Saturday, March 14, 2009

Martha's Joey

Klee Wyck, is a work of autobiographical non-fiction by Emily Carr.
The original edition of Klee Wyck was 21 chapters long, but the commonly available copy of the book has a chapter excised. That chapter is Martha's Joey.

Martha's Joey

One day our father and his three girls were going over James Bay
Bridge in Victoria. We met a jolly-faced old Indian woman with a
little fair-haired white boy about as old as I was.

Father said, "Hello, Joey!", and to the woman he said: "How are
you getting on, Martha?"

Father had given each of us a big flat chocolate in silver paper
done up like a dollar piece. We were saving them to eat when we
got home.

Father said, "Who will give her chocolate to Joey?"

We were all willing. Father took mine because I was the smallest
and the greediest of his little girls.

The boy took it from my hand shyly, but Martha beamed so wide all
over me that I felt very generous.

After we had passed on I said, "Father, who is Joey?"

"Joey," said my father, "was left when he was a tiny baby at Indian
Martha's house. One very dark stormy night a man and woman knocked
at her door. They asked if she would take the child in out of the
wet, while they went on an errand. They would soon be back, they
said, but they never came again, though Martha went on expecting
them and caring for the child. She washed the fine clothes he had
been dressed in and took them to the priest; but nobody could find
out anything about the couple who had forsaken the baby."

"Martha had no children and she got to love the boy very much. She
dressed him in Indian clothes and took him for her own. She called
him Joey."

I often thought about what Father had told us about Joey.

One day Mother said I could go with her, and we went to a little
hut in a green field where somebody's cows grazed. That was where
Martha lived.

We knocked at the door but there was no answer. As we stood there
we could hear someone inside the house crying and crying. Mother
opened the door and we went in.

Martha was sitting on the floor. Her hair was sticking out wildly,
and her face was all swollen with crying. Things were thrown about
the floor as if she did not care about anything any more. She could
only sit swaying back and forth crying out, "Joey--my Joey--my
Joey--"

Mother put some nice things on the floor beside her, but she did
not look at them. She just went on crying and moaning.

Mother bent over Martha and stroked her shoulder; but it was no
good saying anything, she was sobbing too hard to hear. I don't
think she even knew we were there. The cat came and cried and begged
for food. The house was cold.

Mother was crying a little when we came away.

"Is Joey dead, Mother?"

"No, the priests have taken him from Martha and sent him away to
school."

"Why couldn't he stay with Martha and go to school like other Indian
boys?"

"Joey is not an Indian; he is a white boy. Martha is not his mother."

"But Joey's mother did not want him; she gave him away to Martha
and that made him her boy. He's hers. It's beastly of the priest
to steal him from Martha."

Martha cried till she had no more tears and then she died.
posted by Tulip Press at

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