<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V."></SPAN>CHAPTER V.</h2>
<h3>JONESY'S BENEFIT.</h3>
<br/>
<p>The Jonesy Benefit grew like Jack's bean-stalk after Miss
Allison took charge of it. There was less than a week in which to
get ready, as the boys insisted on having it on the twenty-second
of February, in honour of Washington's birthday; but in that short
time the childish show which Ginger had proposed grew into an
entertainment so beautiful and elaborate that the neighbourhood
talked of it for weeks after.</p>
<p>Miss Allison spent one sleepless night, planning her campaign
like a general, and next morning had an army of helpers at work.
Before the day was over she sent a letter to an old school friend
of hers in the city, Miss Eleanor Bond, who had been her most
intimate companion all through her school-days, and who still spent
a part of every summer with her.</p>
<p>"Dearest Nell," the letter said, "come out to-morrow on the
first afternoon train, if you love me. The children are getting up
an entertainment for charity, which shall be duly explained on your
arrival. No time now. I am superintending a force of carpenters in
the college hall, where the entertainment is to take place, have
two seamstresses in the house hurrying up costumes, and am helping
mother scour the country for pretty children to put in the
tableaux.</p>
<p>"The house is like an ant-hill in commotion, there is so much
scurrying around; but I know that is what you thoroughly enjoy. You
shall have a finger in every pie if you will come out and help me
to make this a never-to-be-forgotten occasion.</p>
<p>"I want to make the old days of chivalry live again for Virginia
and Malcolm and Keith. I am going back to King Arthur's Court for
the flower of knighthood at his round table. Come and read for us
between tableaux as only you can do. Be the interpreter of 'Sir
Launfal's Vision' and the 'Idylls of the King,' Give us the benefit
of your talent for sweet charity's sake, if not for the sake of
'auld lang syne' and your devoted ALLISON."</p>
<p>"She'll be here," said Miss Allison, as she sealed the letter,
nodding confidently to Mrs. Sherman, who had come over to help with
Lloyd's costume. "You remember Nell Bond, do you not? She took the
prize every year in elocution, and was always in demand at every
entertainment. She is the most charming reader I ever heard, and as
for story-telling--well, she's better than the 'Arabian Nights.'
You must let the Little Colonel come over every evening while she
is here."</p>
<p>Miss Bond arrived the next day, and her visit was a time of
continual delight to the children. They followed her wherever she
went, until Mrs. Maclntyre laughingly called her the 'Pied Piper of
Hamelin,' and asked what she had done to bewitch them.</p>
<p>The first night they gathered around the library-table, all as
busy as bees. Keith and the Little Colonel were cutting tinsel into
various lengths for Virginia to tie into fringe for a gay banner.
Malcolm was gilding some old spurs, Mrs. Maclntyre sat stringing
yards of wax beads, that gleamed softly in the lamplight like great
rope of pearls, and Mrs. Sherman was painting the posters, which
were to be put up in the post-office and depot as advertisements of
the Jonesy Benefit.</p>
<p>Miss Allison, who had been busy for hours with pasteboard and
glue, tin-foil and scissors, held up the suit of mail which she had
just finished.</p>
<p>"Isn't that fine!" cried Malcolm. "It looks exactly like some of
the armour we saw in the Tower of London, doesn't it, Keith?"</p>
<p>"I've thought of a riddle!" exclaimed Virginia. "Why is Aunt
Allison's head like Aladdin's lamp?"</p>
<p>"'Cause it's so bright?" ventured Malcolm.</p>
<p>"No; because she has only to rub it, and everything she thinks
of appears. I don't see how it is possible to make so many
beautiful things out of almost nothing."</p>
<p>Virginia looked admiringly around at all the pretty articles
scattered over the room. A helmet with nodding white plumes lay on
the piano. A queen's robe trailed its royal ermine beside it. A
sword with a jewelled hilt shone on the mantel, and a dozen
dazzling shields were ranged in various places on the low
bookshelves.</p>
<p>It was easy, in the midst of such surroundings, for the children
to imagine themselves back in the days of King Arthur and his
court, while Miss Bond sat there telling them such beautiful tales
of its fair ladies and noble knights. Indeed, before the day of the
entertainment came around they even found themselves talking to
each other in the quaint speech of that olden time.</p>
<p>When Malcolm accidentally ran against his grandmother in the
hall, instead of his usual, "Oh, excuse me, grandmother," it was
"Prithee grant me gracious pardon, fair dame. Not for a king's
ransom would I have thus jostled thee in such unseemly haste!" And
Ginger, instead of giving Keith a slap when he teasingly penned her
up in a corner, to make her divide some nuts with him, said, in a
most tragic way, "Unhand me, villain, or by my troth thou'lt rue
this ruffian conduct sore!"</p>
<p>The library-table was strewn with books of old court life, and
pictures of kings and queens whose costumes were to be copied in
the tableaux. There was one book which Keith carried around with
him until he had spelled out the whole beautiful tale. It was
called "In Kings' Houses," and was the story of the little Duke of
Gloster who was made a knight in his boyhood. And when Keith had
read it himself, he took it down to the professor's, and read it
all over again to Jonesy.</p>
<br/>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/0097-1.jpg" width-obs="45%" alt=""><br/>
<b>"THERE WAS ONE BOOK WHICH KEITH CARRIED AROUND WITH
HIM."</b></p>
<br/>
<p>"Think how grand he must have looked, Jonesy," cried Keith, "and
I am to be dressed exactly like him when I am knighted in the
tableau." Then he read the description again:</p>
<p>"'A suit of white velvet embroidered with seed pearls, and
literally blazing with jewels,--even the buttons being great
brilliants. From his shoulder hung a cloak of azure blue velvet,
the colour of the order, richly wrought with gold; and around his
neck he wore the magnificent collar and jewel of St. George and the
Dragon, that was the personal gift of his Majesty, the king.'</p>
<p>"Think how splendid it must have been, Jonesy, when the
procession came in to the music of trumpets and bugles and silver
flutes and hautboys! Wouldn't you like to have seen the heralds
marching by, two by two, in cloth of gold, with an escort of the
queen's guard following? All of England's best and bravest were
there, and they sat in the carven stalls in St. George's Chapel,
with their gorgeous banners drooping over them. I saw that chapel,
Jonesy, when we were in England, and I saw where the knights kept
the 'vigil of arms' in the holy places, the night before they took
their vows." He picked up the book and read again: "'Fasting and
praying and lonely watching by night in the great abbey where there
are so many dead folk.'</p>
<p>"Oh, don't you wish you could have lived in those days, Jonesy,
and have been a knight?"</p>
<p>It was all Greek to Jonesy. The terms puzzled him, but he
enjoyed Keith's description of the tournaments.</p>
<p>Several evenings after that, Keith went down to the cottage
dressed in the beautiful velvet costume of white and blue, ablaze
with rhinestones and glittering jewels. He had been wrapped in his
Aunt Allison's golf cape, and, as he threw it off, Jonesy's eyes
opened wider and wider with wonder.</p>
<p>"Hi! You look like a whole jeweller's window!" he cried, dazzled
by the gorgeous sight. The professor lighted another lamp, and
Keith turned slowly around, to be admired on every side like a
pleased peacock.</p>
<p>"Of course it's all only imitation," he explained, "but it will
look just as good as the real thing behind the footlights. But you
ought to see the stage when it's fixed up to look like the Hall of
the Shields, if you want to see glitter. It's be-<i>yu</i>-tiful!
Like the one at Camelot, you know."</p>
<p>But Jonesy did not know, and Keith had to tell about that old
castle at Camelot, as Miss Bond had told him. How that down the
side of the long hall ran a treble range of shields,--</p>
<blockquote>"And under every shield a knight was named,<br/>
For such was Arthur's custom in his hall.<br/>
When some good knight had done one noble deed<br/>
His arms were carven only, but if twain<br/>
His arms were blazoned also, but if none<br/>
The shield was blank and bare, without a sign,<br/>
Saving the name beneath."</blockquote>
<p>Keith had been greatly interested in watching the carpenters fix
the stage so that it could be made to look like the Hall of the
Shields in a very few moments, when the time for that tableau
should come. He knew where every glittering shield was to hang, and
every banner and battle-axe.</p>
<p>"How do you suppose those knights felt," he said to Jonesy, "who
saw their shields hanging there year after year, blank and bare,
because they had never done even one noble deed? They must have
been dreadfully ashamed when the king walked by and read their
names underneath, and then looked up at the shields and saw nothing
emblazoned on them or even carved. Seems to me that I would have
done something to have made me worthy of that honour if I had
<i>died</i> for it!"</p>
<p>Something,--it may have been the soft, rich colour of the
jewel-broidered velvet the boy wore, or maybe the flush that rose
to his cheeks at the thrill of such noble thoughts,--something had
brought an unusual beauty into his face. As he stood there, with
head held high, his dark eyes flashing, his face glowing, and in
that princely dress of a bygone day, he looked every inch a
nobleman. There was something so pure and sweet, too, in the
expression of his upturned face that the light upon it seemed to
touch it into an almost unearthly fairness.</p>
<p>The professor, who had been watching him with a tender smile on
his rugged old face, drew the child toward him, and brushed the
hair back on his forehead.</p>
<p>"Ach, liebchen," he said, in his queer broken speech, "thy
shield will never be blank and bare. Already thou hast blazoned it
with the beauty of a noble purpose, and like Galahad, thou too
shalt find the Grail."</p>
<p>It was Keith's turn to be puzzled, but he did not like to ask
for an explanation; there was something so solemn in the way the
old man put his hand on his head as he spoke, almost as if he were
bestowing a blessing. Besides, it was time to go to the rehearsal
at the college. One of the servants had come to stay with Jonesy
while the professor went over to practise on his violin. He was to
play behind the scenes, a soft, low accompaniment to Miss Bond's
reading.</p>
<p>By eight o'clock, the night of the Benefit, every seat in the
house was full. "That's jolly for Jonesy," exclaimed Malcolm,
peeping out from behind the curtain. "We counted up that ten cents
a ticket would make enough, if they were all sold, to pay his board
till papa comes home, and buy him all the new clothes he needs,
too. Now every ticket is sold."</p>
<p>"Hurry up, Malcolm," called Keith. "We are first on the
programme, and it is time to begin."</p>
<br/>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/0104-1.jpg" width-obs="40%" alt=""></p>
<br/>
<p>There was a great bustle behind the scenes for a few minutes,
and then "Beauty and the Beast" was announced. When the Little
Colonel came on the stage leading the great bear, such a cheering
and clapping began that they both looked around, half frightened;
but the boys followed immediately and the Little Colonel, dressed
as a flower girl, danced out to meet Keith, who came in clicking
his castanets in time to Malcolm's whistling. The bear was made to
go through all his tricks and his soldier drill.</p>
<p>The children in the audience stood on tiptoe in their eagerness
to see the great animal perform, and were so wild in their applause
that the boys begged to be allowed to take it in front of the
curtain every time during the evening when there was a long pause
while some tableau was being prepared.</p>
<p>Over the rustle of fluttering programmes and the hum of
conversation that followed the first number, there fell presently
the soft, sweet notes of the professor's violin, and Miss Bond's
musical voice began the story of the Vision of Sir Launfal.</p>
<blockquote>"My golden spurs now bring to me,<br/>
And bring to me my richest mail,<br/>
For to-morrow I go over land and sea<br/>
In search of the Holy Grail."</blockquote>
<p>Here the curtains were drawn apart to show Malcolm seated on his
pony as Sir Launfal, "in his gilded mail that flamed so bright." It
was really a beautiful picture he made, and his grandmother,
leaning forward, her face beaming with pride at the boy's noble
bearing, compared him with Arthur himself, "with lance in rest,
from spur to plume a star of tournament,"</p>
<p>The next tableau showed him spurning the leper at his gate, and
turning away in disgust from the beggar who "seemed the one blot on
the summer morn." How Miss Bond's voice rang out when "the leper
raised not the gold from the dust."</p>
<blockquote>"Better to me the poor man's crust.<br/>
That is no true alms which the hand can hold.<br/>
He gives nothing but worthless gold<br/>
Who gives from a sense of duty."</blockquote>
<p>In the next tableau it was "as an old bent man, worn-out and
frail," that Sir Launfal came back from his weary pilgrimage. He
had not found the Holy Grail, but through his own sufferings he had
learned pity for all pain and poverty. Once more he stood beside
the leper at his castle gate, but this time he stooped to share
with him his crust and wooden bowl of water.</p>
<p>Then it happened on the stage just as was told in the poem.</p>
<p>A light shone round about the place, and the crouching leper
stood up. The old ragged mantle dropped off, and there in a long
garment almost dazzling in its whiteness, stood a figure--</p>
<blockquote>"Shining and tall, and fair, and straight<br/>
As the pillar that stood by the Beautiful gate."</blockquote>
<p>They could not see the face, it was turned aside; but the golden
hair was like a glory, and the uplifted arms held something high in
air that gleamed like a burnished star, as all the lights in the
room were turned full upon it, for a little space. It was a golden
cup. Then the voice again:</p>
<blockquote>"In many climes without avail<br/>
Thou hast spent thy life for the Holy Grail.<br/>
Behold it is here--this cup, which thou<br/>
Didst fill at the streamlet for me but now.<br/>
The holy supper is kept indeed<br/>
In whatso we share with another's need."</blockquote>
<p>It was an old story to most of the audience, worn threadbare by
many readings, but with these living illustrations, and Miss Bond's
wonderful way of telling it, a new meaning crept into the
well-known lines, that thrilled every listener.</p>
<p>"Could you understand that, Teddy?" asked old Judge Fairfax,
patting his little grandson on the head.</p>
<p>"Course!" exclaimed seven-year-old Ted, who had followed his
sister Sally to every rehearsal.</p>
<p>"When you give money to people just to get rid of 'em, and
because you feel you'd ought to, it doesn't count for anything. But
if you divide something you've got, and would like to keep it all
yourself, because you love to, and are sorry for 'em, then it
counts a pile. Sir Launfal would have popped Jonesy into a 'sylum
when he first started out to find that gold cup, but when he came
back he'd 'a' worked like a horse getting up a benefit for him, and
would have divided his own home with him, if he hadn't been living
at his grandmother's, and couldn't."</p>
<p>An amused smile went around that part of the audience which
overheard Ted's shrilly given explanation.</p>
<p>Pictures from the "Idylls of the King" followed in rapid
succession, and then came the prettiest of all, being the one in
which Keith was made a knight. Virginia as queen, her short black
hair covered by a powdered wig, and a long court-train sweeping
behind her, stood touching his shoulder with the jewel-hilted
sword, as he knelt at her feet. Lloyd and Sally Fairfax, Julia
Ferris, and a dozen other pretty girls of the neighbourhood, helped
to fill out the gay court scene, while all the boys that could be
persuaded to take part were dressed up for heralds, guardsmen,
pages, and knights. That tableau had to be shown four times, and
then the audience kept on applauding as if they never intended to
stop.</p>
<p>The last one in this series of tableaux was the Hall of the
Shields, as Keith had described it to Jonesy. A whole row of
dazzling shields hung across the back of the stage, emblazoned with
the arms of all the old knights whose names have come down to us in
song or story. Then for the first time that evening Miss Bond came
out on the stage where she could be seen, and told the story of the
death of King Arthur, and the passing away of the order of the
Round Table. She told it so well that little Ted Fairfax listened
with his mouth open, seeming to see the great arm that rose out of
the water to take back the king's sword into the sea, from which it
had been given him. An arm like a giant's, "clothed in white
samite, mystic, wonderful, that caught the sword by the hilt,
flourished it three times, and drew it under the mere."</p>
<p>"True, 'the old order changeth,'" said Miss Bond, "but
knighthood has <i>not</i> passed away. The flower of chivalry has
blossomed anew in this new world, and America, too, has her Hall of
the Shields."</p>
<p>Just a moment the curtains were drawn together, and then were
widely parted again, as a chorus of voices rang out with the
words:</p>
<blockquote>"Hail, Columbia, happy land;<br/>
Hail, ye heroes, heaven-born band!"</blockquote>
<p>In that moment, on every shield had been hung the pictured face
of some well-known man who had helped to make his country a power
among the nations; presidents, patriots, philanthropists,
statesmen, inventors, and poets,--there they were, from army and
navy, city and farm, college halls and humble cabins,--a long, long
line, and the first was Washington, and the last was the "Hero of
Manila."</p>
<p>Cheer after cheer went up, and it might have been well to have
ended the programme there, but to satisfy the military-loving
little Ginger, one more was added.</p>
<p>"There ought to be a Goddess of Liberty in it," she insisted,
"because it is Washington's birthday; and if we had been doing it
by ourselves we were going to have something in it about Cuba, on
papa's account."</p>
<p>So when the curtain rose the last time, it was on Sally Fairfax
as a gorgeous Goddess of Liberty, conferring knighthood on two boys
who stood for the Army and Navy, while a little dark-eyed girl
knelt at their feet as Cuba, the distressed maiden whom their
chivalry had rescued.</p>
<p>It was late when the performance closed; later still when the
children reached home that night, for Mrs. MacIntyre had determined
to have a flash-light picture taken of them, and they had to wait
until the photographer could send home for his camera.</p>
<p>After they reached the house they could hardly be persuaded to
undress. Virginia trailed up and down the halls in her royal robes,
Malcolm clanked around in his suit of mail and plumed helmet, and
Keith stood before a mirror, admiring the handsome little figure it
showed him.</p>
<br/>
<p class="lft"><ANTIMG src="images/0112-1.jpg" width-obs="50%" alt=""></p>
<br/>
<p>"I hate to take it off," he said, fingering the dazzling collar,
ablaze with jewels. "I'd like to be a knight always, and wear a
sword and spurs every day."</p>
<p>"So would I," said Malcolm, beginning to yawn sleepily. "I wish
that Jonesy had been well enough to go to-night. Isn't it splendid
that the Benefit turned out so well? Aunt Allison says there is
plenty of money now to get Jonesy's clothes and pay his board till
papa comes, and send him back to Barney, too, if papa thinks best
and hasn't any better plan."</p>
<p>"I wish there'd been enough money to buy a nice little home out
here in the country for him and Barney. Wouldn't it have been
lovely if there had a-been?" cried Keith.</p>
<p>"Well, I should say!" answered Malcolm. "Maybe we can have
another benefit some day and make enough for that."</p>
<p>With this pleasant prospect before them, they laid aside their
knightly garments, hoping to put them on again soon in Jonesy's
behalf, and talked about the home that might be his some day, until
they fell asleep.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>The flash-light pictures of the three children were all that the
fondest grandmother could wish. As soon as they came, Keith carried
his away to his room to admire in private. "It is so pretty that it
doesn't seem it can be me," he said, propping it up on the desk
before him. "I wish that I could look that way always."</p>
<p>The next time that Miss Allison went into the room she found
that Keith had written under it in his round, boyish hand, a
quotation that had taken his fancy the first time he heard it. It
was in one of Miss Bond's stories, and he repeated it until he
learned it: "<i>Live pure,</i> <i>speak truth, right the wrong,
follow the king; else wherefore born?</i>"</p>
<p>She asked him about it at bedtime. "Why, that's our motto," he
explained. "Malcolm has it written under his, too. We've made up
our minds to be a sort of knight, just as near the real thing as we
can, you know, and that is what knights have to do: live pure, and
speak truth, and right the wrong. We've always tried to do the
first two, so that won't be so hard. It's righting the wrong that
will be the tough job, but we have done it a little teenty, weenty
bit for Jonesy, don't you think, auntie? It was all wrong that he
should have such a hard time and be sent to an asylum away from
Barney, when we have you all and everything nice. Malcolm and I
have been talking it over. If we could do something to keep him
from growing up into a tramp like that awful man that brought him
here, wouldn't that be as good a deed as some that the real knights
did? Wouldn't that be serving our country, too, Aunt Allison, just
a little speck?" He asked the question anxiously. Malcolm said
nothing, but also waited with a wistful look for her answer.</p>
<p>"My dear little Sir Galahads," she said, bending over to give
each of the boys a good-night kiss, "you will be 'really truly'
knights if you can live up to the motto you have chosen. Heaven
help you to be always as worthy of that title as you are
to-night!"</p>
<p>Keith held her a moment, with both arms around her neck. "What
does that mean, auntie?" he asked. "That is what the professor
said, too,--Galahad."</p>
<p>"It is too late to explain to you to-night," she said, "but I
will tell you sometime soon, dear."</p>
<p>It was several days before she reminded them of that promise.
Then she called them into her room and told them the story of Sir
Galahad, the maiden knight, whose "strength was as the strength of
ten because his heart was pure." Then from a little morocco case,
lined with purple velvet, she took two pins that she had bought in
the city that morning. Each was a little white enamel flower with a
tiny diamond in the centre, like a drop of dew.</p>
<p>"You can't wear armour in these days," she said, as she fastened
one on the lapel of each boy's coat, "but this shall be the badge
of your knighthood,--'wearing the white flower of a blameless
life.' The little pins will help you to remember, maybe, and will
remind you that you are pledged to right the wrong wherever you
find it, in little things as well as great."</p>
<p>It was a very earnest talk that followed. The boys came out from
her room afterward, wearing the tiny white pins, and with a sweet
seriousness in their faces. A noble purpose had been born in their
hearts; but alas for chivalry! the first thing they did was to
taunt Virginia with the fact that she could never be a knight
because she was only a girl.</p>
<p>"I don't care," retorted Ginger, quickly. "I can be
a--a--<i>patriot</i>, anyhow, and that's lots better."</p>
<p>The boys laughed, and she flushed angrily.</p>
<p>"They ought to mean the same thing exactly in this day of the
world," said Miss Allison, coming up in time to hear the dispute
that followed. "Virginia, you shall have a badge, too. Run into my
room and bring me that little jewelled flag on my cushion."</p>
<p>"I think that this is the very prettiest piece of jewelry you
have," exclaimed Virginia, coming back with the pin. It was a
little flag whose red, white, and blue was made of tiny settings of
garnets, sapphires, and diamonds.</p>
<p>"You think that, because it is in the shape of a flag," said
Miss Allison, with an amused smile. "Well, it shall be yours. See
how well it can remind you of the boys' knightly motto. There is
the white for the first part, the 'live pure,' and the 'true blue'
for the 'speak truth,' and then the red,--surely no soldier's
little daughter needs to be told what that stands for, when her own
brave father has spilled part of his good red life-blood to 'right
the wrong' on the field of battle."</p>
<p>"Oh, Aunt Allison!" was all that Virginia could gasp in her
delight as she clasped the precious pin tightly in her hand. "Is it
mine? For my very own?"</p>
<p>"For your very own, dear," was the answer.</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm so glad!" cried Virginia, thanking her with a kiss.
"I'd a thousand times rather have it than one like the boys'. It
means so much more!"</p>
<br/>
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