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A Bit of Shore Life
by
She told me how much they had wished that Georgie had come to live with them after his mother died. It would have been very handy for them to have him in winter too; but it was no use trying to get him away from his father; and neither of them were contented if they were out of sight of the sea. “He’s a dreadful odd boy, and so old for his years. Hannah, she says he’s older now than I be,” and she blushed a little as she looked up at me; while for a moment the tears came into my eyes, as I thought of this poor, plain woman, who had such a capacity for enjoyment, and whose life had been so dull, and far apart from the pleasures and satisfactions which had made so much of my own life. It seemed to me as if I had had a great deal more than I deserved, while this poor soul was almost beggared. I seemed to know all about her life in a flash, and pitied her from the bottom of my heart. Yet I suppose she would not have changed places with me for any thing, or with anybody else, for that matter.
Miss Cynthia had a good deal to say about her mother, who had been a schoolmate of Mrs. Wallis’s–I had just been telling them what I could about the auction. She told me that she had died the spring before, and said how much they missed her; and Hannah broke in upon her regrets in her brusque, downright way: “I should have liked to kep’ her if she’d lived to be a hundred, but I don’t wish her back. She’d had considerable many strokes, and she couldn’t help herself much if any. She’d got to be rising eighty, and her mind was a good deal broke,” she added conclusively, after a short silence; while Cynthia looked sorrowfully out of the window, and we heard the sound of Georgie’s axe at the other side of the house, and the wild sweet whistle of a bird that flew overhead. I suppose one of the sisters was just as sorry as the other in reality.
“Now I want you and Georgie to stop and have some tea. I’ll get it good and early,” said Hannah, starting suddenly from her chair, and beginning to bustle about again, after she had asked me about some people at home whom she knew; “Cynthy! Perhaps she’d like to walk round out doors a spell. It’s breezing up, and it’ll be cooler than it is in the house.–No: you needn’t think I shall be put out by your stopping; but you’ll have to take us just as we be. Georgie always calculates to stop when he comes up. I guess he’s made off for the woods. I see him go across the lot a few minutes ago.”
So Cynthia put on a discouraged-looking gingham sun-bonnet, which drooped over her face, and gave her a more appealing look than ever, and we went over to the pine-woods, which were beautiful that day. She showed me a little waterfall made by a brook that came over a high ledge of rock covered with moss, and here and there tufts of fresh green ferns. It grew late in the afternoon, and it was pleasant there in the shade, with the noise of the brook and the wind in the pines, that sounded like the sea. The wood-thrushes began to sing,–and who could have better music?
Miss Cynthia told me that it always made her think of once when she was a little girl to hear the thrushes. She had run away, and fallen into the marsh; and her mother had sent her to bed quick as she got home, though it was only four o’clock. And she was so ashamed, because there was company there,–some of her father’s folks from over to Eliot; and then she heard the thrushes begin to call after a while, and she thought they were talking about her, and they knew she had been whipped and sent to bed. “I’d been gone all day since morning. I had a great way of straying off in the woods,” said she. “I suppose mother was put to it when she see me coming in, all bog-mud, right before the company.”