to hospital, and bury
the dead.'
"Is that a dead man under the blue coverlet?" I asked with awe.
"I suppose so," said Godfather Gilpin.
"But why don't his friends go to the funeral?" I inquired.
"He has no friends to follow him," said my godfather. "That is why he
is being buried by the Brothers of Pity."
Long after Godfather Gilpin had told me all that he could tell me of the
Fratelli della Misericordia--long after I had put the congregation
(including the Religious Orders and Taylor's Sermons) back into the
shelf to which they belonged--the masked faces and solemn garb of the
men in the picture haunted me.
I have changed my mind a great many times, since I can remember,
about what I will be when I am grown up. Sometimes I have thought I
should like to be an officer and die in battle; sometimes I settled to be a
clergyman and preach splendid sermons to enormous congregations;
once I quite decided to be a head fireman and wear a brass helmet, and
be whirled down lighted streets at night, every one making way for me,
on errands of life and death.
But the history of the Brothers of Pity put me out of conceit with all
other heroes. It seemed better than anything I had ever thought of--to
do good works unseen of men, without hope of reward, and to those
who could make no return. For it rang in my ears that Godfather Gilpin
had said, "He has no friends--that is why he is being buried by the
Brothers of Pity."
I quite understood what I thought they must feel, because I had once
buried a cat who had no friends. It was a poor half-starved old thing,
for the people it belonged to had left it, and I used to see it slinking up
to the back door and looking at Tabby, who was very fat and sleek, and
at the scraps on the unwashed dishes after dinner. Mrs. Jones kicked it
out every time, and what happened to it before I found it lying draggled
and dead at the bottom of the Ha-ha, with the top of a kettle still
fastened to its scraggy tail, I never knew, and it cost me bitter tears to
guess. It cost me some hard work, too, to dig the grave, for my spade
was so very small.
I don't think Mrs. Jones would have cared to be a Brother of Pity, for
she was very angry with me for burying that cat, because it was such a
wretched one, and so thin and dirty, and looked so ugly and smelt so
nasty. But that was just why I wanted to give it a good funeral, and why
I picked my crimson lily and put it in the grave, because it seemed so
sad the poor thing should be like that when it might have been clean
and fluffy, and fat and comfortable, like Tabby, if it had had a home
and people to look after it.
It was remembering about the cat that made me think that there were no
Brothers of Pity (not even in Tuscany, for I asked Godfather Gilpin) to
bury beasts and birds and fishes when they have no friends to go to
their funerals. And that was how it was that I settled to be a Brother of
Pity without waiting till I grew up and could carry men.
I had a shilling of my own, and with sixpence of it I bought a yard and
a half of black calico at the post-office shop, and Mrs. Jones made me a
cloak out of it; and with the other sixpence I bought a mask--for they
sell toys there too. It was not a right sort of mask, but I could not make
Mrs. Jones understand about a hood with two eye-holes in it, and I did
not like to show her the picture, for if she had seen that I wanted to play
at burying people, perhaps she would not have made me the cloak. She
made it very well, and it came down to my ankles, and I could hide my
spade under it. The worst of the mask was that it was a funny one, with
a big nose; but it hid my face all the same, and when you get inside a
mask you can feel quite grave whatever it's painted like.
I had never had so happy a summer before as the one when I was a
Brother of Pity. I heard Nurse saying to Mrs. Jones that "there was no
telling what would keep children out of mischief," for that I "never
seemed to be tired of that old black rag and that ridiculous face."
But it
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