When Jessie reached home she threw her hood and cloak carelessly on to the floor. The cloak-stand was pretty well filled up, and she was in too much haste, to take the pains needed to find a place on the hooks for her garments. This was one of her faults. A new impulse had seized her, and she thought of nothing else. Bounding into her mother’s room, she said: “Mother, will you let me make two shirts for poor Jack Moneypenny?” Mrs. Carlton looked up from her work, and after a moment’s glance at the eager face of her daughter, asked: “Who is Jack Moneypenny, my dear?” Jessie, in her eagerness to carry her point, had forgotten to ask if her mother knew any thing of the widow, or her son, Jack. This “Oh dear! what will Guy say? I promised to keep it all secret, and now I have told all about it. He said girls couldn’t keep a secret, and I believe he is right. What shall I do, Mother?” “Why tell him that you have told me, to be sure. Guy has no secrets with his mother, and I am sure he does not wish his sister to have any.” “Has Guy told you about it, then?” “Yes, he told me all his plans from the first. Guy never conceals any thing from his mother.” “What made you ask me who Jack Moneypenny was, then, Ma, if you knew before?” “Only to teach my Jessie, that she ought to be less abrupt in her manners. You should have stated your case first, and then have asked me your question.” “So I should, Ma,” said Jessie, musing a few moments, and gazing on her foot, as she traced the outline of the carpet-pattern with it. Then smiling, she looked up, and added, “but you know, Mamma, it is my way, to speak first, and think afterwards.” “Not a very wise way, either,” said Mrs. Carlton; “but about those shirts, why do you wish to make them?” Jessie told her mother about Jack’s letter, and what the widow had said. “Well,” replied Mrs. Carlton; “I will give you the cloth, and cut out the shirts, if you really wish to make them.” “I do, Mother, very much wish to do it. Only think how glad the widow will be, and how comfortable the shirts will make the poor sick boy, in that horrid hospital.” “Very true, my dear, but how about your uncle’s slippers, and cushion, and watch-pocket?” A blush tinged Jessie’s cheek again. The little wizard had once more hurried her into a new plan before her old ones had been worked Such were the questions which floated like unpleasant dreams through Jessie’s mind as she sat with her hands on the back of a chair-seat, knocking her heels against the floor. Her mother, though she allowed her to think awhile in silence, read her thoughts in the workings of her face. When Jessie seemed to be lost in the fog of her own thoughts, Mrs. Carlton came to her aid, and said: “Jessie.” “Yes, Ma.” “I have been thinking that poor Jack needs those shirts directly, and that you could not make him a pair in less than two, perhaps in not less than three weeks. So I don’t see how you can help him out of his present trouble.” Jessie sighed, and said, “I didn’t think of that.” “Well, I have a plan to propose. I will send him two of Guy’s shirts to-morrow, and you shall make two new ones for Guy, at your leisure.” “What a dear, good, nice mother you are,” cried Jessie, running to Mrs. Carlton, and giving her more kisses than I am able to count. Thus did a mother’s love find a key with which to unlock Jessie’s puzzle, and to enable her to help poor Jack, without breaking her purpose to finish Uncle Morris’s things, and thereby drive that plague of her life, the little wizard, away from Glen Morris. “I will work ever so hard, see if I don’t, Ma,” said she, as she patted her mother’s cheek. “I will finish the slippers, and get the shirts done, too, before Christmas. Don’t you think I can?” “You can, I have no doubt, if you try my dear.” “Well, I’ll try then. I’ll join Guy’s famous Try Company, and will try and try, and try again, until I fairly succeed.” Mrs. Carlton kissed her daughter affectionately; after which the now light-hearted girl bounded out of the room, singing—
“That’s it! That’s it, my little puss,” said Uncle Morris, who was in the parlor which Jessie entered singing her joyous roundelay. “Corporal Try is a little fellow, but he has helped do all the great things that have ever been done. There is nothing good or great which he cannot do. He will help a little girl learn to darn her own stocking, or make a quilt for her old uncle; and he will help men build “I know it,” replied Jessie, “and I’ve joined his company; so if you meet little Impulse the wizard, please tell him not to come here again unless he wishes to be beaten with a big club called good resolution.” “Bravely spoken, Lady Jessie! May you never desert the Corporal’s colors! Above all, may you always obtain grace from above whereby to conquer yourself, which is the grandest deed you can possibly perform.” Jessie sat down to her work-basket, and took up one of the pieces of cloth for her uncle’s slippers. But as it was now late in the afternoon of a dull November day, she could not see to embroider very well. So she thought she would go out again and buy the brown worsted which was needed in working out the figure on the slippers. Going to the window first, she noticed that the sky looked cold and bleak. The wind, too, was whistling mournfully “Please, Hugh, will you run down to the village with me? I want to get some worsted at Mrs. Horton’s.” “Why didn’t you get it this afternoon?” asked Hugh in his usual grumpy way when asked to do any thing. “I didn’t think of it.” “Didn’t think of it, eh? Well, I don’t think I shall be your lackey this cold afternoon. I’d rather sit here and keep my toes warm.” “Do go, dear Hugh, please do!” said Jessie in her mellowest tones. “I shall want the worsted to-morrow morning.” “Oh, go to Greenwich! You are always wanting something. Girls want a mighty sight of waiting on. I won’t go.” Jessie turned away from her ungracious brother wishing, as she had so often done, that “Oh dear!” sighed she, “what shall I do? I wish Guy was in.” “Perhaps you would accept an old man’s company,” said her uncle, rising and buttoning up his coat. “I should be very, very glad to have it, but I don’t want to trouble you, Uncle,” she replied. “It’s no trouble to go out with my little puss. Besides, by going, I can give this drone-like brother of yours a practical lesson in that love and politeness which he so much despises. I shall certainly be happier going with you, than he will be in the indulgence of his selfishness before the fire.” Hugh said something in a grumbling tone which neither his uncle nor sister understood. In a few minutes the good old man, having firm hold of Jessie’s hand, was breasting the cold wind as they walked smartly along the frozen road leading to the village. “You will have a chance to try your new skates to-morrow if it is as cold as this all night,” said Mr. Morris, as they crossed the bridge over the brook. “Won’t that be nice?” replied Jessie; “Carrie Sherwood has a pair too, and we will both try together. I guess I shall get some bumps though before I learn to skate well. I wish we had some one to teach us how to use them.” “What will you give me, if I consent to be your teacher?” “Oh, Uncle Morris! You don’t mean it, do you?” “To be sure I do. When I was young they called me the best skater in town. I could go through all kinds of movements, and even cut my name on the ice with my skates. I guess I haven’t quite forgotten how I used to do it. But what will you give me if I consent to teach you?” “I will love you ever so much, and so will Carrie.” “But I thought you loved me ever so much already?” “Well, so I do, Uncle. I love you better than I love anybody in the world, except ma and pa. But I will love you better and better.” “That’s pay enough,” said Mr. Morris, warmly pressing the hand of his niece. “The pure fresh love of a child’s heart is worth more to an old man like me than much gold. It makes my heart grow young again—but what have we here?” They had now reached a stone wall which fronted the estate of Esquire Duncan. An angle in the fence had made a corner, in which was seated a girl of about Jessie’s age and size. She was clothed in rags; her feet were bare. She had no covering on her head save her tangled hair. Her face and arms were brown and dirty. She shivered in the piercing wind, and traces of recent tears were visible in the dirt which covered her woe-worn face. “Poor little girl! I wonder where she lives?” exclaimed Jessie. “Where do you live, my dear?” asked Mr. Morris, addressing the child. “New York,” replied the outcast curtly. “How came you here?” “Mother left me down yonder,” said the girl, pointing to the four cross-roads just beyond. “Where is your mother now?” “Don’t know.” “What did she say when she left you?” “She told me to sit on the trough of the pump while she went to buy some bread. But she didn’t come back, and I came over here out of the wind.” “How long since she left you?” “Ever so long.” “Poor little girl! I’m afraid your mother brought you out here to cast you off, and so get rid of you,” said Uncle Morris. “Guess not! Guess she got drunk somewhere,” said the girl, in a manner so cold and dogged that Mr. Morris shuddered. Here, Jessie, whose eyes were swimming with tears, pulled her uncle’s hand. Taking him a little aside, she said— “Please, Uncle, take her home, and let me give her something to eat.” “Better take her to the alms-house, I’m “Then we can teach her to be good,” said Jessie. This was a home thrust that went right to the good old man’s heart. “The alms-house,” he thought, “is not a very likely place to grow goodness in. It is too chilly and heartless. There will be little sympathy there with the struggles and sorrows of a child like this; Jessie shall have her way this time. She shall go with us.” After forming this purpose, he looked at his niece, and said— “Perhaps you are right, Jessie. The poor creature shall go home with us, at least, for to-night.” “Oh, I am so glad, I’m so glad,” cried Jessie, clapping her hands, then running to the shivering child, who had been watching them during this conversation with a puzzled air, she said— “Come, little girl, you are to go home with me. Uncle says so.” “I don’t want to. I’ll wait here for mother,” “My child,” said Mr. Morris, “I fear your mother has left you here on purpose, and that she will never come back. If she is in the place, you shall go to her as soon as we can find her. If you stay here you will freeze. Come with us and we will give you a supper, and let you warm yourself before a rousing fire, while we search for your mother.” The idea of supper and a rousing fire took hold of the little outcast’s feelings. Gathering her rags close to her chilled body she stepped forward, and said— “I’ll go with you.” “What is your name?” inquired Jessie. “Madge!” said the child, curtly. “Madge what?” asked Uncle Morris. “Madge Clifton!” said the child. “Which means, I suppose, Margaret Clifton,” said the old gentleman. “A pretty name enough, and I wish its owner was in a prettier condition. But come, let us hasten out of this cold biting wind.” Poor little, shivering Madge! Waiting so long for her mother, alone and in a strange place, had made her heart heavy and sad. Her limbs were so stiff with cold she could scarcely walk, at first. But the kind looks of the good old gentleman, and the loving words of Jessie, cheered her on; and in a few minutes they entered the back door of Glen Morris Cottage. |