It was on a morning of the
lovely New England May that
we left the horse-car, and,
spreading our umbrellas, walked
down the street to our new
home in Charlesbridge, through
a storm of snow and rain so
finely blent by the influences
of this fortunate climate,
that no flake knew itself
from its sister drop, or could
be better identified by the
people against whom they beat
in unison. A vernal gale from
the east fanned our cheeks
and pierced our marrow and
chilled our blood, while the
raw, cold green of the adventurous
grass on the borders of the
sopping side-walks gave, as
it peered through its veil
of melting snow and freezing
rain, a peculiar cheerfulness
to the landscape. Here and
there in the vacant lots abandoned
hoop-skirts defied decay;
and near the half-finished
wooden houses, empty mortar-beds,
and bits of lath and slate
strewn over the scarred and
mutilated ground, added their
interest to the scene....
This heavenly weather,
which the Pilgrim Fathers,
with the idea of turning
their thoughts effectually
from earthly pleasures,
came so far to discover,
continued with slight amelioration
throughout the month of
May and far into June; and
it was a matter of constant
amazement with one who had
known less austere climates,
to behold how vegetable
life struggled with the
hostile skies, and, in an
atmosphere as chill and
damp as that of a cellar,
shot forth the buds and
blossoms upon the pear-trees,
called out the sour Puritan
courage of the currant-bushes,
taught a reckless native
grape-vine to wander and
wanton over the southern
side of the fence, and decked
the banks with violets as
fearless and as fragile
as New England girls; so
that about the end of June,
when the heavens relented
and the sun blazed out at
last, there was little for
him to do but to redden
and darken the daring fruits
that had attained almost
their full growth without
his countenance.
Then, indeed, Charlesbridge
appeared to us a kind of
Paradise. The wind blew
all day from the southwest,
and all day in the grove
across the way the orioles
sang to their nestlings....
The house was almost new
and in perfect repair; and,
better than all, the kitchen
had as yet given no signs
of unrest in those volcanic
agencies which are constantly
at work there, and which,
with sudden explosions,
make Herculaneums and Pompeiis
of so many smiling households.
Breakfast, dinner, and tea
came up with illusive regularity,
and were all the most perfect
of their kind; and we laughed
and feasted in our vain
security.
We had out from the city
to banquet with us the friends
we loved, and we were inexpressibly
proud before them of the
Help, who first wrought
miracles of cookery in our
honor, and then appeared
in a clean white apron,
and the glossiest black
hair, to wait upon the table.
She was young, and certainly
very pretty; she was as
gay as a lark, and was courted
by a young man whose clothes
would have been a credit,
if they had not been a reproach,
to our lowly basement. She
joyfully assented to the
idea of staying with us
till she married.
In fact, there was much
that was extremely pleasant
about the little place when
the warm weather came, and
it was not wonderful to
us that Jenny was willing
to remain. It was very quiet;
we called one another to
the window if a large dog
went by our door; and whole
days passed without the
movement of any wheels but
the butcher's upon our street,
which flourished in ragweed
and buttercups and daisies,
and in the autumn burned,
like the borders of nearly
all the streets in Charlesbridge,
with the pallid azure flame
of the succory.
The neighborhood was in
all things a frontier between
city and country. The horse-cars,
the type of such civilization-full
of imposture, discomfort,
and sublime possibility-as
we yet possess, went by
the head of our street,
and might, perhaps, be available
to one skilled in calculating
the movements of comets;
while two minutes' walk
would take us into a wood
so wild and thick that no
roof was visible through
the trees. We learned, like
innocent pastoral people
of the golden age, to know
the several voices of the
cows pastured in the vacant
lots, and, like engine-drivers
of the iron age, to distinguish
the different whistles of
the locomotives passing
on the neighboring railroad....
We played a little at gardening,
of course, and planted tomatoes,
which the chickens seemed to like,
for they ate them up as fast as
they ripened; and we watched with
pride the growth of our Lawton blackberries,
which, after attaining the most
stalwart proportions, were still
as bitter as the scrubbiest of their
savage brethren, and which, when
by advice left on the vines for
a week after they turned black,
were silently gorged by secret and
gluttonous flocks of robins and
orioles. As for our grapes, the
frost cut them off in the hour of
their triumph.
So, as I have hinted, we were
not surprised that Jenny should
be willing to remain with us,
and were as little prepared for
her desertion as for any other
change of our mortal state. But
one day in September she came
to her nominal mistress with tears
in her beautiful eyes and protestations
of unexampled devotion upon her
tongue, and said that she was
afraid she must leave us. She
liked the place, and she never
had worked for any one that was
more of a lady, but she had made
up her mind to go into the city.
All this, so far, was quite in
the manner of domestics who, in
ghost stories, give warning to
the occupants of haunted houses;
and Jenny's mistress listened
in suspense for the motive of
her desertion, expecting to hear
no less than that it was something
which walked up and down the stairs
and dragged iron links after it,
or something that came and groaned
at the front door, like populace
dissatisfied with a political
candidate. But it was in fact
nothing of this kind; simply,
there were no lamps upon our street,
and Jenny, after spending Sunday
evening with friends in East Charlesbridge,
was always alarmed, on her return,
in walking from the horse-car
to our door. The case was hopeless,
and Jenny and our household parted
with respect and regret.
We had not before this thought
it a grave disadvantage that our
street was unlighted. Our street
was not drained nor graded; no
municipal cart ever came to carry
away our ashes; there was not
a water-butt within half a mile
to save us from fire, nor more
than the one-thousandth part of
a policeman to protect us from
theft. Yet, as I paid a heavy
tax, I somehow felt that we enjoyed
the benefits of city government,
and never looked upon Charlesbridge
as in any way undesirable for
residence. But when it became
necessary to find help in Jenny's
place, the frosty welcome given
to application at the intelligence
offices renewed a painful doubt
awakened by her departure.
To be sure, the heads of the
offices were polite enough; but
when the young housekeeper had
stated her case at the first to
which she applied, and the Intelligencer
had called out to the invisible
expectants in the adjoining room,
"Anny wan wants to do giner'l
housewark in Charlsbrudge?"
there came from the maids invoked
so loud, so fierce, so full a
"No!" as shook the lady's
heart with an indescribable shame
and dread. The name that, with
an innocent pride in its literary
and historical associations, she
had written at the heads of her
letters, was suddenly become a
matter of reproach to her; and
she was almost tempted to conceal
thereafter that she lived in Charlesbridge,
and to pretend that she dwelt
upon some wretched little street
in Boston. "You see,"
said the head of the office, "the
gairls doesn't like to live so
far away from the city. Now, if
it was on'y in the Port."
...
This pen is not graphic enough
to give the remote reader an idea
of the affront offered to an inhabitant
of Old Charlesbridge in these
closing words. Neither am I of
sufficiently tragic mood to report
here all the sufferings undergone
by an unhappy family in finding
servants, or to tell how the winter
was passed with miserable makeshifts.
Alas! is it not the history of
a thousand experiences? Any one
who looks upon this page could
match it with a tale as full of
heartbreak and disaster, while
I conceive that, in hastening
to speak of Mrs. Johnson, I approach
a subject of unique interest....
I say, our last Irish girl went
with the last snow, and on one of
those midsummer-like days that sometimes
fall in early April to our yet bleak
and desolate zone, our hearts sang
of Africa and golden joys. A Libyan
longing took us, and we would have
chosen, if we could, to bear a strand
of grotesque beads, or a handful
of brazen gauds, and traffic them
for some sable maid with crisp locks,
whom, uncoffling from the captive
train beside the desert, we should
make to do our general housework
forever, through the right of lawful
purchase. But we knew that this
was impossible, and that, if we
desired colored help, we must seek
it at the intelligence office, which
is in one of those streets chiefly
inhabited by the orphaned children
and grandchildren of slavery. To
tell the truth these orphans do
not seem to grieve much for their
bereavement, but lead a life of
joyous, and rather indolent oblivion
in their quarter of the city.
They are often to be seen sauntering
up and down the street by which
the Charlesbridge cars arrive,-the
young with a harmless swagger,
and the old with the generic limp
which our Autocrat has already
noted as attending advanced years
in their race.... How gayly are
the young ladies of this race
attired, as they trip up and down
the side-walks, and in and out
through the pendent garments at
the shop-doors! They are the black
pansies and marigolds and dark-blooded
dahlias among womankind. They
try to assume something of our
colder race's demeanor, but even
the passer on the horse-car can
see that it is not native with
them, and is better pleased when
they forget us, and ungenteelly
laugh in encountering friends,
letting their white teeth glitter
through the generous lips that
open to their ears. In the streets
branching upward from this avenue,
very little colored men and maids
play with broken or enfeebled
toys, or sport on the wooden pavements
of the entrances to the inner
courts.
Now and then a colored soldier
or sailor-looking strange in his
uniform, even after the custom
of several years-emerges from
those passages; or, more rarely,
a black gentleman, stricken in
years, and cased in shining broadcloth,
walks solidly down the brick sidewalk,
cane in hand,-a vision of serene
self-complacency, and so plainly
the expression of virtuous public
sentiment that the great colored
louts, innocent enough till then
in their idleness, are taken with
a sudden sense of depravity, and
loaf guiltily up against the house-walls.
At the same moment, perhaps,
a young damsel, amorously scuffling
with an admirer through one of
the low open windows, suspends
the strife, and bids him,-"Go
along now, do!" More rarely
yet than the gentleman described,
one may see a white girl among
the dark neighbors, whose frowsy
head is uncovered, and whose sleeves
are rolled up to her elbows, and
who, though no doubt quite at
home, looks as strange there as
that pale anomaly which may sometimes
be seen among a crew of blackbirds.
An air not so much of decay as
of unthrift, and yet hardly of
unthrift, seems to prevail in
the neighborhood, which has none
of the aggressive and impudent
squalor of an Irish quarter, and
none of the surly wickedness of
a low American street. A gayety
not born of the things that bring
its serious joy to the true New
England heart-a ragged gayety,
which comes of summer in the blood,
and not in the pocket or the conscience,
and which affects the countenance
and the whole demeanor, setting
the feet to some inward music,
and at times bursting into a line
of song or a child-like and irresponsible
laugh-gives tone to the visible
life, and wakens a very friendly
spirit in the passer, who somehow
thinks there of a milder climate,
and is half persuaded that the
orange-peel on the side-walks
came from fruit grown in the soft
atmosphere of those back courts.
It was in this quarter, then,
that we heard of Mrs. Johnson; and
it was from a colored boarding-house
there that she came out to Charlesbridge
to look at us, bringing her daughter
of twelve years with her. She was
a matron of mature age and portly
figure, with a complexion like coffee
soothed with the richest cream;
and her manners were so full of
a certain tranquillity and grace,
that she charmed away all our will
to ask for references. It was only
her barbaric laughter and lawless
eye that betrayed how slightly her
New England birth and breeding covered
her ancestral traits, and bridged
the gulf of a thousand years of
civilization that lay between her
race and ours. But in fact, she
was doubly estranged by descent;
for, as we learned later, a sylvan
wildness mixed with that of the
desert in her veins: her grandfather
was an Indian, and her ancestors
on this side had probably sold their
lands for the same value in trinkets
that bought the original African
pair on the other side.
The first day that Mrs. Johnson
descended into our kitchen, she
conjured from the malicious disorder
in which it had been left by the
flitting Irish kobold a dinner
that revealed the inspirations
of genius, and was quite different
from a dinner of mere routine
and laborious talent. Something
original and authentic mingled
with the accustomed flavors; and,
though vague reminiscences of
canal-boat travel and woodland
camps arose from the relish of
certain of the dishes, there was
yet the assurance of such power
in the preparation of the whole,
that we knew her to be merely
running over the chords of our
appetite with preliminary savors,
as a musician acquaints his touch
with the keys of an unfamiliar
piano before breaking into brilliant
and triumphant execution.
Within a week she had mastered
her instrument; and thereafter
there was no faltering in her
performances, which she varied
constantly, through inspiration
or from suggestion.... But, after
all, it was in puddings that Mrs.
Johnson chiefly excelled. She
was one of those cooks-rare as
men of genius in literature-who
love their own dishes; and she
had, in her personally child-like
simplicity of taste, and the inherited
appetites of her savage forefathers,
a dominant passion for sweets.
So far as we could learn, she
subsisted principally upon puddings
and tea. Through the same primitive
instincts, no doubt, she loved
praise. She openly exulted in
our artless flatteries of her
skill; she waited jealously at
the head of the kitchen stairs
to hear what was said of her work,
especially if there were guests;
and she was never too weary to
attempt emprises of cookery.
While engaged in these, she wore
a species of sightly handkerchief
like a turban upon her head, and
about her person those mystical
swathings in which old ladies
of the African race delight. But
she most pleasured our sense of
beauty and moral fitness when,
after the last pan was washed
and the last pot was scraped,
she lighted a potent pipe, and,
taking her stand at the kitchen
door, laded the soft evening air
with its pungent odors. If we
surprised her at these supreme
moments, she took the pipe from
her lips, and put it behind her,
with a low, mellow chuckle, and
a look of half-defiant consciousness;
never guessing that none of her
merits took us half so much as
the cheerful vice which she only
feigned to conceal.
Some things she could not do
so perfectly as cooking because
of her failing eyesight, and we
persuaded her that spectacles
would both become and befriend
a lady of her years, and so bought
her a pair of steel-bowed glasses.
She wore them in some great emergencies
at first, but had clearly no pride
in them. Before long she laid
them aside altogether, and they
had passed from our thoughts,
when one day we heard her mellow
note of laughter and her daughter's
harsher cackle outside our door,
and, opening it, beheld Mrs. Johnson
in gold-bowed spectacles of massive
frame. We then learned that their
purchase was in fulfilment of
a vow made long ago, in the life-time
of Mr. Johnson, that, if ever
she wore glasses, they should
be gold-bowed; and I hope the
manes of the dead were half as
happy in these votive spectacles
as the simple soul that offered
them.
She and her late partner were
the parents of eleven children,
some of whom were dead, and some
of whom were wanderers in unknown
parts. During his life-time she
had kept a little shop in her native
town; and it was only within a few
years that she had gone into service.
She cherished a natural haughtiness
of spirit, and resented control,
although disposed to do all she
could of her own notion. Being told
to say when she wanted an afternoon,
she explained that when she wanted
an afternoon she always took it
without asking, but always planned
so as not to discommode the ladies
with whom she lived. These, she
said, had numbered twenty-seven
within three years, which made us
doubt the success of her system
in all cases, though she merely
held out the fact as an assurance
of her faith in the future, and
a proof of the ease with which places
are to be found.
She contended, moreover, that
a lady who had for thirty years
had a house of her own, was in
nowise bound to ask permission
to receive visits from friends
where she might be living, but
that they ought freely to come
and go like other guests. In this
spirit she once invited her son-in-law,
Professor Jones of Providence,
to dine with her; and her defied
mistress, on entering the dining-room,
found the Professor at pudding
and tea there,-an impressively
respectable figure in black clothes,
with a black face rendered yet
more effective by a pair of green
goggles. It appeared that this
dark professor was a light of
phrenology in Rhode Island, and
that he was believed to have uncommon
virtue in his science by reason
of being blind as well as black.
I am loath to confess that Mrs.
Johnson had not a flattering opinion
of the Caucasian race in all respects.
In fact, she had very good philosophical
and Scriptural reasons for looking
upon us as an upstart people of
new blood, who had come into their
whiteness by no creditable or
pleasant process. The late Mr.
Johnson, who had died in the West
Indies, whither he voyaged for
his health in quality of cook
upon a Down-East schooner, was
a man of letters, and had written
a book to show the superiority
of the black over the white branches
of the human family. In this he
held that, as all islands have
been at their discovery found
peopled by blacks, we must needs
believe that humanity was first
created of that color.
Mrs. Johnson could not show us
her husband's work (a sole copy
in the library of an English gentleman
at Port au Prince is not to be
bought for money), but she often
developed its arguments to the
lady of the house; and one day,
with a great show of reluctance,
and many protests that no personal
slight was meant, let fall the
fact that Mr. Johnson believed
the white race descended from
Gehaz, the leper, upon whom the
leprosy of Naaman fell when the
latter returned by Divine favor
to his original blackness. "And
he went out from his presence
a leper as white as snow,"
said Mrs. Johnson, quoting irrefutable
Scripture. "Leprosy, leprosy,"
she added thoughtfully,-"nothing
but leprosy bleached you out."
It seems to me much in her praise
that she did not exult in our
taint and degradation, as some
white philosophers used to do
in the opposite idea that a part
of the human family were cursed
to lasting blackness and slavery
in Ham and his children, but even
told us of a remarkable approach
to whiteness in many of her own
offspring. In a kindred spirit
of charity, no doubt, she refused
ever to attend church with people
of her elder and wholesomer blood.
When she went to church, she said,
she always went to a white church,
though while with us I am bound
to say she never went to any.
She professed to read her Bible
in her bedroom on Sundays; but
we suspected, from certain sounds
and odors which used to steal
out of this sanctuary, that her
piety more commonly found expression
in dozing and smoking.
I would not make a wanton jest
here of Mrs. Johnson's anxiety to
claim honor for the African color,
while denying this color in many
of her own family. It afforded a
glimpse of the pain which all her
people must endure, however proudly
they hide it or light-heartedly
forget it, from the despite and
contumely to which they are guiltlessly
born; and when I thought how irreparable
was this disgrace and calamity of
a black skin, and how irreparable
it must be for ages yet, in this
world where every other shame and
all manner of wilful guilt and wickedness
may hope for covert and pardon,
I had little heart to laugh. Indeed,
it was so pathetic to hear this
poor old soul talk of her dead and
lost ones, and try, in spite of
all Mr. Johnson's theories and her
own arrogant generalizations, to
establish their whiteness, that
we must have been very cruel and
silly people to turn her sacred
fables even into matter of question.
I have no doubt that her Antoinette
Anastasia and her Thomas Jefferson
Wilberforce-it is impossible to
give a full idea of the splendor
and scope of the baptismal names
in Mrs. Johnson's family-have as
light skins and as golden hair in
heaven as her reverend maternal
fancy painted for them in our world.
There, certainly, they would
not be subject to tanning, which
had ruined the delicate complexion,
and had knotted into black woolly
tangles the once wavy blonde locks
of our little maid-servant Naomi;
and I would fain believe that
Toussaint Washington Johnson,
who ran away to sea so many years
ago, has found some fortunate
zone where his hair and skin keep
the same sunny and rosy tints
they wore to his mother's eyes
in infancy. But I have no means
of knowing this, or of telling
whether he was the prodigy of
intellect that he was declared
to be. Naomi could no more be
taken in proof of the one assertion
than of the other. When she came
to us, it was agreed that she
should go to school; but she overruled
her mother in this as in everything
else, and never went. Except Sunday-school
lessons, she had no other instruction
than that her mistress gave her
in the evenings, when a heavy
day's play and the natural influences
of the hour conspired with original
causes to render her powerless
before words of one syllable.
The first week of her services
she was obedient and faithful
to her duties; but, relaxing in
the atmosphere of a house which
seems to demoralize all menials,
she shortly fell into disorderly
ways of lying in wait for callers
out of doors, and, when people
rang, of running up the front
steps, and letting them in from
the outside. As the season expanded,
and the fine weather became confirmed,
she modified even this form of
service, and spent her time in
the fields, appearing at the house
only when nature importunately
craved molasses....
In her untamable disobedience,
Naomi alone betrayed her sylvan
blood, for she was in all other
respects negro and not Indian.
But it was of her aboriginal ancestry
that Mrs. Johnson chiefly boasted,-when
not engaged in argument to maintain
the superiority of the African
race. She loved to descant upon
it as the cause and explanation
of her own arrogant habit of feeling;
and she seemed indeed to have
inherited something of the Indian's
hauteur along with the Ethiop's
supple cunning and abundant amiability.
She gave many instances in which
her pride had met and overcome
the insolence of employers, and
the kindly old creature was by
no means singular in her pride
of being reputed proud.
She could never have been a woman
of strong logical faculties, but
she had in some things a very
surprising and awful astuteness.
She seldom introduced any purpose
directly, but bore all about it,
and then suddenly sprung it upon
her unprepared antagonist. At
other times she obscurely hinted
a reason, and left a conclusion
to be inferred; as when she warded
off reproach for some delinquency
by saying in a general way that
she had lived with ladies who
used to come scolding into the
kitchen after they had taken their
bitters. "Quality ladies
took their bitters regular,"
she added, to remove any sting
of personality from her remark;
for, from many things she had
let fall, we knew that she did
not regard us as quality.
On the contrary, she often tried
to overbear us with the gentility
of her former places; and would
tell the lady over whom she reigned,
that she had lived with folks worth
their three and four hundred thousand
dollars, who never complained as
she did of the ironing. Yet she
had a sufficient regard for the
literary occupations of the family,
Mr. Johnson having been an author.
She even professed to have herself
written a book, which was still
in manuscript, and preserved somewhere
among her best clothes.
It was well, on many accounts,
to be in contact with a mind so
original and suggestive as Mrs.
Johnson's. We loved to trace its
intricate yet often transparent
operations, and were perhaps too
fond of explaining its peculiarities
by facts of ancestry,-of finding
hints of the Pow-wow or the Grand
Custom in each grotesque development.
We were conscious of something
warmer in this old soul than in
ourselves, and something wilder,
and we chose to think it the tropic
and the untracked forest. She
had scarcely any being apart from
her affection; she had no morality,
but was good because she neither
hated nor envied; and she might
have been a saint far more easily
than far more civilized people.
There was that also in her sinuous
yet malleable nature, so full
of guile and so full of goodness,
that reminded us pleasantly of
lowly folks in elder lands, where
relaxing oppressions have lifted
the restraints of fear between
master and servant, without disturbing
the familiarity of their relation.
She advised freely with us upon
all household matters, and took
a motherly interest in whatever
concerned us. She could be flattered
or caressed into almost any service,
but no threat or command could
move her.
When she erred she never acknowledged
her wrong in words, but handsomely
expressed her regrets in a pudding,
or sent up her apologies in a
favorite dish secretly prepared.
We grew so well used to this form
of exculpation, that, whenever
Mrs. Johnson took an afternoon
at an inconvenient season, we
knew that for a week afterwards
we should be feasted like princes.
She owned frankly that she loved
us, that she never had done half
so much for people before, and
that she never had been nearly
so well suited in any other place;
and for a brief and happy time
we thought that we never should
part.
One day, however, our dividing
destiny appeared in the basement,
and was presented to us as Hippolyto
Thucydides, the son of Mrs. Johnson,
who had just arrived on a visit
to his mother from the State of
New Hampshire. He was a heavy
and loutish youth, standing upon
the borders of boyhood, and looking
forward to the future with a vacant
and listless eye. I mean this
was his figurative attitude; his
actual manner, as he lolled upon
a chair beside the kitchen window,
was so eccentric that we felt
a little uncertain how to regard
him, and Mrs. Johnson openly described
him as peculiar. He was so deeply
tanned by the fervid suns of the
New Hampshire winter, and his
hair had so far suffered from
the example of the sheep lately
under his charge, that he could
not be classed by any stretch
of comparison with the blonde
and straight-haired members of
Mrs. Johnson's family.
He remained with us all the first
day until late in the afternoon,
when his mother took him out to
get him a boarding-house. Then
he departed in the van of her
and Naomi, pausing at the gate
to collect his spirits, and, after
he had sufficiently animated himself
by clapping his palms together,
starting off down the street at
a hand-gallop, to the manifest
terror of the cows in the pasture,
and the confusion of the less
demonstrative people of our household.
Other characteristic traits appeared
in Hippolyto Thucydides within
no very long period of time, and
he ran away from his lodgings
so often during the summer that
he might be said to board round
among the outlying cornfields
and turnip-patches of Charlesbridge.
As a check upon this habit, Mrs.
Johnson seemed to have invited him
to spend his whole time in our basement;
for whenever we went below we found
him there, balanced-perhaps in homage
to us, and perhaps as a token of
extreme sensibility in himself-upon
the low window-sill, the bottoms
of his boots touching the floor
inside, and his face buried in the
grass without.
We could formulate no very tenable
objection to all this, and yet
the presence of Thucydides in
our kitchen unaccountably oppressed
our imaginations. We beheld him
all over the house, a monstrous
eidolon, balanced upon every window-sill;
and he certainly attracted unpleasant
notice to our place, no less by
his furtive and hangdog manner
of arrival than by the bold displays
with which he celebrated his departures.
We hinted this to Mrs. Johnson,
but she could not enter into our
feeling. Indeed, all the wild
poetry of her maternal and primitive
nature seemed to cast itself about
this hapless boy; and if we had
listened to her we should have
believed there was no one so agreeable
in society, or so quick-witted
in affairs, as Hippolyto, when
he chose....
At last, when we said positively
that Thucydides should come to
us no more, and then qualified
the prohibition by allowing him
to come every Sunday, she answered
that she never would hurt the
child's feelings by telling him
not to come where his mother was;
that people who did not love her
children did not love her; and
that, if Hippy went, she went.
We thought it a masterstroke of
firmness to rejoin that Hippolyto
must go in any event; but I am
bound to own that he did not go,
and that his mother stayed, and
so fed us with every cunning propitiatory
dainty, that we must have been
Pagans to renew our threat. In
fact, we begged Mrs. Johnson to
go into the country with us, and
she, after long reluctation on
Hippy's account, consented, agreeing
to send him away to friends during
her absence.
We made every preparation, and
on the eve of our departure Mrs.
Johnson went into the city to
engage her son's passage to Bangor,
while we awaited her return in
untroubled security.
But she did not appear till midnight,
and then responded with but a
sad "Well, sah!" to
the cheerful "Well, Mrs.
Johnson!" that greeted her.
"All right, Mrs. Johnson?"
Mrs. Johnson made a strange noise,
half chuckle and half death-rattle,
in her throat. "All wrong,
sah. Hippy's off again; and I've
been all over the city after him."
"Then you can't go with
us in the morning?"
"How can I, sah?"
Mrs. Johnson went sadly out of
the room. Then she came back to
the door again, and opening it,
uttered, for the first time in
our service, words of apology
and regret: "I hope I ha'n't
put you out any. I wanted to go
with you, but I ought to knowed
I couldn't. All is, I loved you
too much."
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