have done for me, nephew! I am under a fine
servitude now;" and she primmed up her mouth, but her eye
laughed,--"little Miss here, chooses to be waited on by me, and me only;
and here I am, with nothing to do but to attend on my lady."
"Little Miss," said Mr. Dymock, "what little Miss? who have you got
there?"
"Neither more nor less," replied Mrs. Margaret, "than your foundling."
"Impossible!" said Mr. Dymock: "Why, what have you done to her?"
"Merely washed, combed, and dressed her," said Mrs. Margaret; "give
me credit, nephew, and tell me what I have brought out by my
diligence."
"You have brought out a brilliant from an unfinished stone," exclaimed
Mr. Dymock; "that is a beautiful child; I shall have extreme delight in
making as much of that fine mind, as you have done with that beautiful
exterior."
"Then you do not think of putting her in a foundling hospital or a
workhouse, nephew, as you proposed last night?" said Mrs. Margaret,
with a smile.
"It would be a folly," replied the nephew, "to degrade such a creature as
that;" and he attempted to kiss the baby; but, swift as thought, she had
turned her face away, and was clinging to Mrs. Margaret.
The old lady primmed up again with much complacency, "Did I not tell
you, nephew, how it was," she said, "nothing will do but Aunt Margaret.
Well, I suppose I must give her my poor pussy's corner in my bed. But
now her back is turned to you, Dymock, observe the singular mark on
her shoulder, and tell me what it is?"
Mr. Dymock saw this mark with amazement:--He saw that it was no
natural mark; and at length, though not till after he had examined it
many times, he made it out, or fancied he had done so, to be a branch of
a palm tree. From the first he had made up his mind that this was a
Jewish child; and, following the idea of the palm-tree, and tracing the
word in a Hebrew lexicon,--for he was a Hebrew scholar, though not a
deep one,--he found that Tamar was the Hebrew for a palm tree. "And
Tamar it shall be," he said; "this maid of Judah, this daughter of Zion
shall be called Tamar;" and he carried his point, although Mrs.
Margaret made many objections, saying it was not a Christian name,
and therefore not proper for a child who was to be brought up as a
Christian. However, as Mr. Dymock had given up his whim of learning
the business of a smith since the adventure which has been so fully
related, and had forgotten the proposed experiment of turning up the
whole moor round the Tower with his new-fangled plough,--that
plough having ceased to be an object of desire to him as soon as it was
completed,--she thought it best to give way to this whim of giving the
child so strange a name, and actually stood herself at the font, as
principal sponsor for little Tamar.
Thus, the orphan was provided with a happy home; nor, as Mrs.
Margaret said, did she ever miss the child's little bite and sup. After a
few days, the babe would condescend to leave Mrs. Margaret, when
required to go to the servants. She would even, when directed so to do,
steal across the floor, and accept a seat on Mr. Dymock's knee, and
gradually she got very fond of him. Nor was her affection unrequited;
he had formed a theory about her,--and it was not a selfish theory, for
he never expected to gain anything by her,--but he believed that she
was of noble but unfortunate Jewish parentage, and he built this theory
on the singular grace and beauty of her person. At all events, he never
doubted but that she was a Jewess; and he talked of it, and thought of it,
till he was entirely convinced that it was so, and had convinced his aunt
also, and established the persuasion in the minds of most persons about
him.
If Mr. Dymock was not a genius, he had all the weaknesses commonly
attributed to genius, and, in consequence, was as useless a being as ever
cumbered the ground; yet, he was generally loved, and no one loved
him more than Tamar did, after she had got over her first baby fear of
him. But Mrs. Margaret, who had no pretensions to genius, was the real
benefactor of this child, and as far as the lady was concerned in
bringing her up, performed the part of a truly affectionate mother. Her
first effort was made to bring the will of the child, which was a lofty
one, under subjection to her own; and the next, to give her habits of
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