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XI. The Old Singers.
WILLIAM was
sitting on the side door step, and the old mother was busy making her tea; she
gave into my hand an old flowered-glass tea-caddy. "William
thought you'd like to see this, when he was settin' the table. My father
brought it to my mother from the island of Tobago; an' here's a pair of
beautiful mugs that came with it." She opened the glass door of a little
cupboard beside the chimney. "These I call my best things, dear," she
said. "You'd laugh to see how we enjoy 'em Sunday nights in winter: we have
a real company tea 'stead o' livin' right along just the same, an' I make
somethin' good for a s'prise an' put on some o' my preserves, an' we get
a'talkin' together an' have real pleasant times." Mrs. Todd
laughed indulgently, and looked to see what I thought of such childishness. "I wish
I could be here some Sunday evening," said I. "William
an' me'll be talkin' about you an' thinkin' o' this nice day," said Mrs.
Blackett affectionately, and she glanced at William, and he looked up bravely
and nodded. I began to discover that he and his sister could not speak their
deeper feelings before each other. "Now I
want you an' mother to sing," said Mrs. Todd abruptly, with an air of
command, and I gave William much sympathy in his evident distress. "After
I've had my cup o' tea, dear," answered the old hostess cheerfully; and so
we sat down and took our cups and made merry while they lasted. It was
impossible not to wish to stay on forever at Green Island, and I could not help
saying so. "I'm
very happy here, both winter an' summer," said old Mrs. Blackett.
"William an' I never wish for any other home, do we, William? I'm glad you
find it pleasant; I wish you'd come an' stay, dear, whenever you feel inclined.
But here's Almiry; I always think Providence was kind to plot an' have her
husband leave her a good house where she really belonged. She'd been very
restless if she'd had to continue here on Green Island. You wanted more scope,
didn't you, Almiry, an' to live in a large place where more things grew? Sometimes
folks wonders that we don't live together; perhaps we shall some time,"
and a shadow of sadness and apprehension flitted across her face. "The
time o' sickness an' failin' has got to come to all. But Almiry's got an herb
that's good for everything." She smiled as she spoke, and looked bright
again. "There's
some herb that's good for everybody, except for them that thinks they're sick
when they ain't," announced Mrs. Todd, with a truly professional air of
finality. "Come, William, let's have Sweet Home, an' then mother'll sing
Cupid an' the Bee for us." Then followed
a most charming surprise. William mastered his timidity and began to sing. His
voice was a little faint and frail, like the family daguerreotypes, but it was
a tenor voice, and perfectly true and sweet. I have never heard Home, Sweet
Home sung as touchingly and seriously as he sang it; he seemed to make it quite
new; and when he paused for a moment at the end of the first line and began the
next, the old mother joined him and they sang together, she missing only the
higher notes, where he seemed to lend his voice to hers for the moment and
carry on her very note and air. It was the silent man's real and only means of
expression, and one could have listened forever, and have asked for more and
more songs of old Scotch and English inheritance and the best that have lived
from the ballad music of the war. Mrs. Todd kept time visibly, and sometimes
audibly, with her ample foot. I saw the tears in her eyes sometimes, when I
could see beyond the tears in mine. But at last the songs ended and the time came
to say good-by; it was the end of a great pleasure. Mrs.
Blackett, the dear old lady, opened the door of her bedroom while Mrs. Todd was
tying up the herb bag, and William had gone down to get the boat ready and to
blow the horn for Johnny Bowden, who had joined a roving boat party who were
off the shore lobstering. I went to the
door of the bedroom, and thought how pleasant it looked, with its
pink-and-white patchwork quilt and the brown unpainted paneling of its
woodwork. "Come
right in, dear," she said. "I want you to set down in my old quilted
rockin'-chair there by the window; you'll say it's the prettiest view in the
house. I set there a good deal to rest me and when I want to read." There was a
worn red Bible on the light-stand, and Mrs. Blackett's heavy silver-bowed
glasses; her thimble was on the narrow window-ledge, and folded carefully on
the table was a thick striped-cotton shirt that she was making for her son.
Those dear old fingers and their loving stitches, that heart which had made the
most of everything that needed love! Here was the real home, the heart of the
old house on Green Island! I sat in the rocking-chair, and felt that it was a
place of peace, the little brown bedroom, and the quiet outlook upon field and
sea and sky. I looked up,
and we understood each other without speaking. "I shall like to think o'
your settin' here to-day," said Mrs. Blackett. "I want you to come
again. It has been so pleasant for William." The wind
served us all the way home, and did not fall or let the sail slacken until we
were close to the shore. We had a generous freight of lobsters in the boat, and
new potatoes which William had put aboard, and what Mrs. Todd proudly called a
full "kag" of prime number one salted mackerel; and when we landed we
had to make business arrangements to have these conveyed to her house in a
wheelbarrow. I never shall forget the day at Green Island. The town of Dunnet Landing seemed large and noisy and oppressive as we came ashore. Such is the power of contrast; for the village was so still that I could hear the shy whippoorwills singing that night as I lay awake in my downstairs bedroom, and the scent of Mrs. Todd's herb garden under the window blew in again and again with every gentle rising of the sea-breeze. |