Robert Herrick

Together


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isn't here, I suppose? There are a good many St. Louis people."

      The guests were now scattered in little groups over the green, dawdling in talk and breathing happily the June-scented air. The stolid man and his placid wife who had sat near the rear had already started for the Colonel's house, following the foot-path across the fields. They walked silently side by side, as if long used to wordless companionship.

      The amiable Senator and his friend Beals examined critically the little Gothic chapel, which had been a gift to his native town by the Colonel, as well as the stone library at the other end of the green. "Nice idea of Price," the Senator was saying, "handsome buildings—pleasant little village," and he moved in the direction of Miss Pallanton, who was alone.

      Down below in the valley, on the railroad siding, lay the special train that had brought most of the guests from New York that morning. The engine emitted little puffs of white smoke in the still noon, ready to carry its load back to the city after the breakfast. About the library steps were the carriages of those who had driven over from neighboring towns; the whole village had a disturbed and festal air.

      The procession was straggling across the village street through the stile and into the meadow, tramping down the thick young grass, up the slope to the comfortable old white house that opened its broad verandas like hospitable arms. The President of the Atlantic and Pacific, deserted by the Senator, had offered his arm to a stern old lady with knotty hands partly concealed in lace gloves. Her lined face had grown serious in age and contention with life. She clung stiffly to the arm of the railroad president—proud, silent, and shy. She was his mother. From her one might conclude that the groom's people were less comfortably circumstanced than the bride's—that this was not a marriage of ambition on the woman's part. It was the first time Mrs. Lane had been "back east" since she had left her country home as a young bride. It was a proud moment, walking with her son's chief; but the old lady did not betray any elation, as she listened to the kindly words that Beals found to say about her son.

      "A first-rate railroad man, Mrs. Lane—he will move up rapidly. We can't get enough of that sort."

      The mother, never relaxing her tight lips, drank it all in, treasured it as a reward for the hard years spent in keeping that boarding-house in Omaha, after the death of her husband, who had been a country doctor.

      "He's a good son," she admitted as the eulogy flagged. "And he knows how to get on with all kinds of folks. … "

      At their heels were Vickers Price and the thin Southern girl, Margaret Lawton. Vickers, just back from Munich for this event, had managed to give the conventional dress that he was obliged to wear a touch of strangeness, with an enormous flowing tie of delicate pink, a velvet waistcoat, and broad-brimmed hat. The clothes and the full beard, the rippling chestnut hair and pointed mustache, showed a desire for eccentricity on the part of the young man that distinguished him from all the other well-dressed young Americans. He carried a thin cane and balanced a cigarette between his lips.

      "Yes," he was saying, "I had to come over to see Isabelle married, but I shall go back after a look around—not the place for me!" He laughed and waved his cane towards the company with an ironic sense of his inappropriateness to an American domestic scene.

      "You are a composer—music, isn't it?" the girl asked, a flash in her blue eyes at the thought of youth, Munich, music.

      "I have written a few things; am getting ready, you know," Vickers Price admitted modestly.

      Just there they were joined by a handsome, fashionably dressed man, his face red with rapid walking. He touched his long, well-brushed black mustache with his handkerchief as he explained:—

      "Missed the train—missed the show—but got here in time for the fun, on the express."

      He took his place beside the girl, whose color deepened and eyes turned away—perhaps annoyed, or pleased?

      "That's what you come for, isn't it?" she said, forcing a little joke.

       Noticing that the two men did not speak, she added hastily, "Don't you know

       Mr. Price, Mr. Vickers Price? Mr. Hollenby."

      The newcomer raised his silk hat, sweeping Vickers, who was fanning himself with his broad-brimmed felt, in a light, critical stare. Then Mr. Hollenby at once appropriated the young woman's attention, as though he would indicate that it was for her sake he had taken this long, hot journey.

      * * * * *

      There were other little groups at different stages on the hill—one gathered about a small, dark-haired woman, whose face burned duskily in the June sun. She was Aline Goring—the Eros of that schoolgirl band at St. Mary's who had come to see their comrade married. And there was Elsie Beals—quite elegant, the only daughter of the President of the A. and P. The Woodyards, Percy and Lancey, classmates of Vickers at the university, both slim young men, wearing their clothes carelessly—clearly not of the Hollenby manner—had attached themselves here. Behind them was Nan Lawton, too boisterous even for the open air. At the head of the procession, now nearly topping the hill beneath the house, was that silent married couple, the heavy, sober man and the serene, large-eyed woman, who did not mingle with the others. He had pointed out to her the amiable Senator and President Beals, both well-known figures in the railroad world where he worked, far down, obscurely, as a rate clerk. His wife looked at these two great ones, who indirectly controlled the petty destiny of the Johnstons, and squeezed her husband's hand more tightly, expressing thus many mixed feelings—content with him, pride and confidence in him, in spite of his humble position in the race.

      "It's just like the Pilgrim's Progress," she said with a little smile, looking backward at the stream.

      "But who is Christian?" the literal husband asked. Her eyes answered that she knew, but would not tell.

      * * * * *

      Just as each one had reflected his own emotion at the marriage, so each one, looking up at the hospitable goal ahead—that irregular, broad white house poured over the little Connecticut hilltop—had his word about the Colonel's home.

      "No wonder they call it the Farm," sneered Nan Lawton to the Senator.

      "It's like the dear old Colonel, the new and the old," the Senator sententiously interpreted.

      Beals, overhearing this, added, "It's poor policy to do things that way. Better to pull the old thing down and go at it afresh—you save time and money, and have it right in the end."

      "It's been in the family a hundred years or more," some one remarked. "The

       Colonel used to mow this field himself, before he took to making hardware."

      "Isabelle will pull it about their ears when she gets the chance," Mrs. Lawton said. "The present-day young haven't much sentiment for uncomfortable souvenirs."

      Her cousin Margaret was remarking to Vickers, "What a good, homey sort of place—like our old Virginia houses—all but that great barn!"

      It was, indeed, as the Senator had said, very like the Colonel, who could spare neither the old nor the new. It was also like him to give Grafton a new stone library and church, and piece on rooms here and there to his own house. In spite of these additions demanded by comfort there was something in the conglomeration to remind the Colonel, who had returned to Grafton after tasting strife and success in the Middle West, of the plain home of his youth.

      "The dear old place!" Alice Johnston murmured to her husband. "It was never more attractive than to-day, as if it knew that it was marrying off an only daughter." To her, too, the Farm had memories, and no new villa spread out spaciously in Italian, Tudor, or Classic style could ever equal this white, four-chimneyed New England mansion.

      On the west slope of the hill near the veranda a large tent had been erected, and into this black-coated waiters were running excitedly to and fro around a wing of the house which evidently held the servant quarters. Just beyond the tent a band was playing a loud march. There was to be dancing on the lawn after the breakfast, and in the evening on the village green for everybody, and later fireworks. The