Part 4 (1/2)
Simmons used to say in an aggrieved voice; ”he'll stand and look at 'em and chirp to 'em by the hour--an' 'en he'll turn round and swear at you 'nough to take your leg off,” Simmons said, bitterly. Simmons did his best for the canaries which he detested, cleaning out the cages and sc.r.a.ping the perches and seeing that the seed-trays and bath-tubs were always full; he did his best conscientiously, and it was hard to be ”swore at when you 'ain't done nothin'.” Perhaps Benjamin Wright had some ”human feelings” for his grandson, Sam; but certainly Simmons's opinion was justified by his treatment of his granddaughters. When by their father's orders the little girls came up to the lonely house on the hill, the old man used to pitch small coins to them and tell them to go and look at the canaries,--”and then clear out. Simmons, give 'em some cake or something! Good-by. Good-by. Clear out.” Long before he had settled into such dreary living, the son with whom he had quarrelled had made a life of his own. His slimness and gayety had disappeared as well as his dreaminess and versifying instincts. ”Poetry?” he had been heard to say, ”why, there isn't a poem that was ever written that I'd take five minutes out of my business to read!” It seemed as if the quarrel had wrenched him from the grooves, physical and spiritual, in which Nature had meant him to run and started him on lines of hard common sense. He was intensely positive; heavy and pompous and painfully literal; inclined to lay down the law to everybody; richer than most of us in Old Chester, and full of solemn responsibilities as burgess and senior warden and banker. His air of aggressive integrity used to make the honestest of us feel as if we had been picking pockets! Yes; a good man, as Old Chester said.
Years ago Dr. Lavendar had given up trying to reconcile the two Wrights; years ago Old Chester's speculations languished and died out.
Once in a while some one remembered the quarrel and said, ”What in the world could it have been about?” And once in a while Samuel's own children asked awkward questions. ”Mother, what was father's row with grandfather?” And Mrs. Wright's answer was as direct as the question.
”I don't know. He never told me.”
When this reply was made to young Sam he dropped the subject. He had but faint interest in his father, and his grandfather with whom he took tea every Sunday night was too important a person to connect with so trivial an affair as a quarrel.
This matter of offspring is certainly very curious. Why should the solid Samuel Wright and his foolish, obedient Eliza have brought into the world a being of mist and fire? A beautiful youth, who laughed or wept or sung aloud, indifferent to all about him! Sometimes Sam senior used to look at his son and shake his head in bewildered astonishment; but often he was angry, and oftener still--though this he never admitted--hurt. The boy, always impersonally amiable, never thought it worth while to explain himself; partly because he was not interested in his father's opinion of his conduct, and partly because he knew he could not make himself understood.
”But who, my dear Eliza,” Samuel would say to his wife--”who could understand such a boy? Look at this last performance of his!
Purchasing pictures of _actors_! Where does he get such low tastes?--unless some of your family were interested in such things?”
”Oh no, Samuel; no, indeed,” Mrs. Wright protested nervously.
”And to use money not his own! Do you know what that is called, my dear Eliza? It is called--”
”Oh don't, Samuel.” whimpered the poor mother.
”And to think how carefully I have trained him! And all I have done for him. I let him buy that skiff he said he wanted. Absolute waste of money! Our old rowboat is good enough for the girls, so why isn't it good enough for him? And I never laid a hand on him in punishment either; not many fathers can say that.”
As for the bank supplies young Sam had explained to his mother that they had been ordered and charged, so what _was_ the matter? And Mrs. Wright kneading her tear-soaked handkerchief into a ball, cried some more and said:
”Oh, Sam dear, why do you act so?”
Sam looked at her attentively, wondering why her little nose always reddened when she cried. But he waited patiently, until she finished her rambling reproaches. It occurred to him that he would tell Mrs.
Richie all about this matter of the prints. ”She will understand,” he thought.
Sam's acquaintance with Mrs. Richie had begun when she was getting settled in her new house. Sam senior, having no desire to climb the hill road, sent his various communications to his tenant by his son, and afterwards Sam junior had communications of his own to make. He fell into the habit of stopping there on Sunday afternoons, quite oblivious of the fact that Mrs. Richie did not display any pleasure at seeing him. After one of these calls he was apt to be late in reaching ”The Top,” as his grandfather's place was called, and old Benjamin Wright, in his brown wig and moth-eaten beaver hat, would glare at him with melancholy dark eyes.
”Gad-a-mercy, what do you mean,--getting here at six-five! I have my tea at six, sir; at six sharp. Either get here on time or stay away. I don't care which. Do you hear?”
”Yes, sir,” young Sam would murmur.
”Where have you been? Mooning after that female at the Stuffed Animal House?”
”I had to leave a message, sir, about the lease.”
”How long does it take to leave a message about a lease?”
”She was not down-stairs and I had to wait--”
”_I_ had to wait! That's more to the point. There, don't talk about it. You drive me crazy with your chatter.”
Then they would sit down to supper in a black silence only broken by an occasional twitter from one of the many cages that hung about the room. But afterwards young Sam had his reward; the library, a toby, long before he was old enough to smoke, and his grandfather reading aloud in a wonderful voice, deep, sonorous, flexible--Shakespeare, Ma.s.singer, Beaumont and Fletcher. To be sure, there was nothing personal in such reading--it was not done to give pleasure to young Sam. Every night the old man rumbled out the stately lines, sitting by himself in this gloomy room walled to the ceiling with books, and warmed by a soft-coal fire that snapped and bubbled behind the iron bars of the grate. Sometimes he would burst into angry ecstasy at the beauty of what he read ”There! What do you think of that?”
”Oh, it's splendid!”
”Hah! Much you know about it! There is about as much poetry in your family as there is in that coal scuttle.”
It was when he was eighteen that once the old man let his grandson read _The Tempest_ with him. It was a tremendous evening to Sam.