The Country of the Pointed Firs
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第17章

Where Pennyroyal GrewWE WERE a little late to dinner, but Mrs.Blackett and Mrs.Todd were lenient, and we all took our places after William had paused to wash his hands, like a pious Brahmin, at the well, and put on a neat blue coat which he took from a peg behind the kitchen door.

Then he resolutely asked a blessing in words that I could not hear, and we ate the chowder and were thankful.The kitten went round and round the table, quite erect, and, holding on by her fierce young claws, she stopped to mew with pathos at each elbow, or darted off to the open door when a song sparrow forgot himself and lit in the grass too near.William did not talk much, but his sister Todd occupied the time and told all the news there was to tell of Dunnet Landing and its coasts, while the old mother listened with delight.Her hospitality was something exquisite;she had the gift which so many women lack, of being able to make themselves and their houses belong entirely to a guest's pleasure,--that charming surrender for the moment of themselves and whatever belongs to them, so that they make a part of one's own life that can never be forgotten.Tact is after all a kind of mindreading, and my hostess held the golden gift.Sympathy is of the mind as well as the heart, and Mrs.Blackett's world and mine were one from the moment we met.Besides, she had that final, that highest gift of heaven, a perfect self-forgetfulness.Sometimes, as I watched her eager, sweet old face, I wondered why she had been set to shine on this lonely island of the northern coast.It must have been to keep the balance true, and make up to all her scattered and depending neighbors for other things which they may have lacked.

When we had finished clearing away the old blue plates, and the kitten had taken care of her share of the fresh haddock, just as we were putting back the kitchen chairs in their places, Mrs.

Todd said briskly that she must go up into the pasture now to gather the desired herbs.

"You can stop here an' rest, or you can accompany me," she announced."Mother ought to have her nap, and when we come back she an' William'll sing for you.She admires music," said Mrs.

Todd, turning to speak to her mother.

But Mrs.Blackett tried to say that she couldn't sing as she used, and perhaps William wouldn't feel like it.She looked tired, the good old soul, or I should have liked to sit in the peaceful little house while she slept; I had had much pleasant experience of pastures already in her daughter's company.But it seemed best to go with Mrs.Todd, and off we went.

Mrs.Todd carried the gingham bag which she had brought from home, and a small heavy burden in the bottom made it hang straight and slender from her hand.The way was steep, and she soon grew breathless, so that we sat down to rest awhile on a convenient large stone among the bayberry.

"There, I wanted you to see this,--'tis mother's picture,"said Mrs.Todd; "'twas taken once when she was up to Portland soon after she was married.That's me," she added, opening another worn case, and displaying the full face of the cheerful child she looked like still in spite of being past sixty."And here's William an'

father together.I take after father, large and heavy, an' William is like mother's folks, short an' thin.He ought to have made something o' himself, bein' a man an' so like mother; but though he's been very steady to work, an' kept up the farm, an' done his fishin' too right along, he never had mother's snap an' power o'

seein' things just as they be.He's got excellent judgment, too,"meditated William's sister, but she could not arrive at any satisfactory decision upon what she evidently thought his failure in life."I think it is well to see any one so happy an' makin'