Amelia Barr - The Paper Cap. A Story of Love and Labor стр 8.

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Katherine had not yet been promoted to a seat at the late supper table, and only came to it when specially asked. So Madam found her ungowned, and with loosened hair, in a dressing-sacque of blue flannel. She was writing a letter to a school friend, but she understood her mothers visit and asked with a smile

Am I to come to supper, mother? Oh, I am so glad.

Then, dearie, do not speak of London, nor the poor children, nor the selfish weavers.

Not selfish, mother. They believe they are fighting for their rights. You know that.

I doant know it. I doant believe it. Their wives and children ought to be more to them than their awn way which is what they really want. Doant say a word about them.

I will not. I am going to tell father about the Arkroyds, who owned Scar Top House so long.

Father will like to hear anything good about Colonel Arkroyd. He is the last of a fine Yorkshire family. Who told thee anything about him?

Before I came to my room I went to give Polly some sugar I had in my pocket for her, and I met Britton, who had just come from the stable. He turned and went with me and he was full of the story and so I had to listen to it.

Well, then, we will listen to it when thou comes down. Father is hungry, so dont keep him waiting, or he will be put out of his way.

I will be down in five minutes, and father is never cross with me.

Indeed, when Madam went back to the parlor, a servant was bringing in the cold mutton and Madam had the bottle of sherry in her hand. A few minutes later Katherine had joined her parents, and they were sitting cozily round a small table, set in the very warmth and light of the hearthstone. Then Madam, fearing some unlucky word or allusion, said as quickly as possible

Whatever was it thou heard about Colonel Ark-royd, Katherine?

Ay! Ay! Colonel Arkroyd! Who has anything to say about him? asked the squire. One of the finest men alive to-day.

I heard a strange thing about his old house, an hour ago.

But he sold Scar Top House, and went to live in Kendal. A man from Bradford bought it, eh?

Yes, a man with a factory and six hundred looms, they say. Father, have you noticed how crowded our rookery is with the birds nests this spring?

I doant know that I hev noticed the number of the nests, but nobody can help hearing their noisy chattering all over Annis.

Do you remember the rookery at Scar Top?

Yes. I often hed a friendly threep with Ark-royd about it. He would insist, that his rookery hed the largest congregation. I let him think so hes twenty years older than I am and I did hear that the Bradford man had bought the place because of the rookery.

So he did. And now, father, every bird has left it. There was not one nest built there this spring. Not one!

I never heard the like. Whoever told thee such a story?

The whole village knows it. One morning very early every rook in Scar Top went away. They went altogether, just before daybreak. They went to Saville Court and settled in a long row of elm trees in the home meadow. They are building there now and the Bradford man

Give him his name. It is John Denby. He was born in Annis in my manor and he worked for the colonel, near twenty years.

Very well. John Denby and Colonel Arkroyd have quarreled about the birds, and there is likely to be a law suit over them.

Upon my word! That will be a varry interesting quarrel. What could make birds act in such a queer way? I niver knew them to do such a thing before.

Well, father, rooks are very aristocratic birds. Denby could not get a caw out of the whole flock. They would not notice Denby, and they used to talk to Arkroyd, whenever he came out of the house. Denby used to work for Colonel Arkroyd, and the rooks knew it. They did not consider him a gentleman, and they would not accept his hospitality.

That is going a bit too far, Katherine.

Oh, no! Old Britton told me so, and the Yorkshire bird does not live who has not told Britton all about itself. He said further, that rooks are very vain and particularly so about their feathers. He declared they would go far out of their way in order to face the wind and so prevent ruffling their feathers.

Rooks are at least a very human bird, said Madam; our rooks make quite a distinction between thee and myself. I can easily notice it. The male birds are in a flutter when thou walks through the rookery, they moderate their satisfaction when I pay them a call and it is the female birds who do the honors then.

That reminds me, mother, that Britton told me rooks intermarried generation after generation, and that if a rook brought home a strange bride, he was forced to build in a tree the community selected, at some distance from the rookery. If he did not do this, his nest was relentlessly torn down.

Well, my Joy, I am glad to learn so much from thee. How do the rooks treat thee?

With but moderate notice, father, unless I am at Brittons side. Then they caw respectfully, as I take my way through their colony. Britton taught me to lift my hat now and then, as father does. The squire laughed, and was a bit confused. Nay, nay! he said. Britton hes been making up that story, though I vow, I would rayther take off my hat to gentlemanly rooks than to some humans I know; I would that! There is one thing I can tell thee about rooks, Britton seems to have forgot; they cant make a bit of sunshine for themselves. If t weather is rainy, no bird in the world is more miserable. They sit with puffed out feathers in uncontrollable melancholy, and they hevnt a caw for anybody. Yet I hev a great respect for rooks.

And I hev a great liking for rook pies, said Madam. There is not a pie in all the records of cookery, to come near it. Par excellence is its name. I shall miss my rook pies, if we go away this summer.

But we shall have something better in their place, dear mother.

Who can tell? In the meantime, sleep will be the best thing for all. To-morrow is a new day. Sleep will make us ready for it.

CHAPTER III THE REALIZATION OF TROUBLE

Beneath this starry arch,
Naught resteth, or is still;
And all things have their march,
As if by one great will.
Move on! Move all!
Hark to the footfall!
On, on! forever!

THE next morning Katherine came to her mother full of enthusiasm. She had some letters in her hand and she said: I have written these letters all alike, mother, and they are ready to send away, if you will give me the names of the ladies you wish them to go to.

How many letters hast thou written?

Seven. I can write as many as you wish.

Thou hes written too many already.

Too many!

Yes, tha must not forget, that this famine and distress is over all Yorkshire over all England. Every town and village hes its awn sick and starving, and hes all it can do to look after them. Thy father told me last night he hed been giving to all the villages round us for a year back but until Mr. Foster told him yesterday he hed no idea that there was any serious trouble in Annis. Tha knows, dearie, that Yorkshire and Lancashire folk wont beg. No, not if they die for want of begging. The preacher found out their need first and he told father at once. Then Jonathan Hartley admitted they were all suffering and that something must be done to help. That is the reason for the meeting this afternoon.

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