<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X</h2>
<h3>THE MINISTER</h3>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></SPAN></span>Mrs. Kittridge's advantages and immunities resulting
from the shipwreck were not yet at an end. Not only
had one of the most "solemn providences" known within
the memory of the neighborhood fallen out at her door,—not
only had the most interesting funeral that had occurred
for three or four years taken place in her parlor, but she
was still further to be distinguished in having the minister
to tea after the performances were all over. To this end
she had risen early, and taken down her best china tea-cups,
which had been marked with her and her husband's
joint initials in Canton, and which only came forth on high
and solemn occasions. In view of this probable distinction,
on Saturday, immediately after the discovery of the
calamity, Mrs. Kittridge had found time to rush to her
kitchen, and make up a loaf of pound-cake and some
doughnuts, that the great occasion which she foresaw might
not find her below her reputation as a forehanded housewife.</p>
<p>It was a fine golden hour when the minister and funeral
train turned away from the grave. Unlike other funerals,
there was no draught on the sympathies in favor of mourners—no
wife, or husband, or parent, left a heart in that
grave; and so when the rites were all over, they turned
with the more cheerfulness back into life, from the contrast
of its freshness with those shadows into which, for
the hour, they had been gazing.</p>
<p>The Rev. Theophilus Sewell was one of the few minis<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></SPAN></span>ters
who preserved the costume of a former generation,
with something of that imposing dignity with which, in
earlier times, the habits of the clergy were invested. He
was tall and majestic in stature, and carried to advantage
the powdered wig and three-cornered hat, the broad-skirted
coat, knee-breeches, high shoes, and plated buckles of the
ancient costume. There was just a sufficient degree of the
formality of olden times to give a certain quaintness to all
he said and did. He was a man of a considerable degree
of talent, force, and originality, and in fact had been held
in his day to be one of the most promising graduates of
Harvard University. But, being a good man, he had proposed
to himself no higher ambition than to succeed to the
pulpit of his father in Harpswell.</p>
<p>His parish included not only a somewhat scattered seafaring
population on the mainland, but also the care of
several islands. Like many other of the New England
clergy of those times, he united in himself numerous different
offices for the benefit of the people whom he served.
As there was neither lawyer nor physician in the town, he
had acquired by his reading, and still more by his experience,
enough knowledge in both these departments to
enable him to administer to the ordinary wants of a very
healthy and peaceable people.</p>
<p>It was said that most of the deeds and legal conveyances
in his parish were in his handwriting, and in the medical
line his authority was only rivaled by that of Miss Roxy,
who claimed a very obvious advantage over him in a certain
class of cases, from the fact of her being a woman,
which was still further increased by the circumstance that
the good man had retained steadfastly his bachelor estate.
"So, of course," Miss Roxy used to say, "poor man! what
could he know about a woman, you know?"</p>
<p>This state of bachelorhood gave occasion to much surmising;
but when spoken to about it, he was accustomed<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></SPAN></span>
to remark with gallantry, that he should have too much
regard for any lady whom he could think of as a wife, to
ask her to share his straitened circumstances. His income,
indeed, consisted of only about two hundred dollars a year;
but upon this he and a very brisk, cheerful maiden sister
contrived to keep up a thrifty and comfortable establishment,
in which everything appeared to be pervaded by a
spirit of quaint cheerfulness.</p>
<p>In fact, the man might be seen to be an original in his
way, and all the springs of his life were kept oiled by a
quiet humor, which sometimes broke out in playful sparkles,
despite the gravity of the pulpit and the awfulness
of the cocked hat. He had a placid way of amusing himself
with the quaint and picturesque side of life, as it
appeared in all his visitings among a very primitive, yet
very shrewd-minded people.</p>
<p>There are those people who possess a peculiar faculty of
mingling in the affairs of this life as spectators as well as
actors. It does not, of course, suppose any coldness of
nature or want of human interest or sympathy—nay, it
often exists most completely with people of the tenderest
human feeling. It rather seems to be a kind of distinct
faculty working harmoniously with all the others; but he
who possesses it needs never to be at a loss for interest or
amusement; he is always a spectator at a tragedy or comedy,
and sees in real life a humor and a pathos beyond
anything he can find shadowed in books.</p>
<p>Mr. Sewell sometimes, in his pastoral visitations, took
a quiet pleasure in playing upon these simple minds, and
amusing himself with the odd harmonies and singular resolutions
of chords which started out under his fingers.
Surely he had a right to something in addition to his limited
salary, and this innocent, unsuspected entertainment
helped to make up the balance for his many labors.</p>
<p>His sister was one of the best-hearted and most unsus<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></SPAN></span>picious
of the class of female idolaters, and worshiped her
brother with the most undoubting faith and devotion—wholly
ignorant of the constant amusement she gave him
by a thousand little feminine peculiarities, which struck
him with a continual sense of oddity. It was infinitely
diverting to him to see the solemnity of her interest in his
shirts and stockings, and Sunday clothes, and to listen to
the subtle distinctions which she would draw between best
and second-best, and every-day; to receive her somewhat
prolix admonition how he was to demean himself in respect
of the wearing of each one; for Miss Emily Sewell was a
gentlewoman, and held rigidly to various traditions of gentility
which had been handed down in the Sewell family,
and which afforded her brother too much quiet amusement
to be disturbed. He would not have overthrown one of
her quiddities for the world; it would be taking away a
part of his capital in existence.</p>
<p>Miss Emily was a trim, genteel little person, with dancing
black eyes, and cheeks which had the roses of youth
well dried into them. It was easy to see that she had been
quite pretty in her days; and her neat figure, her brisk
little vivacious ways, her unceasing good-nature and kindness
of heart, still made her an object both of admiration
and interest in the parish. She was great in drying herbs
and preparing recipes; in knitting and sewing, and cutting
and contriving; in saving every possible snip and chip
either of food or clothing; and no less liberal was she in
bestowing advice and aid in the parish, where she moved
about with all the sense of consequence which her brother's
position warranted.</p>
<p>The fact of his bachelorhood caused his relations to the
female part of his flock to be even more shrouded in sacredness
and mystery than is commonly the case with the great
man of the parish; but Miss Emily delighted to act as
interpreter. She was charmed to serve out to the willing<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></SPAN></span>
ears of his parish from time to time such scraps of information
as regarded his life, habits, and opinions as might
gratify their ever new curiosity. Instructed by her, all
the good wives knew the difference between his very best
long silk stocking and his second best, and how carefully
the first had to be kept under lock and key, where he
could not get at them; for he was understood, good as he
was, to have concealed in him all the thriftless and pernicious
inconsiderateness of the male nature, ready at any
moment to break out into unheard-of improprieties. But
the good man submitted himself to Miss Emily's rule, and
suffered himself to be led about by her with an air of half
whimsical consciousness.</p>
<p>Mrs. Kittridge that day had felt the full delicacy of the
compliment when she ascertained by a hasty glance, before
the first prayer, that the good man had been brought out
to her funeral in all his very best things, not excepting the
long silk stockings, for she knew the second-best pair by
means of a certain skillful darn which Miss Emily had once
shown her, which commemorated the spot where a hole
had been. The absence of this darn struck to Mrs. Kittridge's
heart at once as a delicate attention.</p>
<p>"Mis' Simpkins," said Mrs. Kittridge to her pastor, as
they were seated at the tea-table, "told me that she wished
when you were going home that you would call in to see
Mary Jane; she couldn't come out to the funeral on account
of a dreffle sore throat. I was tellin' on her to gargle
it with blackberry-root tea—don't you think that is a
good gargle, Mr. Sewell?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I think it a very good gargle," replied the minister,
gravely.</p>
<p>"Ma'sh rosemary is the gargle that I always use," said
Miss Roxy; "it cleans out your throat so."</p>
<p>"Marsh rosemary is a very excellent gargle," said Mr.
Sewell.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Why, brother, don't you think that rose leaves and
vitriol is a good gargle?" said little Miss Emily; "I
always thought that you liked rose leaves and vitriol for
a gargle."</p>
<p>"So I do," said the imperturbable Mr. Sewell, drinking
his tea with the air of a sphinx.</p>
<p>"Well, now, you'll have to tell which on 'em will be
most likely to cure Mary Jane," said Captain Kittridge,
"or there'll be a pullin' of caps, I'm thinkin'; or else the
poor girl will have to drink them all, which is generally
the way."</p>
<p>"There won't any of them cure Mary Jane's throat,"
said the minister, quietly.</p>
<p>"Why, brother!" "Why, Mr. Sewell!" "Why, you
don't!" burst in different tones from each of the women.</p>
<p>"I thought you said that blackberry-root tea was good,"
said Mrs. Kittridge.</p>
<p>"I understood that you 'proved of ma'sh rosemary,"
said Miss Roxy, touched in her professional pride.</p>
<p>"And I am sure, brother, that I have heard you say,
often and often, that there wasn't a better gargle than rose
leaves and vitriol," said Miss Emily.</p>
<p>"You are quite right, ladies, all of you. I think these
are all good gargles—excellent ones."</p>
<p>"But I thought you said that they didn't do any good?"
said all the ladies in a breath.</p>
<p>"No, they don't—not the least in the world," said Mr.
Sewell; "but they are all excellent gargles, and as long as
people must have gargles, I think one is about as good as
another."</p>
<p>"Now you have got it," said Captain Kittridge.</p>
<p>"Brother, you do say the strangest things," said Miss
Emily.</p>
<p>"Well, I must say," said Miss Roxy, "it is a new idea
to me, long as I've been nussin', and I nussed through one<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></SPAN></span>
season of scarlet fever when sometimes there was five died
in one house; and if ma'sh rosemary didn't do good then,
I should like to know what did."</p>
<p>"So would a good many others," said the minister.</p>
<p>"Law, now, Miss Roxy, you mus'n't mind him. Do
you know that I believe he says these sort of things just
to hear us talk? Of course he wouldn't think of puttin'
his experience against yours."</p>
<p>"But, Mis' Kittridge," said Miss Emily, with a view of
summoning a less controverted subject, "what a beautiful
little boy that was, and what a striking providence that
brought him into such a good family!"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Kittridge; "but I'm sure I don't see
what Mary Pennel is goin' to do with that boy, for she
ain't got no more government than a twisted tow-string."</p>
<p>"Oh, the Cap'n, he'll lend a hand," said Miss Roxy,
"it won't be easy gettin' roun' him; Cap'n bears a pretty
steady hand when he sets out to drive."</p>
<p>"Well," said Miss Emily, "I do think that bringin'
up children is the most awful responsibility, and I always
wonder when I hear that any one dares to undertake it."</p>
<p>"It requires a great deal of resolution, certainly," said
Mrs. Kittridge; "I'm sure I used to get a'most discouraged
when my boys was young: they was a reg'lar set of
wild ass's colts," she added, not perceiving the reflection
on their paternity.</p>
<p>But the countenance of Mr. Sewell was all aglow with
merriment, which did not break into a smile.</p>
<p>"Wal', Mis' Kittridge," said the Captain, "strikes me
that you're gettin' pussonal."</p>
<p>"No, I ain't neither," said the literal Mrs. Kittridge,
ignorant of the cause of the amusement which she saw
around her; "but you wa'n't no help to me, you know;
you was always off to sea, and the whole wear and tear
on't came on me."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well, well, Polly, all's well that ends well; don't you
think so, Mr. Sewell?"</p>
<p>"I haven't much experience in these matters," said Mr.
Sewell, politely.</p>
<p>"No, indeed, that's what he hasn't, for he never will
have a child round the house that he don't turn everything
topsy-turvy for them," said Miss Emily.</p>
<p>"But I was going to remark," said Mr. Sewell, "that a
friend of mine said once, that the woman that had brought
up six boys deserved a seat among the martyrs; and that
is rather my opinion."</p>
<p>"Wal', Polly, if you git up there, I hope you'll keep a
seat for me."</p>
<p>"Cap'n Kittridge, what levity!" said his wife.</p>
<p>"I didn't begin it, anyhow," said the Captain.</p>
<p>Miss Emily interposed, and led the conversation back to
the subject. "What a pity it is," she said, "that this poor
child's family can never know anything about him. There
may be those who would give all the world to know what
has become of him; and when he comes to grow up, how
sad he will feel to have no father and mother!"</p>
<p>"Sister," said Mr. Sewell, "you cannot think that a child
brought up by Captain Pennel and his wife would ever feel
as without father and mother."</p>
<p>"Why, no, brother, to be sure not. There's no doubt
he will have everything done for him that a child could.
But then it's a loss to lose one's real home."</p>
<p>"It may be a gracious deliverance," said Mr. Sewell—"who
knows? We may as well take a cheerful view, and
think that some kind wave has drifted the child away from
an unfortunate destiny to a family where we are quite sure
he will be brought up industriously and soberly, and in
the fear of God."</p>
<p>"Well, I never thought of that," said Miss Roxy.</p>
<p>Miss Emily, looking at her brother, saw that he was<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></SPAN></span>
speaking with a suppressed vehemence, as if some inner
fountain of recollection at the moment were disturbed. But
Miss Emily knew no more of the deeper parts of her brother's
nature than a little bird that dips its beak into the
sunny waters of some spring knows of its depths of coldness
and shadow.</p>
<p>"Mis' Pennel was a-sayin' to me," said Mrs. Kittridge,
"that I should ask you what was to be done about the
bracelet they found. We don't know whether 'tis real
gold and precious stones, or only glass and pinchbeck.
Cap'n Kittridge he thinks it's real; and if 'tis, why then
the question is, whether or no to try to sell it, or keep it
for the boy agin he grows up. It may help find out who
and what he is."</p>
<p>"And why should he want to find out?" said Mr.
Sewell. "Why should he not grow up and think himself
the son of Captain and Mrs. Pennel? What better lot
could a boy be born to?"</p>
<p>"That may be, brother, but it can't be kept from him.
Everybody knows how he was found, and you may be sure
every bird of the air will tell him, and he'll grow up restless
and wanting to know. Mis' Kittridge, have you got
the bracelet handy?"</p>
<p>The fact was, little Miss Emily was just dying with
curiosity to set her dancing black eyes upon it.</p>
<p>"Here it is," said Mrs. Kittridge, taking it from a
drawer.</p>
<p>It was a bracelet of hair, of some curious foreign workmanship.
A green enameled serpent, studded thickly with
emeralds and with eyes of ruby, was curled around the
clasp. A crystal plate covered a wide flat braid of hair, on
which the letters "D.M." were curiously embroidered in a
cipher of seed pearls. The whole was in style and workmanship
quite different from any jewelry which ordinarily
meets one's eye.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>But what was remarkable was the expression in Mr.
Sewell's face when this bracelet was put into his hand.
Miss Emily had risen from table and brought it to him,
leaning over him as she did so, and he turned his head a
little to hold it in the light from the window, so that only
she remarked the sudden expression of blank surprise and
startled recognition which fell upon it. He seemed like a
man who chokes down an exclamation; and rising hastily,
he took the bracelet to the window, and standing with his
back to the company, seemed to examine it with the
minutest interest. After a few moments he turned and
said, in a very composed tone, as if the subject were of no
particular interest,—</p>
<p>"It is a singular article, so far as workmanship is concerned.
The value of the gems in themselves is not great
enough to make it worth while to sell it. It will be worth
more as a curiosity than anything else. It will doubtless
be an interesting relic to keep for the boy when he grows
up."</p>
<p>"Well, Mr. Sewell, you keep it," said Mrs. Kittridge;
"the Pennels told me to give it into your care."</p>
<p>"I shall commit it to Emily here; women have a native
sympathy with anything in the jewelry line. She'll be
sure to lay it up so securely that she won't even know
where it is herself."</p>
<p>"Brother!"</p>
<p>"Come, Emily," said Mr. Sewell, "your hens will all
go to roost on the wrong perch if you are not at home to
see to them; so, if the Captain will set us across to Harpswell,
I think we may as well be going."</p>
<p>"Why, what's your hurry?" said Mrs. Kittridge.</p>
<p>"Well," said Mr. Sewell, "firstly, there's the hens;
secondly, the pigs; and lastly, the cow. Besides I shouldn't
wonder if some of Emily's admirers should call on her
this evening,—never any saying when Captain Broad may
come in."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Now, brother, you are too bad," said Miss Emily, as
she bustled about her bonnet and shawl. "Now, that's
all made up out of whole cloth. Captain Broad called last
week a Monday, to talk to you about the pews, and hardly
spoke a word to me. You oughtn't to say such things,
'cause it raises reports."</p>
<p>"Ah, well, then, I won't again," said her brother. "I
believe, after all, it was Captain Badger that called twice."</p>
<p>"Brother!"</p>
<p>"And left you a basket of apples the second time."</p>
<p>"Brother, you know he only called to get some of my
hoarhound for Mehitable's cough."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, I remember."</p>
<p>"If you don't take care," said Miss Emily, "I'll tell
where you call."</p>
<p>"Come, Miss Emily, you must not mind him," said
Miss Roxy; "we all know his ways."</p>
<p>And now took place the grand leave-taking, which consisted
first of the three women's standing in a knot and all
talking at once, as if their very lives depended upon saying
everything they could possibly think of before they
separated, while Mr. Sewell and Captain Kittridge stood
patiently waiting with the resigned air which the male sex
commonly assume on such occasions; and when, after two
or three "Come, Emily's," the group broke up only to form
again on the door-step, where they were at it harder than
ever, and a third occasion of the same sort took place at the
bottom of the steps, Mr. Sewell was at last obliged by main
force to drag his sister away in the middle of a sentence.</p>
<p>Miss Emily watched her brother shrewdly all the way
home, but all traces of any uncommon feeling had passed
away; and yet, with the restlessness of female curiosity,
she felt quite sure that she had laid hold of the end of some
skein of mystery, could she only find skill enough to unwind
it.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She took up the bracelet, and held it in the fading evening
light, and broke into various observations with regard
to the singularity of the workmanship. Her brother seemed
entirely absorbed in talking with Captain Kittridge about
the brig Anna Maria, which was going to be launched from
Pennel's wharf next Wednesday. But she, therefore,
internally resolved to lie in wait for the secret in that confidential
hour which usually preceded going to bed. Therefore,
as soon as she had arrived at their quiet dwelling,
she put in operation the most seducing little fire that ever
crackled and snapped in a chimney, well knowing that nothing
was more calculated to throw light into any hidden
or concealed chamber of the soul than that enlivening blaze,
which danced so merrily on her well-polished andirons, and
made the old chintz sofa and the time-worn furniture so
rich in remembrances of family comfort.</p>
<p>She then proceeded to divest her brother of his wig and
his dress-coat, and to induct him into the flowing ease of
a study-gown, crowning his well-shaven head with a black
cap, and placing his slippers before the corner of a sofa
nearest the fire. She observed him with satisfaction sliding
into his seat, and then she trotted to a closet with a glass
door in the corner of the room, and took down an old,
quaintly-shaped silver cup, which had been an heirloom in
their family, and was the only piece of plate which their
modern domestic establishment could boast; and with this,
down cellar she tripped, her little heels tapping lightly on
each stair, and the hum of a song coming back after her as
she sought the cider-barrel. Up again she came, and set
the silver cup, with its clear amber contents, down by the
fire, and then busied herself in making just the crispest,
nicest square of toast to be eaten with it; for Miss Emily
had conceived the idea that some little ceremony of this sort
was absolutely necessary to do away all possible ill effects
from a day's labor, and secure an uninterrupted night's<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></SPAN></span>
repose. Having done all this, she took her knitting-work,
and stationed herself just opposite to her brother.</p>
<p>It was fortunate for Miss Emily that the era of daily
journals had not yet arisen upon the earth, because if it had,
after all her care and pains, her brother would probably
have taken up the evening paper, and holding it between
his face and her, have read an hour or so in silence; but
Mr. Sewell had not this resort. He knew perfectly well
that he had excited his sister's curiosity on a subject
where he could not gratify it, and therefore he took refuge
in a kind of mild, abstracted air of quietude which bid
defiance to all her little suggestions.</p>
<p>After in vain trying every indirect form, Miss Emily
approached the subject more pointedly. "I thought that
you looked very much interested in that poor woman to-day."</p>
<p>"She had an interesting face," said her brother, dryly.</p>
<p>"Was it like anybody that you ever saw?" said Miss
Emily.</p>
<p>Her brother did not seem to hear her, but, taking the
tongs, picked up the two ends of a stick that had just fallen
apart, and arranged them so as to make a new blaze.</p>
<p>Miss Emily was obliged to repeat her question, whereat
he started as one awakened out of a dream, and said,—</p>
<p>"Why, yes, he didn't know but she did; there were a
good many women with black eyes and black hair,—Mrs.
Kittridge, for instance."</p>
<p>"Why, I don't think that she looked like Mrs. Kittridge
in the least," said Miss Emily, warmly.</p>
<p>"Oh, well! I didn't say she did," said her brother,
looking drowsily at his watch; "why, Emily, it's getting
rather late."</p>
<p>"What made you look so when I showed you that bracelet?"
said Miss Emily, determined now to push the war to
the heart of the enemy's country.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Look how?" said her brother, leisurely moistening a
bit of toast in his cider.</p>
<p>"Why, I never saw anybody look more wild and astonished
than you did for a minute or two."</p>
<p>"I did, did I?" said her brother, in the same indifferent
tone. "My dear child, what an active imagination you
have. Did you ever look through a prism, Emily?"</p>
<p>"Why, no, Theophilus; what do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Well, if you should, you would see everybody and
everything with a nice little bordering of rainbow around
them; now the rainbow isn't on the things, but in the
prism."</p>
<p>"Well, what's that to the purpose?" said Miss Emily,
rather bewildered.</p>
<p>"Why, just this: you women are so nervous and excitable,
that you are very apt to see your friends and the
world in general with some coloring just as unreal. I am
sorry for you, childie, but really I can't help you to get up
a romance out of this bracelet. Well, good-night, Emily;
take good care of yourself and go to bed;" and Mr. Sewell
went to his room, leaving poor Miss Emily almost persuaded
out of the sight of her own eyes.</p>
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