Ishmael; Or, In the Depths Part 48
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"'Run home?' how can he run home, uncle? If he lives at the weaver's, it is four miles off! How can he run it, or even walk it? Don't you see how badly hurt he is? Why, he could scarcely limp from the pond to the shop!
I think it would be only kind, uncle, to take him up beside you. We pa.s.s close to the hut, you know, in going home, and we could set him down."
"Come along, then, my little fellow! The young princess says you are to ride home with us, and her highness' wishes are not to be disobeyed!"
laughed Mr. Middleton, holding out his hand to help the boy into the carriage.
Ishmael made no objection to this proposal: but eagerly clambered up to the offered seat beside the gentleman.
The reins were moved, and they set off at a spanking pace, and were soon bowling along the turnpike road that made a circuit through the forest toward Brudenell Heights.
The sun had set, a fresh breeze had sprung up, and, as they were driving rapidly in the eye of the wind, there was scarcely opportunity for conversation. In little more than an hour they reached a point in the road within a few hundred yards of the weaver's hut.
"Here we are, my boy! Now, do you think you can get home without help?"
inquired Mr. Middleton, as he stopped the carriage.
"Oh, yes, sir, thank you!" replied Ishmael, as he clambered down to the ground. He took off his hat beside the carriage, and making his best Sabbath-school bow, said:
"Good-evening, sir; good-evening, madam and miss, and thank you very much."
"Good-evening, my little man; there get along home with you out of the night air," said Mr. Middleton.
Mrs. Middleton and the little lady nodded and smiled their adieus.
And Ishmael struck into the narrow and half hidden footpath that led from the highway to the hut.
The carriage started on its way.
"A rather remarkable boy, that," said Mr. Middleton, as they drove along the forest road encircling the crest of the hills towards Brudenell Heights, that moonlit, dewy evening; "a rather remarkable boy! He has an uncommonly fine head! I should really like to examine it! The intellect and moral organs seem wonderfully developed! I really should like to examine it carefully at my leisure."
"He has a fine face, if it were not so pale and thin," said Mrs.
Middleton.
"Poor, poor fellow," said Claudia, in a tone of deep pity, "he is thin and pale, isn't he? And Fido is so fat and sleek! I'm afraid he doesn't get enough to eat, uncle!"
"Who, Fido?"
"No, the other one, the boy! I say I'm afraid he don't get enough to eat. Do you think he does?"
"I--I'm afraid not, my dear!"
"Then I think it is a shame, uncle! Rich people ought not to let the poor, who depend upon them, starve! Papa says that I am to come into my mamma's fortune as soon as I am eighteen. When I do, n.o.body in this world shall want. Everybody shall have as much as ever they can eat three times a day. Won't that be nice?"
"Magnificent, my little princess, if you can only carry out your ideas,"
replied her uncle.
"Oh! but I will! I will, if it takes every dollar of my income! My mamma told me that when I grew up I must be the mother of the poor! And doesn't a mother feed her children?"
Middleton laughed.
"And as for that poor boy on the hill, he shall have tarts and cheese cakes, and plum pudding, and roast turkey, and new books every day; because I like him; I like him so much; I like him better than I do anything in the world except Fido!"
"Well, my dear," said Mr. Middleton, seizing this opportunity of administering an admonition, "like him as well as Fido, if you please; but do not pet him quite as freely as you pet Fido."
"But I will, if I choose to! Why shouldn't I?" inquired the young lady, erecting her haughty little head.
"Because he is not a dog!" dryly answered her uncle.
"Oh! but he likes petting just as much as Fido! He does indeed, uncle; I a.s.sure you! Oh, I noticed that."
"Nevertheless, Miss Claudia, I must object in future to your making a pet of the poor boy, whether you or he like it or not."
"But I will, if I choose!" persisted the little princess, throwing back her head and shaking all her ringlets.
Mr. Middleton sighed, shook his head, and turned to his wife, whispering, in a low tone:
"What are we to do with this self-willed elf? To carry out her father's ideas, and let her nature have unrestrained freedom to develop itself, will be the ruin of her! Unless she is controlled and guided she is just the girl to grow up wild and eccentric, and end in running away with her own footman."
These words were not intended for Miss Claudia's ears; but notwithstanding, or rather because of, that, she heard every syllable, and immediately fired up, exclaiming:
"Who are you talking of marrying a footman? Me! me! me! Do you think that I would ever marry anyone beneath me?' No, indeed! I will live to be an old maid, before I will marry anybody but a lord! that I am determined upon!"
"You will never reach that consummation of your hopes, my dear, by petting a peasant boy, even though you do look upon him as little better than a dog," said Mr. Middleton, as he drew up before the gates of Brudenell.
A servant was in attendance to open them. And as the party were now at home, the conversation ceased for the present.
Claudia ran in to exhibit her purchases.
Her favorite, Fido, ran to meet her, barking with delight.
CHAPTER XXIII.
ISHMAEL'S PROGRESS.
Athwart his face when blushes pa.s.s To be so poor and weak, He falls into the dewy gra.s.s, To cool his fevered cheek; And hears a music strangely made, That you have never heard, A sprite in every rustling blade, That sings like any bird!
--_Monckton Milnes_.
Meanwhile on that fresh, dewy, moonlight summer evening, along the narrow path leading through the wood behind the hut, Ishmael limped--the happiest little fellow, despite his wounds and bruises, that ever lived.
He was so happy that he half suspected his delight to be all unreal, and feared to wake up presently and find it was but a dream, and see the little black-eyed girl, the ride in the carriage, and, above all, the new "Ill.u.s.trated History of the United States" vanish into the land of shades.
In this dazed frame of mind he reached the hut and opened the door.
The room was lighted only by the blazing logs of a wood fire, which the freshness of the late August evening on the hills made not quite unwelcome.
The room was in no respect changed in the last twelve years. The well-cared-for though humble furniture was still in its old position.
Ishmael; Or, In the Depths Part 48
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Ishmael; Or, In the Depths Part 48 summary
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