It was early in the autumn.
Mr. and Mrs. Perkins, with their two hopefuls, had
returned from a month of rest at the mountains, and
the question of school for Thaddeus junior came up.
“He is nearly six years old,”
said Bessie, “and I think he is quite intelligent
enough to go to school, don’t you?”
“Well, if you want my honest
opinion,” Thaddeus answered, “I think
he’s intelligent enough to go without school
for another year at least. I don’t want
a hot-house boy, and I have always been opposed to
forcing these little minds that we are called upon
by circumstances to direct. It seems to me that
the thing for us to do is to hold them back, if anything.
If Teddy goes to school now, he’ll be ready
for college when he is twelve. He’ll be
graduated at sixteen, and at twenty he’ll be
practising law. At twenty-five he’ll be
leader of the bar; and then—what will there
be left for him to achieve at fifty? Absolutely
nothing.”
Mrs. Perkins laughed. “You
have great hopes for Teddy, haven’t you?”
“Certainly I have,” Thaddeus
replied; “and why shouldn’t I? Doesn’t
he combine all my good qualities plus yours?
How can he be anything else than great?”
“I am afraid there’s a
touch of vanity in you,” said Mrs. Perkins,
with a smile. “That remark certainly indicates
it.”
“No—it’s not
vanity in me,” said Thaddeus. “It’s
confidence in you. You’ve assured me so
often of my perfection that I am beginning to believe
in it; and as for your perfection, I’ve always
believed in it. Hence, when I see Teddy combining
your perfect qualities with my own, I regard him as
a supernaturally promising person—that
is, I do until he begins to show the influence of
contact with the hired man, and uses language which
he never got from you or from me.”
“Granting that he is great at
twenty-five,” said Mrs. Perkins, after a few
moments’ reflection, “is that such a horrible
thing?”
“It isn’t for the parents
of the successful youth, but for the successful youth
himself it’s something awful,” returned
Thaddeus, with a convincing shake of the head.
“If no one ever lived beyond the age of thirty-five
it wouldn’t be so bad, but think of living to
be even so young as sixty, with a big reputation to
sustain through more than half of that period!
I wouldn’t want to have to sustain a big name
for twenty-five years. Success entails conspicuousness,
and conspicuousness makes error almost a crime.
Put your mind on it for a moment. Think of
Teddy here. How nervous it would make him in
everything he undertook to feel that the eyes of the
world were upon him. And take into consideration
that other peculiarity of human nature which leads
us all, you and me as well as every one else, to believe
that the man who does not progress is going backward,
that there is no such thing as standing still; then
think of a man illustrious enough for seventy at twenty-five—at
the limit of success, with all those years before
him, and no progress possible! No, my dear.
Don’t let’s talk of school for Teddy yet.”
“I am sure I don’t want
to force him,” said Mrs. Perkins, “but
it sometimes seems to me that he needs lessons in
discipline. I can’t be following around
after him all the time, and it seems to me some days
that I do nothing but find fault with him. I
don’t want him to think I’m a stern mother;
and when he tells me, as he did yesterday, that he
wishes I’d take a vacation for a month, I can’t
blame him.”
“Did he tell you that?”
asked Thaddeus, with a chuckle.
“Yes, he did,” replied
Mrs. Perkins. “I’d kept him in a
chair for an hour because he would tease Tommy, and
when finally I let him go I told him that he was wearing
me out with his naughtiness. About an hour later
he came back and said, ’You have an awful hard
time bringin’ me up, don’t you?’
I said yes, and added that he might spare me the
necessity of scolding him so often, to which he replied
that he’d try, but thought it would be better
if I’d take a vacation for a month. He
hadn’t much hope for his own improvement.”
Thaddeus shook internally.
“He’s perfectly wild,
too, at times,” Mrs. Perkins continued.
“He wants to do such fearful things.
I caught him sliding down the banisters yesterday
head-foremost, and you know how he was at the Mountain
House all summer long. Perfectly irrepressible.”
“That’s very true,”
said Thaddeus. “I was speaking of it to
the doctor up there, and asked him what he thought
I’d better do.”
“And what did he say?” asked Mrs. Perkins.
“He stated his firm belief that
there was nothing you or I could do to get him down
to a basis, but thought Hagenbeck might accomplish
something.”
“No doubt he thought that,”
cried Bessie. “No doubt everybody thought
that, but it wasn’t entirely Teddy’s fault.
If there is anything in the world that is well calculated
to demoralize an active-minded, able-bodied child,
it is hotel life. Teddy was egged on to all
sorts of indiscretions by everybody in the hotel, from
the bell-boys up. If he’d stand on his
head on the cashier’s desk, the cashier would
laugh first, and then, to get rid of him, would suggest
that he go into the dining-room and play with the headwaiter;
and when he upset the contents of his bait-box in
Mrs. Harkaway’s lap, she interfered when I scolded
him, and said she liked it. What can you do
when people talk that way?”
“Get him to upset his bait-box
in her lap again,” said Thaddeus. “I
think if he had been encouraged to do that as a regular
thing, every morning for a week, she’d have
changed her tune.”
“Well, it all goes to prove
one thing,” said Mrs. Perkins, “and that
is, Teddy needs more care than we can give him personally.
We are too lenient. Whenever you start in to
punish him it ends up with a game; when I do it, and
he says something funny, as he always does, I have
to laugh.”
“How about the ounce-of-prevention
idea?” suggested Thaddeus. “We’ve
let him go without a nurse for a year now—why
can’t we employ a maid to look after him—not
to boss him, but to keep an eye on him—to
advise him, and, in case he declines to accept the
advice, to communicate with us at once? All he
needs is directed occupation. As he is at present,
he directs his own occupation, with the result that
the things he does are of an impossible sort.”
“That means another servant
for me to manage,” sighed Mrs. Perkins.
“True; but a servant is easier
to manage than Teddy. You can discharge a servant
if she becomes impossible. We’ve got Teddy
for keeps,” said Thaddeus.
“Very well—so be
it,” said Mrs. Perkins. “You are
right, I guess, about school. He ought not to
be forced, and I’d be worried about him all
the time he was away, anyhow.”
So it was decided that Teddy should
have a nurse, and for a day or two the subject was
dropped. Later on Mrs. Perkins reopened it.
“I’ve been thinking all
day about Teddy’s nurse, Thaddeus,” she
said, one evening after dinner. “I think
it would be nice if we got him a French nurse.
Then he could learn French without any forcing.”
“Good scheme,” said Thaddeus.
“I approve of that. We might learn a
little French from her ourselves, too.”
“That’s what I thought,”
said Bessie and that point was decided. The new
nurse was to be French, and the happy parents drew
beatific visions of the ease with which they should
some day cope with Parisian hotel-keepers and others
in that longed-for period when they should find themselves
able, financially, to visit the French capital.
But—
Ah! Those buts that come into
our lives! Conjunctions they are called!
Are they not rather terminals? Are they not
the forerunners of chaos in the best-laid plans of
mankind? If for every “but” that
destroys our plan of action there were ready always
some better-succeeding plan, then might their conjunctive
force seem more potent; as life goes, however, unhappily,
they are not always so provided, and the English “but”
takes on its Gallic significance, which leads the
Frenchman to define it as meaning “the end.”
There was an object-lesson in store for the Perkinses.
On the Sunday following the discussion
with which this story opens, the Perkinses, always
hospitable, though distinctly unsociable so far as
the returning of visits went, received a visit from
their friends the Bradleys. Ordinarily a visit
from one’s town friends is no very great undertaking
for a suburban host or hostess, but when the town
friends have children from whom they are inseparable,
and those children have nurses who, whithersoever
the children go, go there also, such a visit takes
on proportions the stupendousness of which I, being
myself a suburban entertainer, would prefer not to
discuss, fearing lest some of my friends with families,
recalling these words, might consider my remarks of
a personal nature. Let me be content with saying,
therefore, that when the Bradleys, Mr. and Mrs., plus
Master and Miss, plus Harriet, the English nurse, came
to visit the Perkins homestead that Sunday, it was
a momentous occasion for the host and hostess, and,
furthermore, like many another momentous occasion,
was far-reaching in its results.
In short, it provided the Perkins
family with that object-lesson to which I have already
alluded.
The Bradleys arrived on Sunday night,
and as they came late little Harry Bradley and the
still smaller Jennie Bradley were tired, and hence
not at all responsive to the welcomes of the Perkinses,
large or small. They were excessively reticent.
When Mrs. Perkins, kneeling before Master Harry,
asked him the wholly unnecessary question, “Why,
is this Harry?” he refused wholly to reply; nor
could the diminutive Jennie be induced to say anything
but “Yumps” in response to a similar question
put to her, “Yumps” being, it is to be
presumed, a juvenilism for “Yes, ma’am.”
Hence it was that the object-lesson did not begin
to develop until breakfast on Sunday morning.
The first step in the lesson was taken at that important
meal, when Master Harry observed, in stentorian yet
sweetly soprano tones:
“Hi wants a glarse o’ milk.”
To which his nurse, standing behind
his chair to relieve the Perkinses’ maid of
the necessity of looking after the Bradley hopefuls,
replied:
“’Ush, ’Arry, ’ush!
Wite till yer arsked.”
Mrs. Bradley nodded approval to Harriet,
and observed quietly to Mrs. Perkins that Harriet
was such a treasure; she kept the children so well
in subjection.
The incident passed without making
any impression upon the minds of any but Thaddeus
junior, who, taking his cue from Harry, vociferously
asserted that he, too, wished a glass of milk, and
in such terms as made the assertion tantamount to
an ultimatum.
Then Miss Jennie seemed to think it was her turn.
“Hi doan’t care fer stike.
Hi wants chickin,” said she. “I’n’t
there goin’ ter be no kikes?”
Mrs. Perkins laughed, though I strongly
suspect that Thaddeus junior would have been sent
from the table had he ventured to express a similar
sentiment. Mrs. Bradley blushed; Bradley looked
severe; Perkins had that expression which all parents
have when other people’s children are involved,
and which implies the thought, “If you were
mine there’d be trouble; but since you are not
mine, how cunning you are!” But Harriet, the
nurse, met the problem. She said:
“Popper’s goin’
ter have stike, Jinnie; m’yby Mr. Perkins’ll
give yer lots o’ gryvy. Hit i’n’t
time fer the kikes.”
Perhaps I ought to say to those who
have not studied dialect as “she is spoke”
that the word m’yby is the Seven Dials idiom
for maybe, itself more or less an Americanism, signifying
“perhaps,” while “kikes” is
a controvertible term for cakes.
After breakfast, as a matter of course,
the senior members of both families attended divine
service, then came dinner, and after dinner the usual
matching of the children began. The hopefuls
of Perkins were matched against the scions of Bradley.
All four were brought downstairs and into the parental
presence in the library.
“Your Harry is a fine fellow,
Mrs. Bradley,” said Thaddeus.
“Yes, we think Harry is a very
nice boy,” returned Mrs. Bradley, with a fond
glance at the youth.
“Wot djer si about me, mar?” asked Harry.
“Nothing, dear,” replied
Mrs. Bradley, raising her eyebrows reprovingly.
“Yes, yer did, too,” retorted
Harry. “Yer said as ’ow hi were a
good boy.”
“Well, ’e i’n’t,
then,” interjected Jennie. “‘E’s
a bloomin’ mean un. ‘E took a knoife
an’ cut open me doll.”
“’Ush, Jinnie, ’ush!”
put in the nurse. “Don’t yer tell
tiles on ’Arry. ’E didn’t
mean ter ’urt yer doll. ’Twas a haxident.”
“No, ’twasn’t a
haxident,” said Jennie. “’E done
it a-purpice.”
“Well, wot if hi did?”
retorted Harry. “Didn’t yer pull
the tile off me rockin’-’orse?”
“Well, never mind,” said
Bradley, seeing how strained things were getting.
“Don’t quarrel about it now. It’s
all done and gone, and I dare say you were both a
little to blame.”
“’Hi war’n’t!”
said Harry, and then the subject was dropped.
The children romped in and out through the library
and halls for some time, and the Bradleys and Perkinses
compared notes on various points of interest to both.
After a while they again reverted to the subject
of their children.
“Does Harry go to school?” asked Bessie.
“No, we think he’s too
young yet,” returned Mrs. Bradley. “He
learns a little of something every day from Harriet,
who is really a very superior girl. She is a
good servant. She hasn’t been in this
country very long, and is English to the core, as you’ve
probably noticed, not only in her way of comporting
herself, but in her accent.”
“Yes, I’ve observed it,”
said Bessie. “What does she teach him?”
“Oh, she tells him stories that
are more or less instructive, and she reads to him.
She’s taught him one or two pretty little songs—
ballads, you know—too. Harry has a
sweet little voice. Harry, dear, won’t
you sing that song about Mrs. Henry Hawkins for mamma?”
“Don’t warn’ter,”
said Harry. “Hi’m sick o’ that
bloomin’ old song.”
“Seems to me I’ve heard
it,” said Thaddeus. “As I remember
it, Harry, it was very pretty.”
“It is,” said Bradley.
“It’s the one you mean—’Oh,
’Lizer! dear ’Lizer! Mrs. ’Ennery
‘Awkins.’ Harry sings it well, too;
but I say, Thad, you ought to hear the nurse sing
it. It’s great.”
“I should think it might be.”
“She has the accent down fine, you know.”
“Sort of born to it, eh?”
“Yes; you can’t cultivate that accent
and get it just right.”
“I’ll do ‘Dear Old
Dutch’ for yer,” suggested Harry.
“Hi likes thet better ’n ’Mrs.
‘Awkins.’”
So Harry deserted “Mrs.
’Awkins” and sang that other pathetic
coster-ballad, “Dear Old Dutch,” and, to
the credit of Harriet, the nurse, it must be said
that he was marvellously well instructed. It
could not have been done better had the small vocalist
been the own son of a London coster-monger instead
of the scion of an American family of refinement.
Thus the day passed. Jennie
proved herself quite as proficient in the dialect
of Seven Dials as was Harry, or even Harriet, and when
she consented to stand on a chair and recite a few
nursery rhymes, there was not an unnoticed “h”
that she did not, sooner or later, pick up and attach
to some other word to which it was not related, as
she went along.
In short, as far as their speech was
concerned, thanks to association with Harriet, Jennie
and Harry were as perfect little cockneys as ever
ignored an aspirate.
The visit of the Bradleys, like all
other things, came to an end, and Bessie, Thaddeus,
and the children were once more left to themselves.
Teddy junior, it was observed, after his day with
Harry, developed a slight tendency to misplace the
letter “h” in his conversation, but it
was soon corrected, and things ran smoothly as of
yore. Only—the Only being the natural
sequence of the But referred to some time since—Mr.
and Mrs. Perkins changed their minds about the French
nurse, and it came about in this way:
“Thaddeus,” said Bessie,
after the Bradleys had departed, “what is the
tile of a rockin’-’orse?”
“I don’t know. Why?” asked
Thaddeus.
“Why, don’t you remember,”
she said, “young Harry Bradley accused Jennie
of pulling out the tile of his rockin’-’orse?”
“Oh yes! Ha, ha!”
laughed Thaddeus. “So she did. I
know now. Tile is cockney for tail.”
“Did you notice the accent those children had?”
“Yes.”
“All got from the nurse, too?”
“True.”
“Ah, Teddy, what do you think
of our getting a French maid, after all? Don’t
you think that we’d run a great risk?”
“Of what?”
“Of having Ted speak—er—cockney
French.”
“H’m—yes.
Very likely,” said Thaddeus. “I’d
thought of that myself, and, I guess, perhaps we’d
better stick to Irish.”
“So do I. We can correct any
tendency to a brogue, don’t you think?”
“Certainly,” said Thaddeus.
“Or, if we couldn’t, it wouldn’t
be fatal to the boy’s prospects. It might
even help him if he—”
“Help him? If what?”
“If he ever went into polities,” said
Perkins.
And that was the object-lesson which
a kindly fate gave to the Perkinses in time to prevent
their engaging a French maid for the children.
As to its value as a lesson, as to
the value of its results, those who are familiar with
French as spoken by nurse-instructed youths can best
judge.
I am not unduly familiar with that
or any other kind of French, but I have ideas in the
matter.