<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER II.</h2>
<p class="p2">“Whishtrew, whishtrew, every bit of me!
Whativer will I do, God knows. The blue ribbon
there forenint me, and the blessed infants one to
aich side”!</p>
<p>The good nurse fell against a chest of drawers,
as she uttered this loud lament; the colour ebbed
from her cherry cheeks, and her sturdy form shook
with terror. She had scarcely turned her back,
she could swear, upon her precious charges; and
now only look at the murder of it! Two little
cots stood side by side, not more than four feet
asunder; and on each cot fast asleep lay a fine
baby, some three or four days old. Upon the floor
between them was a small rosette of blue ribbon.
The infants were slumbering happily; and breathing
as calmly as could be. Each queer little dump
of a face was nestled into its pillow; and a small
red podge, which was meant for an arm, lay crosswise
upon the flannel. Nothing could look more
delicious to the eyes of a fine young woman.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Nevertheless, that fine young woman, Mrs. Biddy
OʼGaghan, stood gazing from one cot to the other,
in hopeless and helpless dismay. Her comely
round face was drawn out with horror, her mouth
wide open, and large tears stealing into her broad
blue Irish eyes.</p>
<p>“And the illigant spots upon them, as like as
two Blemishing spannels; nor the blissed saints in
heaven, if so be they was tuk to glory, afore they
do be made hairyticks, cudnʼt know one from
the ither, no more nor the winds from the brazes.
And there go the doctorʼs bell again! Oh whurra–strew,
whurra, whurra”!</p>
<p>Now Biddy OʼGaghan would scarcely have been
head–nurse at Nowelhurst Hall, before she was
thirty years old, but for her quick self–reliance.
She was not the woman therefore to wring her
hands long, and look foolish. Her Irish wit soon
suggested so many modes of solution, all so easy,
and all so delightfully free from reason, that the
only question was how to listen to all at once.
First she went and bolted carefully both the doors
of the nursery. Then, with a look of triumph,
she rushed to her yellow workbox, snatched up a
roll of narrow tape, some pins, and a pair of
scissors, and knelt upon the floor very gingerly,
where the blue ribbon lay. Then, having pinned
one end of the tape to the centre of the rosette,
and the rosette itself to the carpet, she let the roll
run with one hand, and drew the tape tight with
the other, until it arrived at the nose of the babe<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>
ensconced in the right–hand cot. There she cut it
off sharply, with a snip that awoke the child, who
looked at her contemplatively from a pair of large
grey eyes. Leaving him to his meditations, she
turned the tape on the pin, and drew it towards the
nasal apology of the other infant. The measure
would not reach; it was short by an inch and a
half. What clearer proof could be given of the
title to knot and pendency?</p>
<p>But alas for Biddyʼs triumph! The infant last
geometrised awoke at that very moment, and lifting
his soft fat legs, in order to cry with more comfort,
disclosed the awkward fact that his left knee was
nearer by three inches to the all–important rosette,
than was any part of his brother. Biddy shook
anew, as she drew the tape to the dimples. What
is the legal centre of a human being? Upon my
word, I think I should have measured from the
<i>ὀμφαλός</i>.</p>
<p>Ere further measurement could be essayed, all
the premises were gone utterly; for the baby upon
the right contrived to turn in the flannels, as an
unsettled silkworm pupa rolls in his cocoon. And
he managed to revolve in the wrong direction; it
was his fate through life. Instead of coming towards
the rosette, as a selfish baby would have done,
away he went, with his grey eyes blinking at the
handle of the door. Then he put up his lips, like
the ring of a limpet, and poked both his little fists
into his mouth.</p>
<p>“Well, I never”, cried Bridget; “that settles it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
altogether. Plase the saints an’ he were a rogue,
itʼs this way heʼd ha’ come over on his blessed little
empty belly. My darlin’ dumplin’ dillikins, itʼs
you as it belongs to, and a fool I must be to doubt
of it. Donʼt I know the bend o’ your nose, and the
way your purty lips dribbles, then? And to think
I was near a robbing you! What with the sitting
up o’ nights, and the worry of that carroty spalpeen,
and the way as they sends my meals up,
Paddy OʼGaghan, as is in glory, wud take me for
another manʼs wife”.</p>
<p>With great relief and strong conviction, Mrs.
OʼGaghan began to stitch the truant rosette upon
the cap of the last–mentioned baby, whence (or
from that of the other) it had dropped through
her own loose carelessness, before they were
cuddled away. And with that ribbon she stitched
upon him the heritage of the old family, the name
of “Cradock Nowell”, borne by the eight last
baronets, and the largest estates and foremost rank
in all the fair county of Hants.</p>
<p>“Sure an’ it wonʼt come off again”, said Biddy
to the baby, as she laid down her needle, for, like
all genuine Irishwomen, she despised a thimble;
“and itʼs meself as is to blame, for not taking a
nick on your ear, dear. A big fool I must be only
to plait it in afore, and only for thinkin’ as it wud
come crossways, when you wint to your blissed
mammy, dear. And little more you be likely to
get there, Iʼm afeared, me darlinʼ. An’ skeared
anybody would be to hoort so much as a hair oʼ<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
your skull, until such time as you has any, you
little jule of jewels, and I kisses every bit on you,
and knows what you be thinking on in the dead
hoor of the night. Bless your ticksy–wicksies, and
the ground as you shall step on, and the childer
as you shall have”.</p>
<p>Unprepared as yet to contemplate the pleasures
of paternity, Master Cradock Nowell elect opened
great eyes and great mouth, in the untutored wrath
of hunger; while from the other cot arose a lusty
yell, as of one already visited by the injustice of
the world. This bitter cry awoke the softness and
the faint misgivings of the Irishwomanʼs heart.</p>
<p>“And the pity of the world it is ye canʼt both
be the eldest. And bedad you should, if Biddy
OʼGaghan had the making of the laws. There
shanʼt be any one iver can say as ye havenʼt had
justice, me honey”.</p>
<p>Leaving both the unconscious claimants snugly
wrapped and smiling, she called to her assistants,
now calmly at tea in an inner room. “Miss Penny,
run down now just, without thinking, and give my
compliments, Mrs. OʼGaghanʼs kind compliments
to the housekeeperʼs room, and would Mrs. Toaster
oblige me with her big square scales? No weights
you neednʼt bring, you know. Only the scales,
and be quick with them”.</p>
<p>“And please, maʼam, what shall I say as you
wants them for”?</p>
<p>“Never you mind, Jane Penny. Wait you till
your betters asks of you. And maynʼt I weigh my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
grandfatherʼs silver, without ask you, Jane Penny?
And likely youʼd rather not, and good reason for
that same, I dessay, after the way as I leaves it
open”.</p>
<p>Overlooking this innuendo, as well as the slight
difficulty of weighing, without weights, imaginary
bullion, Miss Penny hurried away; for the wrath
of the nurse was rising, and it was not a thing to
be tampered with. When Jane returned with the
beam of justice, and lingered fondly in the doorway
to watch its application, the head–nurse sidled
her grandly into the little room, and turned the
key upon her.</p>
<p>“Go and finish your tea, Miss Penny. No
draughts in this room, if you please, miss. Save
their little sowls, and divil a hair upon them.
Now come here, my two chickabiddies”.</p>
<p>Adjusting the scales on the bed, where at night
she lay with the infants warm upon her, she took
the two red lumps of innocence in her well–rounded
arms, and laid one in either scale. As she did so,
they both looked up and smiled: it reminded them,
I suppose, of being laid in their cradles. Blessing
them both, and without any nervousness—for to
her it could make no difference—she raised by the
handle the balance. It was a very nice question—which
baby rose first from the counterpane. So
very slight was the difference, that the rosette itself
might almost have turned the scale. But there
was a perceptible difference, of perhaps about half
an ounce, and that in favour of the sweet–tempered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
babe who now possessed the ribbon; and who, as
the other rose slowly before him, drew up his own
little toes, and tried prematurely to crow at him.
Prematurely, my boy, in many ways.</p>
<p>No further mistrust was left in the mind of Mrs.
OʼGaghan. Henceforth that rosetted infant is like
to outweigh and outmeasure his brother, a hundredfold,
a thousandfold, in every balance, by every
standard, save those of self, and of true love, and
perhaps of the kingdom of Heaven.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span></p>
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