—By Charles Dickens—
Caleb Plummer and his blind daughter lived alone in a
little cracked nutshell of a house. They were toy-makers, and their house was
stuck like a toadstool on to the premises of Messrs. Gruff & Tackleton, the
Toy Merchants for whom they worked,—the latter of whom was himself both Gruff
and Tackleton in one.
I am saying that Caleb and his blind daughter lived here.
I should say Caleb did, his daughter lived in an enchanted palace, which her
father's love had created for her. She did not know that the ceilings were
cracked, the plaster tumbling down, and the wood work rotten; that everything
was old and ugly and poverty-stricken about her and that her father was a
grey-haired stooping old man, and the master for whom they worked a hard and
brutal taskmaster;—oh, dear no, she fancied a pretty, cosy, compact little home
full of tokens of a kind master's care, a smart, brisk, gallant-looking father,
and a handsome and noble-looking Toy Merchant who was an angel of goodness.
This was all Caleb's doings. When his blind daughter was
a baby he had determined in his great love and pity for her, that her
deprivation should be turned into a blessing, and her life as happy as he could
make it. And she was happy; everything about her she saw with her father's
eyes, in the rainbow-coloured light with which it was his care and pleasure to
invest it.
Bertha sat busily at work, making a doll's frock, whilst
Caleb bent over the opposite side of the table painting a doll's house.
"You were out in the rain last night in your
beautiful new great-coat," said Bertha.
"Yes, in my beautiful new great-coat," answered
Caleb, glancing to where a roughly made garment of sack-cloth was hung up to
dry.
"How glad I am you bought it, father."
"And of such a tailor! quite a fashionable tailor, a
bright blue cloth, with bright buttons; it's a deal too good a coat for
me."
"Too good!" cried the blind girl, stopping to
laugh and clap her hands—"as if anything was too good for my handsome
father, with his smiling face, and black hair, and his straight figure."
Caleb began to sing a rollicking song.
"What, you are singing, are you?" growled a
gruff voice, as Mr. Tackleton put his head in at the door. "I can't afford
to sing, I hope you can afford to work too. Hardly time for both, I should
say."
"You don't see how the master is winking at
me," whispered Caleb in his daughter's ear—"such a joke, pretending
to scold, you know."
The blind girl laughed and nodded, and taking Mr.
Tackleton's reluctant hand, kissed it gently. "What is the idiot
doing?" grumbled the Toy Merchant, pulling his hand roughly away.
"I am thanking you for the beautiful little
tree," replied Bertha, bringing forward a tiny rose-tree in blossom, which
Caleb had made her believe was her master's gift, though he himself had gone without
a meal or two to buy it.
"Here's Bedlam broke loose. What does the idiot
mean?" snarled Mr. Tackleton; and giving Caleb some rough orders, he
departed without the politeness of a farewell.
"If you could only have seen him winking at me all
the time, pretending to be so rough to escape thanking," exclaimed Caleb,
when the door was shut.
Now a very sad and curious thing had happened. Caleb, in
his love for Bertha, had so successfully deceived her as to the real character
of Mr. Tackleton, that she had fallen in love, not with her master, but with
what she imagined him to be, and was happy in an innocent belief in his
affection for her; but one day she accidently heard he was going to be married,
and could not hide from her father the pain and bewilderment she felt at the
news.
"Bertha, my dear," said Caleb at length,
"I have a confession to make to you; hear me kindly though I have been
cruel to you." "You cruel to me!" cried Bertha, turning her
sightless face towards him. "Not meaning it, my child! and I never
suspected it till the other day. I have concealed things from you which would
have given pain, I have invented things to please you, and have surrounded you
with fancies."
"But living people are not fancies, father, you
cannot change them."
"I have done so, my child, God forgive me! Bertha,
the man who is married to-day is a hard master to us both, ugly in his looks
and in his nature, and hard and heartless as he can be."
"Oh heavens! how blind I have been, how could you
father, and I so helpless!" Poor Caleb hung his head. "Answer me father," said Bertha.
"What is my home like?"
"A poor place, Bertha, a very poor and bare place!
indeed as little able to keep out wind and weather as my sackcloth coat."
"And the presents that I took such care of, that
came at my wish, and were so dearly welcome?" Caleb did not answer.
"I see, I understand," said Bertha, "and
now I am looking at you, at my kind, loving compassionate father, tell me what
is he like?"
"An old man, my child, thin, bent, grey-haired,
worn-out with hard work and sorrow, a weak, foolish, deceitful old man."
The blind girl threw herself on her knees before him, and
took his grey head in her arms. "It is my sight, it is my sight restored,"
she cried. "I have been blind, but now I see, I have never till now truly
seen my father. Father, there is not a grey hair on your head that shall be
forgotten in my prayers and thanks to Heaven."
"My Bertha!" sobbed Caleb, "and the brisk
smart father in the blue coat—he's gone, my child."
"Dearest father, no, he's not gone, nothing is gone.
I have been happy and contented, but I shall be happier and more contented
still, now that I know what you are. I am not blind, father, any longer."
The End
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