[Instructor's note: At
length
[12.1] .
. .
The steps within [Van Brunt's house]
drew near the door, and first [12.2]
"What is all this?" said she in great surprise. "Bless me!
poor little dear! what is this?"
[12.3] "Nothing in
the world but a drowned rat, Mrs. Van Brunt, don't you see?" said [12.4]
"Go home, Nancy Vawse! go home," said the old lady, "you're a
regular bad girl. I do believe this is some mischief o' yourn, go right off
home; it's time you were after your cow a great while ago.” [12.5]
As she spoke, she drew Ellen in, and shut the door.
[12.6] "Poor little
dear," said the old lady, kindly, "what has happened to you? Come to the fire,
love, you're trembling with the cold. Oh, dear! dear! You’re soaking wet; this
is all along of
[12.7] Good Mrs. Van
Brunt had drawn Ellen to the fire, and all this while she was pulling off as
fast as possible her wet clothes. Then sending a girl
[Sally]
who was in waiting, for clean towels,
she rubbed Ellen dry from head to foot, and wrapping her in a blanket, left her
in a chair before the fire, while she went to seek something for her to put on.
Ellen had managed to tell who she was, and how her mischance had come about, but
little else, though the kind old lady had kept on pouring out words of sorrow
and pity during the whole time. She came trotting back directly with one of her
own short gowns, the only thing that she could lay hands on that was anywhere
near Ellen's length. Enormously big it was for her but Mrs. Van Brunt wrapped it
round and round, and the blanket over it again, and then she bustled about till
she had prepared a tumbler
[small glass]
of hot
drink, which she said was to keep Ellen from catching cold. It was anything but
agreeable being made from some bitter herb, and sweetened with molasses
[folk remedy]; but Ellen
swallowed it, as she would anything else at such kind hands, and the old lady
carried her herself into a little room opening out of the kitchen, and laid her
in a bed that had been warmed for her. Excessively tired and weak as she was,
Ellen scarcely needed the help of the hot herb tea to fall into a very deep
sleep; perhaps it might not have lasted so very long as it did, but for that.
Afternoon changed for evening, evening grew quite dark, still Ellen did not
stir; and after every little journey into the bedroom to see how she was doing,
Mrs. Van Brunt came back saying how glad she was to see her sleeping so finely.
Other eyes looked on her for a
minute—kind and gentle eyes; though Mrs. Van Brunt's were kind and gentle too;
once a soft kiss touched her forehead, there was no danger of waking her.
[reference to new character,
[12.8] It was
perfectly dark in the little bedroom, and had been so a good while, when Ellen
was aroused by some noise, and then a rough voice she knew very well. Feeling
faint and weak, and not more than half awake yet, she lay still and listened.
She heard the outer door open and shut, and then
the voice said,
[12.9] "So mother, you've got my stray sheep
here, have you?"
[12.10] "Ay, ay," said the voice of Mrs. Van Brunt, "have you been
looking for her? how did you know she was here?"
[12.11] "Looking for
her! ay, looking for her ever since sundown. She has been missing at the house
since some time this forenoon.
I believe her aunt got a bit scared about her; any how I
did. She's a queer little chip as ever I see."
[12.12] "She's dear little soul,
I know," said his mother;
"you needn't say nothin' agin her, I ain't a going to believe it."
[12.13] "No more am I—I'm the best friend she's got, if she
only knowed it; but don't you think," said Mr. Van Brunt, laughing, "I asked
her to give me a kiss this forenoon, and if I'd been an owl she couldn't ha'
been more scared; she went off like a streak, and Miss Fortune said she was as
mad as she could be, and that's the last of her."
[12.14] "How did you find her out?"
[12.15] "I met that mischievous Vawse girl, and
I made her tell me; she had no mind to at first. It'll be the worse for Ellen if
she takes to that wicked thing."
[12.16] "She won't.
[12.17] "No, mother, and I must take that young one back. Ain't she
awake yet?"
[12.18] "I'll see
directly; but she ain't going home, nor you neither, 'Brahm, till you've got
your supper; it would be a sin to let her. She shall have a taste of my
splitters
[defined later in chapter] this
very night; I've been makin' them o' purpose for her. So you may just take off
your hat and sit down."
[12.19] "You mean to let her know where to come when she wants good
things, mother. Well, I won't say splitters ain't worth waiting for."
[12.20] Ellen heard him sit down, and then she guessed from the words
that passed that Mrs. Van Brunt and her little maid were busied in making the
cakes; she lay quiet.
[12.21] "You're a good friend, 'Brahm," began
the old lady again, "nobody knows that better than me; but I hope that poor
little thing has got another one today that'll do more for her than you can."
[12.22] "What, yourself, mother? I don't know about that."
[12.23] "No, no; do
you think I mean myself?—there, turn it quick, Sally!—Miss
Alice has been here."
[12.24] "How? this evening?"
[12.25] "Just a
little before dark,
on her grey pony.
She came in for a minute, and I took her—that'll burn, Sally!—I took her in to
see the child while she was asleep, and I told her all you told me about her.
She didn't say much, but she looked at her very sweet, as she always does, and I
guess,—there—now I'll see after my little sleeper."
[12.26] And
presently Mrs. Van Brunt came to the bedside with a light, and her arm full of
Ellen's dry clothes.
Ellen felt as if she
could have put her arms round her kind old friend and hugged her with all her
heart; but it was not her way to show her feelings before strangers.
She suffered Mrs. Van Brunt to dress her in
silence, only saying with a sigh, "How kind you are to me, ma'am!" to which the
old lady replied with a kiss, and telling her she mustn't say a word about that.
[12.27] The kitchen was bright with firelight
and candlelight; the
tea-table looked beautiful with its piles of white splitters, besides plenty of
other and more substantial things; and at the corner of the hearth sat Mr. Van
Brunt.
[12.28] "So," said he, smiling, as Ellen came in and took her stand
at the opposite corner,—"so I drove you away this morning? You ain't mad with me
yet, I hope."
[12.29] Ellen crossed directly over to him, and putting her little
hand in his great rough one, said, "I'm very much obliged to you, Mr. Van Brunt,
for taking so much trouble to come and look after me.”
[12.30] She said it with a look of gratitude and trust that pleased
him very much.
[12.31] "Trouble, indeed!"
said he, good-humoredly, "I'd take twice as much any day for what you wouldn't
give me this forenoon. But never fear, Miss Ellen, I ain't a going to ask you
that again."
[Van Brunt is receptive to child’s signals, confirming
Romantic values]
[12.32] He shook the little hand and from that time Ellen and her
rough charioteer were firm friends.
[12.33] Mrs. Van
Brunt now summoned them to table; and Ellen was well feasted with the
splitters, which were a kind of rich shortcake baked in irons, very thin
and crisp, and then split in two and buttered, whence their name. A pleasant
meal was that. Whatever an epicure might have thought of the tea, to Ellen in
her famished state it was delicious; and no epicure could have found fault with
the cold ham and the butter and the cakes; but
far better than all was the spirit of kindness that was there. Ellen
feasted on that more than on anything else. If her host and hostess were not
very polished, they could not have been outdone in their kind care of her and
kind attention to her wants. And when the supper was at length over, Mrs.
Van Brunt declared a little color had come back to the pale cheeks. The color
came back in good earnest a few minutes after, when
a great tortoise-shell cat walked into the room. Ellen jumped down
from her chair, and presently was bestowing the tenderest caresses upon pussy,
who stretched out her head and purred as if she liked them very well.
[12.34] "What a nice cat!" said Ellen.
[12.35] "She has
five kittens," said Mrs. Van Brunt.
[12.36] "Five kittens!" said Ellen. "Oh, may I come some time and see
them?"
[12.37] "You shall see 'em right away, dear, and come as often as you
like too. Sally, just take a basket, and go fetch them kittens here."
[12.38] Upon this,
Mr. Van Brunt began to talk about its being time to go, if they were going. But
his mother insisted that Ellen should stay where she was; she said she was not
fit to go home that night, that she oughtn't to walk a step, and that 'Brahm'
should go and tell Miss Fortune the child was safe and well, and would be with
her early in the morning. Mr. Van Brunt shook his head two or three times, but
finally agreed, to Ellen's great joy. When he came back, she was
sitting on the floor before the fire, with all the five kittens in her
lap, and the old mother cat walking around and over her and them. But she looked
up with a happier face then he had ever seen her wear, and told him she was
"so much obliged to him
for taking such a long, walk for her;" and
Mr. Van Brunt felt that, like his oxen,
he could have done a great deal more with pleasure.
[fine mix of labor & love]
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