“For freedom’s battle, once
begun,
Bequeathed by bleeding sire to son,
Though baffled alt, is ever won.”
“The unconquerable mind, and freedom’s
holy flame.”
“With freedom’s soil beneath
our feet,
And freedom’s banner streaming o’er
us.”
“And the King hath laid his hand
On the watcher’s head;
Till the heart that was worn and sad,
Is quiet and comforted.”
It was a beautiful day at the close
of May, 1836, and New Orleans was holding a jubilant
holiday. The streets were full of flowers and
gay with flying flags; bells were ringing and bands
of music playing; and at the earliest dawn the levee
was black with a dense crowd of excited men.
In the shaded balconies beautiful women were watching;
and on the streets there was the constant chatter
of gaudily turbaned negresses, and the rollicking
guffaws of the darkies, who had nothing to do but
laugh and be merry.
New Orleans in those days took naturally
to a holiday; and a very little excuse made her put
on her festal garments, and this day she had the very
best of reasons for her rejoicing. The hero of
San Jacinto was coming to be her guest, and though
he was at death’s door with his long-neglected
wound, she was determined to meet him with songs of
triumph. As he was carried in his cot through
the crowded streets to the house of the physician
who was to attend to his shattered bone, shouts of
acclamation rent the air. Men and women and little
children pressed to the cotside, to touch his hand,
or to look upon his noble, emaciated face. And
though he had striven with things impossible, and
was worn to a shadow with pain and fever, he must have
felt that “welcome” an over-payment for
all his toil and suffering.
Yet it was not alone General Houston
that was honored that day by the men of New Orleans.
He represented to them the heroes of the Texan Thermopylae
at the Alamo, the brave five hundred who had fallen
in cold-blooded massacre at Goliad, and the seven
hundred who had stood for liberty and the inalienable
rights of manhood at San Jacinto. He was not
only Sam Houston; he was the ideal in whom men honored
all the noblest sentiments of humanity.
A few friends accompanied him, and
among them John Millard. On reaching Texas John
had gone at once to Houston’s side; and in days
and nights of such extremity as they shared together,
friendship grows rapidly. Houston, like the best
of great generals, had immense personal magnetism,
and drew close to him the brave and the honest-hearted.
John gave him the love of a son for a father, and the
homage of a Soldier for a great leader. He rode
by his side to victory, and he could not bear to leave
him when he was in suffering and danger.
Phyllis expected John, and the Bishop
went into the city to meet him. O, how happy
she was! She went from room to room re-arranging
the lace curtains, and placing every chair and couch
in its prettiest position. The table on such
holidays is a kind of altar, and she spread it with
the snowiest damask, the clearest crystal, and the
brightest silver. She made it beautiful with
fresh cool ferns and budding roses. Outside Nature
had done her part. The orange-trees filled the
air with subtle fragrance, and the warm south wind
wafted it in waves of perfume through the open doors
and windows. Every vine was in its first beauty,
every tree and shrub had as yet its spring grace, that
luminous emerald transparency which seems to make
the very atmosphere green. The garden was wearing
all its lilies and pansies and sweet violets, and the
birds were building, and shedding song upon every
tree-top.
To meet her lover, when that lover
comes back from the battle-field with the light of
victory on his brow, what women will not put on all
her beautiful garments? Phyllis’s dark eyes
held a wonderfully tender light, and the soft, rich
pallor of her complexion took just the shadow of color
from the dress of pale pink which fell in flowing lines
to her small sandaled feet. A few white narcissus
were at her belt and in her black hair, and a fairer
picture of pure and graceful womanhood never gladdened
a lover’s heart.
John had taken in and taken on, even
in the few weeks of his absence, some of that peculiar
air of independence which seems to be the spirit infusing
every thing in Texan land. “I can’t
help it,” he said, with a laugh; “it’s
in the air; the very winds are full of freedom; they
know nothing will challenge them, and they go roving
over the prairies with a sound like a song.”
The Bishop had come back with John,
but the Bishop was one of those old men who, while
they gather the wisdom of age, can still keep their
young heart. After supper was over he said:
“Phyllis, my daughter, let them put me a chair
and a table under the live oaks by the cabins.
I am going to have a class-meeting there to-night.
That will give me the pleasure of making many hearts
glad; and it will give John a couple of hours to tell
you all the wonderful things he is going to do.”
And there, two hours afterward, John
and Phyllis went to find him. He was sitting
under a great tree, with the servants in little ebony
squads around him at the doors of their white cabins;
and singularly white they looked, under the swaying
festoons of gray moss and in the soft light; for the
moon was far up in the zenith, calm and bright and
worshipful. John and Phyllis stood together, listening
to his benediction; Then they walked silently back
to the house, wonderfully touched by the pathos of
a little “spiritual” that an old negress
started, and whose whispering minor tones seemed to
pervade all the garden—
“Steal away-steal away!
Steal away to Jesus!”
And in those moments, though not a
word was uttered, the hearts of Phyllis and John were
knitted together as no sensuous pleasure of dance
or song could ever have bound them. Love touched
the spiritual element in each soul, and received its
earnest of immortality. And lovers, who have
had such experiences together, need never fear that
chance or change of life can separate them.
“John,” said the Bishop,
as they sat in the moonlight, “it is my turn
now. I want to hear about Texas and about Houston.
Where did you meet him?”
“I met him falling back from
the Colorado. I crossed the Buffalo Bayou at
Vance’s Bridge, just above San Jacinto, and rode
west. Twenty miles away I met the women and children
of the western settlements, and they told me that
Houston was a little farther on, interposing himself
and his seven hundred men between the Mexican army
and them. O, how my heart bled for them!
They were footsore, hungry, and exhausted. Many
of the women were carrying sick children. The
whole country behind them had been depopulated, and
their only hope was to reach the eastern settlements
on the Trinity before Santa Anna’s army overtook
them. I could do nothing to help them, and I
hasted onward to join the defending party. I
came up to it on the evening of the 20th of April—a
desperate handful of men—chased from their
homes by an overpowering foe, and quite aware that
not only themselves, but their wives and children,
were doomed by Santa Anna to an exterminating massacre.”
“What was your first impression of Houston,
John?”
“That he was a born leader of
men. He had the true imperial look. He was
dressed in buckskin and an Indian blanket, and was
leaning upon his rifle, talking to some of his men.
‘General,’ I said, ’I am a volunteer.
I bring you a true heart and a steady rifle.’
“‘You are welcome, sir,’
he answered. ’We are sworn to win our rights,
or to die free men. Now, what do you say?’
“‘That I am with you with
all my soul.’ Then I told him that there
were two regiments on the way, and that the women of
Nashville were raising a company of young men, and
that another company would start from Natchez within
a week. ‘Why, this is great news,’
he said; and he looked me steadily in the face till
both our eyes shone and our hands met—I
know not how—but I loved and trusted him.”
“I understand, John. When
soldiers are few they draw close together. Forlorn
hopes have their glad hours, and when men press hands
beneath the fire of batteries they touch souls also.
It is war that gives us our brother-in-arms.
The spiritual warfare knows this also, John.
“’O, these are moments, rare
fair moments!
Sing and shout, and use them
well.’”
“The little band were without
commissary and without transport; they were half-clad
and half-armed, and in the neighborhood of a powerful
enemy. They had been living three days upon ears
of dried corn, but they had the will of men determined
to be free and the hearts of heroes. I told them
that the eyes of the whole country were on them, their
sympathies with them, and that help was coming.
And who do you think was with them, father? The
very soul and spirit of their purpose?”
“Some Methodist missionary, doubtless.”
“Henry Stephenson. He had
been preaching and distributing Bibles from San Antonia
to the Sabine River, and neither soldier nor priest
could make him afraid. He was reading the Bible,
with his rifle in his hand, when I first saw him—a
tall, powerful man, with a head like a dome and an
eye like an eagle.”
“Well, well, John; what would you?”
“’In iron times God sends
with mighty power,
Iron apostles to make smooth
his way.’
What did he say to you?”
“Nothing specially to me; but
as we were lying around resting and watching he spoke
to all. ‘Boys!’ he said, ’I
have been reading the word of the living God.
We are his free-born sons, and the name of our elder
brother, Christ, can’t be mixed up with any kind
of tyranny, kingly or priestly; we won’t have
it. We are the children of the knife-bearing
men who trampled kingly and priestly tyranny beneath
their feet on the rocks of New England. We are
fighting for our rights and our homes, and for the
everlasting freedom of our children. Strike like
men! The cause commends the blow!’”
“And I wish I had been there
to strike, John; or, at least, to strengthen and succor
those who did strike.”
“We had no drums, or fifes,
or banners in our little army; none of the pomp of
war; nothing that helps and stimulates; but the preacher
was worth them all.”
“I can believe that. When
we remember how many preachers bore arms in Cromwell’s
camps, there isn’t much miracle in Marston Moor
and Worcester fight. You were very fortunate
to be in time for San Jacinto.”
“I was that. Fortune may
do her worst, she cannot rob me of that honor.”
“It was a grand battle.”
“It was more a slaughter than
a battle. You must imagine Santa Anna with two
thousand men behind their breastworks, and seven hundred
desperate Texans facing them. About noon three
men took axes, and, mounting their horses, rode rapidly
away. I heard, as they mounted, Houston say to
them, ’Do your work, and come back like eagles,
or you’ll be behind time for the fight.’
Then all was quiet for an hour or two. About
the middle of the afternoon; when Mexicans are usually
sleeping or gambling, we got the order to ‘stand
ready.’ In a few moments the three men
who had left us at noon returned. They were covered
with foam and mire, and one of them was swinging an
ax. As he came close to us he cried out, ’Vance’s
Bridge is cut down! Now fight for your wives
and your lives, and remember the Alamo!’
“Instantly Houston gave the
order, ‘Charge!’ And the whole seven hundred
launched themselves on Santa Anna’s breastworks
like an avalanche. Then there was three minutes
of smoke and fire and blood. Then a desperate
hand-to-hand struggle. Our men had charged the
breastwork, with their rifles in their hands and their
bowie-knives between their teeth. When rifles
and pistols had been discharged they flung them away,
rushed on the foe, and cut their path through a wall
of living Mexicans with their knives. ‘Remember
the Alamo!’ ’Remember the Goliad!’
were the cries passed from mouth to mouth whenever
the slaughter slackened. The Mexicans were panic-stricken.
Of one column of five hundred Mexicans only thirty
lived to surrender themselves as prisoners of war.”
“Was such slaughter needful, John?”
“Yes, it was needful, Phyllis. What do
you say, father?”
“I say that we who shall reap
where others sowed in blood and toil, must not judge
the stern, strong hands that labored for us. God
knows the kind of men that are needed for the work
that is to be done. Peace is pledged in war,
and often has the Gospel path been laid o’er
fields of battle. San Jacinto will be no barren
deed; ’one death for freedom makes millions
free!’”
“Did you lose many men, John?”
“The number of our slain is
the miracle. We had seven killed and thirty wounded.
It is incredible, I know; and when the report was made
to Houston he asked, ‘Is it a dream?’”
“But Houston himself was among the wounded,
was he not?”
“At the very beginning of the
fight a ball crashed through his ankle, and his horse
also received two balls in its chest; but neither man
nor horse faltered. I saw the noble animal at
the close of the engagement staggering with his master
over the heaps of slain. Houston, indeed, had
great difficulty in arresting the carnage; far over
the prairie the flying foe were followed, and at Vance’s
Bridge—to which the Mexicans fled, unaware
of its destruction—there was an awful scene.
The bayou was choked with men and horses, and the water
red as blood.”
“Ah, John; could you not spare the flying?
Poor souls!”
“Daughter, keep your pity for
the women and children who would have been butchered
had these very men been able to do it! Give your
sympathy to the men who fell in their defense.
Did you see Stephenson in the fight, John?”
John smiled. “I saw him
after it. He had torn up every shirt he had into
bandages, and was busy all night long among the wounded
men. In the early dawn of the next day we buried
our dead. As we piled the last green sod above
them the sun rose and flooded the graves with light,
and Stephenson turned his face to the east, and cried
out, like some old Hebrew prophet warrior:
“’Praise ye the Lord for the
avenging of Israel, when the people
willingly offered themselves.’...
“’My heart is toward the governors
of Israel, that offered themselves
willingly among the people. Bless
ye the Lord.’...
“’So let all thine enemies
perish, O Lord: but let them that love
him be as the sun when he goeth forth
in his might.’”
“Verses from a famous old battle
hymn, John. How that Hebrew book fits itself
to all generations! If is to humanity what the
sunshine is to the material world, new every day;
as cheering to one generation as to another, suitable
for all ages and circumstances.”
“I asked him where the verses
were, and learned them. I want to forget nothing
pertaining to that day. Look here!” and
John took a little box out of his pocket and, opening
it, displayed one grain of Indian corn. “Father,
Phyllis, I would not part with that grain of corn for
any money.”
“It has a story, I see, John.”
“I reckon it has. When
Santa Anna, disguised as a peasant, and covered with
the mud of the swamp in which he had been hiding, was
brought before Houston, I was there. Houston,
suffering very keenly from his wound, was stretched
upon the ground among his officers. The Mexican
is no coward. He bowed with all his Spanish graces
and complimented Houston on the bravery of his small
army, declaring; ’that he had never before understood
the American character.’ ‘I see now,’
he said, laying both his hands upon his breast, ’that
it is impossible to enslave them.’ Houston
put his hand in his pocket and pulled out part of an
ear of corn. ‘Sir,’ he asked, ’do
you ever expect to conquer men fighting for freedom
who can march four days with an ear of corn for a
ration?’ Young Zavala looked at the corn, and
his eyes filled. ‘Senor,’ he said,
’give me, I pray you, one grain of that corn;
I will plant and replant it until my fields wave with
it.’ We answered the request with a shout,
and Houston gave it away grain by grain. Phyllis
shall plant and watch mine. In two years one
grain will give us enough to sow a decent lot, and,
if we live, we shall see many a broad acre tasseled
with San Jacinto corn.”
“You must take me to see your general, John.”
“Bishop, we will go to-morrow.
You are sure to like him—though, it is
wonderful, but even now he has enemies.”
“Not at all wonderful, John.
No man can be liked by every one. God himself
does not please all; nay as men are, I think it may
stand with divinity to say He cannot.”
“He will like to see you, sir.
He told me himself, that nearly all the Texan colonies
brought not only their religion, but their preachers
with them. He said it was these Protestant preachers
who had fanned and kept alive the spirit of resistance
to Spanish tyranny and to Roman priest-craft.”
“I have not a doubt of it, John.
You cannot have a free faith in an enslaved country.
They knew that the way of the Lord must be prepared.
“’Their
free-bred souls
Went not with priests to school,
To trim the tippet and the stole,
And pray by printed rule.
“’And they would cast the
eager word
From their hearts fiery core,
Smoking and red, as God had stirred
The Hebrew men of yore.’”
During the next two weeks many similar
conversations made the hours to all three hearts something
far more than time chopped up into minutes. There
was scarcely a barren moment, and faith and hope and
love grew in them rapidly toward higher skies and wider
horizons. Then General Houston was so much relieved
that he insisted on going back to His post, and John
returned to Texas with him.
But with the pleasant memories of
this short, stirring visit, and frequent letters from
John and Richard, the summer passed rapidly to Phyllis.
Her strength was nearly restored, and she went singing
about the house full of joy and of loving-kindness
to all living things. The youngest servant on
the place caught her spirit, and the flowers and sunshine
and warmth all seemed a part of that ampler life and
happiness which had come to her.
Richard returned in the fall.
He had remained a little later than he intended in
order to be present at Antony’s marriage.
“A very splendid affair, indeed,” he said;
“but I doubt if Lady Evelyn’s heart was
in it.” It was rather provoking to Phyllis
that Richard had taken entirely a masculine view of
the ceremony, and had quite neglected to notice all
the small details which are so important in a woman’s
estimate. He could not describe a single dress.
“It seemed as if every one wore white, and made
a vast display of jewelry. Pshaw! Phyllis,
one wedding is just like another.”
“Not at all, Richard. Who married them?”
“There was a Bishop, a dean;
and a couple of clergymen present. I imagine
the knot was very securely tied.”
“Was the squire present?”
“No. They were married
from the earl’s town house. The squire was
unable to take the journey. He was very quiet
and somber about the affair.”
“George Eltham, I suppose, was Antony’s
chief friend?”
“He was not there at all.
The Elthams went to the Continent shortly before the
wedding. It troubled the squire.”
“Why? What particular difference could
it make?”
“He said to me that it was the
beginning of a change which he feared. ‘George
will leave t’ firm next. Antony ought to
have married Cicely Eltham. I know Eltham—he’ll
be angry at Cicely having been passed by—and
he’ll show it, soon or later, I’m sure.’”
“But Antony had a right to please himself.”
“I fancy that he had been very
attentive to Miss Eltham. I remember noticing
something like it myself the summer you and I were
first at Hallam.”
“Elizabeth says, in her last
letter, that they are in Paris.”
“Probably they are back in England
by this time. Antony has taken a very fine mansion
at Richmond.”
“Is the bride pretty?”
“Very—only cold and
indifferent, also. I am almost inclined to say
that she was sad.”
Then they talked of John’s visit,
and the subject had a great fascination for Richard.
Perhaps Phyllis unconsciously described Texas, and
Texan affairs, in the light of her own heart; it is
certain that Richard never wearied of hearing her
talk upon the subject; and the following spring he
determined to see the country of which he had heard
so much. John met him with a fine horse at the
Buffalo Bayou, and they took their course direct west
to the Colorado.
To one coming from the old world it
was like a new world that had been lying asleep for
centuries. It had such a fresh odor of earth and
clover and wild flowers. The clear pure air caused
a peculiar buoyancy of spirits. The sky was perfectly
blue, and the earth freshly green. The sunrises
had the pomp of Persian mornings, the nights the soft
bright glory of the Texan moon. They rode for
days over a prairie studded with islands of fine trees,
the grass smooth as a park, and beautiful with blue
salvias and columbines, with yellow coronella and
small starry pinks, and near the numerous creeks the
white feathery tufts of the fragrant meadow-sweet.
It looked like miles and miles of green rumpled velvet,
full of dainty crinklings, mottled with pale maroon,
and cuir, purple, and cream-color.
“How beautiful is this place!”
cried Richard, reverently; “surely this is one
of the many mansions of our Father! One would
be ashamed to be caught sinning or worrying in it!”
As they reached the pine sands the
breeze was keener, and their spirits were still more
joyous and elastic. The golden dust of the pine
flower floated round in soft clouds, and sunk gently
down to the ground. Was it not from the flower
of the pine the old gods of Olympus extracted the
odorous resin with which they perfumed their nectar?
And then, shortly afterward, they came to the magnificent
rolling prairies of the Colorado, with their bottomless
black soil, and their timbered creeks, and their air
full of the clean dainty scent of miles of wild honeysuckle.
“Now, Richard, drink—drink
of the Colorado. It has a charm to lure you back
to Texas, no matter how far away you stray. Soon
or later ‘the mustang feeling’ will seize
you, and you’ll leave every thing and come back.
Do you see yonder hilly roll, with the belt of timber
at its foot?”
“Yes, I see it.”
“On its summit I am going to
build a home—a long, low log-house, spreading
out under the live oaks, and draped with honeysuckles.
Phyllis helped me to draw the plan of it when I saw
her last. The house will be built, and the vines
planted by the end of this year. Then she has
promised to come. I hope you will be glad, Richard.”
“I shall be glad to see her and you happy.”
But although the pretty nest was built,
and the vines growing luxuriantly, it was not until
the close of 1838, nearly two years and a half after
San Jacinto, that the lovers could venture to begin
their housekeeping. The Indians hung persistently
about the timber of the Colorado, and it was necessary
to keep armed men constantly on the ‘range’
to protect the lives of the advance corps of Anglo-American
civilization. During this time John was almost
constantly in the saddle, and Phyllis knew that it
would be folly to add to his responsibility until
his service was performed.
As it frequently happens, one change
brings another. While the preparations were making
for Phyllis’s marriage, a letter arrived from
Hallam which Richard could not refuse to answer in
person. “My father is dying,” wrote
Elizabeth, “and he wishes much to see you.”
So the marriage was hurried forward, and took place
in the last days of September. Some marriages
do not much affect the old home, but that of Phyllis
was likely to induce many changes. She would take
with her to Texas Harriet and several of the old servants;
and there was no one to fill her place as mistress
of the house, or as her brother’s companion.
So that when she thought of the cheery rooms, closed
and silent, she was glad that Richard had to leave
them, until the first shock of their separation was
over.
She went away with a pretty and cheerful
eclat. A steamer had been chartered to take the
party and all their household belongings from New
Orleans to Texas, for Phyllis was carrying much of
her old life into her new one. The deck was crowded
with boxes of every description; the cabin full of
a cheerful party who had gone down to send away the
bride with blessings and good wishes. It seemed
all sad enough to Richard. After our first youth
we have lost that recklessness of change Which throws
off the old and welcomes the new without regret.
The past had been so happy, what the future might
be none could tell.
He turned his face eastward without
much hope. Elizabeth’s letter had been
short and inexplicit. “She would see him
soon; letters never fully explained any thing.”
He arrived at Hallam toward the end of October, and
having come by an earlier packet than had been named,
he was not expected, and there was no one at the coach
to meet him. It was one of those dying days of
summer when there is a pale haze over the brown bare
fields of the gathered harvests. Elizabeth was
walking on the terrace; he saw her turn and come unconsciously
toward him. She was pale and worn, and an inexpressible
sadness was in her face. But the surprise revealed
the full beauty and tenderness of her soul. “O,
Richard! Richard! my love! my love!” and
so saying, she came forward with hands outstretched
and level palms; and the rose came blushing into her
cheeks, and the love-light into her eyes; and when
Richard kissed her, she whispered, “Thank God
you are come! I am so glad!”
People are apt to suppose that in
old countries and among the wealthy classes years
come and go and leave few traces. The fact is
that no family is precisely in the same circumstances
after an interval of a year or two. Gold cannot
bar the door against sorrow, and tapestry and eider-down
have no covenant with change. Richard had not
been many hours in Hallam when he felt the influence
of unusual currents and the want of customary ones.
The squire’s face no longer made a kind of sunshine
in the big, low rooms and on the pleasant terraces.
He was confined to his own apartments, and there Richard
went to talk to him. But he was facing death
with a calm and grand simplicity. “I’d
hev liked to hev lived a bit longer, Richard, if it
hed been His will; but he knows what’s
best. I s’all answer willingly when he
calls me. He knows t’ right hour to make
t’ change; I’d happen order it too soon
or too late. Now sit thee down, and tell me about
this last fight for liberty. Phyllis hes fair
made my old heart burn and beat to t’ varry
name o’ Texas. I’m none bound by Yorkshire,
though I do think it’s the best bit o’
land on t’ face o’ t’ world.
And I like to stand up for t’ weakest side—that’s
Yorkshire! If I hed known nowt o’ t’
quarrel, I’d hev gone wi’ t’ seven
hundred instead o’ t’ two thousand; ay,
would I!” Decay had not touched his mind or his
heart; his eyes flashed, and he spoke out with all
the fervor of his youth: “If I’d
nobbut been a young man when a’ this happened,
I’m varry sure I’d hev pitch’d in
and helped ’em. It’s natural for Englishmen
to hate t’ Spaniards and Papists. Why,
thou knows, we’ve hed some tussles wi’
them ourselves; and Americans are our children, I reckon.”
“Then Texans are your grandchildren;
Texas is an American colony.”
“They hed t’ sense to
choose a varry fine country, it seems. If I was
young again, I’d travel and see more o’
t’ world. But when I was thy age folks
thought t’ sun rose and set i’ England;
that they did.”
He was still able, leaning upon Richard’s
arm, to walk slowly up and down his room, and sometimes
into the long, central gallery, where the likenesses
of the older Hallams hung. He often visited them,
pausing before individuals: “I seem ta be
getting nearer to them, Richard,” he said, one
day; “I wonder if they know that I’m coming.”
“I remember reading of a good
man who, when he was dying, said to some presence
invisible to mortal eyes, ‘Go! and tell my dead,
I come!’”
“I would like to send a message
to my father and mother, and to my dear wife, and
my dead son, Edward. It would be a varry pleasant
thing to see a face you know and loved after that
dark journey.”
“I have read that
“’Eyes watch us that we cannot
see,
Lips warn us that we may not
kiss,
They wait for us, and starrily
Lean toward us, from heaven’s
lattices.’”
“That’s a varry comforting
thought, Richard. Thou sees, as I draw near to
t’ other life, I think more about it; and t’
things o’ this life that used to worry me above
a bit, hev kind of slipped away from me.”
It seemed to be very true that the
things of this life had slipped away from him.
Richard expected him every day to speak about Hallam
and Elizabeth; but week after week passed, and he did
not name the estate. As Christmas drew near he
was, however, much excited. Lady Evelyn was expected,
and she was to bring with her Antony’s son, who
had been called after the squire. He longed to
see the child, and at once took him to his heart.
And he was a very beautiful boy, bright and bold,
and never weary of lisping, “Gran’pa.”
One night, after the nurse had taken
him away, the squire, who was alone with Richard,
said, “I commit that little lad to thy care,
Richard; see he hes his rights, and do thy duty by
him.”
“If his father dies I will do all I am permitted
to do.”
“For sure; I forgot. What
am I saying? There’s Antony yet. He
wants Hallam back. What does ta say?”
“I should be glad to see him in his place.”
“I believe thee. Thou wilt stand by Elizabeth?”
“Until death.”
“I believe thee. There’s
a deal o’ Hallam in thee, Richard. Do thy
duty by t’ old place.”
“I will. You may trust me, uncle.”
“I do. That’s a’
that is to be said between thee and me. It’s
a bit o’ comfort to hev heard thee speak out
so straightfor’ard. God bless thee, nephew
Richard!”
He brightened up considerably the
week before Christmas, and watched Elizabeth and Lady
Evelyn deck his room with box and fir and holly.
The mother was quiet and very undemonstrative, but
she attached herself to the dying man, and he regarded
her with a pitying tenderness, for which there appeared
to be no cause whatever. As she carried away her
boy in her arms on Christmas-eve, he looked sadly after
her, and, touching Elizabeth’s hand, said, “Be
varry good to her, wilt ta?”
They had all spent an hour with him
in honor of the festival, and about seven o’clock
he went to bed. Richard knew that the ladies would
be occupied for a short time with some Christmas arrangements
for the poor of the village, and he remained with
the squire. The sick man fell into a deep sleep,
and Richard sat quiet, with his eyes fixed upon the
glowing embers. Suddenly, the squire spoke out
clear and strong—“Yes, father, I
am coming!”
In the dim chamber there was not a
movement. Richard glanced at the bed. His
uncle’s eyes were fixed upon him. He went
to his side and grasped his hand.
“Did you hear him call me?”
“I heard no one speak but you.”
“My father called me, Richard.”
Richard fully believed the dying man.
He stooped to his face and said, cheerfully, “You
will not go alone then, dear uncle; I am glad for
your sake!”
“Ay; it’s nearly time
to go. It’s a bit sudden at last; but I’m
ready. I wish Antony hed got here; tell them
to come, and to bring t’ little lad.”
There was no disputing the change
in the face, the authority of the voice. Gently
they gathered around him, and Elizabeth laid the sleeping
child on a pillow by his side. Richard saw him
glance at the chubby little hand stretched out, and
he lifted it to the squire’s face. The
dying man kissed it, and smilingly looked at Elizabeth.
Then he let his eyes wander to Richard and his daughter-in-law.
“Good-bye, all!” he whispered,
faintly, and almost with the pleasant words upon his
lips he went away.
In a few hours the Christmas waits
came singing through the park, and the Christmas bells
filled the air with jubilant music; but Squire Henry
Hallam had passed far beyond the happy clamor.
He had gone home to spend the Christmas feast with
the beloved who were waiting for him; with the just
made perfect; with the great multitude which no man
can number.