The Little Violinist | Page 2

Thomas Bailey Aldrich
and loved and tenderly cared
for. Very modest of them--was it not?--in view of the fact that I had
never seen either of them before. To all intents and purposes they were
perfect strangers to me. What was my surprise when it turned out (just
as if it were in a fairy legend) that these were my own sons! When I say

they came hand in hand, it is to advise you that these two boys were
twins, like that pair of tiny girls I just mentioned.
These young gentlemen are at present known as Charley and Talbot, in
the household, and to a very limited circle of acquaintances outside; but
as Charley has declared his intention to become a circus-rider, and
Talbot, who has not so soaring an ambition, has resolved to be a
policeman, it is likely the world will hear of them before long. In the
mean time, and with a view to the severe duties of the professions
selected, they are learning the alphabet, Charley vaulting over the hard
letters with an agility which promises well for his career as circus-rider,
and Talbot collaring the slippery S's and pursuing the suspicious X Y
Z's with the promptness and boldness of a night-watchman.
Now it is my pleasure not only to feed and clothe Masters Charley and
Talbot as if they were young princes or dukes, but to look to it that they
do not wear out their ingenious minds by too much study. So I
occasionally take them to a puppet-show or a musical entertainment,
and always in holiday time to see a pantomime. This last is their
especial delight. It is a fine thing to behold the business-like air with
which they climb into their seats in the parquet, and the gravity with
which they immediately begin to read the play-bill upside down. Then,
between the acts, the solemnity with which they extract the juice from
an orange, through a hole made with a lead-pencil, is also a noticeable
thing.
Their knowledge of the mysteries of Fairyland is at once varied and
profound. Everything delights, but nothing astonishes them. That
people covered with spangles should dive headlong through the floor;
that fairy queens should step out of the trunks of trees; that the poor
wood-cutter's cottage should change, in the twinkling of an eye, into a
glorious palace or a goblin grotto under the sea, with crimson fountains
and golden staircases and silver foliage--all that is a matter of course.
This is the kind of world they live in at present. If these things
happened at home they would not be astonished.
The other day, it was just before Christmas, I saw the boys attentively
regarding a large pumpkin which lay on the kitchen floor, waiting to be

made into pies. If that pumpkin had suddenly opened, if wheels had
sprouted out on each side, and if the two kittens playing with an
onion-skin by the range had turned into milk-white ponies and
harnessed themselves to this Cinderella coach, neither Charley nor
Talbot would have considered it an unusual circumstance.
The pantomime which is usually played at the Boston Theatre during
the holidays is to them positive proof that the stories of Cinderella and
Jack of the Beanstalk and Jack the Giant-Killer have historical solidity.
They like to be reassured on that point. So one morning last January,
when I informed Charley and Talbot, at the breakfast-table, that Prince
Rupert and his court had come to town,
"Some in jags, Some in rags, And some in velvet gown,"
the news was received with great satisfaction; for this meant that we
were to go to the play.
For the sake of the small folk, who could not visit him at night, Prince
Rupert was gracious enough to appear every Saturday afternoon during
the month. We decided to wait upon his Highness at one of his
matinées.
You would never have dreamed that the sun was shining brightly
outside, if you had been with us in the theatre that afternoon. All the
window-shutters were closed, and the great glass chandelier hanging
from the gayly painted dome was one blaze of light.
But brighter even than the jets of gas were the ruddy, eager faces of
countless boys and girls, fringing the balconies and crowded into the
seats below, longing for the play to begin. And nowhere were there two
merrier or more eager faces than those of Charley and Talbot, pecking
now and then at a brown paper cone filled with white grapes, which I
held, and waiting for the solemn green curtain to roll up, and disclose
the coral realm of the Naiad Queen.
I shall touch very lightly on the literary aspects of the play. Its plot, like
that of the modern novel, was of so subtile
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