cried out, while she turned her wheel round 
and round with her bobbin, 'What makes your feet so big, my friend?' 
'Traveling long journeys. Traveling long journeys,' replied the skeleton
feet, and again the woman sang-- 
'Oh! if I'd good company--if I'd good company, Oh! how happy should 
I be!' 
Rattle--rattle went something in the chimney, and down came a pair of 
little mouldering ankles. 'What makes your ankles so small?' asked the 
woman. 'Worm-eaten, worm-eaten,' answered the mouldering ankles, 
and the wheel went merrily round." 
It is unnecessary to repeat the couplet which Miss Thusa sang between 
every descending horror, in a voice which sounded as if it came 
through a fine-toothed comb, in little trembling wires, though it gave 
indescribable effect to her gloomy tale. 
"In a few moments," continued Miss Thusa, "she heard a shoving, 
pushing sound in the chimney like something groaning and laboring 
against the sides of the bricks, and presently a great, big, bloated body 
came down and set itself on legs that were no larger than a pipe stem. 
Then a little, scraggy neck, and, last of all, a monstrous skeleton head 
that grinned from ear to ear. 'You want good company, and you shall 
have it,' said the figure, and its voice did sound awfully--but the woman 
put up her wheel and asked the grim thing to take a chair and make 
himself at home. 
"'I can't stay to-night,' said he, 'I've got a journey to take by the 
moonlight. Come along and let us be company for each other. There is 
a snug little place where we can rest when we're tired.'" 
"Oh! Miss Thusa, she didn't go, did she?" interrupted Helen, whose 
eyes, which had been gradually enlarging, looked like two full 
midnight moons. 
"Hush, child, if you ask another question, I'll stop short. She didn't do 
anything else but go, and they must have been a pretty sight walking in 
the moonlight together. The lonely woman and the worm-eaten traveler. 
On they went through the woods and over the plains, and up hill and 
down hill, over bridges made of fallen trees, and streams that had no
bridges at all; when at last they came to a kind of uneven ground, and 
as the moon went behind a cloud, they went stumbling along as if 
treading over hillocks of corn. 
"'Here it is,' cried the worm-eaten traveler, stopping on the brink of a 
deep, open grave. The moon looked forth from behind a cloud, and 
showed how awful deep it was. She wanted to turn back then, but the 
skeleton arms of the figure seized hold of her, and down they both went 
without ladder or rope, and no mortal ever set eyes on them more. 
'Oh! if I'd good company--if I'd good company, Oh! how happy should 
I be!'" 
It is impossible to describe the intensity with which Helen listened to 
this wild, dark legend, crouching closer and closer to the chimney 
corner, while the chillness of superstitious terror quenched the burning 
fire-rose on her cheek. 
"Was the spinning woman you, Miss Thusa?" whispered she, afraid of 
the sound of her own voice; "and did you see it with your own eyes?" 
"Hush, foolish child!" said Miss Thusa, resuming her natural tone; "ask 
me no questions, or I'll tell you no tales. 'Tis time for the yellow bird to 
be in its nest. Hark! I hear your mother calling me, and 'tis long past 
your bed-time. Come." 
And Miss Thusa, sweeping her long right arm around the child, bore 
her shrinking and resisting towards the nursery room. 
"Please, Miss Thusa," she pleaded, "don't leave me alone. Don't leave 
me in the dark. I'm not one bit sleepy--I never shall go to sleep--I'm 
afraid of the worm-eaten man." 
"I thought the child had more sense," exclaimed the oracle. "I didn't 
think she was such a little goose as this," continued she, depositing her 
between the nice warm blankets. "Nobody ever troubles good little 
girls--the holy angels take care of them. There, good night--shut your 
eyes and go to sleep."
"Please don't take the light," entreated Helen, "only just leave it till I 
get to sleep; I'll blow it out as soon as I'm asleep." 
"I guess you will," said Miss Thusa, "when you get a chance." Then 
catching up the lamp, she shot out of the room, repeating to herself, 
"Poor child! She does hate the dark so! That was a powerful story, to be 
sure. I shouldn't wonder if she dreamed about it. I never did see a child 
that listens to anything as she does. It's a pleasure to amuse her. Little 
monkey! She really acts as if 'twas all true. I know that's my master 
piece; that is the reason I'm so choice of it. It isn't every one    
    
		
	
	
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