Ishmael; Or, In the Depths - LightNovelsOnl.com
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On Sat.u.r.days, according to custom, the school had a holiday; and Ishmael spent the morning in working in the garden. As it was now the depth of winter, there was but little to do, and half a day's work in the week sufficed to keep all in order. Sat.u.r.day afternoons Ishmael went over to open and air the library at Tanglewood, and to return the books he had read and bring back new ones. Sat.u.r.day evenings he spent very much as he did the preceding ones of the week--in giving Reuben his lesson, in posting up the week's accounts, and in reading law until bed time.
On Sundays Ishmael rested from worldly labors and went to church to refresh his soul. But for this Sabbath's rest, made obligatory upon him by the Christian law, Ishmael must have broken down under his severe labors. As it was, however, the benign Christian law of the Sabbath's holy rest proved his salvation.
CHAPTER XLVIII.
ONWARD.
The boldness and the quiet, That calmly go ahead, In spite of wrath and riot, In spite of quick and dead-- Warm energy to spur him, Keen enterprise to guide.
And conscience to upstir him, And duty by his side, And hope forever singing a.s.surance of success, And rapid action springing At once to nothing less!
--_M.F. Tupper_.
In this persevering labor Ishmael cheerfully pa.s.sed the winter months.
He had not heard one word of Claudia, or of her father, except such scant news as reached him through the judge's occasional letters to the overseer.
He had received an encouraging note from Mr. Middleton in answer to the letter he had written to that gentleman. About the first of April Ishmael's first quarterly school bills began to be due.
Tuition fees were not high in that poor neighborhood, and his pay for each pupil averaged about two dollars a quarter. His school numbered thirty pupils, about one-third of whom never paid, consequently at the end of the first three months his net receipts were just forty-two dollars. Not very encouraging this, yet Ishmael was pleased and happy, especially as he felt that he was really doing the little savages intrusted to his care a great deal of good.
Half of this money Ishmael would have forced upon Hannah and Reuben; but Hannah flew into a pa.s.sion and demanded if her nephew took her for a money-grub; and Reuben quietly a.s.sured the young man that his services overpaid his board, which was quite true.
One evening about the middle of April Ishmael sat at his school desk mending pens, setting copies, and keeping an eye on a refractory boy who had been detained after school hours to learn a lesson he had failed to know in his cla.s.s.
Ishmael had just finished setting his last copy and was engaged in piling the copy-books neatly, one on top of another, when there came a soft tap at the door.
"Come in," said Ishmael, fully expecting to see some of the refractory boy's friends come to inquire after him.
The door opened and a very young lady, in a gray silk dress, straw hat, and blue ribbons entered the schoolroom.
Ishmael looked up, gave one glance at the fair, sweet face, serious blue eyes, and soft light ringlets, and dropped his copy-books, came down from his seat and hurried to meet the visitor, exclaiming:
"Bee! Oh, dear, dear Bee, I am so glad to see you!"
"So am I you, Ishmael," said Beatrice Middleton, frankly giving her hand to be shaken.
"Bee! oh, I beg pardon! Miss Middleton I mean! it is such a happiness to me to see you again!"
"So it is to me to see you, Ishmael," frankly answered Beatrice.
"You will sit down and rest, Bee?--Miss Middleton!" exclaimed Ishmael, running to bring his own school chair for her accommodation.
"I will sit down, Bee. None of my old schoolmates call me anything else, Ishmael, and I should hardly know my little self by any other name,"
said Bee, taking the offered seat.
"I thank you very much for letting me call you so! It really went against all old feelings of friends.h.i.+p to call you otherwise."
"Why certainly it did."
"I hope your father and all the family are well?"
"All except mamma, who, you know, is very delicate."
"Yes, I know. They are all down here, of course?"
"No; no one but myself and one man- and maid-servant."
"Indeed!"
"Yes; I came down to see to the last preparations, so as to have everything in order and comfortable for mamma when she comes."
"Still 'mamma's right-hand woman,' Bee!"
"Well, yes; I must be so. You know her health is very uncertain, and there are so many children--two more since you left us, Ishmael! And they are all such a responsibility! And as mamma is so delicate and I am the eldest daughter, I must take much of the care of them all upon myself," replied the girl-woman very gravely.
"Yes, I suppose so; and yet--" Ishmael hesitated and Bee took up the discourse:
--"I know what you are thinking of, Ishmael! That some other than myself ought to have been found to come down to this uninhabited house to make the final preparations for the reception of the family; but really now, Ishmael, when you come to think of it, who could have been found so competent as myself for this duty? To be sure, you know, we sent an upholsterer down with the new furniture, and with particular instructions as to its arrangement: every carpet, set of curtains, and suit of furniture marked with the name of the room for which it was destined. But then, you know, there are a hundred other things to be done, after the upholsterer has quitted the house, that none but a woman and a member of the family would know how to do--cut gla.s.s and china and cutlery to be taken out of their cases and arranged in sideboards and cupboards; and bed and table linen to be unpacked and put into drawers and closets; and the children's beds to be aired and made up; and mamma's own chamber and nursery made ready for her; and, last of all, for the evening that they are expected to arrive, a nice delicate supper got. Now, who was there to attend to all this but me?" questioned Beatrice, looking gravely into Ishmael's face. And as she waited for an answer, Ishmael replied:
"Why--failing your mamma, your papa might have done it, without any derogation from his manly dignity. When General Was.h.i.+ngton was in Philadelphia, during his first Presidential term, with all the cares of the young nation upon his shoulders, he superintended the fitting up of his town house for the reception of Mrs. Was.h.i.+ngton; descending even to the details of hanging curtains and setting up mangles!"
Beatrice laughed, as she said:
"Law, Ishmael! haven't you got over your habit of quoting your heroes yet? And have you really faith enough to hope that modern men will come up to their standard? Of course, George Was.h.i.+ngton was equal to every human duty from the conquering of Cornwallis to--the crimping of a cap-border, if necessary! for he was a miracle! But my papa, G.o.d bless him, though wise and good, is but a man, and would no more know how to perform a woman's duties than I should how to do a man's! What should he know of china-closets and linen chests? Why, Ishmael, he doesn't know fi'penny bit cotton from five s.h.i.+lling linen, and would have been as apt as not to have ordered the servants' sheets on the children's beds and vice versa; and for mamma's supper he would have been as likely to have fried pork as the broiled spring chickens that I shall provide! No, Ishmael; gentlemen may be great masters in Latin and Greek; but they are dunces in housekeeping matters."
"As far as your experience goes, Bee."
"Of course, as far as my experience goes."
"When did you reach Rushy Sh.o.r.e, Bee?"
"Last night about seven o'clock. Matty came with me in the carriage, and Jason drove us. We spent all day in unpacking and arranging the things that had been sent down on the 'Canvas Back' a week or two ago. And this afternoon I thought I would walk over here and see what sort of a school you had. Papa read your letter to us, and we were all interested in your success here."
"Thank you, dear Bee; I know that you are all among my very best friends; and some of these days, Bee, I hope, I trust, to do credit to your friends.h.i.+p."
"That you will, Ishmael! What do you think my papa told my uncle Merlin?--that 'that young man (meaning you) was destined to make his mark on this century.'"
A deep blush of mingled pleasure, bashfulness, and aspiration mantled Ishmael's delicate face. He bowed with sweet, grave courtesy, and changed the subject of conversation by saying:
"I hope Judge Merlin and his daughter are quite well?"
"Quite. They are still at Annapolis. Papa visited them there for a few days last week. The judge is stopping at the Stars and Stripes hotel, and Claudia is a parlor boarder at a celebrated French school in the vicinity. Claudia will not 'come out' until next winter, when her father goes to Was.h.i.+ngton. For next December Claudia will be eighteen years of age, and will enter upon her mother's large property, according to the terms of the marriage settlement and the mother's will. I suppose she will be the richest heiress in America, for the property is estimated at more than a million! Ah! it is fine to be Claudia Merlin--is it not, Ishmael?"
"Very," answered the young man, scarcely conscious amid the whirl of his emotions what he was saying.