<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<h3>A DAY WITH THE SHAKERS.</h3>
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<p>hree weeks after Mr. Joyce's visit, the long summer vacation began.
The children liked school, but none the less did they rejoice over the
coming of vacation. It brought a sense of liberty, of
long-days-all-their-own-to-do-as-they-liked-with, which it was worth
going to school the rest of the year to feel. Each new morning was like
a separate beautiful gift, brought and laid in their hands by an
invisible somebody, who must be kind and a friend, since he continually
did this delightful thing for them.</p>
<p>One hot August afternoon, Eyebright and two or three of her special
cronies had gone for coolness to the ice-house, a place which they had
used as a playroom before on especially sultry days. It was a large,
square underground cave, with a shingled roof set over it, whose eaves
rested on the ground. The ice when first put in, filled all the space
under the roof, and it was necessary to climb up to reach the top layer;
later, ice and ground were on a level, but by August so much ice had
been used or had melted away, that a ladder was wanted to help people
down to the surface. The girls had left the door a little open, but
still the place was dark, and they could only dimly see the tin chest in
the corner where Wealthy kept her marketing, and the shapes of two or
three yellow crocks which lay half buried, their round lids looking like
the caps of droll little drowning Chinamen.</p>
<p>It was so hot outside, that the dullness of the ice was as refreshing
as very cold water is to people who have been walking in the sun. The
girls drew long breaths of relief as they entered. Such a sharp change
from heat to cold is not quite safe, and I imagine Wealthy would
probably have had a word to say on the subject, had she spied them going
into the ice-house; but Wealthy happened to be looking another way that
afternoon, so she did not interfere; and as, strange to say, it harmed
nobody that time, we need not discuss the wisdom of the proceeding, only
don't any of you who read this go and sit in an ice-house without
getting leave from someone wiser than yourselves.</p>
<p>"Oh, this is delightful," said Romaine. "It's just like the North
Pole and the Arctic regions which Pa read about in the book. Don't you
come here sometimes and play shipwreck and polar bears, Eyebright? I
should think you would."</p>
<p>"We did once, but Harry Prime broke a butter-jar, and Wealthy was as
mad as hops, and said we must never play here again, and I must never
let another boy come into the ice-house. She didn't say we girls mustn't
come, though, and I'm glad she didn't; for it's lovely in hot weather, I
think."</p>
<p>"I wish <i>we</i> had an ice-house," sighed Kitty Bury, "you do have
such lots of nice things, Eyebright, ice-houses and hay-lofts and a
great big garret, and a room to yourself; I wish I was an only
child."</p>
<p>"I'd rather have some brothers and sisters than all the ice-houses in
creation," said Eyebright, who never had agreed with Kitty as to the
advantages of being 'only.' "It's a great deal nicer."</p>
<p>"That's because you don't know any thing about it. Brothers and
sisters are nice enough sometimes, but other times they're nothing but a
plague," snapped Kitty, who seemed out of sorts for some reason or
other; "you can't imagine what a bother Sarah Jane is to me. She's
always taking my things, and turning my drawers over, and tagging round
after me when I don't want her; and if I bolt the door, and try to get a
little peace and quiet, she comes and bangs, and says it's her room too,
and I've no business to lock her out; and then mother takes her part,
and it isn't nice a bit. I would a great deal rather be an only child
than have Sarah Jane."</p>
<p>"But don't you have splendid times at night and in the morning? I
always thought it must be so nice to wake up and find another girl there
ready to play and talk." Eyebright's tone was a little wistful.</p>
<p>"Well, it's nice <i>sometimes</i>," admitted Kitty.</p>
<p>Just then the door at the top of the ladder opened, and a fresh face
peeped in.</p>
<p>"Oh, it's Molly Prime," they all cried. "Here we are, Molly, come
along."</p>
<p>Molly scrambled down the ladder.</p>
<p>"I guessed where you were," she said. "Wealthy didn't know, so I took
care not to say a word to her, but just crept round and looked in. Oh,
girls! what do you think is going to happen?—something nice."</p>
<p>"What?"</p>
<p>"Miss Fitch is going to have a picnic and take us to the
Shakers."</p>
<p>The Shaker settlement was about ten miles from Tunxet. I am not sure
that I have remembered to tell you that Tunxet was the name of the place
where Eyebright and the other children lived, but it was, Tunxet
Village. They were used to see the stout, sober-looking brethren in
their broad-brimmed hats, driving about the place in wagons and selling
vegetables, cheese, and apple-butter. But, as it happened, none of the
children had ever visited the home of the community, and Molly's news
produced a great excitement.</p>
<p>"Goody! goody!" they all cried, "when are we going, Molly, and how
did you know?"</p>
<p>"Miss Fitch told father. She came to borrow our big wagon, and Ben to
drive, and Pa said she could have it and welcome, because he thinks ever
so much of Miss Fitch, and so does mother. We are going on Friday, and
we are not to carry any thing to eat, because we're sure to get a
splendid dinner over there. Mother says nobody makes such good things as
the Shakers do. Won't it be lovely? All the school is going, little ones
and all, except Washington Wheeler, and he can't, because he's got the
measles."</p>
<p>"Oh, poor little Washington, that's too bad," said Eyebright, "but
I'm too glad for any thing that we're going. I always did want to see
the Shakers. Wealthy went once, and she told me about it. She says
they're the cleanest people in the world, and that you might eat off
their kitchen floor."</p>
<p>"Well, if Wealthy says that, you may be sure it is true," put in
Laura Wheelwright. "Ma declares <i>she's</i> the cleanest person she
ever saw."</p>
<p>"Oh, Wealthy says the Shakers wouldn't call her clean a bit," replied
Eyebright. "They'd never eat off <i>her</i> floor, she says."</p>
<p>"Shall we really have to eat off a floor?" inquired Bessie,
anxiously.</p>
<p>"Oh, no. That's only a way of saying very clean indeed!" explained
Eyebright.</p>
<p>All was expectation from that time onward till Friday came. The
children were afraid it might rain, and watched the clouds anxiously.
Thursday evening brought a thunder-storm, and many were the groans and
sighs; but next morning dawned fresh and fair, with clear sunshine, and
dust thoroughly laid on the roads, so that every thing seemed to smile
on the excursion. There was but one discord in the general joy, which
was that poor little Washington Wheeler must be left behind, with his
measles and his disappointment. Eyebright felt so sorry for him that she
told Wealthy she was afraid she shouldn't enjoy herself; but bless her!
no sooner were they fairly off, than she forgot Washington and every
thing else, except the nice time they were having; and neither she nor
any one beside noticed the very red and very tear-stained little face,
pressed against the pane of the upper window of Mr. Wheeler's house, to
watch the big wagon roll through the village.</p>
<p>Such a big wagon, and packed so very full! There were twenty-three of
them, including Miss Fitch, and Ben, the driver, and how they all got in
is a mystery to this day. The big girls held the little ones in their
laps, the boys were squeezed into the bottom, which was made soft with
straw, and somehow every body did have a place, though how, I can't
explain. The road was new to them after the first two or three miles,
and a new road is always exciting, especially when, as this did, it
winds and turns, now in the woods, and now out, now sunshiny, and now
shady, and does not give you many chances to look ahead and see what you
are coming to. They passed several farmhouses, where boys whom they had
never seen before ran out and raised a shout at the sight of the wagon
and its merry load. A horse in a field, who looked like a very tame,
good-natured horse indeed, took a fancy to them, and trotted alongside
till stopped by a fence. Then he flung up his head and whinnied, as if
calling them to come back, which made the children laugh. Soon after
that they reached a bit of woodland, where trees arched over the road
and made it cool and shady, and there they saw a squirrel, running just
ahead of the wagon over the pine needles. He did not seem to notice them
at first, but the boys whooped and hurrahed, and <i>then</i> he was off
in a minute, flashing up a tree-trunk like a streak of striped
lightning. This was delightful; and no less so a flight of crows which
passed overhead, cawing, and flying so low that the children could see
every feather in their bodies, which shone in the sun like burnished
green-black jet, and the glancing of their thievish eyes.</p>
<p>"Going to steal from some farmer's wheat-crop," said Miss Fitch, and
she repeated these verses about a crow, which amused the children
greatly.</p>
<p><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
"Where are you bound to, you sooty-black crow?</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
What is that noise which you make as you go?</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
You are a sad wicked thief, as I know,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
Held by no honesty, keeping no law—</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
What do you say, sir?" The crow he said—</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 24em;">"Caw."</span><br/>
<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
"Corn is still green, oh, you naughty, bad crow,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
Wheat is not ripe in the meadow below.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
What is your errand? I think it is low</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
Thus to be stuffing and cramming your maw,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
Robbing the farmers!—" The crow he said—</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 24em;">"Caw."</span><br/>
<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
"Bring me my gun. Now you sinful old crow,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
Right at your back I take aim as you go.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
You are a thief and the honest man's foe!</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
Therefore I shoot you." Click! Bang!—but, oh pshaw!</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 6em;">
Off flew the crow, and he laughed and said—</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 24em;">"Caw."</span><br/></p>
<p>By the time that the children had done giggling over the crow-rhymes,
the Shaker village was in sight, looking, against its back-ground of
green trees, like a group of nice yellow cheeses,—only the cheeses
were not round. All the buildings were cream-colored, and seemed freshly
painted, they were so very clean. The windows had no shutters, but
inside some of them hung blue paper shades to keep out the sun. Every
thing looked thrifty and in excellent order. The orchard trees were
heavy with half-grown apples and pears; the grass fields had been newly
cut, and nothing could be imagined neater than the vegetable gardens
which lay on one side of the houses. All the green things stood in
precise straight rows,—every beet, and carrot, and cucumber with
his hands in his own pocket, so to speak; none of that reaching about
and intruding on neighboring premises which most vegetables indulge in;
but every one at home, with a sedate air, and minding his own business.
Not a single squash-vine could be detected tickling another squash-vine;
each watermelon lay in the middle of his hill with a solemn expression
on his large face; the tomatoes looked ashamed of being red; and only a
suit of drab apiece seemed wanting, to make the pumpkins as respectably
grave as the other members of the community. Two small boys, in
wide-brimmed hats and legs of discreet tint, were weeding these decorous
vegetables. They raised their heads and took one good stare as the big
wagon rattled past, then they lowered them again, and went on with their
work, laying the pig-weeds, which they pulled out of the ground, in neat
little piles along the garden walk.</p>
<p>At the door of the principal building, a stout, butternut-colored
Elder stood waiting, as if to learn their business.</p>
<p>"We have driven over to see your village," said Miss Fitch, in her
pleasant voice, "and we should like dinner, if you can give it to
us."</p>
<p>"Yea," said the Elder. He pronounced the word as if it were spelled
"ye." That was all he said; but he helped the children to get down from
the wagon, and led the way through a very clean, bare passage to a room
equally clean and bare, where four women in drab gowns with wide collars
and stiff white caps were sitting, each on a little platform by herself,
darning stockings, with a basket of mending beside her.</p>
<p>One of these introduced herself to Miss Fitch as Sister Samantha. She
had a round, comfortable face, and the boys and girls, who had felt an
awe of the grave Elder, recovered courage as they looked at her. She
said they could "go round" if they wanted to, and called a younger
sister named Dorcas to show them the way.</p>
<p>Sister Dorcas had a pale, rather dissatisfied face. She did not seem
so happy as Sister Samantha. She showed the children all that there was
to see, but she said very little and took no pains to explain any thing,
or to make the visit pleasant. They saw the bedrooms where the sisters
slept, and the bedrooms where the brothers slept, all exactly alike,
comfortable, plain, and unadorned, except for wonderful patchwork quilts
on the beds, and the gay "pulled" rugs on the floors. They were shown
the kitchen where the food for all the community was cooked, a kitchen
as clean and shining as the waxen cell of a bee, and the storerooms,
full of dried fruits and preserved fruits, honey, cheeses, beeswax,
wooden ware, brooms, herbs, and soap. There was an "office" also, where
these things were for sale to any one who should choose to buy, and
great consultations took place among the children, who had almost all
brought a little shopping money. Some chose maple-sugar, some,
silk-winders, some, little cakes of white wax for use in work-baskets.
Molly Prime had a sudden bright thought, which she whispered about, and
after much giggling and mysterious explanations in corners, they clubbed
together and got a work-basket for Miss Fitch. It cost a dollar and a
quarter, and was a great beauty, the children thought. Miss Fitch was
very much pleased with it, and that added to their pleasure, so that the
purchase of the work-basket was one of the pleasantest events of the
day. Eyebright spent what was left of her money in buying a new
mop-handle as a present for Wealthy, who wanted one, she knew. She was a
good deal laughed at by the other boys and girls, but she didn't mind
that a bit, and shouldering her mop-handle as if it had been a
flag-staff, followed with the rest wherever Sister Dorcas chose to lead
them.</p>
<p>Sister Dorcas took them to see the big barns, sweet with freshly made
hay, and to the dairy and cheese-house, with white shelves laden with
pans of rich milk and curds, the very sight of which made the children
hungry. Next they peeped into the meeting-house for Sundays, and then
they were taken to the room where fruit was packed and sorted. Here they
found half-a-dozen young Shakeresses, busy in filling baskets with
blackberries for next day's market.</p>
<p>These Shaker girls pleased the children very much; they looked so
fresh and prim and pretty in their sober costume, and so cheerful and
smiling. Eyebright fell in love at once with the youngest and prettiest,
a girl only two or three years older than herself. She managed to get
close to her, and, under pretence of helping with the blackberries, drew
her a little to one side, where they could talk without being
overheard.</p>
<p>"Do you like to live here?" she asked confidentially, as their
fingers met in the blackberry basket.</p>
<p>"Yea," said the little Shakeress, glancing round shyly. Then as she
saw that nobody was noticing them, she became more communicative.</p>
<p>"I like it—pretty well," she said. "But I guess I shan't stay
here always."</p>
<p>"Won't you? What will you do then? Where will you go?"</p>
<p>"I don't know yet; but Ruth Berguin—she is my sister in the
flesh—was once of this family, and she left, and went back to the
world's people and got married. She lives up in Canada now, and has got
two babies. She came for a visit once, and fetched one of them. Sister
Samantha felt real badly when Ruth went, but she liked the baby ever so
much. I mean to go back to the world's people too, some day."</p>
<p>"Oh my! perhaps <i>you</i> will get married," suggested Eyebright,
greatly excited at the idea.</p>
<p>"Perhaps I shall," answered the small Shakeress with unmoved
gravity.</p>
<p>Then she told Eyebright that her name was Jane, and she was an
orphan, and that she and sister Orphah, whom she pointed out, slept
together in one of the bedrooms which the children had seen upstairs,
and had very "good times" after the lights were out, whispering to each
other and planning what they would do when they were old enough to do
any thing. Sister Orphah, too, had a scheme for returning to the world's
people—perhaps they might go together. The idea of these "good
times" rather tickled Eyebright's imagination. For a few minutes she
reflected that perhaps it might be a pleasant thing to come and join the
Shakers. She and sister Jane grew intimate so fast, and chattered so
merrily, that Bessie became jealous and drew near to hear what they were
saying, and presently one of the elder Shakeresses joined them, and
gently sent Jane away on an errand. Eyebright's chance for confidences
was over: but she had made the most of it while it lasted, and that is
always a comfort.</p>
<p>By the time that they had finished the round of the premises dinner
was ready,—welcome news; for the children were all very hungry. It
was spread in an enormous dining-room on two long tables. The men
Shakers sat at one table, and the women Shakers at the other. Miss Fitch
and her scholars were placed with the latter, and some of the young
sisters waited on them very neatly and quietly. Sister Jane was one of
these and she took especial care of Eyebright whom she seemed to regard
as a friend of her own. No one spoke at either table except to ask for
something or to say "thank you"; but to make up for this silence, a
prodigious amount of eating was done. No wonder, for the dinner was
excellent, the very best dinner, the children thought, that they had
ever tasted. There was no fresh meat, but capital pork and beans,
vegetables of all kinds, delicious Indian pudding, flooded with thick,
yellow cream, brown bread and white, rusk, graham gems, oat-meal and
grits, with the best of butter, apple-sauce, maple-molasses, and plenty
of the richest milk. Every thing was of the nicest material, and as
daintily clean as if intended for a queen. Miss Fitch praised the food,
and Sister Samantha, who looked pleased, said they tried to do things
thoroughly, "as to the Lord." Miss Fitch said afterward that she thought
this was an admirable idea, and she wished more people would try it,
because then there would be less bad cooking in the world, and less
saleratus and dyspepsia. She said that to be faithful and thorough in
every thing, even in getting dinner ready, was a real way of serving
God, and pleased Him too, because He looks beyond things, and sees the
spirit in which we do them.</p>
<p>At three o'clock the wagon came to the door, and they said good-by to
the kind Shakers. Miss Fitch paid for the dinner; but the elder was not
willing to take much. They entertained the poor for nothing, he said. A
small compensation from those who were able and willing to pay, did not
come amiss, but a dinner for boys and girls like those, he guessed,
didn't amount to much. Miss Fitch privately doubted this. It seemed to
her that a regiment of grown men could hardly have devoured more in the
same space of time than her hungry twenty-one; but she was grateful to
the elder for his kindness, and told him so. Eyebright parted from
Sister Jane with a kiss, and gave her, by way of keepsake, the only
thing she had,—a china doll about two inches long, which chanced
to be at the bottom of her pocket. It was a droll gift to make to a
solemn little Shakeress in drab; but Jane was pleased, and said she
should always keep it. Then they were packed into the wagon again, and
with many good-bys they drove away, kissing their hands to the sisters
at the door, and carrying with them a sense of cleanliness, hospitality,
and quiet peace, which would make them for ever friendly to the name of
Shaker.</p>
<p>The drive home was as pleasant as that of the morning had been. The
children were not at all tired, and in the most riotous spirits. They
hurrahed every five minutes. They made jokes and guessed riddles, and
sang choruses,—"<i>Tranquidillo</i>" was one; "We'll bear the
storm, it won't be long," another; and "Ubidee," which Herman Bury had
picked up from a cousin in college, and which they all thought grand.
Past the farmhouses they went, past the tree where the squirrel had
curled himself to sleep, and the fields from which the thievish crows
had flown. They stopped a minute at Mr. Wheeler's to leave some
maple-sugar for Washington,—not the best diet for measles,
perhaps, but pleasant as a proof of kind feeling, and then, one by one,
they were dropped at the doors of their own homes.</p>
<p>"Well!" said Wealthy, eying her mop-handle with great satisfaction.
"That's what I call sensible. I expected you'd spend your money on some
pesky gimcrack or other. I never thought 't would be a handy thing like
this, and I am obliged to you for it, Eyebright. Now run up and see your
ma. She was asking after you a while ago."</p>
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