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PAGE 2

The Little Bound-Boy
by [?]

“Well, my little man,” I said, “is any one sick?”

“Please sir, Mr. Maxwell wants you to come down and see Johnny.”

“Mr. Maxwell! Do you live with Mr. Maxwell?”

“Yes, sir.”

I now recognized the lad. He was a good deal changed since I last saw him, and changed for the worse.

“What is the matter with Johnny?” I asked.

“I believe he’s got the croup.”

“Indeed! Is he very sick?”

“Yes, sir. He can’t hardly breathe at all, and goes all the time just so–” Imitating the wheezing sound attendant upon constricted respiration.

“Very well, my boy, I will be there in a little while, But, bless me! you will get the croup as well as Johnny, if you go out in such weather as this and have on no warmer clothing than covers you now. Come up to the stove and warm yourself–you are shivering all over. Why did not you bring an umbrella?”

“Mr. Maxwell never lets me take the umbreller,” said the boy innocently.

“He doesn’t? But he sends you out in the rain?”

“Oh yes–always. Sometimes I am wet all day.”

“Doesn’t it make you sick?”

“I feel bad, and ache all over sometimes after I have been wet; and sometimes my face swells up and pains me so I can’t sleep.”

“Do not your feet get very cold? Have you no better shoes than these?”

“I’ve got a better pair of shoes: but they hurt my feet so I can’t wear them. Thomas, one of the boys, gave me these old ones.”

“Why do they hurt your feet? Are they too small?”

“No, sir, I don’t think they are. But my feet are sore.”

I feared as much as this. “What is the matter with your feet?” I asked.

“I don’t know, sir. The boys say that nothing’s the matter with them, only they’re a little snow-burnt.”

“How do they feel?”

“They burn and itch, and are so tender I can hardly touch them. I can’t sleep at nights sometimes for the burning and itching.”

I examined the boy’s feet, and found them red, shining and tumefied, with other indications of a severe attack of chilblains.

“What have you done for your feet?” I asked. “Does Mr. Maxwell know they are so bad?”

“I showed them to him, and he said it was only a snow-burn, and that I must put my feet in snow and let it draw the cold out.”

“Did you do so?”

“Yes, sir, as long as I could bear it; but it hurt dreadful bad. Mr. Maxwell said I didn’t keep them in half long enough.”

“Were they better afterward?”

“Yes, sir, I think they were; but I go out so much in the snow, and get them wet so often, that they can’t get well.”

“What is your name?” I asked.

“William.”

“What else?”

“William Miller.”

“Is your mother alive?”

The tone and manner of the boy, when he gave a half inarticulate negative, made me regret having asked the question. It was a needless one, for already knew that his mother was dead. It was meant, however, as a preliminary inquiry, and, having been made, I proceeded to question him, in order to learn something, briefly, of his history.

“Were you born in Baltimore?” I continued.

“Yes, sir.”

“Have you any relatives here?”

“Mr. P—-W—-is my uncle.”

“Mr. W—-?” I said, in surprise.

“Yes, sir–mother said he was my uncle.”

“Is he your mother’s brother?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Did he ever come to see your mother?”

“No, sir, he never came near us, and mother never went to see him.”

“What was the reason?”

“I don’t know, sir.”

The child continued to look intently in my face, but I questioned him no further. I knew Mr. W—-very well, and settled it at once in my mind that I would call and see him about the lad. I stood musing for some moments after the boy’s last reply, and then said–

“Tell Mr. Maxwell, that I will call down in about half an hour: Run home as quickly as you can, and try and keep out of the rain.”

The sad, rebuking earnestness with which the boy looked at me, when I said this, touched my feelings. He had, evidently, expected more than a mere expression of sympathy; but I did not think it right to create any false hopes in his mind. I meant to do all I could to relieve his wretched condition; but did not know how far I would be successful.