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In 1895 a young mother, dying of "quick consumption.." exacted
from her husband a promise that he would let her widowed mother
have the baby, a two-year-old girl. Since the husband's sight was
rapidly failing, and he could no longer support his two little
daughters, there was no room for argument. Only God knows the
anguish in that father's heart.
To spare the feelings of a member of that family, who is a respected citizen in his community, let us omit the gruesome details, except to say that Jane was an utterly unhappy child, feeling that nobody wanted her. She tried to run away, but the pangs of hunger brought her back. Then one day, as she sat by the roadside up near the cemetery aimlessly making mud pies, this "Aunt Caroline" of Indiana house-cleaning days came by, with horse and buggy. Jane recognized her, and asked for a ride.
With that wish granted, she begged to go home with her. The warm heart behind those deep blue, searching eyes could not withstand a child's pleading and Jane was granted a week's leave of absence to go to the farm for a visit.
Years later "Aunt Caroline" told how Jane begged so hard to stay with her and her family that this good aunt-by-marriage, widowed and poor, wrote to the child's guardian, offering a home to the orphan.
The offer' was accepted with alacrity. Two weeks after this visit Aunt Caroline's son, Ellis, pulled his milk-wagon team to a halt in front of the house where Jane was staying. Someone helped him with the black trunk with the curved top. This trunk was valuable. It held priceless paisley shawls, brocaded black satin shawls with silk fringes, rich velvet and laces, linen table-cloths and bed-spreads made from the flax on Grandmother's farm and Jane's mother's flat silver. But there was not one child's dress. Jane wore her "one and only," a red-and-white check, on her spindly body. Psychologists say that children remember in detail a deeply happy experience. Jane remembers every detail of that ride.
She remembers Ellis' faded blue shirt with the white polka-dots, the gray-white suspenders, the Sunday-go-meetin' stiff straw hat, now sun-tanned and dingy on top, and used only for trips to town. She can remember the horses, Dick, a dark bay, and Fannie, a "flea-bitten gray" and the wonderful thrill of holding the reins, or "lines," as they were called. Every tree and bush and flower along the road to Paradise was glorified that day. Jane leaned far over the dash-board to dislodge one of the lines, trapped under Fannie's tail Ellis gently pulled her back to safety, and with pseudo-sternness and the kindest voice she had ever heard said, "You mustn't lean out like that; you might fall and get killed; and," he added, "I'm so busy right now, I wouldn't have time to bury you."
And Jane, who had wept bitter tears over teasing and taunts, laughed gaily at his little joke. She was all warm and happy inside. They had reached the Nancy Gill place (now Nannie Nowry's). and there below to the right smiling under the bright May sun were the undulating fields, Nature's fine feather-stitching of pale green on a dark brown coverlet, the new crop of corn for 1900; there was the orchard; there was the assembly of house and barn and corn-crib and granary and wagon-shed, coal shed, and Dutch oven that spelled HOME.
When we pulled into the yard (yes, it was WE), Ina was wiping her hands on a fresh, crisp roller towel by the open back door; and through the kitchen window came the singing voice of Aunt Caroline, as she kneaded her sixteen loaves of bread, "Tis the song, the sigh of the weary; Hard times, hard times come again no mo'. She little knew how prophetic was her song.
Yes, that was fifty years ago. Although dear Aunt Caroline went to her reward thirty-four years ago, and kind Ellis, 15 years ago, the appreciation of their kindness deepens with the passing years. As for Ina (Mrs. Clyde Lemon), no flesh-and-blood sister could possibly be more loyal and steadfast in her affection. And now another important member of that family steps into the picture: Knox.
Knox, who was always interested in the moral and spiritual welfare of the family protégé; Dr. Knox, who has dedicated his whole life to helping others; Knox, the sentimental old codger, who just has to come back every now and then to the old haunts, and hunt up all his old friends and schoolmates. He is on his way East now with his wife and daughter, Helen.
Knox is sole delegate from his Glendale, Calif., church to the Presbyterian General Assembly in Cincinnati, 0., May 22-27. Then he and his family will be at Ina's for a family reunion over that weekend and through Memorial Day. He is hoping to see many of his old Friends at the Memorial Day services in Saltsburg. I shall be hanging onto his coat-tall and looking hard, too.
It will be a day of memories and Remembrance for all of us. Forgive the personal angle. This letter is my memorial to that wonderful Gilkerson family, who put Christianity to work.
With love and Sympathy for the sorrowing.
Florence B. Taylor