WHO MET DIAMOND AT SANDWICH
As THEY flew, so fast they went that the sea slid away from under
them like a great web of shot silk, blue shot with grey, and green
shot with
purple. They went so fast that the stars themselves
appeared to sail away past them
overhead, "like golden boats,"
on a blue sea turned
upside down. And they went so fast that Diamond
himself went the other way as fast--I mean he went fast asleep
in North Wind's arms.
When he woke, a face was bending over him; but it was not North Wind's;
it was his mother's. He put out his arms to her, and she clasped him
to her bosom and burst out crying. Diamond kissed her again and again
to make her stop. Perhaps kissing is the best thing for crying,
but it will not always stop it.
"What is the matter, mother?" he said.
"Oh, Diamond, my
darling! you have been so ill!" she sobbed.
"No, mother dear. I've only been at the back of the north wind,"
returned Diamond.
"I thought you were dead," said his mother.
But that moment the doctor came in.
"Oh! there!" said the doctor with gentle
cheerfulness; "we're better
to-day, I see."
Then he drew the mother aside, and told her not to talk to Diamond,
or to mind what he might say; for he must be kept as quiet as possible.
And indeed Diamond was not much inclined to talk, for he felt
very strange and weak, which was little wonder,
seeing that all
the time he had been away he had only sucked a few lumps of ice,
and there could not be much
nourishment in them.
Now while he is lying there, getting strong again with chicken
broth and other nice things, I will tell my readers what had been
taking place at his home, for they ought to be told it.
They may have forgotten that Miss Coleman was in a very poor
state of health. Now there were three reasons for this.
In the first place, her lungs were not strong. In the second place,
there was a gentleman somewhere who had not
behaved very well to her.
In the third place, she had not anything particular to do.
These three nots together are enough to make a lady very ill indeed.
Of course she could not help the first cause; but if the other two
causes had not existed, that would have been of little consequence;
she would only have to be a little careful. The second she could not
help quite; but if she had had anything to do, and had done it well,
it would have been very difficult for any man to
behave badly to her.
And for this third cause of her
illness, if she had had anything
to do that was worth doing, she might have borne his bad behaviour
so that even that would not have made her ill. It is not always easy,
I
confess, to find something to do that is worth doing, but the
most difficult things are
constantly being done, and she might
have found something if she had tried. Her fault lay in this,
that she had not tried. But, to be sure, her father and mother
were to blame that they had never set her going. Only then again,
nobody had told her father and mother that they ought to set her going
in that direction. So as none of them would find it out of themselves,
North Wind had to teach them.
We know that North Wind was very busy that night on which she
left Diamond in the
cathedral. She had in a sense been blowing
through and through the Colemans' house the whole of the night.
First, Miss Coleman's maid had left a chink of her mistress's
window open, thinking she had shut it, and North Wind had wound
a few of her hairs round the lady's
throat. She was considerably
worse the next morning. Again, the ship which North Wind had sunk
that very night belonged to Mr. Coleman. Nor will my readers
understand what a heavy loss this was to him until I have informed
them that he had been getting poorer and poorer for some time.
He was not so successful in his
speculations as he had been, for he
speculated a great deal more than was right, and it was time he
should be pulled up. It is a hard thing for a rich man to grow poor;
but it is an awful thing for him to grow
dishonest, and some kinds
of
speculation lead a man deep into
dishonesty before he thinks
what he is about. Poverty will not make a man worthless--he may be
worth a great deal more when he is poor than he was when he was rich;
but
dishonesty goes very far indeed to make a man of no value--
a thing to be thrown out in the dust-hole of the creation,
like a bit of a broken basin, or a dirty rag. So North Wind had
to look after Mr. Coleman, and try to make an honest man of him.
So she sank the ship which was his last
venture, and he was what
himself and his wife and the world called ruined.
Nor was this all yet. For on board that
vessel Miss Coleman's
lover was a passenger; and when the news came that the
vessel had
gone down, and that all on board had perished, we may be sure she
did not think the loss of their fine house and garden and furniture
the greatest
misfortune in the world.
Of course, the trouble did not end with Mr. Coleman and his family.
Nobody can suffer alone. When the cause of
suffering is most deeply
hidden in the heart, and nobody knows anything about it but the
man himself, he must be a great and a good man indeed, such as few
of us have known, if the pain inside him does not make him
behaveso as to cause all about him to be more or less uncomfortable.
But when a man brings money-troubles on himself by making haste
to be rich, then most of the people he has to do with must suffer
in the same way with himself. The elm-tree which North Wind blew
down that very night, as if small and great trials were to be
gathered in one heap, crushed Miss Coleman's pretty summer-house:
just so the fall of Mr. Coleman crushed the little family that
lived over his coach-house and
stable. Before Diamond was well
enough to be taken home, there was no home for him to go to.
Mr. Coleman--or his creditors, for I do not know the particulars--
had sold house,
carriage, horses, furniture, and everything.
He and his wife and daughter and Mrs. Crump had gone to live
in a small house in Hoxton, where he would be unknown,
and
whence he could walk to his place of business in the City.
For he was not an old man, and hoped yet to retrieve his fortunes.
Let us hope that he lived to retrieve his
honesty, the tail
of which had slipped through his fingers to the very last joint,
if not beyond it.
Of course, Diamond's father had nothing to do for a time, but it was
not so hard for him to have nothing to do as it was for Miss Coleman.
He wrote to his wife that, if her sister would keep her there till
he got a place, it would be better for them, and he would be greatly
obliged to her. Meantime, the gentleman who had bought the house
had allowed his furniture to remain where it was for a little while.
Diamond's aunt was quite
willing to keep them as long as she could.
And indeed Diamond was not yet well enough to be moved with safety.
When he had recovered so far as to be able to go out, one day his
mother got her sister's husband, who had a little pony-cart, to carry
them down to the sea-shore, and leave them there for a few hours.
He had some business to do further on at Ramsgate, and would pick them
up as he returned. A whiff of the sea-air would do them both good,
she said, and she thought besides she could best tell Diamond
what had happened if she had him quite to herself.
CHAPTER XIII
THE SEASIDE
DIAMOND and his mother sat down upon the edge of the rough grass
that bordered the sand. The sun was just far enough past its
highest not to shine in their eyes when they looked eastward.
A sweet little wind blew on their left side, and comforted the
mother without letting her know what it was that comforted her.
Away before them stretched the sparkling waters of the ocean,
every wave of which flashed out its own delight back in the face
of the great sun, which looked down from the st
illness of its blue
house with
glorious silent face upon its flashing children.
On each hand the shore rounded outwards, forming a little bay.
There were no white cliffs here, as further north and south, and the
place was rather
dreary, but the sky got at them so much the better.
Not a house, not a creature was within sight. Dry sand was about
their feet, and under them thin wiry grass, that just managed to grow
out of the
poverty-stricken shore.
"Oh dear!" said Diamond's mother, with a deep sigh, "it's a sad world!"
"Is it?" said Diamond. "I didn't know."
"How should you know, child? You've been too well taken care of,
I trust."
"Oh yes, I have," returned Diamond. "I'm sorry! I thought you
were taken care of too. I thought my father took care of you.
I will ask him about it. I think he must have forgotten."
"Dear boy!" said his mother. "your father's the best man in the world."
"So I thought!" returned Diamond with
triumph. "I was sure
of it!--Well, doesn't he take very good care of you?"
"Yes, yes, he does," answered his mother, bursting into tears.
"But who's to take care of him? And how is he to take care of us
if he's got nothing to eat himself?"
"Oh dear!" said Diamond with a gasp; "hasn't he got anything
to eat? Oh! I must go home to him."
"No, no, child. He's not come to that yet. But what's to become
of us, I don't know."
"Are you very hungry, mother? There's the basket. I thought you
put something to eat in it."
"O you
darling stupid! I didn't say I was hungry," returned his mother,
smiling through her tears.
"Then I don't understand you at all," said Diamond. "Do tell me
what's the matter."
"There are people in the world who have nothing to eat, Diamond."
"Then I suppose they don't stop in it any longer. They--they--
what you call--die--don't they?"
"Yes, they do. How would you like that?"
"I don't know. I never tried. But I suppose they go where they
get something to eat."
"Like enough they don't want it," said his mother, petulantly.
"That's all right then," said Diamond, thinking I daresay more
than he chose to put in words.
"Is it though? Poor boy! how little you know about things!
Mr. Coleman's lost all his money, and your father has nothing to do,
and we shall have nothing to eat by and by."
"Are you sure, mother?"
"Sure of what?"
"Sure that we shall have nothing to eat."
"No, thank Heaven! I'm not sure of it. I hope not."
"Then I can't understand it, mother. There's a piece of gingerbread
in the basket, I know."
"O you little bird! You have no more sense than a
sparrow that picks
what it wants, and never thinks of the winter and the frost and,
the snow."
"Ah--yes--I see. But the birds get through the winter, don't they?"
"Some of them fall dead on the ground."
"They must die some time. They wouldn't like to be birds always.
Would you, mother?"
"What a child it is!" thought his mother, but she said nothing.
"Oh! now I remember," Diamond went on. "Father told me that day I went
to Epping Forest with him, that the rose-bushes, and the may-bushes,
and the holly-bushes were the bird's barns, for there were the hips,
and the haws, and the holly-berries, all ready for the winter."
"Yes; that's all very true. So you see the birds are provided for.
But there are no such barns for you and me, Diamond."
"Ain't there?"
"No. We've got to work for our bread."
"Then let's go and work," said Diamond, getting up.
"It's no use. We've not got anything to do."
"Then let's wait."
"Then we shall starve."
"No. There's the basket. Do you know, mother, I think I shall call
that basket the barn."
"It's not a very big one. And when it's empty--where are we then?"
"At auntie's cupboard," returned Diamond promptly.
"But we can't eat auntie's things all up and leave her to starve."