The Purple Heights | Page 6

Marie Conway Oemler
spot the Riverton Road was tree-shaded and bird-haunted.
There were clumps of elder here and there, and cassena bushes, and tall
fennel in the corners of the old worm-fence bordering the fields on each
side. The worm-fence was of a polished, satiny, silvery gray, with
trimmings of green vines clinging to it, wild-flowers peeping out of its
crotches, and tall purple thistles swaying their heads toward it. On one
especially tall thistle the Red Admiral had come to anchor.
He wore upon the skirts of his fine dark-colored frock-coat a
red-orange border sewed with tiny round black buttons; across the
middle of his fore-wings, like the sash of an order, was a broad red
ribbon, and the spatter of white on the tips may have been his idea of
epaulets; or maybe they were nature's Distinguished Service medals
given him for conspicuous bravery, for there is no more gallant sailor
of the skies than the Red Admiral.
When this gentleman comes to anchor on a flower he hoists his gay
sails erect over his fat black back, in order that his under wings may be
properly admired; for he knows very well that the cunningest craftsman

that ever worked with mosaics and metals never turned out a better bit
of jewel-work than those under wings.
It was this piece of painted perfection that caught Peter Champneys's
unhappy eyes and brought him to a standstill. Peter forgot that he was
the school dunce, that tears were still on his cheeks, that he had a
headache and an empty stomach. His eyes began to shine unwontedly,
brightening into a golden limpidity, and his lips puckered into a smile.
The Red Admiral, if one might judge by his unrubbed wings and the
new and glossy vividness of his colorings, may have been some nine
hours old. Peter, by the entry in his mother's Bible, was nine years old.
Quite instinctively Peter's brown fingers groped for a pencil. At the feel
of it he experienced a thrill of satisfaction. Down on his knees he went,
and crept forward, nearer and nearer; for one must come as the wind
comes who would approach the Red Admiral. Peter had no paper, so a
fly-leaf of his geography would have to do. All athrill, he worked with
his bit of pencil; and on the fly-leaf grew the worm-fence with the
blackberry bramble climbing along its corners, and the fennel, and the
elder bushes near by; and in the foreground the tall thistle, with the
butterfly upon it. The Red Admiral is a gourmet; he lingers daintily
over his meals; so Peter had time to make a careful sketch of him. This
done, he sketched in the field beyond, and the buzzard hanging
motionless in the sky.
It was crude and defective, of course, and a casual eye wouldn't have
glanced twice at it, but a true teacher would instantly have recognized
the value, not of what it performed, but of what it presaged. For all its
faults it was bold and rapid, like the Admiral's flight, and it had the
Admiral's airy grace and freedom. It seized the outlines of things with
unerring precision.
The child kneeling in the dust of the Riverton Road, with an old
geography open on his knee, felt in his thin breast a faint flutter, as of
wings. He looked at the sketch; he watched the Red Admiral finish his
meal and go scudding down the wind. And he knew he had found the
one thing he could do, the one thing he wanted to do, that he must and
would do. It was as if the butterfly had been a fairy, to open for Peter a

tiny door of hope. He wrote under the sketch:
Jun. 2, 189- This day I notissed the red and blak buterfly on the thissel.
He stared at this for a while, and added:
P.S. In futcher watch for this buterfly witch mite be a fary.
Then he went trudging homeward. He was smiling, his own shy, secret
smile. He held his head erect and looked ahead of him as if in the far,
far distance he had seen something, a beckoning something, toward
which he was to strive. Barefooted Peter, poverty-stricken, lonely Peter
for the first time glimpsed the purple heights.

CHAPTER II
THE PROMISE
It is written in the Live Green Book that one may not stumble upon one
of its secrets without at the same discovering something about others
quite as fascinating and worth exploring. This is a wise and blessed law,
which the angels of the Little Peoples are always trying to have
enforced. Peter Champneys suspected the Red Admiral of being a fairy;
so when he ran fleet-footed over the fields and through the woods and
alongside the worm-fences after the Admiral,
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