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Sample Pages from [em]The Last Crusader: Isabella of Spain[/em] by William Thomas Walsh

ISABELLA OF SPAIN

I

ISABEL OPENS HER EYES UPON A MUDDLED WORLD, AND MEETS A KING AND THE KING'S MASTER

ISABEL was born to the purple in no ordinary sense. She was more than the daughter of King Juan II of Castile and his second wife, Dona Isabel, of Portugal. Under the pink and white of her skin pulsed the blood of crusaders and conquerors, the blood of Alfred the Great, of William the Conqueror, of the iron Plantagenet Henry II and the fiery Eleanor of Aquitaine, of Edward I and Edward III of England, of Philip the Bold of France, of Alfonso the Wise of Castile. She was descended on both sides from Louis IX of France and his cousin Fernando III of Castile, both kings, both crusaders and both canonized saints. She derived Lancastrian blood through both parents from John of Gaunt, brother of the Black Prince. Yet her arrival in a chaotic world on the twenty-second of April, 1451, caused hardly a stir even in the little town of Madrigal. Her father, who was at Segovia, announced the event by proclamation: "I, the King. ..make known to you that by the grace of Our Lord this Thursday just past, the Queen, Dona Isabel, my dear and well-beloved wife, was delivered of a daughter; the which I tell you that you may give thanks to God." The infanta was baptized a few days later in the Church of Saint Nicholas, with no especial pomp or display. When the voices of her sponsors rumbled among the arches and arabesques of the old church, renouncing Satan and all his works on her behalf, there was no prophet on hand to cry out that one of the most remarkable women in all history had been born.

During the long and painful confinement of Isabel's mother , there were certain symptoms of poisoning which, although they yielded to antidotes, left her a victim of a chronic nervous depression. In an epoch when the illnesses of the great were often ascribed to the malice of their foes, it was inevitable that people should whisper the name of Don Alvaro de Luna, Constable of Castile and Grand Master of the Order of Santiago, especially as that gifted and charming gentleman had long been suspected of having murdered the King's first wife, Dona Maria of Aragon, and her sister, the Dowager Queen Leonor of Portugal.

Lean, dark and sinister, exquisite in silk and jewels, handsome even in his late middle age, this nephew of the anti-Pope Benedict had been absolute master, for a long generation, of King Juan and of all Castile. He looted the Crown to make himself fabulously rich, he corrupted the Church by naming unworthy friends for benefices, he alienated the nobles by his insolence and arrogance, he infuriated the populace by giving high offices and privileges to Jews and Moors, he sowed discord in Aragon, Navarre, France and Italy for his own ends, and he led a life so dissolute that many blamed him for all the moral decay that made the court notorious. It was in his time, said the chronicler Palencia, that Castile saw the beginning of certain infames tratos obscenos, "infamous obscene customs which have since increased so shamefully." Intimate friend as well as prime minister, he dominated the King completely. He told him what to wear, what to eat, and even when to enter the bedroom of Queen Maria. Various interpretations were attached to the royal complacency. Many suspected the Constable of sorcery. Some said that he was protecting the weak-willed King from his own immoderation; others questioned the legitimacy of Don Enrique, the heir to the throne. But the gossip troubled the King not at all, so long as he was spared the boredom of administration, and left free to indulge his passion for poetry and music, for with all his weaknesses he was a loyal patron of the fine arts.

When Queen Leonor was driven out of Portugal by her brother-in-law, the regent, Don Pedro, she visited her sister, the Queen of Castile; and De Luna, who was friendly to Don Pedro, resented her presence as a threat to his own supremacy. Queen Maria died, after an illness of only three days. There were strange spots on her body, says the chronicler, "like those caused by herbs." Her sister died of the same mysterious ailment. The enemies of Don Alvaro had their opinion.

The King, who was disappointed in his son Enrique, thought of marrying again. His choice fell upon Fredagonde, daughter of Charles VII of France. But Don Alvaro had other plans for him. He had already, in fact, arranged for his master's marriage to the young Princess Isabel, first cousin of King Alfonso V of Portugal and niece of the Regent Don Pedro. The Constable feared the effect of a French alliance on his own position. On the other hand, his friend Don Pedro would know how to influence his young and inexperienced niece in the right direction, and Don Alvaro flattered himself that she would become a pliant instrument in his hands for the domination of the King. Women had always found him irresistible.

In the year 1447, consequently, there came to Burgos a slender princess from the west, whose face was rather melancholy in repose, though it became singularly beautiful, like the glass of some Gothic window, when the light of any emotion shone through it. She was the daughter of the Infante Don Juan, a younger son of Juan the Great of Portugal; her grandmother was Philippa, one of the daughters of John of Gaunt. Her welcoming was magnificent even for a country with a weakness for royal brides. There were dances, banquets, speeches, bull-fights, tourneys, glittering processions. Don Alvaro had arranged everything.

But Isabel had grown up in the court of a strong monarch, and had very definite notions of what a King should be. Her husband the slave of a haughty subject? Intolerable! That any one should attempt to regulate her domestic routine was not even to be thought of. And when Don Alvaro bowed over her hand with his most disarming smile, she read his heart; and, feeling that this man with the soft voice and the touch that made one think of a dark snake, would destroy her, body and soul, unless she destroyed him, she decided without hesitation that he must be destroyed.

To the further annoyance of the Constable, King Juan fell in love with his young wife. Assured by a fortune teller that he would live to be ninety, and finding himself still handsome and charming in his forties, he gave himself up to love and to gluttony, without consulting Don Alvaro as to his comings and goings. The Queen began to feel for him the affection that weak and likable men often inspire in strong-minded women. Pious, energetic, and incapable of compromise where any principle was involved, she threw her influence on the side of the nobles who were constantly plotting for the downfall of the favorite even after he crushed them at the first battle of Olmedo. The suspicion that de Luna had attempted to poison her at the time of the Infanta Isabel's birth urged her on to hasten his fall. Three years after the birth of the Princess Isabel, she brought forth her son, Alfonso; and while he was still in the womb, she accomplished her desire.

The murder of Don Alfonso Perez de Vivero gave her the opportunity she sought. He was the King's messenger, but Don Alvaro, angered because he had forsaken his party for the Queen's, had him thrown out of a window on Good Friday afternoon, in 1453. This conduct agreed so well with the popular impression that the Constable was a Catholic in name only, and a dabbler in black magic, that the indignation against him was extreme. The Queen made use of it to complete her ascendancy over the King. She induced him to have Don Alvaro seized and taken to Valladolid, where a council of his enemies was waiting to pass judgment upon him. At the crucial moment, some of the Conversos whom he had raised to power joined the party of the Queen. Their ingratitude was decisive.

De Luna was as unruffled and confident in misfortune as he had been in power. He knew that, if he could talk with the King for five minutes, his personal charm would gain a pardon. It had on other occasions. N o one knew better than he how difficult it was for Don Juan to punish anyone ; in fact, de Luna had once advised him never to speak with any man whom he had condemned. The Queen reminded her husband of that excellent counsel when he thought of receiving the Constable in audience. Seconded by those who feared the vengeance of Don Alvaro if he returned to power, she adjured him, in the name of Castile, of their love, of their children, of the God so long defied by de Luna, to prove himself a true King by administering strict justice. Twice during the trial, Juan is said to have signed- an order for the release of his friend, and to have been shamed out of sending it by the Queen, who remained at his side night and day. When he ratified the sentence of the Court, his tears fell upon the paper.

Meanwhile in Valladolid, that drab city, preparations for the execution had been completed with almost indecent haste, and at 8 o'clock on the morning of June 2, a crowd was gathering in the Plaza Major before a huge scaffold covered with black velvet, surmounted by a crucifix and a block. Against this sable background, thumbing the edge of the great sword of the Kings of Castile, stood the tall figure of an executioner, masked, silent, wrapped in robes of scarlet. The Plaza was almost filled with peasants, cattle herders, gayly dressed hidalgos who had ridden from far places to see their master's undoing. A trumpet sounded, and down the principal street came a little procession to the sound of muffled kettle-drums: first, a parti-colored herald with gaudy cap and tabard, proclaiming in a loud voice the high crimes of Don Alvaro de Luna; next, two ranks of men-at-arms in leather jerkins and cuirasses, and finally, mounted on a mule, the imperturbable Grand Master, wearing high-heeled shoes with diamond buckles, and muffled to the chin in a long Castilian cloak, while his confessor rode beside him.

The condemned dismounted, gazed serenely about at the brilliant assembly of his foes and the idly curious, smiled as if to say that one could expect no more from human nature, and with a firm step went up to meet the man in scarlet. Never had he looked more noble and gracious than when he raised his fine head and gazed thoughtfully out of his dark eyes over the heads of the people. A murmur of admiration and pity rIppled through the crowd; whereat Don Alvaro placed his hand over his heart and bowed to them with grave gallantry. After another word with his confessor, he loosened the tasseled cord at his neck and handed his cloak to his page Morales, revealing on his breast the sword and cockleshell of Santiago, emblems of the great Crusade that he had sacrificed to avarice and ambition. He handed the page his hat; a ring, as a keep- sake. If he glanced down the narrow street to see whether the King's messenger was coming, if he began to doubt the promises of his astrologers, he betrayed no uneasiness when he turned again to the spectators and in a resonant voice wished happiness and prosperity to the King and people of Castile. The sunlight sparkled on his coal black hair, on the jewels at his feet and his waist, on the newly ground steel of the sword of justice. Don Alvaro casually examined the block and the sword, took from his bosom a black ribbon, handed it to the executioner for the binding of his hands. This done, he knelt before the crucifix and prayed with fervor. A silence like the dying of the wind in a field of wheat fell over the murmuring crowd. The Grand Master was placing his head on the block. The man in red made a pantherlike movement. There was a flash of steel. Cries and shrieks burst from the Plaza. The head rolled in the dust. Castile! Castile for the King Don Juan and his wife Lady Isabel!

It was the young Queen's hour of victory, but the chalice of her triumph was bitter. For the King suffered the remorse of the imaginative, and all the rest of his miserable days passed in self-reproaches for the doom of his friend. Even the birth of his son Alfonso, November 15, 1454, left him unconsoled. He died the following July, after a reign of forty-eight indolent years, moaning, "Would to God I had been born the son of a mechanic instead of the son of a King !" He had encouraged art and literature, he had given power and privileges to the Jews, he was father to a princess in whom his intellect and her mother's will compounded to form greatness. History has remembered little more of him. His magnificent tomb is in the Cartuja de Miraflores, two miles from Burgos.

After his funeral and the coronation of the new King Enrique IV, the Queen withdrew from the court with her two children, and made her residence in the small castle of Arevalo, in Old Castile. Alfonso was an infant in the cradle. The Infanta Isabel was a self-possessed little blonde girl of three years, with wide shoulders and sturdy legs, who regarded the world frankly and analytically through large blue eyes in which there were tiny streaks and specks of gold and green.

The melancholy that had fallen upon the Queen when Isabel was born became habitual. After the King's death she was seldom free from illness, never from anxiety. Her allowance from her stepson Enrique, who had never liked her much, came so irregularly that the little family was sometimes reduced to the bare necessities, almost to actual want. But as all other resources failed her, the pious Queen turned more than ever to the solace of religion, and spent what remained of her superb will in the service of her children. Isabel remembered her lying in bed, ill; in white mourning garments, weeping for the King ; in the chapel, kneeling in reverence before the uplifted Host. The child remembered something vague but terrifying about the execution of Alvaro de Luna, for it was much talked about, and sung about in popular ballads. She recalled being told at the age of six that King Enrique was arranging for her marriage to Prince Fernando, the five year old second son of the King of Aragon. Fernando! The name was like a ball chiming in a far country of romance. It was odd to be the betrothed of a Prince that one had never seen.

At Arevalo Isabel formed her first friendship, one that lasted until the day of her death. Beatriz de Bobadilla was a child of her own age, daughterof the governor of hte castle. Beatriz was dark and emotional, while Isabel was fair, reserved and strangely mature. They became inseparable. They played games together in the inclosed garden of the Alcazar, they learned to read by the bedside of the Queen, they approached the altar in the chapel together to receive their first Holy Communion. Sometimes they rode with the governor and his troops through the little walled town into the flat checkered country, where fields of wheat and saffron extended one after another as far as one could see - the wheat almost the color of Isabel's hair, and the saffron very fragrant on the wind. Cows and horses grazed in the pastures along the meandering Araja. Beyond the green places lay a flat desert, stark and treeless and full of unknown things to be feared. The lights and shadows alternated on this level plateau in broad undulating bars, like the waves of a great dark sea.

Sometimes they rode as far as Medina del Campo, where the greatest fair in Spain was held three times a year, and merchants came from all over southern Europe to buy choice Castilian wools and grains, and blooded steers and horses and mules from Andalusia. There were cavaliers from Aragon, sailors from Catalonia on the east coast, mountaineers from Guipuzcoa on the north, turbaned Moors from Granada in the south, blue-eyed Castilian farmers, bearded Jews in gaberdines, peasants from Provence and Languedoc, sometimes even an Englishman or a German. The people interested her, but not so much as the horses. Before Isabel was ten she scorned the mule that etiquette ordained for women and children, and kept her seat on a spirited horse. Days in the saddle made her hard, straight, resourceful, fearless, indifferent to fatigue, contemptuous of pain; a vigorous girl with delicate pink complexion, a firm prudent mouth, a lower jaw a trifle heavy, indicating unusual energy and will. She became a skilled huntress, commencing with hares and deer, but later following the black wild boar, and on one occasion slaying a good-sized bear with her javelin. Her brother, Alfonso learned also to handle a sword and to tilt with lances.

Isabel grew up without a knowledge of Latin, but her education in other respects was sound and well balanced. She learned to speak Castilian musically and with elegance, and to write it with a touch of distinction. She studied grammar and rhetoric, painting, poetry, history and philosophy. She embroidered intricate Moorish designs on velour and cloth of gold, and illuminated prayers in Gothic characters on leaves of parchment. A missal that she painted, and some banners and ornaments for the altar in her chapel, are in the Cathedral at Granada. She had inherited a love for music and poetry. She read her father's favorite poet, Juan de Mena, and probably a Spanish translation of Dante. Her tutors, having studied at Salamanca University, must have given her at second hand the philosophy of Aristotle on which Saint Thomas Aquinas had built the great synthesis that was the foundation of medieval teaching.

Some notion of how science was taught at the period may be had from a philosophical and allegorical novel called the Vision deleytable, written by the Bachelor de la Torre about 1461 for the instruction of Prince Charles of Viana, Isabel's second fiance. "I perceive that motion is the cause of peat," says the young hero; and goes on to discuss why there are perpendicular lines on the sun, what makes the wind blow, why climates differ, why materials are different, what causes the sensations of smell, taste, hearing, why some plants are large and others small, the properties of medicines-and all this sugar-coated in the form of a novel! The tragedies of Seneca were known in Spain. One of the first books published after the introduction of printing in Isabel's reign was a translation of Plutarch's Lives by Alonso de Palencia; another by the same author was Josephus's History. Spanish versions of the Odyssey and the Aeneid were popular in the court of Isabel's brother. Books of medicine and surgery and anatomical charts were fairly common in a country where the Jews had long excelled in the healing art. From singing the Cancioneros that had been so dear to her father, Isabel evoked from the past the heroic story of her crusading ancestors; and from the chronicles of her own time, there unrolled before her keen intelligence and strong imagination a picture of the fascinating and terrifying world into which she had been born.

She was a King's daughter and the half-sister of a King, and there were certain inevitable questions that she must have asked her mother. What manner of man was Don Enrique IV, and what was he doing to bring back the glories of Saint Fernando and Alfonso the Wise, and heal the scars that the gemmed boots of Don Alvaro had left upon the face of a Castile weary of wars and feuds ?

His Majesty occasionally rode to Arevalo to visit his relatives. Isabel remembered his coming there one day with two cavaliers, the Marques of Villena and his brother Don Pedro Giron. These gentlemen, she learned afterwards from her mother, were the King's closest companions, his criados, who advised him in everything and who therefore were the two most powerful persons in the realm. Perhaps that was why they cut a more magnificent figure than King Enrique himself. They wore fine silks, bordered with cloth of gold, large and brilliant jewels, heavy gold chains cunningly wrought by smiths in Cordoba. The King looked shabby beside them. Loose-jointed, tall and awkward, he wore his long woolen cloak in a slovenly way, and instead of .the boots that Castilian cavaliers wore, had his small delicate feet shod in buskins, like those of the Moors, with mud on them, so that they looked all the more peculiar on the ends of his long legs. But his face puzzled the little princess even more than his queer clothes and his familiar way of speaking to the servants. His skin was very white and rather puffy. His eyes were blue, somewhat too large! and" somehow different from the eyes of other people. His nose was wide, flat and decidedly crooked, the result, it was said, of a fall he had as a boy. At the top of that prominent organ were two vertical furrows into which the bushy royal eyebrows curled up in a most peculiar manner. His beard was shaggy , with auburn streaks in it, and stuck out so oddly and abruptly that it made his face in profile look concave. But it was the eyes that one kept looking at and wondering about. There was a strange look of grievance and bewilderment in them, an inquietude that vaguely disturbed one. What did they remind her of ? His chaplain, who wrote a eulogy of him after his death, recorded that Enrique's "aspect was fierce, like that of a lion that by its very look strikes terror to all beholders." But it did not remind the chronicler Palencia of a lion at all. It reminded him of one of those monkeys that Isabel had seen in a wooden cage at the fair at Medina del Campo. His eyes glittered and roved about and looked ashamed, just like a monkey's.

His Majesty talked of one thing and another, sometimes turning for confirmation of what he said to the Marques of Villena, who nodded or put in a suave word in his slow drawl. This gentleman, had he had the good or evil fortune to be born later, would have been called a self-made man; for in the time of King Juan he was one Juan Pacheco, a page introduced at court by Don Alvaro de Luna. Though a professing christian, he was one of many with Jewish blood in their veins who owed their prosperity to the great Constable; on both sides he was descended from the Jew Ruy Capon. But, with other Conversos of the court, he had requited his benefactor by helping to overthrow him. Prince Enrique, whose elevation was thus hastened, rewarded Pacheco by making him Marques of Villena and his intimate companion and adviser .

Of the three men, the Marques was the most likable, because there was a twinkle in his shrewd eyes, and his beard and mustache were positively fascinating, so ingeniously had they been curled. Besides, he smelled delightfully of ambergris. He had a long aquiline nose, quite hooked in the middle and pointed at the tip; and somewhat too near the base of it, a narrow mouth with full lips, giving a curiously cherubic expression to the whole face. On either side of the mouth a carefully waxed and twisted mustache drooped somewhat dejectedly for a short distance, and then of a sudden turned out and up into two jaunty and devil-may-care points. The Marques could be charming when he wanted to be, and on this particular occasion he made himself most agreeable.

His brother, Don Pedro Giron, was also of that numerous class of Castilians known as Conversos, or New Christians. He must have made at least some pretence of being a Catholic, else he could hardly have attained to the Grand Mastership of the illustrious military Order of Calatrava, founded by two Cistercian monks and consecrated to the rule of St. Benedict. He was a sleek, well-fed man, probably a sensual and passionate man. He hardly glanced at the Queen, but his eyes returned from time to time to gloat upon the fresh blonde beauty of the young princess, and his look was one of those under which a woman has almost the sensation of being forcibly disrobed.

After the King and the two cavaliers had gone, Isabel found her mother weeping in her apartment. She may have divined that the royal visit in some way concerned her, but she was too young to be told of the indecent proposal that Don Pedro had made on another occasion to the Queen, and at the instigation - so he said - of King Enrique himself.
Excerpted from The Last Crusader: Isabella of Spain by William Thomas Walsh 1930, TAN Books and Publishers, Used with permission.

Sample Pages from [em]The Little Flower: The Story of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus[/em] by Mary Fabyan Windeatt

Chapter One

The Baby of the Martin Family

Papa was a watchmaker and had a rather long name - Louis Joseph Aloysius Stanislaus Martin. Mama's was much shortert - Zelie Marie Guerin. They were married on July 13, 1858, in the churcyh of Notre Dame in Alencon, France. Papa was about thirty-five years old at the time, Mama was twenty-six. A few people were afraid that the marriage was a mistake. You see, they were remembering those days long ago when Papa thought he had a vocation to be a monk. They also remembered that Mama once tried to enter the religious life, too - as a Sister of Saint Vincent de Paul.

"Louis Martin and Zelie Guerin are far too holy to live in the world," these people told one another. "Each would be better off in some monastery."

But this was not so. God did not want Papa or Mama to live in the cloister. He wanted them to live in the world. He wanted them to have many children and to teach these little ones the beauties of the Catholic faith. So it was that they married each other, that thirteenth day of July in the year 1858, and settled down to a quiet life in Alencon.

The first child God sent my parents was a girl. She was called Marie Louise in Baptism, although from the start Papa justa called her Marie - which is the French form for Mary.

"We'l giev each of our little ones the first name of Marie," he said. "Even the boys. In this way they'll all be consecrated to the Blessed Virgin."

It was a fine thought, and one with which Mama readily agreed. She had a very high opinion of Papa, and not a day passed that she did not thank God for giving her such a fine husband. How king he was! And how hard he worked at his comfortable home! Truly, there was no better man in Alencon, in all France than Louis Joseph Aloysius Stanislaus Martin!

As time passed, my parents prayed very hard that God would send them a little boy. They were anxious to have a son to give to the priesthood. But the next three babies were all girls: Marie Pauline, Marie Leonie, Marie Helen. It did seem as though the many prayers for a son, "a little missionary," would never be answered. Then one find day Marie Joseph Louis came to gladden the hearts of all.

"Here's our priest!" said Papa delightedly.

Alas! The new baby lived only five months. Then God called him to Heaven. The same thing happened with Marie Joseph John Baptist - the sixth child to come into our home. This little brother lived to be eight months old. Then he died, too.

Poor Papa! Poor Mama! They were deeply afflicted at the loss of their two little sons. But they loved God in a really honest way, which means that they loved His Will and trusted it more than their own. Therefore, they did not grieve long. Besides, faith told them that they had given new saints to love God in Heaven.

"The boys will pray for us," Papa said. "Just think! They went to god without one sin on their souls!"

Presently another girl was born in our house - Marie Celine. The next year came one more - Marie Melanie Therese. This little one lived only a short time. Then death came again as God called to Himself the fourth child in our family: five-year-old Marie Helen.

The neighbors were shocked at all the sorrow which came to our house. "Four children dead out of eight!" they said, sadly shaking their hads. "Really, it would be better if these little ones had never been born. Then their parents would have been spared a good deal of pain."

"No, no!" Mama would protest. "My children are not lost to me. Life is short. We shall meet again in Heaven."

"And we still have Marie, Pauline, Leonie and Celine to cheer us up," Papa would put in, comfortingly. "My business is prospering, too. Why should we complain?"

Everyone marveled at the wonderful way in which Papa and Mama accepted these fresh trials. Death ahd called four times in twelve years, yet the Martin house was still a cheerful place. So was the shop where Papa worked at his trade of watchmaker and jeweler. It was a pleasure to visit either one.

Time passed, and presently it was the year 1873. Marie and Pauline, students at the Visitation convent in Le Mans, were home in Alencon for their Christmas vacation. Late on the night of January 2, Papa went upstairs to the little room where they were sleeping.

"Wake up, children!" he cried excitedly. "I have some news for you!"

The girls sat up with a start, blinking at the light from Papa's lamp. What had happened? Why was their faither standing in the doorway with such a big smile on his face?

"What is it, Papa?" asked Marie anxiously. "Mama's not sick again?"

A dozen questions were on Pauline's tongue, but Papa gave her no change to ask them.

No, Marie. Mama's all right. And you have a new sister now - a beautiful little girl!"

Yes, it was January 2, 1873, and God had sent me to earth at last - to the wonderful Christian home of Louis Martin, watchmaker of Alencon!

Of course Marie and Pauline found it hard to go to sleep after Papa's visit. They asked each other many questions about me. For instance, was I a healthy baby! Would I stay with them or go to Heaven like the other little sisters and brothers? What would Papa and Mama call me? When would I be baptized? Who would be my godmother?

"Marie, I think you'll be chosen," said Pauline suddenly. "After all, you're the oldest - thirteen next month. I'm only eleven."

Marie smiled. To be godmother of the new little sister! That would be wonderful!

"Oh, I hope so," she said softly. "I've never been a godmother in my whoel life."

So it came to pass that on January 4, when I was two days old, a little procession set out from our house and made its way through the snowy streets to the church of Notre Dame. Our maid, Louise, carried me in her arms, well warpped in blankets. Then came Papa, with Marie and Pauline each hanging on an arm. There were also soem neighbors and friends.

"Papa, tell us again what the baby is going to be called," said Marie. "I"m so excited about being her godmother that I'm not just sure."

Papa laughed heartily. "Her name is a nice one, child. Marie Frances Therese." Then the happy light died out of his eyes as he gave a quick glance at the wintery sky.

"Dear God, please leave this cihld with us!" he whispered. "In the Name of Thy Son, Jesus Christ!"

There was good reaosn for Papa to be anxious about me. In the days following my Baptism, I fell ill and it seemed likely that God soon would take me to Himself in Heaven.

"The only way that this child can be saved is to give her to a good nurse," said the doctor. "One who lives in the country. Perhaps with proper food and plenty of fresh air and sunnshine, the baby will get strength enough to live."

Poor Mama! She did not want to be parted from me, yet she agreed to do whatever the doctor thought best. There was a farm woman she knew, Rose Taille, who might take care of me for a few months. She had been very successful in nursing other sick children. Perhaps she could help me, too.

Rose Taille wasn't sure about this. The day Mama brought her into Alencon to have a look at me, the good-natured woman gave a great sigh. She had never seen such a poor little scrap of humanity. Why, I was nothing but skin and bones! And so pale!

"I"ll do my best," she told Mama. "But I can promise you nothing, Madame. Ah, what a sickly little mite we have here! Only prayers will save her, I'm thinking."

Mama nodded. There would be plenty of prayers - to Saint Joseph, to the Blessed Virgin, to all the saints. Oh how she would pray for me! And Papa, too.

So Rose tok me out into the country, pausing frequently on the journey to see if I was still alive. She was a little worried about this new responsibility. She had four children of her own to care for, and it was necessary to help her husband with the farm work, too. Perhaps she shouldn't have taken me with her. If I died, people might blame her.

But I did not die. God heard the fervent prayers which Papa and Mama offered for my recovery, and at Rose's house I became a totally different child. This was not because the good woman had any luxuries to give me. On the contrary, she had very little time to spend on my care. Because there was no proper carriage, she would put me ina wheelbarrow filled with hay and take me out to where she and her husband were working. Sometimes I was left alone under a tree. At others, Rose put the wheelbarrow in the sun.

"The little one is too pale," she said. "Maybe the sunshine will help her to grow strong."

I did grow strong and brown. In a few months there was no longer any danger that I would die. Rose was very proud, and one May day she took me hom to show Mama how I had grown. Why, I weighed fourteen pounds!

"Therese is going to be all right, Madame," she said thankfully. "And I think I can leave her with you, now that she's nearly five months old."

Mama was so happy. "Rose, how can I thank you?" she cried. "You saved my little girls' life!"

Rose smiled shyly as she put me into Mama's arms. "I have to go to the market now," she said. "It's the day for selling butter, and I'm late."

Of course I could not understand what Rose was saying, but it did not take long for me to realize that she had left me in a stranger's arms. At once I started to cry. Nothing could make me stop. As time passed Mama became frightened. She tried to comfort me, to sing little songs, to rock me to sleep. I wasn't interested. I wanted Rose, no one else. Finally Mama called the maid.

"Louise, what am I going to do? Therese will make herself sick with all this crying!'

Louise peered down at me. I was screaming at the top of my lungs, and my face was a deep and angry red.

"Do you really want my opinion, Madame?"

"In Heaven's name, yes! None of my other children ever acted like this."

Louise smiled. "It's simple, Madame. The child wants Rose. She won't stop crying unless we take her to her."

"But Rose is selling butter at the market!"

"She could still look after the baby, Madame. And she'd be pleased if we told her how the little one misses her."

Poor Mama! She didn't want to let go of me but there was nothing else to do. "All right," she said sadly. "Take Therese down to the market, Louise. But if she still keeps on crying, what shall we do then?"

There was no need for Mama to worry about this. As soon as Louise and I arrived at the market, where women from the farms outside Alencon were selling their butter, I began to smile. Then I laughed and laughed, for my eyes had caught sight of Rose. I stretched out my arms happily. This was what I had wanted all the time - my mother!

I stayed at the market until noon, happy and contented as Rose and her friends sold their butter. A few people asked questions about me as I lay quietly in my good friend's arms.

"Rose, I didn't know you had such a little girl as this one," they remarked. "And she has fair hair. I thought your children were dark."

Rose laughed. "Oh, the child isn't mind," she said.

"Then whose is she?"

"She belongs to the Martin family, Lord bless her! And good as gold she is, too - at least when I'm looking after her!"

Excerpted from The Little Flower: The Story of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus by Mary Fabyan Windeatt Copyright 1944, TAN Books and Publishers, Used with permission.

Sample Pages from [em]The Mitchell's: Five for Victory[/em] by Hilda Van Stockum

1
Father Leaves

IN THE HOT July sun Washington's Union Station seemed like a vaulted oven. Joan felt the heat more than the other Mitchell children because she rushed around so. She could see little sweat drops glistening on her nose when she shut one eye. She tried it first on the left side and then on the right. It made her forget about Daddy. Joan hated "good-bys" and this one was going to be terrible, worse even than when Uncle Jim had left. Daddy hadn't been drafted very long yet, and the Mitchells had hoped he would have a long period of training first, like Uncle Jim. But the Navy needed electrical engineers so badly that they had made Daddy a lieutenant right away and after a few weeks' training he had been assigned to a ship. Now his family was seeing him off.

A lot of other people seemed to be leaving at the same time as Daddy. The station was full of uniforms, weeping ladies and shrieking children. Joan hoped Mother wouldn't cry. She knew Grannie would, but Grannie was so old Joan felt sure people would understand and forgive her. Besides, there were strangers who were sobbing too, and Joan appeared to be the only one who blushed for them. One soldier had to take leave of a dog, and the dog didn't understand. He was a strong dog and he was dragging a red-eyed lady around on a leash. When the soldier tried to rush past the ticket collector, the dog gave a howl and bounded after him, tripping up Daddy with the leash. Luckily Daddy was able to catch his balance in midair.

"Dogs!" he muttered in a tone of rage. Daddy hated dogs.

"I'm so sorry," began the lady on the leash, but the dog didn't wait for her to finish. He whisked her off and she soon vanished in the crowd.

"Dogs!" repeated Father, almost sounding like one himself, he growled so. "Useless parasites of civilization, objects of slobbering sentimentality, verminous vandals...."

"Daddy, don't say such bad words!" cried Joan, shocked. Daddy's blue eyes twinkled down on her.

"Joan," he said, "I know you and I warn you. Don't you go filling my house with animals while I'm gone. I don't want to come back to a zoo! And especially, no dogs! Do you hear?"

"Yes, Daddy," said Joan meekly, though with a heavy heart. Joan loved animals and longed for a pet, but Daddy said five children were noise, confusion and expense enough.

"Hurry, John!" cried Mother, who was trying to keep her youngest daughter from being trampled underfoot. "We're late!"

Joan's heart skipped a beat. What if Daddy missed the train and let the ship go off without him? Would he be courtmartialed? They were very strict in the Navy.

"Daddy! Daddy! Hurry!" she cried, tugging at his uniform.

But Daddy was as calm as ever. Now they were shoving past the ticket collector and there beside the platform stood the train, panting to leave. Lieutenant Mitchell took a hasty farewell of his family. First Grannie, then Mother, who held Baby Timmy, then Joan, Patsy, Peter and Angela. The train was already in motion when he jumped on, his cap at a rakish angle.

"Don't forget your gun!" shouted Peter after him. "And shoot first, hear?"

"And bring back a baby-orphan from Europe!" yelled Patsy. Daddy was already too far off to hear, which was just as well, thought Mother. She had enough children to take care of at present.

"You take Peter and Patsy, Grannie, will you?" she said. "And watch out for those luggage carts. Joan! You hold Angela."

Another train thundered into the station, oozing passengers, who pushed past Mother and unsettled her pretty new hat with the red cherries. It dropped over one ear, giving Mother a wild look as she clutched Timmy and tried to watch over the other children as well.

"Take care!" she cried, but Joan had already caught Angela before the child could fall off the platform.

Angela was the beauty of the family and she had need to be, as Mother often remarked grimly. If she hadn't been so cherubic, with long blond curls, wistful blue eyes and the most enchanting little legs in the whole wide world, she'd surely have been disowned long ago! She was more trouble than the rest of the family put together. Now she set up a howl as Joan attempted to force her to follow the family procession.

"My shoe!" she screamed. "My li'l shoe!" Joan looked down. Yes—Angela was walking on one sock and one shoe.

"Mother! Mother!" cried Joan. "Wait!" Mother heard her, notwithstanding the roar and rumble of traffic.

"What is it?" she asked, turning around.

"Angela has lost her shoe."

"Oh my goodness," sighed Mother. "And I've spent my last shoe stamp. We'll just have to find it." She gazed around at the shuffling crowd.

"Grannie!" she cried. Grannie had gone on, not noticing the interruption, but Peter pulled her to a standstill.

"Mother is calling you."

"Yes, what?" said Grannie. She was thinking of Daddy and it was hard to make her understand.

"Shoe? Which shoe?" she asked.

"Never mind," said Mother. "You go on with Peter and Patsy; we'll find you in the waiting room. I've got to hurry and look for that shoe."

So Grannie walked on with her portion of the Mitchell family, while Mother straightened her hat, settled Timmy firmly on her arm and ran back to Joan and Angela, who each wanted to go in a different direction. Poor Joan's face looked like a radish.

"It's no use," she cried bitterly. "I can't do a thing with her." And with melancholy eyes she watched a bead of sweat roll down her nose and jump off at the tip.

"My shoe!" cried Angela in a heartbroken voice. "The pretty li'l one!"

"Where did you lose it?" asked Mother, peering around in vain.

"Down there," said Angela, pointing a fat little finger at the tracks. "I threw him."

"You threw it?" cried Mother indignantly. Joan couldn't help laughing, and after casting an angry look at her, Mother had to laugh, too. The little white shoe perched jauntily on one of the gleaming steel tracks.

"How shall we ever get it back?" sighed Mother.

"Why don't you ask a porter?" suggested Joan.

"I see one there," and she was off, presently returning with a redcap, who took in the situation at once.

"I'll have it for you in a jiffy, ma'am," he promised, lowering himself to the tracks while Joan watched anxiously for possible trains. The porter picked up the shoe, dusted it on his sleeve, and leaped back on to the platform with astonishing agility.

"Now don't go losing it again, honey," he told Angela as he bent to put the shoe back on her foot. Angela rewarded him with a golden smile. The porter flashed his teeth at her and straightened up again.

"Lawdy, ma'am!" he cried, rolling his eyes and pointing at Timmy, who sat still as an angel on Mother's arm. "That chile is eating your hat!" Mother hastily lowered Timmy to look at him. The baby gazed back at her complacently, his face smeared with red paint. In his hands he held the pretty bunch of imitation cherries, several of them obviously missing.

"Goodness, I hope they're not poisonous!" cried Mother, trying to clean Timmy's face with her handkerchief.

The redcap laughed. "I don't reckon so, ma'am," he murmured consolingly. "They're just paper and paint; he'll never notice it. It was your hat I was thinking of, such a pretty hat, too. Give me the boy, I'll tote him for you; you look plumb tuckered out." And the good-natured porter took Timmy and put him on his shoulder. Timmy gazed triumphantly down on Mother.

"That is a relief," sighed Mother gratefully, fanning herself with her plucked hat.

"Where were you all fixing to go?" asked the redcap.

"To the waiting room," said Mother, hurrying to keep up with his long strides. "I have more children there, waiting with my mother-in-law."

"Whew!" whistled the porter. "How are you all going to get home?"

"In a taxi, I suppose," said Mother wearily. She couldn't face the long bus journey after all this. It meant changing into another bus, half-way, too.

"You'll need a moving van," the redcap told her. He pushed ahead, Timmy crowing with delight at seeing so much of the world. Mother and Joan followed, with Angela between them.

When they arrived at the spacious waiting room with its ocean of seats, Mother asked: "Do you see Grannie anywhere?" Joan peered around.

"No," she said.

"I wonder where she went?" murmured Mother.

"There's a lady's waiting room further on," the porter pointed out helpfully. "Perhaps she went there."

"Yes . . ." said Mother. "That will be it," and she made a motion to go on, but Joan had caught sight of a glass counter and cried:

"Oh! Look at the lovely toys!"

"Hush!" cried Mother warningly, but it was too late, Angela had heard.

"Which toys?" she cried, pulling herself loose and streaking off in the direction Joan had pointed.

"Oh dear, I'm sorry," said Joan. Mother shrugged her shoulders. It couldn't be helped, and slowly they followed Angela, who was already squatting on the floor before the counter, wrapped in bliss.

"Oh! see? Look at the pussy, oh, the sweet pussy! Oh Mommy, Mommy, I want the pussy! I want that pussy, Mommy, that cute li'l pussy!" Angela jumped to her feet again and skipped up and down in a frenzy of joy, her curls flying, her eyes blazing blue fire.

"How much is it?" Mother asked timidly of a very superior lady who sat behind the counter, slowly chewing gum with an air as if the toys were no concern of hers.

"Oh, that..." she said, looking down her nose at the true-to-life fur kitten of Angela's choice.

"Two-ninety-eight," she announced.

Mother was aghast. "For that little thing?"

"Oh, Mother, buy it for her!" pleaded Joan. "She likes it so much."

"But I can't," said Mother wildly, remembering the few dollar bills in her slender purse which still had to yield the taxi's fare as well as the porter's tip. "I just can't."

Angela looked incredulous. She couldn't have that pussy? Unbelievable! She sat down on the ground and started a howl which seemed to come from the toes of her little feet, winding its way through her chubby body and exploding from her rosy lips with the force of a blackout siren. Even the lady behind the counter stopped chewing and took notice.

"She can't do that here," she remarked in an injured voice, frowning down on what she could see of Angela through two layers of glass.

"Oh, can't she?" echoed Mother bitterly.

But Joan had already taken the matter in hand. Seemingly heedless of Angela, she studied the pussycat with cold disdain.

"I don't like that pussy," she said loudly. "I bet it can't walk, or scratch, or mew, or even purr." Angela stopped screaming and listened. She had been disappointed in toys before. Was this pussy, perhaps, not as perfect as it seemed?

"It is, too, a neat pussy," she said defiantly.

But Joan perceived that her words had taken effect. "Santa Claus has much neater pussies..." she began. "And look... there's Grannie!" Yes, there was Grannie, who had waxed impatient and had sallied forth, remembering that Mother might have meant the general waiting room after all.

"Oh, I'm so glad you're all right," she cried, seeing the little group before the glass counter. "I was afraid something had happened to you."

"And I," began Mother, but she was interrupted by shrieks from Peter and Patsy, who had discovered the toys, while Angela ran to her grandmother and poured out her woes.

"Mommy won't buy the li'l pussy," she said, pointing to the kitten.

"Oh, I'll pay for it," said Grannie immediately, opening her bag.

"Grannie dear, you mustn't," cried Mother, alarmed. "It's two-ninety-eight."

"Buy me something, buy me something," cried Peter, Patsy and Joan, dancing around like wild Indians.

"Don't you all want a taxi now?" asked the porter, growing impatient at last. But Grannie had approached the glass counter, fumbling with her purse, and Mother sighed.

"You'd better give the baby to me if you are in a hurry," she told the porter. "I can see we won't be through here for some time. Please, Mother," she begged, laying a hand on Grannie's shoulder, "Don't ruin yourself. Let me pay for this; I can take it out of next month's allowance."

But Grannie was stubborn. "I don't have to go to the hairdresser now John and Jim have both left," she said. "I'll wash my own hair and be rich." Mother couldn't say anything after that, for Angela had grabbed her pussy and run away with it like a dog with a bone, doubtless fearing that Grannie might change her mind. She was half-way down the huge room before Mother caught up with her.

"I want candy," she announced as her eyes lit on a slot-machine. Mother got her some.

"It's all wrong," she thought. "The child is being spoilt, but we've got to get home some time," and she walked quickly back with a now radiant Angela.

Grannie was sitting triumphantly on a bench with Timmy on her lap. The redcap had gone and the other children were blissful with presents. Joan and Patsy had each chosen a children's magazine and Peter was zooming a little wooden airplane about.

"I paid for everything," crowed Grannie, "even for the porter."

"You shouldn't have done it," murmured Mother, but she felt relieved and began to cheer up. "Come along, chickens," she said. "Peter, don't fly that plane, it might hit someone."

But Peter had already let it go and it did hit someone, a fat gentleman who looked annoyed and crushed it with his foot. Peter picked up the wreck and wept over it. The other children gathered around to mourn with him.

"Come along," cried Mother. "I still have to cook dinner! It was your own fault, Peter. I told you not to fly it here, it's too dangerous."

"I had to," Peter defended himself. "In a war you can't just stay home because it's safer!"

"Perhaps that man was an anti-aircraft gun," suggested Patsy.

"No, he looked more like a barrage balloon," remarked Joan.

"Yes," agreed Peter, and a smile shone through his tears. He lovingly wrapped the remains of his plane in his handkerchief, with a vague idea of "gluing" them when he got home.

"Come, children!" cried Mother from afar. "We have to get a taxi!"

"A taxi? Are we going in a taxi? Oh boy!" And the children ran like hounds after a scent.

"May I sit in front? May I? May I?"

"Peter may," Mother decided, "because he was good about his wrecked plane."

They still had to find a taxi, however. There was a crowd waiting and there weren't enough taxis to go around. People had to double up. But, as Joan remarked, the Mitchells were double already, and when they at last had their taxi they filled it completely. Peter and Patsy were squeezed in front with the driver, congratulating each other on their luck.

"We see all the new things, and in the back they see only old things," Patsy summed up. Then they took the driver into their confidence and told him that their Daddy had gone to the war.

"Why don't you go to the war?" asked Patsy. "You're a man, too."

"They won't have me," grumbled the taxi driver. "I'm too old."

"Oh." The children looked at him. He did look rather old with wrinkles in his face and whitish kind of hair. Not as white as Grannie's, but white as a spider's web. Grannie's was white as a Christmas tree angel.

"It's like me," said Peter. "I'm too young." The taxi driver's face grew still more wrinkled as he gave Peter a sideways glance.

"I guess you are, at that," he admitted. "How old are you?"

"Six," said Peter. "And anyway, I've to look after my family."

"Oh," said the driver. "You've a family, have you?"

"Well, all of us," explained Peter, sweeping his arm around and hitting Patsy in the face. Patsy protested, but Peter paid no attention.

"I'm the only man in the family, the only one that can talk. It's a big... a big... what was the word Daddy said, Patsy?"

"I don't care," sulked Patsy. "You hit me."

"Well, anyway," Peter went on hurriedly, "I've a lot of expendents."

"Dependents, you mean," chuckled the taxi driver. "Or is it expenses?" Peter thought it better to let it go. That was the trouble with new words—they were very attractive, but people were always asking what they meant.

"Daddy had to go to the war because people were making so many mistakes," he explained, changing the subject.

"Yes," said Patsy. "I guess we'll win soon now."

"It can't be too soon for me," sighed the taxi driver. "I've got two sons in Italy."

They were nearing Chevy Chase circle and soon the children cried:

"Here we are! Here we are!" as the taxi stopped in front of a comfortable stucco house, which looked rather the worse for wear. Several dolls and a toy gun lay scattered over the front steps. While Mother paid the driver Grannie lifted Timmy out and the other children stumbled on to the sidewalk without assistance. The house looked cold and empty, and Joan remembered that it was Cora the maid's day off.

She skipped up the steps and went to open the door. She pulled at it and pushed and kicked. She rattled the knob. It wouldn't open. Patsy and Peter came and pushed and rattled and kicked, too, but it didn't help. The door was definitely locked. Oh, well! They ran to the back door and tried it. No, sir, locked, too. Then they went to the cellar door. Also locked. Joan thought this must be the very first time since they lived in the house that all the doors were locked at the same time. The children ran back to the front again. Mother was coming up the steps, loaded with Timmy, and Grannie came puffing after her.

"The doors are locked!" cried Peter.

"Oh!" Mother sat down on a step and tried to open her bag while balancing Timmy on her knee.

"I'll take him," said Joan eagerly, grasping her fat little brother in her strong arms and lifting him up.

"Oh dear," cried Mother, rummaging frantically through her bag and scattering ration books, fountain pen, spectacles, stamps and letters around her. "Oh dear, how stupid, how ridiculous—whatever shall we do?"

"What is it, Mother?" cried the children. Mother looked ready to burst into tears. She wiped her forehead, pushing her hat back, the sorry hat without its cherries, and glanced up at the closed house.

"Oh, nothing," she sighed. "Only—Daddy has the key."

 


Excerpted from The Mitchell's: Five for Victory by Hilda Van Stockum Copyright 1945, Used with permission from Bethlehem Books

Sample Pages from [em]The Outlaws of Ravenhurst[/em] by Sr. M. Imelda Wallace, S.L.

Introduction
During the preparation of the 4-Sight Edition of the Catholic Authors Series for Grades 7 to 10, our staff was engaged in selecting authentic literature that clothes truth in the splendor of beauty and, by its inherent perfection, purifies the heart of man, impels the will, and exalts to action.

We read practically all the books by Catholic authors for the junior high school level. We were hard put to find enough artistically valid books for a full-blown reading program. It is incontrovertible that we have a growing number of Catholic authors invincible in their Faith and increasingly indisputable in their art who do not invent escapes from reality but dramatize the seizure of it. We gave their work complete and grateful treatment in 4-Sight.

But these books were oases. Hundreds of others were unalleviated sand. The number of books that should not have been written is staggering. Laid end to end they should lead from wherever they are to an attic.

In desperation, we dug into our bag of out-of-print books. We remembered Outlaws of Ravenhurst from our recent youth. To our delight, we could recall plot, characters, incidents. Now, we opened it again.

Here was manna in our desert. The men were manly, the women womanly. And the boys were not self-righteous Horners sitting in corners-sugarplums pulling other sugarplums out of a pie and eating them without relish. Here were clean, poignant parallels of Tarsicius and Sebastian and Campion; here were other Christs and other crucifixions-and, yes, here was Judas.

Clearly, this was not the work of a hagiographer turned storyteller and perpetrating vicious portraits of the saints as people born with holy water in their veins that immunized them to concupiscence.

Here was struggle between good and evil, beginning in the center of men's hearts and spreading out in concentric, enveloping circles. In miniature was the recurring and current conflict of the world: Christ against antichrist, and the Mother of God recognized in her practiced historic role of saving men in the imminence of their peril and making them strong out of weakness.

What a contrast to the many books full of pasteboard boys and girls threatened by transparent plots of butter-milk villains! What a relief it was to find no invertebrate heroines simpering in synthetic halos, enumerating their novenas to assorted saints with the sweet stoicism of dowagers unveiling their operations, and negotiating lachrymose conversions right and left.

Here were boy and man standing in the full stature of body-spirit, choosing between good and evil and coming to grips with the devil. No secularism here, relegating God to the periphery of grace before big meals. Here Christ in the heart of His Mother was the center-the Catholic center of living. These were total Christians living their Faith to the hilt of their claymores. What an exhilarating departure from "how Joe and Harry spent their vacation" circumscribed by a canoe, several unconvincing catfish, and abominable prose-running the emotional gamut from A to B with a narrative temperature that couldn't incubate the egg of a wren.

Furthermore, we had always been saying that a man becomes what he reads: he reads mush and you can pour him through a keyhole; he wrestles with giants and becomes a king. Here, reading a book within a book, the hero meets God's nobility and grows to the stature of early Christians who stood heaven-high in the Colosseum.

The plot cascaded down the jagged rocks of the Highlands, suspense was keyed like a fiddle string, and the people didn't talk like characters in novels. The story had a heart that was warm, palpitating, compassionate, and capable of refreshing indignation.

This was high adventure, indeed. This was a book. We contacted the author, Sister Imelda. Where could we procure copies of Outlaws of Ravenhurst? We were told we couldn't. The book was not in print. Why hadn't it been reprinted? Publishers had been asked to reprint it but refused to.

But it must be reprinted! We'd publish it ourselves -all right? Certainly, delighted, decidedly delighted! Would she simplify the dialect for youngsters who read while they run the bases, but retain the good smack of Scotch ( dialect) ? Yes, she had already done that.

Had she considered telescoping several chapters and poising that twelfth climax on a precipice edge? Very well.

Would she delete a few things that might irritate fastidious critics who write with scalpels? Yes.

Could the story be dropped like a hot iron at the finish? Certainly.

Could we begin at once? At once.

Sister Imelda is delightful.

Here is Outlaws of Ravenhurst, revised, reset, illustrated-"for God and Our Lady!"

Truth is compelling when it is real-ized. It is realized when seen. It is seen when it is em-bodied, incarnated, act-ualized. Literature at its best is truth clothed in the splendor of beauty, capable of impelling vacillation from ('Not yet, O Lord," to "Now!" We believe this book to be truth in raiment becoming it.

GEORGE N. SCHUSTER, S.M.

Contents

INTRODUCTION VII

Chapter I. THE GRAY-CLOAKED STRANGER I

Chapter 2. BROWN-HEAD GOES FISHING 5

Chapter 3. UNCLE ROGER 16
Chapter 4. WHEN MEN PLAY MARBLES 22
Chapter 5. CASTLE RAVENHURST 33
Chapter 6. BY THE OLD FIREPLACE 44
Chapter 7. MY FRIEND GODFREY 58
Chapter 8. THE RUIN IN THE WOOD 70
Chapter 9 .THE MERCY OF A COWARD 84
Chapter 10. SECRET OF THE FIREPLACE 95
Chapter I I. RETURN OF LANG-SWORD 105
Chapter I2. LAST STAND OF THE OLD EARL 117
Chapter I3. GUARDIANS OF THE KING 129
Chapter I4. GLORY OF THE BITTER END 143
Chapter I5 .SPLINTER OF THE LANG-SWORD 155
Chapter I6. ESCAPE 160
Chapter I7. SECRET PASSAGES 166
Chapter I8. SIR JAMES OF GORDON 172
Chapter I9. MUCKLE JOHN 188
Chapter 20. GORDON FOR GOD AND OUR LADY 195
Chapter 2I .ROCK RAVEN NO MORE 206
Chapter 22. IN THE HOLLOW OF GOD'S HAND 212
Chapter 23. OUR LADY'S HOME 224

Chapter I

THE GRAY - CLOAKED STRANGER

NIGHT LAY on the long swelling waves of the Chesapeake Bay: no wind, no star, a murky darkness. The spars of an unlighted ship loomed through the fog and sank into fog again. Stealthily, from the bulky gloom of the deck, a dory slid on oiled ropes to the somber waters. Two seamen followed. Then down the ropes came an object which seemed to be a man with a bundle, wrapped in a long gray cloak. The dory pulled off and was swallowed by the fog.

For an hour the ship swung at anchor, still no light aloft or alow, and no sound save the dull lapping of the waves. Then from the stern a bell began to toll. One slow, booming tone rolled off and died away before the next followed. As if drawn out of the fog by the bellts deep calling, the dory came gliding back again. Two seamen were at the oars. The anchor sobbed up from the sea's grip. The tide was offshore and the ship floated out with the current, unlighted, silent, back into the white smother from which it had come.

Keen and marrow-searching, the morning wind rose along the shore of Maryland. Dense fog became a fine, drizzling rain turning to sleet. Breasting it along lonely ways among the sand dunes, hurried a lean, bent man carrying a bundle under his cloak - a long, muddied, threadbare garment as gray as rain-soaked ashes.

The bundle was hard to manage. It seemed to move of its own accord. Once in a while a sound came out of it, a wailing cry, "Dunkie Teewee! Take Dordie out."

"Sh!" the man would whisper. His tone was a stern command, but his eyes glowed with great love. The bundle would sniffle a moment or two, then grow quiet. After hours of tramping, the man found a nook where the forest met the last sand dunes. Here, crouched between a low bank and a tree, with his own body shielding the bundle from the sleet, the man opened his cloak and loosened the sailcloth and the plaid shawl within. A fat fist slipped out of the opening, then a i tousle of brown curls, a gurgling laugh, and a piping voice, "Dood Dunkie Teewee! Take it all off!"

"Hush!" came the man's low command in atone that would have been menacing except that it was so deeply kind. "Drink." He drew a flask from his cloak.

The child drank, but all the while he stared over the bottle's rim at the man-a wise, wide, baby stare. His eyes were blue and deep as the sea, with a flash in their depths that in the turning of an instant might be fun or fury; just now the eyes shone with a puzzled and half-angry trust.

Even in this short time the little fist which guided the flask was growing blue though it gripped with deft strength-a swordsman's right hand still in the making. The stranger hastened to enclose the baby in his warm coverings. He wound the cloak about himself and his bundle, left the shelter, and hurried on through the stinging sleet.

By midafternoon they had reached the top of a rough knob. Here the man seemed to be expecting someone. Placing himself in a spot well screened by the under- brush, he kept a constant eye on a little path which wound around the base of the hill.

It was almost sundown before the expected one arrived, a gentle old man on a steady-going bay horse. His round, low-crowned hat, sober clothing, and great saddlebags gave him the appearance of a missionary passing from one Mass station to another. If the man of the gray cloak was expecting the meeting, this other person evidently was not; yet the stranger studied the missionary's face with a look of recognition and relief. Then, turning sharply, he slipped off in an opposite direction across the hill and down the other side until he reached the path at a point where the horseman must soon pass.

Here the stranger took his queer bundle from beneath his cloak and propped it up against a stump. He loosened the wrappings from the baby's face and pressed upon the Ilittle brow one long, long kiss. The child awoke and cried out to him. The gray-cloaked figure whirled and darted up the hill into a thicket. Perhaps he feared the horseman would come before time. Perhaps he could not trust himself further lest he fail to carry out his plan.

The child, left suddenly alone, cried out at first as if it were some game; then, cross from weariness, he screamed and struggled with his coverings. At last, as if too weary to battle longer, his voice dropped to a convulsed sobbing, "Dunkie! Dunkie Teewee!"

Far up the slope the stranger knelt between a ledge and a twisted mass of brush and vine. His clenched hands were outstretched on the rock, gripped upon each other till the fingernails bit into the lean flesh. His hollow, weather-furrowed face was set by the clenched will behind it, but his eyes were wet with an agony of love and longing.


Excerpted from The Outlaws of Ravenhurst by Sr. M. Imelda Wallace, S.L. Used with permission from Lepanto Press

Sample Pages from [em]The Princess and Curdie[/em] by George MacDonald

I The Mountain

Curdie was the son of Peter the miner. He lived with his father and mother in a cottage built on a mountain, and he worked with his father inside the mountain.

A mountain is a strange and awful thing. In old times, without knowing so much of their strangeness and awfulness as we do, people were yet more afraid of mountains. But then somehow they had not come to see how beautiful they are as well as awful, and they hated them - and what people hate they must fear. Now that we have learned to look at them with admiration, perhaps we do not always feel quite awe enough of them. To me they are beautiful terrors.

I will try to tell you what they are. They are portions of the heart of the earth that have escaped from the dungeon down below, and rushed up and out. For the heart of the earth is a great wallowing mass, not of blood, as in the hearts of men and animals, but of glowing hot melted metals and stones. And as our hearts keep us alive, so that great lump of heat keeps the earth alive: it is a huge power of buried sunlight - that is what it is. Now think: out of that cauldron, where all the bubbles would be as big as the Alps if it could get room for its boiling, certain bubbles have bubbled out and escaped - up and away, and there they stand in the cool, cold sky -- mountains. Think of the change, and you will no more wonder that there should be something awful about the very look of a mountain: from the darkness - for where the light has nothing to shine upon, it is much the same as darkness - from the heat, from the endless tumult of boiling unrest - up, with a sudden heavenward shoot, into the wind, and the cold, and the starshine, and a cloak of snow that lies like ermine above the blue-green mail of the glaciers; and the great sun, their grandfather, up there in the sky; and their little old cold aunt, the moon, that comes wandering about the house at night; and everlasting stillness, except for the wind that turns the tocks and caverns into a roaring organ for the young archangels that are studying how to let out the pent-up praises of their hearts, and the molten music of the streams, rushing ever from the bosoms of the glaciers fresh-born. Think too of the change in their own substance - no longer molten and soft, heaving and glowing, but hard and shining and cold. Think of the creatures scampering over and burrowing in it, and the birds building their nests upon it, and the trees growing out of its sides, like hair to clothe it, and the lovely grass in the valleys, and the gracious flowers even at the very edge of its armour of ice, like the rich embroidery of the garment below, and the rivers galloping down the valleys in a tumult of white and green! And along with all these, think of the terrible precipices down which the traveller may fall and be lost, and the frightful gulfs of blue air cracked in the glaciers, and the park profound lakes, covered like little arctic oceans with floating lumps of ice. All this outside the mountain! But the inside, who shall tell what lies there? Caverns of awfullest solitude, their walls miles thick, sparkling with ores of gold or silver, copper or iron, tin or mercury, studded perhaps with precious stones -perhaps a brook, with eyeless fish in it, running ceaseless, cold and babbling, through banks crusted with carbuncles and golden topazes, or over a gravel of which some of the stones are rubies and emeralds, perhaps diamonds and sapphires -who can tell? - and whoever can't tell is free to think -all waiting to flash, waiting for millions of ages - ever since the earth flew off from the sun, a great blot of fire, and began to cool. Then there are caverns full of water, numbing cold, fiercely hot -hotter than any boiling water. From some of these the water cannot get out, and from others it runs in channels as the blood in the body: little veins bring it down from the ice above the great caverns of the mountain's heart whence the arteries let it out again, gushing in pipes and clefts and ducts of all shapes and kinds, through and through its bulk, until it springs new-born to the light, and rushes down the mountain-side in torrents, and down the valleys in rivers -down, down, rejoicing, to the mighty lungs of the world, that is the sea, where it is tossed in storms and cyclones, heaved up in billows, twisted in waterspouts, dashed to mist upon rocks, beaten by millions of tails, and breathed by millions of gills, whence at last, melted into vapour by the sun, it is lifted up pure into the air, and borne by the servant winds back to the mountain tops and the snow, the solid ice, and the molten stream.

Well, when the heart of the earth has thus come rushing up among her children, bringing with it gifts of all that she possesses, then straightway into it rush her children to see what they can find there. With pickaxe and spade and crowbar, with boring chisel and blasting powder, they force their way back: is it to search for what toys they may have left in their long-forgotten nurseries? Hence the mountains that lift their heads into the clear air, and are dotted over with the dwellings of men, are tunnelled and bored in the darkness of their bosoms by the dwellers in the houses which they hold up to the sun and air .

Curdie and his father were of these: their business was to bring to light hidden things; they sought silver in the rock and found it, and carried it out. Of the many other precious things in their mountain they knew little or nothing. Silver ore was what they were sent to find, and in darkness and danger they found it. But oh, how sweet was the air on the mountain face when they came out at sunset to go home to wife and mother! They did breathe deep then!

The mines belonged to the king of the country, and the miners were his servants, working under his overseers and officers. He was a real king- that is, one who ruled for the good of his people, and not to please himself, and he wanted the silver not to buy rich things for himself, but to help him to govern the country, and pay the armies that defended it from certain troublesome neighbours, and the judges whom he set to portion out righteousness amongst the people, so that they might learn it themselves, and come to do without judges at all. Nothing that could be got from the heart of the earth could have been put to better purposes than the silver the king's miners got for him. There were people in the country who, when it came into their hands, degraded it by locking it up in a chest, and then it grew diseased, and was called mammon, and bred all sorts of quarrels; but when first it left the king's hands it never made any but friends, and the air of the world kept it clean.

About a year before this story began, a series of very remarkable events had just ended. I will narrate as much of them as will serve to show the tops of the roots of my tree.

Upon the mountain, on one of its many claws, stood a grand old house, half farmhouse, half castle, belonging to the king; and there his only child, the Princess Irene, had been brought up till she was nearly nine years old, and would doubtless have continued much longer, but for the strange events to which I have referred.

At that time the hollow places of the mountain were inhabited by creatures called goblins, who for various reasons and in various ways made themselves troublesome to all, but to the little princess dangerous. Mainly by the watchful devotion and energy of Curdie, however, their designs had been utterly defeated, and made to recoil upon themselves to their own destruction, so that now there were very few of them left alive, and the miners did not believe that there was a single goblin remaining in the whole inside of the mountain.

The king had been so pleased with the boy - then approaching thirteen years of age -that when he carried away his daughter he asked him to accompany them; but he was still better pleased with him when he found that he preferred staying with his father and mother. He was aright good king, and knew that the love ofa boy who would not leave his father and mother to be made a great man, was worth ten thousand offers to die for his sake, and would prove so when the right time came. For his father and mother, they would have given him up without a grumble, for they were just as good as the king, and he and they perfectly understood each other; but in this matter, not seeing that he could do anything for the king which one of his numerous attendants could not do as well, Curdie felt that it was for him to decide. So the king took a kind farewell of them all and rode away, with his daughter on his horse before him.

A gloom fell upon the mountain and the miners when he was gone, and Curdie did not whistle for a whole week. As for his verses, there was no occasion to make any now. He had made them only to drive away the goblins, and they were all gone - a good riddance - only the princess was gone too! He would rather have had things as they were, except for.the princess's sake. But whoever is diligent will soon be cheerful, and though the miners missed the household of the castle, they yet managed to get on without them.

Peter and his wife, however ,were troubled with the fancy that they had stood in the way of their boy's good fortune. It would have been such a fine thing for him and them too, they thought, if he had ridden with the good king's train. How beautiful he looked, they said, when he rode the king's own horse through the river that the goblins had sent out of the hill!. He might soon have been a captain, they did belIeve! The good, kind people dId not reflect that the road to the next duty is the only straight one, or that, for their fancied good, we should never wish our children or friends to do what we would not do ourselves if we were in their position. We must accept righteous sacrifices as well as make them.


Excerpted from The Princess and Curdie by George MacDonald, 1882

Sample Pages from [em]The Princess and the Goblin[/em] by George MacDonald

I Why the Princess has a Story about Her

There was once a little princess whose father was king over a great country full of mountains and valleys. His palace was built upon one of the mountains, and was very grand and beautiful. The princess, whose name was Irene, was born there, but she was sent soon after her birth, because her mother was not very strong, to be brought up by country people in a large house, half castle, half farmhouse, on the side of another mountain, about half-way between its base and its peak.

The princess was a sweet little creature, and at the time my story begins, was about eight years old, I think, but she got older very fast. Her face was fair and pretty, with eyes like two bits of night-sky, each with a star dissolved in the blue. Those eyes you would have thought must have known they came from there, so often were they turned up in that direction. The ceiling of her nursery was blue, with stars in it, as like the sky as they could make it. But I doubt if ever she saw the real sky with the stars in it, for a reason which I had better mention at once.

These mountains were full of hollow places underneath; huge caverns, and winding ways, some with water running through them, and some shining with all colours of the rainbow when a light was taken in. There would not have been much known about them, had there not been mines there, great deep pits, with long galleries and passages running off from them, which had been dug to get at the ore of which the mountains were full. In the course of digging, the miners came upon many of these natural caverns. A few of them had far-off openings out on the side of a mountain, or into a ravine.

Now in these subterranean caverns lived a strange race of beings, called by some gnomes, by some kobolds, by some goblins. There was a legend current in the country, that at one time they lived above ground, and were very like other people. But for some reason or other, concerning which there were different legendary theories, the king had laid what they thought too severe taxes upon them, or had required observances of them they did not like, or had begun to treat them with more severity, in some way or other, and impose stricter laws; and the consequence was that they had all disappeared from the face of the country. According to the legend, however, instead of going to some other country, they had all taken refuge in the subterranean caverns, whence they never came out but at night, and then seldom showed themselves in any numbers, and never to many people at once. It was only in the least frequented and most difficult parts of the mountains that they were said to gather even at night in the open air . Those who had caught sight of any of them said that they had greatly altered in the course of generations; and no wonder, seeing they lived away from the sun, in cold and wet and dark places. They were now, not ordinarily ugly, but either absolutely hideous, or ludicrously grotesque both in face and form. There was no invention, they said, of the most lawless imagination expressed by pen or pencil, that could surpass the extravagance of their appearance. But I suspect those who said so, had mistaken some of their animal companions for the goblins themselves - of which more by and by. The goblins themselves were not so far removed from the human as such a description would imply. And as they grew misshapen in body, they had grown in knowledge and cleverness, and now were able to do things no mortal could see the possibility of. But as they grew in cunning, they grew in mischief, and their great delight was in every way they could think of to annoy the people who lived in the open-air-storey above them. They had enough of affection left for each other, to preserve them from being absolutely cruel for cruelty's sake to those that came in their way; but still they so heartily cherished the ancestral grudge against those who occupied their former possessions, and especially against the descendants of the king who had caused their expulsion, that they sought every opportunity of tormenting them in ways that were as odd as their inventors and although dwarfed and misshapen, they had strength equal to theIr cunning. In the process of time they had got a king and a government of their own, whose chief business, beyond their own simple affairs, was to devise trouble for their neighbours. It will now be pretty evident why the little princess had never seen the sky at night. They were much too afraid of the goblins to let her out of the house then, even in company with ever so many attendants; and they had good reason, as we shall see by and by.


Excerpted from The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald, 1871

Sample Pages from [em]The Railway Children[/em] by E. Nesbit

CHAPTER 1

The Beginning of Things

They were not railway children to begin with. I don't suppose they had ever thought about railways except as a means of getting to Maskelyne and Cook's, the Pantomime, Zoological Gardens, and Madame Tussaud's. They were just ordinary suburban children, and they lived with their Father and Mother in an ordinary red-brick-fronted villa, with coloured glass in the front door, a tiled passage that was called a hall, a bath-room with hot and cold water, electric bells, french windows, and a good deal of white paint, and "every modem convenience", as the house-agents say.

There were three of them. Roberta was the eldest. Of course, Mothers never have favourites, but if their Mother had had a favourite, it might have been Roberta. Next came Peter, who wished to be an Engineer when he grew up; and the youngest was Phyllis, who meant extremely well.

Mother did not spend all her time in paying dull calls to dull ladies, and sitting dully at home waiting for dull ladies to pay calls to her. She was almost always there, ready to play with the children, and read to them, and help them to do their home-lessons. Besides this she used to write stories for them while they were at school, and read them i aloud after tea, and she always made up funny pieces of poetry for their birthdays and for other great occasions, such as the christening of the new kittens, or the refurnishing of the dolls' house, or the time when they were getting over the mumps.

These three lucky children always had everything they needed: pretty clothes, good fires, a lovely nursery with heaps of toys, and a Mother Goose wall-paper. They had a kind and merry nursemaid, and a dog who was called James, and who was their very own. They also had a Father who was just perfect - never cross, never unjust, and always ready for a game--at least, if at any time he was not ready, he always had an excellent reason for it, and explained the reason to the children so interestingly and funnily that they felt sure he couldn't help himself.

You will think that they ought to have been very happy. And so they were, but they did not know how happy till the pretty life in Edgecombe Villa was over and done with, and they had to live a very different life indeed.

The dreadful change came quite suddenly. Peter had a birthday - his tenth. Among his other presents was a model engine more perfect than you could ever have dreamed of. The other presents were full of charm, but the Engine was fuller of charm than any of the others were.

Its charm lasted in its full perfection for exactly three days. Then, owing either to Peter's inexperience or Phyllis's good intentions, which had been rather pressing, or to some other cause, the Engine suddenly went off with a bang. James was so frightened that he went out and did not come back all day. All the Noah's Ark people who were in the tender were broken to bits, but nothing else was hurt except the poor little engine and the feelings of Peter. The others said he cried over it - but of course boys of ten do not cry, however terrible the tragedies may be which darken their lot. He said that his eyes were red because he had a cold. This turned out to be true, though Peter did not know it was when he said it; the next day he had to go to , bed and stay there. Mother began to be afraid that he might be sickening for measles, when suddenly he sat up in bed and said:

"I hate gruel! I hate barley water! I hate bread and milk. I want to get up and have something real to eat."

"What would you like?" Mother asked.

"A pigeon-pie," said Peter, eagerly, "a large pigeon -pie. A very large one."

So Mother asked the Cook to make a large pigeon-pie. The pie was made. And when the pie was made, it was cooked. And when it was cooked, Peter ate some of it. After that his cold was better. Mother made a piece of poetry to amuse him while the pie was being made. It began by saying what an unfortunate but worthy boy Peter was, then it went on:

He had an engine that he loved
With all his heart and soul,
And if he had a wish on earth
It was to keep it whole.
One day - my friends, prepare your minds,-
I'm coming to the worst-
Quite suddenly a screw went mad,
And then the boiler burst!
With gloomy face he picked it up
And took it to his Mother,
Though even he could not suppose
That she could make another,-
For those who perished on the line
He did not seem to care,
His engine being more to him
Than all the people there.
And now you see the reason why
Our Peter has been ill
He soothes his soul with pigeon-pie
His gnawing grief to kill-
He wraps himself in blankets warm
And sleeps in bed till late,
Determined thus to overcome
His miserable fate.
And if his eyes are rather red,
His cold must just excuse it:
Offer him pie, you may be sure
He never will refuse it.

Father had been away in the country for three or four days. All Peter's hopes for the curing of his afflicted Engine were now fixed on his Father, for Father was most wonderfully clever with his fingers. He could mend all sorts of things. He had often acted as veterinary surgeon to the wooden rocking-horse; once he had saved its life when all human aid was despaired of, and the poor creature was given up for lost, and even the carpenter said he didn't see his way to do anything. And it was Father who mended the doll's cradle when no one else could; and with a little glue and some bits of wood and a pen-knife made all the Noah's Ark beasts as strong on their pins as ever they were, if not stronger.

Peter, with heroic unselfishness, did not say anything about his Engine till after Father had had his dinner and his after-dinner cigar. The unselfishness was Mother's idea - but it was Peter who carried it out. And needed a good deal of patience, too.

At last Mother said to Father, "Now, dear, if you're quite rested, and quite comfy, we want to tell you about me great railway accident, and ask your advice."

: "All right," said Father, "fire away!"

So men Peter told me sad tale, and fetched what was left of me Engine.

"Hum," said Father, when he had looked me Engine over very carefully.

The children held their breaths.

"Is there no hope?" said Peter, in a low, unsteady voice.

"Hope? Rather! Tons of it," said Father, cheerfully; "but it'll want something besides hope - a bit of brazing say, or some solder, and a new valve. I think we'd better keep it for a rainy day. In other words, I'll give up Saturday afternoon to it, and you shall all help me."

"Can girls help to mend engines?" Peter asked doubtfully.

"Of course they can. Girls are just as clever as boys, and don't you forget it! How would you like to be an engine-driver, Phil?"

"My face would be always dirty, wouldn't it?" said Phyllis, in unemotional tones, "and I expect I should break something."

"I should just love it," said Roberta-"do you think I could when I'm grown up, Daddy? Or even a stoker?"

"You mean a fireman," said Daddy, pulling and twisting at the engine. "Well, if you still wish it, when you're grown up, we'll see about making you a fire-woman. I remember when I was a boy -"

Just then there was a knock at the front door .

"Who on earth!" said Father. "An Englishman's house is his castle, of course, but I do wish they built semi-detached villas with moats and draw-bridges."

Ruth - she was the parlour-maid and had red hair - came in and said that two gentlemen wanted to see the master .

"I've shown them into the library, Sir," said she.

"I expect it's the subscription to the Vicar's testimonial," said Mother, "or else it's the choir holiday fund. Get rid of them quickly, dear. It does break up an evening so, and it's nearly the children's bedtime."

But Father did not seem to be able to get rid of the gentlemen at all quickly.

"I wish we had got a moat and drawbridge," said Roberta; "then, when we didn't want people, we could just pull up the drawbridge and no one else could get in. I expect Father will have forgotten about when he was a boy if they stay much longer."

Mother tried to make the time pass by telling them a new fairy story about a Princess with green eyes, but it was difficult because they could hear the voices of Father and the gentlemen in the Library, and Father's voice sounded louder and different from the voice he generally used to people who came about testimonials and holiday funds.

Then the Library bell rang, and everyone heaved a breath of relief.

"They're going now," said Phyllis; "he's rung to have them shown out."

But instead of showing anybody out, Ruth showed herself in, and she looked queer, the children thought.

"Please'm," she said, "the Master wants you to just step into the study. He looks like the dead, mum; I think he's had bad news. You'd best prepare yourself for the worst, 'm - p'raps it's a death in the family or a bank busted or - "

"That'll do, Ruth," said Mother gently; "you can go."

Then Mother went into the Library .There was more talking. Then the bell rang again, and Ruth fetched a cab. The children heard boots go out and down the steps. The cab drove away, and the front door shut. Then Mother came in. Her dear face was as white as her lace collar, and her eyes looked very big and shining. Her mouth looked like just a line of pale red - her lips were thin and not their proper shape at all.

"It's bedtime," she said. "Ruth will put you to bed."

"But you promised we should sit up late tonight because Father's come home," said Phyllis.

"Father's been called away - on business," said Mother. "Come, darlings, go at once."

They kissed her and went. Roberta lingered to give Mother an extra hug and to whisper:

"It wasn't bad news, Mammy, was it? Is anyone dead-or-"

"Nobody's dead-no," said Mother, and she almost seemed to push Roberta away. "I can't tell you anything tonight, my pet. Go, dear, go now." So Roberta went.

Ruth brushed the girls' hair and helped them to undress. (Mother almost always did this herself.) When she had turned down the gas and left them she found Peter, still dressed, waiting on the stairs.

"I say, Ruth, what's up?" he asked.

"Don't ask me no questions and I won't tell you no lies," the red-headed Ruth replied. "You'll know soon enough."

Late that night Mother came up and kissed all three children as they lay asleep. But Roberta was the only one whom the kiss woke, and she lay mousey-still, and said nothing.

"If Mother doesn't want us to know she's been crying," she said to herself as she heard through the dark the catching ofher Mother's breath, "we won't know it. That's all."

When they came down to breakfast the next morning, Mother had already gone out.

"To London," Ruth said, and left them to their breakfast.

"There's something awful the matter," said Peter, breaking his egg. "Ruth told me last night we should know soon enough."

"Did you ask her?" said Roberta, with scorn.

"Yes, I did!" said Peter, angrily. "If you could go to bed without caring whether Mother was worried or not, I couldn't. So there."

"I don't think we ought to ask the servants things Mother doesn't tell us," said Roberta.

"That's right, Miss Goody-Goody," said Peter, "preach away."

"I'm not goody," said Phyllis, "but I think Bobbie's right this time."

"Of course. She always is. In her own opinion," said Peter.

"Oh, don'tl" cried Roberta, putting down her egg-spoon; "don't let's be horrid to each other. I'm sure some dire calamity is happening. Don't let's make it worse!"

"Who began, I should like to know?" said Peter.

Roberta made an effort, and answered: "I did I suppose but-"

"Well, then," said Peter, triumphantly. But before he went to school he thumped his sister between the shoulders and told her to cheer up. The children came home to one o'clock dinner, but Mother was not there. And she was not there at tea-time.

It was nearly seven before she came in, looking so ill and tired that the children felt they could not ask her any questions. She sank into an arm-chair. Phyllis took the long pins out of her hat, while Roberta took off her gloves, and Peter unfastened her walking-shoes and fetched her soft velvety slippers for her.

When she had had a cup of tea, and Roberta had put eau-de-Cologne on her poor head that ached, Mother said:

"Now, my darlings, I want to tell you something. Those men last night did bring very bad news, and Father will be away for some time. I am very worried about it, and I want you all to help me, and, not to make things harder for me."

"As if we would!" said Roberta, holding Mother's hand against her face.

"You can help me very much," said Mother, "by being good and happy and not quarrelling when I'm away" - Roberta and Peter exchanged guilty glances -"for I shall have to be away a good deal."

"We won't quarrel. Indeed we won't," said everybody. And meant it, too.

"Then," Mother went on, "I want you not to ask me any questions about this trouble; and not to ask anybody else any questions."

Peter cringed and shuffied his boots on the carpet. "

"You'll promise this, too, won't you?" said Mother.

"I did ask Ruth," said Peter, suddenly. "I'm very sorry, but I did."

" And what did she say?" .

"She said I should know soon enough."

"It isn't necessary for you to know anything about it," said Mother; "it's about business, and you never do understand business, do you?"

"No," said Roberta; "is it something to do with Government?" For Father was in a Government Office.

"Yes," said Mother. "Now it's bed-time, my darlings. And don't you worry. It'll all come right in the end."

"Then don't you worry either, Mother," said Phyllis, "and we'll all be as good as gold."

Mother sighed and kissed them.

"We'll begin being good the first thing tomorrow morning," said Peter, as they went upstairs.

"Why not now?' said Roberta.

"There's nothing to be good about now, silly," said Peter .

"We might begin to try to feel good," said Phyllis, "and not call names."

"Who's calling names?" said Peter. "Bobbie knows right enough that when I say 'silly', it's just the same as if l said Bobbie."

"Well," said Roberta.

"No, I don't mean what you mean. I mean it's just a - what is it Father calls it? -a term of endearment! Good night."

The girls folded up their clothes with more than usual neatness - which was the only way of being good that they could think of.

"I say," said Phyllis, smoothing out her pinafore, "you used to say it was so dull - nothing happening, like in books. Now something has happened."

"I never wanted things to happen to make Mother unhappy," said Roberta. "Everything's perfectly horrid. "

Everything continued to be perfectly horrid for some weeks.

Mother was nearly always out. Meals were dull and dirty. The between-maid was sent away, and Aunt Emma came on a visit. Aunt Emma was much older than Mother. She was going abroad to be a governess. She was very busy getting her clothes ready, and they were very ugly, dingy clothes, and she had them always littering about, and the sewing-machine seemed to whir-on and on all day and most of the night. Aunt Emma believed in keeping children in their proper places. And they more than returned the compliment. Their idea of Aunt Emma's proper place was anywhere where they were not. So they saw very little of her. They preferred the company of the servants, who were more amusing. Cook, if in a good temper, could sing comic songs, and the housemaid, if she happened not to be offended with you, could imitate a hen that has laid an egg, a bottle of champagne being opened, and could mew like two cats fighting. The servants never told the children what the bad news was that the gentlemen had brought to Father. But they kept hinting that they could tell a great deal if they chose - and this was not comfortable.

One day when Peter had made a booby trap over the bath-room door, and it had acted beautifully as Ruth passed through, that red-haired parlour-maid caught him and boxed his ears.

"You'll come to a bad end," she said furiously, "you nasty little limb, you! If you don't mend your ways, you'll go where your precious Father's gone, so I tell you straight!"

Roberta repeated this to her Mother, and next day Ruth was sent away.

Then came the time when Mother came home and went to bed and stayed there two days and the Doctor came, and the children crept wretchedly about the house and wondered if the world was coming to an end.

Mother came down one morning to breakfast, very pale and with lines on her face that used not to be there. And she smiled, as well as she could, and said: "Now, my pets, everything is settled. We're going to leave this house, and go and live in the country. Such a ducky dear little white house. I know you'll love it."

A whirling week of packing followed - not just packing clothes, like when you go to the seaside, but packing chairs and tables, covering their tops with sacking and their legs with straw.

All sorts of things were packed that you don't pack when you go to the seaside. Crockery, blankets, candlesticks, carpets, bedsteads, saucepans, and even fenders and fire-irons.

The house was like a furniture warehouse. I think the children enjoyed it very much. Mother was very busy, but not too busy now to talk to them, and read to them, and even to make a bit of poetry for Phyllis to cheer her up when she fell down with a screwdriver and ran it into her hand.

"Aren't you going to pack this, Mother?" Roberta asked, pointing to the beautiful cabinet inlaid with red turtleshell and brass.

"We can't take everything," said Mother.

"But we seem to be taking all the ugly things," said Roberta.

"We're taking the useful ones," said Mother; "we've got to play at being poor for a bit, my chick-a-biddy."

When all the ugly useful things had been packed up and taken away in a van by men in green-baize aprons, the two girls and Mother and Aunt Emma slept in the two spare rooms where the furniture was all pretty. All their beds had gone. A bed was made up for Peter on the drawing-room sofa.

"I say, this is larks," he said, wriggling joyously, as Mother tucked him up, "I do like moving! I wish we moved once a month."

Mother laughed.

"I don't!" she said. "Good night, Peterkin."

As she turned away Roberta saw her face. She never forgot it.

"Oh, Mother," she whispered all to herself as she got into bed, "how brave you are! How I love you! Fancy being brave enough to laugh when you're feeling like that!"

Next day boxes were filled, and boxes and more boxes; and then late in the afternoon a cab came to take them to the station.

Aunt Emma saw them off. They felt that they were seeing her off, and they were glad of it. "But, oh, those poor little foreign children that she's going to governess!" whispered Phyllis. "I wouldn't be them for anything!"

At first they enjoyed looking out of the window, but when it grew dusk they grew sleepier and sleepier, and no one knew how long they had been in the train when they were roused by Mother's shaking them gently and saying:

"Wake up, dears. We're there."

They woke up, cold and melancholy, and stood shivering on the draughty platform while the baggage was taken out of the train. Then the engine, puffing and blowing, set to work again, and dragged the train away. The children watched the tail-lights of the guard's van disappear into the darkness.

This was the first train the children saw on that railway which was in time to become so very dear to them. They did not guess then how they would grow to love the railway, and how soon it would become the centre of their new life nor what wonders and changes it would bring to them. They only shivered and sneezed and hoped the walk to the new house would not be long. Peter's nose was colder than he ever remembered it to have been before. Robena's hat was crooked, and the elastic seemed tighter than usual. Phyllis's shoe-laces had come undone.

"Come," said Mother, "we've got to walk. There aren't any cabs here."

The walk was dark and muddy. The children stumbled a little on the rough road, and once Phyllis absently fell into a puddle, and was picked up damp and unhappy. There were no gas-Iamps on the road and the road was uphill. The cart went at a slow pace and they followed the gritty crunch of its wheels. As their eyes got used to the darkness, they could see the mound of boxes swaying dimly in front of them. A long gate had to be opened for the cart to pass through, and after that the road seemed to go across fields - and now it went downhill. Presently a great dark lumpish thing showed over to the right. "

"There's the house," said Mother. "I wonder why she's shut the shutters."

"Who's she?" asked Roberta. "

"The woman I engaged to clean the place, and put the furniture straight and get supper. " There was a low wall, and trees inside.

"That's the garden," said Mother.

] "It looks more like a dripping-pan full of black cabbages," said Peter.

The cart went on along by the garden wall, and round to the back of the house, and here it clattered into a cobble-stoned yard and stopped at the back door.

There was no light in any of the windows. Everyone hammered at the door, but no one came.

The man who drove the cart said he expected Mrs Viney had gone home.

"You see your train was that late," said he.

"But she's got the key," said Mother: "What are we to do?"

"Oh, she'll have left that under the doorstep," said the cart man; "folks do hereabouts." He took the lantern off his cart and stooped.

"Ay, here it is, right enough," he said.

He unlocked the door and went in and set his lantern on the table.

"Got e'er a candle?" said he.

"I don't know where anything is." Mother spoke rather less cheerfully than usual.

He struck a match. There was a candle on the table, and he lighted it. By its thin little glimmer the children saw a large bare kitchen with a stone floor . There were no curtains, no hearth-rug. The kitchen table from home stood in the middle of the room. The chairs were in one comer, and the pots, pans, brooms, and crockery in another. There was no fire, and the black grate showed cold, dead ashes. As the cart man turned to go out after he had brought in the boxes, there was a rustling, scampering sound that seemed to come from inside the walls of the house.

"Oh, what's that?" cried the girls.

"It's only the rats," said the cart man. And he went away and shut the door, and the sudden draught of it blew out the candle.

"Oh, dear," said Phyllis, "I wish we hadn't come!" and she knocked a chair over.

"Only the rats!" said Peter, in the dark.
Excerpted from The Railway Children by E. Nesbit, Copyright 1900

Sample Pages from [em]The Reb and the Redcoats[/em] by Constance Savery

THE YOUNGEST REBEL

CHARLOTTE DARRINGTON was writing her copy when her brothers, Joseph and George, pounded up the stairs. They rushed into the schoolroom.

"Charlotte, come to the parlor this instant. Old Harry is back from the American war with a bullet wound in his chest. He has brought a box of gifts from Papa, which is going to be unpacked as soon as Mamma has read Papa’s long letters, sheaves of them. And Old Harry has a special gift from himself, for you. Lucky girl, you always were Old Harry’s favorite!"

Down went Charlotte’s pen, and scamper, scamper went Charlotte’s feet, with Joseph and George scurrying after.

There in the parlor sat Old Harry in his red coat, beaming all over his face. He was not really old, but after he went to the war, his place as gardener at Thorndale Hall was taken by his son, Young Harry. Now he was at home again, glad to be in England once more. The box of gifts stood on the table in front of him, and on his knees, in a wrapper of coarse canvas, lay the parcel containing the special gift for Charlotte.

Mrs. Darrington was asking Old Harry questions about his wound, and promising to send to the nearest town for medicines and comforts that could not be obtained in the country. Her eyes kept wandering to the packet of letters she held. Charlotte knew that she was counting the minutes until she was free to read what Papa had written.

Joseph and George began to drum on the box. Mamma said pleasantly:

"After all, we will open the box first. We know that dearest Papa was alive and well when he wrote the letters—and we couldn’t wish for better news than that! So you shall not be kept waiting, my dears."

"Thank you, Mamma," said Joseph, George and Kitty the youngest. Charlotte did not speak. She was thinking, Mamma is the kindest, most unselfish person in the world. She puts everybody before herself.

Old Harry made short work of the fastenings. Out of the box came treasures for everyone in Thorndale Hall, from little kitchenmaid, Sukey, to the governess, Miss Pipkin.

The gifts were of fine Indian workmanship: bows, arrows and headdresses for the boys; purses, mats, carved spoons, scarves, bead ornaments and basketry for the rest. Charlotte had a purple-and-white flower basket, with a necklace of purple and white stones to match.

At last the box was empty, and only Charlotte’s special present remained to be unpacked. With proud looks, Harry unpicked the stitches round the canvas wrapper. Beneath the canvas was a layer of wadding, and under that was a miniature patchwork quilt. Old Harry unrolled it.

A little waxen face looked up at Charlotte, a resolute little face with a sparkle of defiance about it, despite its dimples and laughter curves. The eyes were brown, and brown too was the straight silky hair that was cut in a fringe across the forehead. Harry drew out the owner of the face, and laid in Charlotte’s arms a doll with a small American painted paper flag pinned to the bodice of its brown dress. Its body was of pink kid, with beautifully fashioned hands and feet.

"Oh, Harry, thank you a thousand, thousand times!" exclaimed Charlotte. "This is by far the prettiest doll I ever saw. She’s as real as if she were alive. How I shall love her! And what fine shops they must have in America!"

"She didn’t come out of no shop," said Harry, grinning. "No, missy, that doll once belonged to a little rebel girl, as lived in Virginny in a big owd house summat like Thorndale Hall, as full of rebels as an egg is full of meat. The family, they had to skip when we British come that way. ‘Redcoats,’ they call us, or ‘Scarlet Lobsters’ when they want to be downright insulting. Well, arter we’d rushed the house, we took a look ’round, see? And fust thing I spied was this here little creature a-sitting on a chair staring at me as bold as brass. Oho! says I to myself, this young lady shall up and come along of us Redcoats. She’ll suit Miss Charlotte to a T, as the saying goes."

"Oh-h-h!" said Charlotte. She met her mother’s eyes, and saw that she too was distressed. Not knowing what next to say, Charlotte kissed the doll.

Harry was delighted. "That’s how that should be! I knowed what I wor about when I laid hands on that reb doll!"

At this moment the butler, Gregory, came to say that the rest of the household had assembled in the servants’ hall.

"Pooh! What a fuss about a trumpery doll!" scoffed George. "Now if Harry had given you the rebel ball that was dug out of his chest, that would have been worth having! He’s got it. He asked the surgeon to keep it for him. He’s going to have it mounted in crystal and silver, to be an heirloom for Young Harry. I wish it was mine, I do!"

If Charlotte had been able to pay attention to anything save the rebel doll, she would have said, "Ugh, how horrid!" But she was still looking sorrowfully into Mamma’s sorrowful face.

"I think, my dear Charlotte," her mother said, "that for the present at any rate you must keep the doll. Its poor little owner would prefer to know that her treasure was in loving hands. Perhaps we’ll find some way of sending the doll back when this dreadful war comes to an end, as we pray God it may. Carry her up to the schoolroom, my love, and make her acquainted with the other dolls."

"I do believe she understands what you say, Mamma!" said Charlotte. "She looks as if she did. I never saw a doll like her. I am glad her hair is the same color as mine. And she is every bit a rebel, for all she is so young."

"The youngest rebel in the world, I should say," said her mother, smiling.

Charlotte carried the rebel doll to the schoolroom, which was also the playroom.

"My dears," she said to her assembled dolls, "this is a young friend who has come all the way from America to see you. Friend, I said, Rosalba! Not enemy," Charlotte added with a stern glance at her biggest doll, who was flopping sideways with her face averted from the stranger.

Rosalba did not respond.

"This is Clarissa, that is Evelina, and here are Susanna and Laurence," said Charlotte. "Laurence is named for my Uncle Laurence, who was badly wounded in the war last autumn, in a skirmish. He was sent home to England, and since Christmas he has been living at the White Priory in Marton Green with Grandpapa and Grandmamma. The doctors say he will not be fit to rejoin his regiment before the summer. Laurence, how often must I tell you not to slouch? It is most unmilitary."

Charlotte bent forward to straighten Laurence. Then she began to undress the weary traveler.

"I wonder how you lost your shoes and stockings and cap, my dear," said Charlotte; "but I suppose I shall never know. And how could your mamma forget you when she and the others escaped from the house? Perhaps the alarm was so sudden that she was hurried away without being allowed a moment to run and fetch you. Oh, poor little girl!"

Charlotte did not like thinking about the American girl. Her eyes filled with tears, and she talked fast to keep herself from crying. "Oh, what’s this? I declare, there’s writing on the back of the flag, done by a person about as old as I am!"

Charlotte had unpinned the flag on the doll’s dress. It was painted only on the upper side. On the reverse, she read:

Go home, Redcoats!
I stand for my country.
Go home, Redcoats!
My name is Patty.
I am Patty’s dearest Patty.

"So you are Patty’s Patty," said Charlotte. "What a dear, little funny name! I like it."

The schoolroom windows looked east to the gray sea, foaming under a bitter late February wind. Charlotte turned from the windows to face the west.

"Patty in America," she said aloud, "I am sorry to say that I have your Patty. There’s nothing I can do about it, but I promise you that you shall have her again some day, if I can contrive it. In the meantime I will take great care of her."

After that, Charlotte brushed the doll’s hair. It was real hair, she noticed. She felt sure that it had once belonged to Patty across the sea.

"There you are, Patty dear," she said, as she tucked the rebel up in the bed that belonged to Rosalba. "All comfy, aren’t you? Have a good long rest after your journey." Rebel Patty looked up at Charlotte, a puckish smile on her face.

Charlotte had just gone down to join her mother in the parlor when a maid came bringing a letter from the Rector of Tumblesand Bay, to whom Joseph, George and about a dozen other boys went for lessons every day, as there was no school near Thorndale Hall. He had been ill for a week, unable to teach his pupils.

"Oh, this is frightful!" said Mamma, after she had read the letter. "Mr. Whittaker is so much worse that the doctor has ordered him perfect rest for the next six months. He is going away tomorrow, and in his absence the services will be taken by a clergyman who does not wish to teach boys!"

"Hurrah, hurrah!" shouted Joseph and George. "Holidays for six months! Hurrah!"

Mamma did not echo the "Hurrah!" She looked sober over the thought that the boys would miss so much school.

"I tell you what, Mamma!" said Joseph. "This is all that young rebel’s doing. She’s plotted it, nobody knows how, just to upset the house!"

That made Mamma laugh, in spite of her trouble.

"I shall ask Miss Pipkin to teach you and George for a few days until I can make other arrangements," she said.

Joseph and George looked glum. Miss Pipkin was Charlotte’s and Kitty’s governess. She was away for the day in Gippeswich, where she was choosing schoolbooks.

Before the boys had opened their mouths to protest, Gregory came in with a letter on a salver. "From Captain Templeton, madam. The messenger is waiting for an answer."

Captain Templeton was Uncle Laurence. Looking a little alarmed, Mamma opened the letter. The children knew why she was alarmed. No sooner were the Christmas holidays over than Grandpapa and Grandmamma had fallen ill. Though not yet recovered from his war wounds, Uncle Laurence had been nursing them, helped by another married sister, the children’s Aunt Sophy, who had left her own home to come to his aid.

"My dears," said Mamma, when she had read the letter, "Uncle Laurence has sent bad news. Aunt Sophy has had to leave the White Priory at a moment’s notice, for your poor Cousin Marcus has been thrown in the hunting field and will need his mother for a long while to come. Uncle Laurence cannot manage the nursing all by himself. He wants me. I shall have to go to the White Priory tomorrow, leaving you in Miss Pipkin’s care."

A dreadful howl went up. "Leave us with Miss Pipkin, Mamma! Mamma, you can’t!"

"I must," said Mamma.

"This is the rebel’s work again, I’ll be bound!" Joseph shouted, his fist in the air. "She’s a menace, that’s what she is! Oh, Mamma, tell Uncle Laurence you’re stopping here!"

Mamma shook her head and sat down to answer Uncle Laurence’s letter.

To lose Mamma for an unknown length of time was a terrible prospect. After they had recovered from the first shock, Kitty, and even George, began to think of the rebel doll with respect mingled with fear.

"I shouldn’t wonder," said George, "if there weren’t great goings-on in the schoolroom tonight, after the house is asleep. That rebel will get up and fight the other dolls, I’m sure she will. In the morning you’ll find legs and arms and flaxen wigs and sawdust and stuffing all over the floor!"

"Do you really think so, George?" asked little Kitty anxiously.

"It might be as well to build a barricade round her for the night," said George, "so that she can’t do any harm."

George built the barricade that evening, with help from Joseph, who happened to be at a loss for something to do. Rosalba’s bed was put on the floor by one of the windows. In front of it, Joseph and George built a stockade of chairs with legs pointing outward, upward and inward in such a way that the rebel doll would find much difficulty in climbing out to attack the English dolls, and even more difficulty in running for shelter if she should be defeated. For extra security, Joseph and George locked the doors of the clothespress in which the Darrington dolls had been hidden, and they balanced the schoolroom bell and a wooden basin on the top of it so that Patty could not shake the door without sounding an alarm and giving herself a cold bath.

Then they went to bed and to sleep. An hour later they were awakened by a crash, a noise of clattering and rumbling, accompanied by frantic yells.

Joseph and George jumped out of bed and ran to the schoolroom, whence the noise came. Charlotte and Kitty followed, trembling. Mrs. Darrington hurried up the stairs. Men and maids flocked after her, carrying candles and pokers.

A dire sight awaited them. Floundering in a sea of tangled chairs by a badly broken window lay Miss Pipkin, who had come into the room in the dark intending to put a parcel of newly purchased schoolbooks in the press. She was screaming at the top of her voice, and she went on screaming for some time after she had been picked out of the tangle, smoothed down, anointed with arnica, and plentifully supplied with burnt feathers, aromatic essences and glasses of water.

When she stopped screaming, she was so angry that she vowed she would leave the house by the London coach the next morning. Nothing would induce her to remain in a situation where she was so abominably treated. As for teaching and taking charge of those impudent practical jokers, Joseph and George, she would sooner jump over the moon.

The four Darringtons did their best to explain, but Miss Pipkin refused to listen to what they said. Mamma apologized, pleaded, remonstrated, all in vain. Miss Pipkin went to her room in a rage, and they could hear her pulling out boxes and drawers as she packed for going away.

Rebel Patty had not been injured when chairs, bell, basin and Pipkin tumbled around her brown head. Calm and unmoved she lay, with the impish smile still there.


Excerpted from The Reb and the Redcoats by Constance Savery Copyright 1961, Used with permission from Bethlehem Books

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