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Chapter XIV Wherein a New Position is Tendered Elnora and Philip Ammon is shown Limberlost Violets THE next
morning Mrs. Comstock called to Elnora, "The mail carrier stopped at our
box." Elnora ran
down the walk and came back carrying an official letter. She tore it open and
read: My Dear
Miss Comstock: At the
weekly meeting of the Onabasha School Board last night, it was decided to add
the position of Lecturer on Natural History to our corps of city teachers. It
will be the duty of this person to spend two hours a week in each of the grade
schools exhibiting and explaining specimens of the most prominent objects in
nature: animals, birds, insects, flowers, vines, shrubs, bushes, and trees.
These specimens and lectures should be appropriate to the seasons and the
comprehension of the grades. This position was unanimously voted to you. I
think you will find the work delightful and much easier than the routine grind
of the other teachers. It is my advice that you accept and begin to prepare
yourself at once. Your salary will be $750 a year, and you will be allowed $200
for expenses in procuring specimens and books. Let us know at once if you want
the position, as it is going to be difficult to fill satisfactorily if you do
not. Very
truly yours, David
Thompson, President, Onabasha Schools. "I
hardly understand," marvelled Mrs. Comstock. "It is
a new position. They never have had anything like it before. I suspect it arose
from the help I've been giving the grade teachers in their nature work. They
are trying to teach the children something, and half the instructors don't know
a blue jay from a king-fisher, a beech leaf from an elm, or a wasp from a
hornet." "Well,
do you?" anxiously inquired Mrs. Comstock. "Indeed,
I do!" laughed Elnora, "and several other things beside. When
Freckles bequeathed me the swamp, he gave me a bigger inheritance than he knew.
While you have thought I was wandering aimlessly, I have been following a
definite plan, studying hard, and storing up the stuff that will earn these
seven hundred and fifty dollars. Mother dear, I am going to accept this, of
course. The work will be a delight. I'd love it most of anything in teaching.
You must help me. We must find nests, eggs, leaves, queer formations in plants
and rare flowers. I must have flower boxes made for each of the rooms and
filled with wild things. I should begin to gather specimens this very
day." Elnora's
face was flushed and her eyes bright. "Oh,
what great work that will be!" she cried. "You must go with me so you
can see the little faces when I tell them how the goldfinch builds its nest,
and how the bees make honey." So Elnora
and her mother went into the woods behind the cabin to study nature. "I
think," said Elnora, "the idea is to begin with fall things in the
fall, keeping to the seasons throughout the year." "What
are fall things?" inquired Mrs. Comstock. "Oh,
fringed gentians, asters, ironwort, every fall flower, leaves from every tree
and vine, what makes them change colour, abandoned bird nests, winter quarters
of caterpillars and insects, what becomes of the butterflies and grasshoppers —
myriads of stuff. I shall have to be very wise to select the things it will be
most beneficial for the children to learn." "Can I
really help you?" Mrs. Comstock's strong face was pathetic. "Indeed,
yes!" cried Elnora. "I never can get through it alone. There will be
an immense amount of work connected with securing and preparing
specimens." Mrs.
Comstock lifted her head proudly and began doing business at once. Her sharp
eyes ranged from earth to heaven. She investigated everything, asking
innumerable questions. At noon Mrs. Comstock took the specimens they had
collected, and went to prepare dinner, while Elnora followed the woods down to
the Sintons' to show her letter. She had to
explain what became of her moths, and why college would have to be abandoned
for that year, but Margaret and Wesley vowed not to tell. Wesley waved the
letter excitedly, explaining it to Margaret as if it were a personal
possession. Margaret was deeply impressed, while Billy volunteered first aid in
gathering material. "Now
anything you want in the ground, Snap can dig it out," he said.
"Uncle Wesley and I found a hole three times as big as Snap, that he dug
at the roots of a tree." "We
will train him to hunt pupae cases," said Elnora. "Are
you going to the woods this afternoon?" asked Billy. "Yes,"
answered Elnora. "Dr. Ammon's nephew from Chicago is visiting in Onabasha.
He is going to show me how men put some sort of compound on a tree, hang a
light beside it, and take moths that way. It will be interesting to watch and
learn." "May I
come?" asked Billy. "Of
course you may come!" answered Elnora. "Is
this nephew of Dr. Ammon a young man?" inquired Margaret. "About
twenty-six, I should think," said Elnora. "He said he had been out of
college and at work in his father's law office three years." "Does
he seem nice?" asked Margaret, and Wesley smiled. "Finest
kind of a person," said Elnora. "He can teach me so much. It is very
interesting to hear him talk. He knows considerable about moths that will be a
help to me. He had a fever and he has to stay outdoors until he grows strong
again." "Billy,
I guess you better help me this afternoon," said Margaret. "Maybe
Elnora had rather not bother with you." "There's
no reason on earth why Billy should not come!" cried Elnora, and Wesley
smiled again. "I
must hurry home or I won't be ready," she added. Hastening
down the road she entered the cabin, her face glowing. "I
thought you never would come," said Mrs. Comstock. "If you don't
hurry Mr. Ammon will be here before you are dressed." "I
forgot about him until just now," said Elnora. "I am not going to
dress. He's not coming to visit. We are only going to the woods for more
specimens. I can't wear anything that requires care. The limbs take the most
dreadful liberties with hair and clothing." Mrs.
Comstock opened her lips, looked at Elnora and closed them. In her heart she
was pleased that the girl was so interested in her work that she had forgotten
Philip Ammon's coming. But it did seem to her that such a pleasant young man
should have been greeted by a girl in a fresh dress. "If she isn't
disposed to primp at the coming of a man, heaven forbid that I should be the
one to start her," thought Mrs. Comstock. Philip came
whistling down the walk between the cinnamon pinks, pansies, and strawberries. He
carried several packages, while his face flushed with more colour than on the
previous day. "Only
see what has happened to me!" cried Elnora, offering her letter. "I'll
wager I know!" answered Philip. "Isn't it great! Every one in
Onabasha is talking about it. At last there is something new under the sun. All
of them are pleased. They think you'll make a big success. This will give an
incentive to work. In a few days more I'll be myself again, and we'll overturn
the fields and woods around here." He went on
to congratulate Mrs. Comstock. "Aren't
you proud of her, though?" he asked. "You should hear what folks are
saying! They say she created the necessity for the position, and every one
seems to feel that it is a necessity. Now, if she succeeds, and she will, all
of the other city schools will have such departments, and first thing you know
she will have made the whole world a little better. Let me rest a few seconds;
my feet are acting up again. Then we will cook the moth compound and put it to
cool." He laughed
as he sat breathing shortly. "It
doesn't seem possible that a fellow could lose his strength like this. My knees
are actually trembling, but I'll be all right in a minute. Uncle Doc said I
could come. I told him how you took care of me, and he said I would be safe
here." Then he
began unwrapping packages and explaining to Mrs. Comstock how to cook the
compound to attract the moths. He followed her into the kitchen, kindled the
fire, and stirred the preparation as he talked. While the mixture cooled, he
and Elnora walked through the vegetable garden behind the cabin and strayed
from there into the woods. "What
about college?" he asked. "Miss Brownlee said you were going." "I had
hoped to," replied Elnora, "but I had a streak of dreadful luck, so
I'll have to wait until next year. If you won't speak of it, I'll tell
you." Philip
promised, so Elnora recited the history of the Yellow Emperor. She was so
interested in doing the Emperor justice she did not notice how many
personalities went into the story. A few pertinent questions told him the
remainder. He looked at the girl in wonder. In face and form she was as lovely
as any one of her age and type he ever had seen. Her school work far surpassed
that of most girls of her age he knew. She differed in other ways. This vast
store of learning she had gathered from field and forest was a wealth of
attraction no other girl possessed. Her frank, matter-of-fact manner was an
inheritance from her mother, but there was something more. Once, as they talked
he thought "sympathy" was the word to describe it and again
"comprehension." She seemed to possess a large sense of brotherhood
for all human and animate creatures. She spoke to him as if she had known him
all her life. She talked to the grosbeak in exactly the same manner, as she
laid strawberries and potato bugs on the fence for his family. She did not
swerve an inch from her way when a snake slid past her, while the squirrels
came down from the trees and took corn from her fingers. She might as well have
been a boy, so lacking was she in any touch of feminine coquetry toward him. He
studied her wonderingly. As they went along the path they reached a large
slime-covered pool surrounded by decaying stumps and logs thickly covered with
water hyacinths and blue flags. Philip stopped. "Is
that the place?" he asked. Elnora
assented. "The doctor told you?" "Yes.
It was tragic. Is that pool really bottomless?" "So
far as we ever have been able to discover." Philip
stood looking at the water, while the long, sweet grasses, thickly sprinkled
with blue flag bloom, over which wild bees clambered, swayed around his feet.
Then he turned to the girl. She had worked hard. The same lavender dress she
had worn the previous day clung to her in limp condition. But she was as evenly
coloured and of as fine grain as a wild rose petal, her hair was really brown,
but never was such hair touched with a redder glory, while her heavy arching
brows added a look of strength to her big gray-blue eyes. "And
you were born here?" He had not
intended to voice that thought. "Yes,"
she said, looking into his eyes. "Just in time to prevent my mother from
saving the life of my father. She came near never forgiving me." "Ah,
cruel!" cried Philip. "I find
much in life that is cruel, from our standpoints," said Elnora. "It
takes the large wisdom of the Unfathomable, the philosophy of the Almighty, to
endure some of it. But there is always right somewhere, and at last it seems to
come." "Will
it come to you?" asked Philip, who found himself deeply affected. "It
has come," said the girl serenely. "It came a week ago. It came in
fullest measure when my mother ceased to regret that I had been born. Now, work
that I love has come — that should constitute happiness. A little farther along
is my violet bed. I want you to see it." As Philip
Ammon followed he definitely settled upon the name of the unusual feature of
Elnora's face. It should be called "experience." She had known bitter
experiences early in life. Suffering had been her familiar more than joy. He
watched her earnestly, his heart deeply moved. She led him into a swampy
half-open space in the woods, stopped and stepped aside. He uttered a cry of
surprised delight. A few
decaying logs were scattered around, the grass grew in tufts long and fine.
Blue flags waved, clusters of cowslips nodded gold heads, but the whole earth
was purple with a thick blanket of violets nodding from stems a foot in length.
Elnora knelt and slipping her fingers between the leaves and grasses to the
roots, gathered a few violets and gave them to Philip. "Can
your city greenhouses surpass them?" she asked. He sat on a
log to examine the blooms. "They
are superb!" he said. "I never saw such length of stem or such rank
leaves, while the flowers are the deepest blue, the truest violet I ever saw
growing wild. They are coloured exactly like the eyes of the girl I am going to
marry." Elnora
handed him several others to add to those he held. "She must have
wonderful eyes," she commented. "No
other blue eyes are quite so beautiful," he said. "In fact, she is altogether
lovely." "Is it
customary for a man to think the girl he is going to marry lovely? I wonder if
I should find her so." "You
would," said Philip. "No one ever fails to. She is tall as you, very
slender, but perfectly rounded; you know about her eyes; her hair is black and
wavy — while her complexion is clear and flushed with red." "Why,
she must be the most beautiful girl in the whole world!" she cried. "No,
indeed!" he said. "She is not a particle better looking in her way
than you are in yours. She is a type of dark beauty, but you are equally as
perfect. She is unusual in her combination of black hair and violet eyes,
although every one thinks them black at a little distance. You are quite as
unusual with your fair face, black brows, and brown hair; indeed, I know many
people who would prefer your bright head to her dark one. It's all a question
of taste — and being engaged to the girl," he added. "That
would be likely to prejudice one," laughed Elnora. "Edith
has a birthday soon; if these last will you let me have a box of them to send
her?" "I
will help gather and pack them for you, so they will carry nicely. Does she
hunt moths with you?" Back went
Philip Ammon's head in a gale of laughter. "No!"
he cried. "She says they are 'creepy.' She would go into a spasm if she
were compelled to touch those caterpillars I saw you handling yesterday." "Why
would she?" marvelled Elnora. "Haven't you told her that they are
perfectly clean, helpless, and harmless as so much animate velvet?" "No, I
have not told her. She wouldn't care enough about caterpillars to listen."
"In
what is she interested?" "What
interests Edith Carr? Let me think! First, I believe she takes pride in being a
little handsomer and better dressed than any girl of her set. She is interested
in having a beautiful home, fine appointments, in being petted, praised, and
the acknowledged leader of society. "She
likes to find new things which amuse her, and to always and in all
circumstances have her own way about everything." "Good
gracious!" cried Elnora, staring at him. "But what does she do? How
does she spend her time?" "Spend
her time!" repeated Philip. "Well, she would call that a joke. Her
days are never long enough. There is endless shopping, to find the pretty
things; regular visits to the dressmakers, calls, parties, theatres,
entertainments. She is always rushed. I never am able to be with her half as
much as I would like." "But I
mean work," persisted Elnora. "In what is she interested that is
useful to the world?" "Me!"
cried Philip promptly. "I can
understand that," laughed Elnora. "What I can't understand is how you
can be in —" She stopped in confusion, but she saw that he had finished
the sentence as she had intended. "I beg your pardon!" she cried.
"I didn't intend to say that. But I cannot understand these people I hear
about who live only for their own amusement. Perhaps it is very great; I'll
never have a chance to know. To me, it seems the only pleasure in this world
worth having is the joy we derive from living for those we love, and those we
can help. I hope you are not angry with me." Philip sat
silently looking far away, with deep thought in his eyes. "You
are angry," faltered Elnora. His look
came back to her as she knelt before him among the flowers and he gazed at her
steadily. "No
doubt I should be," he said, "but the fact is I am not. I cannot
understand a life purely for personal pleasure myself. But she is only a girl,
and this is her playtime. When she is a woman in her own home, then she will be
different, will she not?" Elnora
never resembled her mother so closely as when she answered that question. "I
would have to be well acquainted with her to know, but I should hope so. To
make a real home for a tired business man is a very different kind of work from
that required to be a leader of society. It demands different talent and
education. Of course, she means to change, or she would not have promised to
make a home for you. I suspect our dope is cool now, let's go try for some
butterflies." As they
went along the path together Elnora talked of many things but Philip answered
absently. Evidently he was thinking of something else. But the moth bait
recalled him and he was ready for work as they made their way back to the
woods. He wanted to try the Limberlost, but Elnora was firm about remaining on
home ground. She did not tell him that lights hung in the swamp would be a
signal to call up a band of men whose presence she dreaded. So they started,
Ammon carrying the dope, Elnora the net, Billy and Mrs. Comstock following with
cyanide boxes and lanterns. First they
tried for butterflies and captured several fine ones without trouble. They also
called swarms of ants, bees, beetles, and flies. When it grew dusk, Mrs. Comstock
and Philip went to prepare supper. Elnora and Billy remained until the
butterflies disappeared. Then they lighted the lanterns, repainted the trees
and followed the home trail. "Do
you 'spec you'll get just a lot of moths?" asked Billy, as he walked
beside Elnora. "I am
sure I hardly know," said the girl. "This is a new way for me.
Perhaps they will come to the lights, but few moths eat; and I have some doubt
about those which the lights attract settling on the right trees. Maybe the
smell of that dope will draw them. Between us, Billy, I think I like my old way
best. If I can find a hidden moth, slip up and catch it unawares, or take it in
full flight, it's my captive, and I can keep it until it dies naturally. But
this way you seem to get it under false pretences, it has no chance, and it
will probably ruin its wings struggling for freedom before morning." "Well,
any moth ought to be proud to be taken anyway, by you," said Billy.
"Just look what you do! You can make everybody love them. People even quit
hating caterpillars when they see you handle them and hear you tell all about
them. You must have some to show people how they are. It's not like killing
things to see if you can, or because you want to eat them, the way most men
kill birds. I think it is right for you to take enough for collections, to show
city people, and to illustrate the Bird Woman's books. You go on and take them!
The moths don't care. They're glad to have you. They like it!" "Billy,
I see your future," said Elnora. "We will educate you and send you up
to Mr. Ammon to make a great lawyer. You'd beat the world as a special pleader.
You actually make me feel that I am doing the moths a kindness to take
them." "And
so you are!" cried Billy. "Why, just from what you have taught them
Uncle Wesley and Aunt Margaret never think of killing a caterpillar until they
look whether it's the beautiful June moth kind, or the horrid tent ones. That's
what you can do. You go straight ahead!" "Billy,
you are a jewel!" cried Elnora, throwing her arm across his shoulders as
they came down the path. "My, I
was scared!" said Billy with a deep breath. "Scared?" questioned Elnora. "Yes sir-ee! Aunt Margaret scared
me. May I ask you a question?" "Of course,
you may!" "Is
that man going to be your beau?" "Billy!
No! What made you think such a thing?" "Aunt
Margaret said likely he would fall in love with you, and you wouldn't want me
around any more. Oh, but I was scared! It isn't so, is it?" "Indeed,
no!" "I am
your beau, ain't I?" "Surely
you are!" said Elnora, tightening her arm. "I do hope Aunt Kate has ginger cookies," said Billy with a little skip of delight. |