<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII</h2>
<h3>FROM THE SEA</h3>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></SPAN></span>During the night and storm, the little Mara had lain
sleeping as quietly as if the cruel sea, that had made her
an orphan from her birth, were her kind-tempered old
grandfather singing her to sleep, as he often did,—with
a somewhat hoarse voice truly, but with ever an undertone
of protecting love. But toward daybreak, there came very
clear and bright into her childish mind a dream, having
that vivid distinctness which often characterizes the dreams
of early childhood.</p>
<p>She thought she saw before her the little cove where she
and Sally had been playing the day before, with its broad
sparkling white beach of sand curving round its blue sea-mirror,
and studded thickly with gold and silver shells.
She saw the boat of Captain Kittridge upon the stocks, and
his tar-kettle with the smouldering fires flickering under
it; but, as often happens in dreams, a certain rainbow
vividness and clearness invested everything, and she and
Sally were jumping for joy at the beautiful things they
found on the beach.</p>
<p>Suddenly, there stood before them a woman, dressed in
a long white garment. She was very pale, with sweet,
serious dark eyes, and she led by the hand a black-eyed
boy, who seemed to be crying and looking about as for
something lost. She dreamed that she stood still, and the
woman came toward her, looking at her with sweet, sad
eyes, till the child seemed to feel them in every fibre of
her frame. The woman laid her hand on her head as if<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></SPAN></span>
in blessing, and then put the boy's hand in hers, and said,
"Take him, Mara, he is a playmate for you;" and with
that the little boy's face flashed out into a merry laugh.
The woman faded away, and the three children remained
playing together, gathering shells and pebbles of a wonderful
brightness. So vivid was this vision, that the little
one awoke laughing with pleasure, and searched under her
pillows for the strange and beautiful things that she had
been gathering in dreamland.</p>
<p>"What's Mara looking after?" said Sally, sitting up in
her trundle-bed, and speaking in the patronizing motherly
tone she commonly used to her little playmate.</p>
<p>"All gone, pitty boy—all gone!" said the child, looking
round regretfully, and shaking her golden head; "pitty
lady all gone!"</p>
<p>"How queer she talks!" said Sally, who had awakened
with the project of building a sheet-house with her fairy
neighbor, and was beginning to loosen the upper sheet and
dispose the pillows with a view to this species of architecture.
"Come, Mara, let's make a pretty house!" she
said.</p>
<p>"Pitty boy out dere—out dere!" said the little one,
pointing to the window, with a deeper expression than ever
of wishfulness in her eyes.</p>
<p>"Come, Sally Kittridge, get up this minute!" said the
voice of her mother, entering the door at this moment;
"and here, put these clothes on to Mara, the child mustn't
run round in her best; it's strange, now, Mary Pennel
never thinks of such things."</p>
<p>Sally, who was of an efficient temperament, was preparing
energetically to second these commands of her mother,
and endue her little neighbor with a coarse brown stuff
dress, somewhat faded and patched, which she herself had
outgrown when of Mara's age; with shoes, which had been
coarsely made to begin with, and very much battered by<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></SPAN></span>
time; but, quite to her surprise, the child, generally so
passive and tractable, opposed a most unexpected and desperate
resistance to this operation. She began to cry and
to sob and shake her curly head, throwing her tiny hands
out in a wild species of freakish opposition, which had,
notwithstanding, a quaint and singular grace about it,
while she stated her objections in all the little English at
her command.</p>
<p>"Mara don't want—Mara want pitty boo des—and
<i>pitty</i> shoes."</p>
<p>"Why, was ever anything like it?" said Mrs. Kittridge
to Miss Roxy, as they both were drawn to the door by the
outcry; "here's this child won't have decent every-day
clothes put on her,—she must be kept dressed up like a
princess. Now, that ar's French calico!" said Mrs. Kittridge,
holding up the controverted blue dress, "and that
ar never cost a cent under five-and-sixpence a yard; it
takes a yard and a half to make it, and it must have been
a good day's work to make it up; call that three-and-sixpence
more, and with them pearl buttons and thread and
all, that ar dress never cost less than a dollar and seventy-five,
and here she's goin' to run out every day in it!"</p>
<p>"Well, well!" said Miss Roxy, who had taken the sobbing
fair one in her lap, "you know, Mis' Kittridge, this
'ere's a kind o' pet lamb, an old-folks' darling, and things
be with her as they be, and we can't make her over, and
she's such a nervous little thing we mustn't cross her."
Saying which, she proceeded to dress the child in her own
clothes.</p>
<p>"If you had a good large checked apron, I wouldn't
mind putting that on her!" added Miss Roxy, after she
had arrayed the child.</p>
<p>"Here's one," said Mrs. Kittridge; "that may save her
clothes some."</p>
<p>Miss Roxy began to put on the wholesome garment;<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></SPAN></span>
but, rather to her mortification, the little fairy began to
weep again in a most heart-broken manner.</p>
<p>"Don't want che't apon."</p>
<p>"Why don't Mara want nice checked apron?" said Miss
Roxy, in that extra cheerful tone by which children are to
be made to believe they have mistaken their own mind.</p>
<p>"Don't want it!" with a decided wave of the little
hand; "I's too pitty to wear che't apon."</p>
<p>"Well! well!" said Mrs. Kittridge, rolling up her eyes,
"did I ever! no, I never did. If there ain't depraved
natur' a-comin' out early. Well, if she says she's pretty
now, what'll it be when she's fifteen?"</p>
<p>"She'll learn to tell a lie about it by that time," said
Miss Roxy, "and say she thinks she's horrid. The child
<i>is</i> pretty, and the truth comes uppermost with her now."</p>
<p>"Haw! haw! haw!" burst with a great crash from Captain
Kittridge, who had come in behind, and stood silently
listening during this conversation; "that's musical now;
come here, my little maid, you <i>are</i> too pretty for checked
aprons, and no mistake;" and seizing the child in his long
arms, he tossed her up like a butterfly, while her sunny
curls shone in the morning light.</p>
<p>"There's one comfort about the child, Miss Kittridge,"
said Aunt Roxy: "she's one of them that dirt won't stick
to. I never knew her to stain or tear her clothes,—she
always come in jist so nice."</p>
<p>"She ain't much like Sally, then!" said Mrs. Kittridge.
"That girl'll run through more clothes! Only last week
she walked the crown out of my old black straw bonnet,
and left it hanging on the top of a blackberry-bush."</p>
<p>"Wal', wal'," said Captain Kittridge, "as to dressin'
this 'ere child,—why, ef Pennel's a mind to dress her in
cloth of gold, it's none of our business! He's rich enough
for all he wants to do, and so let's eat our breakfast and
mind our own business."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>After breakfast Captain Kittridge took the two children
down to the cove, to investigate the state of his boat and
tar-kettle, set high above the highest tide-mark. The sun
had risen gloriously, the sky was of an intense, vivid blue,
and only great snowy islands of clouds, lying in silver
banks on the horizon, showed vestiges of last night's storm.
The whole wide sea was one glorious scene of forming and
dissolving mountains of blue and purple, breaking at the
crest into brilliant silver. All round the island the waves
were constantly leaping and springing into jets and columns
of brilliant foam, throwing themselves high up, in
silvery cataracts, into the very arms of the solemn evergreen
forests which overhung the shore.</p>
<p>The sands of the little cove seemed harder and whiter
than ever, and were thickly bestrewn with the shells and
seaweed which the upturnings of the night had brought
in. There lay what might have been fringes and fragments
of sea-gods' vestures,—blue, crimson, purple, and
orange seaweeds, wreathed in tangled ropes of kelp and
sea-grass, or lying separately scattered on the sands. The
children ran wildly, shouting as they began gathering sea-treasures;
and Sally, with the air of an experienced hand
in the business, untwisted the coils of rosy seaweed, from
which every moment she disengaged some new treasure,
in some rarer shell or smoother pebble.</p>
<p>Suddenly, the child shook out something from a knotted
mass of sea-grass, which she held up with a perfect shriek
of delight. It was a bracelet of hair, fastened by a brilliant
clasp of green, sparkling stones, such as she had never
seen before. She redoubled her cries of delight, as she
saw it sparkle between her and the sun, calling upon her
father.</p>
<p>"Father! father! do come here, and see what I've
found!"</p>
<p>He came quickly, and took the bracelet from the child's<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></SPAN></span>
hand; but, at the same moment, looking over her head, he
caught sight of an object partially concealed behind a projecting
rock. He took a step forward, and uttered an
exclamation,—</p>
<p>"Well, well! sure enough! poor things!"</p>
<p>There lay, bedded in sand and seaweed, a woman with
a little boy clasped in her arms! Both had been carefully
lashed to a spar, but the child was held to the bosom of
the woman, with a pressure closer than any knot that mortal
hands could tie. Both were deep sunk in the sand,
into which had streamed the woman's long, dark hair,
which sparkled with glittering morsels of sand and pebbles,
and with those tiny, brilliant, yellow shells which are so
numerous on that shore.</p>
<p>The woman was both young and beautiful. The forehead,
damp with ocean-spray, was like sculptured marble,—the
eyebrows dark and decided in their outline; but the
long, heavy, black fringes had shut down, as a solemn curtain,
over all the history of mortal joy or sorrow that those
eyes had looked upon. A wedding-ring gleamed on the
marble hand; but the sea had divorced all human ties, and
taken her as a bride to itself. And, in truth, it seemed
to have made to her a worthy bed, for she was all folded
and inwreathed in sand and shells and seaweeds, and a
great, weird-looking leaf of kelp, some yards in length, lay
twined around her like a shroud. The child that lay in
her bosom had hair, and face, and eyelashes like her own,
and his little hands were holding tightly a portion of the
black dress which she wore.</p>
<p>"Cold,—cold,—stone dead!" was the muttered exclamation
of the old seaman, as he bent over the woman.</p>
<p>"She must have struck her head there," he mused, as
he laid his finger on a dark, bruised spot on her temple.
He laid his hand on the child's heart, and put one finger
under the arm to see if there was any lingering vital heat,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></SPAN></span>
and then hastily cut the lashings that bound the pair to the
spar, and with difficulty disengaged the child from the cold
clasp in which dying love had bound him to a heart which
should beat no more with mortal joy or sorrow.</p>
<p>Sally, after the first moment, had run screaming toward
the house, with all a child's forward eagerness, to be the
bearer of news; but the little Mara stood, looking anxiously,
with a wishful earnestness of face.</p>
<p>"Pitty boy,—pitty boy,—come!" she said often; but
the old man was so busy, he scarcely regarded her.</p>
<p>"Now, Cap'n Kittridge, do tell!" said Miss Roxy,
meeting him in all haste, with a cap-border stiff in air,
while Dame Kittridge exclaimed,—</p>
<p>"Now, you don't! Well, well! didn't I say that was
a ship last night? And what a solemnizing thought it was
that souls might be goin' into eternity!"</p>
<p>"We must have blankets and hot bottles, right away,"
said Miss Roxy, who always took the earthly view of matters,
and who was, in her own person, a personified humane
society. "Miss Kittridge, you jist dip out your dishwater
into the smallest tub, and we'll put him in. Stand away,
Mara! Sally, you take her out of the way! We'll fetch
this child to, perhaps. I've fetched 'em to, when they's
seemed to be dead as door-nails!"</p>
<p>"Cap'n Kittridge, you're sure the woman's dead?"</p>
<p>"Laws, yes; she had a blow right on her temple here.
There's no bringing her to till the resurrection."</p>
<p>"Well, then, you jist go and get Cap'n Pennel to come
down and help you, and get the body into the house, and
we'll attend to layin' it out by and by. Tell Ruey to
come down."</p>
<p>Aunt Roxy issued her orders with all the military vigor
and precision of a general in case of a sudden attack. It
was her habit. Sickness and death were her opportunities;
where they were, she felt herself at home, and she<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></SPAN></span>
addressed herself to the task before her with undoubting
faith.</p>
<p>Before many hours a pair of large, dark eyes slowly
emerged from under the black-fringed lids of the little
drowned boy,—they rolled dreamily round for a moment,
and dropped again in heavy languor.</p>
<p>The little Mara had, with the quiet persistence which
formed a trait in her baby character, dragged stools and
chairs to the back of the bed, which she at last succeeded
in scaling, and sat opposite to where the child lay, grave
and still, watching with intense earnestness the process that
was going on. At the moment when the eyes had opened,
she stretched forth her little arms, and said, eagerly,
"Pitty boy, come,"—and then, as they closed again, she
dropped her hands with a sigh of disappointment. Yet,
before night, the little stranger sat up in bed, and laughed
with pleasure at the treasures of shells and pebbles which
the children spread out on the bed before him.</p>
<p>He was a vigorous, well-made, handsome child, with
brilliant eyes and teeth, but the few words that he spoke
were in a language unknown to most present. Captain
Kittridge declared it to be Spanish, and that a call which
he most passionately and often repeated was for his mother.
But he was of that happy age when sorrow can be easily
effaced, and the efforts of the children called forth joyous
smiles. When his playthings did not go to his liking, he
showed sparkles of a fiery, irascible spirit.</p>
<p>The little Mara seemed to appropriate him in feminine
fashion, as a chosen idol and graven image. She gave him
at once all her slender stock of infantine treasures, and
seemed to watch with an ecstatic devotion his every movement,—often
repeating, as she looked delightedly around,
"Pitty boy, come."</p>
<p>She had no words to explain the strange dream of
the morning; it lay in her, struggling for expression, and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></SPAN></span>
giving her an interest in the new-comer as in something
belonging to herself. Whence it came,—whence come
multitudes like it, which spring up as strange, enchanted
flowers, every now and then in the dull, material pathway
of life,—who knows? It may be that our present faculties
have among them a rudimentary one, like the germs
of wings in the chrysalis, by which the spiritual world
becomes sometimes an object of perception; there may be
natures in which the walls of the material are so fine and
translucent that the spiritual is seen through them as
through a glass darkly. It may be, too, that the love
which is stronger than death has a power sometimes to
make itself heard and felt through the walls of our mortality,
when it would plead for the defenseless ones it has
left behind. All these things <i>may</i> be,—who knows?</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"There," said Miss Roxy, coming out of the keeping-room
at sunset; "I wouldn't ask to see a better-lookin'
corpse. That ar woman was a sight to behold this morning.
I guess I shook a double handful of stones and them
little shells out of her hair,—now she reely looks beautiful.
Captain Kittridge has made a coffin out o' some
cedar-boards he happened to have, and I lined it with
bleached cotton, and stuffed the pillow nice and full, and
when we come to get her in, she reely will look lovely."</p>
<p>"I s'pose, Mis' Kittridge, you'll have the funeral to-morrow,—it's
Sunday."</p>
<p>"Why, yes, Aunt Roxy,—I think everybody must
want to improve such a dispensation. Have you took little
Mara in to look at the corpse?"</p>
<p>"Well, no," said Miss Roxy; "Mis' Pennel's gettin'
ready to take her home."</p>
<p>"I think it's an opportunity we ought to improve," said
Mrs. Kittridge, "to learn children what death is. I think
we can't begin to solemnize their minds too young."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>At this moment Sally and the little Mara entered the
room.</p>
<p>"Come here, children," said Mrs. Kittridge, taking a
hand of either one, and leading them to the closed door of
the keeping-room; "I've got somethin' to show you."</p>
<p>The room looked ghostly and dim,—the rays of light
fell through the closed shutter on an object mysteriously
muffled in a white sheet.</p>
<p>Sally's bright face expressed only the vague curiosity of
a child to see something new; but the little Mara resisted
and hung back with all her force, so that Mrs. Kittridge
was obliged to take her up and hold her.</p>
<p>She folded back the sheet from the chill and wintry
form which lay so icily, lonely, and cold. Sally walked
around it, and gratified her curiosity by seeing it from
every point of view, and laying her warm, busy hand on
the lifeless and cold one; but Mara clung to Mrs. Kittridge,
with eyes that expressed a distressed astonishment.
The good woman stooped over and placed the child's little
hand for a moment on the icy forehead. The little one
gave a piercing scream, and struggled to get away; and as
soon as she was put down, she ran and hid her face in
Aunt Roxy's dress, sobbing bitterly.</p>
<p>"That child'll grow up to follow vanity," said Mrs.
Kittridge; "her little head is full of dress now, and she
hates anything serious,—it's easy to see that."</p>
<p>The little Mara had no words to tell what a strange,
distressful chill had passed up her arm and through her
brain, as she felt that icy cold of death,—that cold so
different from all others. It was an impression of fear and
pain that lasted weeks and months, so that she would start
out of sleep and cry with a terror which she had not yet a
sufficiency of language to describe.</p>
<p>"You seem to forget, Mis' Kittridge, that this 'ere child
ain't rugged like our Sally," said Aunt Roxy, as she raised<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></SPAN></span>
the little Mara in her arms. "She was a seven-months'
baby, and hard to raise at all, and a shivery, scary little
creature."</p>
<p>"Well, then, she ought to be hardened," said Dame
Kittridge. "But Mary Pennel never had no sort of idea
of bringin' up children; 'twas jist so with Naomi,—the
girl never had no sort o' resolution, and she just died for
want o' resolution,—that's what came of it. I tell ye,
children's got to learn to take the world as it is; and 'tain't
no use bringin' on 'em up too tender. Teach 'em to begin
as they've got to go out,—that's my maxim."</p>
<p>"Mis' Kittridge," said Aunt Roxy, "there's reason in
all things, and there's difference in children. 'What's
one's meat's another's pison.' You couldn't fetch up Mis'
Pennel's children, and she couldn't fetch up your'n,—so
let's say no more 'bout it."</p>
<p>"I'm always a-tellin' my wife that ar," said Captain
Kittridge; "she's always wantin' to make everybody over
after her pattern."</p>
<p>"Cap'n Kittridge, I don't think <i>you</i> need to speak,"
resumed his wife. "When such a loud providence is
a-knockin' at <i>your</i> door, I think you'd better be a-searchin'
your own heart,—here it is the eleventh hour, and you
hain't come into the Lord's vineyard yet."</p>
<p>"Oh! come, come, Mis' Kittridge, don't twit a feller
afore folks," said the Captain. "I'm goin' over to Harpswell
Neck this blessed minute after the minister to 'tend
the funeral,—so we'll let <i>him</i> preach."</p>
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