Anne of Ingleside
'Oh, Mummy, it smells like spring today,' cried Nan, delightedly snuffing the fresh moist air. 'Mummy, isn't spring an exciting time!'
Spring was trying out her paces that day... like an adorable baby just learning to walk. The winter pattern of trees and fields was beginning to be overlaid with hints of green, and Jem had again brought in the first mayflowers. But an enormously fat lady, sinking puffingly into one of the Ingleside easy-chairs, sighed, and said sadly that the springs weren't so nice as they were when she was young.
'Don't you think perhaps the change is in us... not in the springs, Mrs Mitchell?' smiled Anne.
'Mebbe so. I know I am changed all too well. I don't suppose to look at me now you'd think I was once the prettiest girl in these parts?'
Anne reflected that she certainly wouldn't. The thin, stringy, mouse-coloured hair under Mrs Mitchell's crepe bonnet and long sweeping 'widow's veil' was streaked with grey; her blue, expressionless eyes were faded and hollow; and to call her double chinned erred on the side of charity. But Mrs Anthony Mitchell was feeling quite contented with herself just then, for nobody in Four Winds had finer weeds. Her voluminous black dress was crepe to the knees. One wore mourning in those days with a vengeance.
Anne was spared the necessity of saying anything, for Mrs Mitchell gave her no chance.
'My soft water system went dry this week... there's a leak in it... so I kem down to the village this morning to get Raymond Russell to come and fix it. And thinks I to myself, "Now that I'm here I'll just run up to Ingleside and ask Mrs Doctor Blythe to write an obitchery for Anthony." '
'An obituary?' said Anne blankly.
'Yes... them things they put in the papers about dead people, you know,' explained Mrs Anthony. 'I want Anthony should have a real good one... something out of the common. You write things, don't you?'
'Occasionally I do write a little story,' admitted Anne. 'But a busy mother hasn't much time for that. I had wonderful dreams once, but now I'm afraid I'll never be in Who's Who, Mrs Mitchell. And I never wrote an obituary in my life.'
'Oh, they can't be hard to write. Old Uncle Charlie Bates over our way writes most of them for the Lower Glen, but he ain't a bit poetical, and I've set my heart on a piece of poetry for Anthony. My, but he was always so fond of poetry. I was up to hear you give that talk on bandages to the Glen Institute last week and thinks I to myself, "Anyone who can talk as glib as that can likely write a real poetical obitchery." You will do it for me, won't you, Mrs Blythe? Anthony would have liked it. He always admired you. He said once that when you come into a room you made all the other women look "common and undistinguished". He sometimes talked real poetical, but he meant well. I've been reading a lot of obitcheries... I have a big scrapbook full of them, but it didn't seem to me he'd have liked any of them. He used to laugh at them so much. And it's time it was done. He's been dead two months. He died lingering, but painless. Coming on spring's an inconvenient time for anyone to die, Mrs Blythe, but I've made the best of it. I s'pose Uncle Charlie will be hopping mad if I get anyone else to write Anthony's obitchery, but I don't care. Uncle Charlie has a wonderful flow of language, but him and Anthony never hit it off any too well, and the long and short of it is I'm not going to have him write Anthony's obitchery. I've been Anthony's wife... his faithful and loving wife for thirty-five years... thirty-five years, Mrs Blythe'... as if she were afraid Anne might think it only thirty-four... 'and I'm going to have an obitchery he'd like, if it takes a leg. That was what my daughter Seraphine said to me; she's married at Lowbridge, you know... nice name, Seraphine, isn't it?... I got it off a gravestone. Anthony didn't like it, he wanted to call her Judith, after his mother. But I said it was too solemn a name, and he gave in real kindly. He weren't no hand at arguing... though he always called her Seraph... where was I?'
'Your daughter was saying?'
'Oh, yes. Seraphine said to me, "Mother, whatever else you have or don't have, have a real, nice obitchery for father." Her and her father were always real thick, though he poked a bit of fun at her now and then, just as he did at me. Now, won't you, Mrs Blythe?'
'I really don't know a great deal about your husband. Mrs Mitchell.'
'Oh, I can tell you all about him... if you don't want to know the colour of his eyes. Do you know, Mrs Blythe, when Seraphine and me was talking things over after the funeral I couldn't tell the colour of his eyes, after living with him thirty-five years. They was kind of soft and dreamy anyhow. He used to look so pleading with them when he was courting me. He had a real hard time to get me, Mrs Blythe. He was mad about me for years. I was full of bounce then and meant to pick and choose. My life story would be real thrilling if you ever get short of material, Mrs Blythe. Ah, well, them days are gone. I had more beaux than you could shake a stick at. But they kept coming and going... and Anthony just kept coming. He was kind of good-looking, too... such a nice, lean man. I never could abide pudgy men... and he was a cut or two above me... I'd be the last one to deny that. "It'll be a step up for a Plummer if you marry a Mitchell," Ma said... I was a Plummer, Mrs Blythe... John A. Plummer's daughter. And he paid me such nice romantic compliments, Mrs Blythe. Once he told me I had the ethereal charm of moonlight. I knew it meant something else, though I don't know yet what "ethereal" means. I've always been meaning to look it up in the dictionary, but I never get around to it. Well, anyway, in the end I passed my word of honour that I would be his bride. That is... I mean... I said I'd take him. My, but I wish you could have seen me in my wedding-dress, Mrs Blythe. They all said I was a picture. Slim as a trout, with hair yaller as gold, and such a complexion. Ah, time makes turrible changes in us. You haven't come to that yet, Mrs Blythe. You're real pretty still... and a highly eddicated woman into the bargain. Ah, well, we can't all be clever, some of us have to do the cooking. That dress you've got on is real handsome, Mrs Blythe. You never wear black I notice... you're right... you'll have to wear it soon enough. Put if off till you have to, I say. Well, where was I?'
'You were... trying to tell me something about Mr Mitchell.'
'Oh, yes. Well, we were married. There was a big comet that night... I remember seeing it as we drove home. It's a real pity you couldn't have seen that comet, Mrs Blythe. It was simply pretty. I don't suppose you could work it into the obitchery, could you?'
'It... might be rather difficult...
'Well,' Mrs Mitchell surrendered the comet with a sigh, 'you'll have to do the best you can. He hadn't a very exciting life. He got drunk once, he said he just wanted to see what it was like for once... he was always of an inquiring turn of mind. But, of course, you couldn't put that in an obitchery. Nothing much else ever happened to him. Not to complain, but just to state facts, he was a bit shiftless and easy-going. He would sit for an hour looking into a hollyhock. My, but he was fond of flowers... hated to mow down the buttercups. No matter if the wheat crop failed as long as there was farewell-summers and golden-rod. And trees... that orchard of his... I always told him, joking like, that he cared far more for his trees than for me. And his farm... my, but he loved his bit of land. He seemed to think it was a human being. Many's the time I've heard him say, "I think I'll go out and have a little talk to my farm."
'When we got old I wanted him to sell, seeing as we had no boys, and retire to Lowbridge, but he would say, "I can't sell my farm... I can't sell my heart." Ain't men funny? Not long before he died he took a notion to have a boiled hen for dinner, "Cooked in that way you have," sez he. He was always partial to my cooking, if I do say it. The only thing he couldn't abide was my lettuce salad with nuts in it. He said the nuts were so durned unexpected. But there wasn't a hen to spare... they was all laying good... and there was only one rooster left, and of course I couldn't kill him. My, but I like to see the roosters strutting round. Ain't anything much handsomer than a fine rooster, do you think, Mrs Blythe? Well, where was I?'
'You were saying your husband wanted you to cook a hen for him.'
'Oh, yes. And I've been so sorry ever si
nce I didn't. I wake up in the night and think of it. But I didn't know he was going to die, Mrs Blythe. He never complained much, and always said he was better. And interested in things to the last. If I'd-a-known he was going to die, Mrs Blythe, I'd have cooked a hen for him, eggs or no eggs.'
Mrs Mitchell removed her rusty black lace mits and wiped her eyes with a handkerchief, black-bordered a full two inches.
'He'd have enjoyed it,' she sobbed. 'He had his own teeth to the last, poor dear. Well, anyway' - folding the handkerchief and putting on the mits - 'he was sixty-five so he weren't far from the allotted span. And I've got another coffin plate. Mary Martha Plummer and me started collecting coffin plates at the same time, but she soon got ahead of me... so many of her relations died, not to speak of her three children. She's got more coffin plates than anyone in these parts. I didn't seem to have much luck, but I've got a full mantelpiece at last. My cousin, Thomas Bates, was buried last week, and I wanted his wife to give me the coffin plate, but she had it buried with him. Said collecting coffin plates was a relic of barbarism. She was a Hampson, and the Hampsons were always odd. Well, where was I?'
Anne really could not tell Mrs Mitchell where she was this time. The coffin plates had dazed her.
'Oh, well, anyway, poor Anthony died. "I go gladly and in quietness," was all that he said, but he smiled just at the last... at the ceiling, not at me nor Seraphine. I'm so glad he was so happy just afore he died. There were times I used to think perhaps he wasn't quite happy, Mrs Blythe... he was so terrible high-strung and sensitive. But he looked real noble and sublime in his coffin. We had a grand funeral. It was just a lovely day. He was buried with loads of flowers. I took a sinking spell at the last, but otherwise everything went off very well. We buried him in the Upper Glen graveyard, though all his family were buried in Lowbridge. But he picked out his graveyard long ago... said he wanted to be buried near his farm and where he could hear the sea and the wind in the trees... there's trees around three sides of that graveyard, you know. I was glad, too, I always thought it was such a cosy little graveyard, and we can keep geraniums growing on his grave. He was a good man... he's likely in heaven now, so that needn't trouble you. I always think it must be some chore to write an obitchery when you don't know where the departed is. I can depend on you then, Mrs Blythe?'
Anne consented, feeling that Mrs Mitchell would stay there and talk until she did consent. Mrs Mitchell, with another sigh of relief, heaved herself out of her chair.
'I must be stepping. I'm expecting a hatching of turkey poults today. I've enjoyed my conversation with you and I wish I could have stayed longer. It's lonesome being a widow woman. A man mayn't amount to an awful lot, but you sort of miss him when he goes.'
Anne politely saw her down the walk. The children were stalking robins on the lawn and daffodil tips were poking up everywhere.
'You've got a nice proud house here... a real, nice, proud house, Mrs Blythe. I've always felt I'd like a big house. But with only us and Seraphine... and where was the money to come from? And, anyway, Anthony'd never hear of it. He had an awful affection for that old house. I'm meaning to sell if I get a fair offer and live either in Lowbridge or Mowbray Narrows. Whichever I decide would be the best place to be a widow in. Anthony's insurance will come in handy. Say what you like, it's easier to bear a full sorrow than an empty one. You'll find that out when you're a widow yourself... though I hope that'll be a good few years yet. How is the doctor getting on? It's been a real sickly winter so he ought to have done pretty well. My, what a nice little family you've got! Three girls! Nice now, but wait you till they come to the boy-crazy age. Not that I'd much trouble with Seraphine. She was quiet... like her father... and stubborn like him. When she fell in love with John Whitaker, have him she would in spite of all I could say. A rowan-tree? Whyn't you have it planted by the front door? It would keep the fairies out.'
'But who would want to keep the fairies out, Mrs Mitchell?'
'Now you're talking like Anthony. I was only joking. O' course I don't believe in fairies... but if they did happen to exist I've heard they were pesky mischievous. Well, goodbye, Mrs Blythe. I'll call round next week for the obitchery.'
23
'You've let yourself in for it, Mrs Doctor dear,' said Susan, who had overheard most of the conversation as she polished her silver in the pantry.
'Haven't I? But, Susan, I really do want to write that "obituary". I liked Anthony Mitchell... what little I've seen of him... and I feel sure that he'd turn over in his grave if his obituary was like the run of the mill in the Daily Enterprise. Anthony had an inconvenient sense of humour.'
'Anthony Mitchell was a real nice fellow when he was young, Mrs Doctor dear. Though a bit dreamy; they said. He didn't hustle enough to suit Bessy Plummer, but he made a decent living and paid his debts. Of course he married the last girl he should have. But although Bessy Plummer looks like a comic valentine now, she was pretty as a picture then. Some of us, Mrs Doctor dear,' concluded Susan with a sigh, 'haven't even that much to remember.'
'Mummy,' said Walter, 'the snack-dragons are coming up thick all around the back porch. And a pair of robins are beginning to build a nest on the pantry window-sill. You'll let them, won't you, Mummy. You won't open the window and scare them away?'
Anne had met Anthony Mitchell once or twice, though the little grey house between the spruce woods and the sea, with the great big willow-tree over it like a huge umbrella, where he lived, was in the lower Glen, and the doctor from Mowbray Narrows attended most of the people there. But Gilbert had bought hay from him now and then, and once when he had brought a load Anne had taken him all over her garden and they found out that they talked the same language. She had liked him... his lean, lined, friendly face, his brave, shrewd, yellowish-hazel eyes that had never faltered or been hoodwinked... save once, perhaps, when Bessy Plummer's shallow and fleeting beauty had tricked him into a foolish marriage. Yet he never seemed unhappy or unsatisfied. As long as he could plough and garden and reap he was as contented as a sunny old pasture. His black hair was but lightly frosted with silver, and a ripe, serene spirit revealed itself in his rare but sweet smiles. His old fields had given him bread and delight, joy of conquest and comfort in sorrow. Anne was satisfied because he was buried near them. He might have 'gone gladly', but he had lived gladly, too. The Mowbray Narrows doctor had said that when he told Anthony Mitchell he could hold out to him no hope of recovery Anthony had smiled and replied, 'Well, life is a trifle monotonous at times now I'm getting old. Death will be something of a change. I'm real curious about it, doctor.' Even Mrs Anthony, among all her rambling absurdities, had dropped a few things that revealed the real Anthony. Anne wrote 'The Old Man's Grave' a few evenings later by her room window, and read it over with a sense of satisfaction.
Make it where the winds may sweep
Through the pine boughs soft and deep, And the murmur of the sea
Come across the orient lea,
And the falling raindrops sing
Gently to his slumbering.
Make it where the meadows wide
Greenly lie on every side,
Harvest fields he reaped and trod, Westering slopes of clover sod,
Orchard lands where bloom and blow Trees he planted long ago.
Make it where the starshine dim
May be alway close to him,
And the sunrise glory spread
Lavishly around his bed,
And the dewy grasses creep
Tenderly above his sleep.
Since these things to him were dear Through full many a well-spent year, It is surely meet their grace
Should be on his resting-place,
And the murmur of the sea
Be his dirge eternally.
'I think Anthony Mitchell would have liked that,' said Anne, flinging her window open to lean out to the spring. Already there were crooked little rows of young lettuce in the children's garden; the sunset was soft and pink behind the maple grove; the Holl
ow rang with the faint, sweet laughter of children.
'Spring is so lovely, I hate to go to sleep and miss any of it,' said Anne.
Mrs Anthony Mitchell came up to get her 'obitchery' one afternoon the next week. Anne read it to her with a secret bit of pride; but Mrs Anthony's face did not express unmixed satisfaction.
'My, I call that real sprightly. You do put things so well. But... but... you didn't say a word about him being in heaven. Weren't you sure he is there?'
'So sure that it wasn't necessary to mention it, Mrs Mitchell.'
'Well, some people might doubt. He... he didn't go to church as often as he might... though he was a member in good standing. And it doesn't tell his age... nor mention the flowers. Why, you just couldn't count the wreaths on the coffin. Flowers are poetical enough I should think!'
'I'm sorry...
'Oh, I don't blame you... not a mite do I blame you. You've done your best and it sounds beautiful. What do I owe you?'
'Why... why... nothing, Mrs Mitchell. I couldn't think of such a thing.'
'Well, I thought likely you'd say that so I brung you up a bottle of my dandelion wine. It sweetens the stomach if you're ever bothered with gas. I'd have brung a bottle of my yarb tea, too, only I was afraid the Doctor mightn't approve. But if you'd like some and think you can smuggle it in unbeknownst to him you've only to say the word.'
'No, no, thank you,' said Anne rather flatly. She had not yet quite recovered from 'sprightly'.
'Just as you like. You'd be welcome to it. I'll not be needing any more medicine myself this spring. When my second cousin, Malachi Plummer, died in the winter I asked his widow to give me the three bottles of medicine there was left over... they got it by the dozen. She was going to throw them out, but I was always one that could never bear to waste anything. I couldn't take more than one bottle myself but I made our hired man take the other two. "If it doesn't do you any good it won't do you any harm," I told him. I won't say I'm not rather relieved you didn't want any cash for the obitchery, for I'm rather short of ready money just now. A funeral is so expensive, though D. B. Martin is about the cheapest undertaker in these parts. I haven't even got my black paid for yet. I won't feel I'm really in mourning till it is. Luckily I hadn't to get a new bunnit. This was the bunnit I had made for Mother's funeral ten years ago. It's kind of fortunate black becomes me, ain't it? If you'd see Malachi Plummer's widow now, with her saller face! Well, I must be stepping. And I'm much obliged to you, Mrs Blythe, even if... but I feel sure you did your best and it's lovely poetry.'