The Bent Twig | Page 2

Dorothy Canfield
thanks from Mother. That was what began the remembered
afternoon. Mother's smiles were golden coin, not squandered on every
occasion. Then, she and Mother and Judith tiptoed out of the bedroom
into Mother's room and there stood Father, with his University clothes
on and yet his hair rather rumpled up, as though he had been teaching
very hard. He had a pile of papers in his hand and he said, "Barbara, are
you awfully busy just now?"
Mother said, Oh no, she wasn't at all. (She never was busy when Father
asked her to do something, although Sylvia could not remember ever

once having seen her sit and do nothing, no, not even for a minute!)
Then Father said, "Well, if you could run over these, I'd have time to
have some ball with the seminar after they're dismissed. These are the
papers the Freshmen handed in for that Economics quiz." Mother said,
"Sure she could," or the equivalent of that, and Father thanked her,
turned Judith upside-down and right-side-up again so quick that she
didn't know what had happened, and left them all laughing as they
usually were when Father ran down from the study for something.
So Sylvia and Judith, quite used to this procedure, sat down on the
floor with a book to keep them quiet until Mother should be through.
Neither of them could read, although Sylvia was beginning to learn, but
they had been told the stories so many times that they knew them from
the pictures. The book they looked at that day had the story of the
people who had rowed a great boat across the water to get a gold
sheepskin, and Sylvia told it to Judith, word for word, as Father always
told it. She glanced up at Mother from time to time to make sure she
was getting it right; and ever afterwards the mention of the Argonauts
brought up before Sylvia's eyes the picture of her mother that day,
sitting very straight, her strong brown fingers making an occasional
mark on the papers, as she turned them over with a crisp rustle, her
quiet face bent, in a calm fixity of attention, over the pages.
Before they knew it, the work was done, Father had come for the
papers, and showed Sylvia one more twist in the acrobatic stunt they
were learning together. She could already take his hands and run up to
his shoulders in one squirrel-like dash; but she was to learn the reverse
and come down on the other side, and she still got tangled up with
which foot to put first. So they practised whenever they had, as now, a
minute or two to spare.
Then Judith was set to play with her blocks like the baby she still was,
while Sylvia and Mother had a lesson in reading. Sylvia could
remember the very sound of Mother's clear voice as she corrected a
mistake. They were reading a story about what happened to a drop of
water that fell into the brook in their field; how, watering the thirsty
cornfields as it flowed, the brook ran down to the river near La Chance,

where it worked ever so many mills and factories and things. Then on
through bigger and bigger rivers until it reached the Mississippi, where
boats rode on its back; and so on down to the ocean. And there, after
resting a while, it was pumped up by the sun and made into a cloud,
and the wind blew it back over the land and to their field again, where
it fell into the brook and said, "Why, how-de-do, Sylvia--you still
here?"
Father had written the story, and Mother had copied it out on the
typewriter so it would be easy for Sylvia to read.
After they had finished she remembered looking out of the window and
watching the big white clouds drift across the pale bright April sky.
They were full of hundreds of drops of water, she thought, that were
going to fall into hundreds of other brooks, and then travel and work till
they reached the sea, and then rest for a while and begin all over again.
Her dark eyes grew very wide as she watched the endless procession of
white mountains move across the great arch of the sky. Her imagination
was stirred almost painfully, her mind expanding with the effort to take
in the new conception of size, of great numbers, of the small place of
her own brook, her own field in the hugeness of the world. And yet it
was an ordered hugeness full of comforting similarity! Now, no matter
where she might go, or what brooks she might see, she would know
that they were all of one family, that the same things happened to them
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