and the reason she
always struck the onlookers as a being of beauty and majesty was partly,
perhaps, because her head seemed to rise from a cloud of white (which was
in reality only a fichu of white mull), and partly because she always
wore a slender fillet of steel to keep back the waves of her fair hair.
It had a little point in front, and when the sun shone on its delicate,
fine-cut prisms it glittered like a halo.  After the appearance of this
heavenly apparition the endless lines of little people wended their was
into the building, and enchanting strains of music were wafted through
the open windows, supplemented sometimes by the inspiring rattle of drums
and the blare of instruments hitherto indissolubly associated with street
parades.

Who?  Why?  Whence?  Whither?  What for?  These were some of the
questions that assailed Marm Lisa’s mind, but in so incoherent a form
that she left them, with all other questions, unanswered.  Atlantic and
Pacific were curious, too, but other passions held greater sway with
them; for when the children disappeared and the music ceased, they called
loudly for more, and usually scratched and pinched Marm Lisa as they were
lifted down from the fence; not seeing daily how anybody else could be
held answerable for the cessation of the entertainment, and scratches and
pinches being the only remedial agencies that suggested themselves.

On this particular occasion there were no bells, no music, and no
mysterious swarming; but the heavenly apparition sat on the broad steps.
Yes, it was she!  Blue-grey eyes with darker lashes sweeping the warm
ivory of her cheeks, sweet true lips for ever parting in kind words, the
white surplice and apron, and the rememberable steel fillet.  She had a
little child in her lap (she generally had, by the way), and there were
other tots clinging fondly to her motherly skirts.  Marm Lisa stood at
the foot of the steps, a twin glued to each side.  She stared at Mistress
Mary with open-mouthed wonder not unmixed with admiration.

‘That same odd child,’ thought Mary.  ‘I have seen her before, and always
with those two little vampires hanging to her skirts.  She looks a trifle
young to have such constant family cares; perhaps we had better “lend a
hand.”’

‘Won’t you come in?’ she asked, with a smile that would have drawn a sane
person up the side of a precipice.

Atlantic turned and ran, but the other two stood their ground.

‘Won’t you come up and see us?’ she repeated.  ‘There are some fishes
swimming in a glass house; come and look at them.’

Marm Lisa felt herself dragged up the steps as by invisible chains, and
even Pacific did not attempt to resist the irresistible.  Atlantic,
finding himself deserted by his comrades, gave a yell of baffled rage,
and scrambled up the steps after them.  But his tears dried instantly at
the sight of the room into which they were ushered; as large as any of
the halls in which Aunt Cora spent her days, and how much more beautiful!
They roved about, staring at the aquarium, and gazing at the
rocking-horse, the piano, the drum, the hanging gardens, with speechless
astonishment.  Lisa shambled at their heels, looking at nothing very
long; and when Rhoda (one of the neophytes), full of sympathy at the
appearance of the wild, forlorn, unkempt trio, sat herself down on a sofa
and gathered them about a wonderful picture-book, Mistress Mary’s keen
eyes saw that Lisa’s gaze wandered in a few minutes.  Presently she crept
over the floor towards a table, and, taking a string from it, began to
blow it to and fro as it hung from her fingers.  Rhoda’s glance followed
Mary’s; but it was only a fleeting one, for the four eyes of the twins
were riveted on hers with devouring eagerness, while they waited for her
explanation of the pictures.  At the end of half an hour, in which the
children had said little or nothing, they had contrived to reveal so many
sorrowful and startling details of their mental, moral, and physical
endowment, that Mistress Mary put on her hat.

‘I will go home with them,’ she said.  ‘There is plenty of work here for
somebody; I could almost hope that it won’t prove ours.’

‘It will,’ replied Rhoda, with a stifled sigh.  ‘There is an old Eastern
legend about the black camel that comes and lies down before the door of
him upon whom Heaven is going to lay her chastening hand.  Every time I
have seen that awful trio on the fence-top, they were fairly surrounded
by black camels in my imagination.  Mistress Mary, I am not sure but
that, in self-defence, we ought to become a highly specialised
_Something_.  We are now a home, a mother, a nursery, a labour bureau, a
divorce court, a registry of appeals, a soup kitchen, an advisory hoard,
and a police force.  If we take _her_, what shall we be?’

‘We will see first where she belongs,’ smiled Mary.  (Nobody could help
smiling at Rhoda.)  ‘Somebody has been neglecting his or her duty.  If we
can make that somebody realise his delinquencies, all the better, for the
responsibility will not be ours.  If we cannot, why, the case is clear
enough and simple enough in my mind.  We certainly do not want “_Mene_,
_mene_, _tekel_, _upharsin_” written over this, of all doors.’

Rhoda’s hand went up to an imaginary cap in a gesture of military
obedience.  ‘Very well, my general.  I fly to prepare weapons with which
to fight Satan.  You, of course, will take _her_; oh, my dear, I’m almost
afraid you oughtn’t!  I choose the bullet-headed blonde twin who says his
name is “Lanty,” and reserve for Edith the bursting-with-fat brunette
twin who calls herself “Ciffy.”  Edith’s disciplinary powers have been
too much vaunted of late; we shall see if Ciffy ruffles her splendid
serenity.’




III
A FAMILY POLYGON


MRS. GRUBB’S family circle was really not a circle at all; it was rather
a polygon—a curious assemblage of distinct personages.

There was no unity in it, no membership one of another.  It was four
ones, not one four.  If some gatherer of statistics had visited the
household, he might have described it thus:—

Mrs. S. Cora Grubb, widow, aged forty years.

‘Alisa Bennett, feeble-minded, aged ten or twelve years.

‘Atlantic and Pacific Simonson, twins, aged four years.’

The man of statistics might seek in vain for some principle of attraction
or cohesion between these independent elements; but no one who knew Mrs.
Grubb would have been astonished at the sort of family that had gathered
itself about her.  Queer as it undoubtedly was at this period, it had, at
various times, been infinitely queerer.  There was a certain memorable
month, shortly after her husband’s decease, when Mrs. Grubb allowed
herself to be considered as a compensated hostess, though the terms
‘landlady’ and ‘boarder’ were never uttered in her hearing.  She hired a
Chinese cook, who slept at home; cleared out, for the use of Lisa and the
twins, a small storeroom in which she commonly kept Eldorado face-powder;
and herself occupied a sofa in the apartment of a friend of humanity in
the next street.  These arrangements enabled her to admit an experimenter
on hypnotism, a mental healer who had been much abused by the orthodox
members of her cult, and was evolving a method of her own, an ostensible
delegate to an Occidental Conference of Religions, and a lady agent for a
flexible celluloid undershirt.  For a few days Mrs. Grubb found the
society of these persons very stimulating and agreeable; but before long
the hypnotist proved to be an unscrupulous gentleman, who hypnotised the
mental healer so that she could not heal, and the Chinese cook so that he
could not cook.  When, therefore, the delegate departed suddenly in
company with the celluloid-underwear lady, explaining by a hurried postal
card that they would ‘remit’ from Chicago, she evicted the other two
boarders, and retired again to private life.

This episode was only one of Mrs. Grubb’s many divagations, for she had
been a person of advanced ideas from a comparatively early age.  It would
seem that she must have inherited a certain number of ‘views,’ because no
human being could have amassed, in a quarter of a century, as many as she
held at the age of twenty-five.  She had then stood up with Mr. Charles
Grubb, before a large assembly, in the presence of which they promised to
assume and continue the relation of husband and wife so long as it was
mutually agreeable.  As a matter of fact it had not been mutually
agreeable to Mr. Grubb more than six months, but such was the nobility of
his character that he never disclosed his disappointment nor claimed any
immunity from the responsibilities of the marriage state.  Mr. Grubb was
a timid, conventional soul, who would have given all the testimony of all
the witnesses of his wedding ceremony for the mere presence of a single
parson; but he imagined himself in love with Cora Wilkins, and she could
neither be wooed nor won by any of the beaten paths that led to other
women.  He foolishly thought that the number of her convictions would
grow less after she became a wife, little suspecting the fertility of her
mind, which put forth a new explanation of the universe every day, like a
strawberry plant that devotes itself so exclusively to ‘runners’ that it
has little vigour left for producing fruit.

The town in New York where they lived proving to be too small, narrow,
and bigoted to hold a developing soul like Mrs. Grubb’s, she persuaded
her husband to take passage for California, where the climate might be
supposed more favourable to the growth of saving ideas.  Mr. Grubb would,
of course, be obliged to relinquish his business, but people could buy
and sell anywhere, she thought, and as for her, she wanted nothing but
unlimited space in which to expand.

There was money enough for an economical journey and a month or two of
idleness afterwards; and as Mrs. Grubb believed everything in the
universe was hers, if she only chose to claim it, the question of
finances never greatly troubled her.  They sailed for the golden West,
then, this ill-assorted couple, accompanied by Mrs. Grubb’s only sister,
who had been a wife, was now a widow, and would shortly become a mother.
The interesting event occurred much sooner than had been anticipated.
The ship became the birthplace of the twins, who had been most unwelcome
when they were thought about as one, and entirely offensive when found to
be two.  The mother did not long survive the shock of her surprise and
displeasure, and after naming the babies Atlantic and Pacific, and
confiding them distinctly to the care of Mr., not Mrs., Grubb, she died,
and was buried at sea, not far from Cape Horn.  Mrs. Cora enjoyed at
first the dramatic possibilities of her position on the ship, where the
baby orphans found more than one kindly, sentimental woman ready to care
for them; but there was no permanent place in her philosophy for a pair
of twins who entered existence with a concerted shriek, and continued it
for ever afterwards, as if their only purpose in life was to keep the
lungs well inflated.  Her supreme wish was to be freed from the carking
cares of the flesh, and thus for ever ready to wing her free spirit in
the pure ether of speculation.

You would hardly suppose that the obscure spouse of Mrs. Grubb could wash
and dress the twins, prepare their breakfast, go to his work, come home
and put them to bed, four or five days out of every seven in the week;
but that is what he did, accepting it as one phase of the mysterious
human comedy (or was it tragedy?) in which he played his humble part.

Mrs. Grubb was no home spirit, no goddess of the hearth.  She graced her
family board when no invitation to refresh herself elsewhere had been
proffered, and that she generally slept in her own bed is as strong a
phrase as can be written on the subject.  If she had been born in Paris,
at the proper time, she would have been the leader of a salon; separated
from that brilliant destiny by years, by race, and by imperious
circumstance, she wielded the same sort of sceptre in her own
circumscribed but appreciative sphere.  No social occasion in Eden Place
was complete without Mrs. Grubb.  With her (and some light refreshment),
a party lacked nothing; without her, even if other conditions were
favourable, it seemed a flat, stale, and unprofitable affair.  Like Robin
Adair,

    ‘She made the ball so fine;
    She made th’ occasion shine.’

Mrs. Grubb hanging on her front gate, duster in hand (she never conversed
quite as well without it, and never did anything else with it), might
have been a humble American descendant of Madame de Staël talking on the
terrace at Coppet, with the famous sprig of olive in her fingers.  She
moved among her subjects like a barouche among express wagons, was heard
after them as a song after sermons.  That she did not fulfil the whole
duty of woman did not occur to her fascinated constituents.  There was
always some duller spirit who could slip in and ‘do the dishes,’ that
Mrs. Grubb might grace a _conversazione_ on the steps or at the gate.
She was not one of those napkin people who hide their talents, or who
immure their lights under superincumbent bushels.  Whatever was hers was
everybody’s, for she dispensed her favours with a liberal hand.  She
would never have permitted a child to suffer for lack of food or bed, for
she was not at heart an unkind woman.  You could see that by looking at
her vague, soft brown eyes,—eyes that never saw practical duties straight
in front of them,—liquid, star-gazing, vision-seeing eyes, that could
never be focussed on any near object, such as a twin or a cooking-stove.
Individuals never interested her; she cared for nothing but humanity, and
humanity writ very large at that, so that once the twins nearly died of
scarlatina while Mrs. Grubb was collecting money for the children of the
yellow-fever sufferers in the South.

But Providence had an eye for Mr. Grubb’s perplexities.  It does not and
cannot always happen, in a world like this, that vice is assisted to
shirk, and virtue aideth to do, its duty; but any man as marvellously
afflicted as Mr. Grubb is likely to receive not only spiritual
consolation, but miraculous aid of some sort.  The spectacle of the
worthy creature as he gave the reluctant twins their occasional bath, and
fed them on food regularly prescribed by Mrs. Grubb, and almost as
regularly rejected by them, would have melted the stoniest heart.  And
who was the angel of deliverance?  A little vacant-eyed, half-foolish,
almost inarticulate child, whose feeble and sickly mother was dragging
out a death-in-life existence in a street near by.  The child saw Mr.
Grubb wheeling the twins in a double perambulator: followed them home;
came again, and then again, and then again; hung about the door, fell
upon a dog that threatened to bite them, and drove it away howling; often
stood over the perambulator with a sunshade for three hours at a time,
without moving a muscle; and adored Mr. Grubb with a consuming passion.
There was no special reason for this sentiment, but then Alisa Bennett
was not quite a reasonable being.  Mr. Grubb had never been adored before
in his life; and to say the truth, his personality was not winning.  He
had a pink, bald head, pale blue eyes, with blond tufts for eyebrows, and
a pointed beard dripping from his chin, which tended to make him look
rather like an invalid goat.  But as animals are said to have an eye for
spirits, children have an eye for souls, which is far rarer than an eye
for beautiful surfaces.

Mr. Grubb began by loathing Alisa, then patiently suffered her, then
pitied, then respected, then loved her.  Mrs. Grubb seldom saw her, and
objected to nothing by which she herself was relieved of care.  So Lisa
grew to be first a familiar figure in the household, and later an
indispensable one.

Poor Mrs. Bennett finally came to the end of things temporal.  ‘Dying is
the first piece of good luck I ever had,’ she said to Mr. Grubb.  ‘If it
turns out that I’ve brought a curse upon an innocent creature, I’d rather
go and meet my punishment half-way than stay here and see it worked out
to the end.’

‘“In my Father’s house are many mansions,”’ stammered Mr. Grubb, who had
never before administered spiritual consolation.

She shook her head.  ‘If I can only get rid of this world, it’s all I
ask,’ she said; ‘if the other one isn’t any better, why, it can’t be any
worse!  Feel under the mattress and you’ll find money enough to last
three or four years.  It’s all she’ll ever get, for she hasn’t a soul now
to look to for help.  That’s the way we human beings arrange things,—we,
or the Lord, or the Evil One, or whoever it is; we bring a puzzle into
the world, and then leave it for other people to work out—if they can!
Who’ll work out this one?  Who’ll work out this one?  Perhaps she’ll die
before the money’s gone; let’s hope for the best.’

‘Don’t take on like that!’ said Mr. Grubb despairingly,—‘don’t!  Pray for
resignation, can’t you?’

‘Pray!’ she exclaimed scornfully.  ‘Thank goodness, I’ve got enough
self-respect left not to pray!—Yes, I must pray, I _must_ . . . Oh, God!
I do not ask forgiveness for him or for myself; I only beg that, in some
way I cannot see, we may be punished, and she spared!’

And when the stricken soul had fled from her frail body, they who came to
prepare her for the grave looked at her face and found it shining with
hope.

It was thus that poor little Alisa Bennett assumed maternal
responsibilities at the age of ten, and gained her sobriquet of ‘Marm
Lisa.’  She grew more human, more tractable, under Mr. Grubb’s fostering
care; but that blessed martyr had now been dead two years, and she began
to wear her former vacuous look, and to slip back into the past that was
still more dreadful than the present.

It seemed to Mrs. Grubb more than strange that she, with her desire for
freedom, should be held to earth by three children not flesh of her
flesh—and such children.  The father of the twins had been a professional
pugilist, but even that fact could never sufficiently account for Pacific
Simonson.  She had apparently inherited instincts from tribes of warlike
ancestors who skulked behind trees with battle-axes, and no one except
her superior in size and courage was safe from her violent hand.  She had
little, wicked, dark eyes and crimson, swollen cheeks, while Atlantic had
flaxen hair, a low forehead, and a square jaw.  He had not Pacific’s
ingenuity in conceiving evil; but when it was once conceived, he had a
dogged persistency in carrying it out that made him worthy of his twin.

Yet with all these crosses Mrs. Grubb was moderately cheerful, for her
troubles were as nebulous as everything else to her mind.  She intended
to invent some feasible plan for her deliverance sooner or later, but she
was much more intent upon development than deliverance, and she never
seemed to have the leisure to break her shackles.  Nothing really
mattered much.  Her body might be occasionally in Eden Place, but her
soul was always in a hired hall.  She delighted in joining the New Order
of Something,—anything, so long as it was an Order and a new one,—and
then going with a selected committee to secure a lodge-room or a hall for
meetings.  She liked to walk up the dim aisle with the janitor following
after her, and imagine brilliant lights (paid for by collection), a neat
table and lamp and pitcher of iced water, and herself in the chair as
president or vice-president, secretary or humble trustee.  There was that
about her that precluded the possibility of simple membership.  She
always rose into office the week after she had joined any society.  If
there was no office vacant, then some bold spirit (generally male) would
create one, that Mrs. Grubb might not wither in the privacy of the ranks.
Before the charter members had fully learned the alphabet of their order
and had gained a thorough understanding of the social revolution it was
destined to work, Mrs. Grubb had mastered the whole scheme and was
unfolding it before large classes for the study of the higher theory.
The instant she had a tale to tell she presumed the ‘listening earth’ to
be ready to hear it.  The new Order became an old one in course of time,
and, like the nautilus.  Mrs. Grubb outgrew her shell and built herself a
more stately chamber.  Another clue to the universe was soon forthcoming,
for all this happened in a city where it is necessary only for a man to
open his lips and say, ‘I am a prophet’, and followers flock unto him as
many in number as the stars.  She was never disturbed that the last clue
had brought her nowhere; she followed the new one as passionately as the
old, and told her breathless pupils that their feet must not be weary,
for they were treading the path of progress; that these apparently
fruitless excursions into the domain of knowledge all served as so many
milestones in their glorious ascent of the mountain of truth.




IV
MARM LISA IS TRANSPLANTED


IT was precisely as Rhoda thought and feared.  The three strange beings
who had drifted within Mistress Mary’s reach had proved to belong to her
simply because they did not belong to anybody else.  They did not know
their names, the streets in which they lived, or anything else about
which they were questioned, but she had followed them home to the corner
house of Eden Place, although she failed, on the occasion of that first
visit, to find Mrs. Grubb within.  There was, however, a very voluble
person next door, who supplied a little information and asked
considerable more.  Mrs. Sylvester told Mary that Mrs. Grubb was at that
moment presiding over a meeting of the Kipling Brothers in Unity Hall,
just round the corner.

‘They meet Tuesdays and Thursdays at four o’clock,’ she said, ‘and you’d
find it a real treat if you like to step over there.’

‘Thank you, I am rather busy this afternoon,’ replied Mary.

‘Do you wish to leave any name or message?  Did you want a setting?’

‘A sitting?’ asked Mary vaguely.  ‘Oh no, thank you; I merely wished to
see Mrs. Grubb—is that the name?’

‘That’s it, and an awful grievance it is to her—Mrs. S. Cora Grubb.  You
have seen it in the newspapers, I suppose; she has a half column “ad.” in
the _Sunday Observer_ once a month.  Wouldn’t you like your nails
attended to?  I have a perfectly splendid manicure stopping with me.’

‘No, thank you.  I hoped to see Mrs. Grubb, to ask if her children can
come and spend the morning with me to-morrow.’

‘Oh, that’ll be all right; they’re not her children; she doesn’t care
where they go; they stay in the back yard or on the sand-lot most of the
time: she’s got something more important to occupy her attention.  Say, I
hope you’ll excuse me, but you look a little pale.  If you were intending
to get some mental healing from Mrs. Grubb, why, I can do it; she found I
had the power, and she’s handed all her healing over to me.  It’s a new
method, and is going to supersede all the others, we think.  My hours are
from ten to twelve, and two to four, but I could take you evenings, if
you’re occupied during the day.  My cures are almost as satisfactory as
Mrs. Grubb’s now, though I haven’t been healing but six months last
Wednesday.’

‘Fortunately I am very well and strong,’ smiled Mistress Mary.

‘Yes, that’s all right, but you don’t know how soon sickness may overtake
you, if you haven’t learned to cast off fear and practise the denials.
Those who are living in error are certain to be affected by it sooner or
later, unless they accept the new belief.  Why don’t you have your nails
done, now you’re here?  My manicure has the highest kind of a polish,—she
uses pumice powder and the rose of Peru lustre; you ought to try her; by
taking twenty tickets you get your single treatments for thirty-five
cents apiece.  Not this afternoon?  Well, some other time, then.  It will
be all right about the children and very good of you to want them.  Of
course you can’t teach them anything, if that’s your idea.  Belief in
original sin is all against my theories, but I confess I can’t explain
the twins without it.  I sometimes wonder I can do any healing with them
in the next house throwing off evil influences.  I am treating Lisa by
suggestion, but she hasn’t responded any yet.  Call again, won’t you?
Mrs. Grubb is in from seven to eight in the morning, and ten-thirty to
eleven-thirty in the evening.  You ought to know her; we think there’s
nobody like Mrs. Grubb; she has a wonderful following, and it’s growing
all the time; I took this house to be near her.  Good afternoon.  By the
way, if you or any of your friends should require any vocal culture, you
couldn’t do better than take of Madame Goldmarker in No. 17.  She can
make anybody sing, they say.  I’m taking of her right along, and my voice
has about doubled in size.  I ought to be leading the Kipling Brothers
now, but my patients stayed so late to-day I didn’t get a good start.
Good afternoon.’

The weeks wore on, and the children were old friends when Mary finally
made Mrs. Grubb’s acquaintance; but in the somewhat hurried interviews
she had with that lady at first, she never seemed able to establish the
kind of relation she desired.  The very atmosphere of her house was
chaotic, and its equally chaotic mistress showed no sign of seeking
advice on any point.

‘Marm Lisa could hardly be received in the schools,’ Mary told the
listening neophytes one afternoon when they were all together.  ‘There
ought of course to be a special place for her and such as she, somewhere,
and people are beginning to see and feel the importance of it here; but
until the thought and hope become a reality the State will simply put the
child in with the idiots and lunatics, to grow more and more wretched,
more hopeless, more stupid, until the poor little light is quenched in
utter darkness.  There is hope for her now, I am sure of it.  If Mrs.
Grubb’s neighbours have told me the truth, any physical malady that may
be pursuing her is in its very first stages; for, so far as they know in
Eden Place, where one doesn’t look for exact knowledge, to be sure, she
has had but two or three attacks (“dizziness” or “faintness” they called
them) in as many years.  She was very strange and intractable just before
the last one, and much clearer in her mind afterwards.  They think her
worse of late, and have advised Mrs. Grubb to send her to an insane
asylum if she doesn’t improve.  She would probably have gone there long
ago if she had not been such a valuable watch-dog for the twins; but she
does not belong there,—we have learned that from the doctors.  They say
decisively that she is curable, but that she needs very delicate
treatment.  My opinion is that we have a lovely bit of rescue-work sent
directly into our hands in the very nick of time.  All those in favour of
opening the garden gates a little wider for Marm Lisa respond by saying
“Ay!”’

There was a shout from the neophytes that shook the very rafters—such a
shout that Lisa shuttled across the room, and, sitting down on a stool at
Mistress Mary’s feet, looked up at her with a dull, uncomprehending
smile.  Why were those beloved eyes full of tears?  She could not be
displeased, for she had been laughing a moment before.  She hardly knew
why, but Mistress Mary’s wet eyes tortured her; she made an ejaculation
of discomfort and resentment, and taking the corner of her apron wiped
her new friend’s face softly, gazing at her with a dumb sorrow until the
smile came back; then she took out her string and her doll and played by
herself as contentedly as usual.

It was thus that heaven began to dawn on poor Marm Lisa.  At first only a
physical heaven: temporary separation from Atlantic and Pacific; a chair
to herself in a warm, sunshiny room; beautiful, bright, incomprehensible
things hanging on the walls; a soft gingham apron that her clumsy fingers
loved to touch; brilliant bits of colour and entrancing waves of sound
that roused her sleeping senses to something like pleasure; a smile
meeting her eyes when she looked up—oh! she knew a smile—God lets love
dwell in these imprisoned spirits!  By-and-by all these new sensations
were followed by thoughts, or something akin to them.  Her face wore a
brooding, puzzled look, ‘Poor little soul, she is feeling her
growing-pains!’ said Mistress Mary.  It was a mind sitting in a dim
twilight where everything seems confused.  The physical eye appears to
see, but the light never quite pierces the dimness nor reflects its
beauty there.  If the ears hear the song of birds, the cooing of babes,
the heart-beat in the organ tone, then the swift little messengers that
fly hither and thither in my mind and yours, carrying echoes of sweetness
unspeakable, tread more slowly here, and never quite reach the spirit in
prison.  A spirit in prison, indeed, but with one ray of sunlight shining
through the bars,—a vision of duty.  Lisa’s weak memory had lost almost
all trace of Mr. Grubb as a person but the old instinct of fidelity was
still there in solution, and unconsciously influenced her actions.  The
devotion that first possessed her when she beheld the twins as babies in
the perambulator still held sway against all their evil actions.  If they
plunged into danger she plunged after them without a thought of
consequences.  There was, perhaps, no real heroism in this, for she saw
no risks and counted no cost: this is what other people said, but
Mistress Mary always thought Marm Lisa had in her the stuff out of which
heroes and martyrs are made.  She had never walked in life’s sunny
places; it had always been the valley of the shadow for her.  She was
surrounded by puzzles with never any answer to one of them, but if only
she had comprehended the truth, it was these very puzzles that were her
salvation.  While her feeble mind stirred, while it wondered, brooded,
suffered,—enough it did all these too seldom,—it kept itself alive, even
if the life were only like the flickering of a candle.  And now the
candle might flicker, but it should never go out altogether, if half a
dozen pairs of women’s hands could keep it from extinction; and how
patiently they were outstretched to shield the poor apology for a flame,
and coax it into burning more brightly!

‘Let the child choose her own special teacher,’ said Mistress Mary; ‘she
is sure to have a strong preference.’

‘Then it will be you,’ laughed Helen.

‘Don’t be foolish; it may be any one of us and it will prove nothing in
any case, save a fancy that we can direct to good use.  She seldom looks
at anybody but you,’ said Edith.

‘That is true,’ replied Mary thoughtfully.  ‘I think she is attracted by
this glittering steel thing in my hair.  I am going to weave it into
Helen’s curly crop some day, and see whether she misses it or transfers
her affection.  I have made up my mind who is the best teacher for her,
and whom she will chose.’

Rhoda gave a comical groan.  ‘Don’t say it’s I,’ she pleaded.  ‘I dread
it.  Please I am not good enough, I don’t know how; and besides, she
gives me the creeps!’

Mistress Mary turned on Rhoda with a reproachful smile, saying, ‘You
naughty Rhoda, with the brightest eyes, the swiftest feet, the nimblest
fingers, the lightest heart among us all, why do you want to shirk?’

Mistress Mary had noted the fact that Lisa had refused to sit in an
unpainted chair, but had dragged a red one from another room and
ensconced herself in it, though it was uncomfortably small.

Now Rhoda was well named, for she was a rose of a girl, with damask
cheeks that glowed like two Jacqueminot beauties.  She was much given to
aprons of scarlet linen, to collars and belts of red velvet, and she had
a general air of being fresh, thoroughly alive, and in a state of dewy
and perennial bloom.  Mary was right in her surmise, and whenever she
herself was out of Lisa’s sight or reach the child turned to Rhoda
instinctively and obeyed her implicitly.




V
HOW THE NEW PLANT GREW


‘NOW, Rhoda dear,’ said Mistress Mary one day, when Lisa had become
somewhat wonted to her new surroundings, ‘you are to fold your hands
respectfully in your lap and I will teach you things,—things which you in
your youth and inexperience have not thought about as yet.  The other
girls may listen, too, and catch the drippings of my wisdom.  I really
know little about the education of defective children, but, thank heaven,
I can put two and two together, as Susan Nipper said.  The general plan
will be to train Lisa’s hands and speak to her senses in every possible
way, since her organs of sense are within your reach, and those of
thought are out of it.  The hardest lesson for such a child to learn is
the subordination of its erratic will to our normal ones.  Lisa’s
attention is the most hopeful thing about her and encourages me more than
anything else.  It is not as if there were no mental processes existing;
they are there, but in a very enfeebled state.  Of course she should have
been under skilled teaching the six years, but, late as it is, we
couldn’t think of giving up a child who can talk, use her right hand,
dress herself, go upon errands, recognise colours, wash dishes; who is
apparently neither vicious nor cunning, but who, on the contrary, has
lived four years under the same roof with Mrs. S. Cora Grubb without
rebellion or violence or treachery!  Why, dear girls, such a task, if it
did not appeal to one on the moral, certainly would on the intellectual,
side.  Marm Lisa will teach us more in a year, you may be sure, than we
shall teach her.  Let us keep a record of our experiments; drop all
materials that seem neither to give her sensations nor wake her
discriminative power, and choose others that speak to her more clearly.
Let us watch her closely, both to penetrate the secret of her condition
and to protect the other children.  What a joy, what a triumph to say to
her some dear day, a few years hence, “You poor, motherless bairn, we
have swept away the cobwebs of your dreams, given you back your will, put
a clue to things in your hand: now go on and learn to live and be
mistress of your own life under God!”’

It was at such a moment, when Mary’s voice trembled, and her eyes shone
through a mist of tears like two victorious stars, that a hush fell upon
the little group, and the spirit of the eternal child descended like a
dove, its pure wings stirring the silence of each woman’s heart.  At such
a moment, their daily work, with its round of harsh, unlovely, beautiful,
discouraging, hopeful, helpful, heavenly duties, was transfigured, and so
were they.  The servant was transformed by the service, and the service
by the servant.  They were alone together, each heart knit to all the
others by the close bond of a common vocation; and though a heretofore
unknown experience, it seemed a natural one when Mistress Mary suddenly
bent her head, and said softly:

‘Father in heaven, it is by the vision of Thy relation to us that we can
apprehend our relation to these little ones.  As we have accepted that
high trust, so make us loyal to it.  When our feet grow weary and our
faith grows dim, help us to follow close after the ever perfect One who
taught even as we are trying to teach.  He it was whom the common people
heard gladly.  He it was who disdained not the use of objects and
symbols, remembering it was the childhood of the race.  He it was who
spake in parables and stories, laying bare soul of man and heart of
nature, and revealing each by divine analogy.  He it was who took the
little ones in His arms and blessed them; who set the child in the midst,
saying, “Except ye become as one of these.”  May the afterglow of that
inspired teaching ever shine upon the path we are treading.  May we bathe
our tired spirits in its warmth and glory, and kindle our torches at the
splendour of its light.  We remember that He told us to feed His lambs.
Dear Lord, help all the faithful shepherds who care for the
ninety-and-nine that lie in the safe cover of the fold; help us, too, for
we are the wandering shepherds whose part it is to go out over the bleak
hills, up the mountain sides and rocky places, and gather in out of the
storm and stress of things all the poor, unshepherded, wee bit lammies
that have either wandered forlornly away from shelter, or have been born
in the wilderness, and know no other home.  Such an one has just strayed
into the fold from the dreary hill-country.  It needs a wiser shepherd
than any one of us.  Grant that by gentleness, patience, and insight we
may atone somewhat for our lack of wisdom and skill.  We read among Thy
mysteries that the divine Child was born of a virgin.  May He be born
again and born daily in our hearts, already touched by that remembrance
and consecrated by its meaning.  And this we ask for love’s sake.  Amen.’

Then there was a space of silence—one of those silences in which we seem
to be caught up into the heart of things, when hidden meanings are
revealed, when the soul stretches itself and grows a little.

It was a few minutes later when Rhoda said, ‘I am fired with zeal, I
confess it.  Henceforth my single aim shall be to bring Marm Lisa into
her lost kingdom and inheritance.  But meanwhile, how, oh how shall I
master the hateful preliminaries?  How shall I teach her to lace her
shoes and keep them laced, unless I invent a game for it?  How shall I
keep her hair from dangling in her eyes, how keep her aprons neat?—though
in those respects she is no worse than Pacific Simonson.  I promised her
a doll yesterday, and she was remarkably good.  Do you object, Mistress
Mary?’

‘I don’t know how much rewards are used in these cases,’ answered Mary,
‘but why do you begin with them when the problem presents no insuperable
difficulties as yet?  Whenever she herself, her awkward hands, her weak
will, her inattention, her restlessness, give her some task she likes,
some pleasure or occupation for which she has shown decided preference,
and thus make happiness follow close upon the heels of effort.  We who
see more clearly the meaning of life know that this will not always
happen, and we can be content to do right for right’s sake.  I don’t
object to your putting hosts of slumbering incentives in Lisa’s mind, but
a slumbering incentive is not vulgar and debasing, like a bribe.’

A plant might be a feeble and common thing, yet it might grow in beauty
and strength in a garden like Mistress Mary’s.  Such soil in the way of
surroundings, such patient cultivation of roots and stems, such
strengthening of tendrils on all sorts of lovely props, such sunshine of
love, such dew of sympathy, such showers of kindness, such favouring
breezes of opportunity, such pleasure for a new leaf, joy for a bud,
gratitude for a bloom!  What an atmosphere in which to grow towards
knowledge and goodness!  Was it any wonder that the little people ‘all in
a row’ responded to the genius of Mistress Mary’s influence?  They used
to sing a song calleth The Light Bird,’ in which some one, all unknown to
the children, would slip into the playground with a bit of broken
looking-glass, and suddenly a radiant fluttering disk of light would
appear on the wall, and dance up and down, above and below, hither and
yon, like a winged sunbeam.  The children held out longing arms, and sang
to it coaxingly.  Sometimes it quivered over Mistress Mary’s head, and
fired every delicate point of her steel tiara with such splendour that
the Irish babies almost felt like crossing themselves.  At such times,
those _deux petits cœurs secs_, Atlantic and Pacific, and all the other
full-fledged and half-fledged scape-graces, forgot to be naughty, and the
millennium was foreshadowed.  The neophytes declared Mistress Mary a bit
of a magician.  Somehow or other, the evil imps in the children shrank
away, abashed by the soft surprise of a glance that seemed to hope
something better, and the good angels came out of their banishment,
unfolded their wings, and sunned themselves in the warmth of her
approving smile.  Her spiritual antennæ were so fine, so fine, that they
discerned the good in everything; they were feeling now after the soft
spot in the rocky heart of Atlantic Simonson; they had not found it yet,
but they would—oh, they would in time; for if hope is the lover’s staff,
it is no less that of the idealist.

Marm Lisa looked upon the miracles that happened under Mistress Mary’s
roof with a sort of dazed wonder, but her intelligence grew a little day
by day; and though she sadly taxed everybody’s patience, she infused a
new spirit into all the neophytes.

Had not improvement been rapid, their untrained zeal might perhaps have
flagged.  Had the mental symptoms, by their obscurity, baffled them or
defied them on every side, their lack of systematic, scientific training
for such a task might have made them discouraged: but delicate and
exacting as the work was, their love and enthusiasm, their insight and
patience, their cleverness and ingenuity, triumphed over all obstacles;
and luckily for their youth and comparative inexperience, they were
rewarded in marvellous measure.

Not that every day was bright and hopeful.  The carefully kept record was
black enough on occasions, beginning with the morning when Helen, sitting
in the circle, felt a rough hand on her head, and Marm Lisa, without the
slightest warning of her intention, snatched Mary’s steel band forcibly
from her hair, and, taking it across the room, put it in its accustomed
place on its owner’s head.  Everybody was startled, but Mary rose from
her chair quietly, and, taking the ornament in one hand and Marm Lisa in
the other, she came to Helen’s side.

‘I like to have my shining crown in Miss Helen’s hair,’ she said; ‘it is
such pretty, curly hair—stroke it softly, Lisa; she must wear it this
morning to please me, and then I will take it again for my own.  Dear
Miss Helen, who is so sweet and good to the children, I love her,’ and
she kissed her fondly on each cheek.

Marm Lisa did not attempt to rebel but she was sullen, and refused her
work when it was offered her later.

Such occurrences were rare, however, for her obliquity always seemed
mental rather than moral.

Straws and bright papers, beads and pretty forms to thread on stout
laces, were given her to wean her from her favourite but aimless
string-play.  There were days of restlessness which she wandered up and
down stairs, and could not be kept in her chair nor persuaded to stand in
her place in the circle.  There were days, too, when she tore the bright
cardboards and glossy weaving-mats that ordinarily gave her such keen
pleasure; but this carelessness grew more and more infrequent, until it
ceased altogether, so that it had probably come more from her inability
to hold and move the materials and needles properly than from a wanton
instinct of destruction; for they would often see the tears drop from her
eyes upon her clumsy fingers as she strove to make them obey her feeble
behests.  At such a moment there was always some one to fling herself
with passionate ardour and sympathy into this latest difficulty.  A
stouter weaving-needle was invented, and a mat of pretty coloured morocco
substituted for the fragile paper; while the poor inert hands were held
and coaxed and strengthened every day by finger gymnastics.

As Lisa grew in power Rhoda grew in ingenuity, and failure in any one
particular only stimulated her genius of invention the more.  Did she
spill paste, mucilage, water on her gingham aprons, and wipe anything and
everything on them that came in her way, Rhoda dressed her in daintier
ones of white cambric, with a ruffle at the neck and sleeves; the child’s
pleasure knew no bounds, and she kept the aprons clean.  With Mrs.
Grubb’s permission her hair was cut shorter, and brushed back under a
round comb.  No regiment of soldiers could have kept the comb in place.
It was taken away and a blue ribbon substituted.  She untied the ribbon
every five minutes for two days, when Mary circumvented her by sewing a
blue ribbon on each sleeve.  This seemed to divert her attention from the
head-band, and after a week or two she allowed it to remain without
interference.  Mary gave her low shoes, hoping that the lessened trouble
of lacing them would make the task a possibility.  There was no
improvement.  If she laced them, it was only under supervision, and they
were always untied within the hour, the dangling laces tripping her
awkward feet.  Slippers or old-fashioned shoes with elastic at the side
would have been an easy way out of the difficulty, but to Rhoda’s mind
that would have been a humiliating confession of failure.  As a last
resort she bought brown shoes and brown laces.

‘If these do not succeed,’ she said, ‘I will have red ones made, paint
the tips blue, and give her yellow laces; but I will fix her mind on her
feet and arouse her pride in them, or die in the attempt.’

This extreme, fortunately, proved unnecessary, since for some unknown
reason the brown foot-gear appealed to Marm Lisa, and she kept the laces
tied.  The salient peculiarity and encouraging feature of the child’s
development was that, save in rare cases, she did not slip back into her
old habits when the novelty of the remedy wore off; with her, almost
every point gained was a point kept.  It was indeed a high Hill
Difficulty that she was climbing—so high that had she realised it she
would never have taken the first step of her own unaided will; but now
this impelling force behind her was so great, and the visions for ever
leading her on were so beautiful, that she ran nor grew weary, she walked
yet did not faint.

The other children, even the youngest of them, were more or less
interested in the novel enterprise, too, though they scarcely knew the
nature of it or how much was at stake.  That a human mind was tottering
to its fall, and that Mistress Mary was engaged in preventing it, was
beyond their ken.  They could see certain details, however, for they were
all one great family of little people, and it was no unaccustomed thing
for them to watch a moral conquest, though they had no conception of an
intellectual one.

Accordingly, there was a shout of triumph from a corner of the room one
morning,—such a shout that seventy or eighty youngsters held their breath
to see what was happening.

After weeks upon weeks of torn cards, broken threads, soiled patterns,
wrong stitches, weak hand held in place by strong hand, Marm Lisa had
sewed without help, and in one lesson, the outline of a huge red apple;
and there she stood, offering her finished work to Mistress Mary.  The
angels in heaven never rejoiced more greatly over the one repentant
sinner than the tired shepherdesses over their one poor ewe lamb, as she
stood there with quivering hands and wet eyes, the first sense of
conscious victory written on her inscrutable brow, and within the turbid,
clouded brain the memory of a long struggle, and a hint, at least, of the
glory she had achieved.

Rhoda took the square of neat cardboard with the precious red circle that
meant so much, and ran into the playground with it, hugging it to her
heart, and crying and laughing over it like a child.

When she came back Mistress Mary put her arm round Lisa’s waist and said
to the whole great family: ‘Children, after trying hard, for ever so
long, Lisa has sewed this lovely picture all by herself.  There is not a
wrong stitch, and one side is as neat as the other.  What shall we say?’

‘Three cheers!  The Chinese must go!’ shouted Pat Higgins, a patriotic
person of five years, whose father was an organiser of sand-lot meetings.

All the grown-ups laughed at this unexpected suggestion, but the cheers
were given with a good will, and Marm Lisa, her mind stirred to its
depths by the unwonted emotion, puzzled out the meaning of them and hid
it in her heart.




VI
FROM GRUBB TO BUTTERFLY


THE children were all nearly a year older when Mrs. Grubb one day climbed
the flight of wooden steps heading to Marm Lisa’s Paradise, and met, as
she did so, a procession of Mistress Mary’s neophytes who were wending
their way homeward.

The spectacle of a number of persons of either sex, or of both sexes,
proceeding in hue or grouped as an audience, acted on Mrs. Grubb
precisely as the taste of fresh blood is supposed to act on a tiger in
captivity.  At such a moment she had but one impulse, and that was to
address the meeting.  The particular subject was not vital, since it was
never the subject, but her own desire to talk, that furnished the
necessary inspiration.  While she was beginning, ‘Ladies and gentlemen,’
in her clear, pheasant voice, her convictions, opinions, views,
prejudices, feelings, experiences, all flew from the different corners of
what she was pleased to call her brain, and focussed themselves on the
point in question.

If the discussion were in a field in which she had made no excursions
whatever, that trifling detail did not impose silence upon her.  She
simply rose, and said:

‘Ladies and gentlemen, though a stranger in your midst, I feel I must say
a word of sympathy to you, and a word of encouragement for your cause.
It is a good and worthy movement, and I honour you for upholding it.
Often and often have I said to my classes, it matters not what face of
truth is revealed to you so long as you get a vision that will help you
to bless your fellow-men.  To bless your fellow-men is the great task
before each and every one of us, and I feel to urge this specially upon
occasions like this, when I see a large and influential audience before
me.  Says Rudyard Kipling, “I saw a hundred men on the road to Delhi, and
they were all my brothers.”  Yes, all our brothers!  The brotherhood of
man and the sisterhood of woman, those are the subjects that include all
others.  I am glad to have met with you, and to have heard the eloquent
words of your speakers.  If any of you would like to know more of my
work, I will gladly meet you in Room A at the close of this meeting.’

She then sat down amid applause.  Never did Mrs. S. Cora Grubb cease
speaking without at least a ripple of approval that sometimes grew into a
positive ovation.  What wonder, then, that she mistook herself for an
inspired person?  It was easy to understand her popularity with her
fellow-men.  Her eyes were as soft and clear as those of a child, her
hair waved prettily off her low, serene brow, her figure was plump and
womanly, and when her voice trembled with emotion (which in her was a
shallow well very near the surface) the charmingest pink colour came and
went in her cheeks.  On such occasions more than one member of the
various brotherhoods thought what a cosy wife she would make, if removed
from the public arena to the ‘sweet, safe corner of the household fire.’
To be sure, she had not much logic, but plenty of sentiment; rather too
great a fondness for humanity, perhaps, but that was because she had no
husband and family of her own to absorb her superfluous sympathy and
energy.  Mrs. Grubb was not so easily classified as these ‘brothers’
imagined, however, and fortunately for them she had no leanings towards
any man’s fireside.  Mr. Grubb had died in the endeavour to understand
her, and it is doubtful whether, had he been offered a second life and
another opportunity, he would have thought the end justified the means.

This criticism, however, applies only to the family circle, for Mrs.
Grubb in a hall was ever winning, delightful, and persuasive.  If she was
illogical, none of her sister-women realised it, for they were pretty
much of the same chaotic order of mind, though with this difference: that
a certain proportion of them were everywhere seeking reasons for their
weariness, their unhappiness, their poverty, their lack of faith and
courage, their unsatisfactory husbands and their disappointing children.
These ladies were apt to be a trifle bitter, and much more interested in
Equal Suffrage, Temperance, Cremation, and Edenic Diet than in subjects
like Palmistry, Telepathy, and Hypnotism, which generally attracted the
vague, speculative, feather-headed ones.  These discontented persons were
always the most frenzied workers and the most eloquent speakers, and
those who were determined to get more rights were mild compared with
those who were determined to avenge their wrongs.  There was, of course,
no unanimity of belief running through all these Clubs, Classes, Circles,
Societies, Orders, Leagues, Chapters, and Unions; but there was one bond
of aversion, and that was domestic service of any kind.  That no woman
could develop or soar properly, and cook, scrub, sweep, dust, wash
dishes, mend, or take care of babies at the same time—to defend this
proposition they would cheerfully have gone to the stake.  They were
willing to concede all these sordid tasks as an honourable department of
woman’s work, but each wanted them to be done by some other woman.

Mrs. Grubb really belonged to neither of these classes.  She was not very
keen about more rights, nor very bloodthirsty about her wrongs.  She
inhabited a kind of serene twilight, the sort that follows an especially
pink sunset.  She was not wholly clear in her mind about anything, but
she was entirely hopeful about the world and its disposition to grow and
move in ever ascending spirals.  She hated housework as much as any of
her followers, although she was seldom allowed to do anything for
herself.  ‘I’ll step in and make your beds, Mrs. Grubb; I know you’re
tired.’  ‘I’ll sweep the front room, Mrs. Grubb; you give yourself out
so, I know you need rest.’  ‘Let me cook your supper while you get up
strength for your lecture; there are plenty of people to cook, but
there’s only one Mrs. Grubb!’  These were the tender solicitations she
was ever receiving.

As for theories, she had small choice.  She had looked into almost every
device for increasing the sum of human knowledge and hastening the
millennium, and she thought them all more or less valuable.  Her memory,
mercifully, was not a retentive one, therefore she remembered little of
the beliefs she had outgrown; they never left even a deposit in the
stretch of wet sand in which they had written themselves.

She had investigated, or at any rate taught, Delsarte, Physical Culture,
Dress-Reform, the Blue-glass Cure, Scientific Physiognomy, Phrenology,
Cheiromancy, Astrology, Vegetarianism, Edenic Diet, Single Tax,
Evolution, Mental Healing, Christian Science, Spiritualism, Theosophy,
and Hypnotism.  All these metamorphoses of thought had Mrs. S. Cora Grubb
passed through, and was not yet a finished butterfly.  Some of the ideas
she had left far behind, but she still believed in them as fragments of
truth suitable for feeble growing souls that could not bear the full
light of revelation in one burst.  She held honorary memberships in most
of the outgrown societies, attended annual meetings of others, and kept
in touch with all the rest by being present at their social reunions.

One of her present enthusiasms was her ‘Kipling Brothers,’ the boys’ band
enlisted under the motto, ‘I saw a hundred men on the road to Delhi, and
they were all my brothers.’  She believed that there was no salvation for
a boy outside of a band.  Banded somehow he must be, then badged,
beribboned, bannered, and bye-lawed.  From the moment a boy’s mother had
left off her bye-lows, Mrs. Grubb wanted him put under bye-laws.  She
often visited Mistress Mary with the idea that some time she could
interest her in one of her thousand schemes; but this special call was to
see if the older children, whose neat handiwork she had seen and admired,
could embroider mottoes on cardboard to adorn the Kipling room at an
approaching festival.  She particularly wanted ‘Look not upon the Wine’
done in blood-red upon black, and ‘Shun the Filthy Weed’ in smoke-colour
on bright green.  She had in her hand a card with the points for her
annual address noted upon it, for this sort of work she ordinarily did in
the horse-cars.  These ran:

  1st.  Value of individuality.  ‘_I_ saw.’

  2nd.  Value of observation.  ‘I _saw_.’

  3rd.  Value of numbers.  ‘I saw a _hundred_ men.’

  4th.  Importance of belonging to the male sex.  It was _men_ who were
  seen on the road.

  5th.  What and where is Delhi?

  6th.  Description of the road thither.

  7th.  Every boy has his Delhi.

  8th.  Are you ‘on the road’?

  9th.  The brotherhood of man.

  10th.  The Kipling Brothers’ Call to Arms.

She intended to run through the heads of this impassioned oration to
Mistress Mary, whom she rather liked; and, in truth, Mary had difficulty
in disliking her, though she thoroughly disapproved of her.  She was so
amiable, and apparently so susceptible to teaching, that Mary always
fancied her on the verge of something better.  Her vagaries, her
neglects, and what to Mary’s mind were positive inhumanities, seemed in a
way unconscious.  ‘If I can only get into sufficiently friendly
relations,’ thought Mary, ‘so that I can convince her that her first and
highest duty lies in the direction of the three children, I believe she
will have the heroism to do it!’  But in this Mistress Mary’s instinct
was at fault.  Mrs. Grubb took indeed no real cognisance of her immediate
surroundings, but she would not have wished to see near duties any more
clearly.  Neither had she any sane and healthy interest in good works of
any kind; she simply had a sort of philanthropic hysteria, and her most
successful speeches were so many spasms.




VII
THE COMET AND THE FIXED STAR


‘I DON’T feel that I can part with Lisa now, just as she’s beginning to
be a help to me,’ argued Mrs. Grubb, shortly after she had been welcomed
and ensconced in a rocking-chair.  ‘As Madame Goldmarker says, nobody
else in the world would have given her a home these four years, and a
good many wouldn’t have had her round the house.’

‘That is true,’ replied Mary, ‘and your husband must have been a very
good man from all you tell me, Mrs. Grubb.’

‘Good enough, but totally uninteresting,’ said that lady laconically.

‘Well, putting aside the question as to whether goodness ought to be
totally uninteresting, you say that Lisa’s mother left Mr. Grubb three
hundred dollars for her food and clothing, and that she has been ever
since a willing servant, absolutely devoted to your interests.’

‘We never put a cent of the three hundred dollars into our own pockets,’
explained Mrs. Grubb.  ‘Mr. Grubb was dreadfully opposed to my doing it,
but every penny of it went to freeing our religious society from debt.
It was a case of the greatest good of the greatest number, and I didn’t
flinch.  I thought it was a good deal more important that the Army of
Present Perfection should have a roof over its head than that Lisa
Bennett should be fed and clothed; that is, if both could not be done.’

‘I don’t know the creed of the Army, but it seems to me your Presently
Perfect soldiers would have been rather uncomfortable under their roof if
Lisa Bennett had been naked and starving outside.’

‘Oh, it would never have come to that,’ responded Mrs. Grubb easily.
‘There is plenty of money in the world, and it belongs equally to the
whole human race.  I don’t recognise anybody’s right to have a dollar
more than I have; but Mr. Grubb could never accept any belief that had
been held less than a thousand years, and before he died he gave some
money to a friend of his, and told him to pay me ten dollars every month
towards Lisa’s board.  Untold gold could never pay for what my pride has
suffered in having her, and if she hadn’t been so useful I couldn’t have
done it,—I don’t pretend that I could.  She’s an offence to the eye.’

‘Not any longer,’ said Mary proudly.

‘Well, she was up to a few months ago; but she would always do anything
for the twins, and though they are continually getting into mischief she
never lets any harm come to them, not so much as a scratch.  If I had
taken a brighter child, she would have been for ever playing on her own
account and thinking of her own pleasure; but if you once get an idea
into Lisa’s head of what you expect her to do, she will go on doing it to
the end of the world, and wild horses couldn’t keep her from it.’

‘It’s a pity more of us hadn’t that virtue of obedience to a higher law.’

‘Well, perhaps it is, and perhaps it isn’t; it’s a sign of a very weak
mind.’

‘Or a very strong one,’ retorted Mary.

‘There are natural leaders and natural followers,’ remarked Mrs. Grubb
smilingly, as she swayed to and fro in Mary’s rocking-chair.  Her smile,
like a ballet-dancer’s, had no connection with, nor relation to, the
matter of her speech or her state of feeling; it was what a watchmaker
would call a detached movement.  ‘I can’t see,’ said she, ‘that it is my
duty to send Lisa away to be taught, just when I need her most.  My
development is a good deal more important than hers.’

‘Why?’

‘Why?  Because I have a vocation and a mission; because, if I should
falter or faint by the wayside, hundreds of women who depend on me for
inspiration would fall back into error and suffer permanent loss and
injury.’

‘Do you suppose they really would?’ asked Mary rather maliciously,
anxious if possible to ruffle the surface of Mrs. Grubb’s exasperating
placidity.  ‘Or would they, of course after a long period of
grief-stricken apathy, attach themselves to somebody else’s classes?’

‘They might,’ allowed Mrs. Grubb, in a tone of hurt self-respect; ‘though
you must know, little as you’ve seen of the world, that no woman has just
the same revelation as any other, and that there are some who are born to
interpret truth to the multitude.  I can say in all humility that it has
been so with me from a child.  I’ve always had a burning desire to
explore the secret chambers of Thought, always yearned to understand and
explain the universe.’

‘I have never tried to explain it,’ sighed Mary a little wearily; ‘one is
so busy trying to keep one’s little corner clean and sweet and pleasant,
a helpful place where sad and tired souls can sit down and rest.’

‘Who wants to sit down and rest?  Not I!’ exclaimed Mrs. Grubb.  ‘But
then, I’m no criterion, I have such an active mind.’

‘There are just a few passive virtues,’ said Mary teasingly.  ‘We must
remember that activity doesn’t always make for good; sometimes it is
unrest, disintegration; not growth, Mrs. Grubb, but fermentation.’

Mrs. Grubb took out a small blank-book and made a note, for she had an
ear for any sentence that might be used in a speech.

‘That is true.  “_Distrust the activity which is not growth_, _but
fermentation_” that will just hit some ladies in my classes, and it comes
right in with something I am going to say this evening.  We have a Diet
Congress here this week, and there’s a good deal of feeling and dispute
between the various branches.  I have two delegates stopping with me, and
they haven’t spoken to each other since yesterday morning, nor sat down
to eat at the same table.  I shall do all I can, as the presiding
officer, to keep things pleasant at the meetings, but it will be
difficult.  You’ve never been in public life and can’t understand it, but
you see there are women among the delegates who’ve suffered the tyranny
of man so long that they will cook anything their husbands demand; women
who believe in eating any kind of food, and hold that the principal
trouble lies in bad cooking; women who will give up meat, but still
indulge in all sorts of cakes, pastries, and kickshaws; and women who are
strong on temperance in drink, but who see no need of temperance in food.
The whole question of diet reform is in an awful state, and a Congress is
the only way to settle it.’

‘How do men stand on the diet question?’ asked Mary, with a twinkle in
her eye.

‘They don’t stand at all,’ answered Mrs. Grubb promptly.  ‘They sit right
still, and some of them lie down flat, you might say, whenever it’s
mentioned.  They’ll do even more for temperance than they will for
reformed diet, though goodness knows they’re fond enough of drinking.
The Edenites number about sixty-seven in this city, and nine is the
largest number of gentlemen that we’ve been able to interest.  Those nine
are the husbands and sons of the lady members, and at the next meeting
two of them are going to be expelled for backsliding.  I declare, if I
was a man, I’d be ashamed to confess that I was all stomach; but that’s
what most of them are.  Not that it’s easy work to be an Edenite: it’s
impossible to any but a highly spiritual nature.  I have been on the diet
for six months, and nothing but my position as vice-president of the
society, and my desire to crush the body and release the spirit, could
have kept me faithful.  I don’t pretend to like it, but that doesn’t make
me disloyal.  There’s nothing I enjoy better than a good cut of underdone
beef, with plenty of dish gravy; I love nice tender porter-house steaks
with mushrooms; I love thick mutton-chops broiled over a hot fire: but I
can’t believe in them, and my conscience won’t allow me to eat them.  Do
you believe in meat?’

‘Certainly.’

‘I don’t see why you say “certainly.”  You would be a good deal better
off without it.  You are filling yourself full of carnal, brutal,
murderous passions every time you eat it.  The people who eat meat are
not half so elevated nor half so teachable as the Edenites.’

‘The Edenites are possibly too weak and hungry to resist instruction,’
said Mary.

‘They are neither weak nor hungry,’ replied their vice-president, with
dignity.  ‘They eat milk, and stewed fruit, and all the edible grains
nicely boiled.  It stands to reason that if you can subdue your earthly,
devilish, sensual instincts on anything, you can do it on a diet like
that.  You can’t fancy an angel or a Mahatma devouring underdone beef.’

‘No,’ agreed Mistress Mary; ‘but for that matter, the spectacle of an
angel eating dried-apple sauce doesn’t appeal to my imagination.’

‘It’s no joking matter,’ said Mrs. Grubb, with real tears in her eyes.
‘It was my interest in Theosophy that brought me to the Edenic diet.  I
have good and sufficient motives for denying my appetite, for I’ve got a
certain goal to reach, and I’m in earnest.’

‘Then here’s my hand, and I respect you for it.  Oh, how I should like a
hot mutton-chop at this moment!—Do forgive me.’

‘I forgive you, because I can see you act up to all the light that has
been revealed to you.  I don’t know as I ought to be proud because I see
so much truth.  My classes tell me I get these marvellous revelations
because I’m so open-minded.  Now Mr. Grubb wouldn’t and couldn’t bear
discussion of any sort.  His soul never grew, for he wouldn’t open a
clink where a new idea might creep in.  He’d always accompany me to all
my meetings (such advantages as that man had and missed!), and sometimes
he’d take the admission tickets; but when the speaking began, he’d shut
the door and stay out in the entry by himself till it was time to wait
upon me home.  Do you believe in vaccination?’

‘Certainly.’

‘Well, it passes my comprehension how you can be so sure of your beliefs.
You’d better come and hear some of the arguments on the opposite side.  I
am the secretary of the Anti-Vaccination League.’  (Mrs. Grubb was
especially happy in her anti-societies; negatives seemed to give her more
scope for argument.)  ‘I say to my classes, “You must not blame those to
whom higher truths do not appeal, for refusing to believe in that which
they cannot understand; but you may reprove them for decrying or
ridiculing those laws or facts of nature which they have never
investigated with an unprejudiced mind.”  Well, I must be going.  I’ve
sat longer than I meant to, this room is so peaceful and comfortable.’

‘But what about Lisa’s future?  We haven’t settled that, although we’ve
had a most interesting and illuminating conversation.’

‘Why, I’ve told you how I feel about her, and you must respect my
feeling.  The world can only grow when each person allows his fellow-man
complete liberty of thought and action.  I’ve kept the child four years,
and now when my good care and feeding, together with the regular work and
early hours I’ve always prescribed, have begun to show their fruits in
her improved condition, you want she should be put in some institution.
Why, isn’t she doing well enough as she is?  I’m sure you’ve had a
wonderful influence over her.’

‘Nothing could induce me to lose sight of her entirely,’ said Mistress
Mary, ‘but we feel now that she is ready to take the next step.  She
needs a skilled physician who is master both of body and mind, as well as
a teacher who is capable of following out his principles.  I will see to
all that, if you will only give me the privilege.’

Mrs. Grubb sank down in the rocking-chair in despair.  ‘Don’t I need some
consideration as well as that little imbecile?  Am I, with my ambitions
and aspirations, to be for ever hampered by these three nightmares of
children?  Oh, if I could once get an astral body, I would stay in it,
you may be sure!’

‘You do not absolutely need Lisa yourself,’ argued Mary.  ‘It is the
twins to whom she has been indispensable.  Provide for them in some way,
and she is freed from a responsibility for which she is not, and never
was, fit.  It is a miracle that some tragedy has not come out of this
daily companionship of three such passionate, irresponsible creatures.’

‘Some tragedy will come out of it yet,’ said Mrs. Grubb gloomily, ‘if I
am not freed from the shackles that keep me in daily slavery.  The twins
are as likely to go to the gallows as anywhere; and as for Lisa, she
would be a good deal better off dead than alive, as Mrs. Sylvester says.’

‘That isn’t for us to decide,’ said Mistress Mary soberly.  ‘I might have
been careless and impertinent enough to say it a year ago, but not now.
Lisa has all along been the victim of cruel circumstances.  Wherever she
has been sinned against through ignorance, it is possible, barely
possible, that the fault may be atoned for; but any neglect of duty now
would be a criminal offence.  It does not behove us to be too scornful
when we remember that the taint (fortunately a slight one) transmitted to
poor little Lisa existed in greater or less degree in Handel and Molière,
Julius Cæsar, Napoleon, Petrarch, and Mohammed.  The world is a good deal
richer for them, certainly.’

Mrs. Grubb elevated her head, the light of interest dawned in her eye,
and she whipped her notebook out of her pocket.

‘Is that a fact?’ she asked excitedly.

‘It is a fact.’

‘Is it generally known?’

‘It must be known by all who have any interest in the education of
defective persons, since it touches one of the bug-bears which they have
to fight.’

‘Is there any society in this city devoted to the study of such
problems?’

‘There is a society which is just on the point of opening an institution
for the training of defective children.’

Mrs. Grubb’s face fell, and her hand relaxed its grasp upon the pencil.
(If there was anything she enjoyed, it was the sensation of being a
pioneer in any movement.)  Presently she brightened again.

‘If it is just starting,’ she said, ‘then it must need more members, and
speakers to stir up the community.  Now, I am calculated, by constant
association with a child of this character, to be of signal service to
the cause.  Not many persons have had my chance to observe phenomena.
Just give me a letter to the president,—have they elected officers
yet?—where do they meet?—and tell him I’ll call on him and throw all the
weight of my influence on his side.  It’s wonderful!  Handel, Molière,
Buddha, was it—Buddha?—Cæsar, Petrarch, and Wellington,—no, not
Wellington.  Never mind, I’ll get a list from you to-morrow and look it
all up,—it’s perfectly marvellous!  And I have one of this great,
unhappy, suffering class in my own family, one who may yet be transformed
into an Elizabeth Browning or a Joan of Arc!’

Mistress Mary sighed in her heart.  She learned more of Mrs. Grubb with
every interview, and she knew that her enthusiasms were as discouraging
as her apathies.

‘How unlucky that I mentioned Napoleon, Cæsar, and Mohammed!’ she
thought.  ‘I shall be haunted now by the fear that she will go on a
lecturing-tour through the country, and exhibit poor Lisa as an
interesting example.  Mrs. Grubb’s mind is like nothing so much as a
crazy-quilt.’




VIII
THE YOUNG MINISTER’S PSYCHOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS


MRS. GRUBB’S interest in the education of the defective classes was as
short-lived as it was ardent.  One interview with the president of the
society convinced her that he was not a person to be ‘helped’ according
to her understanding of the term.  She thought him a self-sufficient
gentleman, inflexible in demeanour, and inhospitable to anybody’s ideas
or anybody’s hobbies but his own.  She resented his praise of Mistress
Mary and Rhoda, and regarded it fulsome flattery when he alluded to their
experiment with Marm Lisa as one of the most interesting and valuable in
his whole experience; saying that he hardly knew which to admire and
venerate the more—the genius of the teachers, or the devotion, courage,
and docility of the pupil.

In the summer months Lisa had gone to the country with Mistress Mary and
Edith, who were determined never to lose sight of her until the end they
sought was actually attained.  There, in the verdant freshness of that
new world, Lisa experienced a strange exaltation of the senses.  Every
wooded path unfolded treasures of leafy bud, blossom, and brier, and of
beautiful winged things that crept and rustled among the grasses.  There
was the ever new surprise of the first wild-flowers, the abounding
mystery of the bird’s note and the brook’s song, the daily greeting of
bees and butterflies, frogs and fishes, field-mice and squirrels; so that
the universe, which in the dead past had been dreary and without meaning,
suddenly became warm and friendly, and she, the alien, felt a sense of
kinship with all created things.

Helen had crossed the continent to imbibe the wisdom of the East, and had
brought back stores of knowledge to spend in Lisa’s service; but Rhoda’s
sacrifice was perhaps the most complete, for Mrs. Grubb having at first
absolutely refused to part with Lisa, Rhoda had flung herself into the
breach and taken the twins to her mother’s cottage in the mountains.

She came up the broad steps, on a certain appointed day in August,
leading her charges into Mistress Mary’s presence.  They were clean, well
dressed, and somewhat calm in demeanour.

‘You may go into the playground,’ she said, after the greetings were
over; ‘and remember that there are sharp spikes on the high fence by the
pepper-tree.’

‘Mary,’ she went on impressively, closing the doors and glancing about
the room to see if there were any listeners, ‘Mary, those children have
been with me eight weeks, and I do—not—like—them.  What are you going to
do with me?  Wait, I haven’t told you the whole truth,—I dislike them
actively.  As for my mother, she is not committed to any theory about the
essential integrity of infancy, and she positively abhors them.’

‘Then they are no more likable in the bosom of the family than they have
been here?’ asked Mary, in a tone of disappointment.

‘More likable?  They are less so!  Do you see any change in me,—a sort of
spiritual effulgence, a saintly radiance, such as comes after a long
spell of persistent virtue?  Because there ought to be, if my summer has
served its purpose.’

‘Poor dear rosy little martyr!  Sit down and tell me all about it.’

‘Well, we have kept a log, but—’

‘“_We_?”  What, Rhoda! did you drag your poor mother into the
experiment?’

‘Mother?  No, she generally locked herself in her room when the twins
were indoors, but—well, of course, I had help of one sort and another
with them.  I have held to your plan of discipline pretty well; at any
rate, I haven’t administered corporal punishment, although, if I had
whipped them whenever they actually needed it, I should have worn out all
the young minister’s slippers.’

Mary groaned.  ‘Then there was another young minister?  It doesn’t make
any difference, Rhoda, whether you spend your summers in the woods or by
the sea, in the valleys or on the mountains, there is always a young
minister.  Have all the old ones perished off the face of the earth,
pray?  And what do the young ones see in you, you dear unregenerate, that
they persist in following you about threatening my peace of mind and your
future career?  Well, go on!’

‘Debarred from the use of the persuasive but obsolete slipper,’ Rhoda
continued evasively, ‘I tried milder means of discipline,—solitary
confinement for one not very much, you know,—only seventeen times in
eight weeks.  I hope you don’t object to that?  Of course, it was in a
pleasant room with southern exposure, good view, and good ventilation, a
thermometer, picture-books, and all that.  It would have worked better if
the twins hadn’t always taken the furniture to pieces, and mother is so
fussy about anything of that sort.  She finally suggested the winter
bedroom for Atlantic’s incarceration, as it has nothing in it but a huge
coal-stove enveloped in a somewhat awe-inspiring cotton sheet.  I put in
a comfortable low chair, a checkerboard, and some books, fixing the time
limit at half an hour.  By the way, Mary, that’s such a pretty idea of
yours to leave the door unlocked, and tell the children to come out of
their own accord whenever they feel at peace with the community.  I tried
it,—oh, I always try your pretty ideas first; but I had scarcely closed
the door before Pacific was out of it again, a regenerated human being
according to her own account.  But to return to Atlantic.  I went to him
when the clock struck, only to discover that he had broken in the circles
of isinglass round the body of the coal-stove, removed the ashes with a
book, got the dampers out of order, and taken the doors off the hinges!
I am sure Mrs. Grubb is right to keep them on bread-and-milk and
apple-sauce; a steady diet of beef and mutton would give them a simply
unconquerable energy.  Oh, laugh as you may, I could never have lived
through the ordeal if it hadn’t been for the young minister!’

‘Do you mean that he became interested in the twins?’

‘Oh, yes!—very deeply interested.  You have heard me speak of him: it was
Mr. Fielding.’

‘Why, Rhoda, he was the last summer’s minister, the one who preached at
the sea-shore.’

‘Certainly; but he was only supplying a pulpit there; now he has his own
parish.  He is taking up a course of child-study, and asked me if he was
at liberty to use the twins for psychological observations.  I assented
most gratefully, thinking, you know, that he couldn’t study them unless
he kept them with him a good deal; but he counted without his host, as
you can imagine.  He lives at the hotel until his cottage is finished,
and the first thing I knew he had hired a stout nursemaid as his
contribution to the service of humanity.  I think he was really sorry for
me, for I was so confined I could scarcely ever ride, or drive, or play
tennis; and besides, he simply had to have somebody to hold the children
while he observed them.  We succeeded better after the nurse came, and we
all had delightful walks and conversations together, just a nice little
family party!  The hotel people called Atlantic the Cyclone, and Pacific
the Warrior.  Sometimes strangers took us for the children’s parents, and
that was embarrassing; not that I mind being mistaken for a parent, but I
decline being credited, or discredited, with the maternity of those
imps!’

‘They are altogether new in my experience,’ confessed Mary.

‘That is just what the young minister said.’

‘Will he keep up his psychological investigation during the autumn?’ Mary
inquired.

‘He really has no material there.’

‘What will he do, then?—carry it on by correspondence?’

‘No, that is always unsatisfactory.  I fancy he will come here
occasionally: it is the most natural place, and he is especially eager to
meet you.’

‘Of course!’ said Mistress Mary, reciting provokingly:

    ‘“My lyre I tune, my voice I raise,
       But with my numbers mix my sighs,
    And whilst I sing Euphelia’s praise
       I fix my soul on Chloe’s eyes.”’

‘How delightful,’ she added, ‘how inspiring it is to see a young man so
devoted to science, particularly to this neglected science!  I shall be
charmed to know more of his psychology and observe his observations.’

‘He is extremely clever.’

‘I have no doubt of it from what you tell me, both clever and ingenious.’

‘And his cottage is lovely; it will be finished and furnished by next
summer,—Queen Anne, you know.’

Now, this was so purely irrelevant that there was a wicked hint of
intention about it; and though Mistress Mary was smiling (and quaking) in
the very depths of her heart, she cruelly led back the conversation into
safe educational channels.  ‘Isn’t it curious,’ she said, ‘that we should
have thought Lisa, not the twins, the impossible problem?  Yet, as I have
written you, her solution is something to which we can look forward with
reasonable confidence.  It is scarcely eighteen months, but the work
accomplished is almost incredible, even to me, and I have watched and
counted every step.’

‘The only explanation must be this,’ said Rhoda, ‘that her condition was
largely the fruit of neglect and utter lack of comprehension.  The state
of mind and body in which she came to us was out of all proportion to the
moving cause, when we discovered it.  Her mother thought she would be an
imbecile, the Grubbs treated her as one, and nobody cared to find out
what she really was or could be.’

‘Her brain had been writ upon by the “moving finger,”’ quoted Mary,
‘though the writing was not graved so deep but that love and science
could erase it.  You remember the four lines in Omar Khayyàm?

    “‘The moving finger writes; and, having writ,
    Moves on: nor all your piety nor wit
       Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,
    Nor all your tears wash out a word of it.”’

‘Edith says I will hardly know her,’ said Rhoda.

‘It is true.  The new physician is a genius, and physically and outwardly
she has changed more in the last three months than in the preceding year.
She dresses herself neatly now, braids her own hair, and ties her ribbons
prettily.  Edith has kept up her gymnastics, and even taught her to row
and play nine-pins.  For the first time in my life, Rhoda, I can fully
understand a mother’s passion for a crippled, or a blind, or a defective
child.  I suppose it was only Lisa’s desperate need that drew us to her
at first.  We all loved and pitied her, even at the very height of her
affliction; but now she fascinates me.  I know no greater pleasure than
the daily miracle of her growth.  She is to me the sister I never had,
the child I never shall have.  When we think of our success with this
experiment, we must try to keep our faith in human nature, even under the
trying ordeal of the twins.’

‘My faith in human nature is absolutely intact,’ answered Rhoda; ‘the
trouble is that the Warrior and the Cyclone are not altogether human.
Atlantic is the coldest creature I ever knew,—so cold that he could stand
the Shadrach-Meshech-and Abednego test with impunity; Pacific is hot,—so
hot-tempered that one can hardly touch her without being scorched.  If I
had money enough to conduct an expensive experiment, I would separate
them, and educate Pacific at the North Pole, and Atlantic in the
Tropics.’

‘If they are not distinctly human, we must allow them a few human virtues
at least,’ said Mary; ‘for example, their loyalty to each other.
Pacific, always at war with the community, seldom hurts her brother;
Atlantic, selfish and grasping with all the world, shares generously with
his sister.  We must remember, too, that Lisa’s care has been worse than
nothing for them, notwithstanding its absolute fidelity; and their
dependence has been a positive injury to her.  There! she has just come
into the playground with Edith.  Will wonders never cease?  Pacific is
embracing her knees, and Atlantic allows himself to be hugged!’

Marm Lisa was indeed beside herself with joy at the meeting.  She clung
to the infant rebels, stroked their hair, admired their aprons, their
clean hands, their new boots; and, on being smartly slapped by Atlantic
for putting the elastic of his hat behind his ears, kissed his hand as if
it had offered a caress.  ‘He’s so little,’ she said apologetically,
looking up with wet eyes to Edith, who stood near.




IX
MARM LISA’S QUEST


IT was not long after this conversation that the twins awoke one morning
with a very frenzy of adventure upon them.  It was accompanied by a
violent reaction against all the laws of God and man, and a desire to
devour the tree of knowledge, fruit, limbs, and trunk, no matter at what
cost.

We have no means of knowing whether there was an excess of electricity in
the atmosphere, whether their youthful livers were disordered, or whether
the Evil One was personally conducting the day’s exercises; judged by the
light of subsequent events, all of these suppositions might easily have
been true.  During the morning they so demeaned themselves that all
Mistress Mary’s younger neophytes became apostates to the true faith, and
went over in a body to the theory of the total depravity of unbaptized
infants.

In the afternoon they did not appear, nor did Marm Lisa.  This was
something that had never occurred before, save when Pacific had a certain
memorable attack of mumps that would have carried off any child who was
fitted for a better world, or one who was especially beloved.

‘Do you suppose anything is wrong?’ asked Mary nervously.

‘Of course not,’ said Edith.  ‘I remember seeing Lisa in the playground
at one o’clock, but my impression is that she was alone, and stayed only
a moment.  At any rate, I was very busy and did not speak to her.  Mrs.
Grubb has probably taken the twins to have their hair cut, or something
of that sort.’

‘What a ridiculous suggestion!’ exclaimed Rhoda.  ‘You know perfectly
well that Mrs. Grubb would never think of cutting their hair, if it swept
the earth!  She may possibly have taken them to join a band; they must be
getting to a proper age for membership.  At any rate, I will call there
and inquire, on my way home, although I can never talk to Mrs. Grubb two
minutes without wanting to shake her.’

Rhoda made her promised visit, but the house was closed and the
neighbours knew nothing of the whereabouts of the children beyond the
fact that Mrs. Grubb was seen talking to them as she went into the yard,
a little after twelve o’clock.  Rhoda naturally concluded, therefore,
that Edith’s supposition must be correct, and that Mrs. Grubb had for
once indulged in a family excursion.

Such was not the case, however.  After luncheon, Marm Lisa had washed the
twins’ hands and faces in the back-yard as usual, and left them for an
instant to get a towel from the kitchen.  When she returned, she looked
blankly about, for there was no sign of the two dripping faces and the
uplifted streaming hands.  They had a playful habit of hiding from her,
knowing that in no other way could they make her so unhappy; so she stood
still for some moments, calling them, at first sharply, then piteously,
but with no result.  She ran to the front gate; it was closed; the
rope-fastening was out of reach, and plainly too complicated even for
their preternatural powers.  She hurried back to the house, and searched
every room in a bewildered sort of fashion, finding nothing.  As she came
out again, her eye caught sight of a kitchen chair in the corner of the
yard.  They had climbed the picket fence, then.  Yes; Atlantic, while
availing himself of its unassuming aid, had left a clue in a fragment of
his trousers.  She opened the gate, and ran breathlessly along the
streets to that Garden of Eden where joy had always hitherto awaited her.
Some instinct of fear or secrecy led her to go quietly through all the
rooms and search the playground without telling any one of her trouble.
That accomplished fruitlessly, she fled home again, in the vain hope of
finding the children in some accustomed haunt overlooked in her first
search.  She began to be thoroughly alarmed now, and thoroughly confused.
With twitching hands and nervous shaking of the head, she hurried through
the vacant rooms, growing more and more aimless in her quest.  She
climbed on a tall bureau and looked in a tiny medicine cupboard; then
under the benches and behind the charts in the parlour; even under the
kitchen sink, among the pots and pans, and in the stove, where she poked
tremulously among the ashes.  Her newfound wit seemed temporarily to have
deserted her, and she was a pitiable thing as she wandered about, her
breath coming in long-drawn sighs, with now and then a half-stifled sob.

Suddenly she darted into the street again.  Perhaps they had followed
their aunt Cora.  Distance had no place in her terror-stricken heart.
She traversed block after block, street after street, until she reached
Pocahontas Hall, a building and locality she knew well.  She crept softly
up the main stairs, and from the landing slipped into the gallery above.
Mrs. Grubb sat in the centre of the stage, with a glass of water, a
bouquet of roses, and a bundle of papers and tracts on the table by her
side.  In the audience were twenty or thirty women and a dozen men, their
laps filled, and their pockets bulging, with propaganda.  They stood at
intervals to ask superfluous or unanswerable questions, upon which Mrs.
Grubb would rise and reply, with cheeks growing pink and pinker, with
pleasant smile and gracious manner, and a voice fairly surcharged with
conviction.  Most of the ladies took notes, and a girl with a receding
chin was seated at a small table in front of the platform, making a
stenographic report.

All this Marm Lisa saw, but her eyes rested on nothing she longed to see.
Mrs. Grubb’s lecture voice rose and fell melodiously, floating up to her
balcony heights in a kind of echo that held the tone, but not the words.
The voice made her drowsy, for she was already worn out with emotion, but
she roused herself with an effort, and stole down the stairs to wander
into the street again.  Ah, there was an idea!  The coat-shop!  Why had
she not thought of it before?

The coat-shop was a sort of clothing manufactory on a small scale, a
tall, narrow building four stories high, where she had often gone with
Atlantic and Pacific.  There were sewing-machines on the ground-floor,
the cutters and pressers worked in the middle stories, and at the top
were the finishers.  It was neither an extensive nor an exciting
establishment, and its only fascination lay in the fact that the
workwomen screamed with laughter at the twins’ conversation, and after
leading them to their utmost length, teasing and goading them into a
towering passion, would stuff them with nuts or dates or cheap
sweetmeats.  The coat-shop was two or three miles from the hall, and it
was closing time and quite dark when Lisa arrived.  She came out of the
door after having looked vainly in every room, and sat down dejectedly in
the entrance, with her weary head leaning against the wall.  There was
but a moment’s respite for her, for the manager came out of his office,
and, stumbling over her in the dusk, took her by the shoulders and pushed
her into the street with an oath.

‘Go and sit on your own doorstep, can’t you?’ he muttered, ‘and not make
me break my legs over you!’

She was too spent to run any further.  She dragged her heavy feet along
slowly, almost unconsciously, neither knowing nor caring whither they led
her.  Home she could not, dared not go, bearing that heavy burden of
remorse!  Mrs. Grubb would ask for Atlantic and Pacific, and then what
would become of her?  Mr. Grubb would want to give Pacific her milk.  No,
Mr. Grubb was dead.  There! she hadn’t looked in the perambulator.  No,
there wasn’t any perambulator.  That was dead, too, and gone away with
Mr. Grubb.  There used to be babies, two babies, in the perambulator.
What had become of them?  Were they lost, too?  And the umbrella that she
used to hold until her arm ached, and the poor, pale, weeping mother
always lying on a bed,—were they all gone together?  Her head buzzed with
worrying, unrelated thoughts, so that she put up her hands and held it in
place on her shoulders as she shuffled wearily along.  A heavy, dripping
mist began to gather and fall, and she shivered in the dampness, huddling
herself together and leaning against the houses for a shelter.  She sat
down on the curb-stone and tried to think, staring haggardly at the sign
on the corner fruit-shop.  In that moment she suddenly forgot the reason
of her search.  She had lost—what?  She could not go home to Eden Place,
but why?  Oh yes!  It came to her now: there was something about a
perambulator, but it all seemed vague to her.  Suddenly a lamplighter put
his ladder against a post in front of her, and, climbing up nimbly,
lighted the gas-jet inside of the glass frame.  It shone full on a flight
of broad steps, a picture so much a part of her life-dream that she would
go up to the very gate of heaven with its lines burned into her heart and
brain.

She crept up and turned the knob of the outer door.  It was unlocked, and
she stole into the inner room, the Paradise, place of joy and sweet
content, heart’s rest, soul’s heaven, love’s own abode.  The very
atmosphere soothed her.  She heard the janitress clatter through the
halls, lock the door, and descend the stairs to her own rooms in the
basement.  The light from the street lamps shone in at the two end
windows, so that the room was not in utter darkness.  She would lie down
here and die with Mr. Grubb and the babies and the umbrella.  Atlantic
and Pacific would be sure to come back; nobody who had ever known it
could live without this place.  Miss Mary would find them.  She would
make everything right.  The mere thought of Mistress Mary brought a
strange peace into poor Lisa’s over-wrought, distraught mind.

She opened the closet door.  It was as dainty and neat as Mistress Mary
herself, and the mere sight of it bred order in Lisa’s thoughts.  On the
top of a pile of envelopes lay the sewing-picture that Atlantic had
spoiled that day.  It had been a black morning, and the bit of cardboard
was torn and soiled and bent.  Lisa looked at it with a maternal and a
prophetic eye.  She could see the firm line of Rhoda’s lip as she bore
down upon the destructive urchin.  She could almost hear the bright
challenging tone as Rhoda would say: ‘Now, Atlantic, let us see what we
can do!  Cut off the chewed edges with these scissors, paste these thin
pieces of paper over the torn places, and rub the card with this crust of
bread.  A new one?  Certainly _not_, my young friend!’

Lisa took the poor little object in her hand, and, seeing Mistress Mary’s
white apron, pressed her cheek against it in a transport of tenderness
and hung it over her arm.  Just then she caught sight of the clay
bird’s-nest that Pacific had modelled—such a lovely bird’s-nest that it
had been kept for the cabinet.  She carried her treasures over to the
old-fashioned lounge where the babies took their occasional nap, put them
carefully in a small red chair close beside it, and then, stretching her
weary length on the cushions, she kissed the smooth folds of the apron,
and clasped it in her arms.

Mistress Mary would come soon.  She would come in her cloud of white, and
her steel fillet would gleam and shine when the sunshine fell upon it,
and make star-rays and moonbeams and lightning-flashes; and the tiny
points would twinkle and wink and laugh and blink whenever she turned her
head.  She would smile, and everything would suddenly be clear; she would
speak, and the weary buzzing of windmills in the brain would be hushed.
Under her touch the darkness and heaviness would vanish, and there would
be no more night there—no more night.

As these healing visions stole upon Marm Lisa, the torture and the
anguish, the long hours of bewilderment, faded little by little, little
by little, till at length a blessed sleep crept over her eyelids,
blotting into a merciful nothingness the terror and the misery of the
day.




X
THE TWINS JOIN THE CELESTIALS


MEANWHILE, Atlantic and Pacific had been enjoying themselves even unto
the verge of delirium.  In the course of their wanderings they had come
upon a Chinaman bearing aloft a huge red silken banner crowned by a
badger’s tail.  Everything young that had two legs was following him, and
they joined the noble army of followers.  As they went on, other Chinamen
with other banners came from the side-alleys, and all at once the small
procession thus formed turned a corner and came upon the parent body, a
sight that fairly stunned them by its Oriental magnificence.  It was the
four thousandth anniversary of the birth of Yeong Wo, had the children
realised it (and that may have been the reason that they awoke in a fever
of excitement)—Yeong Wo, statesman, philanthropist, philosopher, and
poet; and the great day had been chosen to dedicate the new temple and
install in it a new joss, and to exhibit a monster dragon just arrived
from China.  The joss had been sitting in solemn state in his sanctum
sanctorum for a week, while the priests appeased him hourly with
plenteous libations of rice brandy, sacrifices of snow-white pigeons, and
offerings of varnished pork.  Clouds of incense had regaled his expansive
mahogany nostrils, while his ears of ivory inlaid with gold and bronze
had been stimulated with the ceaseless clashing of gongs and wailings of
Chinese fiddles.  Such homage and such worship would have touched a heart
of stone, and that of the joss was penetrable sandalwood; so as the days
of preparation wore away the smile on the teakwood lips of the idol
certainly became more propitious.  This was greatly to the satisfaction
of the augurs and the high priest; for a mighty joss is not always in a
sunny humour on feast-days, and to parade a sulky god through the streets
is a very depressing ceremony, foretelling to the initiated a season of
dire misfortune.  So his godship smiled and shook his plume of peacock
feathers benignantly on Yeong Wo’s birthday, and therefore the pageant in
which Atlantic and Pacific bore a part was more gorgeous than anything
that ever took place out of the Flowery Kingdom itself.

Fortune smiled upon the naughty creatures at the very outset, for Pacific
picked up a stick of candy in the street, and gave half of it to a pretty
Chinese maiden whose name in English would have been Spring Blossom, and
who looked, in any language, like a tropical flower, in her gown of
blue-and-gold-embroidered satin and the sheaf of tiny fans in her glossy
black hair.  Spring Blossom accepted the gift with enthusiasm, since a
sweet tooth is not a matter of nationality, and ran immediately to tell
her mother, a childish instinct also of universal distribution.  She
climbed, as nimbly as her queer little shoes would permit, a flight of
narrow steps leading to a balcony; while the twins followed close at her
heels, and wedged their way through a forest of Mongolian legs till they
reached the front, where they peeped through the spaces of the railings
with Spring Blossom, Fairy Foot, Dewy Rose, and other Celestial babies,
quite overlooked in the crowd and excitement and jollity.  Such a very
riot of confusion there was, it seemed as if Confucius might have
originally spelled his name with an s in the middle; for every window was
black with pigtailed highbinders, cobblers, pork butchers, and
pawnbrokers.  The narrow streets and alleys became one seething mass of
Asiatic humanity; while the painted belles came out on their balconies
like butterflies, sitting among a wealth of gaudy paper flowers that
looked pale in comparison with the daubs of vermilion on their cheeks and
the rainbow colours of their silken tunics.

At last the pageant had gathered itself together, and came into full view
in all its magnificence.  There were pagodas in teakwood inlaid with
gold; and resting on ebony poles, and behind them, on a very tame
Rosinante decked with leopard skins and gold bullion fringes, a Chinese
maiden dressed to represent a queen of Celestial mythology.  Then came
more pagodas, and companies of standard-bearers in lavender tunics, red
sashes, green and orange leggings and slippers; more and more splendid
banners, painted with dragons sprawling in distressed attitudes; litters
containing minor gods and the paraphernalia they were accustomed to need
on a journey like this; more litters bearing Chinese orchestras, gongs
going at full blast, fiddles squeaking, drums rumbling, trumpets
shrieking, cymbals clashing,—just the sort of Babel that the twins
adored.

And now came the chariot and throne of the great joss himself, and just
behind him a riderless bay horse, intended for his imperial convenience
should he tire of being swayed about on the shoulders of his twelve
bearers, and elect to change his method of conveyance.  Behind this
honoured steed came a mammoth rock-cod in a pagoda of his own, and then,
heralded by a fusilade of fire-crackers, the new dragon itself,
stretching and wriggling its monster length through one entire block.  A
swarm of men cleared the way for it, gesticulating like madmen in their
zeal to get swimming-room for the sacred monster.  Never before in her
brief existence had Pacific Simonson been afraid of anything, but if she
had been in the street, and had so much as caught the wink of the
dragon’s eye, or a wave of its consecrated fin, she would have dropped
senseless to the earth; as it was, she turned her back to the procession,
and, embracing with terror-stricken fervour the legs of the Chinaman
standing behind her, made up her mind to be a better girl in the future.
The monster was borne by seventy-four coolies who furnished legs for each
of the seventy-four joints of its body, while another concealed in its
head tossed it wildly about.  Little pigtailed boys shrieked as they
looked at its gaping mouth that would have shamed a man-eating shark, at
the huge locomotive headlights that served for its various sets of eyes,
at the horns made of barber poles, and the moustache of twisted hogshead
hoops.  Behind this baleful creature came other smaller ones, and more
flags, and litters with sacrificial offerings, and more musicians, till
all disappeared in the distance, and the crowd surged in the direction of
the temple.

There was no such good fortune for the twins as an entrance into this
holy of holies, for it held comparatively few besides the dignitaries,
aristocrats, and wealthy merchants of the colony; but there was still
ample material for entertainment, and they paid no heed to the going down
of the sun.  Why should they, indeed, when there were fascinating opium
dens standing hospitably open, where they could have the excitement of
entrance even if it were followed by immediate ejectment?  As it grew
darker, the scene grew more weird and fairylike, for the scarlet, orange,
and blue lanterns began to gleam one by one in the narrow doorways, and
from the shadowy corners of the rooms behind them.  In every shop were
tables laden with Chinese delicacies,—fish, flesh, fowl, tea, rice,
whisky, lichee nuts, preserved limes, ginger, and other sweetmeats; all
of which, when not proffered, could be easily purloined, for there was no
spirit of parsimony or hostility afloat in the air.  In cubby-holes back
of the counters, behind the stoves, wherever they could find room for a
table, groups of moon-eyed men began to congregate for their nightly game
of fan-tan, some of the players and onlookers smoking, while others
chewed lengths of peeled sugar-cane.

In the midst of festivities like these the twins would have gone on from
bliss to bliss without consciousness of time or place, had not hunger
suddenly descended upon them and sleep begun to tug at their eyelids,
changing in a trice their joy into sorrow and their mirth into mourning.
Not that they were troubled with any doubts, fears, or perplexities.
True, they had wandered away from Eden Place, and had not the slightest
idea of their whereabouts.  If they had been a couple of babes in a wood,
or any two respectable lost children of romance, memories of lullabies
and prayers at mother’s knee would have precipitated them at this
juncture into floods of tears; but home to them was simply supper and
bed.  The situation did not seem complex to their minds; the only plan
was, of course, to howl, and to do it thoroughly,—stand in a corner of
the market-place, and howl in such a manner that there could be no
mistake as to the significance of the proceeding; when the crowd
collected,—for naturally a crowd would collect,—simply demand supper and
bed, no matter what supper nor which bed; eat the first, lie down in the
second, and there you are!  If the twins had been older and more
experienced, they would have known that people occasionally do demand the
necessities of life without receiving them; but in that case they would
also have known that such a misfortune would never fall upon a couple of
lost children who confide their woes to the public.  There was no
preconcerted plan between them, no system.  They acted without invention,
premonition, or reflection.  It was their habit to scream, while holding
the breath as long as possible, whenever the universe was unfriendly, and
particularly when Nature asserted herself in any way; it was a curious
fact that they resented the intervention of Nature and Providence with
just as much energy as they did the discipline of their caretakers.  They
screamed now, the moment that the entertainment palled and they could not
keep their eyes open without effort; and never had they been more
successful in holding their breath and growing black in the face; indeed,
Pacific, in the midst of her performance, said to Atlantic, ‘Yours is
purple, how is mine?’

A crowd did gather, inevitably, for the twins’ lungs were capable of a
body of tone more piercing than that of a Chinese orchestra, and the
wonder is that poor Lisa did not hear them as she sat shivering on the
curbstone, miles away; for it was her name with which they conjured.

The populace amused itself for a short space of time, watching the fine
but misdirected zeal of the performance, and supposing that the parents
of the chanting cherubs were within easy reach.  It became unpleasant
after a while, however, and a policeman, inquiring into the matter,
marched the two dirty, weary little protestants off to a station near
by,—a march nearly as difficult and bloody as Sherman’s memorable ‘march
to the sea’; for the children associated nothing so pleasant as supper
and bed with a blue-coated, brass-buttoned person, and resisted his
well-meant advances with might and main, and tooth and nail.

The policeman was at last obliged to confine himself to Atlantic, and
called a brother-in-arms to take charge of Pacific.  He was a man who had
achieved distinction in putting down railroad riots, so he was well
calculated for the task, although he was somewhat embarrassed by the
laughter of the bystanders when his comrade called out to him, ‘Take your
club, Mike, but don’t use firearms unless your life’s in danger!’

The station reached, the usual examination took place.  Atlantic never
could tell the name of the street in which he lived, nor the number of
the house.  Pacific could, perhaps, but would not; and it must be said,
in apology for her abnormal defiance, that her mental operations were
somewhat confused, owing to copious indulgence in strong tea, ginger,
sugar-cane, and dried fish.  She had not been wisely approached in the
first place, and she was in her sulkiest and most combative humour; in
fact, when too urgently pressed for information as to her age, ancestry,
and abiding-place, she told the worthy police-officer to go to a locality
for which he felt utterly unsuited, after a life spent in the exaltation
of virtue and the suppression of vice.  (The vocabulary of the twins was
somewhat poverty-stricken in respect to the polite phrases of society,
but in profanity it would have been rich for a parrot or a pirate.)  The
waifs were presently given to the care of the police matron, and her
advice, sought later, was to the effect that the children had better be
fed and put to bed, and as little trouble expended upon them as was
consistent with a Christian city government.

‘It is possible their parents may call for them in the morning,’ she said
acidly, ‘but I think it is more than likely that they have been deserted.
I know if they belonged to me they’d be lost for ever before I tried to
find them!’ and she rubbed a black-and-blue spot on her person, which, if
exposed, would have betrayed the shape, size, and general ground-plan of
Pacific’s boot.




XI
RHODA FREES HER MIND


MORNING dawned, and Mistress Mary and Rhoda went up the flight of broad
steps rather earlier than usual,—so early that the janitress, who had
been awake half the night with an ailing baby, was just going in to dust
the rooms.

It was she who first caught sight of the old sofa and its occupant, and
her exclamation drew Mary and Rhoda to the spot.  There lay poor Marm
Lisa in the dead sleep of exhaustion, her dress torn and wrinkled, her
shoes travel-stained, her hair tangled and matted.  Their first idea was
that the dreaded foe might have descended upon her, and that she had had
some terrible seizure with no one near to aid and relieve her.  But the
longer they looked, the less they feared this; her face, though white and
tear-stained, was tranquil, her lips only slightly pale, and her
breathing calm and steady.  Mary finally noted the pathetic grouping of
little objects in the red chair, and, touched by this, began to apprehend
the significance of her own white apron close clasped in the child’s
loyal arms, and fell a-weeping softly on Rhoda’s shoulder.  ‘She needed
me, Rhoda,’ she said.  ‘I do not know for what, but I am sure she needed
me.’

‘I see it all,’ said Rhoda, administering soft strokes of consolation:
‘it is something to do with those little beasts; yes, I will call them
beasts, and if you don’t let me, I’ll call them brutes.  They lost
themselves yesterday, of course, and dear old Lisa searched for them all
the afternoon and half the night, for aught we know, and then came here
to be comforted, I suppose—the blessed thing!’

‘Hush! don’t touch her,’ Mary whispered, as Rhoda went impetuously down
on her knees by the sofa; ‘and we must not talk in this room, for fear of
waking her.  Suppose you go at once to Mrs. Grubb’s, dear, and, whatever
you learn about the twins there, I shall meanwhile call a carriage and
take Lisa home to my own bed.  The janitress can send Edith to me as soon
as she comes, and I will leave her with Lisa while I run back here to
consult with you and Helen.  I shall telegraph for Dr. Thorne, also, to
be sure that this sleep is as natural and healing a thing as it appears
to be.’

Mrs. Grubb was surprised, even amused, at Rhoda’s exciting piece of news,
but she was perfectly tranquil.

‘Well, don’t they beat all!’ she exclaimed, leaning against the
door-frame and taking her side hair out of waving-pins as she talked.
‘No, I haven’t seen them since noon yesterday.  I was out to a picnic
supper at the Army Headquarters at night, and didn’t get home till later
than usual, so I didn’t go up to their room.  I thought they were in bed;
they always have been in bed when it was bedtime, ever since they were
born.’  Here she removed the last pin, and put it with the others in the
bosom of her dress for safe-keeping.  ‘This morning, when they didn’t
turn up, I thought some of you girls had taken a fancy to keep them
overnight; I didn’t worry, supposing that Lisa was with them.’

‘Nobody on earth could take a fancy to the twins or keep them an hour
longer than necessary, and you know it, Mrs. Grubb,’ said Rhoda, who
seldom minced matters; ‘and in case no one should ever have the bad
manners to tell you the whole truth, I want to say here and now that you
neglect everything good and sensible and practical,—all the plain, simple
duties that stare you directly in the face,—and waste yourself on matters
that are of no earthly use to anybody.  Those children would have been
missed last night if you had one drop of mother’s blood in your veins!
You have three helpless children under what you are pleased to call your
care’ (and here Rhoda’s lip curled so scornfully that Mrs. Grubb was
tempted to stab her with a curling-pin), ‘and you went to sleep without
knowing to a certainty whether they had had supper or bed!  I don’t
believe you are a woman at all—you are just a vague abstraction; and the
only things you’ve ever borne or nursed or brooded in your life have been
your miserable, bloodless little clubs and bands and unions!’

Rhoda’s eyes flashed summer lightning, her nostrils quivered, her cheeks
flamed scarlet, and Mrs. Grubb sat down suddenly and heavily on the front
stairs and gasped for breath.  According to her own belief, her whole
life had been passed in a search for truth, but it is safe to say she had
never before met it in so uncompromising and disagreeable a shape.

‘Perhaps when you are quite through with your billingsgate,’ she finally
said, ‘you will take yourself off my steps before you are ejected.  You!
to presume to criticise me!  You, that are so low in the scale of being,
you can no more understand my feelings and motives than a jellyfish can
comprehend a star!  Go back and tell Miss Mary,’ she went on
majestically, as she gained confidence and breath, ‘that it is her duty
and business to find the children, since they were last seen with her,
and unless she proves more trustworthy they will not be allowed to return
to her.  Tell her, too, that when she wishes to communicate with me, she
must choose some other messenger besides you, you impudent, grovelling
little earthworm!  Get out of my sight, or you will unfit me for my
classes!’

Mrs. Grubb was fairly superb as she launched these thunderbolts of
invective; the staircase her rostrum, her left hand poised impressively
on the baluster, and the three snaky strands of brown hair that had
writhed out of the waving-pins hissing Medusa-wise on each side of her
bead.

Rhoda was considerably taken aback by the sudden and violent slamming of
the door of No. 1 Eden Place, and she felt an unwelcome misgiving as to
her wisdom in bringing Mrs. Grubb face to face with truth.  Her rage had
somewhat subsided by the time she reached Mistress Mary’s side, for she
had stopped on the way to ask a policeman to telephone the various
stations for news of the lost children, and report at once to her.
‘There is one good thing,’ she thought: ‘wherever they may be, their
light cannot be hid any more than that of a city that is set on a hill.
There will be plenty of traces of their journey, for once seen they are
never forgotten.  Nobody but a hero would think of kidnapping them, and
nobody but an idiot would expect a ransom for them!’

‘I hope you didn’t upbraid Mrs. Grubb,’ said Mary, divining from Rhoda’s
clouded brow that her interview had not been a pleasant one.  ‘You know
our only peaceful way of rescuing Lisa from her hold is to make a friend
of her, and convert her to our way of thinking.  Was she much disturbed
about the children?’

‘Disturbed!’ sniffed Rhoda disdainfully.  ‘Imagine Mrs. Grubb disturbed
about anything so trivial as a lost child!  If it had been a lost
amendment, she might have been ruffled!’

‘What is she doing about it, and in what direction is she searching?’

‘She is doing nothing, and she will do nothing; she has gone to a
Theosophy lecture, and we are to find the twins; and she says it’s your
fault, anyway, and unless you prove more trustworthy the seraphs will be
removed from your care; and you are not to send me again as a messenger,
if you please, because I am an impudent, grovelling little earthworm!’

‘Rhoda!’

‘Yes’m!’

‘Did she call you that?’

‘Yes’m, and a jellyfish besides; in fact, she dragged me through the
entire animal kingdom; but she is a stellar being—she said so.’

‘What did you say to her to provoke that, Rhoda?  She is thoroughly
illogical and perverse, but she is very amiable.’

‘Yes, when you don’t interfere with her.  You should catch her with her
hair in waving-pins, just after she has imbibed apple-sauce!  Oh, I can’t
remember exactly what I said, for I confess I was a trifle heated, and at
the moment I thought only of freeing my mind.  Let me see: I told her she
neglected all the practical duties that stared her directly in the face,
and squandered herself on useless fads and vagaries—that’s about all.
No-o, now that I come to think of it, I did say that the children would
have been missed and found last night, if she had had a drop of mother’s
blood in her veins.’

‘That’s terse and strong—and tactful,’ said Mary; ‘anything more?’

‘No, I don’t think so.  Oh yes! now that I reflect, I said I didn’t
believe she was a woman at all.  That seemed to enrage her beyond
anything, somehow; and when I explained it, and tried to modify it by
saying I meant that she had never borne or loved or brooded anything in
her life but her nasty little clubs, she was white with anger, and told
me I was too low in the scale of being to understand her.  Good gracious!
I wish she understood herself half as well as I understand her!’

Mary gave a hysterical laugh.  ‘I can’t pretend you didn’t speak the
truth, Rhoda, but I am sadly afraid it was ill advised to wound Mrs.
Grubb’s vanity.  Do you feel a good deal better?’

‘No,’ confessed Rhoda penitently.  ‘I did for fifteen minutes,—yes,
nearly half an hour; but now I feel worse than ever.’

‘That is one of the commonest symptoms of freeing one’s mind,’ observed
Mary quietly.

It was scarcely an hour later when Atlantic and Pacific were brought in
by an officer, very dirty and dishevelled, but gay and irresponsible as
larks, nonchalant, amiable, and unrepentant.  As Rhoda had prophesied,
there had been no difficulty in finding them; and as everybody had
prophesied, once found there had not been a second’s delay in delivery.
Moved by fiery hatred of the police matron, who had illustrated justice
more than mercy, and illustrated it with the back of a hair-brush on
their reversed persons; lured also by two popcorn balls, a jumping-jack,
and a tin horse, they accepted the municipal escort with alacrity; and
nothing was ever jauntier than the manner in which Pacific, all smiles
and molasses, held up her sticky lips for an expected salute—an unusual
offer which was respectfully declined as a matter of discipline.

Mary longed for Rhoda’s young minister in the next half-hour, which she
devoted to private spiritual instruction.  Psychology proved wholly
unequal to the task of fathoming the twins, and she fancied that theology
might have been more helpful.  Their idea seemed to be—if the rudimentary
thing she unearthed from their consciousness could be called an idea—that
they would not mind repenting if they could see anything of which to
repent.  Of sin, as sin, they had no apparent knowledge, either by sight,
by hearsay or by actual acquaintance.  They sat stolidly in their little
chairs, eyes roving to the windows, the blackboard, the pictures; they
clubbed together and fished a pin from a crack in the floor during one of
Mary’s most thrilling appeals; finally they appeared so bored by the
whole proceeding that she felt a certain sense of embarrassment in the
midst of her despair.  She took them home herself at noon, apologised to
the injured Mrs. Grubb for Rhoda’s unfortunate remarks, and told that
lady, gently but firmly, that Lisa could not be moved until she was
decidedly better.

‘She was wandering about the streets searching for the twins from noon
till long after dark, Mrs. Grubb—there can be no doubt of it; and she
bears unmistakable signs of having suffered deeply.  I have called in a
physician, and we must all abide by his advice.’

‘That’s well enough for the present,’ agreed Mrs. Grubb reluctantly, ‘but
I cannot continue to have my studies broken in upon by these excitements.
I really cannot.  I thought I had made an arrangement with Madame
Goldmarker to relieve me, but she has just served me a most unladylike
and deceitful trick, and the outcome of it will be that I shall have to
send Lisa to the asylum.  I can get her examined by the commissioners
some time before Christmas, and if they decide she’s imbecile they’ll
take her off my hands.  I didn’t want to part with her till the twins got
older, but I’ve just found a possible home for them if I can endure their
actions until New Year’s.  Our Army of Present Perfection isn’t
progressing as it ought to, and it’s going to found a colony down in San
Diego County, and advertise for children to bring up in the faith.  A
certain number of men and women have agreed to go and start the thing and
I’m sure my sister, if she was alive would be glad to donate her children
to such a splendid enterprise.  If the commissioners won’t take Lisa, she
can go to Soul Haven, too—that’s the name of the place;—but no, of course
they wouldn’t want any but bright children, that would grow up and spread
the light.’ (Mary smiled at the thought of the twins engaged in the
occupation of spreading light.)  ‘I shall not join the community myself,
though I believe it’s a good thing; but a very different future is
unveiling itself before me’ (her tone was full of mystery here), ‘and
some time, if I can ever pursue my investigations in peace, you will
knock at this door and I shall have vanished!  But I shall know of your
visit, and the very sound of your footfall will reach my ear, even if I
am inhabiting some remote mountain fastness!’

                                * * * * *

When Lisa awoke that night, she heard the crackling of a wood fire on the
hearth; she felt the touch of soft linen under her aching body, and the
pressure of something cool and fragrant on her forehead.  Her right hand,
feebly groping the white counterpane, felt a flower in its grasp.
Opening her eyes, she saw the firelight dancing on tinted walls, and an
angel of deliverance sitting by her bedside—a dear familiar woman angel,
whose fair crowned head rose from a cloud of white, and whose sweet
downward gaze held all of benignant motherhood that God could put into
woman’s eyes.

Marm Lisa looked up dumbly and wonderingly at first, but the mind
stirred, thought flowed in upon it, a wave of pain broke over her heart,
and she remembered all; for remembrance, alas, is the price of reason.

‘Lost! my twinnies, all lost and gone!’ she whispered brokenly, with
long, shuddering sobs between the words.  ‘I look—look—look; never, never
find!’

‘No, no, dear,’ Mary answered, stroking the lines from her forehead, ‘not
lost any more; found, Lisa—do you understand?  They are found, they are
safe and well, and nobody blames you; and you are safe, too, your new
self, your best self unharmed, thank God; so go to sleep, little sister,
and dream happy dreams!’

Glad tears rushed from the poor child’s eyes, tears of conscious
happiness, and the burden rolled away from her heart now, as yesterday’s
whirring shuttles in her brain had been hushed into silence by her long
sleep.  She raised her swimming eyes to Mistress Mary’s with a look of
unspeakable trust.  ‘I love you! oh, I love, love, love you!’ she
whispered, and, holding the flower close to her breast, she breathed a
sigh of sweet content, and sank again into quiet slumber.




XII
FLOTSAM AND JETSAM


IT may be said in justice to Mrs. Grubb that she was more than usually
harassed just at this time.

Mrs. Sylvester, her voluble next-door neighbour, who had lifted many
sordid cares from her shoulders, had suddenly become tired of the ‘new
method of mental healing,’ and during a brief absence of Mrs. Grubb from
the city had issued a thousand embossed gilt-edged cards, announcing
herself as the Hand Reader in the following terms:—

                TO THE ELITE LADIES AND GENTLEMEN OF THE CITY!

    I take this method of introducing myself to your kind consideration
    as a Hand Reader of _rare_ and _genuine merit_; catering merely to
    the Creme du le Creme of this city.  No others need apply.

    Having been educated carefully and refinedly, speaking French
    fluently, therefore I only wish to deal with the elite of the
    bon-ton.

    I do not advertise in papers nor at residence.

                           Ladies $1.50.  Gents $2.

    Yours truly,

                                                     MRS. PANSY SYLVESTER,
                                                    3 Eden Place near 4th,
                                                                Lower bell

    _P.S._  Pupil of S. CORA GRUBB.

Inasmuch as Mrs. Sylvester had imbibed all her knowledge from Mrs. Grubb,
that prophet and scholar thought, not unnaturally, that she might have
been consulted about the enterprise, particularly as the cards were of a
nature to prejudice the better class of patients, and lower the social
tone of the temple of healing.

As if this were not vexatious enough, her plans were disarranged in
another and more important particular.  Mrs. Sylvester’s manicure had set
up a small establishment for herself, and admitted as partner a certain
chiropodist named Boone.  The two artists felt that by sharing expenses
they might increase profits, and there was a sleeping thought in both
their minds that the partnership might ripen into marriage if the
financial returns of the business were satisfactory.  It was destined,
however, to be a failure in both respects; for Dr. Boone looked upon
Madame Goldmarker, the vocal teacher in No. 13 Eden Place, and to look
upon her was to love her madly, since she earned seventy-five dollars a
month, while the little manicure could barely eke out a slender and
uncertain twenty.  In such crises the heart can be trusted to leap in the
right direction and beat at the proper rate.

Mrs. Grubb would have had small interest in these sordid romances had it
not been that Madame Goldmarker had faithfully promised to look after
Lisa and the twins, so that Mrs. Grubb might be free to hold classes in
the adjoining towns.  The little blind god had now overturned all these
well-laid plans, and Mrs. Grubb was for the moment the victim of
inexorable circumstances.

Dr. Boone fitted up princely apartments next his office, and Madame
Goldmarker Boone celebrated her nuptials and her desertion of Eden Place
by making a formal _début_ at a concert in Pocahontas Hall.  The next
morning, the neighbourhood that knew them best, and many other
neighbourhoods that knew them not at all, received neat printed circulars
thrust under the front door.  Upon one side of the paper were printed the
words and music of ‘Home, Sweet Home,’ ‘as sung by Madame Goldmarker
Boone at her late concert in Pocahontas Hall.’  On the reverse side
appeared a picture of the doctor, a neat cut of a human foot, a schedule
of prices, and the alluring promise that the Madame’s vocal pupils would
receive treatment at half the regular rates.

Many small disputes and quarrels were consequent upon these business,
emotional, and social convulsions, and each of the parties concerned,
from Mrs. Grubb to the chiropodist, consulted Mistress Mary and solicited
her advice and interference.

This seemed a little strange, but Mistress Mary’s garden was the sort of
place to act as a magnet to reformers, eccentrics, professional
philanthropists, and cranks.  She never quite understood the reason, and
for that matter nobody else did, unless it were simply that the place was
a trifle out of the common, and she herself a person full of ideas, and
eminently sympathetic with those of other people.  Anybody could ‘drop
in,’ and as a consequence everybody did—grandmothers, mothers with babes
in arms, teachers, ministers, photographers, travellers, and journalists.
A Russian gentleman who had escaped from Siberia was a frequent visitor.
He wanted to marry Edith and open a boarding-house for Russian exiles,
and was perfectly confident of making her happy, as he spoke seven
languages and had been a good husband to two Russian ladies now deceased.
An Alaskan missionary, home on a short leave, called periodically, and
attempted to persuade Mary to return with him to his heathen.  These
suitors were disposed of summarily when they made their desires known;
but there were other visitors, part of the flotsam and jetsam of a great
city, who appeared and disappeared mysteriously—ships passing Mistress
Mary in the night of sorrow, and, after some despairing,
half-comprehended signal, vanishing into the shadows out of which they
had come.  Sometimes, indeed, inspired by the good cheer of the place,
they departed, looking a little less gloomy; sometimes, too, they grew
into a kind of active if transitory relation with the busy little world,
and became, for a time, a part of it.

Mistress Mary went down to the street corner with the children one noon
to see them safely over the crossing.  There was generally a genial
policeman who made it a part of his duty to stand guard there, and guide
the reckless and stupid and bewildered ones among the youngsters over the
difficulties that lay in their path.  Sometimes he would devote himself
exclusively to Atlantic and Pacific Simonson, who really desired death,
though they were not spiritually fitted for it, and bent all their
energies towards getting under trucks rather than away from them.  Marm
Lisa never approached the spot without a nervous trembling and a look of
terror in her eyes, and before the advent of the helpful officer had
always taken a twin by each arm, and the three had gone over thus as a
solid body, no matter how strong the resistance.

On this special morning there was no guardian of the peace in evidence,
but standing on the crossing was a bearded man of perhaps forty years.
Rather handsome he was, and well though carelessly dressed, but he stood
irresolutely with his hands in his pockets, as if quite undecided what to
do next.  Mary simply noted him as an altogether strange figure in the
neighbourhood, but the unexpected appearance of a large dog on the scene
scattered the babies, and they fell on her in a weeping phalanx.

‘Will you kindly help a little?’ she asked after a moment’s waiting, in
which any chivalrous gentleman, she thought, should have flung himself
into the breach.

‘I?’ he asked vaguely.  ‘How do you mean?  What shall I do?’

She longed to say, ‘Wake up, and perhaps an idea will come to you’; but
she did say, with some spirit, ‘Almost anything, thank you.  Drive the
dog away, and help some of the smallest children across the street,
please.  You can have these two’ (indicating the twins smilingly), ‘or
the other ninety-eight—whichever you like.’

He obeyed orders, though not in a very alert fashion, but showed a sense
of humour in choosing the ninety-eight rather than the two, and Mary left
him on the corner with a pleasant word of thanks and a cheery remark.

The next morning he appeared at the garden gate, and asked if he might
come in and sit a while.  He was made welcome; but it was a busy morning,
and he was so silent a visitor that everybody forgot his existence.

He made a curious impression, which can hardly be described, save that
any student of human nature would say at once, ‘He is out of relation
with the world.’  He had something of the expression one sees in a
recluse or a hermit.  If you have ever wandered up a mountain side, you
may have come suddenly upon a hut, a rude bed within it, and in the door
a man reading, or smoking, or gazing into vacancy.  You remember the look
you met in that man’s eyes.  He has tasted life and found it bitter; has
sounded the world and found it hollow; has known man or woman and found
them false.  Friendship to him is without savour, and love without hope.

After watching the children for an hour, the stranger slipped out
quietly.  Mistress Mary followed him to the door, abashed at her
unintentional discourtesy in allowing him to go without a good morning.
She saw him stand at the foot of the steps, look first up, then down the
street, then walk aimlessly to the corner.  There, with hands in pockets,
he paused again, glancing four ways; then, with a shrug and a gait that
seemed to say, ‘It makes no difference,’ he slouched away.

‘He is simply a stranger in a strange city, pining for his home,’ thought
Mary, ‘or else he is a stranger in every city, and has nowhere a home.’

He came again a few days later, and then again, apologising for the
frequency of his visits, but giving no special reason for them.  The
neophytes called him ‘the Solitary,’ but the children christened him
after a fashion of their own, and began to ask small favours of him.
‘Thread my needle, please, Mr. Man!’  ‘More beads,’ or ‘More paper, Mr.
Man, please.’

It is impossible to keep out of relation with little children.  One of
these mites of humanity would make a man out of your mountain hermit,
resist as he might.  They set up a claim on one whether it exists or not,
and one has to allow it, and respond to it at least in some perfunctory
fashion.  More than once, as Mr. Man sat silently near the circle, the
chubby Baker baby would fall over his feet, and he would involuntarily
stoop to pick her up, straighten her dress, and soothe her woe.  There
was no hearty pleasure in his service even now.  Nobody was certain that
he felt any pleasure at all.  His helpfulness was not spontaneous; it
seemed a kind of reflex action, a survival of some former state of mind
or heart; for he did his favours in a dream, nor heard any thanks: yet
the elixir was working in his veins.

‘He is dreadfully in the way,’ grumbled Edith; ‘he is more ever-present
than my ardent Russian.’

‘So long as he insists on coming, let us make him supply the paternal
element,’ suggested Rhoda.  ‘It may be a degrading confession, but we
could afford to part with several women here if we could only secure a
really fatherly man.  The Solitary cannot indulge in any day-dreams or
trances, if we accept him as the patriarch of the institution.’

Whereupon they boldly asked him, on his subsequent visits, to go upon
errands, and open barrels of apples, and order intoxicated gentlemen off
the steps, and mend locks and window-fastenings, and sharpen
lead-pencils, and put on coal, and tell the lady in the rear that her
parrot interfered with their morning prayers by shrieking the hymns in
impossible keys.  He accepted these tasks without protest, and performed
them conscientiously, save in the parrot difficulty, in which case he
gave one look at the lady, and fled without opening the subject.

It could not be said that he appeared more cheerful, the sole sign of any
increased exhilaration of spirits being the occasional straightening of
his cravat and the smoothing of his hair—refinements of toilet that had
heretofore been much neglected, though he always looked unmistakably the
gentleman.

He seemed more attracted by Lisa than by any of the smaller children; but
that may have been because Mary had told him her story, thinking that
other people’s stories were a useful sort of thing to tell people who had
possible stories of their own.

Lisa was now developing a curious and unexpected facility and talent in
the musical games.  She played the tambourine, the triangle, the drum, as
nobody else could, and in accompanying the marches she invented all sorts
of unusual beats and accents.  It grew to be the natural thing to give
her difficult parts in the little dramas of child life: the cock that
crowed in the morn to wake the sleeping birds and babies, the mother-bird
in the nest, the spreading willow-tree in the pond where the frogs
congregated,—these _rôles_ she delighted in and played with all her soul.

It would have been laughable, had it not been pathetic, to watch her drag
Mr. Man into the games, and to see him succumb to her persuasions with
his face hanging out flaming signals of embarrassment.  In the ‘Carrier
Doves’ the little pigeons flew with an imaginary letter to him, and this
meant that he was to stand and read it aloud, as Mary and Edith had done
before him.

‘It seems to be a letter from a child,’ he faltered, and then began
stammeringly, ‘“My dear Mr. Man”’—there was a sudden stop.  That there
was a letter in his mind nobody could doubt, but he was too greatly moved
to read it.  Rhoda quickly reached out her hand for the paper, covering
his discomfiture by exclaiming, ‘The pigeons have brought Mr. Man a
letter from some children in his fatherland!  Yes’ (reading), ‘they hope
that we will be good to him, because he is far away from home, and they
send their love to all Mistress Mary’s children.  Wasn’t it pretty of the
doves to remember that Mr. Man is a stranger here?’

The Solitary appeared for the last time a week before Thanksgiving Day,
and he opened the door on a scene of jollity that warmed him to the
heart.

In the middle of the floor was a mimic boat, crowded from stem to stern
with little Pilgrim fathers and mothers trying to land on Plymouth Rock,
in a high state of excitement and an equally high sea.  Pat Higgins was a
chieftain commanding a large force of tolerably peaceful Indians on the
shore, and Massasoit himself never exhibited more dignity; while Marm
Lisa was the proud mother of the baby Oceanus born on the eventful voyage
of the _Mayflower_.

Then Mistress Mary told the story of the festival very simply and
sweetly, and all the tiny Pilgrims sang a hymn of thanksgiving.  The
Solitary listened, with his heart in his eyes and a sob in his throat;
then, Heaven knows under the inspiration of what memory, he brushed Edith
from the piano-stool, and, seating himself in her place, played as if he
were impelled by some irresistible force.  The hand of a master had never
swept those keys before, and he held his hearers spellbound.

There was a silence that could be felt.  The major part of the audience
were not of an age to appreciate high art, but the youngsters were awed
by the strange spectacle of Mr. Man at the piano, and with gaping mouth
and strained ear listened to the divine harmonies he evoked.  On and on
he played, weaving the story of his past into the music, so it seemed to
Mistress Mary.  The theme came brokenly and uncertainly at first, as his
thoughts strove for expression.  Then out of the bitterness and gall, the
suffering and the struggle—and was it remorse?—was born a sweet,
resolute, triumphant strain that carried the listeners from height to
height of sympathy and emotion.  It had not a hint of serenity; it was
new-born courage, aspiration, and self-mastery the song of ‘him that
overcometh.’

When he paused, there was a deep-drawn breath, a sigh from hearts
surcharged with feeling, and Lisa, who had drawn closer and closer to the
piano, stood there now, one hand leaning on Mr. Man’s shoulder and the
tears chasing one another down her cheeks.

‘It hurts me here,’ she sighed, pressing her hand to her heart.

He rose presently and left the room without a word, while the children
prepared for home-going with a subdued air of having assisted at some
solemn rite.

When Mistress Mary went out on the steps, a little later, he was still
there.

‘It is the last time!  Auf wiedersehen!’ he said.

‘Auf wiedersehen,’ she answered gently, giving him her hand.

‘Have you no Thanksgiving sermon for me?’ he asked, holding her fingers
lingeringly.  ‘No child in all your flock needs it so much.’

‘Yes,’ said Mary, her eyes falling, for a moment, beneath his earnest
gaze; but suddenly she lifted them again as she said bravely, ‘I have a
sermon, but it is one with a trumpet-call, and little balm in it.  “Unto
whomsoever anything is given, of him something shall be required.”’

When he reached the corner of the street he stopped, but instead of
glancing four ways, as usual, he looked back at the porch where Mistress
Mary stood.  She carried Jenny Baker, a rosy sprig of babyhood, in the
lovely curve of her arm; Bobby Baxter clasped her neck from behind in a
strangling embrace; Johnny, and Meg, and Billy were tugging at her apron;
and Marm Lisa was standing on tiptoe trying to put a rose in her hair.
Then the Solitary passed into the crowd, and they saw him in the old
places no more.




XIII
LEAVES FROM MISTRESS MARY’S GARDEN


‘WE have an unknown benefactor.  A fortnight ago came three bushels of
flowers: two hundred tiny nosegays marked “For the children,” half a
dozen knots of pink roses for the “little mothers,” a dozen scarlet
carnations for Lisa, while one great bunch of white lilies bore the
inscription, “For the Mother Superior.”  Last week a barrel of apples and
another of oranges appeared mysteriously, and to-day comes a note,
written in a hand we do not recognise, saying we are not to buy holly,
mistletoe, evergreens, Christmas tree, or baubles of any kind, as they
will be sent to us on December 22.  We have inquired of our friends, but
have no clue as yet, further than it must be somebody who knows our needs
and desires very thoroughly.  We have certainly entertained an angel
unawares, but which among the crowd of visitors is it most likely to be?
The Solitary, I wonder?  I should never have thought it, were it not for
the memory of that last day, the scene at the piano, the “song of him
that overcometh,” and the backward glance from the corner as he sprang,
absolutely sprang, on the car.  There was purpose in it, or I am greatly
mistaken.  Mr. Man’s eyes would be worth looking into, if one could find
purpose in their brown depths!  Moreover, though I am too notorious a
dreamer of dreams to be trusted, I cannot help fancying he went _back_ to
something; it was not a mere forward move, not a sudden determination to
find some new duty to do that life might grow nobler and sweeter, but a
return to an old duty grown hateful.  That was what I saw in his face as
he stood on the crossing, with the noon sunshine caught in his tawny hair
and beard.  Rhoda, Edith, and I have each made a story about him, and
each of us would vouch for the truth of her particular version.  I will
not tell mine, but this is Rhoda’s; and while it differs from my own in
several important particulars, it yet bears an astonishing resemblance to
it.  It is rather romantic, but if one is to make any sort of story out
of the Solitary it must be a romantic one, for he suggests no other.

‘Rhoda began her tale with a thrilling introduction that set us all
laughing (we smile here when still the tears are close at hand; indeed,
we must smile, or we could not live): the prelude being something about a
lonely castle in the heart of the Hartz Mountains, and a prattling
golden-haired babe stretching its arms across a ruined moat in the
direction of its absent father.  This was in the nature of an absurd
prologue, but when she finally came to the Solitary she grew serious; for
she made him in the bygone days a sensitive child and a dreamy, impetuous
youth, with a domineering, ill-tempered father who was utterly unable and
unwilling to understand or to sympathise with him.  His younger brother
(for Rhoda insists on a younger brother) lived at home, while he, the
elder, spent, or misspent, his youth and early manhood in a German
university.  As the years went on, the relations between himself and his
father grew more and more strained.  Do as the son might, he could never
please, either in his line of thought and study or in his practical
pursuits.  The father hated his books, his music, his poetry, and his
artist friends, while he on his part found nothing to stimulate or
content him in his father’s tasks and manner of life.  His mother pined
and died in the effort to keep peace between them, but the younger
brother’s schemes were quite in an opposite direction.  At this time, Mr.
Man flung himself into a foolish marriage, one that promised little in
the shape of the happiness he craved so eagerly.  (Rhoda insists on this
unhappy marriage; I am in doubt about it.)  Finally his father died, and
on being summoned home, as he supposed, to take his rightful place and
assume the management of the estate, he found himself disinherited.  He
could have borne the loss of fortune and broad acres better than this
convincing proof of his father’s dislike and distrust, and he could have
endured even that, had it not befallen him through the perfidy of his
brother.  When, therefore, he was met by his wife’s bitter reproaches and
persistent coldness he closed his heart against all the world, shook the
dust of home from off his feet, left his own small fortune behind him,
kissed his little son, and became a wanderer on the face of the earth.

‘This is substantially Rhoda’s story, but it does not satisfy her
completely.  She says, in her whimsical way, that it needs another
villain to account properly for Mr. Man’s expression.

‘Would it not be strange if by any chance we have brought him to a
happier frame of mind?  Would it not be a lovely tribute to the secret
power of this place, to the healing atmosphere of love that we try to
create—that atmosphere in which we bathe our own tired spirits day by
day, recreating ourselves with every new dawn?  But whether our
benefactor be the Solitary or not, some heart has been brought into new
relation with us and with the world.  It only confirms my opinion that
everybody is at his or her best in the presence of children.  In what
does the magic of their influence consist?  This morning I was riding
down in the horse-cars, and a poor ragged Italian woman entered, a baby
in her arms, and two other children following close behind.  The girl was
a mite of a thing, prematurely grave, serious, pretty, and she led a boy
just old enough to toddle.  She lifted him carefully up to the seat (she
who should have been lifted herself!), took his hat, smoothed his damp,
curly hair, and tucked his head down on her shoulder, a shoulder that had
begun its life-work full early, poor tot!  The boy was a feeble, frail,
ill-nourished, dirty young urchin, who fell asleep as soon as his head
touched her arm.  His child-nurse, having made him comfortable, gave a
sigh of relief, and looked up and down the car with a radiant smile of
content.  Presto, change!  All the railroad magnates and clerks had been
watching her over their newspapers, and in one instant she had captured
the car.  I saw tears in many eyes, and might have seen more had not my
own been full.  There was apparently no reason for the gay, winsome,
enchanting smile that curved the red mouth, brought two dimples into the
brown cheeks, and sunny gleams into two dark eyes.  True, she was riding
instead of walking, and her charge was sleeping instead of waking and
wailing; but these surely were trifling matters on which to base such
rare content.  Yet there it was shining in her face as she met a dozen
pairs of eyes, and saw in each of them love for her sweet motherly little
self, and love for the “eternal womanly” of which she was the visible
expression.  There was a general exodus at Brett Street, and every man
furtively slipped a piece of silver into the child’s lap as he left the
car; each, I think, trying to hide his action from the others.

‘It is of threads such as these that I weave the fabric of my daily
happiness,—a happiness that my friends never seem able to comprehend; the
blindest of them pity me, indeed, but I consider myself like Mary of old,
“blessed among women.”’

_Another day_.—‘God means all sorts of things when he sends men and women
into the world.  That he means marriage, and that it is the chiefest
good, I have no doubt, but it is the love forces in it that make it so.
I may, perhaps, reach my highest point of development without marriage,
but I can never do it unless I truly and deeply love somebody or
something.  I am not sure, but it seems to me God intends me for other
people’s children, not for my own.  My heart is so entirely in my work
that I fancy I have none left for a possible husband.  If ever a man
comes who is strong enough and determined enough to sweep things aside
and make a place for himself willy-nilly, I shall ask him to come in and
rest; but that seems very unlikely.  What man have I ever seen who would
help me to be the woman my work helps me to be?  Of course there are
such, but the Lord keeps them safely away from my humble notice, lest I
should die of love or be guilty of hero-worship.

‘Men are so dull, for the most part!  They are often tender and often
loyal, but they seldom put any spiritual leaven into their tenderness,
and their loyalty is apt to be rather unimaginative.  Heigho!  I wish we
could make lovers as the book-writers do, by rolling the virtues and
graces of two or three men into one!  I’d almost like to be a man in this
decade, a young, strong man, for there are such splendid giants to slay!
To be sure, a woman can always buckle on the sword, and that is rather a
delightful avocation, after all; but somehow there are comparatively few
men nowadays who care greatly to wear swords or have them buckled on.
There is no inspiration in trying to buckle on the sword of a man who
never saw one, and who uses it wrong end foremost, and falls down on it,
and entangles his legs in it, and scratches his lady’s hand with it
whenever he kisses her!  And therefore, these things, for aught I see,
being unalterably so, I will take children’s love, woman’s love, and
man’s friendship; man’s friendship, which, if it is not life’s poetry, is
credible prose, says George Meredith,—“a land of low undulations, instead
of Alps, beyond the terrors and deceptions.”  That will fill to
overflowing my life, already so full, and in time I shall grow from
everybody’s Mistress Mary into everybody’s Mother Mary, and that will be
the end of me in my present state of being.  I am happy, yes, I am
blessedly happy in this prospect, and yet—’

_Another day_.—‘My beloved work!  How beautiful it is!  Toniella has not
brought little Nino this week.  She says he is ill, but that he sits
every day in the orchard, singing our songs and modelling birds from the
lump of clay we sent him.  When I heard that phrase “in the orchard,” I
felt a curious sensation, for I know they live in a tenement house; but I
said nothing, and went to visit them.

‘The orchard is a few plants in pots and pans on a projecting
window-sill!

‘My heart went down on its knees when I saw it.  The divine spark is in
those children; it will be a moving power, helping them to struggle out
of their present environment into a wider, sunnier one—the one of the
real orchards.  How fresh, how full of possibilities, is the world to the
people who can keep the child heart, and above all to the people who are
able to see orchards in window-boxes!’

_Another day_.—‘Lisa’s daily lesson is just finished.  It was in
arithmetic, and I should have lost patience had it not been for her
musical achievements this morning.  Edith played the airs of twenty or
thirty games, and without a word of help from us she associated the right
memory with each, and illustrated it with pantomime.  In some cases, she
invented gestures of her own that showed deeper intuition than ours; and
when, last of all, the air of the Carrier Doves was played, a vision of
our Solitary must have come before her mind.  Her lip trembling, she held
an imaginary letter in her fingers, and, brushing back the hair from her
forehead (his very gesture!), she passed her hand across her eyes, laid
the make-believe note in Rhoda’s apron, and slipped out of the door
without a word.

“‘Mr. Man!  Mr. Man!  It is Mr. Man when he couldn’t read his letter!”
cried the children.  “Why doesn’t he come to see us any more, Miss
Rhoda?”

‘“He is doing some work for Miss Mary, I think,” answered Rhoda, with a
teasing look at me.

‘Lisa came back just then, and rubbed her cheek against my arm.  “I went
to the corner,” she whispered, “but he wasn’t there; he is never there
now!”

‘It was the remembrance of this astonishing morning that gave me courage
in the later lesson.  She seems to have no idea of numbers—there will be
great difficulty there,—but she begins to read well, and the marvel of it
is that she has various talents!  She is weak, uneducated; many things
are either latent or altogether missing in her as yet, and I do not know
how many of them will appear, nor how long a process it will be; but her
mind is full of compensations, and that is the last thing I expected.  It
is only with infinite struggle that she _learns_ anything, though she is
capable of struggle, and that is a good deal to say; but she has besides
a precious heritage of instincts and insights, hitherto unsuspected and
never drawn upon.  It is precisely as if there had been a bundle of
possibilities folded away somewhere in her brain, but hidden by an
intervening veil, or crushed by some alien weight.  We seem to have drawn
away that curtain or lifted that weight, and the faculties so long
obscured are stretching themselves and growing with their new freedom.
It reminds me of the weak, stunted grass-blades under a stone.  I am
always lifting it and rolling it away, sentimentally trying to give the
struggling shoots a chance.  One can see for many a long day where the
stone has been, but the grass forgets it after a while, when it breathes
the air and sunshine, tastes the dew and rain, and feels the miracle of
growth within its veins.’

_Another day_.—‘The twins are certainly improving a trifle.  They are by
no means angelic, but they are at least growing human; and if ever their
tremendous energy—a very whirlwind—is once turned in the right direction,
we shall see things move, I warrant you!  Rhoda says truly that the
improvement cannot be seen with the naked eye; but the naked eye is never
in use with us, in our work, nor indeed with the Father of Lights, who
teaches us all to see truly if we will.

‘The young minister has spent a morning with us.  He came to make my
acquaintance, shook me warmly by the hand, and—that was the last I saw of
him, for he kept as close to Rhoda’s side as circumstances would permit!
The naked eye is all one needs to discern his motives!  Psychological
observations, indeed!  Child study, forsooth!  It was lovely to see
Rhoda’s freshness, spontaneity, and unconsciousness, as she flitted about
like a pretty cardinal-bird.  Poor young minister, whose heart is
dangling at the strings of her scarlet apron!  Lucky young minister, if
his arm ever goes about that slender red-ribboned waist, and his lips
ever touch that glowing cheek!  But poor me! what will the garden be
without our crimson rose?’




XIV
MORE LEAVES


‘IT has been one of the discouraging days.  Lisa was wilful; the twins
had a moral relapse; the young minister came again, and, oh, the
interminable length of time he held Rhoda’s hand at parting!  Is it not
strange that, with the whole universe to choose from, his predatory eye
must fall upon my blooming Rhoda?  I wonder whether the fragrance she
will shed upon that one small parsonage will be as widely disseminated as
the sweetness she exhales here, day by day, among our “little people all
in a row”?  I am not sure; I hope so; at any rate, selfishness must not
be suffered to eclipse my common-sense, and the young minister seems a
promising, manly fellow.

‘When we have had a difficult day, I go home and sit down in my cosy
corner in the twilight, the time and place where I always repeat my
_credo_, which is this:—

‘It is the children of this year, of every new year, who are to bring the
full dawn, that dawn that has been growing since first the world began.
It is not only that children re-create the world year by year, decade by
decade, by making over human nature; by transforming trivial, thoughtless
men and women into serious, earnest ones; by waking in arid natures
slumbering seeds of generosity, self-sacrifice, and helpfulness.  It is
not alone in this way that children are bringing the dawn of the perfect
day.  It is the children (bless them! how naughty they were to-day!) who
are going to do all we have left undone, all we have failed to do, all we
might have done had we been wise enough, all we have been too weak and
stupid to do.

‘Among the thousands of tiny things growing up all over the land, some of
them under my very wing—watched and tended, unwatched and untended,
loved, unloved, protected from danger, thrust into temptation, among them
somewhere is the child who will write a great poem that will live for
ever and ever, kindling every generation to a loftier ideal.  There is
the child who will write the novel that is to stir men’s hearts to nobler
issues and incite them to better deeds.  There is the child (perhaps it
is Nino) who will paint the greatest picture or carve the greatest statue
of the age; another who will deliver his country in an hour of peril;
another who will give his life for a great principle; and another, born
more of the spirit than the flesh, who will live continually on the
heights of moral being, and, dying, draw men after him.  It may be I
shall preserve one of these children to the race—who knows?  It is a peg
big enough on which to hang a hope, for every child born into the world
is a new incarnate thought of God, an ever fresh and radiant
possibility.’

_Another day_.—‘Would I had the gift to capture Mrs. Grubb and put her
between the covers of a book!’

‘It tickles Rhoda’s fancy mightily that the Vague Lady (as we call her)
should take Lisa before the Commissioners of Lunacy!  Rhoda says that if
she has an opportunity to talk freely with them, they will inevitably
jump at the conclusion that Lisa has brought _her_ for examination, as
she is so much the more irrational of the two!  Rhoda facetiously
imagines a scene in which a reverend member of the body takes Lisa aside
and says solemnly, “My dear child, you have been wise beyond your years
in bringing us your guardian, and we cannot allow her to be at large
another day, lest she becomes suddenly violent.”

‘Of late I have noticed that she has gradually dropped one club and
society after another, concentrating her attention more and more upon
Theosophy.  Every strange weed and sucker that can grow anywhere
flourishes in the soil of her mind, and if a germ of truth or
common-sense does chance to exist in any absurd theory, it is choked by
the time it has lain there among the underbrush for a little space; so
that when she begins her harvesting (which is always a long while before
anything is ripe), one can never tell precisely what sort of crop was
planted.

‘It seems that the Theosophists are considering the establishment of a
colony of Mahatmas at Mojave, on the summit of the Tehachapi Mountains.
Their present habitat is the Himalayas, but there is no reason why we
should not encourage them to settle in this country.  The Tehachapis
would give as complete retirement as the Himalayas, while the spiritual
advantages to be derived from an infusion of Mahatmas into our population
are self-evident.  “Think, my sisters,” Mrs. Grubb would say, “think,
that our mountain ranges may some time be peopled by omniscient beings
thousands of years old and still growing!”  Up to this last aberration I
have had some hope of Grubb o’ Dreams.  I thought it a good sign, her
giving up so many societies and meetings.  The house is not any tidier,
but at least she stays in it occasionally.  In the privacy of my own mind
I have been ascribing this slight reformation to the most ordinary
cause,—namely, a Particular Man.  It would never have occurred to me in
her case had not Edith received confidential advices from Mrs. Sylvester.

‘“We’re going to lose her, I feel it!” said Mrs. Sylvester.  “I feel it,
and she alludes to it herself.  There ain’t but two ways of her classes
losing her, death and marriage; and as she looks too healthy to die, it
must be the other one.  She’s never accepted any special attentions till
about a month ago, when the Improved Order of Red Men held their Great
Council here.  You see she used to be Worthy Wenonah of Pocahontas Lodge
years ago, when my husband was Great Keeper of the Wampum, but she hasn’t
attended regularly; a woman is so handicapped, when it comes to any kind
of public work, by her home and her children.—I do hope I shall live long
enough to see all those kind of harassing duties performed in public,
co-operative institutions.—She went to the Council to keep me company,
mostly, but the very first evening I could see that William Burkhardt, of
Bald Eagle No. 62, was struck with her; she lights up splendidly, Mrs.
Grubb does.  He stayed with her every chance he got during the week: but
I didn’t see her give him any encouragement, and I should never have
thought of it again if she hadn’t come home late from one of the Council
Fires at the Wigwam.  I was just shutting my bedroom blinds.  I tried not
to listen, for I despise eavesdropping, of all things, but I couldn’t
help hearing her say, “No, Mr. Burkhardt, you are only a Junior Sagamore,
and I am ambitious.  When you are a Great Sachem, it will be time enough
to consider the matter.”’

‘Mrs. Sylvester, Edith, and I agreed that this was most significant, but
we may have been mistaken, according to her latest development.  The
“passing away” so feelingly alluded to by Mrs. Sylvester is to be of a
different sort.  She has spoken mysteriously to me before of her reasons
for denying herself luxuries; of the goal she expected to reach through
rigid denial of the body and training of the spirit; of her longing to
come less in contact with the foul magnetism of the common herd, so
detrimental to her growth; but she formally announced to me in strict
confidence to-day her ambition to be a Mahatma.  Of course she has been
so many things that there are comparatively few left; still, say whatever
we like, she has the spirit of all the Argonauts, that woman!  She has
been an Initiate for some time, and considers herself quite ready for the
next step, which is to be a Chela.  It is unnecessary to state that she
climbs the ladder of evolution much faster than the ordinary Theosophist,
who is somewhat slow in his movements, and often deals in centuries, or
even æons.

‘I did not know that there were female Mahatmas, reasoning unconsciously
from the fact that an Adept is supposed to hold his peace for many years
before he can even contemplate the possibility of being a Mahatma.  (The
idea of Grubb o’ Dreams holding her peace is too absurd for argument.)
There are many grades of Adepts, it seems, ranging from the “topmost”
Mahatmas down.  The highest of all, the Nirmanakayas, are self-conscious
without the body, travelling hither and thither with but one object, that
of helping humanity.  As we descend the scale, we find Adepts (and a few
second-class Mahatmas) living in the body, for the wheel of Karma has not
entirely revolved for them; but they have a key to their “prison” (that
is what Mrs. Grubb calls her nice, pretty body!), and can emerge from it
at pleasure.  That is, any really capable and energetic Adept can project
his soul from its prison to any place that he pleases, with the rapidity
of thought.  I may have my personal doubts as to the possibilities of
this gymnastic feat, but Mrs. Grubb’s intellectual somersaults have been
of such thoroughness and frequency that I am sure, if anybody can perform
the gyration, she can!  Meantime, there are decades of retirement,
meditation, and preparation necessary, and she can endure nothing of that
sort in this present incarnation, so the parting does not seem imminent!

‘She came to consult me about Soul Haven for the twins.  I don’t think it
a wholly bad plan.  The country is better for them than the city; we can
manage occasional news of their welfare; it will tide to get over the
brief interval of time needed by Mrs. Grubb for growing into a Chela; and
in any event, they are sure to run away from the Haven as soon as they
become at all conscious of their souls, a moment which I think will be
considerably delayed.

‘Mrs. Grubb will not yield Lisa until she is certain that the Soul Haven
colonists will accept the twins without a caretaker; but unless the
matter is quietly settled by the new year I shall find some heroic means
of changing her mind.  I have considered the matter earnestly for many
months without knowing precisely how to find sufficient money for the
undertaking.  My own income can be stretched to cover her maintenance,
but it is not sufficient to give her the proper sort of education.  She
is beyond my powers now, and perhaps—nay, of a certainty, if her health
continue to improve—five years of skilful teaching will make her—what it
will make her no one can prophesy, but it is sure to be something worth
working for.  No doubt I can get the money by a public appeal, and if it
were for a dozen children instead of one I would willingly do it, as
indeed I have done it many times in the past.

‘That was a beautiful thought of Pastor Von Bodelschwingh, of the Colony
of Mercy in Germany.  “Mr. Man” told me about him in one of the very few
long talks we had together.  He had a home for adults and children of
ailing mind and body, and when he wanted a new house for the little ones,
and there was no money to build or equip it, he asked every parent in
Germany for a thank-offering to the Lord of one penny for each well
child.  Within a short fortnight four hundred thousand pennies flowed
in—four hundred thousand thank-offerings for children strong and well.
The good pastor’s wish was realised, and his Baby Castle an accomplished
fact.  Not only did the four hundred thousand pennies come, but the
appeal for them stimulated a new sense of gratitude among all the parents
who responded, so that there came pretty, touching messages from all
sides, such as: “Four pennies for four living children; for a child in
heaven, two.”  “Six pennies for a happy home.”  “One penny for the child
we never had.”  “Five pennies for a good wife.”

‘Ah! never, surely, was a Baby Castle framed of such lovely timber as
this!  It seems as if heaven’s sweet air must play about the towers, and
heaven’s sunshine stream in at every window, of a house built from turret
to foundation-stone of such royal material.  The Castle might look like
other castles, but every enchanted brick and stone and block of wood,
every grain of mortar, every bit of glass and marble, unlike all others
of its kind, would be transformed by the thought it represented and
thrilled with the message it bore.

‘Such an appeal I could make for my whole great family, but somehow this
seems almost a private matter, and I am sensitive about giving it
publicity.  My love and hope for Lisa are so great, I cannot bear to
describe her “case,” nor paint her unhappy childhood in the hues it
deserves, for the sake of gaining sympathy and aid.  I may have to do it,
but would I were the little Croesus of a day!  Still, Christmas is
coming, and who knows?

    “Everywhere the Feast o’ the Babe,
    Joy upon earth, peace and good-will to men!
    We are baptized.”

Merry Christmas is coming.  Everybody’s hand-grasp is warmer because of
it, though of course it is the children whose merriment rings truest.

‘There are just one or two things, grown up as I am, that I should like
to find in the toe of my stocking on Christmas morning; only they are
impalpable things that could neither be put in nor taken out of real
stockings.

‘Old as we are, we are most of us mere children in this, that we go on
hoping that next Christmas all the delicious happenings we have missed in
other Christmases may descend upon us by the old and reliable
chimney-route!  A Santa Claus that had any bowels of compassion would
rush down the narrowest and sootiest chimney in the world to give me my
simple wishes.  It isn’t as if I were petitioning nightly for a grand
house, a yacht, a four-in-hand, a diamond necklace, and a particular man
for a husband; but I don’t see that modesty finds any special favour with
St. Nick.  Now and then I harbour a rascally suspicion that he is an
indolent, time-serving person, who slips down the widest, cleanest
chimneys to the people who clamour the loudest; but this abominable
cynicism melts into thin air the moment that I look at his jolly visage
on the cover of a picture-book.  Dear, fat, rosy, radiant Being!  Surely
he is incapable of any but the highest motives!  I am twenty-eight years
old, but age shall never make any difference in the number or extent of
my absurdities.  I am going to write a letter and send it up the chimney!
It never used to fail in the long-ago; but ah! then there were two dear,
faithful go-betweens to interpret my childish messages of longing to
Santa Claus, and jog his memory at the critical time!’




XV
‘THE FEAST O’ THE BABE’


IT was sure to be a green Christmas in that sunny land, but not the sort
of ‘green Yule’ that makes the ‘fat kirkyard.’  If the New Englanders who
had been transplanted to that shore of the Pacific ever longed for a
bracing snowstorm, for frost pictures on the window-panes, for the breath
of a crystal air blown over ice-fields—an air that nipped the ears, but
sent the blood coursing through the veins, and made the turkey and
cranberry sauce worth eating,—the happy children felt no lack, and basked
contentedly in the soft December sunshine.  Still further south there
were mothers who sighed even more for the sound of merry sleigh-bells,
the snapping of logs on the hearth, the cosy snugness of a fire-lit room
made all the snugger by the fierce wind without: that, if you like, was a
place to hang a row of little red and brown woollen stockings!  And when
the fortunate children on the eastern side of the Rockies, tired of
resisting the Sand Man, had snuggled under the great down comforters and
dropped off to sleep, they dreamed, of course, of the proper Christmas
things—of the tiny feet of reindeer pattering over the frozen crust, the
tinkle of silver bells on their collars, the real Santa Claus with
icicles in his beard, with red cheeks, and a cold nose, and a powder of
snow on his bearskin coat, and with big fur mittens never too clumsy to
take the toys from his pack.

Here the air blew across orange groves and came laden with the sweetness
of opening buds; here, if it were a sunny Christmas Day, as well it might
be, the children came in to dinner tired with playing in the garden: but
the same sort of joyous cries that rent the air three thousand miles away
at sight of hot plum-pudding woke the echoes here because of fresh
strawberries and loquats; and although, in the minds of the elders, who
had been born in snowdrifts and bred upon icicles, this union of balmy
air, singing birds, and fragrant bloom might strike a false note at
Christmastide, it brought nothing but joy to the children.  After all, if
it were not for old associations’ sake, it would seem that one might
fitly celebrate the birthday of the Christ-child under sunshine as warm
and skies of the same blue as those that sheltered the heavenly Babe in
old Judea.

During the late days of October and the early days of November the long
drought of summer had been broken, and it had rained steadily, copiously,
refreshingly.  Since then there had been day after day of brilliant,
cloudless sunshine, and the moist earth, warmed gratefully through to the
marrow, stirred and trembled and pushed forth myriads of tender shoots
from the seeds that were hidden in its bosom; and the tender shoots
themselves looked up to the sun, and, with their roots nestled in sweet,
fragrant beds of richness, thought only of growing tall and green,
dreamed only of the time when pink pimpernels would bloom between their
waving blades, and when tribes of laughing children would come to ramble
over the hillsides.  The streets of the city were full of the fragrance
of violets, for the flower-vendors had great baskets of them over their
arms, and every corner tempted the passers-by with the big odorous purple
bunches that offered a royal gift of sweetness for every penny invested.

Atlantic and Pacific Simonson had previously known little, and Marm Lisa
less, of Christmas-time, but the whole month of December in Mistress
Mary’s garden was a continual feast of the new-born Babe.  There was an
almost oppressive atmosphere of secrecy abroad.  Each family of children,
working in the retirement of its particular corner, would shriek, ‘Oh,
don’t come!’ and hide small objects under pinafores and tables when Mary,
Rhoda, Edith, or Helen appeared.  The neophyte in charge was always in
the attitude of a surprised hen, extending her great apron to its utmost
area as a screen to hide these wonderful preparations.  Edith’s group was
slaving over Helen’s gift, Rhoda’s over Edith’s, and so on, while all the
groups had some marvellous bit of co-operative work in hand for Mistress
Mary.  At the afternoon council, the neophytes were obliged to labour
conscientiously on presents destined for themselves, rubbing off stains,
disentangling knots, joining threads, filling up wrong holes and punching
right ones, surreptitiously getting the offerings of love into a
condition where the energetic infants could work on them again.  It was
somewhat difficult to glow and pale with surprise when they received
these well-known and well-worn trophies of skill from the tree at the
proper time, but they managed to achieve it.

Never at any other season was there such a scrubbing of paws, and in
spite of the most devoted sacrifices to the Moloch of cleanliness the
excited little hands grew first moist, and then grimy, nobody knew how.
‘It must leak out of the inside of me,’ wailed Bobby Baxter when sent to
the pump for the third time one morning; but he went more or less
cheerfully, for his was the splendid honour of weaving a frame for Lisa’s
picture, and he was not the man to grudge an inch or two of skin if
thereby he might gain a glorious immortality.

The principal conversation during this festival time consisted of phrases
like: ‘I know what you’re goin’ to have, Miss Edith, but I won’t tell!’
‘Miss Mary, Sally ’most told Miss Rhoda what she was makin’ for her.’
‘Miss Helen, Pat Higgins went right up to Miss Edith and asked her to
help him mend the leg of his clay frog, and it’s his own Christmas
present to her!’

The children could not for the life of them play birds, or butterflies,
or carpenter, or scissors-grinder, for they wanted to shout the live-long
day—

    ‘Christmas bells are ringing sweet,
    We too the happy day must greet’;

or—

       ‘Under the holly, now,
       Sing and be jolly, now,
    Christmas has come and the children are glad’;

or—

          ‘Hurrah for Santa Claus!
    Long may he live at his castle in Somewhere-land!’

There was much whispering and discussion about evergreens and garlands
and wreaths that were soon to come, and much serious planning with regard
to something to be made for mother, father, sister, brother, and the
baby; something, too, now and then, for a grandpapa in Sweden, a
grandmamma in Scotland, a Norwegian uncle, an Irish aunt, and an Italian
cousin; but there was never by chance any cogitation as to what the
little workers themselves might get.  In the happier homes among them,
there was doubtless the usual legitimate speculation as to doll or drum,
but here in this enchanted spot, this materialised Altruria, the talk was
all of giving, when the Wonderful Tree bloomed in their midst—the
Wonderful Tree they sang about every morning, with the sweet voice

          ‘telling its branches among
    Of shepherd’s watch and of angel’s song,
    Of lovely Babe in manger low,—
    The beautiful story of long ago,
    When a radiant star threw its beams so wide
    To herald the earliest Christmastide.’

The Tree was coming—Mistress Mary said so; and bless my heart, you might
possibly meddle with the revolution of the earth around the sun, or
induce some weak-minded planet to go the wrong way, but you would be
helpless to reverse one of Mistress Mary’s promises!  They were as fixed
and as unchangeable as the laws of the Medes and Persians, and there was
a record of their fulfilment indelibly written in the memories of two
hundred small personages—personages in whom adult caprice and flexibility
of conduct had bred a tendency to suspicion.

The Tree, therefore, had been coming for a fortnight, and on the 22nd it
came!  Neither did it come alone, for it was accompanied by a forest of
holly and mistletoe, and ropes of evergreen, and wreaths and garlands of
laurel, and green stars by the dozen.  And in a great box, at present
hidden from the children, were heaps of candles, silver and crystal
baubles, powdered snowflakes, glass icicles, gilded nuts, parti-coloured
spheres, cornucopias full of goodies, and, above all, two wonderful
Christmas angels, and a snow-white dove!

Neither tree, nor garlands, nor box contained any hint of the donor, to
the great disappointment of the neophytes.  Rhoda had an idea, for Cupid
had ‘clapped her i’ the shoulder,’ and her intuitions were
preternaturally keen just now.  Mary almost knew, though she had never
been in love in her life, and her faculties were working only in their
every-day fashion; but she was not in the least surprised when she drew a
letter from under the white dove’s wing.  Seeing that it was addressed to
her, she waited until everybody had gone, and sat under the pepper-tree
in the deserted playground, where she might read it in solitude.

‘DEAR MISTRESS MARY,’ it said, ‘do you care to hear of my life?

    “Pas Ewig-Weibliche
    Zieht uns hinan,”

and I am growing olives.  Do you remember what the Spanish monk said to
the tree that he pruned, and that cried out under his hook? “It is not
beauty that is wanted of you, nor shade, but olives.”  The sun is hot,
and it has not rained for many a long week, it seems to me, but the dew
of your influence falls ever sweet and fresh on the dust of my daily
task.

‘Enclosed please find the wherewithal for Lisa’s next step higher.  As
she needs more it will come.  I give it for sheer gratitude, as the good
folk gave their pennies to Pastor Von Bodelschwingh.  Why am I grateful?
For your existence, to be sure!  I had lived my life haunted by the
feeling that there was such a woman, and finally the mysterious wind of
destiny blew me to her, “as the tempest brings the rose-tree to the
pollard willow.”

‘Do not be troubled about me, little mother-of-many!  There was once upon
a time a common mallow by the roadside, and being touched by Mohammed’s
garment as he passed, it was changed at once into a geranium; and best of
all, it remained a geranium for ever after.

                                                          ‘YOUR SOLITARY.’




XVI
CLEANSING FIRES


IT was the afternoon of the day before Christmas, and all the little
people had gone home, leaving the room vacant for the decking of the
Wonderful Tree.  Edith, Helen, and others were perched on step-ladders,
festooning garlands and wreaths from window to window and post to post.
Mary and Rhoda were hanging burdens of joy among the green branches of
the tree.

The room began to look more and more lovely as the evergreen stars were
hung by scarlet ribbons in each of the twelve windows, and the
picture-frames were crowned with holly branches.  Then Mistress Mary was
elevated to a great height on a pyramid of tables and chairs, and
suspended the two Christmas angels by invisible wires from the ceiling.
When the chorus of admiration had subsided, she took the white dove from
Rhoda’s upstretched hands (and what a charming Christmas picture they
made—the eager, upturned rosy face of the one, the gracious fairness of
the other!), and laying its soft breast against her cheek for a moment,
perched it on the topmost branch of waving green with a thought of ‘Mr.
Man,’ and a hope that the blessed day might bring him a tithe of the
cheer he had given them.  The effect of the dove and the angels was so
electrical that all the fresh young voices burst into the chorus of the
children’s hymn:

    ‘He was born upon this day
    In David’s town so far away,
    He the good and loving One,
    Mary’s ever-blessèd Son.

    Let us all our voices lend,
    For he was the children’s Friend,
    He so lovely, He so mild,
    Jesus, blessèd Christmas Child!’

As the last line of the chorus floated through the open windows, an alarm
of fire sounded, followed by a jangle of bells and a rumble of patrol
wagons.  On going to the west window, Edith saw a blaze of red light
against the sky, far in the distance, in the direction of Lone Mountain.
Soon after, almost on the heels of the first, came another alarm with its
attendant clangings, its cries of ‘Fire!’ its chatterings and
conjectures, its rushing of small boys in all directions, its tread of
hurrying policemen, its hasty flinging up of windows and grouping of
heads therein.

The girls were too busy labelling the children’s gifts to listen
attentively to the confused clamour in the streets,—fires were common
enough in a city built of wood; but when, half an hour after the first
and second alarms, a third sounded, they concluded it must be a
conflagration, and Rhoda, dropping her nuts and cornucopias, ran to the
corner for news.  She was back again almost immediately, excited and
breathless.

‘Oh, Mary!’ she exclaimed, her hand on her panting side, ‘unless they are
mistaken, it is three separate fires: one, a livery-stable and
carriage-house out towards Lone Mountain; another fearful one on
Telegraph Hill—a whole block of houses, and they haven’t had enough help
there because of the Lone Mountain fire; now there’s a third alarm, and
they say it’s at the corner of Sixth and Dutch streets.  If it is, we
have a tenement house next door; isn’t that clothing-place on the corner?
Yes, I know it is; make haste!  Edith and Helen will watch the Christmas
things.’

Mary did not need to be told to hasten.  She had her hat in her hand and
was on the sidewalk before Rhoda had fairly finished her sentence.

They hurried through the streets, guided by the cloud of smoke that
gushed from the top of a building in the near distance.  Almost everybody
was running in the opposite direction, attracted by the Telegraph Hill
fire that flamed vermilion and gold against the grey sky, looking from
its elevation like a mammoth bonfire, or like a hundred sunsets massed in
one lurid pile of colour.

‘Is it the Golden Gate tenement house?’ they asked of the neighbourhood
locksmith, who was walking rapidly towards them.

‘No, it’s the coat factory next door,’ he answered hurredly.  ‘’Twouldn’t
be so much of a blaze if they could get the fire company here to put it
out before it gets headway; but it’s one o’ those blind fires that’s been
sizzling away inside the walls for an hour.  The folks didn’t know they
was afire till a girl ran in and told ’em—your Lisa it was,—and they
didn’t believe her at first; but it warn’t a minute before the flames
burst right through the plastering in half a dozen places to once.  I
tell you they just dropped everything where it was and run for their
lives.  There warn’t but one man on the premises, and he was such a
blamed fool he wasted five minutes trying to turn the alarm into the
letter-box on the lamp-post, ’stead of the right one alongside.  I’m
going home for some tools—Hullo! there’s the flames coming through one
corner o’ the roof; that’s the last o’ the factory, I guess; but it ain’t
much loss, any way; it’s a regular sweatin’-shop.  They’ll let it go now,
and try to save the buildings each side of it—that’s what they’ll do.’

That is what they were doing when Mary and Rhoda broke away from the
voluble locksmith in the middle of his discourse and neared the scene of
excitement.  The firemen had not yet come, though it was rumoured that a
detachment was on the way.  All the occupants of the tenement house were
taking their goods and chattels out—running down the narrow stairways
with feather-beds, dropping clocks and china ornaments from the windows,
and endangering their lives by crawling down the fire-escapes with small
articles of no value.  Men were scarce at that hour in that locality, but
there was a good contingent of small shopkeepers and
gentlemen-of-steady-leisure, who were on the roof pouring-water over wet
blankets and comforters and carpets.  A crazy-looking woman in the fourth
story kept dipping a child’s handkerchief in and out of a bowl of water
and wrapping it about a tomato-can with a rosebush planted in it.
Another, very much intoxicated, leaned from her window, and, regarding
the whole matter as an agreeable entertainment, called down humorous
remarks and ribald jokes to the oblivious audience.  There was an
improvised hook-and-ladder company pouring water where it was least
needed, and a zealous self-appointed commanding officer who did nothing
but shout contradictory orders; but as nobody obeyed them, and every man
did just as he was inclined, it did not make any substantial difference
in the result.

Mary and Rhoda made their way through the mass of interested spectators,
not so many here as on the cooler side of the street.  Where was Lisa?
That was the first, indeed the only question.  How had she come there?
Where had she gone?  There was a Babel of confusion, but nothing like the
uproar that would have been heard had not part of the district’s
population fled to the more interesting fire, and had not the whole thing
been so quiet and so lightning-quick in its progress.  The whole scene
now burst upon their view.  A few harassed policemen had stretched ropes
across the street, and were trying to keep back the rebellious ones in
the crowd who ever and anon would struggle under the line and have to be
beaten back by force.

As Mary and Rhoda approached, a group on the outskirts cried out, ‘Here
she is!  ’Tain’t more ’n a minute sence they went to tell her!  Here she
is now!’

The expected fire-brigade could hardly be called ‘she,’ Mary thought, as
she glanced over her shoulder.  She could see no special reason for any
interest in her own movements.  She took advantage of the parting of the
crowd, however, and as she made her way she heard, as in a waking dream,
disjointed sentences that had no meaning at first, but being pieced
together grew finally into an awful whole.

‘Why didn’t the factory girls bring ’em out?  Didn’t know they was
there?’

‘Say, one of ’em was saved, warn’t it?’

‘Which one of ’em did she get down before the roof caught?’

‘No, ’tain’t no such thing; the manager’s across the bay; she gave the
alarm herself.’

‘She didn’t know they was in there; I bet yer they’d run and hid, and she
was hunting ’em when she seen the smoke.’

‘Yes, she did; she dropped the girl twin out of the second-story window
into Abe Isaac’s arms, but she didn’t know the boy was in the building
till just now, and they can’t hardly hold her.’

‘She’s foolish, anyhow, ain’t she?’

Mary staggered beyond Rhoda to the front of the crowd.

‘Let me under the rope!’ she cried, with a mother’s very wail in her
tone—‘let me under the rope, for God’s sake!  They’re my children!’

At this moment she heard a stentorian voice call to some one, ‘Wait a
minute till the firemen get here, and they’ll go for him!  Come back,
girl, d-n you! you shan’t go!’

‘Wait?  No!  _Not_ wait!’ cried Lisa, tearing herself dexterously from
the policeman’s clutches, and dashing like a whirlwind up the tottering
stairway before any one else could gather presence of mind to seize and
detain her.

Pacific was safe on the pavement, but she had only a moment before been
flung from those flaming windows, and her terrified shrieks rent the air.
The crowd gave a long-drawn groan, and mothers turned their eyes away and
shivered.  Nobody followed Marm Lisa up that flaming path of death and
duty: it was no use flinging a good life after a worthless one.

‘Fool! crazy fool!’ people ejaculated, with tears of reverence in their
eyes.

‘Darling, splendid fool!’ cried Mary.  ‘Fool worth all the wise ones
among us!’

‘He that loseth his life for My sake shall find it!’ said a pious
Methodist cobbler with a patched boot under his arm.

In the eternity of waiting that was numbered really but in seconds, a
burly policeman beckoned four men and gave them a big old-fashioned
counterpane that some one had offered, telling them to stand ready for
whatever might happen.

‘Come closer, boys,’ said one of them, wetting his hat in a tub of water;
‘if we take a little scorchin’ doin’ this now, we may git it cooler in
the next world!’

‘Amen!  Trust the Lord!’ said the cobbler; and just then Marm Lisa
appeared at one of the top windows with a child in her arms.  No one else
could have recognised Atlantic in the smoke, but Rhoda and Mary knew the
round cropped head and the familiar blue gingham apron.

Lisa stood in the empty window-frame, a trembling figure on a background
of flame.  Her post was not at the moment in absolute danger.  There was
hope yet, though to the onlookers there seemed none.

‘Throw him!’  ‘Drop him!’  ‘Le’ go of him!’ shouted the crowd.

‘Hold your jaws, and let me do the talking!’ roared the policeman.  ‘Stop
your noise, if you don’t want two dead children on your consciences!
Keep back, you brutes, keep back o’ the rope, or I’ll club you!’

It was not so much the officer’s threats as simple, honest awe that
caused a sudden hush to fall.  There were whisperings, sighs, tears,
murmurings, but all so subdued that it seemed like silence in the midst
of the fierce crackling of the flames.

‘Drop him!  We’ll ketch him in the quilt!’ called the policeman, standing
as near as he dared.

Lisa looked shudderingly at the desperate means of salvation so far
below, and, turning her face away as much as she could, unclasped her
arms despairingly, and Atlantic came swooping down from their shelter,
down, down into the counterpane; stunned, stifled, choked by smoke, but
uninjured, as Lisa knew by the cheers that greeted his safe descent.

A tongue of fire curled round the corner of the building and ran up to
the roof towards another that was licking its way along the top of the
window.

‘Jump now yourself!’ called the policeman, while two more men silently
joined the four holding the corners of the quilt.  Every eye was fixed on
the motionless figure of Marm Lisa, who had drawn her shawl over her
head, as if just conscious of nearer heat.

The wind changed, and blew the smoke away from her figure.  The men on
the roof stopped work, not caring for the moment whether they saved the
tenement house or not, since a human life was hanging in the balance.
The intoxicated woman threw a beer-bottle into the street, and her son
ran up from the crowd and locked her safely in her kitchen at the back of
the house.

‘Jump this minute, or you’re a dead girl!’ shouted the officer, hoarse
with emotion.  ‘God A’mighty, she ain’t goin’ to jump—she’s
terror-struck!  She’ll burn right there before our eyes, when we could
climb up and drag her down if we had a long enough ladder!’

‘They’ve found another ladder and are tying two together,’ somebody said.

‘The fire company’s comin’!  I hear ’em!’ cried somebody else.

‘They’ll be too late,’ moaned Rhoda, ‘too late!  Oh, Mary, make her
jump!’

Lisa had felt no fear while she darted through smoke and over charred
floors in pursuit of Atlantic—no fear, nothing but joy when she dragged
him out from under bench and climbed to the window-sill with him,—but now
that he was saved she seemed paralysed.  So still she was, she might have
been a carven statue save for the fluttering of the garments about her
thin childish legs.  The distance to the ground looked impassable, and
she could not collect her thoughts for the hissing of the flame as it ate
up the floor in the room behind her.  Horrible as it was, she thought it
would be easier to let it steal behind her and wrap her in its burning
embrace than to drop from these dizzy heights down through that terrible
distance, to hear her own bones snap as she touched the quilt, and to see
her own blood staining the ground.

‘She’ll burn, sure,’ said a man.  ‘Well, she’s half-witted—that’s one
comfort!’

Mary started as if she were stung, and forced her way still nearer to the
window; hoping to gain a position where she could be more plainly seen.

Everybody thought something was going to happen.  Mary had dozens of
friends and more acquaintances in that motley assemblage, and they
somehow felt that there were dramatic possibilities in the situation.
Unless she could think of something, Marm Lisa’s last chance was gone:
that was the sentiment of the crowd, and Mary agreed in it.

Her cape had long since dropped from her shoulders, her hat was trampled
under foot, the fair coil of hair had loosened and was falling on her
neck, and the steel fillet blazed in the firelight.  She stepped to the
quilt and made a despairing movement to attract Lisa’s attention.

‘Li-sa!’ she called, in that sweet, carrying woman’s voice that goes so
much further than a man’s.

The child started, and, pushing back the shawl, looked out from under its
cover, her head raised, her eyes brightening.

Mary chanced all on that one electrical moment of recognition, and, with
a mien half commanding and half appealing, she stretched out both her
arms and called again, while the crowd held its breath:

‘Come to me, darling!  Jump, little sister! _now_!’

Not one second did Marm Lisa hesitate.  She would have sprung into the
fire at that dear mandate, and, closing her eyes, she leaped into the air
as the roof above her head fell in with a crash.

Just then the beating of hoofs and jangling of bells in the distance
announced the coming of the belated firemen; not so long belated
actually, for all the emotions, heart-beats, terrors, and despairs that
go to make up tragedy can be lived through in a few brief moments.

In that sudden plunge from window to earth Marm Lisa seemed to die
consciously.  The grey world, the sad world, vanished, ‘and the immortal
light, all young and joyful, million-orbed, million-coloured,’ beamed on
her darkness.  She kept on falling, falling, falling, till she reached
the abysmal depths of space—then she knew no more: and Mary, though prone
on the earth, kept falling, falling, falling with her into so deep a
swoon that she woke only to find herself on a friendly bed, with Rhoda
and Lisa herself, weeping over her.

                                * * * * *

At five o’clock, Mrs. Grubb, forcibly torn from a meeting and acquainted
with the afternoon’s proceedings, hurried into a lower room in the
tenement house, where Mary, Rhoda, and the three children were gathered
for a time.  There were still a hundred people in the street, but they
showed their respect by keeping four or five feet away from the windows.

The twins sat on a sofa, more quiet than anything save death itself.
They had been rocked to the very centre of their being, and looked like
nothing so much as a couple of faded photographs of themselves.  Lisa lay
on a cot, sleeping restlessly; Mary looked pale and wan, and there were
dark circles under her eyes.

As Mrs. Grubb opened the door softly, Mary rose to meet her.

‘Have you heard all?’ she asked.

‘Yes, everything!’ faltered Mrs. Grubb with quivering lips and downcast
eyelids.

Mary turned towards Lisa’s bed.  ‘Mrs. Grubb,’ she said, looking straight
into that lady’s clear, shallow eyes, ‘I think Lisa has earned her
freedom, and the right to ask a Christmas gift of you.  Stand on the
other side of the cot and put your hand in mine.  I ask you for the last
time, will you give this unfinished, imperfect life into my keeping, if I
promise to be faithful to it unto the end, whatever it may be?’

I suppose that every human creature, be he ever so paltry, has his hour
of effulgence, an hour when the mortal veil grows thin and the divine
image stands revealed, endowing him, for a brief space at least with a
kind of awful beauty and majesty.

It was Mistress Mary’s hour.  Her pure, unswerving spirit shone with a
white and steady radiance that illuminated Mrs. Grubb’s soul to its very
depths, showing her in a flash the feeble flickerings and waverings of
her own trivial purposes.  At that moment her eye was fitted with a new
lens, through which the road to the summit of the Tehachapi Mountains and
Mahatmadom suddenly looked long, weary, and profitless, and by means of
which the twins were transferred from the comfortable middle distance
they had previously occupied to the immediate foreground of duty.  The
lens might slip, but while it was in place she saw as clearly as another
woman.

‘Will you?’ repeated Mistress Mary, wondering at her silence.

Mrs. Grubb gave one last glance at the still reproach of Lisa’s face, and
one more at the twins, who seemed to loom more formidably each time she
regarded them; then drawing a deep breath she said, ‘Yes, I will; I
_will_, no matter what happens; but it isn’t enough to give up, and you
needn’t suppose I think it is.’  And taking a passive twin by either
hand, she passed out of the door into the crowded thoroughfare, and
disappeared in the narrow streets that led to Eden Place.