Produced by Al Haines
THE QUEEN'S TWIN
AND OTHER STORIES
BY SARAH ORNE JEWETT
BOSTON AND NEW YORK
HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
The Riverside Press, Cambridge
M DCCC XCIX
COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY SARAH ORNE JEWETT
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
To
SUSAN BURLEY CABOT
CONTENTS
THE QUEEN'S TWIN A DUNNET SHEPHERDESS WHERE'S NORA BOLD WORDS AT THE BRIDGE MARTHA'S LADY THE COON DOG AUNT CYNTHY DALLETT THE NIGHT BEFORE THANKSGIVING
THE QUEEN'S TWIN.
I.
The coast of Maine was in former years brought so near to foreign shores by its busy fleet of ships that among the older men and women one still finds a surprising proportion of travelers. Each seaward-stretching headland with its high-set houses, each island of a single farm, has sent its spies to view many a Land of Eshcol; one may see plain, contented old faces at the windows, whose eyes have looked at far-away ports and known the splendors of the Eastern world. They shame the easy voyager of the North Atlantic and the Mediterranean; they have rounded the Cape of Good Hope and braved the angry seas of Cape Horn in small wooden ships; they have brought up their hardy boys and girls on narrow decks; they were among the last of the Northmen's children to go adventuring to unknown shores. More than this one cannot give to a young State for its enlightenment; the sea captains and the captains' wives of Maine knew something of the wide world, and never mistook their native parishes for the whole instead of a part thereof; they knew not only Thomaston and Castine and Portland, but London and Bristol and Bordeaux, and the strange-mannered harbors of the China Sea.
One September day, when I was nearly at the end of a summer spent in a village called Dunnet Landing, on the Maine coast, my friend Mrs. Todd, in whose house I lived, came home from a long, solitary stroll in the wild pastures, with an eager look as if she were just starting on a hopeful quest instead of returning. She brought a little basket with blackberries enough for supper, and held it towards me so that I could see that there were also some late and surprising raspberries sprinkled on top, but she made no comment upon her wayfaring. I could tell plainly that she had something very important to say.
"You have n't brought home a leaf of anything," I ventured to this practiced herb-gatherer. "You were saying yesterday that the witch hazel might be in bloom."
"I dare say, dear," she answered in a lofty manner; "I ain't goin' to say it was n't; I ain't much concerned either way 'bout the facts o' witch hazel. Truth is, I 've been off visitin'; there's an old Indian footpath leadin' over towards the Back Shore through the great heron swamp that anybody can't travel over all summer. You have to seize your time some day just now, while the low ground 's summer-dried as it is to-day, and before the fall rains set in. I never thought of it till I was out o' sight o' home, and I says to myself, 'To-day 's the day, certain!' and stepped along smart as I could. Yes, I 've been visitin'. I did get into one spot that was wet underfoot before I noticed; you wait till I get me a pair o' dry woolen stockings, in case of cold, and I 'll come an' tell ye."
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: The Queen's Twin and Other Stories by Jewett
- 2: I knew that certain ills were apt to seize upon her
- 3: Todd spoke again to make a formal announcement
- 4: And the wandering flocks on high cloudy pastures
- 5: Todd as we sat down to rest on the worn doorstep
- 6: And in old times folks had been lost
- 7: You might say that Abby 'd been a slave
- 8: Todd would say comprehensively
- 9: But Albert come below pretty soon
- 10: Todd put in a discerning question now and then
- 11: Martin did not appear to understand at first
- 12: Early one morning at Dunnet Landing
- 13: Todd was getting out her old iron lobster pot
- 14: And when I reached the schoolhouse
- 15: Persistent call to a listener that trout brooks always make
- 16: William led the way across the pasture
- 17: Frost whitened ledges that made the hill
- 18: They do so well because they 're shepherded
- 19: Hight really smiled and settled herself in her chair
- 20: Thankful Hight gave a suspicious look through the window
- 21: Hight frankly began to show fatigue
- 22: William unloaded his gift of dried fish
- 23: I thought something had happened the poor shild
- 24: Is she a pritty slip of a gerrl
- 25: Ain't she me own sister's shild
- 26: When I heard the folks tarking
- 27: An' so she wint on the next two or free days
- 28: And Mickey got out of it laughing
- 29: I 'd like well if he 'd give a look at one o' me own gerrls
- 30: But she picked out a crusty bun
- 31: Why don't you be afther getting your mother out
- 32: 't will give you a big market for your buns
- 33: The Ryans were all abed and asleep
- 34: Nora never said that she was tired
- 35: Sure there 's plinty Flahertys in it now
- 36: God bless the shild that I thought I 'd never see
- 37: And herself shuk her fist at me
- 38: How well you rache through an honest fince
- 39: Dunleavy stood looking at him over the fence
- 40: Dunleavy sat behind the screen of blue mosquito netting
- 41: Dunleavy is very pleasant here so close together
- 42: It was evident to every one in town that Miss Harriet Pyne
- 43: Miss Harriet Pyne sighed anxiously
- 44: Miss Pyne always loves to send something to the minister
- 45: And he was much obliged to both Miss Pyne and Miss Vernon
- 46: She looked years older than Helena
- 47: It's so much pleasanter for Miss Pyne
- 48: Miss Harriet Pyne lived on in the large white house
- 49: As she promised to come again to Ashford
- 50: Miss Pyne herself had many fixed habits
- 51: Who never had known Miss Helena
- 52: 'I 'm goin' over as fur as Dipford Centre
- 53: Wife said she was inquirin' about the circus
- 54: A good coon dog 's worth somethin'
- 55: Nobody likes to be hindered in a coon hunt
- 56: Price and Eliza Jane Topliff appeared at once
- 57: He set everything by him as a coon dog
- 58: He 'll scent the coon quick enough then
- 59: They all bark alike after a coon
- 60: Aunt Cynthy Dallett 's just one of 'em
- 61: Your aunt Dallett is a very self contained person
- 62: Hand walked first and Miss Pendexter followed
- 63: An' now I 'm carryin' her up to Aunt Cynthy
- 64: There was cup custards and custard pie
- 65: Dallett turned her head she could look into the bedroom
- 66: Thin one was easily recognized as Abby Pendexter
- 67: Dallett led the way with eager hospitality
- 68: Abby Pendexter did not join in this conversation
- 69: Dallett decided to be quite proper for the Queen
- 70: Robb found it too large for herself alone
- 71: But Mary Ann Robb waked up frightened and bewildered
- 72: It was not the keeper of the poorhouse
