Jupiter Lights
those people, that they stare
know. So I told them that you were the celebrated Jessamine family-you and Miss Leontine;
ebrated Jessamine famil
ht it looked like a panorama. They seemed
ke into
ked round the wagon with indignant step. "It
over"-here she paused. "I don't know what you will think, but I believe it really was left over after
with a square box behind, which opened at the back like the
t to us; it was a damned impertine
night, grandpa," remarked Cicely. "And you will have
Miss Leontine. He cou
ts of her attire, pale blues and lavenders, and faint green. Her face bore a strong resemblance to the face of a camel; give a camel a pink-and-white complexion, blue eyes, and light-brown hair coming down in flat bands on each side of its long face, and you have Miss Leontine. She was extraordinarily tall-she
ess, Cousin Sarah Cray, had an old horse, and this wagon had been borrowed from Dickson, the village grainer (who had so mistakenly saved t
th a harassing cough, a baby's little cough, which is so distressing to the ears of those who love him. Eve had walked about, day and night, carrying him in her
," Cicely suggested. She was always present when Eve walked restless
t was very cold now at Romney; the Sound was dark and rough all the time, the sea boomed, the winds were bitter. They had
she came back to daily life again. One of the first things she said was: "I ought not to
s Jac
sn't decent; here we have all descended upon her at a moment's notice, and
with each other just the same. As for Cousin Sarah Cra
It is all very well for you," she we
hink so; she thinks you very
must have! But why shouldn't we all go to the
no hotel to go to," res
igations, for the present. She accepted, too, the makeshifts of the rambling housekeeping. But if the housekeeping was of a wandering order, the welc
ted from Holland a hundred and twenty years before. In the corner of one of the fields bordering the river were the earthworks of a Revolutionary fort; in a jungle a quarter of a mile distant there was a deserted church, with high pews, mouldering funeral hatchments, and even the insignia of George the Third in faded gilt over the organ-loft. Bellington House had bee
, but he again led the way (with appropriate discourse) from the fish-ponds to the fort,
wagon. The judge walked round it afresh. Then he turned away,
e saying?"
all them," answered Cicely, composedly. "He
ttle distance; as she walked away, her skirt caught itself behind at each step upon the tops of
said Cicely; "she thinks him perfect. Grandp
ad suffered almost as much as the rice fields of Romney: they had been flooded so often that much of the land was now worthless, disintegrated and overgrown with lespedeza. They crossed the river (which had done the damage) on-or rather in-a long shaking w
you're
n wagon, our
ro, bulle
cely on th
id the judge,
ing condition of the world at present? Everything is known. Where can a gentleman travel now, with the element of
frica," Ev
ink I said fo
pot, curb yourself," s
ia, we had Thibet, we had Cham-Tartary; we could arrive on cam
out yo
te direction, drawn by two mules; the driver, an athletic young negro with an insolent face, was walking beside his team. His broad cart filled every inch of the track; it was impossible to pass it witho
ht. "Turn out, boy!" he repeated, with the imperious man
se of the horse; then, putting his hands in his pockets, he pla
ched him. "You are not going to fight with him, grandpa?" she said, i
rage he was white, with his eyes blazing. Eve
er he has struck you down we shall be here alone with him-think of that. We will all get out, and then you can lead t
a leaf with his repressed rage, the judge put up his hand to help her in her descent. She accepted his aid hurriedly, giving Jack to Cicely; Miss Leontine had climbed down alone, the tears dropping on her cheeks behind her veil. The judge then led the horse up the bank and p
Leontine joined them whenever she was able, but the tears constantly succeeded each other on her long face, and she was as constantly putting her handkerchief to her eyes in order to repress them, the gesture muc
pentine man who is in love with Matilda Debbs," sai
her handkerchief. "The
hing against the
ards his character, n-nothing. But he is a manufacturer of tubs. It appears that it
each of the Misses Debbs, it wouldn't be a bad idea;
n lady, with almost a convulsion of gri
e not. Now se
ave no more of thi
ely put her hand behind her and furtivel
oadway was deeply covered with yellow sand; the spacious sidewalks which bordered it were equally in a state of nature. The houses, at some distance
wn door, and went on towards the
back from Mellons," said Cicely. "Grandpa, would
ld negro who was wheeling the covered hand-cart along
Eve bent down and took one of the circulars which were lying, neatly piled, in a corner. It announced, not in print, but in delicate hand-writing, that at the private bakery, number ten
commented. "Miss Leontine's is Clotilda Leo
to descend; and then Eve, who had little Jack, fast asleep, in her arms. Cicely motioned to Eve to go into the house; she herself followed her grandfather as he led the horse round to the stables. Eve went in, carrying Jack and the cakes.
ve took a seat at the window; s
kes a mistake, there's never the tinetiest streak of heaviness in her little pounds! And her breads
e do it
after the war, they found themselves left with nothing in the world but their house. They could have kept school in it, of course, for they are accomplished beyond
to leave their hom
could not open a school anywhere else-in Charl
only that I did not reco
wo; but I reckon they will always be 'the girls' to us, even if they're eighty," she added, laughing. "Well, Polly had this idea. And she has been
p, isn't it?-
p is near there, and it has some Yankee name or other, I beli
d, at least, that they buy Miss Pol
Miss Polly; she has a soft poetical nature, and she ma
e her?" said Eve, wit
wered Cousin Sarah Cray,
l him that she is coming here to tea
But sh
se make haste, Mrs. Cray; we are so afraid, Ci
s she was, she ran swiftly through the hall and across the veranda
street to the home of the Misses Wingfield. The door stood open, Miss Polly was in the hall. She was a handsome woman, vigorous, erect, with clear b
I noticed that she had been crying; but she is so sweet tha
udge from being whi
doesn't look it. I will go with you, of course
is door, and beckoned to her mysteriously. He was a small elderly negro, with a dignified manner; he wore blue goggles; Eve knew him slightly,
in fer one brief momen'
d, though smartly whitewashed, and adorned with bright green blinds-and the postm
window to see that no one was looking in. "Carn't be too pertikler w'en it's guv'ment bu
?" said Eve. "
ve you s'pose we 'ain't guv it our bes' cornsideration. We knows de looks ob mos' ob
ng anxiously at them from the small window in the parti
tamp. And the name is plainly written,
I tol' Mister Cotesworth," said
nnot read?" said Eve, surveying "Mi
moment, an abashed look. "We 'lowed,"
got so bad lately-dat's w'at. Take de letter, Mister Cotesworth, and doan' trouble de lady no mo'. Fi
the stables, where the judge was superintending the rubbing down and the feeding of the horse.
told him that the poor horse must be fed first, in common
aid Miss Polly; "he wouldn't be so uncivil." She went up
ook the fair hand, and, bending hi
her luscious, indolent, Southern pronunciation. "Oh, surely not-surely not. Let us go to Cousin Sarah Cray's parlor; I have something
mired Miss P
kept a firm hol
dge yi