[Written for The Flag of Our Union]
Our Lodger
by Theodore Arnold
The year before I was admitted to the bar I spent at Mrs. Martha Sanborn’s, on Home street. It was one of the pleasantest houses I ever lived in. In the first place, Mrs. Sanborn was a good, motherly body, a capital housekeeper, and not at all gasping, nor hard, nor suspicious. If any of her boarders or lodgers were behindhand in paying, she would wait a little, as long as it was convenient, then ask for money in a pleasant, kind way, just as if all had the same interests, and she was sure that her family meant to do the right thing by her.
“You see I have my rent to pay to-morrow,” she would say; “and you wouldn’t want me to be a discredit to you. When a housekeeper doesn’t pay her bills, it reflects on her boarders. Don’t you see some way to get it?”
Not a cross word, not a hint that couldn’t be forgotten, but was left to rankle. And to give her family due credit, she seldom had anything of the kind to say. They all did well by her; and not a New Year’s, Christmas or birthday passed but she got a present from each one; and not one left her without a farewell gift. It was really touching to see any one of her boarders go off. I well remember when Tom Kane went. For two days before the good lady could hardly eat a mouthful, and her eyes would fill with tears every time she looked at Tom. He had been with her three years, and was going to California. She looked over and mended his clothes, she helped pack his trunk, and put a little Bible in it. With her name on the fly-leaf… Read More