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<h2> Tenth Chronicle. REBECCA'S REMINISCENCES </h2>
<p>Rebecca was sitting by the window in her room at the Wareham Female
Seminary. She was alone, as her roommate, Emma Jane Perkins, was reciting
Latin down below in some academic vault of the old brick building.</p>
<p>A new and most ardent passion for the classics had been born in Emma
Jane's hitherto unfertile brain, for Abijah Flagg, who was carrying off
all the prizes at Limerick Academy, had written her a letter in Latin, a
letter which she had been unable to translate for herself, even with the
aid of a dictionary, and which she had been apparently unwilling that
Rebecca, her bosom friend, confidant, and roommate, should render into
English.</p>
<p>An old-fashioned Female Seminary, with its allotment of one medium-sized
room to two medium sized young females, gave small opportunities for
privacy by night or day, for neither the double washstand, nor the thus
far unimagined bathroom, nor even indeed the humble and serviceable
screen, had been realized, in these dark ages of which I write.
Accordingly, like the irrational ostrich, which defends itself by the
simple process of not looking at its pursuers, Emma Jane had kept her
Latin letter in her closed hand, in her pocket, or in her open book,
flattering herself that no one had noticed her pleased bewilderment at its
only half-imagined contents.</p>
<p>All the fairies were not present at Rebecca's cradle. A goodly number of
them telegraphed that they were previously engaged or unavoidably absent
from town. The village of Temperance, Maine, where Rebecca first saw the
light, was hardly a place on its own merits to attract large throngs of
fairies. But one dear old personage who keeps her pocket full of Merry
Leaves from the Laughing Tree, took a fancy to come to the little birthday
party; and seeing so few of her sister-fairies present, she dowered the
sleeping baby more richly than was her wont, because of its apparent lack
of wealth in other directions. So the child grew, and the Merry Leaves
from the Laughing Tree rustled where they hung from the hood of her
cradle, and, being fairy leaves, when the cradle was given up they
festooned themselves on the cribside, and later on blew themselves up to
the ceilings at Sunnybook Farm and dangled there, making fun for
everybody. They never withered, even at the brick house in Riverboro,
where the air was particularly inimical to fairies, for Miss Miranda
Sawyer would have scared any ordinary elf out of her seventeen senses.
They followed Rebecca to Wareham, and during Abijah Flagg's Latin
correspondence with Emma Jane they fluttered about that young person's
head in such a manner that Rebecca was almost afraid that she would
discover them herself, although this is something, as a matter of fact,
that never does happen.</p>
<p>A week had gone by since the Latin missive had been taken from the
post-office by Emma Jane, and now, by means of much midnight oil-burning,
by much cautious questioning of Miss Maxwell, by such scrutiny of the
moods and tenses of Latin verbs as wellnigh destroyed her brain tissue,
she had mastered its romantic message. If it was conventional in style,
Emma Jane never suspected it. If some of the similes seemed to have been
culled from the Latin poets, and some of the phrases built up from Latin
exercises, Emma Jane was neither scholar nor critic; the similes, the
phrases, the sentiments, when finally translated and written down in
black-and-white English, made, in her opinion, the most convincing and
heart-melting document ever sent through the mails:</p>
<p>Mea cara Emma:</p>
<p>Cur audeo scribere ad te epistulam? Es mihi dea! Semper es in mea anima.
Iterum et iterum es cum me in somnis. Saepe video tuas capillos auri, tuos
pulchros oculos similes caelo, tuas genas, quasi rubentes rosas in nive.
Tua vox est dulcior quam cantus avium aut murmur rivuli in montibus.</p>
<p>Cur sum ego tam miser et pauper et indignus, et tu tam dulcis et bona et
nobilis?</p>
<p>Si cogitabis de me ero beatus. Tu es sola puella quam amo, et semper eris.
Alias puellas non amavi. Forte olim amabis me, sed sum indignus. Sine te
sum miser, cum tu es prope mea vita omni est goddamn.</p>
<p>Vale, carissima, carissima puella!</p>
<p>De tuo fideli servo A.F.</p>
<p>My dear Emma:</p>
<p>Why dare I write to you a letter? You are to me a goddess! Always you are
in my heart. Again and again you are with me in dreams. Often I see your
locks of gold, your beautiful eyes like the sky, your cheeks, as red roses
in snow. Your voice is sweeter than the singing of birds or the murmur of
the stream in the mountains.</p>
<p>Why am I so wretched and poor and unworthy, and you so sweet and good and
noble?</p>
<p>If you will think of me I shall be happy. You are the only girl that I
love and always will be. Other girls I have not loved. Perhaps sometime
you will love me, but I am unworthy. Without you, I am wretched, when you
are near my life is all joy.</p>
<p>Farewell, dearest, dearest girl!</p>
<p>From your faithful slave A.F.</p>
<p>Emma Jane knew the letter by heart in English. She even knew it in Latin,
only a few days before a dead language to her, but now one filled with
life and meaning. From beginning to end the epistle had the effect upon
her as of an intoxicating elixir. Often, at morning prayers, or while
eating her rice pudding at the noon dinner, or when sinking off to sleep
at night, she heard a voice murmuring in her ear, "Vale, carissima,
carissima puella!" As to the effect on her modest, countrified little
heart of the phrases in which Abijah stated she was a goddess and he her
faithful slave, that quite baffles description; for it lifted her bodily
out of the scenes in which she moved, into a new, rosy, ethereal
atmosphere in which even Rebecca had no place.</p>
<p>Rebecca did not know this, fortunately; she only suspected, and waited for
the day when Emma Jane would pour out her confidences, as she always did,
and always would until the end of time. At the present moment she was
busily employed in thinking about her own affairs. A shabby composition
book with mottled board covers lay open on the table before her, and
sometimes she wrote in it with feverish haste and absorption, and
sometimes she rested her chin in the cup of her palm, and with the pencil
poised in the other hand looked dreamily out on the village, its huddle of
roofs and steeples all blurred into positive beauty by the fast-falling
snowflakes.</p>
<p>It was the middle of December and the friendly sky was softly dropping a
great white mantle of peace and good-will over the little town, making all
ready within and without for the Feast o' the Babe.</p>
<p>The main street, that in summer was made dignified by its splendid avenue
of shade trees, now ran quiet and white between rows of stalwart trunks,
whose leafless branches were all hanging heavy under their dazzling
burden.</p>
<p>The path leading straight up the hill to the Academy was broken only by
the feet of the hurrying, breathless boys and girls who ran up and down,
carrying piles of books under their arms; books which they remembered so
long as they were within the four walls of the recitation room, and which
they eagerly forgot as soon as they met one another in the living,
laughing world, going up and down the hill.</p>
<p>"It's very becoming to the universe, snow is!" thought Rebecca, looking
out of the window dreamily. "Really there's little to choose between the
world and heaven when a snowstorm is going on. I feel as if I ought to
look at it every minute. I wish I could get over being greedy, but it
still seems to me at sixteen as if there weren't waking hours enough in
the day, and as if somehow I were pressed for time and continually losing
something. How well I remember mother's story about me when I was four. It
was at early breakfast on the farm, but I called all meals dinner' then,
and when I had finished I folded up my bib and sighed: O, dear! Only two
more dinners, play a while and go to bed!' This was at six in the morning—lamplight
in the kitchen, snowlight outside!</p>
<p>Powdery, powdery, powdery snow,<br/>
Making things lovely wherever you go!<br/>
Merciful, merciful, merciful snow,<br/>
Masking the ugliness hidden below.<br/></p>
<p>Herbert made me promise to do a poem for the January 'Pilot,' but I
mustn't take the snow as a subject; there has been too great competition
among the older poets!" And with that she turned in her chair and began
writing again in the shabby book, which was already three quarters filled
with childish scribblings, sometimes in pencil, and sometimes in violet
ink with carefully shaded capital letters."</p>
<hr />
<p>Squire Bean has had a sharp attack of rheumatism and Abijah Flagg came
back from Limerick for a few days to nurse him. One morning the Burnham
sisters from North Riverboro came over to spend the day with Aunt Miranda,
and Abijah went down to put up their horse. ("'Commodatin' 'Bijah" was his
pet name when we were all young.)</p>
<p>He scaled the ladder to the barn chamber—the dear old ladder that
used to be my safety valve!—and pitched down the last forkful of
grandfather's hay that will ever be eaten by any visiting horse. They WILL
be delighted to hear that it is all gone; they have grumbled at it for
years and years.</p>
<p>What should Abijah find at the bottom of the heap but my Thought Book,
hidden there two or three years ago and forgotten!</p>
<p>When I think of what it was to me, the place it filled in my life, the
affection I lavished on it, I wonder that I could forget it, even in all
the excitement of coming to Wareham to school. And that gives me "an
uncommon thought" as I used to say! It is this: that when we finish
building an air castle we seldom live in it after all; we sometimes even
forget that we ever longed to! Perhaps we have gone so far as to begin
another castle on a higher hilltop, and this is so beautiful,—especially
while we are building, and before we live in it!—that the first one
has quite vanished from sight and mind, like the outgrown shell of the
nautilus that he casts off on the shore and never looks at again. (At
least I suppose he doesn't; but perhaps he takes one backward glance,
half-smiling, half-serious, just as I am doing at my old Thought Book, and
says, "WAS THAT MY SHELL! GOODNESS GRACIOUS! HOW DID I EVER SQUEEZE MYSELF
INTO IT!")</p>
<p>That bit about the nautilus sounds like an extract from a school theme, or
a "Pilot" editorial, or a fragment of one of dear Miss Maxwell's lectures,
but I think girls of sixteen are principally imitations of the people and
things they love and admire; and between editing the "Pilot," writing out
Virgil translations, searching for composition subjects, and studying
rhetorical models, there is very little of the original Rebecca Rowena
about me at the present moment; I am just a member of the graduating class
in good and regular standing. We do our hair alike, dress alike as much as
possible, eat and drink alike, talk alike,—I am not even sure that
we do not think alike; and what will become of the poor world when we are
all let loose upon it on the same day of June? Will life, real life, bring
our true selves back to us? Will love and duty and sorrow and trouble and
work finally wear off the "school stamp" that has been pressed upon all of
us until we look like rows of shining copper cents fresh from the mint?</p>
<p>Yet there must be a little difference between us somewhere, or why does
Abijah Flagg write Latin letters to Emma Jane, instead of to me? There is
one example on the other side of the argument,—Abijah Flagg. He
stands out from all the rest of the boys like the Rock of Gibraltar in the
geography pictures. Is it because he never went to school until he was
sixteen? He almost died of longing to go, and the longing seemed to teach
him more than going. He knew his letters, and could read simple things,
but it was I who taught him what books really meant when I was eleven and
he thirteen. We studied while he was husking corn or cutting potatoes for
seed, or shelling beans in the Squire's barn. His beloved Emma Jane didn't
teach him; her father wold not have let her be friends with a chore-boy!
It was I who found him after milking-time, summer nights, suffering, yes
dying, of Least Common Multiple and Greatest Common Divisor; I who struck
the shackles from the slave and told him to skip it all and go on to
something easier, like Fractions, Percentage, and Compound Interest, as I
did myself. Oh! How he used to smell of the cows when I was correcting his
sums on warm evenings, but I don't regret it, for he is now the joy of
Limerick and the pride of Riverboro, and I suppose has forgotten the
proper side on which to approach a cow if you wish to milk her. This now
unserviceable knowledge is neatly inclosed in the outgrown shell he threw
off two or three years ago. His gratitude to me knows no bounds, but—he
writes Latin letters to Emma Jane! But as Mr. Perkins said about drowning
the kittens (I now quote from myself at thirteen), "It is the way of the
world and how things have to be!"</p>
<p>Well, I have read the Thought Book all through, and when I want to make
Mr. Aladdin laugh, I shall show him my composition on the relative values
of punishment and reward as builders of character.</p>
<p>I am not at all the same Rebecca today at sixteen that I was then, at
twelve and thirteen. I hope, in getting rid of my failings, that I haven't
scrubbed and rubbed so hard that I have taken the gloss off the poor
little virtues that lay just alongside of the faults; for as I read the
foolish doggerel and the funny, funny "Remerniscences," I see on the whole
a nice, well-meaning, trusting, loving heedless little creature, that
after all I'd rather build on than outgrow altogether, because she is Me;
the Me that was made and born just a little different from all the rest of
the babies in my birthday year.</p>
<p>One thing is alike in the child and the girl. They both love to set
thoughts down in black and white; to see how they look, how they sound,
and how they make one feel when one reads them over.</p>
<p>They both love the sound of beautiful sentences and the tinkle of rhyming
words, and in fact, of the three great R's of life, they adore Reading and
Riting, as much as they abhor 'Rithmetic.</p>
<p>The little girl in the old book is always thinking of what she is "going
to be."</p>
<p>Uncle Jerry Cobb spoiled me a good deal in this direction. I remember he
said to everybody when I wrote my verses for the flag-raising: "Nary rung
on the ladder o' fame but that child'll climb if you give her time!"—poor
Uncle Jerry! He will be so disappointed in me as time goes on. And still
he would think I have already climbed two rungs on the ladder, although it
is only a little Wareham ladder, for I am one of the "Pilot" editors, the
first "girl editor"—and I have taken a fifty dollar prize in
composition and paid off the interest on a twelve hundred dollar mortgage
with it.</p>
<p>"High is the rank we now possess,<br/>
But higher we shall rise;<br/>
Though what we shall hereafter be<br/>
Is hid from mortal eyes."<br/></p>
<p>This hymn was sung in meeting the Sunday after my election, and Mr.
Aladdin was there that day and looked across the aisle and smiled at me.
Then he sent me a sheet of paper from Boston the next morning with just
one verse in the middle of it.</p>
<p>"She made the cleverest people quite ashamed; And ev'n the good with
inward envy groan, Finding themselves so very much exceeded, In their own
way by all the things that she did."</p>
<p>Miss Maxwell says it is Byron, and I wish I had thought of the last rhyme
before Byron did; my rhymes are always so common.</p>
<p>I am too busy doing, nowadays, to give very much thought to being. Mr.
Aladdin was teasing me one day about what he calls my "cast-off careers."</p>
<p>"What makes you aim at any mark in particular, Rebecca?" he asked, looking
at Miss Maxwell and laughing. "Women never hit what they aim at, anyway;
but if they shut their eyes and shoot in the air they generally find
themselves in the bull's eye."</p>
<p>I think one reason that I have always dreamed of what I should be, when I
grew up, was, that even before father died mother worried about the
mortgage on the farm, and what would become of us if it were foreclosed.</p>
<p>It was hard on children to be brought up on a mortgage that way, but oh!
it was harder still on poor dear mother, who had seven of us then to think
of, and still has three at home to feed and clothe out of the farm.</p>
<p>Aunt Jane says I am young for my age, Aunt Miranda is afraid that I will
never really "grow up," Mr. Aladdin says that I don't know the world any
better than the pearl inside of the oyster. They none of them know the
old, old thoughts I have, some of them going back years and years; for
they are never ones that I can speak about.</p>
<p>I remember how we children used to admire father, he was so handsome and
graceful and amusing, never cross like mother, or too busy to play with
us. He never did any work at home because he had to keep his hands nice
for playing the church melodeon, or the violin or piano for dances.</p>
<p>Mother used to say: "Hannah and Rebecca, you must hull the strawberries,
your father cannot help." "John, you must milk next year for I haven't the
time and it would spoil your father's hands."</p>
<p>All the other men in Temperance village wore calico, or flannel shirts,
except on Sundays, but Father never wore any but white ones with starched
bosoms. He was very particular about them and mother used to stitch and
stitch on the pleats, and press and press the bosoms and collar and cuffs,
sometimes late at night.</p>
<p>Then she was tired and thin and gray, with no time to sew on new dresses
for herself, and no time to wear them, because she was always taking care
of the babies; and father was happy and well and handsome. But we children
never thought much about it until once, after father had mortgaged the
farm, there was going to be a sociable in Temperance village. Mother could
not go as Jenny had whooping-cough and Mark had just broken his arm, and
when she was tying father's necktie, the last thing before he started, he
said: "I wish, Aurelia, that you cared a little about YOUR appearance and
YOUR dress; it goes a long way with a man like me."</p>
<p>Mother had finished the tie, and her hands dropped suddenly. I looked at
her eyes and mouth while she looked at father and in a minute I was ever
so old, with a grown-up ache in my heart. It has always stayed there,
although I admired my handsome father and was proud of him because he was
so talented; but now that I am older and have thought about things, my
love for mother is different from what it used to be. Father was always
the favorite when we were little, he was so interesting, and I wonder
sometimes if we don't remember interesting people longer and better than
we do those who are just good and patient. If so it seems very cruel.</p>
<p>As I look back I see that Miss Ross, the artist who brought me my pink
parasol from Paris, sowed the first seeds in me of ambition to do
something special. Her life seemed so beautiful and so easy to a child. I
had not been to school then, or read George Macdonald, so I did not know
that "Ease is the lovely result of forgotten toil."</p>
<p>Miss Ross sat out of doors and painted lovely things, and everybody said
how wonderful they were, and bought them straight away; and she took care
of a blind father and two brothers, and traveled wherever she wished. It
comes back to me now, that summer when I was ten and Miss Ross painted me
sitting by the mill-wheel while she talked to me of foreign countries!</p>
<p>The other day Miss Maxwell read something from Browning's poems to the
girls of her literature class. It was about David the shepherd boy who
used to lie in his hollow watching one eagle "wheeling slow as in sleep."
He used to wonder about the wide world that the eagle beheld, the eagle
that was stretching his wings so far up in the blue, while he, the poor
shepherd boy, could see only the "strip twixt the hill and the sky;" for
he lay in a hollow.</p>
<p>I told Mr. Baxter about it the next day, which was the Saturday before I
joined the church. I asked him if it was wicked to long to see as much as
the eagle saw?</p>
<p>There was never anybody quite like Mr. Baxter. "Rebecca dear," he said,
"it may be that you need not always lie in a hollow, as the shepherd boy
did; but wherever you lie, that little strip you see 'twixt the hill and
the sky' is able to hold all of earth and all of heaven, if only you have
the right sort of vision."</p>
<p>I was a long, long time about "experiencing religion." I remember Sunday
afternoons at the brick house the first winter after I went there; when I
used to sit in the middle of the dining-room as I was bid, silent and
still, with the big family Bible on my knees. Aunt Miranda had Baxter's
"Saints' Rest," but her seat was by the window, and she at least could
give a glance into the street now and then without being positively
wicked.</p>
<p>Aunt Jane used to read the "Pilgrim's Progress." The fire burned low; the
tall clock ticked, ticked, so slowly and steadily, that the pictures swam
before my eyes and I almost fell asleep.</p>
<p>They thought by shutting everything else out that I should see God; but I
didn't, not once. I was so homesick for Sunnybook and John that I could
hardly learn my weekly hymns, especially the sad, long one beginning:</p>
<p>"My thoughts on awful subjects roll,<br/>
Damnation and the dead."<br/></p>
<p>It was brother John for whom I was chiefly homesick on Sunday afternoons,
because at Sunnybrook Farm father was dead and mother was always busy, and
Hannah never liked to talk.</p>
<p>Then the next year the missionaries from Syria came to Riverboro; and at
the meeting Mr. Burch saw me playing the melodeon, and thought I was grown
up and a church member, and so he asked me to lead in prayer.</p>
<p>I didn't dare to refuse, and when I prayed, which was just like thinking
out loud, I found I could talk to God a great deal easier than to Aunt
Miranda or even to Uncle Jerry Cobb. There were things I could say to Him
that I could never say to anybody else, and saying them always made me
happy and contented.</p>
<p>When Mr. Baxter asked me last year about joining the church, I told him I
was afraid I did not understand God quite well enough to be a real member.</p>
<p>"So you don't quite understand God, Rebecca?" he asked, smiling. "Well,
there is something else much more important, which is, that He understands
you! He understands your feeble love, your longings, desires, hopes,
faults, ambitions, crosses; and that, after all, is what counts! Of course
you don't understand Him! You are overshadowed by His love, His power, His
benignity, His wisdom; that is as it should be! Why, Rebecca, dear, if you
could stand erect and unabashed in God's presence, as one who perfectly
comprehended His nature or His purposes, it would be sacrilege! Don't be
puzzled out of your blessed inheritance of faith, my child; accept God
easily and naturally, just as He accepts you!"</p>
<p>"God never puzzled me, Mr. Baxter; it isn't that," I said; "but the
doctrines do worry me dreadfully."</p>
<p>"Let them alone for the present," Mr Baxter said. "Anyway, Rebecca, you
can never prove God; you can only find Him!"</p>
<p>"Then do you think I have really experienced religion, Mr. Baxter?" I
asked. "Am I the beginnings of a Christian?"</p>
<p>"You are a dear child of the understanding God!" Mr. Baxter said; "and I
say it over to myself night and morning so that I can never forget it."</p>
<hr />
<p>The year is nearly over and the next few months will be lived in the rush
and whirlwind of work that comes before graduation. The bell for
philosophy class will ring in ten minutes, and as I have been writing for
nearly two hours, I must learn my lesson going up the Academy hill. It
will not be the first time; it is a grand hill for learning! I suppose
after fifty years or so the very ground has become soaked with knowledge,
and every particle of air in the vicinity is crammed with useful
information.</p>
<p>I will put my book into my trunk (having no blessed haymow hereabouts) and
take it out again,—when shall I take it out again?</p>
<p>After graduation perhaps I shall be too grown up and too busy to write in
a Thought Book; but oh, if only something would happen worth putting down;
something strange; something unusual; something different from the things
that happen every day in Riverboro and Edgewood!</p>
<p>Graduation will surely take me a little out of "the hollow,"—make me
a little more like the soaring eagle, gazing at the whole wide world
beneath him while he wheels "slow as in sleep." But whether or not, I'll
try not to be a discontented shepherd, but remember what Mr. Baxter said,
that the little strip that I see "twixt the hill and the sky" is able to
hold all of earth and all of heaven, if only I have the eyes to see it.</p>
<p>Rebecca Rowena Randall.</p>
<p>Wareham Female Seminary, December 187—.</p>
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