Ethelyn had been more particular than she meant to be with her reasons

for her disappointment, and in enumerating the bad habits to which she

said Western people were addicted, she had included the points upon

which Andy had seized so readily. He had never been told before that his

manners were entirely what they ought not to be; he could hardly see it

so now, but if it would please Ethie he would try to refrain, he said,

asking that when she saw him doing anything very outlandish, she would

remind him of it and tell him what was right.

"I think folks is always happier," he continued, "when they forgit to

please themselves and try to suit others, even if they can't see any

sense in it."

Andy did not exactly mean this as a rebuke, but it had the effect of one

and set Ethelyn thinking. Such genuine simplicity and frankness could

not be lost upon her, and long after Andy had left her and gone to his

room, where he sought in his prayer-book for something just suited to

her case, she sat pondering all he had said, and upon the faith which

could make even simple Andy so lovable and good.

"He has improved his one talent far more than I have my five or ten,"

she said, while regrets for her own past misdeeds began to fill her

bosom, with a wish that she might in some degree atone for them.

Perhaps it was the resolution formed that night, and perhaps it was the

answer to Andy's prayer that God would have mercy upon Ethie and incline

her and his mother to pull together better, which sent Ethelyn down to

breakfast the next morning and kept her below stairs a good portion of

the day, and made her accept James' invitation to ride with him in the

afternoon. Then when it was night again, and she saw Eunice carrying

through the hall a smoking firebrand, which she knew was designed for

the parlor fire, she changed her mind about staying alone upstairs with

the books she had commenced to read, but brought instead the white,

fleecy cloud she was knitting, and sat with the family, who had never

seen her more gracious or amiable, and wondered what had happened. Andy

thought he knew; he had prayed for Ethie, not only the previous night,

but that morning before he left his room, and also during the day--once

in the barn upon a rick of hay and once behind the smoke-house.

Andy always looked for direct answers to his prayers, and believing he

had received one his face was radiant with content and satisfaction,

when after supper he brushed and wet his hair and plastered it down upon

his forehead, and changed his boots for a lighter pair of Richard's, and

then sat down before the parlor fire with the yarn sock he was knitting

for himself. Ethelyn had never seen him engaged in this feminine

employment before, and she felt a strong disposition to laugh, but

fearing to wound him, repressed her smiles and seemed not to look at him

as he worked industriously on the heel, turning and shaping it better

than she could have done. It was not often that Ethelyn had favored the

family with music, but she did so that night, playing and singing pieces

which she knew were familiar to them, and only feeling a momentary pang

of resentment when, at the close of "Yankee Doodle," with variations,

quiet John remarked that Melinda herself could not go ahead of that!

Melinda's style of music was evidently preferable to her own, but she

swallowed the insult and sang "Lily Dale," at the request of Andy, who,

thinking the while of dear little Daisy, wiped his eyes with the leg of

his sock, while a tear trickled down his mother's cheek and dropped

into her lap.




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