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<h2> CHAPTER XVI. DIAMOND MAKES A BEGINNING </h2>
<p>THE wind blew loud, but Diamond slept a deep sleep, and never heard it. My
own impression is that every time when Diamond slept well and remembered
nothing about it in the morning, he had been all that night at the back of
the north wind. I am almost sure that was how he woke so refreshed, and
felt so quiet and hopeful all the day. Indeed he said this much, though
not to me—that always when he woke from such a sleep there was a
something in his mind, he could not tell what—could not tell whether
it was the last far-off sounds of the river dying away in the distance, or
some of the words of the endless song his mother had read to him on the
sea-shore. Sometimes he thought it must have been the twittering of the
swallows—over the shallows, you, know; but it may have been the
chirping of the dingy sparrows picking up their breakfast in the yard—how
can I tell? I don't know what I know, I only know what I think; and to
tell the truth, I am more for the swallows than the sparrows. When he knew
he was coming awake, he would sometimes try hard to keep hold of the words
of what seemed a new song, one he had not heard before—a song in
which the words and the music somehow appeared to be all one; but even
when he thought he had got them well fixed in his mind, ever as he came
awaker—as he would say—one line faded away out of it, and then
another, and then another, till at last there was nothing left but some
lovely picture of water or grass or daisies, or something else very
common, but with all the commonness polished off it, and the lovely soul
of it, which people so seldom see, and, alas! yet seldomer believe in,
shining out. But after that he would sing the oddest, loveliest little
songs to the baby—of his own making, his mother said; but Diamond
said he did not make them; they were made somewhere inside him, and he
knew nothing about them till they were coming out.</p>
<p>When he woke that first morning he got up at once, saying to himself,
“I've been ill long enough, and have given a great deal of trouble; I must
try and be of use now, and help my mother.” When he went into her room he
found her lighting the fire, and his father just getting out of bed. They
had only the one room, besides the little one, not much more than a
closet, in which Diamond slept. He began at once to set things to rights,
but the baby waking up, he took him, and nursed him till his mother had
got the breakfast ready. She was looking gloomy, and his father was
silent; and indeed except Diamond had done all he possibly could to keep
out the misery that was trying to get in at doors and windows, he too
would have grown miserable, and then they would have been all miserable
together. But to try to make others comfortable is the only way to get
right comfortable ourselves, and that comes partly of not being able to
think so much about ourselves when we are helping other people. For our
Selves will always do pretty well if we don't pay them too much attention.
Our Selves are like some little children who will be happy enough so long
as they are left to their own games, but when we begin to interfere with
them, and make them presents of too nice playthings, or too many sweet
things, they begin at once to fret and spoil.</p>
<p>“Why, Diamond, child!” said his mother at last, “you're as good to your
mother as if you were a girl—nursing the baby, and toasting the
bread, and sweeping up the hearth! I declare a body would think you had
been among the fairies.”</p>
<p>Could Diamond have had greater praise or greater pleasure? You see when he
forgot his Self his mother took care of his Self, and loved and praised
his Self. Our own praises poison our Selves, and puff and swell them up,
till they lose all shape and beauty, and become like great toadstools. But
the praises of father or mother do our Selves good, and comfort them and
make them beautiful. They never do them any harm. If they do any harm, it
comes of our mixing some of our own praises with them, and that turns them
nasty and slimy and poisonous.</p>
<p>When his father had finished his breakfast, which he did rather in a
hurry, he got up and went down into the yard to get out his horse and put
him to the cab.</p>
<p>“Won't you come and see the cab, Diamond?” he said.</p>
<p>“Yes, please, father—if mother can spare me a minute,” answered
Diamond.</p>
<p>“Bless the child! I don't want him,” said his mother cheerfully.</p>
<p>But as he was following his father out of the door, she called him back.</p>
<p>“Diamond, just hold the baby one minute. I have something to say to your
father.”</p>
<p>So Diamond sat down again, took the baby in his lap, and began poking his
face into its little body, laughing and singing all the while, so that the
baby crowed like a little bantam. And what he sang was something like this—such
nonsense to those that couldn't understand it! but not to the baby, who
got all the good in the world out of it:— baby's a-sleeping wake up
baby for all the swallows are the merriest fellows and have the yellowest
children who would go sleeping and snore like a gaby disturbing his mother
and father and brother and all a-boring their ears with his snoring
snoring snoring for himself and no other for himself in particular wake up
baby sit up perpendicular hark to the gushing hark to the rushing where
the sheep are the woolliest and the lambs the unruliest and their tails
the whitest and their eyes the brightest and baby's the bonniest and
baby's the funniest and baby's the shiniest and baby's the tiniest and
baby's the merriest and baby's the worriest of all the lambs that plague
their dams and mother's the whitest of all the dams that feed the lambs
that go crop-cropping without stop-stopping and father's the best of all
the swallows that build their nest out of the shining shallows and he has
the merriest children that's baby and Diamond and Diamond and baby and
baby and Diamond and Diamond and baby—</p>
<p>Here Diamond's knees went off in a wild dance which tossed the baby about
and shook the laughter out of him in immoderate peals. His mother had been
listening at the door to the last few lines of his song, and came in with
the tears in her eyes. She took the baby from him, gave him a kiss, and
told him to run to his father.</p>
<p>By the time Diamond got into the yard, the horse was between the shafts,
and his father was looping the traces on. Diamond went round to look at
the horse. The sight of him made him feel very queer. He did not know much
about different horses, and all other horses than their own were very much
the same to him. But he could not make it out. This was Diamond and it
wasn't Diamond. Diamond didn't hang his head like that; yet the head that
was hanging was very like the one that Diamond used to hold so high.
Diamond's bones didn't show through his skin like that; but the skin they
pushed out of shape so was very like Diamond's skin; and the bones might
be Diamond's bones, for he had never seen the shape of them. But when he
came round in front of the old horse, and he put out his long neck, and
began sniffing at him and rubbing his upper lip and his nose on him, then
Diamond saw it could be no other than old Diamond, and he did just as his
father had done before—put his arms round his neck and cried—but
not much.</p>
<p>“Ain't it jolly, father?” he said. “Was there ever anybody so lucky as me?
Dear old Diamond!”</p>
<p>And he hugged the horse again, and kissed both his big hairy cheeks. He
could only manage one at a time, however—the other cheek was so far
off on the other side of his big head.</p>
<p>His father mounted the box with just the same air, as Diamond thought,
with which he had used to get upon the coach-box, and Diamond said to
himself, “Father's as grand as ever anyhow.” He had kept his brown
livery-coat, only his wife had taken the silver buttons off and put brass
ones instead, because they did not think it polite to Mr. Coleman in his
fallen fortunes to let his crest be seen upon the box of a cab. Old
Diamond had kept just his collar; and that had the silver crest upon it
still, for his master thought nobody would notice that, and so let it
remain for a memorial of the better days of which it reminded him—not
unpleasantly, seeing it had been by no fault either of his or of the old
horse's that they had come down in the world together.</p>
<p>“Oh, father, do let me drive a bit,” said Diamond, jumping up on the box
beside him.</p>
<p>His father changed places with him at once, putting the reins into his
hands. Diamond gathered them up eagerly.</p>
<p>“Don't pull at his mouth,” said his father, “just feel, at it gently to
let him know you're there and attending to him. That's what I call talking
to him through the reins.”</p>
<p>“Yes, father, I understand,” said Diamond. Then to the horse he said, “Go
on Diamond.” And old Diamond's ponderous bulk began at once to move to the
voice of the little boy.</p>
<p>But before they had reached the entrance of the mews, another voice called
after young Diamond, which, in his turn, he had to obey, for it was that
of his mother. “Diamond! Diamond!” it cried; and Diamond pulled the reins,
and the horse stood still as a stone.</p>
<p>“Husband,” said his mother, coming up, “you're never going to trust him
with the reins—a baby like that?”</p>
<p>“He must learn some day, and he can't begin too soon. I see already he's a
born coachman,” said his father proudly. “And I don't see well how he
could escape it, for my father and my grandfather, that's his
great-grandfather, was all coachmen, I'm told; so it must come natural to
him, any one would think. Besides, you see, old Diamond's as proud of him
as we are our own selves, wife. Don't you see how he's turning round his
ears, with the mouths of them open, for the first word he speaks to tumble
in? He's too well bred to turn his head, you know.”</p>
<p>“Well, but, husband, I can't do without him to-day. Everything's got to be
done, you know. It's my first day here. And there's that baby!”</p>
<p>“Bless you, wife! I never meant to take him away—only to the bottom
of Endell Street. He can watch his way back.”</p>
<p>“No thank you, father; not to-day,” said Diamond. “Mother wants me.
Perhaps she'll let me go another day.”</p>
<p>“Very well, my man,” said his father, and took the reins which Diamond was
holding out to him.</p>
<p>Diamond got down, a little disappointed of course, and went with his
mother, who was too pleased to speak. She only took hold of his hand as
tight as if she had been afraid of his running away instead of glad that
he would not leave her.</p>
<p>Now, although they did not know it, the owner of the stables, the same man
who had sold the horse to his father, had been standing just inside one of
the stable-doors, with his hands in his pockets, and had heard and seen
all that passed; and from that day John Stonecrop took a great fancy to
the little boy. And this was the beginning of what came of it.</p>
<p>The same evening, just as Diamond was feeling tired of the day's work, and
wishing his father would come home, Mr. Stonecrop knocked at the door. His
mother went and opened it.</p>
<p>“Good evening, ma'am,” said he. “Is the little master in?”</p>
<p>“Yes, to be sure he is—at your service, I'm sure, Mr. Stonecrop,”
said his mother.</p>
<p>“No, no, ma'am; it's I'm at his service. I'm just a-going out with my own
cab, and if he likes to come with me, he shall drive my old horse till
he's tired.”</p>
<p>“It's getting rather late for him,” said his mother thoughtfully. “You see
he's been an invalid.”</p>
<p>Diamond thought, what a funny thing! How could he have been an invalid
when he did not even know what the word meant? But, of course, his mother
was right.</p>
<p>“Oh, well,” said Mr. Stonecrop, “I can just let him drive through
Bloomsbury Square, and then he shall run home again.”</p>
<p>“Very good, sir. And I'm much obliged to you,” said his mother. And
Diamond, dancing with delight, got his cap, put his hand in Mr.
Stonecrop's, and went with him to the yard where the cab was waiting. He
did not think the horse looked nearly so nice as Diamond, nor Mr.
Stonecrop nearly so grand as his father; but he was none, the less
pleased. He got up on the box, and his new friend got up beside him.</p>
<p>“What's the horse's name?” whispered Diamond, as he took the reins from
the man.</p>
<p>“It's not a nice name,” said Mr. Stonecrop. “You needn't call him by it. I
didn't give it him. He'll go well enough without it. Give the boy a whip,
Jack. I never carries one when I drive old——”</p>
<p>He didn't finish the sentence. Jack handed Diamond a whip, with which, by
holding it half down the stick, he managed just to flack the haunches of
the horse; and away he went.</p>
<p>“Mind the gate,” said Mr. Stonecrop; and Diamond did mind the gate, and
guided the nameless horse through it in safety, pulling him this way and
that according as was necessary. Diamond learned to drive all the sooner
that he had been accustomed to do what he was told, and could obey the
smallest hint in a moment. Nothing helps one to get on like that. Some
people don't know how to do what they are told; they have not been used to
it, and they neither understand quickly nor are able to turn what they do
understand into action quickly. With an obedient mind one learns the
rights of things fast enough; for it is the law of the universe, and to
obey is to understand.</p>
<p>“Look out!” cried Mr. Stonecrop, as they were turning the corner into
Bloomsbury Square.</p>
<p>It was getting dusky now. A cab was approaching rather rapidly from the
opposite direction, and Diamond pulling aside, and the other driver
pulling up, they only just escaped a collision. Then they knew each other.</p>
<p>“Why, Diamond, it's a bad beginning to run into your own father,” cried
the driver.</p>
<p>“But, father, wouldn't it have been a bad ending to run into your own
son?” said Diamond in return; and the two men laughed heartily.</p>
<p>“This is very kind of you, I'm sure, Stonecrop,” said his father.</p>
<p>“Not a bit. He's a brave fellow, and'll be fit to drive on his own hook in
a week or two. But I think you'd better let him drive you home now, for
his mother don't like his having over much of the night air, and I
promised not to take him farther than the square.”</p>
<p>“Come along then, Diamond,” said his father, as he brought his cab up to
the other, and moved off the box to the seat beside it. Diamond jumped
across, caught at the reins, said “Good-night, and thank you, Mr.
Stonecrop,” and drove away home, feeling more of a man than he had ever
yet had a chance of feeling in all his life. Nor did his father find it
necessary to give him a single hint as to his driving. Only I suspect the
fact that it was old Diamond, and old Diamond on his way to his stable,
may have had something to do with young Diamond's success.</p>
<p>“Well, child,” said his mother, when he entered the room, “you've not been
long gone.”</p>
<p>“No, mother; here I am. Give me the baby.”</p>
<p>“The baby's asleep,” said his mother.</p>
<p>“Then give him to me, and I'll lay him down.”</p>
<p>But as Diamond took him, he woke up and began to laugh. For he was indeed
one of the merriest children. And no wonder, for he was as plump as a
plum-pudding, and had never had an ache or a pain that lasted more than
five minutes at a time. Diamond sat down with him and began to sing to
him.</p>
<p>baby baby babbing your father's gone a-cabbing to catch a shilling for its
pence to make the baby babbing dance for old Diamond's a duck they say he
can swim but the duck of diamonds is baby that's him and of all the
swallows the merriest fellows that bake their cake with the water they
shake out of the river flowing for ever and make dust into clay on the
shiniest day to build their nest father's the best and mother's the
whitest and her eyes are the brightest of all the dams that watch their
lambs cropping the grass where the waters pass singing for ever and of all
the lambs with the shakingest tails and the jumpingest feet baby's the
funniest baby's the bonniest and he never wails and he's always sweet and
Diamond's his nurse and Diamond's his nurse and Diamond's his nurse</p>
<p>When Diamond's rhymes grew scarce, he always began dancing the baby. Some
people wondered that such a child could rhyme as he did, but his rhymes
were not very good, for he was only trying to remember what he had heard
the river sing at the back of the north wind.</p>
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