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-
- ANNE OF AVONLEA
-
- by
-
- Lucy Maud Montgomery
-
-
- to
- my former teacher
- HATTIE GORDON SMITH
- in grateful remembrance of her
- sympathy and encouragement
-
-
-
- Flowers spring to blossom where she walks
- The careful ways of duty,
- Our hard, stiff lines of life with her
- Are flowing curves of beauty.
- -WHITTIER
-
-
-
- I An Irate Neighbor
- II Selling in Haste and Repenting at Leisure
- III Mr. Harrison at Home
- IV Different Opinions47
- V A Full-fledged Schoolma'am
- VI All Sorts and Conditions of Men. . .and women
- VII The Pointing of Duty
- VIII Marilla Adopts Twins
- IX A Question of Color
- X Davy in Search of a Sensation
- XI Facts and Fancies
- XII A Jonah Day
- XIII A Golden Picnic
- XIV A Danger Averted
- XV The Beginning of Vacation
- XVI The Substance of Things Hoped For
- XVII A Chapter of Accidents
- XVIII An Adventure on the Tory Road
- XIX Just a Happy Day
- XX The Way It Often Happens
- XXI Sweet Miss Lavendar
- XXII Odds and Ends
- XXIII Miss Lavendar's Romance
- XXIV A Prophet in His Own Country
- XXV An Avonlea Scandal
- XXVI Around the Bend
- XXVII An Afternoon at the Stone House
- XXVIII The Prince Comes Back to the Enchanted Palace
- XXIX Poetry and Prose
- XXX A Wedding at the Stone House
-
-
-
-
- I
-
- An Irate Neighbor
-
-
- A tall, slim girl, "half-past sixteen," with serious gray eyes and hair
- which her friends called auburn, had sat down on the broad red sandstone
- doorstep of a Prince Edward Island farmhouse one ripe afternoon in August,
- firmly resolved to construe so many lines of Virgil.
-
- But an August afternoon, with blue hazes scarfing the harvest slopes,
- little winds whispering elfishly in the poplars, and a dancing slendor
- of red poppies outflaming against the dark coppice of young firs in a
- corner of the cherry orchard, was fitter for dreams than dead languages.
- The Virgil soon slipped unheeded to the ground, and Anne, her chin propped
- on her clasped hands, and her eyes on the splendid mass of fluffy clouds
- that were heaping up just over Mr. J. A. Harrison's house like a great
- white mountain, was far away in a delicious world where a certain
- schoolteacher was doing a wonderful work, shaping the destinies of
- future statesmen, and inspiring youthful minds and hearts with high
- and lofty ambitions.
-
- To be sure, if you came down to harsh facts. . .which, it must be confessed,
- Anne seldom did until she had to. . .it did not seem likely that there was
- much promising material for celebrities in Avonlea school; but you could
- never tell what might happen if a teacher used her influence for good.
- Anne had certain rose-tinted ideals of what a teacher might accomplish
- if she only went the right way about it; and she was in the midst of a
- delightful scene, forty years hence, with a famous personage. . .just
- exactly what he was to be famous for was left in convenient haziness,
- but Anne thought it would be rather nice to have him a college president
- or a Canadian premier. . .bowing low over her wrinkled hand and assuring
- her that it was she who had first kindled his ambition, and that all his
- success in life was due to the lessons she had instilled so long ago in
- Avonlea school. This pleasant vision was shattered by a most unpleasant
- interruption.
-
- A demure little Jersey cow came scuttling down the lane and five seconds
- later Mr. Harrison arrived. . .if "arrived" be not too mild a term to
- describe the manner of his irruption into the yard.
-
- He bounced over the fence without waiting to open the gate, and angrily
- confronted astonished Anne, who had risen to her feet and stood looking
- at him in some bewilderment. Mr. Harrison was their new righthand
- neighbor and she had never met him before, although she had seen him
- once or twice.
-
- In early April, before Anne had come home from Queen's, Mr. Robert Bell,
- whose farm adjoined the Cuthbert place on the west, had sold out and
- moved to Charlottetown. His farm had been bought by a certain Mr. J. A.
- Harrison, whose name, and the fact that he was a New Brunswick man,
- were all that was known about him. But before he had been a month in
- Avonlea he had won the reputation of being an odd person. . ."a crank,"
- Mrs. Rachel Lynde said. Mrs. Rachel was an outspoken lady, as those
- of you who may have already made her acquaintance will remember.
- Mr. Harrison was certainly different from other people. . .and that
- is the essential characteristic of a crank, as everybody knows.
-
- In the first place he kept house for himself and had publicly
- stated that he wanted no fools of women around his diggings.
- Feminine Avonlea took its revenge by the gruesome tales it related
- about his house-keeping and cooking. He had hired little John
- Henry Carter of White Sands and John Henry started the stories.
- For one thing, there was never any stated time for meals in the
- Harrison establishment. Mr. Harrison "got a bite" when he felt
- hungry, and if John Henry were around at the time, he came in for a
- share, but if he were not, he had to wait until Mr. Harrison's
- next hungry spell. John Henry mournfully averred that he would
- have starved to death if it wasn't that he got home on Sundays and
- got a good filling up, and that his mother always gave him a basket
- of "grub" to take back with him on Monday mornings.
-
- As for washing dishes, Mr. Harrison never made any pretence of doing
- it unless a rainy Sunday came. Then he went to work and washed them
- all at once in the rainwater hogshead, and left them to drain dry.
-
- Again, Mr. Harrison was "close." When he was asked to subscribe to
- the Rev. Mr. Allan's salary he said he'd wait and see how many
- dollars' worth of good he got out of his preaching first. . .he
- didn't believe in buying a pig in a poke. And when Mrs. Lynde
- went to ask for a contribution to missions. . .and incidentally to
- see the inside of the house. . .he told her there were more
- heathens among the old woman gossips in Avonlea than anywhere else
- he knew of, and he'd cheerfully contribute to a mission for
- Christianizing them if she'd undertake it. Mrs. Rachel got
- herself away and said it was a mercy poor Mrs. Robert Bell was
- safe in her grave, for it would have broken her heart to see the
- state of her house in which she used to take so much pride.
-
- "Why, she scrubbed the kitchen floor every second day," Mrs. Lynde
- told Marilla Cuthbert indignantly, "and if you could see it now!
- I had to hold up my skirts as I walked across it."
-
- Finally, Mr. Harrison kept a parrot called Ginger. Nobody in
- Avonlea had ever kept a parrot before; consequently that
- proceeding was considered barely respectable. And such a parrot!
- If you took John Henry Carter's word for it, never was such an
- unholy bird. It swore terribly. Mrs. Carter would have taken
- John Henry away at once if she had been sure she could get another
- place for him. Besides, Ginger had bitten a piece right out of the
- back of John Henry's neck one day when he had stooped down too near
- the cage. Mrs. Carter showed everybody the mark when the luckless
- John Henry went home on Sundays.
-
- All these things flashed through Anne's mind as Mr. Harrison stood,
- quite speechless with wrath apparently, before her. In his
- most amiable mood Mr. Harrison could not have been considered a
- handsome man; he was short and fat and bald; and now, with his
- round face purple with rage and his prominent blue eyes almost
- sticking out of his head, Anne thought he was really the ugliest
- person she had ever seen.
-
- All at once Mr. Harrison found his voice.
-
- "I'm not going to put up with this," he spluttered, "not a day longer,
- do you hear, miss. Bless my soul, this is the third time, miss. . .
- the third time! Patience has ceased to be a virtue, miss.
- I warned your aunt the last time not to let it occur again. . .
- and she's let it. . .she's done it. . .what does she mean by it,
- that is what I want to know. That is what I'm here about, miss."
-
- "Will you explain what the trouble is?" asked Anne, in her most
- dignified manner. She had been practicing it considerably of late
- to have it in good working order when school began; but it had no
- apparent effect on the irate J. A. Harrison.
-
- "Trouble, is it? Bless my soul, trouble enough, I should think.
- The trouble is, miss, that I found that Jersey cow of your aunt's
- in my oats again, not half an hour ago. The third time, mark you.
- I found her in last Tuesday and I found her in yesterday. I came
- here and told your aunt not to let it occur again. She has let it
- occur again. Where's your aunt, miss? I just want to see her for
- a minute and give her a piece of my mind. . .a piece of J. A.
- Harrison's mind, miss."
-
- "If you mean Miss Marilla Cuthbert, she is not my aunt, and she has
- gone down to East Grafton to see a distant relative of hers who is
- very ill," said Anne, with due increase of dignity at every word.
- "I am very sorry that my cow should have broken into your oats. . .
- she is my cow and not Miss Cuthbert's. . .Matthew gave her to me three
- years ago when she was a little calf and he bought her from Mr. Bell."
-
- "Sorry, miss! Sorry isn't going to help matters any. You'd better
- go and look at the havoc that animal has made in my oats. . .trampled
- them from center to circumference, miss."
-
- "I am very sorry," repeated Anne firmly, "but perhaps if you kept your
- fences in better repair Dolly might not have broken in. It is your
- part of the line fence that separates your oatfield from our pasture and
- I noticed the other day that it was not in very good condition."
-
- "My fence is all right," snapped Mr. Harrison, angrier than ever
- at this carrying of the war into the enemy's country. "The jail
- fence couldn't keep a demon of a cow like that out. And I can tell
- you, you redheaded snippet, that if the cow is yours, as you say,
- you'd be better employed in watching her out of other people's
- grain than in sitting round reading yellowcovered novels,". . .with
- a scathing glance at the innocent tan-colored Virgil by Anne's feet.
-
- Something at that moment was red besides Anne's hair. . .which had
- always been a tender point with her.
-
- "I'd rather have red hair than none at all, except a little fringe
- round my ears," she flashed.
-
- The shot told, for Mr. Harrison was really very sensitive about
- his bald head. His anger choked him up again and he could only
- glare speechlessly at Anne, who recovered her temper and followed
- up her advantage.
-
- "I can make allowance for you, Mr. Harrison, because I have an
- imagination. I can easily imagine how very trying it must be to
- find a cow in your oats and I shall not cherish any hard feelings
- against you for the things you've said. I promise you that Dolly
- shall never break into your oats again. I give you my word of
- honor on THAT point."
-
- "Well, mind you she doesn't," muttered Mr. Harrison in a somewhat
- subdued tone; but he stamped off angrily enough and Anne heard him
- growling to himself until he was out of earshot.
-
- Grievously disturbed in mind, Anne marched across the yard and
- shut the naughty Jersey up in the milking pen.
-
- "She can't possibly get out of that unless she tears the fence down,"
- she reflected. "She looks pretty quiet now. I daresay she
- has sickened herself on those oats. I wish I'd sold her to Mr.
- Shearer when he wanted her last week, but I thought it was just as
- well to wait until we had the auction of the stock and let them all
- go together. I believe it is true about Mr. Harrison being a crank.
- Certainly there's nothing of the kindred spirit about HIM."
-
- Anne had always a weather eye open for kindred spirits.
-
- Marilla Cuthbert was driving into the yard as Anne returned from
- the house, and the latter flew to get tea ready. They discussed
- the matter at the tea table.
-
- "I'll be glad when the auction is over," said Marilla. "It is too
- much responsibility having so much stock about the place and
- nobody but that unreliable Martin to look after them. He has never
- come back yet and he promised that he would certainly be back last
- night if I'd give him the day off to go to his aunt's funeral. I
- don't know how many aunts he has got, I am sure. That's the fourth
- that's died since he hired here a year ago. I'll be more than
- thankful when the crop is in and Mr. Barry takes over the farm.
- We'll have to keep Dolly shut up in the pen till Martin comes,
- for she must be put in the back pasture and the fences there have
- to be fixed. I declare, it is a world of trouble, as Rachel says.
- Here's poor Mary Keith dying and what is to become of those two
- children of hers is more than I know. She has a brother in British
- Columbia and she has written to him about them, but she hasn't
- heard from him yet."
-
- "What are the children like? How old are they?"
-
- "Six past. . .they're twins."
-
- "Oh, I've always been especially interested in twins ever since
- Mrs. Hammond had so many," said Anne eagerly. "Are they pretty?"
-
- "Goodness, you couldn't tell. . .they were too dirty. Davy had
- been out making mud pies and Dora went out to call him in. Davy
- pushed her headfirst into the biggest pie and then, because she
- cried, he got into it himself and wallowed in it to show her it was
- nothing to cry about. Mary said Dora was really a very good child
- but that Davy was full of mischief. He has never had any bringing
- up you might say. His father died when he was a baby and Mary has
- been sick almost ever since."
-
- "I'm always sorry for children that have no bringing up," said
- Anne soberly. "You know _I_ hadn't any till you took me in hand.
- I hope their uncle will look after them. Just what relation is
- Mrs. Keith to you?"
-
- "Mary? None in the world. It was her husband. . .he was
- our third cousin. There's Mrs. Lynde coming through the yard.
- I thought she'd be up to hear about Mary"
-
- "Don't tell her about Mr. Harrison and the cow," implored Anne.
-
- Marilla promised; but the promise was quite unnecessary,
- for Mrs. Lynde was no sooner fairly seated than she said,
-
- "I saw Mr. Harrison chasing your Jersey out of his oats today when
- I was coming home from Carmody. I thought he looked pretty mad.
- Did he make much of a rumpus?"
-
- Anne and Marilla furtively exchanged amused smiles. Few things in
- Avonlea ever escaped Mrs. Lynde. It was only that morning Anne had said,
-
- "If you went to your own room at midnight, locked the door, pulled
- down the blind, and SNEEZED, Mrs. Lynde would ask you the next day
- how your cold was!"
-
- "I believe he did," admitted Marilla. "I was away. He gave Anne a
- piece of his mind."
-
- "I think he is a very disagreeable man," said Anne, with a
- resentful toss of her ruddy head.
-
- "You never said a truer word," said Mrs. Rachel solemnly. "I knew
- there'd be trouble when Robert Bell sold his place to a New Brunswick
- man, that's what. I don't know what Avonlea is coming to, with so
- many strange people rushing into it. It'll soon not be safe to go
- to sleep in our beds."
-
- "Why, what other strangers are coming in?" asked Marilla.
-
- "Haven't you heard? Well, there's a family of Donnells, for one
- thing. They've rented Peter Sloane's old house. Peter has hired
- the man to run his mill. They belong down east and nobody knows
- anything about them. Then that shiftless Timothy Cotton family are
- going to move up from White Sands and they'll simply be a burden on
- the public. He is in consumption. . .when he isn't stealing. . .
- and his wife is a slack-twisted creature that can't turn her hand
- to a thing. She washes her dishes SITTING DOWN. Mrs. George Pye
- has taken her husband's orphan nephew, Anthony Pye. He'll be going
- to school to you, Anne, so you many expect trouble, that's what.
- And you'll have another strange pupil, too. Paul Irving is coming
- from the States to live with his grandmother. You remember his
- father, Marilla. . .Stephen Irving, him that jilted Lavendar Lewis
- over at Grafton?"
-
- "I don't think he jilted her. There was a quarrel. . .I suppose
- there was blame on both sides."
-
- "Well, anyway, he didn't marry her, and she's been as queer as
- possible ever since, they say. . .living all by herself in that
- little stone house she calls Echo Lodge. Stephen went off to the
- States and went into business with his uncle and married a Yankee.
- He's never been home since, though his mother has been up to see
- him once or twice. His wife died two years ago and he's sending
- the boy home to his mother for a spell. He's ten years old and I
- don't know if he'll be a very desirable pupil. You can never tell
- about those Yankees."
-
- Mrs Lynde looked upon all people who had the misfortune to be born
- or brought up elsewhere than in Prince Edward Island with a decided
- can-any-good-thing-come-out-of-Nazareth air. They MIGHT be good
- people, of course; but you were on the safe side in doubting it.
- She had a special prejudice against "Yankees." Her husband had been
- cheated out of ten dollars by an employer for whom he had once
- worked in Boston and neither angels nor principalities nor powers
- could have convinced Mrs. Rachel that the whole United States was
- not responsible for it.
-
- "Avonlea school won't be the worse for a little new blood," said
- Marilla drily, "and if this boy is anything like his father he'll
- be all right. Steve Irving was the nicest boy that was ever raised
- in these parts, though some people did call him proud. I should
- think Mrs. Irving would be very glad to have the child. She has
- been very lonesome since her husband died."
-
- "Oh, the boy may be well enough, but he'll be different from
- Avonlea children," said Mrs. Rachel, as if that clinched the matter.
- Mrs. Rachel's opinions concerning any person, place, or thing,
- were always warranted to wear. "What's this I hear about
- your going to start up a Village Improvement Society, Anne?"
-
- "I was just talking it over with some of the girls and boys at the
- last Debating Club," said Anne, flushing. "They thought it would
- be rather nice. . .and so do Mr. and Mrs. Allan. Lots of villages
- have them now."
-
- "Well, you'll get into no end of hot water if you do. Better leave
- it alone, Anne, that's what. People don't like being improved."
-
- "Oh, we are not going to try to improve the PEOPLE. It is Avonlea
- itself. There are lots of things which might be done to make it
- prettier. For instance, if we could coax Mr. Levi Boulter to pull
- down that dreadful old house on his upper farm wouldn't that be an
- improvement?"
-
- "It certainly would," admitted Mrs. Rachel. "That old ruin has
- been an eyesore to the settlement for years. But if you Improvers
- can coax Levi Boulter to do anything for the public that he isn't
- to be paid for doing, may I be there to see and hear the process,
- that's what. I don't want to discourage you, Anne, for there may
- be something in your idea, though I suppose you did get it out of
- some rubbishy Yankee magazine; but you'll have your hands full with
- your school and I advise you as a friend not to bother with your
- improvements, that's what. But there, I know you'll go ahead with
- it if you've set your mind on it. You were always one to carry a
- thing through somehow."
-
- Something about the firm outlines of Anne's lips told that Mrs.
- Rachel was not far astray in this estimate. Anne's heart was
- bent on forming the Improvement Society. Gilbert Blythe, who
- was to teach in White Sands but would always be home from
- Friday night to Monday morning, was enthusiastic about it;
- and most of the other folks were willing to go in for anything
- that meant occasional meetings and consequently some "fun."
- As for what the "improvements" were to be, nobody had any very
- clear idea except Anne and Gilbert. They had talked them over
- and planned them out until an ideal Avonlea existed in their minds,
- if nowhere else.
-
- Mrs. Rachel had still another item of news.
-
- "They've given the Carmody school to a Priscilla Grant. Didn't you
- go to Queen's with a girl of that name, Anne?"
-
- "Yes, indeed. Priscilla to teach at Carmody! How perfectly
- lovely!" exclaimed Anne, her gray eyes lighting up until they
- looked like evening stars, causing Mrs. Lynde to wonder anew if
- she would ever get it settled to her satisfaction whether Anne
- Shirley were really a pretty girl or not.
-
-
-
-
- II
-
- Selling in Haste and
- Repenting at Leisure
-
-
- Anne drove over to Carmody on a shopping expedition the next
- afternoon and took Diana Barry with her. Diana was, of course,
- a pledged member of the Improvement Society, and the two girls
- talked about little else all the way to Carmody and back.
-
- "The very first thing we ought to do when we get started is to have
- that hall painted," said Diana, as they drove past the Avonlea hall,
- a rather shabby building set down in a wooded hollow, with spruce trees
- hooding it about on all sides. "It's a disgraceful looking place and
- we must attend to it even before we try to get Mr. Levi Boulder to pull
- his house down. Father says we'll never succeed in DOING that. Levi
- Boulter is too mean to spend the time it would take."
-
- "Perhaps he'll let the boys take it down if they promise to haul the
- boards and split them up for him for kindling wood," said Anne hopefully.
- "We must do our best and be content to go slowly at first. We can't
- expect to improve everything all at once. We'll have to educate
- public sentiment first, of course."
-
- Diana wasn't exactly sure what educating public sentiment meant;
- but it sounded fine and she felt rather proud that she was going to
- belong to a society with such an aim in view.
-
- "I thought of something last night that we could do, Anne.
- You know that three-cornered piece of ground where the roads from
- Carmody and Newbridge and White Sands meet? It's all grown over
- with young spruce; but wouldn't it be nice to have them all cleared
- out, and just leave the two or three birch trees that are on it?"
-
- "Splendid," agreed Anne gaily. "And have a rustic seat put under
- the birches. And when spring comes we'll have a flower-bed made
- in the middle of it and plant geraniums."
-
- "Yes; only we'll have to devise some way of getting old Mrs. Hiram
- Sloane to keep her cow off the road, or she'll eat our geraniums
- up," laughed Diana. "I begin to see what you mean by educating
- public sentiment, Anne. There's the old Boulter house now. Did
- you ever see such a rookery? And perched right close to the road
- too. An old house with its windows gone always makes me think of
- something dead with its eyes picked out."
-
- "I think an old, deserted house is such a sad sight," said Anne
- dreamily. "It always seems to me to be thinking about its past
- and mourning for its old-time joys. Marilla says that a large
- family was raised in that old house long ago, and that it was a real
- pretty place, with a lovely garden and roses climbing all over it.
- It was full of little children and laughter and songs; and now it
- is empty, and nothing ever wanders through it but the wind. How
- lonely and sorrowful it must feel! Perhaps they all come back on
- moonlit nights. . .the ghosts of the little children of long ago
- and the roses and the songs. . .and for a little while the old
- house can dream it is young and joyous again."
-
- Diana shook her head.
-
- "I never imagine things like that about places now, Anne. Don't
- you remember how cross mother and Marilla were when we imagined
- ghosts into the Haunted Wood? To this day I can't go through that
- bush comfortably after dark; and if I began imagining such things
- about the old Boulter house I'd be frightened to pass it too.
- Besides, those children aren't dead. They're all grown up and
- doing well. . .and one of them is a butcher. And flowers and
- songs couldn't have ghosts anyhow."
-
- Anne smothered a little sigh. She loved Diana dearly and they had
- always been good comrades. But she had long ago learned that when she
- wandered into the realm of fancy she must go alone. The way to it was
- by an enchanted path where not even her dearest might follow her.
-
- A thunder-shower came up while the girls were at Carmody; it did
- not last long, however, and the drive home, through lanes where the
- raindrops sparkled on the boughs and little leafy valleys where the
- drenched ferns gave out spicy odors, was delightful. But just as
- they turned into the Cuthbert lane Anne saw something that spoiled
- the beauty of the landscape for her.
-
- Before them on the right extended Mr. Harrison's broad, gray-green
- field of late oats, wet and luxuriant; and there, standing squarely
- in the middle of it, up to her sleek sides in the lush growth, and
- blinking at them calmly over the intervening tassels, was a Jersey cow!
-
- Anne dropped the reins and stood up with a tightening of the lips
- that boded no good to the predatory quadruped. Not a word said she,
- but she climbed nimbly down over the wheels, and whisked across the
- fence before Diana understood what had happened.
-
- "Anne, come back," shrieked the latter, as soon as she found
- her voice. "You'll ruin your dress in that wet grain. . .ruin it.
- She doesn't hear me! Well, she'll never get that cow out by herself.
- I must go and help her, of course."
-
- Anne was charging through the grain like a mad thing. Diana hopped
- briskly down, tied the horse securely to a post, turned the skirt
- of her pretty gingham dress over her shoulders, mounted the fence,
- and started in pursuit of her frantic friend. She could run faster
- than Anne, who was hampered by her clinging and drenched skirt, and
- soon overtook her. Behind them they left a trail that would break
- Mr. Harrison's heart when he should see it.
-
- "Anne, for mercy's sake, stop," panted poor Diana. "I'm right out
- of breath and you are wet to the skin."
-
- "I must. . .get. . .that cow. . .out. . .before. . .Mr. Harrison.
- . .sees her," gasped Anne. "I don't. . .care. . .if I'm. . .drowned
- . . .if we. . .can. . .only. . .do that."
-
- But the Jersey cow appeared to see no good reason for being hustled
- out of her luscious browsing ground. No sooner had the two breathless
- girls got near her than she turned and bolted squarely for the opposite
- corner of the field.
-
- "Head her off," screamed Anne. "Run, Diana, run."
-
- Diana did run. Anne tried to, and the wicked Jersey went around
- the field as if she were possessed. Privately, Diana thought she was.
- It was fully ten minutes before they headed her off and drove her
- through the corner gap into the Cuthbert lane.
-
- There is no denying that Anne was in anything but an angelic temper
- at that precise moment. Nor did it soothe her in the least to
- behold a buggy halted just outside the lane, wherein sat Mr.
- Shearer of Carmody and his son, both of whom wore a broad smile.
-
- "I guess you'd better have sold me that cow when I wanted to buy
- her last week, Anne," chuckled Mr. Shearer.
-
- "I'll sell her to you now, if you want her," said her flushed and
- disheveled owner. "You may have her this very minute."
-
- "Done. I'll give you twenty for her as I offered before, and Jim
- here can drive her right over to Carmody. She'll go to town with
- the rest of the shipment this evening. Mr. Reed of Brighton wants
- a Jersey cow."
-
- Five minutes later Jim Shearer and the Jersey cow were marching up
- the road, and impulsive Anne was driving along the Green Gables
- lane with her twenty dollars.
-
- "What will Marilla say?" asked Diana.
-
- "Oh, she won't care. Dolly was my own cow and it isn't likely
- she'd bring more than twenty dollars at the auction. But oh dear,
- if Mr. Harrison sees that grain he will know she has been in
- again, and after my giving him my word of honor that I'd never let
- it happen! Well, it has taught me a lesson not to give my word of
- honor about cows. A cow that could jump over or break through our
- milk-pen fence couldn't be trusted anywhere."
-
- Marilla had gone down to Mrs. Lynde's, and when she returned knew
- all about Dolly's sale and transfer, for Mrs. Lynde had seen most
- of the transaction from her window and guessed the rest.
-
- "I suppose it's just as well she's gone, though you DO do things in
- a dreadful headlong fashion, Anne. I don't see how she got out of
- the pen, though. She must have broken some of the boards off."
-
- "I didn't think of looking," said Anne, "but I'll go and see now.
- Martin has never come back yet. Perhaps some more of his aunts
- have died. I think it's something like Mr. Peter Sloane and the
- octogenarians. The other evening Mrs. Sloane was reading a
- newspaper and she said to Mr. Sloane, `I see here that another
- octogenarian has just died. What is an octogenarian, Peter?' And
- Mr. Sloane said he didn't know, but they must be very sickly
- creatures, for you never heard tell of them but they were dying.
- That's the way with Martin's aunts."
-
- "Martin's just like all the rest of those French," said Marilla in disgust.
- "You can't depend on them for a day." Marilla was looking over Anne's
- Carmody purchases when she heard a shrill shriek in the barnyard.
- A minute later Anne dashed into the kitchen, wringing her hands.
-
- "Anne Shirley, what's the matter now?"
-
- "Oh, Marilla, whatever shall I do? This is terrible. And it's all
- my fault. Oh, will I EVER learn to stop and reflect a little
- before doing reckless things? Mrs. Lynde always told me I would do
- something dreadful some day, and now I've done it!"
-
- "Anne, you are the most exasperating girl! WHAT is it you've done?"
-
- "Sold Mr. Harrison's Jersey cow. . .the one he bought from Mr. Bell
- . . .to Mr. Shearer! Dolly is out in the milking pen this very minute."
-
- "Anne Shirley, are you dreaming?"
-
- "I only wish I were. There's no dream about it, though it's very
- like a nightmare. And Mr. Harrison's cow is in Charlottetown by
- this time. Oh, Marilla, I thought I'd finished getting into scrapes,
- and here I am in the very worst one I ever was in in my life.
- What can I do?"
-
- "Do? There's nothing to do, child, except go and see Mr. Harrison
- about it. We can offer him our Jersey in exchange if he doesn't
- want to take the money. She is just as good as his."
-
- "I'm sure he'll be awfully cross and disagreeable about it, though,"
- moaned Anne.
-
- "I daresay he will. He seems to be an irritable sort of a man.
- I'll go and explain to him if you like."
-
- "No, indeed, I'm not as mean as that," exclaimed Anne. "This is all
- my fault and I'm certainly not going to let you take my punishment.
- I'll go myself and I'll go at once. The sooner it's over the better,
- for it will be terribly humiliating."
-
- Poor Anne got her hat and her twenty dollars and was passing out
- when she happened to glance through the open pantry door. On the
- table reposed a nut cake which she had baked that morning. . .a
- particularly toothsome concoction iced with pink icing and adorned
- with walnuts. Anne had intended it for Friday evening, when the
- youth of Avonlea were to meet at Green Gables to organize the
- Improvement Society. But what were they compared to the justly
- offended Mr. Harrison? Anne thought that cake ought to soften the
- heart of any man, especially one who had to do his own cooking, and
- she promptly popped it into a box. She would take it to Mr. Harrison
- as a peace offering.
-
- "That is, if he gives me a chance to say anything at all," she
- thought ruefully, as she climbed the lane fence and started on a
- short cut across the fields, golden in the light of the dreamy
- August evening. "I know now just how people feel who are being led
- to execution."
-
-
-
- III
-
- Mr. Harrison at Home
-
-
- Mr. Harrison's house was an old-fashioned, low-eaved, whitewashed
- structure, set against a thick spruce grove.
-
- Mr. Harrison himself was sitting on his vineshaded veranda, in his
- shirt sleeves, enjoying his evening pipe. When he realized who was
- coming up the path he sprang suddenly to his feet, bolted into the
- house, and shut the door. This was merely the uncomfortable result
- of his surprise, mingled with a good deal of shame over his outburst
- of temper the day before. But it nearly swept the remnant of her
- courage from Anne's heart.
-
- "If he's so cross now what will he be when he hears what I've
- done," she reflected miserably, as she rapped at the door.
-
- But Mr. Harrison opened it, smiling sheepishly, and invited her
- to enter in a tone quite mild and friendly, if somewhat nervous.
- He had laid aside his pipe and donned his coat; he offered Anne a very
- dusty chair very politely, and her reception would have passed off
- pleasantly enough if it had not been for the telltale of a parrot who
- was peering through the bars of his cage with wicked golden eyes.
- No sooner had Anne seated herself than Ginger exclaimed,
-
- "Bless my soul, what's that redheaded snippet coming here for?"
-
- It would be hard to say whose face was the redder, Mr. Harrison's
- or Anne's.
-
- "Don't you mind that parrot," said Mr. Harrison, casting a furious
- glance at Ginger. "He's. . .he's always talking nonsense. I got
- him from my brother who was a sailor. Sailors don't always use the
- choicest language, and parrots are very imitative birds."
-
- "So I should think," said poor Anne, the remembrance of her errand
- quelling her resentment. She couldn't afford to snub Mr. Harrison
- under the circumstances, that was certain. When you had just sold
- a man's Jersey cow offhand, without his knowledge or consent
- you must not mind if his parrot repeated uncomplimentary things.
- Nevertheless, the "redheaded snippet" was not quite so meek as she
- might otherwise have been.
-
- "I've come to confess something to you, Mr. Harrison," she said
- resolutely. "It's. . .it's about. . .that Jersey cow"
-
- "Bless my soul," exclaimed Mr. Harrison nervously, "has she gone
- and broken into my oats again? Well, never mind. . .never mind if
- she has. It's no difference. . .none at all. I. . .I was too
- hasty yesterday, that's a fact. Never mind if she has."
-
- "Oh, if it were only that," sighed Anne. "But it's ten times
- worse. I don't..."
-
- "Bless my soul, do you mean to say she's got into my wheat?"
-
- "No. . .no. . .not the wheat. But. . ."
-
- "Then it's the cabbages! She's broken into my cabbages that I was
- raising for Exhibition, hey?"
-
- "It's NOT the cabbages, Mr. Harrison. I'll tell you everything. . .
- that is what I came for -- but please don't interrupt me. It makes
- me so nervous. Just let me tell my story and don't say anything
- till I get through -- and then no doubt you'll say plenty,"
- Anne concluded, but in thought only.
-
- "I won't say another word," said Mr. Harrison, and he didn't. But
- Ginger was not bound by any contract of silence and kept ejaculating,
- "Redheaded snippet" at intervals until Anne felt quite wild.
-
- "I shut my Jersey cow up in our pen yesterday. This morning I went
- to Carmody and when I came back I saw a Jersey cow in your oats.
- Diana and I chased her out and you can't imagine what a hard time
- we had. I was so dreadfully wet and tired and vexed -- and Mr.
- Shearer came by that very minute and offered to buy the cow. I
- sold her to him on the spot for twenty dollars. It was wrong of me.
- I should have waited and consulted Marilla, of course. But I'm
- dreadfully given to doing things without thinking -- everybody
- who knows me will tell you that. Mr. Shearer took the cow right
- away to ship her on the afternoon train."
-
- "Redheaded snippet," quoted Ginger in a tone of profound contempt.
-
- At this point Mr. Harrison arose and, with an expression that would
- have struck terror into any bird but a parrot, carried Ginger's cage
- into an adjoining room and shut the door. Ginger shrieked, swore,
- and otherwise conducted himself in keeping with his reputation,
- but finding himself left alone, relapsed into sulky silence.
-
- "Excuse me and go on," said Mr. Harrison, sitting down again.
- "My brother the sailor never taught that bird any manners."
-
- "I went home and after tea I went out to the milking pen. Mr.
- Harrison,". . .Anne leaned forward, clasping her hands with her
- old childish gesture, while her big gray eyes gazed imploringly
- into Mr. Harrison's embarrassed face. . ."I found my cow still
- shut up in the pen. It was YOUR cow I had sold to Mr. Shearer."
-
- "Bless my soul," exclaimed Mr. Harrison, in blank amazement at
- this unlooked-for conclusion. "What a VERY extraordinary thing!"
-
- "Oh, it isn't in the least extraordinary that I should be getting
- myself and other people into scrapes," said Anne mournfully.
- "I'm noted for that. You might suppose I'd have grown out of it
- by this time. . .I'll be seventeen next March. . .but it seems
- that I haven't. Mr. Harrison, is it too much to hope that you'll
- forgive me? I'm afraid it's too late to get your cow back, but
- here is the money for her. . .or you can have mine in exchange
- if you'd rather. She's a very good cow. And I can't express how
- sorry I am for it all."
-
- "Tut, tut," said Mr. Harrison briskly, "don't say another word
- about it, miss. It's of no consequence. . .no consequence whatever.
- Accidents will happen. I'm too hasty myself sometimes, miss. . .
- far too hasty. But I can't help speaking out just what I think and
- folks must take me as they find me. If that cow had been in my cabbages
- now. . .but never mind, she wasn't, so it's all right. I think I'd
- rather have your cow in exchange, since you want to be rid of her."
-
- "Oh, thank you, Mr. Harrison. I'm so glad you are not vexed.
- I was afraid you would be."
-
- "And I suppose you were scared to death to come here and tell me,
- after the fuss I made yesterday, hey? But you mustn't mind me,
- I'm a terrible outspoken old fellow, that's all. . .awful apt to
- tell the truth, no matter if it is a bit plain."
-
- "So is Mrs. Lynde," said Anne, before she could prevent herself.
-
- "Who? Mrs. Lynde? Don't you tell me I'm like that old gossip,"
- said Mr. Harrison irritably. "I'm not. . .not a bit. What have
- you got in that box?"
-
- "A cake," said Anne archly. In her relief at Mr. Harrison's
- unexpected amiability her spirits soared upward feather-light.
- "I brought it over for you. . .I thought perhaps you didn't
- have cake very often."
-
- "I don't, that's a fact, and I'm mighty fond of it, too. I'm much
- obliged to you. It looks good on top. I hope it's good all the
- way through."
-
- "It is," said Anne, gaily confident. "I have made cakes in my time
- that were NOT, as Mrs. Allan could tell you, but this one is all right.
- I made it for the Improvement Society, but I can make another for them."
-
- "Well, I'll tell you what, miss, you must help me eat it. I'll put
- the kettle on and we'll have a cup of tea. How will that do?"
-
- "Will you let me make the tea?" said Anne dubiously.
-
- Mr. Harrison chuckled.
-
- "I see you haven't much confidence in my ability to make tea.
- You're wrong. . .I can brew up as good a jorum of tea as you ever
- drank. But go ahead yourself. Fortunately it rained last Sunday,
- so there's plenty of clean dishes."
-
- Anne hopped briskly up and went to work. She washed the teapot in
- several waters before she put the tea to steep. Then she swept the
- stove and set the table, bringing the dishes out of the pantry.
- The state of that pantry horrified Anne, but she wisely said
- nothing. Mr. Harrison told her where to find the bread and butter
- and a can of peaches. Anne adorned the table with a bouquet from
- the garden and shut her eyes to the stains on the tablecloth. Soon
- the tea was ready and Anne found herself sitting opposite Mr.
- Harrison at his own table, pouring his tea for him, and chatting
- freely to him about her school and friends and plans. She could
- hardly believe the evidence of her senses.
-
- Mr. Harrison had brought Ginger back, averring that the poor
- bird would be lonesome; and Anne, feeling that she could forgive
- everybody and everything, offered him a walnut. But Ginger's
- feelings had been grievously hurt and he rejected all overtures of
- friendship. He sat moodily on his perch and ruffled his feathers
- up until he looked like a mere ball of green and gold.
-
- "Why do you call him Ginger?" asked Anne, who liked appropriate names
- and thought Ginger accorded not at all with such gorgeous plumage.
-
- "My brother the sailor named him. Maybe it had some reference to
- his temper. I think a lot of that bird though. . .you'd be
- surprised if you knew how much. He has his faults of course.
- That bird has cost me a good deal one way and another. Some
- people object to his swearing habits but he can't be broken of them.
- I've tried. . .other people have tried. Some folks have prejudices
- against parrots. Silly, ain't it? I like them myself. Ginger's a
- lot of company to me. Nothing would induce me to give that bird
- up. . .nothing in the world, miss."
-
- Mr. Harrison flung the last sentence at Anne as explosively as if
- he suspected her of some latent design of persuading him to give
- Ginger up. Anne, however, was beginning to like the queer, fussy,
- fidgety little man, and before the meal was over they were quite
- good friends. Mr. Harrison found out about the Improvement
- Society and was disposed to approve of it.
-
- "That's right. Go ahead. There's lots of room for improvement in
- this settlement. . .and in the people too."
-
- "Oh, I don't know," flashed Anne. To herself, or to her particular
- cronies, she might admit that there were some small imperfections,
- easily removable, in Avonlea and its inhabitants. But to hear a
- practical outsider like Mr. Harrison saying it was an entirely
- different thing. "I think Avonlea is a lovely place; and the
- people in it are very nice, too."
-
- "I guess you've got a spice of temper," commented Mr. Harrison,
- surveying the flushed cheeks and indignant eyes opposite him.
- "It goes with hair like yours, I reckon. Avonlea is a pretty
- decent place or I wouldn't have located here; but I suppose
- even you will admit that it has SOME faults?"
-
- "I like it all the better for them," said loyal Anne. "I don't
- like places or people either that haven't any faults. I think a
- truly perfect person would be very uninteresting. Mrs. Milton White
- says she never met a perfect person, but she's heard enough about one
- . . .her husband's first wife. Don't you think it must be very
- uncomfortable to be married to a man whose first wife was perfect?"
-
- "It would be more uncomfortable to be married to the perfect wife,"
- declared Mr. Harrison, with a sudden and inexplicable warmth.
-
- When tea was over Anne insisted on washing the dishes, although Mr.
- Harrison assured her that there were enough in the house to do for
- weeks yet. She would dearly have loved to sweep the floor also,
- but no broom was visible and she did not like to ask where it was
- for fear there wasn't one at all.
-
- "You might run across and talk to me once in a while," suggested
- Mr. Harrison when she was leaving. "'Tisn't far and folks ought
- to be neighborly. I'm kind of interested in that society of yours.
- Seems to me there'll be some fun in it. Who are you going to
- tackle first?"
-
- "We are not going to meddle with PEOPLE. . .it is only PLACES we
- mean to improve," said Anne, in a dignified tone. She rather
- suspected that Mr. Harrison was making fun of the project.
-
- When she had gone Mr. Harrison watched her from the window. . .a
- lithe, girlish shape, tripping lightheartedly across the fields in
- the sunset afterglow.
-
- "I'm a crusty, lonesome, crabbed old chap," he said aloud,
- "but there's something about that little girl makes me feel young
- again. . .and it's such a pleasant sensation I'd like to have it
- repeated once in a while."
-
- "Redheaded snippet," croaked Ginger mockingly.
-
- Mr. Harrison shook his fist at the parrot.
-
- "You ornery bird," he muttered, "I almost wish I'd wrung your neck
- when my brother the sailor brought you home. Will you never be
- done getting me into trouble?"
-
- Anne ran home blithely and recounted her adventures to Marilla,
- who had been not a little alarmed by her long absence and was
- on the point of starting out to look for her.
-
- "It's a pretty good world, after all, isn't it, Marilla?" concluded
- Anne happily. "Mrs. Lynde was complaining the other day that it
- wasn't much of a world. She said whenever you looked forward to
- anything pleasant you were sure to be more or less disappointed
- . . .perhaps that is true. But there is a good side to it too.
- The bad things don't always come up to your expectations either
- . . .they nearly always turn out ever so much better than you think.
- I looked forward to a dreadfully unpleasant experience when I went
- over to Mr. Harrison's tonight; and instead he was quite kind and
- I had almost a nice time. I think we're going to be real good
- friends if we make plenty of allowances for each other, and
- everything has turned out for the best. But all the same, Marilla,
- I shall certainly never again sell a cow before making sure to whom
- she belongs. And I do NOT like parrots!"
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
- Different Opinions
-
-
- One evening at sunset, Jane Andrews, Gilbert Blythe, and Anne Shirley
- were lingering by a fence in the shadow of gently swaying spruce boughs,
- where a wood cut known as the Birch Path joined the main road. Jane had
- been up to spend the afternoon with Anne, who walked part of the way home
- with her; at the fence they met Gilbert, and all three were now talking
- about the fateful morrow; for that morrow was the first of September
- and the schools would open. Jane would go to Newbridge and Gilbert
- to White Sands.
-
- "You both have the advantage of me," sighed Anne. "You're going to
- teach children who don't know you, but I have to teach my own old
- schoolmates, and Mrs. Lynde says she's afraid they won't respect me
- as they would a stranger unless I'm very cross from the first.
- But I don't believe a teacher should be cross. Oh, it seems to me
- such a responsibility!"
-
- "I guess we'll get on all right," said Jane comfortably. Jane
- was not troubled by any aspirations to be an influence for good.
- She meant to earn her salary fairly, please the trustees, and get
- her name on the School Inspector's roll of honor. Further ambitions
- Jane had none. "The main thing will be to keep order and a teacher
- has to be a little cross to do that. If my pupils won't do as I tell
- them I shall punish them."
-
- "How?"
-
- "Give them a good whipping, of course."
-
- "Oh, Jane, you wouldn't," cried Anne, shocked. "Jane, you COULDN'T!"
-
- "Indeed, I could and would, if they deserved it," said Jane decidedly.
-
- "I could NEVER whip a child," said Anne with equal decision.
- "I don't believe in it AT ALL. Miss Stacy never whipped any of us
- and she had perfect order; and Mr. Phillips was always whipping and
- he had no order at all. No, if I can't get along without whipping
- I shall not try to teach school. There are better ways of managing.
- I shall try to win my pupils' affections and then they will WANT to
- do what I tell them."
-
- "But suppose they don't?" said practical Jane.
-
- "I wouldn't whip them anyhow. I'm sure it wouldn't do any good.
- Oh, don't whip your pupils, Jane dear, no matter what they do."
-
- "What do you think about it, Gilbert?" demanded Jane. "Don't you
- think there are some children who really need a whipping now and then?"
-
- "Don't you think it's a cruel, barbarous thing to whip a child. . .
- ANY child?" exclaimed Anne, her face flushing with earnestness.
-
- "Well," said Gilbert slowly, torn between his real convictions and
- his wish to measure up to Anne's ideal, "there's something to be
- said on both sides. I don't believe in whipping children MUCH.
- I think, as you say, Anne, that there are better ways of managing
- as a rule, and that corporal punishment should be a last resort.
- But on the other hand, as Jane says, I believe there is an occasional
- child who can't be influenced in any other way and who, in short,
- needs a whipping and would be improved by it. Corporal punishment
- as a last resort is to be my rule."
-
- Gilbert, having tried to please both sides, succeeded, as is usual
- and eminently right, in pleasing neither. Jane tossed her head.
-
- "I'll whip my pupils when they're naughty. It's the shortest and
- easiest way of convincing them."
-
- Anne gave Gilbert a disappointed glance.
-
- "I shall never whip a child," she repeated firmly. "I feel sure it
- isn't either right or necessary."
-
- "Suppose a boy sauced you back when you told him to do something?"
- said Jane.
-
- "I'd keep him in after school and talk kindly and firmly to him,"
- said Anne. "There is some good in every person if you can find it.
- It is a teacher's duty to find and develop it. That is what our
- School Management professor at Queen's told us, you know. Do you
- suppose you could find any good in a child by whipping him? It's
- far more important to influence the children aright than it is even
- to teach them the three R's, Professor Rennie says."
-
- "But the Inspector examines them in the three R's, mind you, and he
- won't give you a good report if they don't come up to his
- standard," protested Jane.
-
- "I'd rather have my pupils love me and look back to me in after years
- as a real helper than be on the roll of honor," asserted Anne decidedly.
-
- "Wouldn't you punish children at all, when they misbehaved?" asked
- Gilbert.
-
- "Oh, yes, I suppose I shall have to, although I know I'll hate to
- do it. But you can keep them in at recess or stand them on the
- floor or give them lines to write."
-
- "I suppose you won't punish the girls by making them sit with the boys?"
- said Jane slyly.
-
- Gilbert and Anne looked at each other and smiled rather foolishly.
- Once upon a time, Anne had been made to sit with Gilbert for
- punishment and sad and bitter had been the consequences thereof.
-
- "Well, time will tell which is the best way," said Jane philosophically
- as they parted.
-
- Anne went back to Green Gables by way of Birch Path, shadowy,
- rustling, fern-scented, through Violet Vale and past Willowmere,
- where dark and light kissed each other under the firs, and down
- through Lover's Lane. . .spots she and Diana had so named long
- ago. She walked slowly, enjoying the sweetness of wood and field
- and the starry summer twilight, and thinking soberly about the new
- duties she was to take up on the morrow. When she reached the yard
- at Green Gables Mrs. Lynde's loud, decided tones floated out through
- the open kitchen window.
-
- "Mrs. Lynde has come up to give me good advice about tomorrow,"
- thought Anne with a grimace, "but I don't believe I'll go in.
- Her advice is much like pepper, I think. . .excellent in small
- quantities but rather scorching in her doses. I'll run over and
- have a chat with Mr. Harrison instead."
-
- This was not the first time Anne had run over and chatted with Mr.
- Harrison since the notable affair of the Jersey cow. She had been
- there several evenings and Mr. Harrison and she were very good
- friends, although there were times and seasons when Anne found the
- outspokenness on which he prided himself rather trying. Ginger
- still continued to regard her with suspicion, and never failed to
- greet her sarcastically as "redheaded snippet." Mr. Harrison had
- tried vainly to break him of the habit by jumping excitedly up
- whenever he saw Anne coming and exclaiming,
-
- "Bless my soul, here's that pretty little girl again," or something
- equally flattering. But Ginger saw through the scheme and scorned
- it. Anne was never to know how many compliments Mr. Harrison paid
- her behind her back. He certainly never paid her any to her face.
-
- "Well, I suppose you've been back in the woods laying in a supply
- of switches for tomorrow?" was his greeting as Anne came up the
- veranda steps.
-
- "No, indeed," said Anne indignantly. She was an excellent target
- for teasing because she always took things so seriously. "I shall
- never have a switch in my school, Mr. Harrison. Of course, I shall
- have to have a pointer, but I shall use it for pointing ONLY."
-
- "So you mean to strap them instead? Well, I don't know but you're right.
- A switch stings more at the time but the strap smarts longer, that's a fact."
-
- "I shall not use anything of the sort. I'm not going to whip my pupils."
-
- "Bless my soul," exclaimed Mr. Harrison in genuine astonishment,
- "how do you lay out to keep order then?"
-
- "I shall govern by affection, Mr. Harrison."
-
- "It won't do," said Mr. Harrison, "won't do at all, Anne.
- `Spare the rod and spoil the child.' When I went to school
- the master whipped me regular every day because he said if
- I wasn't in mischief just then I was plotting it."
-
- "Methods have changed since your schooldays, Mr. Harrison."
-
- "But human nature hasn't. Mark my words, you'll never manage the young
- fry unless you keep a rod in pickle for them. The thing is impossible."
-
- "Well, I'm going to try my way first," said Anne, who had a fairly strong
- will of her own and was apt to cling very tenaciously to her theories.
-
- "You're pretty stubborn, I reckon," was Mr. Harrison's way of
- putting it. "Well, well, we'll see. Someday when you get riled
- up. . .and people with hair like yours are desperate apt to get
- riled. . .you'll forget all your pretty little notions and give
- some of them a whaling. You're too young to be teaching anyhow
- . . .far too young and childish."
-
- Altogether, Anne went to bed that night in a rather pessimistic mood.
- She slept poorly and was so pale and tragic at breakfast next morning
- that Marilla was alarmed and insisted on making her take a cup of
- scorching ginger tea. Anne sipped it patiently, although she could
- not imagine what good ginger tea would do. Had it been some magic brew,
- potent to confer age and experience, Anne would have swallowed a quart
- of it without flinching.
-
- "Marilla, what if I fail!"
-
- "You'll hardly fail completely in one day and there's plenty more
- days coming," said Marilla. "The trouble with you, Anne, is that
- you'll expect to teach those children everything and reform all
- their faults right off, and if you can't you'll think you've failed."
-
-
-
-
- V
-
- A Full-fledged Schoolma'am
-
-
- When Anne reached the school that morning. . .for the first time
- in her life she had traversed the Birch Path deaf and blind to its
- beauties. . .all was quiet and still. The preceding teacher had
- trained the children to be in their places at her arrival, and when
- Anne entered the schoolroom she was confronted by prim rows of
- "shining morning faces" and bright, inquisitive eyes. She hung up
- her hat and faced her pupils, hoping that she did not look as
- frightened and foolish as she felt and that they would not perceive
- how she was trembling.
-
- She had sat up until nearly twelve the preceding night composing a
- speech she meant to make to her pupils upon opening the school.
- She had revised and improved it painstakingly, and then she had
- learned it off by heart. It was a very good speech and had some
- very fine ideas in it, especially about mutual help and earnest
- striving after knowledge. The only trouble was that she could not
- now remember a word of it.
-
- After what seemed to her a year. . .about ten seconds in reality
- . . .she said faintly, "Take your Testaments, please," and sank
- breathlessly into her chair under cover of the rustle and clatter
- of desk lids that followed. While the children read their verses
- Anne marshalled her shaky wits into order and looked over the
- array of little pilgrims to the Grownup Land.
-
- Most of them were, of course, quite well known to her. Her own
- classmates had passed out in the preceding year but the rest had
- all gone to school with her, excepting the primer class and ten
- newcomers to Avonlea. Anne secretly felt more interest in these
- ten than in those whose possibilities were already fairly well
- mapped out to her. To be sure, they might be just as commonplace
- as the rest; but on the other hand there MIGHT be a genius among
- them. It was a thrilling idea.
-
- Sitting by himself at a corner desk was Anthony Pye. He had a
- dark, sullen little face, and was staring at Anne with a hostile
- expression in his black eyes. Anne instantly made up her mind that
- she would win that boy's affection and discomfit the Pyes utterly.
-
- In the other corner another strange boy was sitting with Arty
- Sloane. . .a jolly looking little chap, with a snub nose, freckled
- face, and big, light blue eyes, fringed with whitish lashes. . .
- probably the DonNELL boy; and if resemblance went for anything,
- his sister was sitting across the aisle with Mary Bell. Anne
- wondered what sort of mother the child had, to send her to school
- dressed as she was. She wore a faded pink silk dress, trimmed with
- a great deal of cotton lace, soiled white kid slippers, and silk
- stockings. Her sandy hair was tortured into innumerable kinky and
- unnatural curls, surmounted by a flamboyant bow of pink ribbon
- bigger than her head. Judging from her expression she was very
- well satisfied with herself.
-
- A pale little thing, with smooth ripples of fine, silky,
- fawn-colored hair flowing over her shoulders, must, Anne thought,
- be Annetta Bell, whose parents had formerly lived in the Newbridge
- school district, but, by reason of hauling their house fifty yards
- north of its old site were now in Avonlea. Three pallid little
- girls crowded into one seat were certainly Cottons; and there was
- no doubt that the small beauty with the long brown curls and hazel
- eyes, who was casting coquettish looks at Jack Gills over the edge
- of her Testament, was Prillie Rogerson, whose father had recently
- married a second wife and brought Prillie home from her grandmother's
- in Grafton. A tall, awkward girl in a back seat, who seemed to have
- too many feet and hands, Anne could not place at all, but later on
- discovered that her name was Barbara Shaw and that she had come to
- live with an Avonlea aunt. She was also to find that if Barbara
- ever managed to walk down the aisle without falling over her own
- or somebody else's feet the Avonlea scholars wrote the unusual
- fact up on the porch wall to commemorate it.
-
- But when Anne's eyes met those of the boy at the front desk facing
- her own, a queer little thrill went over her, as if she had found
- her genius. She knew this must be Paul Irving and that Mrs. Rachel
- Lynde had been right for once when she prophesied that he would be
- unlike the Avonlea children. More than that, Anne realized that he
- was unlike other children anywhere, and that there was a soul
- subtly akin to her own gazing at her out of the very dark blue eyes
- that were watching her so intently.
-
- She knew Paul was ten but he looked no more than eight. He had the
- most beautiful little face she had ever seen in a child. . .
- features of exquisite delicacy and refinement, framed in a halo of
- chestnut curls. His mouth was delicious, being full without
- pouting, the crimson lips just softly touching and curving into
- finely finished little corners that narrowly escaped being dimpled.
- He had a sober, grave, meditative expression, as if his spirit was
- much older than his body; but when Anne smiled softly at him it
- vanished in a sudden answering smile, which seemed an illumination
- of his whole being, as if some lamp had suddenly kindled into flame
- inside of him, irradiating him from top to toe. Best of all, it
- was involuntary, born of no external effort or motive, but simply
- the outflashing of a hidden personality, rare and fine and sweet.
- With a quick interchange of smiles Anne and Paul were fast friends
- forever before a word had passed between them.
-
- The day went by like a dream. Anne could never clearly recall it
- afterwards. It almost seemed as if it were not she who was
- teaching but somebody else. She heard classes and worked sums and
- set copies mechanically. The children behaved quite well; only two
- cases of discipline occurred. Morley Andrews was caught driving a
- pair of trained crickets in the aisle. Anne stood Morley on the
- platform for an hour and. . .which Morley felt much more keenly. . .
- confiscated his crickets. She put them in a box and on the way from
- school set them free in Violet Vale; but Morley believed, then and ever
- afterwards, that she took them home and kept them for her own amusement.
-
- The other culprit was Anthony Pye, who poured the last drops of
- water from his slate bottle down the back of Aurelia Clay's neck.
- Anne kept Anthony in at recess and talked to him about what was
- expected of gentlemen, admonishing him that they never poured water
- down ladies' necks. She wanted all her boys to be gentlemen, she said.
- Her little lecture was quite kind and touching; but unfortunately
- Anthony remained absolutely untouched. He listened to her in silence,
- with the same sullen expression, and whistled scornfully as he went out.
- Anne sighed; and then cheered herself up by remembering that winning a
- Pye's affections, like the building of Rome, wasn't the work of a day.
- In fact, it was doubtful whether some of the Pyes had any affections
- to win; but Anne hoped better things of Anthony, who looked as if he
- might be a rather nice boy if one ever got behind his sullenness.
-
- When school was dismissed and the children had gone Anne dropped
- wearily into her chair. Her head ached and she felt woefully
- discouraged. There was no real reason for discouragement, since
- nothing very dreadful had occurred; but Anne was very tired and
- inclined to believe that she would never learn to like teaching.
- And how terrible it would be to be doing something you didn't like
- every day for. . .well, say forty years. Anne was of two minds
- whether to have her cry out then and there, or wait till she was
- safely in her own white room at home. Before she could decide
- there was a click of heels and a silken swish on the porch floor,
- and Anne found herself confronted by a lady whose appearance made
- her recall a recent criticism of Mr. Harrison's on an overdressed
- female he had seen in a Charlottetown store. "She looked like a
- head-on collision between a fashion plate and a nightmare."
-
- The newcomer was gorgeously arrayed in a pale blue summer silk,
- puffed, frilled, and shirred wherever puff, frill, or shirring
- could possibly be placed. Her head was surmounted by a huge white
- chiffon hat, bedecked with three long but rather stringy ostrich
- feathers. A veil of pink chiffon, lavishly sprinkled with huge
- black dots, hung like a flounce from the hat brim to her shoulders
- and floated off in two airy streamers behind her. She wore all the
- jewelry that could be crowded on one small woman, and a very strong
- odor of perfume attended her.
-
- "I am Mrs. DonNELL. . .Mrs. H. B. DonNELL," announced this vision,
- "and I have come in to see you about something Clarice Almira told
- me when she came home to dinner today. It annoyed me EXCESSIVELY."
-
- "I'm sorry," faltered Anne, vainly trying to recollect any incident
- of the morning connected with the Donnell children.
-
- "Clarice Almira told me that you pronounced our name DONnell. Now,
- Miss Shirley, the correct pronunciation of our name is DonNELL. . .
- accent on the last syllable. I hope you'll remember this in future."
-
- "I'll try to," gasped Anne, choking back a wild desire to laugh.
- "I know by experience that it's very unpleasant to have one's name
- SPELLED wrong and I suppose it must be even worse to have it
- pronounced wrong."
-
- "Certainly it is. And Clarice Almira also informed me that you
- call my son Jacob."
-
- "He told me his name was Jacob," protested Anne.
-
- "I might well have expected that," said Mrs. H. B. Donnell, in a
- tone which implied that gratitude in children was not to be looked
- for in this degenerate age. "That boy has such plebeian tastes,
- Miss Shirley. When he was born I wanted to call him St. Clair
- . . .it sounds SO aristocratic, doesn't it? But his father
- insisted he should be called Jacob after his uncle. I yielded,
- because Uncle Jacob was a rich old bachelor. And what do you
- think, Miss Shirley? When our innocent boy was five years old Uncle
- Jacob actually went and got married and now he has three boys of
- his own. Did you ever hear of such ingratitude? The moment the
- invitation to the wedding. . .for he had the impertinence to send
- us an invitation, Miss Shirley. . .came to the house I said, `No
- more Jacobs for me, thank you.' From that day I called my son St.
- Clair and St. Clair I am determined he shall be called. His father
- obstinately continues to call him Jacob, and the boy himself
- has a perfectly unaccountable preference for the vulgar name.
- But St. Clair he is and St. Clair he shall remain. You will kindly
- remember this, Miss Shirley, will you not? THANK you. I told
- Clarice Almira that I was sure it was only a misunderstanding and
- that a word would set it right. Donnell. . .accent on the last
- syllable. . .and St. Clair. . .on no account Jacob. You'll remember?
- THANK you."
-
- When Mrs. H. B. DonNELL had skimmed away Anne locked the school
- door and went home. At the foot of the hill she found Paul Irving
- by the Birch Path. He held out to her a cluster of the dainty
- little wild orchids which Avonlea children called "rice lillies."
-
- "Please, teacher, I found these in Mr. Wright's field," he said
- shyly, "and I came back to give them to you because I thought you
- were the kind of lady that would like them, and because. . ." he
- lifted his big beautiful eyes. . ."I like you, teacher."
-
- "You darling," said Anne, taking the fragrant spikes. As if Paul's
- words had been a spell of magic, discouragement and weariness
- passed from her spirit, and hope upwelled in her heart like a
- dancing fountain. She went through the Birch Path light-footedly,
- attended by the sweetness of her orchids as by a benediction.
-
- "Well, how did you get along?" Marilla wanted to know.
-
- "Ask me that a month later and I may be able to tell you. I can't now
- . . .I don't know myself. . .I'm too near it. My thoughts feel as if
- they had been all stirred up until they were thick and muddy. The only
- thing I feel really sure of having accomplished today is that I taught
- Cliffie Wright that A is A. He never knew it before. Isn't it
- something to have started a soul along a path that may end in
- Shakespeare and Paradise Lost?"
-
- Mrs. Lynde came up later on with more encouragement. That good
- lady had waylaid the schoolchildren at her gate and demanded of
- them how they liked their new teacher.
-
- "And every one of them said they liked you splendid, Anne, except
- Anthony Pye. I must admit he didn't. He said you `weren't any good,
- just like all girl teachers.' There's the Pye leaven for you.
- But never mind."
-
- "I'm not going to mind," said Anne quietly, "and I'm going to make
- Anthony Pye like me yet. Patience and kindness will surely win him."
-
- "Well, you can never tell about a Pye," said Mrs. Rachel cautiously.
- "They go by contraries, like dreams, often as not. As for that
- DonNELL woman, she'll get no DonNELLing from me, I can assure you.
- The name is DONnell and always has been. The woman is crazy, that's what.
- She has a pug dog she calls Queenie and it has its meals at the table
- along with the family, eating off a china plate. I'd be afraid of a
- judgment if I was her. Thomas says Donnell himself is a sensible,
- hard-working man, but he hadn't much gumption when he picked out a wife,
- that's what."
-
-
-
-
- VI
-
- All Sorts and Conditions of Men. . .and women
-
-
- A September day on Prince Edward Island hills; a crisp wind blowing
- up over the sand dunes from the sea; a long red road, winding
- through fields and woods, now looping itself about a corner of
- thick set spruces, now threading a plantation of young maples with
- great feathery sheets of ferns beneath them, now dipping down into
- a hollow where a brook flashed out of the woods and into them again,
- now basking in open sunshine between ribbons of golden-rod and
- smoke-blue asters; air athrill with the pipings of myriads of crickets,
- those glad little pensioners of the summer hills; a plump brown pony
- ambling along the road; two girls behind him, full to the lips with
- the simple, priceless joy of youth and life.
-
- "Oh, this is a day left over from Eden, isn't it, Diana?". . .and
- Anne sighed for sheer happiness. "The air has magic in it. Look
- at the purple in the cup of the harvest valley, Diana. And oh, do
- smell the dying fir! It's coming up from that little sunny hollow
- where Mr. Eben Wright has been cutting fence poles. Bliss is it
- on such a day to be alive; but to smell dying fir is very heaven.
- That's two thirds Wordsworth and one third Anne Shirley. It
- doesn't seem possible that there should be dying fir in heaven,
- does it? And yet it doesn't seem to me that heaven would be quite
- perfect if you couldn't get a whiff of dead fir as you went through
- its woods. Perhaps we'll have the odor there without the death.
- Yes, I think that will be the way. That delicious aroma must be the
- souls of the firs. . .and of course it will be just souls in heaven."
-
- "Trees haven't souls," said practical Diana, "but the smell of dead
- fir is certainly lovely. I'm going to make a cushion and fill it
- with fir needles. You'd better make one too, Anne."
-
- "I think I shall. . .and use it for my naps. I'd be certain to
- dream I was a dryad or a woodnymph then. But just this minute I'm
- well content to be Anne Shirley, Avonlea schoolma'am, driving over
- a road like this on such a sweet, friendly day."
-
- "It's a lovely day but we have anything but a lovely task before us,"
- sighed Diana. "Why on earth did you offer to canvass this road, Anne?
- Almost all the cranks in Avonlea live along it, and we'll probably be
- treated as if we were begging for ourselves. It's the very worst road
- of all."
-
- "That is why I chose it. Of course Gilbert and Fred would have
- taken this road if we had asked them. But you see, Diana, I feel
- myself responsible for the A.V.I.S., since I was the first to
- suggest it, and it seems to me that I ought to do the most
- disagreeable things. I'm sorry on your account; but you needn't
- say a word at the cranky places. I'll do all the talking. . .
- Mrs. Lynde would say I was well able to. Mrs. Lynde doesn't know
- whether to approve of our enterprise or not. She inclines to,
- when she remembers that Mr. and Mrs. Allan are in favor of it;
- but the fact that village improvement societies first originated
- in the States is a count against it. So she is halting between two
- opinions and only success will justify us in Mrs. Lynde's eyes.
- Priscilla is going to write a paper for our next Improvement meeting,
- and I expect it will be good, for her aunt is such a clever writer and
- no doubt it runs in the family. I shall never forget the thrill it gave
- me when I found out that Mrs. Charlotte E. Morgan was Priscilla's aunt.
- It seemed so wonderful that I was a friend of the girl whose aunt wrote
- `Edgewood Days' and `The Rosebud Garden.'"
-
- "Where does Mrs. Morgan live?"
-
- "In Toronto. And Priscilla says she is coming to the Island for a
- visit next summer, and if it is possible Priscilla is going to
- arrange to have us meet her. That seems almost too good to be true
- --but it's something pleasant to imagine after you go to bed."
-
- The Avonlea Village Improvement Society was an organized fact.
- Gilbert Blythe was president, Fred Wright vice-president, Anne
- Shirley secretary, and Diana Barry treasurer. The "Improvers," as
- they were promptly christened, were to meet once a fortnight at the
- homes of the members. It was admitted that they could not expect
- to affect many improvements so late in the season; but they meant
- to plan the next summer's campaign, collect and discuss ideas,
- write and read papers, and, as Anne said, educate the public
- sentiment generally.
-
- There was some disapproval, of course, and. . .which the Improvers
- felt much more keenly. . .a good deal of ridicule. Mr. Elisha
- Wright was reported to have said that a more appropriate name for
- the organization would be Courting Club. Mrs. Hiram Sloane
- declared she had heard the Improvers meant to plough up all the
- roadsides and set them out with geraniums. Mr. Levi Boulter
- warned his neighbors that the Improvers would insist that everybody
- pull down his house and rebuild it after plans approved by the society.
- Mr. James Spencer sent them word that he wished they would kindly
- shovel down the church hill. Eben Wright told Anne that he wished
- the Improvers could induce old Josiah Sloane to keep his whiskers trimmed.
- Mr. Lawrence Bell said he would whitewash his barns if nothing else would
- please them but he would NOT hang lace curtains in the cowstable windows.
- Mr. Major Spencer asked Clifton Sloane, an Improver who drove the milk to
- the Carmody cheese factory, if it was true that everybody would have to
- have his milk-stand hand-painted next summer and keep an embroidered
- centerpiece on it.
-
- In spite of. . .or perhaps, human nature being what it is, because
- of. . .this, the Society went gamely to work at the only improvement
- they could hope to bring about that fall. At the second meeting,
- in the Barry parlor, Oliver Sloane moved that they tart a subscription
- to re-shingle and paint the hall; Julia Bell seconded it, with an
- uneasy feeling that she was doing something not exactly ladylike.
- Gilbert put the motion, it was carried unanimously, and Anne gravely
- recorded it in her minutes. The next thing was to appoint a committee,
- and Gertie Pye, determined not to let Julia Bell carry off all the laurels,
- boldly moved that Miss Jane Andrews be chairman of said committee.
- This motion being also duly seconded and carried, Jane returned
- the compliment by appointing Gertie on the committee, along with
- Gilbert, Anne, Diana, and Fred Wright. The committee chose their
- routes in private conclave. Anne and Diana were told off for the
- Newbridge road, Gilbert and Fred for the White Sands road, and Jane
- and Gertie for the Carmody road.
-
- "Because," explained Gilbert to Anne, as they walked home together
- through the Haunted Wood, "the Pyes all live along that road and
- they won't give a cent unless one of themselves canvasses them."
-
- The next Saturday Anne and Diana started out. They drove to the end of
- the road and canvassed homeward, calling first on the "Andrew girls."
-
- "If Catherine is alone we may get something," said Diana, "but if
- Eliza is there we won't."
-
- Eliza was there. . .very much so. . .and looked even grimmer than
- usual. Miss Eliza was one of those people who give you the
- impression that life is indeed a vale of tears, and that a smile,
- never to speak of a laugh, is a waste of nervous energy truly
- reprehensible. The Andrew girls had been "girls" for fifty odd
- years and seemed likely to remain girls to the end of their earthly
- pilgrimage. Catherine, it was said, had not entirely given up hope,
- but Eliza, who was born a pessimist, had never had any. They lived
- in a little brown house built in a sunny corner scooped out of
- Mark Andrew's beech woods. Eliza complained that it was terrible
- hot in summer, but Catherine was wont to say it was lovely and
- warm in winter.
-
- Eliza was sewing patchwork, not because it was needed but simply as
- a protest against the frivolous lace Catherine was crocheting.
- Eliza listened with a frown and Catherine with a smile, as the
- girls explained their errand. To be sure, whenever Catherine
- caught Eliza's eye she discarded the smile in guilty confusion;
- but it crept back the next moment.
-
- "If I had money to waste," said Eliza grimly, "I'd burn it up and
- have the fun of seeing a blaze maybe; but I wouldn't give it to
- that hall, not a cent. It's no benefit to the settlement. . .just
- a place for young folks to meet and carry on when they's better be
- home in their beds."
-
- "Oh, Eliza, young folks must have some amusement," protested
- Catherine.
-
- "I don't see the necessity. We didn't gad about to halls and
- places when we were young, Catherine Andrews. This world is
- getting worse every day"
-
- "I think it's getting better," said Catherine firmly.
-
- "YOU think!" Miss Eliza's voice expressed the utmost contempt.
- "It doesn't signify what you THINK, Catherine Andrews. Facts
- is facts."
-
- "Well, I always like to look on the bright side, Eliza."
-
- "There isn't any bright side."
-
- "Oh, indeed there is," cried Anne, who couldn't endure such heresy
- in silence." Why, there are ever so many bright sides, Miss Andrews.
- It's really a beautiful world."
-
- "You won't have such a high opinion of it when you've lived as long
- in it as I have," retorted Miss Eliza sourly, "and you won't be so
- enthusiastic about improving it either. How is your mother, Diana?
- Dear me, but she has failed of late. She looks terrible run down.
- And how long is it before Marilla expects to be stone blind, Anne?"
-
- "The doctor thinks her eyes will not get any worse if she is very
- careful," faltered Anne.
-
- Eliza shook her head.
-
- "Doctors always talk like that just to keep people cheered up. I wouldn't
- have much hope if I was her. It's best to be prepared for the worst."
-
- "But oughtn't we be prepared for the best too?" pleaded Anne.
- "It's just as likely to happen as the worst."
-
- "Not in my experience, and I've fifty-seven years to set against
- your sixteen," retorted Eliza. "Going, are you? Well, I hope this
- new society of yours will be able to keep Avonlea from running any
- further down hill but I haven't much hope of it."
-
- Anne and Diana got themselves thankfully out, and drove away as
- fast as the fat pony could go. As they rounded the curve below the
- beech wood a plump figure came speeding over Mr. Andrews' pasture,
- waving to them excitedly. It was Catherine Andrews and she was so
- out of breath that she could hardly speak, but she thrust a couple
- of quarters into Anne's hand.
-
- "That's my contribution to painting the hall," she gasped. "I'd
- like to give you a dollar but I don't dare take more from my egg
- money for Eliza would find it out if I did. I'm real interested
- in your society and I believe you're going to do a lot of good.
- I'm an optimist. I HAVE to be, living with Eliza. I must hurry
- back before she misses me. . .she thinks I'm feeding the hens.
- I hope you'll have good luck canvassing, and don't be cast down over
- what Eliza said. The world IS getting better. . .it certainly is."
-
- The next house was Daniel Blair's.
-
- "Now, it all depends on whether his wife is home or not," said Diana,
- as they jolted along a deep-rutted lane. "If she is we won't get a cent.
- Everybody says Dan Blair doesn't dare have his hair cut without asking
- her permission; and it's certain she's very close, to state it moderately.
- She says she has to be just before she's generous. But Mrs. Lynde says
- she's so much `before' that generosity never catches up with her at all."
-
- Anne related their experience at the Blair place to Marilla that evening.
-
- "We tied the horse and then rapped at the kitchen door.
- Nobody came but the door was open and we could hear somebody
- in the pantry, going on dreadfully. We couldn't make out the words
- but Diana says she knows they were swearing by the sound of them.
- I can't believe that of Mr. Blair, for he is always so quiet and meek;
- but at least he had great provocation, for Marilla, when that poor man
- came to the door, red as a beet, with perspiration streaming down his
- face, he had on one of his wife's big gingham aprons. `I can't get
- this durned thing off,' he said, `for the strings are tied in a hard
- knot and I can't bust 'em, so you'll have to excuse me, ladies.'
- We begged him not to mention it and went in and sat down. Mr. Blair
- sat down too; he twisted the apron around to his back and rolled it up,
- but he did look so ashamed and worried that I felt sorry for him,
- and Diana said she feared we had called at an inconvenient time.
- `Oh, not at all,' said Mr. Blair, trying to smile. . .you know he
- is always very polite. . .'I'm a little busy. . .getting ready to
- bake a cake as it were. My wife got a telegram today that her
- sister from Montreal is coming tonight and she's gone to the
- train to meet her and left orders for me to make a cake for tea.
- She writ out the recipe and told me what to do but I've clean forgot
- half the directions already. And it says, "flavor according to taste."
- What does that mean? How can you tell? And what if my taste doesn't
- happen to be other people's taste? Would a tablespoon of vanilla be
- enough for a small layer cake?"
-
- "I felt sorrier than ever for the poor man. He didn't seem to be
- in his proper sphere at all. I had heard of henpecked husbands and
- now I felt that I saw one. It was on my lips to say, `Mr. Blair,
- if you'll give us a subscription for the hall I'll mix up your cake
- for you.' But I suddenly thought it wouldn't be neighborly to drive
- too sharp a bargain with a fellow creature in distress. So I
- offered to mix the cake for him without any conditions at all.
- He just jumped at my offer. He said he'd been used to making his
- own bread before he was married but he feared cake was beyond him,
- and yet he hated to disappoint his wife. He got me another apron,
- and Diana beat the eggs and I mixed the cake. Mr. Blair ran about
- and got us the materials. He had forgotten all about his apron and
- when he ran it streamed out behind him and Diana said she thought
- she would die to see it. He said he could bake the cake all right.
- . .he was used to that. . .and then he asked for our list and he
- put down four dollars. So you see we were rewarded. But even if
- he hadn't given a cent I'd always feel that we had done a truly
- Christian act in helping him."
-
- Theodore White's was the next stopping place. Neither Anne nor
- Diana had ever been there before, and they had only a very slight
- acquaintance with Mrs. Theodore, who was not given to hospitality.
- Should they go to the back or front door? While they held a
- whispered consultation Mrs. Theodore appeared at the front door
- with an armful of newspapers. Deliberately she laid them down one
- by one on the porch floor and the porch steps, and then down the
- path to the very feet of her mystified callers.
-
- "Will you please wipe your feet carefully on the grass and then
- walk on these papers?" she said anxiously. "I've just swept
- the house all over and I can't have any more dust tracked in.
- The path's been real muddy since the rain yesterday."
-
- "Don't you dare laugh," warned Anne in a whisper, as they marched
- along the newspapers. "And I implore you, Diana, not to look at me,
- no matter what she says, or I shall not be able to keep a sober face."
-
- The papers extended across the hall and into a prim, fleckless parlor.
- Anne and Diana sat down gingerly on the nearest chairs and explained
- their errand. Mrs. White heard them politely, interrupting only twice,
- once to chase out an adventurous fly, and once to pick up a tiny wisp
- of grass that had fallen on the carpet from Anne's dress. Anne felt
- wretchedly guilty; but Mrs. White subscribed two dollars and paid
- the money down. . ."to prevent us from having to go back for it,"
- Diana said when they got away. Mrs. White had the newspapers
- gathered up before they had their horse untied and as they drove
- out of the yard they saw her busily wielding a broom in the hall.
-
- "I've always heard that Mrs. Theodore White was the neatest woman
- alive and I'll believe it after this," said Diana, giving way to
- her suppressed laughter as soon as it was safe.
-
- "I am glad she has no children," said Anne solemnly. "It would be
- dreadful beyond words for them if she had."
-
- At the Spencers' Mrs. Isabella Spencer made them miserable by saying
- something ill-natured about everyone in Avonlea. Mr. Thomas Boulter
- refused to give anything because the hall, when it had been built,
- twenty years before, hadn't been built on the site he recommended.
- Mrs. Esther Bell, who was the picture of health, took half an hour
- to detail all her aches and pains, and sadly put down fifty cents
- because she wouldn't be there that time next year to do it. . .no,
- she would be in her grave.
-
- Their worst reception, however, was at Simon Fletcher's. When they
- drove into the yard they saw two faces peering at them through the
- porch window. But although they rapped and waited patiently and
- persistently nobody came to the door. Two decidedly ruffled and
- indignant girls drove away from Simon Fletcher's. Even Anne
- admitted that she was beginning to feel discouraged. But the tide
- turned after that. Several Sloane homesteads came next, where they
- got liberal subscriptions, and from that to the end they fared well,
- with only an occasional snub. Their last place of call was at
- Robert Dickson's by the pond bridge. They stayed to tea here,
- although they were nearly home, rather than risk offending Mrs.
- Dickson, who had the reputation of being a very "touchy" woman.
-
- While they were there old Mrs. James White called in.
-
- "I've just been down to Lorenzo's," she announced. "He's the
- proudest man in Avonlea this minute. What do you think? There's
- a brand new boy there. . .and after seven girls that's quite an
- event, I can tell you." Anne pricked up her ears, and when they
- drove away she said.
-
- "I'm going straight to Lorenzo White's."
-
- "But he lives on the White Sands road and it's quite a distance out
- of our, way" protested Diana. "Gilbert and Fred will canvass him."
-
- "They are not going around until next Saturday and it will be too
- late by then," said Anne firmly. "The novelty will be worn off.
- Lorenzo White is dreadfully mean but he will subscribe to ANYTHING
- just now. We mustn't let such a golden opportunity slip, Diana."
- The result justified Anne's foresight. Mr. White met them in the yard,
- beaming like the sun upon an Easter day. When Anne asked for a
- subscription he agreed enthusiastically.
-
- "Certain, certain. Just put me down for a dollar more than the
- highest subscription you've got."
-
- "That will be five dollars. . .Mr. Daniel Blair put down four,"
- said Anne, half afraid. But Lorenzo did not flinch.
-
- "Five it is. . .and here's the money on the spot. Now, I want you
- to come into the house. There's something in there worth seeing. . .
- something very few people have seen as yet. Just come in and pass
- YOUR opinion."
-
- "What will we say if the baby isn't pretty?" whispered Diana in
- trepidation as they followed the excited Lorenzo into the house.
-
- "Oh, there will certainly be something else nice to say about it,"
- said Anne easily. "There always is about a baby."
-
- The baby WAS pretty, however, and Mr. White felt that he got his
- five dollars' worth of the girls' honest delight over the plump
- little newcomer. But that was the first, last, and only time that
- Lorenzo White ever subscribed to anything.
-
- Anne, tired as she was, made one more effort for the public weal
- that night, slipping over the fields to interview Mr. Harrison, who
- was as usual smoking his pipe on the veranda with Ginger beside him.
- Strickly speaking he was on the Carmody road; but Jane and Gertie,
- who were not acquainted with him save by doubtful report, had
- nervously begged Anne to canvass him.
-
- Mr. Harrison, however, flatly refused to subscribe a cent, and all
- Anne's wiles were in vain.
-
- "But I thought you approved of our society, Mr. Harrison," she mourned.
-
- "So I do. . .so I do. . .but my approval doesn't go as deep as my
- pocket, Anne."
-
- "A few more experiences such as I have had today would make me as
- much of a pessimist as Miss Eliza Andrews," Anne told her
- reflection in the east gable mirror at bedtime.
-
-
-
-
- VII
-
- The Pointing of Duty
-
-
- Anne leaned back in her chair one mild October evening and sighed.
- She was sitting at a table covered with text books and exercises,
- but the closely written sheets of paper before her had no apparent
- connection with studies or school work.
-
- "What is the matter?" asked Gilbert, who had arrived at the open
- kitchen door just in time to hear the sigh.
-
- Anne colored, and thrust her writing out of sight under some school
- compositions.
-
- "Nothing very dreadful. I was just trying to write out some of my
- thoughts, as Professor Hamilton advised me, but I couldn't get them
- to please me. They seem so still and foolish directly they're written
- down on white paper with black ink. Fancies are like shadows. . .
- you can't cage them, they're such wayward, dancing things.
- But perhaps I'll learn the secret some day if I keep on trying.
- I haven't a great many spare moments, you know. By the time I
- finish correcting school exercises and compositions, I don't
- always feel like writing any of my own."
-
- "You are getting on splendidly in school, Anne. All the children
- like you," said Gilbert, sitting down on the stone step.
-
- "No, not all. Anthony Pye doesn't and WON'T like me. What is worse,
- he doesn't respect me. . .no, he doesn't. He simply holds me in
- contempt and I don't mind confessing to you that it worries me miserably.
- It isn't that he is so very bad. . .he is only rather mischievous, but
- no worse than some of the others. He seldom disobeys me; but he obeys
- with a scornful air of toleration as if it wasn't worthwhile disputing
- the point or he would. . .and it has a bad effect on the others.
- I've tried every way to win him but I'm beginning to fear I never shall.
- I want to, for he's rather a cute little lad, if he IS a Pye, and I
- could like him if he'd let me."
-
- "Probably it's merely the effect of what he hears at home."
-
- "Not altogether. Anthony is an independent little chap and makes
- up his own mind about things. He has always gone to men before and
- he says girl teachers are no good. Well, we'll see what patience
- and kindness will do. I like overcoming difficulties and teaching
- is really very interesting work. Paul Irving makes up for all that
- is lacking in the others. That child is a perfect darling,
- Gilbert, and a genius into the bargain. I'm persuaded the world
- will hear of him some day," concluded Anne in a tone of conviction.
-
- "I like teaching, too," said Gilbert. "It's good training, for one thing.
- Why, Anne, I've learned more in the weeks I've been teaching the young the
- ideas of White Sands than I learned in all the years I went to school myself.
- We all seem to be getting on pretty well. The Newbridge people like Jane,
- I hear; and I think White Sands is tolerably satisfied with your humble
- servant. . .all except Mr. Andrew Spencer. I met Mrs. Peter Blewett on
- my way home last night and she told me she thought it her duty to inform
- me that Mr. Spencer didn't approve of my methods."
-
- "Have you ever noticed," asked Anne reflectively, "that when people
- say it is their duty to tell you a certain thing you may prepare
- for something disagreeable? Why is it that they never seem to think
- it a duty to tell you the pleasant things they hear about you?
- Mrs. H. B. DonNELL called at the school again yesterday and told me
- she thought it HER duty to inform me that Mrs. Harmon Andrew
- didn't approve of my reading fairy tales to the children, and that
- Mr. Rogerson thought Prillie wasn't coming on fast enough in
- arithmetic. If Prillie would spend less time making eyes at the
- boys over her slate she might do better. I feel quite sure that
- Jack Gillis works her class sums for her, though I've never been
- able to catch him red-handed."
-
- "Have you succeeded in reconciling Mrs. DonNELL's hopeful son to
- his saintly name?"
-
- "Yes," laughed Anne, "but it was really a difficult task. At
- first, when I called him `St. Clair' he would not take the least
- notice until I'd spoken two or three times; and then, when the
- other boys nudged him, he would look up with such an aggrieved air,
- as if I'd called him John or Charlie and he couldn't be expected to
- know I meant him. So I kept him in after school one night and
- talked kindly to him. I told him his mother wished me to call him
- St. Clair and I couldn't go against her wishes. He saw it when it
- was all explained out. . .he's really a very reasonable little
- fellow. . .and he said _I_ could call him St. Clair but that
- he'd `lick the stuffing' out of any of the boys that tried it.
- Of course, I had to rebuke him again for using such shocking language.
- Since then _I_ call him St. Clair and the boys call him Jake and all
- goes smoothly. He informs me that he means to be a carpenter, but
- Mrs. DonNELL says I am to make a college professor out of him."
-
- The mention of college gave a new direction to Gilbert's thoughts,
- and they talked for a time of their plans and wishes. . .gravely,
- earnestly, hopefully, as youth loves to talk, while the future is
- yet an untrodden path full of wonderful possibilities.
-
- Gilbert had finally made up his mind that he was going to be a doctor.
-
- "It's a splendid profession," he said enthusiastically. "A fellow
- has to fight something all through life. . .didn't somebody once
- define man as a fighting animal?. . .and I want to fight disease
- and pain and ignorance. . .which are all members one of another.
- I want to do my share of honest, real work in the world, Anne. . .
- add a little to the sum of human knowledge that all the good men
- have been accumulating since it began. The folks who lived before
- me have done so much for me that I want to show my gratitude by
- doing something for the folks who will live after me. It seems to
- me that is the only way a fellow can get square with his obligations
- to the race."
-
- "I'd like to add some beauty to life," said Anne dreamily. "I don't
- exactly want to make people KNOW more. . .though I know that IS the
- noblest ambition. . .but I'd love to make them have a pleasanter
- time because of me. . .to have some little joy or happy thought
- that would never have existed if I hadn't been born."
-
- "I think you're fulfilling that ambition every day," said Gilbert
- admiringly.
-
- And he was right. Anne was one of the children of light by birthright.
- After she had passed through a life with a smile or a word thrown
- across it like a gleam of sunshine the owner of that life saw it,
- for the time being at least, as hopeful and lovely and of good report.
-
- Finally Gilbert rose regretfully.
-
- "Well, I must run up to MacPhersons'. Moody Spurgeon came home
- from Queen's today for Sunday and he was to bring me out a book
- Professor Boyd is lending me."
-
- "And I must get Marilla's tea. She went to see Mrs. Keith this
- evening and she will soon be back."
-
- Anne had tea ready when Marilla came home; the fire was crackling
- cheerily, a vase of frost-bleached ferns and ruby-red maple leaves
- adorned the table, and delectable odors of ham and toast pervaded
- the air. But Marilla sank into her chair with a deep sigh.
-
- "Are your eyes troubling you? Does your head ache?" queried
- Anne anxiously.
-
- "No. I'm only tired. . .and worried. It's about Mary and those children
- . . .Mary is worse. . .she can't last much longer. And as for the twins,
- _I_ don't know what is to become of them."
-
- "Hasn't their uncle been heard from?"
-
- "Yes, Mary had a letter from him. He's working in a lumber camp
- and `shacking it,' whatever that means. Anyway, he says he can't
- possibly take the children till the spring. He expects to be
- married then and will have a home to take them to; but he says
- she must get some of the neighbors to keep them for the winter.
- She says she can't bear to ask any of them. Mary never got on
- any too well with the East Grafton people and that's a fact.
- And the long and short of it is, Anne, that I'm sure Mary wants
- me to take those children. . .she didn't say so but she LOOKED it."
-
- "Oh!" Anne clasped her hands, all athrill with excitement.
- "And of course you will, Marilla, won't you?"
-
- "I haven't made up my mind," said Marilla rather tartly. "I don't
- rush into things in your headlong way, Anne. Third cousinship is a
- pretty slim claim. And it will be a fearful responsibility to have
- two children of six years to look after. . .twins, at that."
-
- Marilla had an idea that twins were just twice as bad as single children.
-
- "Twins are very interesting. . .at least one pair of them," said Anne.
- "It's only when there are two or three pairs that it gets monotonous.
- And I think it would be real nice for you to have something to amuse
- you when I'm away in school."
-
- "I don't reckon there'd be much amusement in it. . .more worry and
- bother than anything else, I should say. It wouldn't be so risky if
- they were even as old as you were when I took you. I wouldn't mind
- Dora so much. . .she seems good and quiet. But that Davy is a limb."
-
- Anne was fond of children and her heart yearned over the Keith twins.
- The remembrance of her own neglected childhood was very vivid with
- her still. She knew that Marilla's only vulnerable point was her
- stern devotion to what she believed to be her duty, and Anne
- skillfully marshalled her arguments along this line.
-
- "If Davy is naughty it's all the more reason why he should have
- good training, isn't it, Marilla? If we don't take them we don't
- know who will, nor what kind of influences may surround them.
- Suppose Mrs. Keith's next door neighbors, the Sprotts, were to
- take them. Mrs. Lynde says Henry Sprott is the most profane man
- that ever lived and you can't believe a word his children say.
- Wouldn't it be dreadful to have the twins learn anything like that?
- Or suppose they went to the Wiggins'. Mrs. Lynde says that Mr.
- Wiggins sells everything off the place that can be sold and brings
- his family up on skim milk. You wouldn't like your relations to be
- starved, even if they were only third cousins, would you? It seems
- to me, Marilla, that it is our duty to take them."
-
- "I suppose it is," assented Marilla gloomily. "I daresay I'll tell
- Mary I'll take them. You needn't look so delighted, Anne. It will
- mean a good deal of extra work for you. I can't sew a stitch on
- account of my eyes, so you'll have to see to the making and mending
- of their clothes. And you don't like sewing."
-
- "I hate it," said Anne calmly, "but if you are willing to take
- those children from a sense of duty surely I can do their sewing
- from a sense of duty. It does people good to have to do things
- they don't like. . .in moderation."
-
-
-
-
- VIII
-
- Marilla Adopts Twins
-
-
- Mrs. Rachel Lynde was sitting at her kitchen window, knitting a
- quilt, just as she had been sitting one evening several years
- previously when Matthew Cuthbert had driven down over the hill with
- what Mrs. Rachel called "his imported orphan." But that had been
- in springtime; and this was late autumn, and all the woods were
- leafless and the fields sere and brown. The sun was just setting
- with a great deal of purple and golden pomp behind the dark woods
- west of Avonlea when a buggy drawn by a comfortable brown nag came
- down the hill. Mrs. Rachel peered at it eagerly.
-
- "There's Marilla getting home from the funeral," she said to her
- husband, who was lying on the kitchen lounge. Thomas Lynde lay
- more on the lounge nowadays than he had been used to do, but Mrs.
- Rachel, who was so sharp at noticing anything beyond her own
- household, had not as yet noticed this. "And she's got the twins
- with her,. . .yes, there's Davy leaning over the dashboard
- grabbing at the pony's tail and Marilla jerking him back.
- Dora's sitting up on the seat as prim as you please. She always
- looks as if she'd just been starched and ironed. Well, poor
- Marilla is going to have her hands full this winter and no mistake.
- Still, I don't see that she could do anything less than take them,
- under the circumstances, and she'll have Anne to help her.
- Anne's tickled to death over the whole business, and she has a
- real knacky way with children, I must say. Dear me, it doesn't
- seem a day since poor Matthew brought Anne herself home and
- everybody laughed at the idea of Marilla bringing up a child.
- And now she has adopted twins. You're never safe from being
- surprised till you're dead."
-
- The fat pony jogged over the bridge in Lynde's Hollow and along the
- Green Gables lane. Marilla's face was rather grim. It was ten
- miles from East Grafton and Davy Keith seemed to be possessed with
- a passion for perpetual motion. It was beyond Marilla's power to
- make him sit still and she had been in an agony the whole way lest
- he fall over the back of the wagon and break his neck, or tumble
- over the dashboard under the pony's heels. In despair she finally
- threatened to whip him soundly when she got him home. Whereupon
- Davy climbed into her lap, regardless of the reins, flung his
- chubby arms about her neck and gave her a bear-like hug.
-
- "I don't believe you mean it," he said, smacking her wrinkled cheek
- affectionately. "You don't LOOK like a lady who'd whip a little
- boy just 'cause he couldn't keep still. Didn't you find it awful
- hard to keep still when you was only 's old as me?"
-
- "No, I always kept still when I was told," said Marilla, trying to
- speak sternly, albeit she felt her heart waxing soft within her
- under Davy's impulsive caresses.
-
- "Well, I s'pose that was 'cause you was a girl," said Davy,
- squirming back to his place after another hug. "You WAS a
- girl once, I s'pose, though it's awful funny to think of it.
- Dora can sit still. . .but there ain't much fun in it _I_ don't think.
- Seems to me it must be slow to be a girl. Here, Dora, let me liven
- you up a bit."
-
- Davy's method of "livening up" was to grasp Dora's curls in his
- fingers and give them a tug. Dora shrieked and then cried.
-
- "How can you be such a naughty boy and your poor mother just laid
- in her grave this very day?" demanded Marilla despairingly.
-
- "But she was glad to die," said Davy confidentially. "I know,
- 'cause she told me so. She was awful tired of being sick.
- We'd a long talk the night before she died. She told me you was
- going to take me and Dora for the winter and I was to be a good boy.
- I'm going to be good, but can't you be good running round just as
- well as sitting still? And she said I was always to be kind to Dora
- and stand up for her, and I'm going to."
-
- "Do you call pulling her hair being kind to her?"
-
- "Well, I ain't going to let anybody else pull it," said Davy,
- doubling up his fists and frowning. "They'd just better try it.
- I didn't hurt her much. . .she just cried 'cause she's a girl.
- I'm glad I'm a boy but I'm sorry I'm a twin. When Jimmy Sprott's
- sister conterdicks him he just says, `I'm oldern you, so of course
- I know better,' and that settles HER. But I can't tell Dora that,
- and she just goes on thinking diffrunt from me. You might let me
- drive the gee-gee for a spell, since I'm a man."
-
- Altogether, Marilla was a thankful woman when she drove into her own yard,
- where the wind of the autumn night was dancing with the brown leaves.
- Anne was at the gate to meet them and lift the twins out. Dora submitted
- calmly to be kissed, but Davy responded to Anne's welcome with one of his
- hearty hugs and the cheerful announcement, "I'm Mr. Davy Keith."
-
- At the supper table Dora behaved like a little lady, but Davy's
- manners left much to be desired.
-
- "I'm so hungry I ain't got time to eat p'litely," he said when Marilla
- reproved him. "Dora ain't half as hungry as I am. Look at all the
- ex'cise I took on the road here. That cake's awful nice and plummy.
- We haven't had any cake at home for ever'n ever so long, 'cause
- mother was too sick to make it and Mrs. Sprott said it was as much
- as she could do to bake our bread for us. And Mrs. Wiggins never
- puts any plums in HER cakes. Catch her! Can I have another piece?"
-
- Marilla would have refused but Anne cut a generous second slice.
- However, she reminded Davy that he ought to say "Thank you" for it.
- Davy merely grinned at her and took a huge bite. When he had
- finished the slice he said,
-
- "If you'll give me ANOTHER piece I'll say thank you for IT."
-
- "No, you have had plenty of cake," said Marilla in a tone which
- Anne knew and Davy was to learn to be final.
-
- Davy winked at Anne, and then, leaning over the table, snatched
- Dora's first piece of cake, from which she had just taken one
- dainty little bite, out of her very fingers and, opening his mouth
- to the fullest extent, crammed the whole slice in. Dora's lip
- trembled and Marilla was speechless with horror. Anne promptly
- exclaimed, with her best "schoolma'am" air,
-
- "Oh, Davy, gentlemen don't do things like that."
-
- "I know they don't," said Davy, as soon as he could speak,
- "but I ain't a gemplum."
-
- "But don't you want to be?" said shocked Anne.
-
- "Course I do. But you can't be a gemplum till you grow up."
-
- "Oh, indeed you can," Anne hastened to say, thinking she saw a chance
- to sow good seed betimes. "You can begin to be a gentleman when you
- are a little boy. And gentlemen NEVER snatch things from ladies. . .
- or forget to say thank you. . .or pull anybody's hair."
-
- "They don't have much fun, that's a fact," said Davy frankly.
- "I guess I'll wait till I'm grown up to be one."
-
- Marilla, with a resigned air, had cut another piece of cake for Dora.
- She did not feel able to cope with Davy just then. It had been a
- hard day for her, what with the funeral and the long drive.
- At that moment she looked forward to the future with a pessimism
- that would have done credit to Eliza Andrews herself.
-
- The twins were not noticeably alike, although both were fair.
- Dora had long sleek curls that never got out of order. Davy had
- a crop of fuzzy little yellow ringlets all over his round head.
- Dora's hazel eyes were gentle and mild; Davy's were as roguish
- and dancing as an elf's. Dora's nose was straight, Davy's a
- positive snub; Dora had a "prunes and prisms" mouth, Davy's was
- all smiles; and besides, he had a dimple in one cheek and none in the
- other, which gave him a dear, comical, lopsided look when he laughed.
- Mirth and mischief lurked in every corner of his little face.
-
- "They'd better go to bed," said Marilla, who thought it was the
- easiest way to dispose of them. "Dora will sleep with me and you
- can put Davy in the west gable. You're not afraid to sleep alone,
- are you, Davy?"
-
- "No; but I ain't going to bed for ever so long yet," said Davy comfortably.
-
- "Oh, yes, you are." That was all the muchtried Marilla said, but
- something in her tone squelched even Davy. He trotted obediently
- upstairs with Anne."
-
- When I'm grown up the very first thing I'm going to do is stay up ALL
- night just to see what it would be like," he told her confidentially.
-
- In after years Marilla never thought of that first week of the
- twins' sojourn at Green Gables without a shiver. Not that it
- really was so much worse than the weeks that followed it; but it
- seemed so by reason of its novelty. There was seldom a waking
- minute of any day when Davy was not in mischief or devising it;
- but his first notable exploit occurred two days after his arrival,
- on Sunday morning. . .a fine, warm day, as hazy and mild as September.
- Anne dressed him for church while Marilla attended to Dora.
- Davy at first objected strongly to having his face washed.
-
- "Marilla washed it yesterday. . .and Mrs. Wiggins scoured me with
- hard soap the day of the funeral. That's enough for one week.
- I don't see the good of being so awful clean. It's lots more
- comfable being dirty."
-
- "Paul Irving washes his face every day of his own accord," said
- Anne astutely.
-
- Davy had been an inmate of Green Gables for little over forty-eight
- hours; but he already worshipped Anne and hated Paul Irving, whom
- he had heard Anne praising enthusiastically the day after his arrival.
- If Paul Irving washed his face every day, that settled it. He, Davy
- Keith, would do it too, if it killed him. The same consideration
- induced him to submit meekly to the other details of his toilet,
- and he was really a handsome little lad when all was done.
- Anne felt an almost maternal pride in him as she led him into
- the old Cuthbert pew.
-
- Davy behaved quite well at first, being occupied in casting covert
- glances at all the small boys within view and wondering which was
- Paul Irving. The first two hymns and the Scripture reading passed
- off uneventfully. Mr. Allan was praying when the sensation came.
-
- Lauretta White was sitting in front of Davy, her head slightly bent
- and her fair hair hanging in two long braids, between which a
- tempting expanse of white neck showed, encased in a loose lace
- frill. Lauretta was a fat, placid-looking child of eight, who had
- conducted herself irreproachably in church from the very first day
- her mother carried her there, an infant of six months.
-
- Davy thrust his hand into his pocket and produced. . .a
- caterpillar, a furry, squirming caterpillar. Marilla saw
- and clutched at him but she was too late. Davy dropped the
- caterpillar down Lauretta's neck.
-
- Right into the middle of Mr. Allan's prayer burst a series of
- piercing shrieks. The minister stopped appalled and opened his eyes.
- Every head in the congregation flew up. Lauretta White was dancing
- up and down in her pew, clutching frantically at the back of her dress.
-
- "Ow. . .mommer. . .mommer. . .ow. . .take it off. . .ow. . .get it
- out. . .ow. . .that bad boy put it down my neck. . .ow. . .mommer.
- . .it's going further down. . .ow. . .ow. . .ow...."
-
- Mrs. White rose and with a set face carried the hysterical,
- writhing Lauretta out of church. Her shrieks died away in the
- distance and Mr. Allan proceeded with the service. But everybody
- felt that it was a failure that day. For the first time in her
- life Marilla took no notice of the text and Anne sat with scarlet
- cheeks of mortification.
-
- When they got home Marilla put Davy to bed and made him stay there
- for the rest of the day. She would not give him any dinner but
- allowed him a plain tea of bread and milk. Anne carried it to him
- and sat sorrowfully by him while he ate it with an unrepentant relish.
- But Anne's mournful eyes troubled him.
-
- "I s'pose," he said reflectively, "that Paul Irving wouldn't have
- dropped a caterpillar down a girl's neck in church, would he?"
-
- "Indeed he wouldn't," said Anne sadly.
-
- "Well, I'm kind of sorry I did it, then," conceded Davy. "But it
- was such a jolly big caterpillar. . .I picked him up on the church
- steps just as we went in. It seemed a pity to waste him. And say,
- wasn't it fun to hear that girl yell?"
-
- Tuesday afternoon the Aid Society met at Green Gables. Anne hurried
- home from school, for she knew that Marilla would need all the assistance
- she could give. Dora, neat and proper, in her nicely starched white dress
- and black sash, was sitting with the members of the Aid in the parlor,
- speaking demurely when spoken to, keeping silence when not, and in every
- way comporting herself as a model child. Davy, blissfully dirty, was
- making mud pies in the barnyard.
-
- "I told him he might," said Marilla wearily. "I thought it would
- keep him out of worse mischief. He can only get dirty at that.
- We'll have our teas over before we call him to his. Dora can have
- hers with us, but I would never dare to let Davy sit down at the
- table with all the Aids here."
-
- When Anne went to call the Aids to tea she found that Dora was not
- in the parlor. Mrs. Jasper Bell said Davy had come to the front
- door and called her out. A hasty consultation with Marilla in the
- pantry resulted in a decision to let both children have their teas
- together later on.
-
- Tea was half over when the dining room was invaded by a forlorn
- figure. Marilla and Anne stared in dismay, the Aids in amazement.
- Could that be Dora. . .that sobbing nondescript in a drenched,
- dripping dress and hair from which the water was streaming on
- Marilla's new coin-spot rug?
-
- "Dora, what has happened to you?" cried Anne, with a guilty glance
- at Mrs. Jasper Bell, whose family was said to be the only one in
- the world in which accidents never occurred.
-
- "Davy made me walk the pigpen fence," wailed Dora. "I didn't want
- to but he called me a fraid-cat. And I fell off into the pigpen and
- my dress got all dirty and the pig runned right over me. My dress
- was just awful but Davy said if I'd stand under the pump he'd wash
- it clean, and I did and he pumped water all over me but my dress
- ain't a bit cleaner and my pretty sash and shoes is all spoiled."
-
- Anne did the honors of the table alone for the rest of the meal
- while Marilla went upstairs and redressed Dora in her old clothes.
- Davy was caught and sent to bed without any supper. Anne went to
- his room at twilight and talked to him seriously. . .a method in
- which she had great faith, not altogether unjustified by results.
- She told him she felt very badly over his conduct.
-
- "I feel sorry now myself," admitted Davy, "but the trouble is I
- never feel sorry for doing things till after I've did them.
- Dora wouldn't help me make pies, cause she was afraid of messing her
- clo'es and that made me hopping mad. I s'pose Paul Irving wouldn't
- have made HIS sister walk a pigpen fence if he knew she'd fall in?"
-
- "No, he would never dream of such a thing. Paul is a perfect
- little gentleman."
-
- Davy screwed his eyes tight shut and seemed to meditate on this for
- a time. Then he crawled up and put his arms about Anne's neck,
- snuggling his flushed little face down on her shoulder.
-
- "Anne, don't you like me a little bit, even if I ain't a good boy like Paul?"
-
- "Indeed I do," said Anne sincerely. Somehow, it was impossible to help
- liking Davy. "But I'd like you better still if you weren't so naughty."
-
- "I. . .did something else today," went on Davy in a muffled voice.
- "I'm sorry now but I'm awful scared to tell you. You won't be very
- cross, will you? And you won't tell Marilla, will you?"
-
- "I don't know, Davy. Perhaps I ought to tell her. But I think I
- can promise you I won't if you promise me that you will never do it
- again, whatever it is."
-
- "No, I never will. Anyhow, it's not likely I'd find any more of
- them this year. I found this one on the cellar steps."
-
- "Davy, what is it you've done?"
-
- "I put a toad in Marilla's bed. You can go and take it out if you like.
- But say, Anne, wouldn't it be fun to leave it there?"
-
- "Davy Keith!" Anne sprang from Davy's clinging arms and flew across
- the hall to Marilla's room. The bed was slightly rumpled. She
- threw back the blankets in nervous haste and there in very truth
- was the toad, blinking at her from under a pillow.
-
- "How can I carry that awful thing out?" moaned Anne with a shudder.
- The fire shovel suggested itself to her and she crept down to get it
- while Marilla was busy in the pantry. Anne had her own troubles carrying
- that toad downstairs, for it hopped off the shovel three times and
- once she thought she had lost it in the hall. When she finally
- deposited it in the cherry orchard she drew a long breath of relief.
-
- "If Marilla knew she'd never feel safe getting into bed again in
- her life. I'm so glad that little sinner repented in time.
- There's Diana signaling to me from her window. I'm glad. . .I
- really feel the need of some diversion, for what with Anthony Pye
- in school and Davy Keith at home my nerves have had about all they
- can endure for one day."
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- A Question of Color
-
-
- "That old nuisance of a Rachel Lynde was here again today,
- pestering me for a subscription towards buying a carpet for the
- vestry room," said Mr. Harrison wrathfully. "I detest that woman
- more than anybody I know. She can put a whole sermon, text, comment,
- and application, into six words, and throw it at you like a brick."
-
- Anne, who was perched on the edge of the veranda, enjoying the charm
- of a mild west wind blowing across a newly ploughed field on a gray
- November twilight and piping a quaint little melody among the twisted
- firs below the garden, turned her dreamy face over her shoulder.
-
- "The trouble is, you and Mrs. Lynde don't understand one another,"
- she explained. "That is always what is wrong when people don't
- like each other. I didn't like Mrs. Lynde at first either; but as
- soon as I came to understand her I learned to."
-
- "Mrs. Lynde may be an acquired taste with some folks; but I didn't
- keep on eating bananas because I was told I'd learn to like them if
- I did," growled Mr. Harrison." And as for understanding her, I
- understand that she is a confirmed busybody and I told her so."
-
- "Oh, that must have hurt her feelings very much," said Anne
- reproachfully. "How could you say such a thing? I said some
- dreadful things to Mrs. Lynde long ago but it was when I had
- lost my temper. I couldn't say them DELIBERATELY."
-
- "It was the truth and I believe in telling the truth to everybody."
-
- "But you don't tell the whole truth," objected Anne. "You only
- tell the disagreeable part of the truth. Now, you've told me a
- dozen times that my hair was red, but you've never once told me
- that I had a nice nose."
-
- "I daresay you know it without any telling," chuckled Mr. Harrison.
-
- "I know I have red hair too. . .although it's MUCH darker than it
- used to be. . .so there's no need of telling me that either."
-
- "Well, well, I'll try and not mention it again since you're so
- sensitive. You must excuse me, Anne. I've got a habit of being
- outspoken and folks mustn't mind it."
-
- "But they can't help minding it. And I don't think it's any help
- that it's your habit. What would you think of a person who went
- about sticking pins and needles into people and saying, `Excuse me,
- you mustn't mind it. . .it's just a habit I've got.' You'd think
- he was crazy, wouldn't you? And as for Mrs. Lynde being a busybody,
- perhaps she is. But did you tell her she had a very kind heart and
- always helped the poor, and never said a word when Timothy Cotton
- stole a crock of butter out of her dairy and told his wife he'd
- bought it from her? Mrs. Cotton cast it up to her the next time
- they met that it tasted of turnips and Mrs. Lynde just said she
- was sorry it had turned out so poorly."
-
- "I suppose she has some good qualities," conceded Mr. Harrison grudgingly.
- "Most folks have. I have some myself, though you might never suspect it.
- But anyhow I ain't going to give anything to that carpet. Folks are
- everlasting begging for money here, it seems to me. How's your project
- of painting the hall coming on?"
-
- "Splendidly. We had a meeting of the A.V.I.S. last Friday night and
- found that we had plenty of money subscribed to paint the and shingle
- the roof too. MOST people gave very liberally, Mr. Harrison."
-
- Anne was a sweet-souled lass, but she could instill some venom into
- innocent italics when occasion required.
-
- "What color are you going to have it?"
-
- "We have decided on a very pretty green. The roof will be dark red,
- of course. Mr. Roger Pye is going to get the paint in town today."
-
- "Who's got the job?"
-
- "Mr. Joshua Pye of Carmody. He has nearly finished the shingling.
- We had to give him the contract, for every one of the Pyes. . .
- and there are four families, you know. . .said they wouldn't give
- a cent unless Joshua got it. They had subscribed twelve dollars
- between them and we thought that was too much to lose, although
- some people think we shouldn't have given in to the Pyes.
- Mrs. Lynde says they try to run everything."
-
- "The main question is will this Joshua do his work well. If he does
- I don't see that it matters whether his name is Pye or Pudding."
-
- "He has the reputation of being a good workman, though they say
- he's a very peculiar man. He hardly ever talks."
-
- "He's peculiar enough all right then," said Mr. Harrison drily.
- "Or at least, folks here will call him so. I never was much of a
- talker till I came to Avonlea and then I had to begin in self-defense
- or Mrs. Lynde would have said I was dumb and started a subscription
- to have me taught sign language. You're not going yet, Anne?"
-
- "I must. I have some sewing to do for Dora this evening. Besides,
- Davy is probably breaking Marilla's heart with some new mischief by
- this time. This morning the first thing he said was, `Where does
- the dark go, Anne? I want to know.' I told him it went around to
- the other side of the world but after breakfast he declared it
- didn't. . .that it went down the well. Marilla says she caught
- him hanging over the well-box four times today, trying to reach
- down to the dark."
-
- "He's a limb," declared Mr. Harrison. "He came over here
- yesterday and pulled six feathers out of Ginger's tail before I
- could get in from the barn. The poor bird has been moping ever
- since. Those children must be a sight of trouble to you folks."
-
- "Everything that's worth having is some trouble," said Anne,
- secretly resolving to forgive Davy's next offence, whatever it
- might be, since he had avenged her on Ginger.
-
- Mr. Roger Pye brought the hall paint home that night and Mr. Joshua
- Pye, a surly, taciturn man, began painting the next day. He was
- not disturbed in his task. The hall was situated on what was called
- "the lower road." In late autumn this road was always muddy and wet,
- and people going to Carmody traveled by the longer "upper" road.
- The hall was so closely surrounded by fir woods that it was invisible
- unless you were near it. Mr. Joshua Pye painted away in the solitude
- and independence that were so dear to his unsociable heart.
-
- Friday afternoon he finished his job and went home to Carmody.
- Soon after his departure Mrs. Rachel Lynde drove by, having braved
- the mud of the lower road out of curiosity to see what the hall
- looked like in its new coat of paint. When she rounded the spruce
- curve she saw.
-
- The sight affected Mrs. Lynde oddly. She dropped the reins, held
- up her hands, and said "Gracious Providence!" She stared as if she
- could not believe her eyes. Then she laughed almost hysterically.
-
- "There must be some mistake. . .there must. I knew those Pyes would
- make a mess of things."
-
- Mrs. Lynde drove home, meeting several people on the road and
- stopping to tell them about the hall. The news flew like wildfire.
- Gilbert Blythe, poring over a text book at home, heard it from his
- father's hired boy at sunset, and rushed breathlessly to Green
- Gables, joined on the way by Fred Wright. They found Diana Barry,
- Jane Andrews, and Anne Shirley, despair personified, at the yard
- gate of Green Gables, under the big leafless willows.
-
- "It isn't true surely, Anne?" exclaimed Gilbert.
-
- "It is true," answered Anne, looking like the muse of tragedy.
- "Mrs. Lynde called on her way from Carmody to tell me. Oh, it is
- simply dreadful! What is the use of trying to improve anything?"
-
- "What is dreadful?" asked Oliver Sloane, arriving at this moment
- with a bandbox he had brought from town for Marilla.
-
- "Haven't you heard?" said Jane wrathfully. "Well, its simply this.
- . .Joshua Pye has gone and painted the hall blue instead of green.
- . .a deep, brilliant blue, the shade they use for painting carts
- and wheelbarrows. And Mrs. Lynde says it is the most hideous
- color for a building, especially when combined with a red roof,
- that she ever saw or imagined. You could simply have knocked me
- down with a feather when I heard it. It's heartbreaking, after all
- the trouble we've had."
-
- "How on earth could such a mistake have happened?" wailed Diana.
-
- The blame of this unmerciful disaster was eventually narrowed down
- to the Pyes. The Improvers had decided to use Morton-Harris paints
- and the Morton-Harris paint cans were numbered according to a color
- card. A purchaser chose his shade on the card and ordered by the
- accompanying number. Number 147 was the shade of green desired and
- when Mr. Roger Pye sent word to the Improvers by his son, John
- Andrew, that he was going to town and would get their paint for
- them, the Improvers told John Andrew to tell his father to get 147.
- John Andrew always averred that he did so, but Mr. Roger Pye as
- stanchly declared that John Andrew told him 157; and there the
- matter stands to this day.
-
- That night there was blank dismay in every Avonlea house where an
- Improver lived. The gloom at Green Gables was so intense that it
- quenched even Davy. Anne wept and would not be comforted.
-
- "I must cry, even if I am almost seventeen, Marilla," she sobbed.
- "It is so mortifying. And it sounds the death knell of our society.
- We'll simply be laughed out of existence."
-
- In life, as in dreams, however, things often go by contraries. The
- Avonlea people did not laugh; they were too angry. Their money had
- gone to paint the hall and consequently they felt themselves bitterly
- aggrieved by the mistake. Public indignation centered on the Pyes.
- Roger Pye and John Andrew had bungled the matter between them;
- and as for Joshua Pye, he must be a born fool not to suspect
- there was something wrong when he opened the cans and saw the color
- of the paint. Joshua Pye, when thus animadverted upon, retorted
- that the Avonlea taste in colors was no business of his, whatever
- his private opinion might be; he had been hired to paint the hall,
- not to talk about it; and he meant to have his money for it.
-
- The Improvers paid him his money in bitterness of spirit, after
- consulting Mr. Peter Sloane, who was a magistrate.
-
- "You'll have to pay it," Peter told him. "You can't hold him
- responsible for the mistake, since he claims he was never told
- what the color was supposed to be but just given the cans and
- told to go ahead. But it's a burning shame and that hall
- certainly does look awful."
-
- The luckless Improvers expected that Avonlea would be more
- prejudiced than ever against them; but instead, public sympathy
- veered around in their favor. People thought the eager,
- enthusiastic little band who had worked so hard for their object
- had been badly used. Mrs. Lynde told them to keep on and show
- the Pyes that there really were people in the world who could
- do things without making a muddle of them. Mr. Major Spencer sent
- them word that he would clean out all the stumps along the road
- front of his farm and seed it down with grass at his own expense;
- and Mrs. Hiram Sloane called at the school one day and beckoned
- Anne mysteriously out into the porch to tell her that if the "Sassiety"
- wanted to make a geranium bed at the crossroads in the spring they
- needn't be afraid of her cow, for she would see that the marauding
- animal was kept within safe bounds. Even Mr. Harrison chuckled,
- if he chuckled at all, in private, and was all sympathy outwardly.
-
- "Never mind, Anne. Most paints fade uglier every year but that
- blue is as ugly as it can be to begin with, so it's bound to fade
- prettier. And the roof is shingled and painted all right. Folks
- will be able to sit in the hall after this without being leaked on.
- You've accomplished so much anyhow."
-
- "But Avonlea's blue hall will be a byword in all the neighboring
- settlements from this time out," said Anne bitterly.
-
- And it must be confessed that it was.
-
-
-
-
- X
-
- Davy in Search of a Sensation
-
-
- Anne, walking home from school through the Birch Path one November
- afternoon, felt convinced afresh that life was a very wonderful thing.
- The day had been a good day; all had gone well in her little kingdom.
- St. Clair Donnell had not fought any of the other boys over the
- question of his name; Prillie Rogerson's face had been so puffed
- up from the effects of toothache that she did not once try to
- coquette with the boys in her vicinity. Barbara Shaw had met
- with only ONE accident. . .spilling a dipper of water over
- the floor. . .and Anthony Pye had not been in school at all.
-
- "What a nice month this November has been!" said Anne, who had
- never quite got over her childish habit of talking to herself.
- "November is usually such a disagreeable month. . .as if the year
- had suddenly found out that she was growing old and could do
- nothing but weep and fret over it. This year is growing old
- gracefully. . .just like a stately old lady who knows she can be
- charming even with gray hair and wrinkles. We've had lovely days
- and delicious twilights. This last fortnight has been so peaceful,
- and even Davy has been almost well-behaved. I really think he
- is improving a great deal. How quiet the woods are today. . .
- not a murmur except that soft wind purring in the treetops!
- It sounds like surf on a faraway shore. How dear the woods are!
- You beautiful trees! I love every one of you as a friend."
-
- Anne paused to throw her arm about a slim young birch and kiss its
- cream-white trunk. Diana, rounding a curve in the path, saw her
- and laughed.
-
- "Anne Shirley, you're only pretending to be grown up. I believe
- when you're alone you're as much a little girl as you ever were."
-
- "Well, one can't get over the habit of being a little girl all at
- once," said Anne gaily. "You see, I was little for fourteen years
- and I've only been grown-uppish for scarcely three. I'm sure I
- shall always feel like a child in the woods. These walks home
- from school are almost the only time I have for dreaming. . .
- except the half-hour or so before I go to sleep. I'm so busy
- with teaching and studying and helping Marilla with the
- twins that I haven't another moment for imagining things.
- You don't know what splendid adventures I have for a little
- while after I go to bed in the east gable every night. I always
- imagine I'm something very brilliant and triumphant and splendid. . .
- a great prima donna or a Red Cross nurse or a queen. Last night
- I was a queen. It's really splendid to imagine you are a queen.
- You have all the fun of it without any of the inconveniences and
- you can stop being a queen whenever you want to, which you couldn't
- in real life. But here in the woods I like best to imagine quite
- different things. . .I'm a dryad living in an old pine, or a little
- brown wood-elf hiding under a crinkled leaf. That white birch you
- caught me kissing is a sister of mine. The only difference is,
- she's a tree and I'm a girl, but that's no real difference.
- Where are you going, Diana?"
-
- "Down to the Dicksons. I promised to help Alberta cut out her new dress.
- Can't you walk down in the evening, Anne, and come home with me?"
-
- "I might. . .since Fred Wright is away in town," said Anne with a
- rather too innocent face.
-
- Diana blushed, tossed her head, and walked on. She did not look
- offended, however.
-
- Anne fully intended to go down to the Dicksons' that evening, but
- she did not. When she arrived at Green Gables she found a state of
- affairs which banished every other thought from her mind. Marilla
- met her in the yard. . .a wild-eyed Marilla.
-
- "Anne, Dora is lost!"
-
- "Dora! Lost!" Anne looked at Davy, who was swinging on the yard
- gate, and detected merriment in his eyes. "Davy, do you know where
- she is?"
-
- "No, I don't," said Davy stoutly. "I haven't seen her since dinner
- time, cross my heart."
-
- "I've been away ever since one o'clock," said Marilla. "Thomas Lynde
- took sick all of a sudden and Rachel sent up for me to go at once.
- When I left here Dora was playing with her doll in the kitchen and Davy
- was making mud pies behind the barn. I only got home half an hour ago
- . . .and no Dora to be seen. Davy declares he never saw her since I left."
-
- "Neither I did," avowed Davy solemnly.
-
- "She must be somewhere around," said Anne. "She would never wander
- far away alone. . .you know how timid she is. Perhaps she has fallen
- asleep in one of the rooms."
-
- Marilla shook her head.
-
- "I've hunted the whole house through. But she may be in some of
- the buildings."
-
- A thorough search followed. Every corner of house, yard, and
- outbuildings was ransacked by those two distracted people. Anne
- roved the orchards and the Haunted Wood, calling Dora's name.
- Marilla took a candle and explored the cellar. Davy accompanied
- each of them in turn, and was fertile in thinking of places where
- Dora could possibly be. Finally they met again in the yard.
-
- "It's a most mysterious thing," groaned Marilla.
-
- "Where can she be?" said Anne miserably
-
- "Maybe she's tumbled into the well," suggested Davy cheerfully.
-
- Anne and Marilla looked fearfully into each other's eyes.
- The thought had been with them both through their entire
- search but neither had dared to put it into words.
-
- "She. . .she might have," whispered Marilla.
-
- Anne, feeling faint and sick, went to the wellbox and peered over.
- The bucket sat on the shelf inside. Far down below was a tiny
- glimmer of still water. The Cuthbert well was the deepest in
- Avonlea. If Dora. . .but Anne could not face the idea.
- She shuddered and turned away.
-
- "Run across for Mr. Harrison," said Marilla, wringing her hands.
-
- "Mr. Harrison and John Henry are both away. . .they went to town today.
- I'll go for Mr. Barry."
-
- Mr. Barry came back with Anne, carrying a coil of rope to which
- was attached a claw-like instrument that had been the business end
- of a grubbing fork. Marilla and Anne stood by, cold and shaken
- with horror and dread, while Mr. Barry dragged the well, and Davy,
- astride the gate, watched the group with a face indicative of huge
- enjoyment.
-
- Finally Mr. Barry shook his head, with a relieved air.
-
- "She can't be down there. It's a mighty curious thing where she
- could have got to, though. Look here, young man, are you sure
- you've no idea where your sister is?"
-
- "I've told you a dozen times that I haven't," said Davy, with an
- injured air. "Maybe a tramp come and stole her."
-
- "Nonsense," said Marilla sharply, relieved from her horrible fear
- of the well. "Anne, do you suppose she could have strayed over to
- Mr. Harrison's? She has always been talking about his parrot ever
- since that time you took her over"
-
- "I can't believe Dora would venture so far alone but I'll go over
- and see," said Anne.
-
- Nobody was looking at Davy just then or it would have been seen that
- a very decided change came over his face. He quietly slipped off
- the gate and ran, as fast as his fat legs could carry him, to the barn.
-
- Anne hastened across the fields to the Harrison establishment in no
- very hopeful frame of mind. The house was locked, the window
- shades were down, and there was no sign of anything living about
- the place. She stood on the veranda and called Dora loudly.
-
- Ginger, in the kitchen behind her, shrieked and swore with sudden
- fierceness; but between his outbursts Anne heard a plaintive cry
- from the little building in the yard which served Mr. Harrison as
- a toolhouse. Anne flew to the door, unhasped it, and caught up a
- small mortal with a tearstained face who was sitting forlornly on
- an upturned nail keg.
-
- "Oh, Dora, Dora, what a fright you have given us! How came you to be here?"
-
- "Davy and I came over to see Ginger," sobbed Dora, "but we couldn't
- see him after all, only Davy made him swear by kicking the door.
- And then Davy brought me here and run out and shut the door; and I
- couldn't get out. I cried and cried, I was frightened, and oh, I'm
- so hungry and cold; and I thought you'd never come, Anne."
-
- "Davy?" But Anne could say no more. She carried Dora home with a
- heavy heart. Her joy at finding the child safe and sound was
- drowned out in the pain caused by Davy's behavior. The freak of
- shutting Dora up might easily have been pardoned. But Davy had
- told falsehoods. . .downright coldblooded falsehoods about it.
- That was the ugly fact and Anne could not shut her eyes to it.
- She could have sat down and cried with sheer disappointment.
- She had grown to love Davy dearly. . .how dearly she had not
- known until this minute. . .and it hurt her unbearably to
- discover that he was guilty of deliberate falsehood.
-
- Marilla listened to Anne's tale in a silence that boded no good
- Davy-ward; Mr. Barry laughed and advised that Davy be summarily
- dealt with. When he had gone home Anne soothed and warmed the
- sobbing, shivering Dora, got her her supper and put her to bed.
- Then she returned to the kitchen, just as Marilla came grimly in,
- leading, or rather pulling, the reluctant, cobwebby Davy, whom she
- had just found hidden away in the darkest corner of the stable.
-
- She jerked him to the mat on the middle of the floor and then went
- and sat down by the east window. Anne was sitting limply by the
- west window. Between them stood the culprit. His back was toward
- Marilla and it was a meek, subdued, frightened back; but his face
- was toward Anne and although it was a little shamefaced there was a
- gleam of comradeship in Davy's eyes, as if he knew he had done wrong
- and was going to be punished for it, but could count on a laugh over
- it all with Anne later on.
-
- But no half hidden smile answered him in Anne's gray eyes,
- as there might have done had it been only a question of mischief.
- There was something else. . .something ugly and repulsive.
-
- "How could you behave so, Davy?" she asked sorrowfully.
-
- Davy squirmed uncomfortably.
-
- "I just did it for fun. Things have been so awful quiet here for
- so long that I thought it would be fun to give you folks a big scare.
- It was, too."
-
- In spite of fear and a little remorse Davy grinned over the recollection.
-
- "But you told a falsehood about it, Davy," said Anne, more sorrowfully
- than ever.
-
- Davy looked puzzled.
-
- "What's a falsehood? Do you mean a whopper?"
-
- "I mean a story that was not true."
-
- "Course I did," said Davy frankly. "If I hadn't you wouldn't have
- been scared. I HAD to tell it."
-
- Anne was feeling the reaction from her fright and exertions.
- Davy's impenitent attitude gave the finishing touch.
- Two big tears brimmed up in her eyes.
-
- "Oh, Davy, how could you?" she said, with a quiver in her voice.
- "Don't you know how wrong it was?"
-
- Davy was aghast. Anne crying. . .he had made Anne cry! A flood of real
- remorse rolled like a wave over his warm little heart and engulfed it.
- He rushed to Anne, hurled himself into her lap, flung his arms around
- her neck, and burst into tears.
-
- "I didn't know it was wrong to tell whoppers," he sobbed.
- "How did you expect me to know it was wrong? All Mr. Sprott's
- children told them REGULAR every day, and cross their hearts too.
- I s'pose Paul Irving never tells whoppers and here I've been trying
- awful hard to be as good as him, but now I s'pose you'll never
- love me again. But I think you might have told me it was wrong.
- I'm awful sorry I've made you cry, Anne, and I'll never tell a
- whopper again."
-
- Davy buried his face in Anne's shoulder and cried stormily.
- Anne, in a sudden glad flash of understanding, held him tight
- and looked over his curly thatch at Marilla.
-
- "He didn't know it was wrong to tell falsehoods, Marilla.
- I think we must forgive him for that part of it this time
- if he will promise never to say what isn't true again."
-
- "I never will, now that I know it's bad," asseverated Davy between sobs.
- "If you ever catch me telling a whopper again you can. . ." Davy groped
- mentally for a suitable penance. . ."you can skin me alive, Anne."
-
- "Don't say `whopper,' Davy. . .say `falsehood,'" said the schoolma'am.
-
- "Why?" queried Davy, settling comfortably down and looking up with
- a tearstained, investigating face. "Why ain't whopper as good as
- falsehood? I want to know. It's just as big a word."
-
- "It's slang; and it's wrong for little boys to use slang."
-
- "There's an awful lot of things it's wrong to do," said Davy with a sigh.
- "I never s'posed there was so many. I'm sorry it's wrong to tell whop. . .
- falsehoods, 'cause it's awful handy, but since it is I'm never going to
- tell any more. What are you going to do to me for telling them this time?
- I want to know." Anne looked beseechingly at Marilla.
-
- "I don't want to be too hard on the child," said Marilla. "I
- daresay nobody ever did tell him it was wrong to tell lies, and
- those Sprott children were no fit companions for him. Poor Mary
- was too sick to train him properly and I presume you couldn't
- expect a six-year-old child to know things like that by instinct.
- I suppose we'll just have to assume he doesn't know ANYTHING right
- and begin at the beginning. But he'll have to be punished for
- shutting Dora up, and I can't think of any way except to send him
- to bed without his supper and we've done that so often. Can't you
- suggest something else, Anne? I should think you ought to be able
- to, with that imagination you're always talking of."
-
- "But punishments are so horrid and I like to imagine only pleasant things,"
- said Anne, cuddling Davy. "There are so many unpleasant things in the
- world already that there is no use in imagining any more."
-
- In the end Davy was sent to bed, as usual, there to remain until
- noon next day. He evidently did some thinking, for when Anne went
- up to her room a little later she heard him calling her name softly.
- Going in, she found him sitting up in bed, with his elbows on his
- knees and his chin propped on his hands.
-
- "Anne," he said solemnly, "is it wrong for everybody to tell whop. . .
- falsehoods? I want to know"
-
- "Yes, indeed."
-
- "Is it wrong for a grown-up person?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Then," said Davy decidedly, "Marilla is bad, for SHE tells them.
- And she's worse'n me, for I didn't know it was wrong but she does."
-
- "Davy Keith, Marilla never told a story in her life," said Anne
- indignantly.
-
- "She did so. She told me last Tuesday that something dreadful
- WOULD happen to me if I didn't say my prayers every night. And I
- haven't said them for over a week, just to see what would happen. . .
- and nothing has," concluded Davy in an aggrieved tone.
-
- Anne choked back a mad desire to laugh with the conviction that it
- would be fatal, and then earnestly set about saving Marilla's reputation.
-
- "Why, Davy Keith," she said solemnly, "something dreadful HAS happened
- to you this very day"
-
- Davy looked sceptical.
-
- "I s'pose you mean being sent to bed without any supper," he said
- scornfully, "but THAT isn't dreadful. Course, I don't like it,
- but I've been sent to bed so much since I come here that I'm getting
- used to it. And you don't save anything by making me go without
- supper either, for I always eat twice as much for breakfast."
-
- "I don't mean your being sent to bed. I mean the fact that you
- told a falsehood today. And, Davy,". . .Anne leaned over the
- footboard of the bed and shook her finger impressively at the
- culprit. . ."for a boy to tell what isn't true is almost the
- worst thing that could HAPPEN to him. . .almost the very worst.
- So you see Marilla told you the truth."
-
- "But I thought the something bad would be exciting," protested Davy
- in an injured tone.
-
- "Marilla isn't to blame for what you thought. Bad things aren't
- always exciting. They're very often just nasty and stupid."
-
- "It was awful funny to see Marilla and you looking down the well, though,"
- said Davy, hugging his knees.
-
- Anne kept a sober face until she got downstairs and then she collapsed
- on the sitting room lounge and laughed until her sides ached.
-
- "I wish you'd tell me the joke," said Marilla, a little grimly.
- "I haven't seen much to laugh at today."
-
- "You'll laugh when you hear this," assured Anne. And Marilla did
- laugh, which showed how much her education had advanced since the
- adoption of Anne. But she sighed immediately afterwards.
-
- "I suppose I shouldn't have told him that, although I heard a
- minister say it to a child once. But he did aggravate me so. It
- was that night you were at the Carmody concert and I was putting
- him to bed. He said he didn't see the good of praying until he got
- big enough to be of some importance to God. Anne, I do not know
- what we are going to do with that child. I never saw his beat.
- I'm feeling clean discouraged."
-
- "Oh, don't say that, Marilla. Remember how bad I was when I came here."
-
- "Anne, you never were bad. . .NEVER. I see that now, when I've
- learned what real badness is. You were always getting into
- terrible scrapes, I'll admit, but your motive was always good.
- Davy is just bad from sheer love of it."
-
- "Oh, no, I don't think it is real badness with him either," pleaded Anne.
- "It's just mischief. And it is rather quiet for him here, you know.
- He has no other boys to play with and his mind has to have something
- to occupy it. Dora is so prim and proper she is no good for a boy's playmate. I really think it
- would be better to let them go to school, Marilla."
-
- "No," said Marilla resolutely, "my father always said that no
- child should be cooped up in the four walls of a school until
- it was seven years old, and Mr. Allan says the same thing.
- The twins can have a few lessons at home but go to school they
- shan't till they're seven."
-
- "Well, we must try to reform Davy at home then," said Anne
- cheerfully. "With all his faults he's really a dear little chap.
- I can't help loving him. Marilla, it may be a dreadful thing to say,
- but honestly, I like Davy better than Dora, for all she's so good."
-
- "I don't know but that I do, myself," confessed Marilla, "and it
- isn't fair, for Dora isn't a bit of trouble. There couldn't be a
- better child and you'd hardly know she was in the house."
-
- "Dora is too good," said Anne. "She'd behave just as well if there
- wasn't a soul to tell her what to do. She was born already brought
- up, so she doesn't need us; and I think," concluded Anne, hitting
- on a very vital truth, "that we always love best the people who
- need us. Davy needs us badly."
-
- "He certainly needs something," agreed Marilla. "Rachel Lynde
- would say it was a good spanking."
-
-
-
-
- XI
-
- Facts and Fancies
-
-
- "Teaching is really very interesting work," wrote Anne to a Queen's
- Academy chum. "Jane says she thinks it is monotonous but I don't
- find it so. Something funny is almost sure to happen every day,
- and the children say such amusing things. Jane says she punishes
- her pupils when they make funny speeches, which is probably why she
- finds teaching monotonous. This afternoon little Jimmy Andrews was
- trying to spell `speckled' and couldn't manage it. `Well,' he said
- finally, `I can't spell it but I know what it means.'
-
- "`What?' I asked.
-
- "`St. Clair Donnell's face, miss.'
-
- "St. Clair is certainly very much freckled, although I try to
- prevent the others from commenting on it. . .for I was freckled
- once and well do I remember it. But I don't think St. Clair minds.
- It was because Jimmy called him `St. Clair' that St. Clair pounded
- him on the way home from school. I heard of the pounding, but not
- officially, so I don't think I'll take any notice of it.
-
- "Yesterday I was trying to teach Lottie Wright to do addition.
- I said, `If you had three candies in one hand and two in the other,
- how many would you have altogether?' `A mouthful,' said Lottie.
- And in the nature study class, when I asked them to give me a good
- reason why toads shouldn't be killed, Benjie Sloane gravely answered,
- `Because it would rain the next day.'
-
- "It's so hard not to laugh, Stella. I have to save up all my amusement
- until I get home, and Marilla says it makes her nervous to hear wild shrieks
- of mirth proceeding from the east gable without any apparent cause.
- She says a man in Grafton went insane once and that was how it began.
-
- "Did you know that Thomas a Becket was canonized as a SNAKE?
- Rose Bell says he was. . .also that William Tyndale WROTE the
- New Testament. Claude White says a `glacier' is a man who puts
- in window frames!
-
- "I think the most difficult thing in teaching, as well as the most
- interesting, is to get the children to tell you their real thoughts
- about things. One stormy day last week I gathered them around me
- at dinner hour and tried to get them to talk to me just as if I
- were one of themselves. I asked them to tell me the things
- they most wanted. Some of the answers were commonplace enough
- . . . dolls, ponies, and skates. Others were decidedly original.
- Hester Boulter wanted `to wear her Sunday dress every day and eat
- in the sitting room.' Hannah Bell wanted `to be good without having
- to take any trouble about it.' Marjory White, aged ten, wanted to
- be a WIDOW. Questioned why, she gravely said that if you weren't
- married people called you an old maid, and if you were your husband
- bossed you; but if you were a widow there'd be no danger of either.
- The most remarkable wish was Sally Bell's. She wanted a 'honeymoon.'
- I asked her if she knew what it was and she said she thought it was
- an extra nice kind of bicycle because her cousin in Montreal went on
- a honeymoon when he was married and he had always had the very latest
- in bicycles!
-
- "Another day I asked them all to tell me the naughtiest thing they
- had ever done. I couldn't get the older ones to do so, but the
- third class answered quite freely. Eliza Bell had `set fire to her
- aunt's carded rolls.' Asked if she meant to do it she said, `not
- altogether.' She just tried a little end to see how it would burn
- and the whole bundle blazed up in a jiffy. Emerson Gillis had
- spent ten cents for candy when he should have put it in his
- missionary box. Annetta Bell's worst crime was `eating some
- blueberries that grew in the graveyard.' Willie White had `slid
- down the sheephouse roof a lot of times with his Sunday trousers on.'
- `But I was punished for it 'cause I had to wear patched pants
- to Sunday School all summer, and when you're punished for a thing
- you don't have to repent of it,' declared Willie.
-
- "I wish you could see some of their compositions. . .so much do
- I wish it that I'll send you copies of some written recently.
- Last week I told the fourth class I wanted them to write me letters
- about anything they pleased, adding by way of suggestion that they
- might tell me of some place they had visited or some interesting
- thing or person they had seen. They were to write the letters on
- real note paper, seal them in an envelope, and address them to me,
- all without any assistance from other people. Last Friday morning
- I found a pile of letters on my desk and that evening I realized
- afresh that teaching has its pleasures as well as its pains. Those
- compositions would atone for much. Here is Ned Clay's, address,
- spelling, and grammar as originally penned.
-
- "`Miss teacher ShiRley
-
- Green gabels.
-
- p.e. Island can
-
- birds
-
-
- "`Dear teacher I think I will write you a composition about birds.
- birds is very useful animals. my cat catches birds. His name is
- William but pa calls him tom. he is oll striped and he got one of
- his ears froz of last winter. only for that he would be a
- good-looking cat. My unkle has adopted a cat. it come to his
- house one day and woudent go away and unkle says it has forgot more
- than most people ever knowed. he lets it sleep on his rocking
- chare and my aunt says he thinks more of it than he does of his
- children. that is not right. we ought to be kind to cats and give
- them new milk but we ought not be better to them than to our
- children. this is oll I can think of so no more at present from
-
- edward blake ClaY.'"
-
-
- "St. Clair Donnell's is, as usual, short and to the point. St.
- Clair never wastes words. I do not think he chose his subject or
- added the postscript out of malice aforethought. It is just that
- he has not a great deal of tact or imagination.
-
-
- "`Dear Miss Shirley
-
- You told us to describe something strange we have seen. I will
- describe the Avonlea Hall. It has two doors, an inside one and an
- outside one. It has six windows and a chimney. It has two ends
- and two sides. It is painted blue. That is what makes it strange.
- It is built on the lower Carmody road. It is the third most
- important building in Avonlea. The others are the church and the
- blacksmith shop. They hold debating clubs and lectures in it and
- concerts.
-
- Yours truly,
- Jacob Donnell.
-
- P.S. The hall is a very bright blue.'"
-
-
- "Annetta Bell's letter was quite long, which surprised me, for
- writing essays is not Annetta's forte, and hers are generally as
- brief as st. Clair's. Annetta is a quiet little puss and a model
- of good behavior, but there isn't a shadow of orginality in her.
- Here is her letter. --
-
-
- "`Dearest teacher,
-
- I think I will write you a letter to tell you how much I love you.
- I love you with my whole heart and soul and mind. . .with all
- there is of me to love. . .and I want to serve you for ever.
- It would be my highest privilege. That is why I try so hard to be
- good in school and learn my lessuns.
-
- "`You are so beautiful, my teacher. Your voice is like music and
- your eyes are like pansies when the dew is on them. You are like a
- tall stately queen. Your hair is like rippling gold. Anthony Pye
- says it is red, but you needn't pay any attention to Anthony.
-
- "`I have only known you for a few months but I cannot realize that
- there was ever a time when I did not know you. . .when you had not
- come into my life to bless and hallow it. I will always look back
- to this year as the most wonderful in my life because it brought
- you to me. Besides, it's the year we moved to Avonlea from
- Newbridge. My love for you has made my life very rich and it has
- kept me from much of harm and evil. I owe this all to you, my
- sweetest teacher.
-
- "`I shall never forget how sweet you looked the last time I saw
- you in that black dress with flowers in your hair. I shall see you
- like that for ever, even when we are both old and gray. You will
- always be young and fair to me, dearest teacher. I am thinking of
- you all the time. . .in the morning and at the noontide and at the
- twilight. I love you when you laugh and when you sigh. . .even
- when you look disdainful. I never saw you look cross though
- Anthony Pye says you always look so but I don't wonder you look
- cross at him for he deserves it. I love you in every dress. . .you
- seem more adorable in each new dress than the last.
-
- "`Dearest teacher, good night. The sun has set and the stars are
- shining. . .stars that are as bright and beautiful as your eyes.
- I kiss your hands and face, my sweet. May God watch over you and
- protect you from all harm.
-
- Your afecksionate pupil
- Annetta Bell.'"
-
-
- "This extraordinary letter puzzled me not a little. I knew Annetta
- couldn't have composed it any more than she could fly. When I went
- to school the next day I took her for a walk down to the brook at
- recess and asked her to tell me the truth about the letter.
- Annetta cried and 'fessed up freely. She said she had never
- written a letter and she didn't know how to, or what to say, but
- there was bundle of love letters in her mother's top bureau drawer
- which had been written to her by an old `beau.'
-
- "`It wasn't father,' sobbed Annetta, `it was someone who was
- studying for a minister, and so he could write lovely letters, but
- ma didn't marry him after all. She said she couldn't make out what
- he was driving at half the time. But I thought the letters were
- sweet and that I'd just copy things out of them here and there to
- write you. I put "teacher" where he put "lady" and I put in
- something of my own when I could think of it and I changed some words.
- I put "dress" in place of "mood." I didn't know just what a "mood"
- was but I s'posed it was something to wear. I didn't s'pose you'd
- know the difference. I don't see how you found out it wasn't
- all mine. You must be awful clever, teacher.'
-
- "I told Annetta it was very wrong to copy another person's letter
- and pass it off as her own. But I'm afraid that all Annetta
- repented of was being found out.
-
- "`And I do love you, teacher,' she sobbed. `It was all true, even
- if the minister wrote it first. I do love you with all my heart.'
-
- "It's very difficult to scold anybody properly under such circumstances.
-
- "Here is Barbara Shaw's letter. I can't reproduce the blots of the original.
-
- "`Dear teacher,
-
- You said we might write about a visit. I never visited but once.
- It was at my Aunt Mary's last winter. My Aunt Mary is a very particular
- woman and a great housekeeper. The first night I was there we were at tea.
- I knocked over a jug and broke it. Aunt Mary said she had had that jug
- ever since she was married and nobody had ever broken it before.
- When we got up I stepped on her dress and all the gathers tore out
- of the skirt. The next morning when I got up I hit the pitcher against
- the basin and cracked them both and I upset a cup of tea on the tablecloth
- at breakfast. When I was helping Aunt Mary with the dinner dishes I
- dropped a china plate and it smashed. That evening I fell downstairs
- and sprained my ankle and had to stay in bed for a week. I heard Aunt Mary
- tell Uncle Joseph it was a mercy or I'd have broken everything in the house.
- When I got better it was time to go home. I don't like visiting very much.
- I like going to school better, especially since I came to Avonlea.
-
- Yours respectfully,
- Barbara. Shaw.'"
-
- "Willie White's began,
-
- Respected Miss,
-
- I want to tell you about my Very Brave Aunt. She lives in Ontario
- and one day she went out to the barn and saw a dog in the yard.
- The dog had no business there so she got a stick and whacked
- him hard and drove him into the barn and shut him up. Pretty soon
- a man came looking for an inaginary lion' (Query; -- Did Willie
- mean a menagerie lion?) `that had run away from a circus. And it
- turned out that the dog was a lion and my Very Brave Aunt had druv
- him into the barn with a stick. It was a wonder she was not et up
- but she was very brave. Emerson Gillis says if she thought it was
- a dog she wasn't any braver than if it really was a dog. But
- Emerson is jealous because he hasn't got a Brave Aunt himself,
- nothing but uncles.'"
-
-
- "I have kept the best for the last. You laugh at me because I
- think Paul is a genius but I am sure his letter will convince you
- that he is a very uncommon child. Paul lives away down near the
- shore with his grandmother and he has no playmates. . .no real
- playmates. You remember our School Management professor told us
- that we must not have `favorites' among our pupils, but I can't
- help loving Paul Irving the best of all mine. I don't think it
- does any harm, though, for everybody loves Paul, even Mrs. Lynde,
- who says she could never have believed she'd get so fond of a Yankee.
- The other boys in school like him too. There is nothing weak or
- girlish about him in spite of his dreams and fancies. He is very
- manly and can hold his own in all games. He fought St. Clair
- Donnell recently because St. Clair said the Union Jack was away
- ahead of the Stars and Stripes as a flag. The result was a drawn
- battle and a mutual agreement to respect each other's patriotism
- henceforth. St. Clair says he can hit the HARDEST but Paul can
- hit the OFTENEST.
-
-
- "Paul's Letter.
-
- My dear teacher,
-
- You told us we might write you about some interesting people we knew.
- I think the most interesting people I know are my rock people and I
- mean to tell you about them. I have never told anybody about them
- except grandma and father but I would like to have you know about
- them because you understand things. There are a great many people
- who do not understand things so there is no use in telling them.
-
- My rock people live at the shore. I used to visit them almost
- every evening before the winter came. Now I can't go till spring,
- but they will be there, for people like that never change. . .that
- is the splendid thing about them. Nora was the first one of them I
- got acquainted with and so I think I love her the best. She lives
- in Andrews' Cove and she has black hair and black eyes, and she
- knows all about the mermaids and the water kelpies. You ought to
- hear the stories she can tell. Then there are the Twin Sailors.
- They don't live anywhere, they sail all the time, but they often
- come ashore to talk to me. They are a pair of jolly tars and they
- have seen everything in the world. . .and more than what is in the
- world. Do you know what happened to the youngest Twin Sailor
- once? He was sailing and he sailed right into a moonglade. A
- moonglade is the track the full moon makes on the water when it is
- rising from the sea, you know, teacher. Well, the youngest Twin
- Sailor sailed along the moonglade till he came right up to the
- moon, and there was a little golden door in the moon and he opened
- it and sailed right through. He had some wonderful adventures in
- the moon but it would make this letter too long to tell them.
-
- Then there is the Golden Lady of the cave. One day I found a big
- cave down on the shore and I went away in and after a while I found
- the Golden Lady. She has golden hair right down to her feet and
- her dress is all glittering and glistening like gold that is alive.
- And she has a golden harp and plays on it all day long. . .you can
- hear the music any time along shore if you listen carefully but
- most people would think it was only the wind among the rocks.
- I've never told Nora about the Golden Lady. I was afraid it
- might hurt her feelings. It even hurt her feelings if I talked
- too long with the Twin Sailors.
-
- I always met the Twin Sailors at the Striped Rocks. The youngest
- Twin Sailor is very good-tempered but the oldest Twin Sailor can
- look dreadfully fierce at times. I have my suspicions about that
- oldest Twin. I believe he'd be a pirate if he dared. There's really
- something very mysterious about him. He swore once and I told him
- if he ever did it again he needn't come ashore to talk to me because
- I'd promised grandmother I'd never associate with anybody that swore.
- He was pretty well scared, I can tell you, and he said if I would
- forgive him he would take me to the sunset. So the next evening
- when I was sitting on the Striped Rocks the oldest Twin came
- sailing over the sea in an enchanted boat and I got in her. The
- boat was all pearly and rainbowy, like the inside of the mussel
- shells, and her sail was like moonshine. Well, we sailed right
- across to the sunset. Think of that, teacher, I've been in the
- sunset. And what do you suppose it is? The sunset is a land
- all flowers. We sailed into a great garden, and the clouds are beds
- of flowers. We sailed into a great harbor, all the color of gold,
- and I stepped right out of the boat on a big meadow all covered with
- buttercups as big as roses. I stayed there for ever so long. It
- seemed nearly a year but the Oldest Twin says it was only a few
- minutes. You see, in the sunset land the time is ever so much
- longer than it is here.
-
- Your loving pupil
- Paul Irving.
-
- P. S. of course, this letter isn't really true, teacher.
- P.I.'"
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
- A Jonah Day
-
-
- It really began the night before with a restless, wakeful vigil of
- grumbling toothache. When Anne arose in the dull, bitter winter
- morning she felt that life was flat, stale, and unprofitable.
-
- She went to school in no angelic mood. Her cheek was swollen and
- her face ached. The schoolroom was cold and smoky, for the fire
- refused to burn and the children were huddled about it in shivering
- groups. Anne sent them to their seats with a sharper tone than she
- had ever used before. Anthony Pye strutted to his with his usual
- impertinent swagger and she saw him whisper something to his
- seat-mate and then glance at her with a grin.
-
- Never, so it seemed to Anne, had there been so many squeaky pencils
- as there were that morning; and when Barbara Shaw came up to the
- desk with a sum she tripped over the coal scuttle with disastrous
- results. The coal rolled to every part of the room, her slate was
- broken into fragments, and when she picked herself up, her face,
- stained with coal dust, sent the boys into roars of laughter.
-
- Anne turned from the second reader class which she was hearing.
-
- "Really, Barbara," she said icily, "if you cannot move without
- falling over something you'd better remain in your seat. It is
- positively disgraceful for a girl of your age to be so awkward."
-
- Poor Barbara stumbled back to her desk, her tears combining with
- the coal dust to produce an effect truly grotesque. Never before
- had her beloved, sympathetic teacher spoken to her in such a tone
- or fashion, and Barbara was heartbroken. Anne herself felt a prick
- of conscience but it only served to increase her mental irritation,
- and the second reader class remember that lesson yet, as well as
- the unmerciful infliction of arithmetic that followed. Just as Anne
- was snapping the sums out St. Clair Donnell arrived breathlessly.
-
- "You are half an hour late, St. Clair," Anne reminded him frigidly.
- "Why is this?"
-
- "Please, miss, I had to help ma make a pudding for dinner
- 'cause we're expecting company and Clarice Almira's sick,"
- was St. Clair's answer, given in a perfectly respectful voice
- but nevertheless provocative of great mirth among his mates.
-
- "Take your seat and work out the six problems on page eighty-four
- of your arithmetic for punishment," said Anne. St. Clair looked
- rather amazed at her tone but he went meekly to his desk and took
- out his slate. Then he stealthily passed a small parcel to Joe
- Sloane across the aisle. Anne caught him in the act and jumped to
- a fatal conclusion about that parcel.
-
- Old Mrs. Hiram Sloane had lately taken to making and selling
- "nut cakes" by way of adding to her scanty income. The cakes were
- specially tempting to small boys and for several weeks Anne had had
- not a little trouble in regard to them. On their way to school the
- boys would invest their spare cash at Mrs. Hiram's, bring the cakes
- along with them to school, and, if possible, eat them and treat
- their mates during school hours. Anne had warned them that if
- they brought any more cakes to school they would be confiscated;
- and yet here was St. Clair Donnell coolly passing a parcel of them,
- wrapped up in the blue and white striped paper Mrs. Hiram used,
- under her very eyes.
-
- "Joseph," said Anne quietly, "bring that parcel here."
-
- Joe, startled and abashed, obeyed. He was a fat urchin who always
- blushed and stuttered when he was frightened. Never did anybody
- look more guilty than poor Joe at that moment.
-
- "Throw it into the fire," said Anne.
-
- Joe looked very blank.
-
- "P. . .p. . .p. . .lease, m. . .m. . .miss," he began.
-
- "Do as I tell you, Joseph, without any words about it."
-
- "B. . .b. . .but m. . .m. . .miss. . .th. . .th. . .they're. . ."
- gasped Joe in desperation.
-
- "Joseph, are you going to obey me or are you NOT?" said Anne.
-
- A bolder and more self-possessed lad than Joe Sloane would have
- been overawed by her tone and the dangerous flash of her eyes.
- This was a new Anne whom none of her pupils had ever seen before.
- Joe, with an agonized glance at St. Clair, went to the stove,
- opened the big, square front door, and threw the blue and white
- parcel in, before St. Clair, who had sprung to his feet, could
- utter a word. Then he dodged back just in time.
-
- For a few moments the terrified occupants of Avonlea school did not
- know whether it was an earthquake or a volcanic explosion that had
- occurred. The innocent looking parcel which Anne had rashly
- supposed to contain Mrs. Hiram's nut cakes really held an
- assortment of firecrackers and pinwheels for which Warren Sloane
- had sent to town by St. Clair Donnell's father the day before,
- intending to have a birthday celebration that evening. The
- crackers went off in a thunderclap of noise and the pinwheels
- bursting out of the door spun madly around the room, hissing and
- spluttering. Anne dropped into her chair white with dismay and all
- the girls climbed shrieking upon their desks. Joe Sloane stood as
- one transfixed in the midst of the commotion and St. Clair,
- helpless with laughter, rocked to and fro in the aisle. Prillie
- Rogerson fainted and Annetta Bell went into hysterics.
-
- It seemed a long time, although it was really only a few minutes,
- before the last pinwheel subsided. Anne, recovering herself,
- sprang to open doors and windows and let out the gas and smoke
- which filled the room. Then she helped the girls carry the
- unconscious Prillie into the porch, where Barbara Shaw, in an agony
- of desire to be useful, poured a pailful of half frozen water over
- Prillie's face and shoulders before anyone could stop her.
-
- It was a full hour before quiet was restored . . .but it was a
- quiet that might be felt. Everybody realized that even the
- explosion had not cleared the teacher's mental atmosphere.
- Nobody, except Anthony Pye, dared whisper a word. Ned Clay
- accidentally squeaked his pencil while working a sum, caught
- Anne's eye and wished the floor would open and swallow him up.
- The geography class were whisked through a continent with a speed
- that made them dizzy. The grammar class were parsed and analyzed
- within an inch of their lives. Chester Sloane, spelling "odoriferous"
- with two f's, was made to feel that he could never live down the
- disgrace of it, either in this world or that which is to come.
-
- Anne knew that she had made herself ridiculous and that the
- incident would be laughed over that night at a score of tea-tables,
- but the knowledge only angered her further. In a calmer mood she
- could have carried off the situation with a laugh but now that was
- impossible; so she ignored it in icy disdain.
-
- When Anne returned to the school after dinner all the children were
- as usual in their seats and every face was bent studiously over a
- desk except Anthony Pye's. He peered across his book at Anne, his
- black eyes sparkling with curiosity and mockery. Anne twitched
- open the drawer of her desk in search of chalk and under her very
- hand a lively mouse sprang out of the drawer, scampered over the
- desk, and leaped to the floor.
-
- Anne screamed and sprang back, as if it had been a snake, and
- Anthony Pye laughed aloud.
-
- Then a silence fell. . .a very creepy, uncomfortable silence.
- Annetta Bell was of two minds whether to go into hysterics again
- or not, especially as she didn't know just where the mouse had gone.
- But she decided not to. Who could take any comfort out of
- hysterics with a teacher so white-faced and so blazing-eyed
- standing before one?
-
- "Who put that mouse in my desk?" said Anne. Her voice was quite
- low but it made a shiver go up and down Paul Irving's spine. Joe
- Sloane caught her eye, felt responsible from the crown of his head
- to the sole of his feet, but stuttered out wildly,
-
- "N. . .n. . .not m. . .m. . .me t. . .t. . .teacher, n. . .n. .
- .not m. . .m. . .me."
-
- Anne paid no attention to the wretched Joseph. She looked at
- Anthony Pye, and Anthony Pye looked back unabashed and unashamed.
-
- "Anthony, was it you?"
-
- "Yes, it was," said Anthony insolently.
-
- Anne took her pointer from her desk. It was a long, heavy hardwood pointer.
-
- "Come here, Anthony."
-
- It was far from being the most severe punishment Anthony Pye had
- ever undergone. Anne, even the stormy-souled Anne she was at that
- moment, could not have punished any child cruelly. But the pointer
- nipped keenly and finally Anthony's bravado failed him; he winced
- and the tears came to his eyes.
-
- Anne, conscience-stricken, dropped the pointer and told Anthony to
- go to his seat. She sat down at her desk feeling ashamed,
- repentant, and bitterly mortified. Her quick anger was gone and
- she would have given much to have been able to seek relief in
- tears. So all her boasts had come to this. . .she had actually
- whipped one of her pupils. How Jane would triumph! And how
- Mr. Harrison would chuckle! But worse than this, bitterest
- thought of all, she had lost her last chance of winning Anthony Pye.
- Never would he like her now.
-
- Anne, by what somebody has called "a Herculaneum effort," kept back
- her tears until she got home that night. Then she shut herself in
- the east gable room and wept all her shame and remorse and
- disappointment into her pillows. . .wept so long that Marilla grew
- alarmed, invaded the room, and insisted on knowing what the trouble was.
-
- "The trouble is, I've got things the matter with my conscience,"
- sobbed Anne. "Oh, this has been such a Jonah day, Marilla. I'm so
- ashamed of myself. I lost my temper and whipped Anthony Pye."
-
- "I'm glad to hear it," said Marilla with decision. "It's what you
- should have done long ago."
-
- "Oh, no, no, Marilla. And I don't see how I can ever look those
- children in the face again. I feel that I have humiliated myself
- to the very dust. You don't know how cross and hateful and horrid
- I was. I can't forget the expression in Paul Irving's eyes. . .he
- looked so surprised and disappointed. Oh, Marilla, I HAVE tried so
- hard to be patient and to win Anthony's liking. . .and now it has
- all gone for nothing."
-
- Marilla passed her hard work-worn hand over the girl's glossy,
- tumbled hair with a wonderful tenderness. When Anne's sobs grew
- quieter she said, very gently for her,
-
- "You take things too much to heart, Anne. We all make mistakes. . .but
- people forget them. And Jonah days come to everybody. As for Anthony Pye,
- why need you care if he does dislike you? He is the only one."
-
- "I can't help it. I want everybody to love me and it hurts me so
- when anybody doesn't. And Anthony never will now. Oh, I just made
- an idiot of myself today, Marilla. I'll tell you the whole story."
-
- Marilla listened to the whole story, and if she smiled at certain
- parts of it Anne never knew. When the tale was ended she said briskly,
-
- "Well, never mind. This day's done and there's a new one coming
- tomorrow, with no mistakes in it yet, as you used to say yourself.
- Just come downstairs and have your supper. You'll see if a good
- cup of tea and those plum puffs I made today won't hearten you up."
-
- "Plum puffs won't minister to a mind diseased," said Anne disconsolately;
- but Marilla thought it a good sign that she had recovered sufficiently
- to adapt a quotation.
-
- The cheerful supper table, with the twins' bright faces, and
- Marilla's matchless plum puffs. . .of which Davy ate four. . .
- did "hearten her up" considerably after all. She had a good sleep
- that night and and awakened in the morning to find herself and the
- world transformed. It had snowed softly and thickly all through
- the hours of darkness and the beautiful whiteness, glittering in
- the frosty sunshine, looked like a mantle of charity cast over all
- the mistakes and humiliations of the past.
-
-
- "Every morn is a fresh beginning,
- Every morn is the world made new,"
-
- sang Anne, as she dressed.
-
- Owing to the snow she had to go around by the road to school and
- she thought it was certainly an impish coincidence that Anthony Pye
- should come ploughing along just as she left the Green Gables lane.
- She felt as guilty as if their positions were reversed; but to her
- unspeakable astonishment Anthony not only lifted his cap. . .which
- he had never done before. . .but said easily,
-
- "Kind of bad walking, ain't it? Can I take those books for you,
- teacher?"
-
- Anne surrendered her books and wondered if she could possibly be awake.
- Anthony walked on in silence to the school, but when Anne took her books
- she smiled down at him. . .not the stereotyped "kind" smile she had so
- persistently assumed for his benefit but a sudden outflashing of good
- comradeship. Anthony smiled. . .no, if the truth must be told,
- Anthony GRINNED back. A grin is not generally supposed to be a
- respectful thing; yet Anne suddenly felt that if she had not yet
- won Anthony's liking she had, somehow or other, won his respect.
-
- Mrs. Rachel Lynde came up the next Saturday and confirmed this.
-
- "Well, Anne, I guess you've won over Anthony Pye, that's what.
- He says he believes you are some good after all, even if you are
- a girl. Says that whipping you gave him was `just as good as a man's.'"
-
- "I never expected to win him by whipping him, though," said Anne, a
- little mournfully, feeling that her ideals had played her false somewhere.
- "It doesn't seem right. I'm sure my theory of kindness can't be wrong."
-
- "No, but the Pyes are an exception to every known rule, that's what,"
- declared Mrs. Rachel with conviction.
-
- Mr. Harrison said, "Thought you'd come to it," when he heard it,
- and Jane rubbed it in rather unmercifully.
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
- A Golden Picnic
-
-
- Anne, on her way to Orchard Slope, met Diana, bound for Green Gables,
- just where the mossy old log bridge spanned the brook below the
- Haunted Wood, and they sat down by the margin of the Dryad's Bubble,
- where tiny ferns were unrolling like curly-headed green pixy folk
- wakening up from a nap.
-
- "I was just on my way over to invite you to help me celebrate my
- birthday on Saturday," said Anne.
-
- "Your birthday? But your birthday was in March!"
-
- "That wasn't my fault," laughed Anne. "If my parents had consulted
- me it would never have happened then. I should have chosen to be
- born in spring, of course. It must be delightful to come into the
- world with the mayflowers and violets. You would always feel that
- you were their foster sister. But since I didn't, the next best
- thing is to celebrate my birthday in the spring. Priscilla is
- coming over Saturday and Jane will be home. We'll all four start
- off to the woods and spend a golden day making the acquaintance of
- the spring. We none of us really know her yet, but we'll meet her
- back there as we never can anywhere else. I want to explore all
- those fields and lonely places anyhow. I have a conviction that
- there are scores of beautiful nooks there that have never really
- been SEEN although they may have been LOOKED at. We'll make friends
- with wind and sky and sun, and bring home the spring in our hearts."
-
- "It SOUNDS awfully nice," said Diana, with some inward distrust of
- Anne's magic of words. "But won't it be very damp in some places yet?"
-
- "Oh, we'll wear rubbers," was Anne's concession to practicalities.
- "And I want you to come over early Saturday morning and help me
- prepare lunch. I'm going to have the daintiest things possible. . .
- things that will match the spring, you understand. . .little jelly
- tarts and lady fingers, and drop cookies frosted with pink and
- yellow icing, and buttercup cake. And we must have sandwiches
- too, though they're NOT very poetical."
-
- Saturday proved an ideal day for a picnic. . .a day of breeze and
- blue, warm, sunny, with a little rollicking wind blowing across
- meadow and orchard. Over every sunlit upland and field was a
- delicate, flower-starred green.
-
- Mr. Harrison, harrowing at the back of his farm and feeling some
- of the spring witch-work even in his sober, middle-aged blood,
- saw four girls, basket laden, tripping across the end of his field
- where it joined a fringing woodland of birch and fir. Their blithe
- voices and laughter echoed down to him.
-
- "It's so easy to be happy on a day like this, isn't it?" Anne
- was saying, with true Anneish philosophy. "Let's try to make this
- a really golden day, girls, a day to which we can always look back
- with delight. We're to seek for beauty and refuse to see anything else.
- `Begone, dull care!' Jane, you are thinking of something that went wrong
- in school yesterday."
-
- "How do you know?" gasped Jane, amazed.
-
- "Oh, I know the expression. . .I've felt it often enough on my own
- face. But put it out of your mind, there's a dear. It will keep
- till Monday. . .or if it doesn't so much the better. Oh, girls,
- girls, see that patch of violets! There's something for memory's
- picture gallery. When I'm eighty years old. . .if I ever am. . .
- I shall shut my eyes and see those violets just as I see them now.
- That's the first good gift our day has given us."
-
- "If a kiss could be seen I think it would look like a violet,"
- said Priscilla.
-
- Anne glowed.
-
- "I'm so glad you SPOKE that thought, Priscilla, instead of just
- thinking it and keeping it to yourself. This world would be a much
- more interesting place. . .although it IS very interesting anyhow. . .
- if people spoke out their real thoughts."
-
- "It would be too hot to hold some folks," quoted Jane sagely.
-
- "I suppose it might be, but that would be their own faults for
- thinking nasty things. Anyhow, we can tell all our thoughts today
- because we are going to have nothing but beautiful thoughts.
- Everybody can say just what comes into her head. THAT is conversation.
- Here's a little path I never saw before. Let's explore it."
-
- The path was a winding one, so narrow that the girls walked in
- single file and even then the fir boughs brushed their faces.
- Under the firs were velvety cushions of moss, and further on, where
- the trees were smaller and fewer, the ground was rich in a variety
- of green growing things.
-
- "What a lot of elephant's ears," exclaimed Diana. "I'm going to
- pick a big bunch, they're so pretty."
-
- "How did such graceful feathery things ever come to have such a
- dreadful name?" asked Priscilla.
-
- "Because the person who first named them either had no imagination
- at all or else far too much," said Anne, "Oh, girls, look at that!"
-
- "That" was a shallow woodland pool in the center of a little open
- glade where the path ended. Later on in the season it would be dried
- up and its place filled with a rank growth of ferns; but now it was
- a glimmering placid sheet, round as a saucer and clear as crystal.
- A ring of slender young birches encircled it and little ferns
- fringed its margin.
-
- "HOW sweet!" said Jane.
-
- "Let us dance around it like wood-nymphs," cried Anne, dropping her
- basket and extending her hands.
-
- But the dance was not a success for the ground was boggy and Jane's
- rubbers came off.
-
- "You can't be a wood-nymph if you have to wear rubbers,"
- was her decision.
-
- "Well, we must name this place before we leave it,"
- said Anne, yielding to the indisputable logic of facts.
- "Everybody suggest a name and we'll draw lots. Diana?"
-
- "Birch Pool," suggested Diana promptly.
-
- "Crystal Lake," said Jane.
-
- Anne, standing behind them, implored Priscilla with her eyes not to
- perpetrate another such name and Priscilla rose to the occasion
- with "Glimmer-glass." Anne's selection was "The Fairies' Mirror."
-
- The names were written on strips of birch bark with a pencil
- Schoolma'am Jane produced from her pocket, and placed in Anne's
- hat. Then Priscilla shut her eyes and drew one. "Crystal Lake,"
- read Jane triumphantly. Crystal Lake it was, and if Anne thought
- that chance had played the pool a shabby trick she did not say so.
-
- Pushing through the undergrowth beyond, the girls came out to the
- young green seclusion of Mr. Silas Sloane's back pasture. Across it
- they found the entrance to a lane striking up through the woods and
- voted to explore it also. It rewarded their quest with a succession
- of pretty surprises. First, skirting Mr. Sloane's pasture, came an
- archway of wild cherry trees all in bloom. The girls swung their hats
- on their arms and wreathed their hair with the creamy, fluffy blossoms.
- Then the lane turned at right angles and plunged into a spruce wood
- so thick and dark that they walked in a gloom as of twilight, with
- not a glimpse of sky or sunlight to be seen.
-
- "This is where the bad wood elves dwell," whispered Anne. "They
- are impish and malicious but they can't harm us, because they are
- not allowed to do evil in the spring. There was one peeping at us
- around that old twisted fir; and didn't you see a group of them on
- that big freckly toadstool we just passed? The good fairies always
- dwell in the sunshiny places."
-
- "I wish there really were fairies," said Jane. "Wouldn't it
- be nice to have three wishes granted you. . .or even only one?
- What would you wish for, girls, if you could have a wish granted?
- I'd wish to be rich and beautiful and clever."
-
- "I'd wish to be tall and slender," said Diana.
-
- "I would wish to be famous," said Priscilla. Anne thought of her
- hair and then dismissed the thought as unworthy.
-
- "I'd wish it might be spring all the time and in everybody's heart
- and all our lives," she said.
-
- "But that," said Priscilla, "would be just wishing this world
- were like heaven."
-
- "Only like a part of heaven. In the other parts there would be
- summer and autumn. . .yes, and a bit of winter, too. I think I
- want glittering snowy fields and white frosts in heaven sometimes.
- Don't you, Jane?"
-
- "I. . .I don't know," said Jane uncomfortably. Jane was a good girl,
- a member of the church, who tried conscientiously to live up to her
- profession and believed everything she had been taught. But she
- never thought about heaven any more than she could help, for all that.
-
- "Minnie May asked me the other day if we would wear our best
- dresses every day in heaven," laughed Diana.
-
- "And didn't you tell her we would?" asked Anne.
-
- "Mercy, no! I told her we wouldn't be thinking of dresses at all there."
-
- "Oh, I think we will. . .a LITTLE," said Anne earnestly.
- "There'll be plenty of time in all eternity for it without
- neglecting more important things. I believe we'll all wear
- beautiful dresses. . .or I suppose RAIMENT would be a more
- suitable way of speaking. I shall want to wear pink for a few
- centuries at firSt. . .it would take me that long to get tired of it,
- I feel sure. I do love pink so and I can never wear it in THIS world."
-
- Past the spruces the lane dipped down into a sunny little open
- where a log bridge spanned a brook; and then came the glory of a
- sunlit beechwood where the air was like transparent golden wine,
- and the leaves fresh and green, and the wood floor a mosaic of
- tremulous sunshine. Then more wild cherries, and a little valley
- of lissome firs, and then a hill so steep that the girls lost their
- breath climbing it; but when they reached the top and came out into
- the open the prettiest surprise of all awaited them.
-
- Beyond were the "back fields" of the farms that ran out to the
- upper Carmody road. Just before them, hemmed in by beeches and
- firs but open to the south, was a little corner and in it a garden
- . . .or what had once been a garden. A tumbledown stone dyke,
- overgrown with mosses and grass, surrounded it. Along the eastern
- side ran a row of garden cherry trees, white as a snowdrift.
- There were traces of old paths still and a double line of rosebushes
- through the middle; but all the rest of the space was a sheet of
- yellow and white narcissi, in their airiest, most lavish, wind-swayed
- bloom above the lush green grasses.
-
- "Oh, how perfectly lovely!" three of the girls cried. Anne only
- gazed in eloquent silence.
-
- "How in the world does it happen that there ever was a garden back here?"
- said Priscilla in amazement.
-
- "It must be Hester Gray's garden," said Diana. "I've heard mother
- speak of it but I never saw it before, and I wouldn't have supposed
- that it could be in existence still. You've heard the story, Anne?"
-
- "No, but the name seems familiar to me."
-
- "Oh, you've seen it in the graveyard. She is buried down there in
- the poplar corner. You know the little brown stone with the
- opening gates carved on it and `Sacred to the memory of Hester
- Gray, aged twenty-two.' Jordan Gray is buried right beside her
- but there's no stone to him. It's a wonder Marilla never told
- you about it, Anne. To be sure, it happened thirty years ago
- and everybody has forgotten."
-
- "Well, if there's a story we must have it," said Anne. "Let's sit
- right down here among the narcissi and Diana will tell it. Why, girls,
- there are hundreds of them. . .they've spread over everything.
- It looks as if the garden were carpeted with moonshine and
- sunshine combined. This is a discovery worth making.
- To think that I've lived within a mile of this place for
- six years and have never seen it before! Now, Diana."
-
- "Long ago," began Diana, "this farm belonged to old Mr. David Gray.
- He didn't live on it. . .he lived where Silas Sloane lives now.
- He had one son, Jordan, and he went up to Boston one winter to work
- and while he was there he fell in love with a girl named Hester Murray.
- She was working in a store and she hated it. She'd been brought up
- in the country and she always wanted to get back. When Jordan asked
- her to marry him she said she would if he'd take her away to some
- quiet spot where she'd see nothing but fields and trees. So he
- brought her to Avonlea. Mrs. Lynde said he was taking a fearful
- risk in marrying a Yankee, and it's certain that Hester was very
- delicate and a very poor housekeeper; but mother says she was
- very pretty and sweet and Jordan just worshipped the ground
- she walked on. Well, Mr. Gray gave Jordan this farm and he built
- a little house back here and Jordan and Hester lived in it for
- four years. She never went out much and hardly anybody went
- to see her except mother and Mrs. Lynde. Jordan made her this
- garden and she was crazy about it and spent most of her time in it.
- She wasn't much of a housekeeper but she had a knack with flowers.
- And then she got sick. Mother says she thinks she was in consumption
- before she ever came here. She never really laid up but just grew
- weaker and weaker all the time. Jordan wouldn't have anybody to
- wait on her. He did it all himself and mother says he was as
- tender and gentle as a woman. Every day he'd wrap her in a shawl
- and carry her out to the garden and she'd lie there on a bench
- quite happy. They say she used to make Jordan kneel down by her
- every night and morning and pray with her that she might die out in
- the garden when the time came. And her prayer was answered. One
- day Jordan carried her out to the bench and then he picked all the
- roses that were out and heaped them over her; and she just smiled
- up at him. . .and closed her eyes. . .and that," concluded Diana softly,
- "was the end."
-
- "Oh, what a dear story," sighed Anne, wiping away her tears.
-
- "What became of Jordan?" asked Priscilla.
-
- "He sold the farm after Hester died and went back to Boston.
- Mr. Jabez Sloane bought the farm and hauled the little house
- out to the road. Jordan died about ten years after and he was
- brought home and buried beside Hester."
-
- "I can't understand how she could have wanted to live back here,
- away from everything," said Jane.
-
- "Oh, I can easily understand THAT," said Anne thoughtfully. "I
- wouldn't want it myself for a steady thing, because, although I
- love the fields and woods, I love people too. But I can understand
- it in Hester. She was tired to death of the noise of the big city
- and the crowds of people always coming and going and caring nothing
- for her. She just wanted to escape from it all to some still, green,
- friendly place where she could reSt. And she got just what she wanted,
- which is something very few people do, I believe. She had four
- beautiful years before she died. . .four years of perfect happiness,
- so I think she was to be envied more than pitied. And then to shut
- your eyes and fall asleep among roses, with the one you loved best
- on earth smiling down at you. . .oh, I think it was beautiful!"
-
- "She set out those cherry trees over there," said Diana. "She told
- mother she'd never live to eat their fruit, but she wanted to think
- that something she had planted would go on living and helping to
- make the world beautiful after she was dead."
-
- "I'm so glad we came this way," said Anne, the shining-eyed.
- "This is my adopted birthday, you know, and this garden and
- its story is the birthday gift it has given me. Did your mother
- ever tell you what Hester Gray looked like, Diana?"
-
- "No. . .only just that she was pretty."
-
- "I'm rather glad of that, because I can imagine what she looked like,
- without being hampered by facts. I think she was very slight and small,
- with softly curling dark hair and big, sweet, timid brown eyes, and a
- little wistful, pale face."
-
- The girls left their baskets in Hester's garden and spent the rest
- of the afternoon rambling in the woods and fields surrounding it,
- discovering many pretty nooks and lanes. When they got hungry they
- had lunch in the prettiest spot of all. . .on the steep bank of a
- gurgling brook where white birches shot up out of long feathery
- grasses. The girls sat down by the roots and did full justice to
- Anne's dainties, even the unpoetical sandwiches being greatly
- appreciated by hearty, unspoiled appetites sharpened by all the
- fresh air and exercise they had enjoyed. Anne had brought glasses
- and lemonade for her guests, but for her own part drank cold brook
- water from a cup fashioned out of birch bark. The cup leaked,
- and the water tasted of earth, as brook water is apt to do in spring;
- but Anne thought it more appropriate to the occasion than lemonade.
-
- "Look do you see that poem?" she said suddenly, pointing.
-
- "Where?" Jane and Diana stared, as if expecting to see Runic rhymes
- on the birch trees.
-
- "There. . .down in the brook. . .that old green, mossy log with
- the water flowing over it in those smooth ripples that look as if
- they'd been combed, and that single shaft of sunshine falling right
- athwart it, far down into the pool. Oh, it's the most beautiful
- poem I ever saw."
-
- "I should rather call it a picture," said Jane. "A poem is lines
- and verses."
-
- "Oh dear me, no." Anne shook her head with its fluffy wild cherry
- coronal positively. "The lines and verses are only the outward
- garments of the poem and are no more really it than your ruffles
- and flounces are YOU, Jane. The real poem is the soul within them
- . . .and that beautiful bit is the soul of an unwritten poem.
- It is not every day one sees a soul. . .even of a poem."
-
- "I wonder what a soul. . .a person's soul. . .would look like,"
- said Priscilla dreamily.
-
- "Like that, I should think," answered Anne, pointing to a radiance
- of sifted sunlight streaming through a birch tree. "Only with shape
- and features of course. I like to fancy souls as being made of light.
- And some are all shot through with rosy stains and quivers. . .and
- some have a soft glitter like moonlight on the sea. . .and some are
- pale and transparent like mist at dawn."
-
- "I read somewhere once that souls were like flowers," said Priscilla.
-
- "Then your soul is a golden narcissus," said Anne, "and Diana's is like
- a red, red rose. Jane's is an apple blossom, pink and wholesome and sweet."
-
- "And your own is a white violet, with purple streaks in its heart,"
- finished Priscilla.
-
- Jane whispered to Diana that she really could not understand what
- they were talking about. Could she?
-
- The girls went home by the light of a calm golden sunset, their
- baskets filled with narcissus blossoms from Hester's garden,
- some of which Anne carried to the cemetery next day and laid
- upon Hester's grave. Minstrel robins were whistling in the firs
- and the frogs were singing in the marshes. All the basins among
- the hills were brimmed with topaz and emerald light.
-
- "Well, we have had a lovely time after all," said Diana, as if she
- had hardly expected to have it when she set out.
-
- "It has been a truly golden day," said Priscilla.
-
- "I'm really awfully fond of the woods myself," said Jane.
-
- Anne said nothing. She was looking afar into the western sky and
- thinking of little Hester Gray.
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
- A Danger Averted
-
-
- Anne, walking home from the post office one Friday evening,
- was joined by Mrs. Lynde, who was as usual cumbered with
- all the cares of church and state.
-
- "I've just been down to Timothy Cotton's to see if I could get
- Alice Louise to help me for a few days," she said. "I had her last
- week, for, though she's too slow to stop quick, she's better than
- nobody. But she's sick and can't come. Timothy's sitting there,
- too, coughing and complaining. He's been dying for ten years and
- he'll go on dying for ten years more. That kind can't even die and
- have done with it. . .they can't stick to anything, even to being sick,
- long enough to finish it. They're a terrible shiftless family and
- what is to become of them I don't know, but perhaps Providence does."
-
- Mrs. Lynde sighed as if she rather doubted the extent of Providential
- knowledge on the subject.
-
- "Marilla was in about her eyes again Tuesday, wasn't she?
- What did the specialist think of them?" she continued.
-
- "He was much pleased," said Anne brightly. "He says there is a
- great improvement in them and he thinks the danger of her losing
- her sight completely is past. But he says she'll never be able to
- read much or do any fine hand-work again. How are your preparations
- for your bazaar coming on?"
-
- The Ladies' Aid Society was preparing for a fair and supper,
- and Mrs. Lynde was the head and front of the enterprise.
-
- "Pretty well. . .and that reminds me. Mrs. Allan thinks it
- would be nice to fix up a booth like an old-time kitchen and
- serve a supper of baked beans, doughnuts, pie, and so on.
- We're collecting old-fashioned fixings everywhere. Mrs.
- Simon Fletcher is going to lend us her mother's braided rugs
- and Mrs. Levi Boulter some old chairs and Aunt Mary Shaw will
- lend us her cupboard with the glass doors. I suppose Marilla
- will let us have her brass candlesticks? And we want all the
- old dishes we can get. Mrs. Allan is specially set on having
- a real blue willow ware platter if we can find one. But nobody
- seems to have one. Do you know where we could get one?"
-
- "Miss Josephine Barry has one. I'll write and ask her if she'll
- lend it for the occasion," said Anne.
-
- "Well, I wish you would. I guess we'll have the supper in about a
- fortnight's time. Uncle Abe Andrews is prophesying rain and storms for
- about that time; and that's a pretty sure sign we'll have fine weather."
-
- The said "Uncle Abe," it may be mentioned, was at least like
- other prophets in that he had small honor in his own country.
- He was, in fact, considered in the light of a standing joke,
- for few of his weather predictions were ever fulfilled.
- Mr. Elisha Wright, who labored under the impression that
- he was a local wit, used to say that nobody in Avonlea
- ever thought of looking in the Charlottetown dailies for
- weather probabilities. No; they just asked Uncle Abe
- what it was going to be tomorrow and expected the opposite.
- Nothing daunted, Uncle Abe kept on prophesying.
-
- "We want to have the fair over before the election comes off,"
- continued Mrs. Lynde, "for the candidates will be sure to come and
- spend lots of money. The Tories are bribing right and left, so they
- might as well be given a chance to spend their money honestly for once."
-
- Anne was a red-hot Conservative, out of loyalty to Matthew's
- memory, but she said nothing. She knew better than to get
- Mrs. Lynde started on politics. She had a letter for Marilla,
- postmarked from a town in British Columbia.
-
- "It's probably from the children's uncle," she said excitedly,
- when she got home. "Oh, Marilla, I wonder what he says about them."
-
- "The best plan might be to open it and see," said Marilla curtly.
- A close observer might have thought that she was excited also,
- but she would rather have died than show it.
-
- Anne tore open the letter and glanced over the somewhat untidy and
- poorly written contents.
-
- "He says he can't take the children this spring. . .he's been sick
- most of the winter and his wedding is put off. He wants to know if
- we can keep them till the fall and he'll try and take them then.
- We will, of course, won't we Marilla?"
-
- "I don't see that there is anything else for us to do," said
- Marilla rather grimly, although she felt a secret relief.
- "Anyhow they're not so much trouble as they were. . .or else
- we've got used to them. Davy has improved a great deal."
-
- "His MANNERS are certainly much better," said Anne cautiously,
- as if she were not prepared to say as much for his morals.
-
- Anne had come home from school the previous evening, to find
- Marilla away at an Aid meeting, Dora asleep on the kitchen sofa,
- and Davy in the sitting room closet, blissfully absorbing the
- contents of a jar of Marilla's famous yellow plum preserves. . .
- "company jam," Davy called it. . .which he had been forbidden to
- touch. He looked very guilty when Anne pounced on him and whisked
- him out of the closet.
-
- "Davy Keith, don't you know that it is very wrong of you to be
- eating that jam, when you were told never to meddle with anything
- in THAT closet?"
-
- "Yes, I knew it was wrong," admitted Davy uncomfortably, "but plum
- jam is awful nice, Anne. I just peeped in and it looked so good I
- thought I'd take just a weeny taste. I stuck my finger in. . ."
- Anne groaned. . ."and licked it clean. And it was so much gooder
- than I'd ever thought that I got a spoon and just SAILED IN."
-
- Anne gave him such a serious lecture on the sin of stealing plum
- jam that Davy became conscience stricken and promised with
- repentant kisses never to do it again.
-
- "Anyhow, there'll be plenty of jam in heaven, that's one comfort,"
- he said complacently.
-
- Anne nipped a smile in the bud.
-
- "Perhaps there will. . .if we want it," she said, "But what makes
- you think so?"
-
- "Why, it's in the catechism," said Davy.
-
- "Oh, no, there is nothing like THAT in the catechism, Davy."
-
- "But I tell you there is," persisted Davy. "It was in that
- question Marilla taught me last Sunday. `Why should we love God?'
- It says, `Because He makes preserves, and redeems us.' Preserves
- is just a holy way of saying jam."
-
- "I must get a drink of water," said Anne hastily. When she came
- back it cost her some time and trouble to explain to Davy that a
- certain comma in the said catechism question made a great deal of
- difference in the meaning.
-
- "Well, I thought it was too good to be true," he said at last, with
- a sigh of disappointed conviction. "And besides, I didn't see when
- He'd find time to make jam if it's one endless Sabbath day, as the
- hymn says. I don't believe I want to go to heaven. Won't there
- ever be any Saturdays in heaven, Anne?"
-
- "Yes, Saturdays, and every other kind of beautiful days. And every
- day in heaven will be more beautiful than the one before it, Davy,"
- assured Anne, who was rather glad that Marilla was not by to be shocked.
- Marilla, it is needless to say, was bringing the twins up in the good old
- ways of theology and discouraged all fanciful speculations thereupon.
- Davy and Dora were taught a hymn, a catechism question, and two
- Bible verses every Sunday. Dora learned meekly and recited like a
- little machine, with perhaps as much understanding or interest as if
- she were one. Davy, on the contrary, had a lively curiosity, and
- frequently asked questions which made Marilla tremble for his fate.
-
- "Chester Sloane says we'll do nothing all the time in heaven but
- walk around in white dresses and play on harps; and he says he
- hopes he won't have to go till he's an old man, 'cause maybe he'll
- like it better then. And he thinks it will be horrid to wear
- dresses and I think so too. Why can't men angels wear trousers,
- Anne? Chester Sloane is interested in those things, 'cause they're
- going to make a minister of him. He's got to be a minister 'cause
- his grandmother left the money to send him to college and he can't
- have it unless he is a minister. She thought a minister was such a
- 'spectable thing to have in a family. Chester says he doesn't mind
- much. . .though he'd rather be a blacksmith. . .but he's bound to
- have all the fun he can before he begins to be a minister, 'cause
- he doesn't expect to have much afterwards. I ain't going to be a
- minister. I'm going to be a storekeeper, like Mr. Blair, and keep
- heaps of candy and bananas. But I'd rather like going to your kind
- of a heaven if they'd let me play a mouth organ instead of a harp.
- Do you s'pose they would?"
-
- "Yes, I think they would if you wanted it," was all Anne could
- trust herself to say.
-
- The A.V.I.S. met at Mr. Harmon Andrews' that evening and a full
- attendance had been requested, since important business was to be
- discussed. The A.V.I.S. was in a flourishing condition, and had
- already accomplished wonders. Early in the spring Mr. Major
- Spencer had redeemed his promise and had stumped, graded, and
- seeded down all the road front of his farm. A dozen other men,
- some prompted by a determination not to let a Spencer get ahead
- of them, others goaded into action by Improvers in their own
- households, had followed his example. The result was that there
- were long strips of smooth velvet turf where once had been
- unsightly undergrowth or brush. The farm fronts that had not been
- done looked so badly by contrast that their owners were secretly
- shamed into resolving to see what they could do another spring.
- The triangle of ground at the cross roads had also been cleared and
- seeded down, and Anne's bed of geraniums, unharmed by any marauding
- cow, was already set out in the center.
-
- Altogether, the Improvers thought that they were getting on
- beautifully, even if Mr. Levi Boulter, tactfully approached by a
- carefully selected committee in regard to the old house on his
- upper farm, did bluntly tell them that he wasn't going to have it
- meddled with.
-
- At this especial meeting they intended to draw up a petition to the
- school trustees, humbly praying that a fence be put around the
- school grounds; and a plan was also to be discussed for planting a
- few ornamental trees by the church, if the funds of the society
- would permit of it. . .for, as Anne said, there was no use in
- starting another subscription as long as the hall remained blue.
- The members were assembled in the Andrews' parlor and Jane was
- already on her feet to move the appointment of a committee which
- should find out and report on the price of said trees, when Gertie
- Pye swept in, pompadoured and frilled within an inch of her life.
- Gertie had a habit of being late. . ."to make her entrance more
- effective," spiteful people said. Gertie's entrance in this
- instance was certainly effective, for she paused dramatically on
- the middle of the floor, threw up her hands, rolled her eyes,
- and exclaimed, "I've just heard something perfectly awful.
- What DO you think? Mr. Judson Parker IS GOING TO RENT ALL
- THE ROAD FENCE OF HIS FARM TO A PATENT MEDICINE COMPANY TO
- PAINT ADVERTISEMENTS ON."
-
- For once in her life Gertie Pye made all the sensation she desired.
- If she had thrown a bomb among the complacent Improvers she could
- hardly have made more.
-
- "It CAN'T be true," said Anne blankly.
-
- "That's just what _I_ said when I heard it first, don't you know,"
- said Gertie, who was enjoying herself hugely. "_I_ said it couldn't
- be true. . .that Judson Parker wouldn't have the HEART to do it,
- don't you know. But father met him this afternoon and asked him
- about it and he said it WAS true. Just fancy! His farm is side-on
- to the Newbridge road and how perfectly awful it will look to see
- advertisements of pills and plasters all along it, don't you know?"
-
- The Improvers DID know, all too well. Even the least imaginative
- among them could picture the grotesque effect of half a mile of
- board fence adorned with such advertisements. All thought of
- church and school grounds vanished before this new danger.
- Parliamentary rules and regulations were forgotten, and Anne,
- in despair, gave up trying to keep minutes at all. Everybody
- talked at once and fearful was the hubbub.
-
- "Oh, let us keep calm," implored Anne, who was the most excited
- of them all, "and try to think of some way of preventing him."
-
- "I don't know how you're going to prevent him," exclaimed Jane bitterly.
- "Everybody knows what Judson Parker is. He'd do ANYTHING for money.
- He hasn't a SPARK of public spirit or ANY sense of the beautiful."
-
- The prospect looked rather unpromising. Judson Parker and his
- sister were the only Parkers in Avonlea, so that no leverage could
- be exerted by family connections. Martha Parker was a lady of all
- too certain age who disapproved of young people in general and the
- Improvers in particular. Judson was a jovial, smooth-spoken man,
- so uniformly goodnatured and bland that it was surprising how few
- friends he had. Perhaps he had got the better in too many business
- transactions. . .which seldom makes for popularity. He was
- reputed to be very "sharp" and it was the general opinion that he
- "hadn't much principle."
-
- "If Judson Parker has a chance to `turn an honest penny,' as he
- says himself, he'll never lose it," declared Fred Wright.
-
- "Is there NOBODY who has any influence over him?" asked Anne
- despairingly.
-
- "He goes to see Louisa Spencer at White Sands," suggested Carrie
- Sloane. "Perhaps she could coax him not to rent his fences."
-
- "Not she," said Gilbert emphatically. "I know Louisa Spencer well.
- She doesn't `believe' in Village Improvement Societies, but she
- DOES believe in dollars and cents. She'd be more likely to urge
- Judson on than to dissuade him."
-
- "The only thing to do is to appoint a committee to wait on him and protest,"
- said Julia Bell, "and you must send girls, for he'd hardly be civil to boys
- . . .but _I_ won't go, so nobody need nominate me."
-
- "Better send Anne alone, " said Oliver Sloane. "She can talk Judson
- over if anybody can."
-
- Anne protested. She was willing to go and do the talking; but she
- must have others with her "for moral support." Diana and Jane were
- therefore appointed to support her morally and the Improvers broke
- up, buzzing like angry bees with indignation. Anne was so worried
- that she didn't sleep until nearly morning, and then she dreamed
- that the trustees had put a fence around the school and painted
- "Try Purple Pills" all over it.
-
- The committee waited on Judson Parker the next afternoon. Anne
- pleaded eloquently against his nefarious design and Jane and Diana
- supported her morally and valiantly. Judson was sleek, suave, flattering;
- paid them several compliments of the delicacy of sunflowers;
- felt real bad to refuse such charming young ladies . . .but
- business was business; couldn't afford to let sentiment stand
- in the way these hard times.
-
- "But I'll tell what I WILL do," he said, with a twinkle in his
- light, full eyes. "I'll tell the agent he must use only handsome,
- tasty colors. . .red and yellow and so on. I'll tell him he
- mustn't paint the ads BLUE on any account."
-
- The vanquished committee retired, thinking things not lawful to be uttered.
-
- "We have done all we can do and must simply trust the rest to Providence,"
- said Jane, with an unconscious imitation of Mrs. Lynde's tone and manner.
-
- "I wonder if Mr. Allan could do anything," reflected Diana.
-
- Anne shook her head.
-
- "No, it's no use to worry Mr. Allan, especially now when the baby's
- so sick. Judson would slip away from him as smoothly as from us,
- although he HAS taken to going to church quite regularly just now.
- That is simply because Louisa Spencer's father is an elder and very
- particular about such things."
-
- "Judson Parker is the only man in Avonlea who would dream of
- renting his fences," said Jane indignantly. "Even Levi Boulter or
- Lorenzo White would never stoop to that, tightfisted as they are.
- They would have too much respect for public opinion."
-
- Public opinion was certainly down on Judson Parker when the facts
- became known, but that did not help matters much. Judson chuckled
- to himself and defied it, and the Improvers were trying to
- reconcile themselves to the prospect of seeing the prettiest part
- of the Newbridge road defaced by advertisements, when Anne rose
- quietly at the president's call for reports of committees on the
- occasion of the next meeting of the Society, and announced that
- Mr. Judson Parker had instructed her to inform the Society that he
- was NOT going to rent his fences to the Patent Medicine Company.
-
- Jane and Diana stared as if they found it hard to believe their ears.
- Parliamentary etiquette, which was generally very strictly enforced
- in the A.V.I.S., forbade them giving instant vent to their curiosity,
- but after the Society adjourned Anne was besieged for explanations.
- Anne had no explanation to give. Judson Parker had overtaken her
- on the road the preceding evening and told her that he had decided
- to humor the A.V.I.S. in its peculiar prejudice against patent
- medicine advertisements. That was all Anne would say, then
- or ever afterwards, and it was the simple truth; but when
- Jane Andrews, on her way home, confided to Oliver Sloane her firm
- belief that there was more behind Judson Parker's mysterious change
- of heart than Anne Shirley had revealed, she spoke the truth also.
-
- Anne had been down to old Mrs. Irving's on the shore road the
- preceding evening and had come home by a short cut which led her
- first over the low-lying shore fields, and then through the beech
- wood below Robert Dickson's, by a little footpath that ran out to
- the main road just above the Lake of Shining Waters. . .known to
- unimaginative people as Barry's pond.
-
- Two men were sitting in their buggies, reined off to the side of
- the road, just at the entrance of the path. One was Judson Parker;
- the other was Jerry Corcoran, a Newbridge man against whom, as
- Mrs. Lynde would have told you in eloquent italics, nothing shady had
- ever been PROVED. He was an agent for agricultural implements and
- a prominent personage in matters political. He had a finger. . .
- some people said ALL his fingers. . .in every political pie that
- was cooked; and as Canada was on the eve of a general election
- Jerry Corcoran had been a busy man for many weeks, canvassing the
- county in the interests of his party's candidate. Just as Anne
- emerged from under the overhanging beech boughs she heard Corcoran
- say, "If you'll vote for Amesbury, Parker. . .well, I've a note
- for that pair of harrows you've got in the spring. I suppose you
- wouldn't object to having it back, eh?"
-
- "We. . .ll, since you put it in that way," drawled Judson with a
- grin, "I reckon I might as well do it. A man must look out for his
- own interests in these hard times."
-
- Both saw Anne at this moment and conversation abruptly ceased.
- Anne bowed frostily and walked on, with her chin slightly more
- tilted than usual. Soon Judson Parker overtook her.
-
- "Have a lift, Anne?" he inquired genially.
-
- "Thank you, no," said Anne politely, but with a fine, needle-like
- disdain in her voice that pierced even Judson Parker's none too
- sensitive consciousness. His face reddened and he twitched his
- reins angrily; but the next second prudential considerations
- checked him. He looked uneasily at Anne, as she walked steadily on,
- glancing neither to the right nor to the left. Had she heard Corcoran's
- unmistakable offer and his own too plain acceptance of it?
- Confound Corcoran! If he couldn't put his meaning into less
- dangerous phrases he'd get into trouble some of these
- long-come-shorts. And confound redheaded school-ma'ams with a
- habit of popping out of beechwoods where they had no business to be.
- If Anne had heard, Judson Parker, measuring her corn in his
- own half bushel, as the country saying went, and cheating himself
- thereby, as such people generally do, believed that she would tell
- it far and wide. Now, Judson Parker, as has been seen, was not
- overly regardful of public opinion; but to be known as having
- accepted a bribe would be a nasty thing; and if it ever reached
- Isaac Spencer's ears farewell forever to all hope of winning Louisa
- Jane with her comfortable prospects as the heiress of a well-to-do
- farmer. Judson Parker knew that Mr. Spencer looked somewhat
- askance at him as it was; he could not afford to take any risks.
-
- "Ahem. . .Anne, I've been wanting to see you about that little
- matter we were discussing the other day. I've decided not to let
- my fences to that company after all. A society with an aim like
- yours ought to be encouraged."
-
- Anne thawed out the merest trifle.
-
- "Thank you," she said.
-
- "And. . .and. . .you needn't mention that little conversation of
- mine with Jerry."
-
- "I have no intention of mentioning it in any case," said Anne icily,
- for she would have seen every fence in Avonlea painted with
- advertisements before she would have stooped to bargain with
- a man who would sell his vote.
-
- "Just so. . .just so," agreed Judson, imagining that they
- understood each other beautifully. "I didn't suppose you would.
- Of course, I was only stringing Jerry. . .he thinks he's so
- all-fired cute and smart. I've no intention of voting for Amesbury.
- I'm going to vote for Grant as I've always done. . .you'll see
- that when the election comes off. I just led Jerry on to see
- if he would commit himself. And it's all right about the fence
- . . .you can tell the Improvers that."
-
- "It takes all sorts of people to make a world, as I've often heard,
- but I think there are some who could be spared," Anne told her
- reflection in the east gable mirror that night. "I wouldn't have
- mentioned the disgraceful thing to a soul anyhow, so my conscience
- is clear on THAT score. I really don't know who or what is to be
- thanked for this. _I_ did nothing to bring it about, and it's hard
- to believe that Providence ever works by means of the kind of
- politics men like Judson Parker and Jerry Corcoran have."
-
-
-
-
- XV
-
- The Beginning of Vacation
-
-
- Anne locked the schoolhouse door on a still, yellow evening, when
- the winds were purring in the spruces around the playground, and
- the shadows were long and lazy by the edge of the woods. She
- dropped the key into her pocket with a sigh of satisfaction. The
- school year was ended, she had been reengaged for the next, with
- many expressions of satisfaction. . .only Mr. Harmon Andrews told
- her she ought to use the strap oftener. . .and two delightful
- months of a well-earned vacation beckoned her invitingly. Anne
- felt at peace with the world and herself as she walked down the
- hill with her basket of flowers in her hand. Since the earliest
- mayflowers Anne had never missed her weekly pilgrimage to Matthew's
- grave. Everyone else in Avonlea, except Marilla, had already
- forgotten quiet, shy, unimportant Matthew Cuthbert; but his memory
- was still green in Anne's heart and always would be. She could
- never forget the kind old man who had been the first to give her
- the love and sympathy her starved childhood had craved.
-
- At the foot of the hill a boy was sitting on the fence in the
- shadow of the spruces. . .a boy with big, dreamy eyes and a
- beautiful, sensitive face. He swung down and joined Anne, smiling;
- but there were traces of tears on his cheeks.
-
- "I thought I'd wait for you, teacher, because I knew you were going
- to the graveyard," he said, slipping his hand into hers. "I'm going
- there, too. . .I'm taking this bouquet of geraniums to put on
- Grandpa Irving's grave for grandma. And look, teacher, I'm going
- to put this bunch of white roses beside Grandpa's grave in memory of
- my little mother. . .because I can't go to her grave to put it there.
- But don't you think she'll know all about it, just the same?"
-
- "Yes, I am sure she will, Paul."
-
- "You see, teacher, it's just three years today since my little
- mother died. It's such a long, long time but it hurts just as
- much as ever. . .and I miss her just as much as ever. Sometimes
- it seems to me that I just can't bear it, it hurts so."
-
- Paul's voice quivered and his lip trembled. He looked down at his
- roses, hoping that his teacher would not notice the tears in his eyes.
-
- "And yet," said Anne, very softly, "you wouldn't want it to stop hurting
- . . .you wouldn't want to forget your little mother even if you could."
-
- "No, indeed, I wouldn't. . .that's just the way I feel. You're so
- good at understanding, teacher. Nobody else understands so well. .
- .not even grandma, although she's so good to me. Father understood
- pretty well, but still I couldn't talk much to him about mother,
- because it made him feel so bad. When he put his hand over his face
- I always knew it was time to stop. Poor father, he must be dreadfully
- lonesome without me; but you see he has nobody but a housekeeper
- now and he thinks housekeepers are no good to bring up little boys,
- especially when he has to be away from home so much on business.
- Grandmothers are better, next to mothers. Someday, when I'm brought
- up, I'll go back to father and we're never going to be parted again."
-
- Paul had talked so much to Anne about his mother and father that
- she felt as if she had known them. She thought his mother must
- have been very like what he was himself, in temperament and
- disposition; and she had an idea that Stephen Irving was a rather
- reserved man with a deep and tender nature which he kept hidden
- scrupulously from the world.
-
- "Father's not very easy to get acquainted with," Paul had said once.
- "I never got really acquainted with him until after my little mother died.
- But he's splendid when you do get to know him. I love him the best in all
- the world, and Grandma Irving next, and then you, teacher. I'd love you
- next to father if it wasn't my DUTY to love Grandma Irving best, because
- she's doing so much for me. YOU know, teacher. I wish she would leave
- the lamp in my room till I go to sleep, though. She takes it right out
- as soon as she tucks me up because she says I mustn't be a coward.
- I'm NOT scared, but I'd RATHER have the light. My little mother
- used always to sit beside me and hold my hand till I went to sleep.
- I expect she spoiled me. Mothers do sometimes, you know."
-
- No, Anne did not know this, although she might imagine it.
- She thought sadly of HER "little mother," the mother who
- had thought her so "perfectly beautiful" and who had died
- so long ago and was buried beside her boyish husband in
- that unvisited grave far away. Anne could not remember
- her mother and for this reason she almost envied Paul.
-
- "My birthday is next week," said Paul, as they walked up the long
- red hill, basking in the June sunshine, "and father wrote me that he
- is sending me something that he thinks I'll like better than anything
- else he could send. I believe it has come already, for Grandma
- is keeping the bookcase drawer locked and that is something new.
- And when I asked her why, she just looked mysterious and said
- little boys mustn't be too curious. It's very exciting to have a
- birthday, isn't it? I'll be eleven. You'd never think it to look
- at me, would you? Grandma says I'm very small for my age and that
- it's all because I don't eat enough porridge. I do my very best,
- but Grandma gives such generous platefuls. . .there's nothing mean
- about Grandma, I can tell you. Ever since you and I had that talk
- about praying going home from Sunday School that day, teacher. . .
- when you said we ought to pray about all our difficulties. . .I've
- prayed every night that God would give me enough grace to enable me
- to eat every bit of my porridge in the mornings. But I've never
- been able to do it yet, and whether it's because I have too little
- grace or too much porridge I really can't decide. Grandma says
- father was brought up on porridge, and it certainly did work
- well in his case, for you ought to see the shoulders he has.
- But sometimes," concluded Paul with a sigh and a meditative air
- "I really think porridge will be the death of me."
-
- Anne permitted herself a smile, since Paul was not looking at her.
- All Avonlea knew that old Mrs. Irving was bringing her grandson up
- in accordance with the good, old-fashioned methods of diet and morals.
-
- "Let us hope not, dear," she said cheerfully. "How are your rock people
- coming on? Does the oldest Twin still continue to behave himself?"
-
- "He HAS to," said Paul emphatically. "He knows I won't associate
- with him if he doesn't. He is really full of wickedness, I think."
-
- "And has Nora found out about the Golden Lady yet?"
-
- "No; but I think she suspects. I'm almost sure she watched me the
- last time I went to the cave. _I_ don't mind if she finds out. . .
- it is only for HER sake I don't want her to. . .so that her feelings
- won't be hurt. But if she is DETERMINED to have her feelings hurt
- it can't be helped."
-
- "If I were to go to the shore some night with you do you think I
- could see your rock people too?"
-
- Paul shook his head gravely.
-
- "No, I don't think you could see MY rock people. I'm the only
- person who can see them. But you could see rock people of your
- own. You're one of the kind that can. We're both that kind.
- YOU know, teacher," he added, squeezing her hand chummily.
- "Isn't it splendid to be that kind, teacher?"
-
- "Splendid," Anne agreed, gray shining eyes looking down into blue
- shining ones. Anne and Paul both knew
-
- "How fair the realm
- Imagination opens to the view,"
-
- and both knew the way to that happy land. There the rose of joy
- bloomed immortal by dale and stream; clouds never darkened the
- sunny sky; sweet bells never jangled out of tune; and kindred
- spirits abounded. The knowledge of that land's geography. . .
- "east o' the sun, west o' the moon". . .is priceless lore, not to
- be bought in any market place. It must be the gift of the good
- fairies at birth and the years can never deface it or take it away.
- It is better to possess it, living in a garret, than to be the
- inhabitant of palaces without it.
-
- The Avonlea graveyard was as yet the grass-grown solitude it had
- always been. To be sure, the Improvers had an eye on it, and
- Priscilla Grant had read a paper on cemeteries before the
- last meeting of the Society. At some future time the Improvers
- meant to have the lichened, wayward old board fence replaced by a
- neat wire railing, the grass mown and the leaning monuments
- straightened up.
-
- Anne put on Matthew's grave the flowers she had brought for it, and
- then went over to the little poplar shaded corner where Hester Gray slept.
- Ever since the day of the spring picnic Anne had put flowers on Hester's
- grave when she visited Matthew's. The evening before she had made a
- pilgrimage back to the little deserted garden in the woods and brought
- therefrom some of Hester's own white roses.
-
- "I thought you would like them better than any others, dear,"
- she said softly.
-
- Anne was still sitting there when a shadow fell over the grass and
- she looked up to see Mrs. Allan. They walked home together.
-
- Mrs. Allan's face was not the face of the girlbride whom the
- minister had brought to Avonlea five years before. It had lost
- some of its bloom and youthful curves, and there were fine, patient
- lines about eyes and mouth. A tiny grave in that very cemetery
- accounted for some of them; and some new ones had come during the
- recent illness, now happily over, of her little son. But Mrs. Allan's
- dimples were as sweet and sudden as ever, her eyes as clear and bright
- and true; and what her face lacked of girlish beauty was now more than
- atoned for in added tenderness and strength.
-
- "I suppose you are looking forward to your vacation, Anne?" she said,
- as they left the graveyard.
-
- Anne nodded.
-
- "Yes.. . .I could roll the word as a sweet morsel under my tongue.
- I think the summer is going to be lovely. For one thing, Mrs. Morgan
- is coming to the Island in July and Priscilla is going to bring her up.
- I feel one of my old `thrills' at the mere thought."
-
- "I hope you'll have a good time, Anne. You've worked very hard
- this past year and you have succeeded."
-
- "Oh, I don't know. I've come so far short in so many things. I
- haven't done what I meant to do when I began to teach last fall.
- I haven't lived up to my ideals."
-
- "None of us ever do," said Mrs. Allan with a sigh. "But then, Anne,
- you know what Lowell says, `Not failure but low aim is crime.'
- We must have ideals and try to live up to them, even if we never
- quite succeed. Life would be a sorry business without them.
- With them it's grand and great. Hold fast to your ideals, Anne."
-
- "I shall try. But I have to let go most of my theories," said Anne,
- laughing a little. "I had the most beautiful set of theories you ever
- knew when I started out as a schoolma'am, but every one of them has
- failed me at some pinch or another."
-
- "Even the theory on corporal punishment," teased Mrs. Allan.
-
- But Anne flushed.
-
- "I shall never forgive myself for whipping Anthony."
-
- "Nonsense, dear, he deserved it. And it agreed with him. You have
- had no trouble with him since and he has come to think there's
- nobody like you. Your kindness won his love after the idea that a
- 'girl was no good' was rooted out of his stubborn mind."
-
- "He may have deserved it, but that is not the point. If I had
- calmly and deliberately decided to whip him because I thought it a
- just punishment for him I would not feel over it as I do. But the
- truth is, Mrs. Allan, that I just flew into a temper and whipped
- him because of that. I wasn't thinking whether it was just or
- unjust. . .even if he hadn't deserved it I'd have done it just the
- same. That is what humiliates me."
-
- "Well, we all make mistakes, dear, so just put it behind you. We
- should regret our mistakes and learn from them, but never carry
- them forward into the future with us. There goes Gilbert Blythe on
- his wheel. . .home for his vacation too, I suppose. How are you
- and he getting on with your studies?"
-
- "Pretty well. We plan to finish the Virgil tonight. . .there are
- only twenty lines to do. Then we are not going to study any more
- until September."
-
- "Do you think you will ever get to college?"
-
- "Oh, I don't know." Anne looked dreamily afar to the opal-tinted
- horizon. "Marilla's eyes will never be much better than they are now,
- although we are so thankful to think that they will not get worse.
- And then there are the twins. . .somehow I don't believe their uncle
- will ever really send for them. Perhaps college may be around the bend
- in the road, but I haven't got to the bend yet and I don't think much
- about it lest I might grow discontented."
-
- "Well, I should like to see you go to college, Anne; but if you
- never do, don't be discontented about it. We make our own lives
- wherever we are, after all. . .college can only help us to do it
- more easily. They are broad or narrow according to what we put
- into them, not what we get out. Life is rich and full here. . .
- everywhere. . .if we can only learn how to open our whole hearts
- to its richness and fulness."
-
- "I think I understand what you mean," said Anne thoughtfully,
- "and I know I have so much to feel thankful for. . .oh, so much. . .
- my work, and Paul Irving, and the dear twins, and all my friends.
- Do you know, Mrs. Allan, I'm so thankful for friendship. It
- beautifies life so much."
-
- "True friendship is a very helpfulul thing indeed," said Mrs. Allan,
- "and we should have a very high ideal of it, and never sully
- it by any failure in truth and sincerity. I fear the name of
- friendship is often degraded to a kind of intimacy that has nothing
- of real friendship in it."
-
- "Yes. . .like Gertie Pye's and Julia Bell's. They are very intimate
- and go everywhere together; but Gertie is always saying nasty things
- of Julia behind her back and everybody thinks she is jealous of her
- because she is always so pleased when anybody criticizes Julia.
- I think it is desecration to call that friendship. If we have
- friends we should look only for the best in them and give them
- the best that is in us, don't you think? Then friendship would
- be the most beautiful thing in the world."
-
- "Friendship IS very beautiful," smiled Mrs. Allan, "but some day. . ."
-
- Then she paused abruptly. In the delicate, white-browed face
- beside her, with its candid eyes and mobile features, there was
- still far more of the child than of the woman. Anne's heart so far
- harbored only dreams of friendship and ambition, and Mrs. Allan
- did not wish to brush the bloom from her sweet unconsciousness.
- So she left her sentence for the future years to finish.
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
- The Substance of Things Hoped For
-
-
- "Anne," said Davy appealingly, scrambling up on the shiny,
- leather-covered sofa in the Green Gables kitchen, where Anne sat,
- reading a letter, "Anne, I'm AWFUL hungry. You've no idea."
-
- "I'll get you a piece of bread and butter in a minute," said Anne
- absently. Her letter evidently contained some exciting news, for
- her cheeks were as pink as the roses on the big bush outside, and
- her eyes were as starry as only Anne's eyes could be.
-
- "But I ain't bread and butter hungry, " said Davy in a disgusted tone.
- "I'm plum cake hungry."
-
- "Oh," laughed Anne, laying down her letter and putting her arm
- about Davy to give him a squeeze, "that's a kind of hunger that can
- be endured very comfortably, Davy-boy. You know it's one of
- Marilla's rules that you can't have anything but bread and butter
- between meals."
-
- "Well, gimme a piece then. . .please."
-
- Davy had been at last taught to say "please," but he generally
- tacked it on as an afterthought. He looked with approval at the
- generous slice Anne presently brought to him. "You always put such
- a nice lot of butter on it, Anne. Marilla spreads it pretty thin.
- It slips down a lot easier when there's plenty of butter."
-
- The slice "slipped down" with tolerable ease, judging from its
- rapid disappearance. Davy slid head first off the sofa, turned a
- double somersault on the rug, and then sat up and announced decidedly,
-
- "Anne, I've made up my mind about heaven. I don't want to go there."
-
- "Why not?" asked Anne gravely.
-
- "Cause heaven is in Simon Fletcher's garret, and I don't like
- Simon Fletcher."
-
- "Heaven in. . .Simon Fletcher's garret!" gasped Anne, too amazed
- even to laugh. "Davy Keith, whatever put such an extraordinary
- idea into your head?"
-
- "Milty Boulter says that's where it is. It was last Sunday in
- Sunday School. The lesson was about Elijah and Elisha, and I up
- and asked Miss Rogerson where heaven was. Miss Rogerson looked
- awful offended. She was cross anyhow, because when she'd asked us
- what Elijah left Elisha when he went to heaven Milty Boulter said,
- `His old clo'es,' and us fellows all laughed before we thought. I
- wish you could think first and do things afterwards, 'cause then
- you wouldn't do them. But Milty didn't mean to be disrespeckful.
- He just couldn't think of the name of the thing. Miss Rogerson said
- heaven was where God was and I wasn't to ask questions like that.
- Milty nudged me and said in a whisper, `Heaven's in Uncle Simon's
- garret and I'll esplain about it on the road home.' So when
- we was coming home he esplained. Milty's a great hand at
- esplaining things. Even if he don't know anything about a thing
- he'll make up a lot of stuff and so you get it esplained all the
- same. His mother is Mrs. Simon's sister and he went with her to
- the funeral when his cousin, Jane Ellen, died. The minister said
- she'd gone to heaven, though Milty says she was lying right before
- them in the coffin. But he s'posed they carried the coffin to the
- garret afterwards. Well, when Milty and his mother went upstairs
- after it was all over to get her bonnet he asked her where heaven
- was that Jane Ellen had gone to, and she pointed right to the
- ceiling and said, `Up there.' Milty knew there wasn't anything but
- the garret over the ceiling, so that's how HE found out. And he's
- been awful scared to go to his Uncle Simon's ever since."
-
- Anne took Davy on her knee and did her best to straighten out this
- theological tangle also. She was much better fitted for the task
- than Marilla, for she remembered her own childhood and had an
- instinctive understanding of the curious ideas that seven-year-olds
- sometimes get about matters that are, of course, very plain and
- simple to grown up people. She had just succeeded in convincing
- Davy that heaven was NOT in Simon Fletcher's garret when Marilla
- came in from the garden, where she and Dora had been picking peas.
- Dora was an industrious little soul and never happier than when
- "helping" in various small tasks suited to her chubby fingers. She
- fed chickens, picked up chips, wiped dishes, and ran errands galore.
- She was neat, faithful and observant; she never had to be told how
- to do a thing twice and never forgot any of her little duties.
- Davy, on the other hand, was rather heedless and forgetful; but
- he had the born knack of winning love, and even yet Anne and Marilla
- liked him the better.
-
- While Dora proudly shelled the peas and Davy made boats of the pods,
- with masts of matches and sails of paper, Anne told Marilla about
- the wonderful contents of her letter.
-
- "Oh, Marilla, what do you think? I've had a letter from Priscilla
- and she says that Mrs. Morgan is on the Island, and that if it is
- fine Thursday they are going to drive up to Avonlea and will reach
- here about twelve. They will spend the afternoon with us and go to
- the hotel at White Sands in the evening, because some of Mrs. Morgan's
- American friends are staying there. Oh, Marilla, isn't it wonderful?
- I can hardly believe I'm not dreaming."
-
- "I daresay Mrs. Morgan is a lot like other people," said Marilla drily,
- although she did feel a trifle excited herself. Mrs. Morgan was a
- famous woman and a visit from her was no commonplace occurrence.
- "They'll be here to dinner, then?"
-
- "Yes; and oh, Marilla, may I cook every bit of the dinner myself?
- I want to feel that I can do something for the author of `The
- Rosebud Garden,' if it is only to cook a dinner for her.
- You won't mind, will you?"
-
- "Goodness, I'm not so fond of stewing over a hot fire in July that
- it would vex me very much to have someone else do it. You're quite
- welcome to the job."
-
- "Oh, thank you," said Anne, as if Marilla had just conferred a
- tremendous favor, "I'll make out the menu this very night."
-
- "You'd better not try to put on too much style," warned Marilla,
- a little alarmed by the high-flown sound of "menu." You'll likely
- come to grief if you do."
-
- "Oh, I'm not going to put on any `style,' if you mean trying to do or
- have things we don't usually have on festal occasions," assured Anne.
- "That would be affectation, and, although I know I haven't as much
- sense and steadiness as a girl of seventeen and a schoolteacher
- ought to have, I'm not so silly AS that. But I want to have
- everything as nice and dainty as possible. Davy-boy, don't leave
- those peapods on the back stairs. . .someone might slip on them.
- I'll have a light soup to begin with. . .you know I can make
- lovely cream-of-onion soup. . .and then a couple of roast fowls.
- I'll have the two white roosters. I have real affection for
- those roosters and they've been pets ever since the gray hen
- hatched out just the two of them. . .little balls of yellow down.
- But I know they would have to be sacrificed sometime, and surely
- there couldn't be a worthier occasion than this. But oh, Marilla,
- _I_ cannot kill them. . .not even for Mrs. Morgan's sake. I'll have
- to ask John Henry Carter to come over and do it for me."
-
- "I'll do it," volunteered Davy, "if Marilla'll hold them by the legs"
- cause I guess it'd take both my hands to manage the axe. It's awful
- jolly fun to see them hopping about after their heads are cut off."
-
- "Then I'll have peas and beans and creamed potatoes and a
- lettuce salad, for vegetables," resumed Anne, "and for dessert,
- lemon pie with whipped cream, and coffee and cheese and lady fingers.
- I'll make the pies and lady fingers tomorrow and do up my white muslin
- dress. And I must tell Diana tonight, for she'll want to do up hers.
- Mrs. Morgan's heroines are nearly always dressed in white muslin,
- and Diana and I have always resolved that that was what we
- would wear if we ever met her. It will be such a delicate
- compliment, don't you think? Davy, dear, you mustn't poke peapods
- into the cracks of the floor. I must ask Mr. and Mrs. Allan and
- Miss Stacy to dinner, too, for they're all very anxious to meet
- Mrs. Morgan. It's so fortunate she's coming while Miss Stacy is here.
- Davy dear, don't sail the peapods in the water bucket. . .go out to
- the trough. Oh, I do hope it will be fine Thursday, and I think it
- will, for Uncle Abe said last night when he called at Mr. Harrison's,
- that it was going to rain most of this week."
-
- "That's a good sign," agreed Marilla.
-
- Anne ran across to Orchard Slope that evening to tell the news to Diana,
- who was also very much excited over it, and they discussed the matter
- in the hammock swung under the big willow in the Barry garden.
-
- "Oh, Anne, mayn't I help you cook the dinner?" implored Diana.
- "You know I can make splendid lettuce salad."
-
- "Indeed you, may" said Anne unselfishly. "And I shall want you to
- help me decorate too. I mean to have the parlor simply a BOWER of
- blossoms. . .and the dining table is to be adorned with wild roses.
- Oh, I do hope everything will go smoothly. Mrs. Morgan's heroines
- NEVER get into scrapes or are taken at a disadvantage, and they
- are always so selfpossessed and such good housekeepers. They seem
- to be BORN good housekeepers. You remember that Gertrude in
- `Edgewood Days' kept house for her father when she was only eight
- years old. When I was eight years old I hardly knew how to do a
- thing except bring up children. Mrs. Morgan must be an authority
- on girls when she has written so much about them, and I do want her
- to have a good opinion of us. I've imagined it all out a dozen
- different ways. . .what she'll look like, and what she'll say, and
- what I'll say. And I'm so anxious about my nose. There are seven
- freckles on it, as you can see. They came at the A.V.I S. picnic,
- when I went around in the sun without my hat. I suppose it's
- ungrateful of me to worry over them, when I should be thankful
- they're not spread all over my face as they once were; but I do
- wish they hadn't come. . .all Mrs. Morgan's heroines have such
- perfect complexions. I can't recall a freckled one among them."
-
- "Yours are not very noticeable," comforted Diana. "Try a little
- lemon juice on them tonight."
-
- The next day Anne made her pies and lady fingers, did up her muslin
- dress, and swept and dusted every room in the house. . .a quite
- unnecessary proceeding, for Green Gables was, as usual, in the
- apple pie order dear to Marilla's heart. But Anne felt that a
- fleck of dust would be a desecration in a house that was to be
- honored by a visit from Charlotte E. Morgan. She even cleaned out
- the "catch-all" closet under the stairs, although there was not the
- remotest possibility of Mrs. Morgan's seeing its interior.
-
- "But I want to FEEL that it is in perfect order, even if she isn't
- to see it," Anne told Marilla. "You know, in her book `Golden Keys,'
- she makes her two heroines Alice and Louisa take for their motto
- that verse of Longfellow's,
-
- "`In the elder days of art
- Builders wrought with greatest care
- Each minute and unseen part,
- For the gods see everywhere,'
-
- and so they always kept their cellar stairs scrubbed and never
- forgot to sweep under the beds. I should have a guilty conscience
- if I thought this closet was in disorder when Mrs. Morgan was in
- the house. Ever since we read `Golden Keys,' last April, Diana and
- I have taken that verse for our motto too."
-
- That night John Henry Carter and Davy between them contrived to execute
- the two white roosters, and Anne dressed them, the usually distasteful
- task glorified in her eyes by the destination of the plump birds.
-
- "I don't like picking fowls," she told Marilla, "but isn't it fortunate
- we don't have to put our souls into what our hands may be doing?
- I've been picking chickens with my hands but in imagination I've
- been roaming the Milky Way."
-
- "I thought you'd scattered more feathers over the floor than usual,"
- remarked Marilla.
-
- Then Anne put Davy to bed and made him promise that he would behave
- perfectly the next day.
-
- "If I'm as good as good can be all day tomorrow will you let me be
- just as bad as I like all the next day?" asked Davy.
-
- "I couldn't do that," said Anne discreetly, "but I'll take you and
- Dora for a row in the flat right to the bottom of the pond, and
- we'll go ashore on the sandhills and have a picnic."
-
- "It's a bargain," said Davy. "I'll be good, you bet. I meant to
- go over to Mr. Harrison's and fire peas from my new popgun at
- Ginger but another day'll do as well. I espect it will be just
- like Sunday, but a picnic at the shore'll make up for THAT."
-
-
-
-
- XVII
-
- A Chapter of Accidents
-
-
- Anne woke three times in the night and made pilgrimages to her
- window to make sure that Uncle Abe's prediction was not coming true.
- Finally the morning dawned pearly and lustrous in a sky full of
- silver sheen and radiance, and the wonderful day had arrived.
-
- Diana appeared soon after breakfast, with a basket of flowers over
- one arm and HER muslin dress over the other. . .for it would not
- do to don it until all the dinner preparations were completed.
- Meanwhile she wore her afternoon pink print and a lawn apron
- fearfully and wonderfully ruffled and frilled; and very neat and
- pretty and rosy she was.
-
- "You look simply sweet," said Anne admiringly.
-
- Diana sighed.
-
- "But I've had to let out every one of my dresses AGAIN. I weigh
- four pounds more than I did in July. Anne, WHERE will this end?
- Mrs. Morgan's heroines are all tall and slender."
-
- "Well, let's forget our troubles and think of our mercies," said
- Anne gaily. "Mrs. Allan says that whenever we think of anything
- that is a trial to us we should also think of something nice that
- we can set over against it. If you are slightly too plump you've
- got the dearest dimples; and if I have a freckled nose the SHAPE of
- it is all right. Do you think the lemon juice did any good?"
-
- "Yes, I really think it did," said Diana critically; and, much
- elated, Anne led the way to the garden, which was full of airy
- shadows and wavering golden lights.
-
- "We'll decorate the parlor first. We have plenty of time, for
- Priscilla said they'd be here about twelve or half past at the
- latest, so we'll have dinner at one."
-
- There may have been two happier and more excited girls somewhere
- in Canada or the United States at that moment, but I doubt it.
- Every snip of the scissors, as rose and peony and bluebell fell,
- seemed to chirp, "Mrs. Morgan is coming today." Anne wondered
- how Mr. Harrison COULD go on placidly mowing hay in the field
- across the lane, just as if nothing were going to happen.
-
- The parlor at Green Gables was a rather severe and gloomy apartment,
- with rigid horsehair furniture, stiff lace curtains, and white
- antimacassars that were always laid at a perfectly correct angle,
- except at such times as they clung to unfortunate people's buttons.
- Even Anne had never been able to infuse much grace into it, for
- Marilla would not permit any alterations. But it is wonderful
- what flowers can accomplish if you give them a fair chance;
- when Anne and Diana finished with the room you would not have
- recognized it.
-
- A great blue bowlful of snowballs overflowed on the polished table.
- The shining black mantelpiece was heaped with roses and ferns.
- Every shelf of the what-not held a sheaf of bluebells; the dark
- corners on either side of the grate were lighted up with jars full
- of glowing crimson peonies, and the grate itself was aflame with
- yellow poppies. All this splendor and color, mingled with the
- sunshine falling through the honeysuckle vines at the windows in a
- leafy riot of dancing shadows over walls and floor, made of the
- usually dismal little room the veritable "bower" of Anne's
- imagination, and even extorted a tribute of admiration from
- Marilla, who came in to criticize and remained to praise.
-
- "Now, we must set the table," said Anne, in the tone of a priestess
- about to perform some sacred rite in honor of a divinity. "We'll
- have a big vaseful of wild roses in the center and one single rose
- in front of everybody's plate -- and a special bouquet of rosebuds
- only by Mrs. Morgan's -- an allusion to `The Rosebud Garden' you know."
-
- The table was set in the sitting room, with Marilla's finest linen
- and the best china, glass, and silver. You may be perfectly
- certain that every article placed on it was polished or scoured to
- the highest possible perfection of gloss and glitter.
-
- Then the girls tripped out to the kitchen, which was filled with
- appetizing odors emanating from the oven, where the chickens were
- already sizzling splendidly. Anne prepared the potatoes and Diana
- got the peas and beans ready. Then, while Diana shut herself into
- the pantry to compound the lettuce salad, Anne, whose cheeks were
- already beginning to glow crimson, as much with excitement as from
- the heat of the fire, prepared the bread sauce for the chickens,
- minced her onions for the soup, and finally whipped the cream for
- her lemon pies.
-
- And what about Davy all this time? Was he redeeming his promise to
- be good? He was, indeed. To be sure, he insisted on remaining in
- the kitchen, for his curiosity wanted to see all that went on. But
- as he sat quietly in a corner, busily engaged in untying the knots
- in a piece of herring net he had brought home from his last trip to
- the shore, nobody objected to this.
-
- At half past eleven the lettuce salad was made, the golden circles
- of the pies were heaped with whipped cream, and everything was
- sizzling and bubbling that ought to sizzle and bubble.
-
- "We'd better go and dress now," said Anne, "for they may be here by twelve.
- We must have dinner at sharp one, for the soup must be served as soon as
- it's done."
-
- Serious indeed were the toilet rites presently performed in the
- east gable. Anne peered anxiously at her nose and rejoiced to see
- that its freckles were not at all prominent, thanks either to the
- lemon juice or to the unusual flush on her cheeks. When they were
- ready they looked quite as sweet and trim and girlish as ever did
- any of "Mrs. Morgan's heroines."
-
- "I do hope I'll be able to say something once in a while, and not
- sit like a mute," said Diana anxiously. "All Mrs. Morgan's
- heroines converse so beautifully. But I'm afraid I'll be
- tongue-tied and stupid. And I'll be sure to say `I seen.'
- I haven't often said it since Miss Stacy taught here; but in
- moments of excitement it's sure to pop out. Anne, if I were
- to say `I seen' before Mrs. Morgan I'd die of mortification.
- And it would be almost as bad to have nothing to say."
-
- "I'm nervous about a good many things," said Anne, "but I
- don't think there is much fear that I won't be able to talk"
-
- And, to do her justice, there wasn't.
-
- Anne shrouded her muslin glories in a big apron and went down to
- concoct her soup. Marilla had dressed herself and the twins, and
- looked more excited than she had ever been known to look before.
- At half past twelve the Allans and Miss Stacy came. Everything was
- going well but Anne was beginning to feel nervous. It was surely
- time for Priscilla and Mrs. Morgan to arrive. She made frequent
- trips to the gate and looked as anxiously down the lane as ever her
- namesake in the Bluebeard story peered from the tower casement.
-
- "Suppose they don't come at all?" she said piteously.
-
- "Don't suppose it. It would be too mean," said Diana, who, however,
- was beginning to have uncomfortable misgivings on the subject.
-
- "Anne," said Marilla, coming out from the parlor, "Miss Stacy wants
- to see Miss Barry's willowware platter."
-
- Anne hastened to the sitting room closet to get the platter. She
- had, in accordance with her promise to Mrs. Lynde, written to Miss
- Barry of Charlottetown, asking for the loan of it. Miss Barry was
- an old friend of Anne's, and she promply sent the platter out, with
- a letter exhorting Anne to be very careful of it, for she had paid
- twenty dollars for it. The platter had served its purpose at the
- Aid bazaar and had then been returned to the Green Gables closet,
- for Anne would not trust anybody but herself to take it back to town.
-
- She carried the platter carefully to the front door where her
- guests were enjoying the cool breeze that blew up from the brook.
- It was examined and admired; then, just as Anne had taken it back
- into her own hands, a terrific crash and clatter sounded from the
- kitchen pantry. Marilla, Diana, and Anne fled out, the latter
- pausing only long enough to set the precious platter hastily down
- on the second step of the stairs.
-
- When they reached the pantry a truly harrowing spectacle met their
- eyes. . .a guilty looking small boy scrambling down from the
- table, with his clean print blouse liberally plastered with yellow
- filling, and on the table the shattered remnants of what had been
- two brave, becreamed lemon pies.
-
- Davy had finished ravelling out his herring net and had wound the
- twine into a ball. Then he had gone into the pantry to put it up
- on the shelf above the table, where he already kept a score or so
- of similar balls, which, so far as could be discovered, served no
- useful purpose save to yield the joy of possession. Davy had to
- climb on the table and reach over to the shelf at a dangerous
- angle. . .something he had been forbidden by Marilla to do, as he
- had come to grief once before in the experiment. The result in
- this instance was disastrous. Davy slipped and came sprawling
- squarely down on the lemon pies. His clean blouse was ruined for
- that time and the pies for all time. It is, however, an ill wind
- that blows nobody good, and the pig was eventually the gainer by
- Davy's mischance.
-
- "Davy Keith," said Marilla, shaking him by the shoulder, "didn't I
- forbid you to climb up on that table again? Didn't I?"
-
- "I forgot," whimpered Davy. "You've told me not to do such an
- awful lot of things that I can't remember them all."
-
- "Well, you march upstairs and stay there till after dinner.
- Perhaps you'll get them sorted out in your memory by that time.
- No, Anne, never you mind interceding for him. I'm not punishing
- him because he spoiled your pies. . .that was an accident.
- I'm punishing him for his disobedience. Go, Davy, I say."
-
- "Ain't I to have any dinner?" wailed Davy.
-
- "You can come down after dinner is over and have yours in the kitchen."
-
- "Oh, all right," said Davy, somewhat comforted. "I know Anne'll
- save some nice bones for me, won't you, Anne? 'Cause you know I
- didn't mean to fall on the pies. Say, Anne, since they ARE spoiled
- can't I take some of the pieces upstairs with me?"
-
- "No, no lemon pie for you, Master Davy," said Marilla, pushing him
- toward the hall."
-
- What shall we do for dessert?" asked Anne, looking regretfully at
- the wreck and ruin.
-
- "Get out a crock of strawberry preserves," said Marilla consolingly.
- "There's plenty of whipped cream left in the bowl for it."
-
- One o'clock came. . .but no Priscilla or Mrs. Morgan. Anne was in
- an agony. Everything was done to a turn and the soup was just
- what soup should be, but couldn't be depended on to remain so for
- any length of time.
-
- "I don't believe they're coming after all," said Marilla crossly.
-
- Anne and Diana sought comfort in each other's eyes.
-
- At half past one Marilla again emerged from the parlor.
-
- "Girls, we MUST have dinner. Everybody is hungry and it's no use
- waiting any longer. Priscilla and Mrs. Morgan are not coming,
- that's plain, and nothing is being improved by waiting."
-
- Anne and Diana set about lifting the dinner, with all the zest gone
- out of the performance.
-
- "I don't believe I'll be able to eat a mouthful," said Diana dolefully.
-
- "Nor I. But I hope everything will be nice for Miss Stacy's and
- Mr. and Mrs. Allan's sakes," said Anne listlessly.
-
- When Diana dished the peas she tasted them and a very peculiar
- expression crossed her face.
-
- "Anne, did YOU put sugar in these peas?"
-
- "Yes," said Anne, mashing the potatoes with the air of one expected
- to do her duty. "I put a spoonful of sugar in. We always do.
- Don't you like it?"
-
- "But _I_ put a spoonful in too, when I set them on the stove," said Diana.
-
- Anne dropped her masher and tasted the peas also. Then she made a grimace.
-
- "How awful! I never dreamed you had put sugar in, because I knew
- your mother never does. I happened to think of it, for a wonder. . .
- I'm always forgetting it. . .so I popped a spoonful in."
-
- "It's a case of too many cooks, I guess," said Marilla, who
- had listened to this dialogue with a rather guilty expression.
- "I didn't think you'd remember about the sugar, Anne, for I'm
- perfectly certain you never did before. . .so _I_ put in a spoonful."
-
- The guests in the parlor heard peal after peal of laughter from the
- kitchen, but they never knew what the fun was about. There were no
- green peas on the dinner table that day, however.
-
- "Well," said Anne, sobering down again with a sigh of recollection,
- "we have the salad anyhow and I don't think anything has happened
- to the beans. Let's carry the things in and get it over."
-
- It cannot be said that that dinner was a notable success socially.
- The Allans and Miss Stacy exerted themselves to save the situation
- and Marilla's customary placidity was not noticeably ruffled.
- But Anne and Diana, between their disappointment and the reaction
- from their excitement of the forenoon, could neither talk nor eat.
- Anne tried heroically to bear her part in the conversation for the
- sake of her guests; but all the sparkle had been quenched in her
- for the time being, and, in spite of her love for the Allans and
- Miss Stacy, she couldn't help thinking how nice it would be when
- everybody had gone home and she could bury her weariness and
- disappointment in the pillows of the east gable.
-
- There is an old proverb that really seems at times to be inspired
- . . ."it never rains but it pours." The measure of that day's
- tribulations was not yet full. Just as Mr. Allan had finished
- returning thanks there arose a strange, ominous sound on the
- stairs, as of some hard, heavy object bounding from step to step,
- finishing up with a grand smash at the bottom. Everybody ran out
- into the hall. Anne gave a shriek of dismay.
-
- At the bottom of the stairs lay a big pink conch shell amid the
- fragments of what had been Miss Barry's platter; and at the top of
- the stairs knelt a terrified Davy, gazing down with wide-open eyes
- at the havoc.
-
- "Davy," said Marilla ominously, "did you throw that conch down ON PURPOSE?"
-
- "No, I never did," whimpered Davy. "I was just kneeling here,
- quiet as quiet, to watch you folks through the bannisters, and my
- foot struck that old thing and pushed it off. . .and I'm awful
- hungry. . .and I do wish you'd lick a fellow and have done with it,
- instead of always sending him upstairs to miss all the fun."
-
- "Don't blame Davy," said Anne, gathering up the fragments with
- trembling fingers. "It was my fault. I set that platter there and
- forgot all about it. I am properly punished for my carelessness;
- but oh, what will Miss Barry say?"
-
- "Well, you know she only bought it, so it isn't the same as if it
- was an heirloom," said Diana, trying to console.
-
- The guests went away soon after, feeling that it was the most tactful
- thing to do, and Anne and Diana washed the dishes, talking less than
- they had ever been known to do before. Then Diana went home with a
- headache and Anne went with another to the east gable, where she
- stayed until Marilla came home from the post office at sunset,
- with a letter from Priscilla, written the day before. Mrs. Morgan
- had sprained her ankle so severely that she could not leave her room.
-
- "And oh, Anne dear," wrote Priscilla, "I'm so sorry, but I'm afraid
- we won't get up to Green Gables at all now, for by the time Aunty's
- ankle is well she will have to go back to Toronto. She has to be
- there by a certain date."
-
- "Well," sighed Anne, laying the letter down on the red sandstone
- step of the back porch, where she was sitting, while the twilight
- rained down out of a dappled sky, "I always thought it was too good
- to be true that Mrs. Morgan should really come. But there. . .that
- speech sounds as pessimistic as Miss Eliza Andrews and I'm ashamed
- of making it. After all, it was NOT too good to be true. . .things
- just as good and far better are coming true for me all the time.
- And I suppose the events of today have a funny side too.
- Perhaps when Diana and I are old and gray we shall be able
- to laugh over them. But I feel that I can't expect to do it
- before then, for it has truly been a bitter disappointment."
-
- "You'll probably have a good many more and worse disappointments
- than that before you get through life," said Marilla, who honestly
- thought she was making a comforting speech. "It seems to me, Anne,
- that you are never going to outgrow your fashion of setting your
- heart so on things and then crashing down into despair because you
- don't get them."
-
- "I know I'm too much inclined that, way" agreed Anne ruefully.
- "When I think something nice is going to happen I seem to fly right
- up on the wings of anticipation; and then the first thing I realize
- I drop down to earth with a thud. But really, Marilla, the flying
- part IS glorious as long as it lasts. . .it's like soaring through
- a sunset. I think it almost pays for the thud."
-
- "Well, maybe it does," admitted Marilla. "I'd rather walk calmly
- along and do without both flying and thud. But everybody has her
- own way of living. . .I used to think there was only one right way
- . . .but since I've had you and the twins to bring up I don't feel
- so sure of it. What are you going to do about Miss Barry's platter?"
-
- "Pay her back the twenty dollars she paid for it, I suppose.
- I'm so thankful it wasn't a cherished heirloom because then
- no money could replace it."
-
- "Maybe you could find one like it somewhere and buy it for her."
-
- "I'm afraid not. Platters as old as that are very scarce. Mrs.
- Lynde couldn't find one anywhere for the supper. I only wish I
- could, for of course Miss Barry would just as soon have one platter
- as another, if both were equally old and genuine. Marilla, look at
- that big star over Mr. Harrison's maple grove, with all that holy
- hush of silvery sky about it. It gives me a feeling that is like
- a prayer. After all, when one can see stars and skies like that,
- little disappointments and accidents can't matter so much, can they?"
-
- "Where's Davy?" said Marilla, with an indifferent glance at the star.
-
- "In bed. I've promised to take him and Dora to the shore for a
- picnic tomorrow. Of course, the original agreement was that he
- must be good. But he TRIED to be good. . .and I hadn't the heart
- to disappoint him."
-
- "You'll drown yourself or the twins, rowing about the pond in that flat,"
- grumbled Marilla. "I've lived here for sixty years and I've never been
- on the pond yet."
-
- "Well, it's never too late to mend," said Anne roguishly.
- "Suppose you come with us tomorrow. We'll shut Green Gables up
- and spend the whole day at the shore, daffing the world aside."
-
- "No, thank you," said Marilla, with indignant emphasis. "I'd be a
- nice sight, wouldn't I, rowing down the pond in a flat? I think I
- hear Rachel pronouncing on it. There's Mr. Harrison driving away
- somewhere. Do you suppose there is any truth in the gossip that
- Mr. Harrison is going to see Isabella Andrews?"
-
- "No, I'm sure there isn't. He just called there one evening
- on business with Mr. Harmon Andrews and Mrs. Lynde saw him and
- said she knew he was courting because he had a white collar on.
- I don't believe Mr. Harrison will ever marry. He seems to have
- a prejudice against marriage."
-
- "Well, you can never tell about those old bachelors. And if he had
- a white collar on I'd agree with Rachel that it looks suspicious,
- for I'm sure he never was seen with one before."
-
- "I think he only put it on because he wanted to conclude a business
- deal with Harmon Andrews," said Anne. "I've heard him say that's
- the only time a man needs to be particular about his appearance,
- because if he looks prosperous the party of the second part won't
- be so likely to try to cheat him. I really feel sorry for Mr.
- Harrison; I don't believe he feels satisfied with his life. It
- must be very lonely to have no one to care about except a parrot,
- don't you think? But I notice Mr. Harrison doesn't like to be
- pitied. Nobody does, I imagine."
-
- "There's Gilbert coming up the lane," said Marilla. "If he wants
- you to go for a row on the pond mind you put on your coat and
- rubbers. There's a heavy dew tonight."
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
-
- An Adventure on the Tory Road
-
-
- "Anne," said Davy, sitting up in bed and propping his chin on
- his hands, "Anne, where is sleep? People go to sleep every night,
- and of course I know it's the place where I do the things I dream,
- but I want to know WHERE it is and how I get there and back without
- knowing anything about it. . .and in my nighty too. Where is it?"
-
- Anne was kneeling at the west gable window watching the sunset sky that
- was like a great flower with petals of crocus and a heart of fiery yellow.
- She turned her head at Davy's question and answered dreamily,
-
- "`Over the mountains of the moon,
- Down the valley of the shadow.'"
-
-
- Paul Irving would have known the meaning of this, or made a meaning
- out of it for himself, if he didn't; but practical Davy, who, as
- Anne often despairingly remarked, hadn't a particle of imagination,
- was only puzzled and disgusted.
-
- "Anne, I believe you're just talking nonsense."
-
- "Of course, I was, dear boy. Don't you know that it is only very
- foolish folk who talk sense all the time?"
-
- "Well, I think you might give a sensible answer when I ask a
- sensible question," said Davy in an injured tone.
-
- "Oh, you are too little to understand," said Anne. But she felt rather
- ashamed of saying it; for had she not, in keen remembrance of many
- similar snubs administered in her own early years, solemnly vowed
- that she would never tell any child it was too little to understand?
- Yet here she was doing it. . .so wide sometimes is the gulf between
- theory and practice.
-
- "Well, I'm doing my best to grow," said Davy, "but it's a thing you
- can't hurry much. If Marilla wasn't so stingy with her jam I believe
- I'd grow a lot faster."
-
- "Marilla is not stingy, Davy," said Anne severely. "It is very
- ungrateful of you to say such a thing."
-
- "There's another word that means the same thing and sounds a lot
- better, but I don't just remember it," said Davy, frowning intently.
- "I heard Marilla say she was it, herself, the other day."
-
- "If you mean ECONOMICAL, it's a VERY different thing from being stingy.
- It is an excellent trait in a person if she is economical.
- If Marilla had been stingy she wouldn't have taken you and Dora
- when your mother died. Would you have liked to live with Mrs. Wiggins?"
-
- "You just bet I wouldn't!" Davy was emphatic on that point. "Nor I
- don't want to go out to Uncle Richard neither. I'd far rather live
- here, even if Marilla is that long-tailed word when it comes to jam,
- 'cause YOU'RE here, Anne. Say, Anne, won't you tell me a story
- 'fore I go to sleep? I don't want a fairy story. They're all
- right for girls, I s'pose, but I want something exciting. . .lots
- of killing and shooting in it, and a house on fire, and in'trusting
- things like that."
-
- Fortunately for Anne, Marilla called out at this moment from her room.
-
- "Anne, Diana's signaling at a great rate. You'd better see what she wants."
-
- Anne ran to the east gable and saw flashes of light coming through
- the twilight from Diana's window in groups of five, which meant,
- according to their old childish code, "Come over at once for I have
- something important to reveal." Anne threw her white shawl over her
- head and hastened through the Haunted Wood and across Mr. Bell's
- pasture corner to Orchard Slope.
-
- "I've good news for you, Anne," said Diana. "Mother and I have
- just got home from Carmody, and I saw Mary Sentner from Spencer
- vale in Mr. Blair's store. She says the old Copp girls on the
- Tory Road have a willow-ware platter and she thinks it's exactly
- like the one we had at the supper. She says they'll likely sell it,
- for Martha Copp has never been known to keep anything she COULD sell;
- but if they won't there's a platter at Wesley Keyson's at Spencervale
- and she knows they'd sell it, but she isn't sure it's just the same
- kind as Aunt Josephine's."
-
- "I'll go right over to Spencervale after it tomorrow," said Anne
- resolutely, "and you must come with me. It will be such a weight
- off my mind, for I have to go to town day after tomorrow and how
- can I face your Aunt Josephine without a willow-ware platter?
- It would be even worse than the time I had to confess about
- jumping on the spare room bed."
-
- Both girls laughed over the old memory. . .concerning which, if
- any of my readers are ignorant and curious, I must refer them to
- Anne's earlier history.
-
- The next afternoon the girls fared forth on their platter hunting
- expedition. It was ten miles to Spencervale and the day was not
- especially pleasant for traveling. It was very warm and windless,
- and the dust on the road was such as might have been expected after
- six weeks of dry weather.
-
- "Oh, I do wish it would rain soon," sighed Anne. "Everything is so
- parched up. The poor fields just seem pitiful to me and the trees
- seem to be stretching out their hands pleading for rain. As for my
- garden, it hurts me every time I go into it. I suppose I shouldn't
- complain about a garden when the farmers' crops are suffering so.
- Mr. Harrison says his pastures are so scorched up that his poor
- cows can hardly get a bite to eat and he feels guilty of cruelty
- to animals every time he meets their eyes."
-
- After a wearisome drive the girls reached Spencervale and turned
- down the "Tory" Road. . .a green, solitary highway where the strips
- of grass between the wheel tracks bore evidence to lack of travel.
- Along most of its extent it was lined with thick-set young spruces
- crowding down to the roadway, with here and there a break where the
- back field of a Spencervale farm came out to the fence or an expanse
- of stumps was aflame with fireweed and goldenrod.
-
- "Why is it called the Tory Road?" asked Anne.
-
- "Mr. Allan says it is on the principle of calling a place a grove
- because there are no trees in it," said Diana, "for nobody lives
- along the road except the Copp girls and old Martin Bovyer at the
- further end, who is a Liberal. The Tory government ran the road
- through when they were in power just to show they were doing something."
-
- Diana's father was a Liberal, for which reason she and Anne never
- discussed politics. Green Gables folk had always been Conservatives.
-
- Finally the girls came to the old Copp homestead. . .a place of
- such exceeding external neatness that even Green Gables would have
- suffered by contrast. The house was a very old-fashioned one,
- situated on a slope, which fact had necessitated the building of a
- stone basement under one end. The house and out-buildings were all
- whitewashed to a condition of blinding perfection and not a weed
- was visible in the prim kitchen garden surrounded by its white paling.
-
- "The shades are all down," said Diana ruefully. "I believe that nobody
- is home."
-
- This proved to be the case. The girls looked at each other in perplexity.
-
- "I don't know what to do," said Anne. "If I were sure the platter
- was the right kind I would not mind waiting until they came home.
- But if it isn't it may be too late to go to Wesley Keyson's
- afterward."
-
- Diana looked at a certain little square window over the basement.
-
- "That is the pantry window, I feel sure," she said, "because this
- house is just like Uncle Charles' at Newbridge, and that is their
- pantry window. The shade isn't down, so if we climbed up on the
- roof of that little house we could look into the pantry and might
- be able to see the platter. Do you think it would be any harm?"
-
- "No, I don't think so," decided Anne, after due reflection, "since
- our motive is not idle curiosity."
-
- This important point of ethics being settled, Anne prepared to mount the
- aforesaid "little house," a construction of lathes, with a peaked roof,
- which had in times past served as a habitation for ducks. The Copp girls
- had given up keeping ducks. . ."because they were such untidy birds". . .
- and the house had not been in use for some years, save as an abode of
- correction for setting hens. Although scrupulously whitewashed it had
- become somewhat shaky, and Anne felt rather dubious as she scrambled up
- from the vantage point of a keg placed on a box.
-
- "I'm afraid it won't bear my weight," she said as she gingerly
- stepped on the roof.
-
- "Lean on the window sill," advised Diana, and Anne accordingly leaned.
- Much to her delight, she saw, as she peered through the pane,
- a willow-ware platter, exactly such as she was in quest of,
- on the shelf in front of the window. So much she saw before the
- catastrophe came. In her joy Anne forgot the precarious nature
- of her footing, incautiously ceased to lean on the window sill,
- gave an impulsive little hop of pleasure. . .and the next moment she
- had crashed through the roof up to her armpits, and there she hung,
- quite unable to extricate herself. Diana dashed into the duck
- house and, seizing her unfortunate friend by the waist, tried to
- draw her down.
-
- "Ow. . .don't," shrieked poor Anne. "There are some long
- splinters sticking into me. See if you can put something under my
- feet. . .then perhaps I can draw myself up."
-
- Diana hastily dragged in the previously mentioned keg and Anne
- found that it was just sufficiently high to furnish a secure
- resting place for her feet. But she could not release herself.
-
- "Could I pull you out if I crawled up?" suggested Diana.
-
- Anne shook her head hopelessly.
-
- "No. . .the splinters hurt too badly. If you can find an axe you
- might chop me out, though. Oh dear, I do really begin to believe
- that I was born under an ill-omened star."
-
- Diana searched faithfully but no axe was to be found.
-
- "I'll have to go for help," she said, returning to the prisoner.
-
- "No, indeed, you won't," said Anne vehemently. "If you do the story
- of this will get out everywhere and I shall be ashamed to show my face.
- No, we must just wait until the Copp girls come home and bind them
- to secrecy. They'll know where the axe is and get me out.
- I'm not uncomfortable, as long as I keep perfectly still. . .
- not uncomfortable in BODY I mean. I wonder what the Copp girls
- value this house at. I shall have to pay for the damage I've done,
- but I wouldn't mind that if I were only sure they would understand
- my motive in peeping in at their pantry window. My sole comfort is
- that the platter is just the kind I want and if Miss Copp will only
- sell it to me I shall be resigned to what has happened."
-
- "What if the Copp girls don't come home until after night. . .or
- till tomorrow?" suggested Diana.
-
- "If they're not back by sunset you'll have to go for other
- assistance, I suppose," said Anne reluctantly, "but you mustn't go
- until you really have to. Oh dear, this is a dreadful predicament.
- I wouldn't mind my misfortunes so much if they were romantic, as
- Mrs. Morgan's heroines' always are, but they are always just
- simply ridiculous. Fancy what the Copp girls will think when they
- drive into their yard and see a girl's head and shoulders sticking
- out of the roof of one of their outhouses. Listen. . .is that a
- wagon? No, Diana, I believe it is thunder."
-
- Thunder it was undoubtedly, and Diana, having made a hasty
- pilgrimage around the house, returned to announce that a very black
- cloud was rising rapidly in the northwest.
-
- "I believe we're going to have a heavy thunder-shower," she exclaimed
- in dismay, "Oh, Anne, what will we do?"
-
- "We must prepare for it," said Anne tranquilly. A thunderstorm
- seemed a trifle in comparison with what had already happened.
- "You'd better drive the horse and buggy into that open shed.
- Fortunately my parasol is in the buggy. Here. . .take my hat
- with you. Marilla told me I was a goose to put on my best hat
- to come to the Tory Road and she was right, as she always is."
-
- Diana untied the pony and drove into the shed, just as the first
- heavy drops of rain fell. There she sat and watched the resulting
- downpour, which was so thick and heavy that she could hardly see
- Anne through it, holding the parasol bravely over her bare head.
- There was not a great deal of thunder, but for the best part of an
- hour the rain came merrily down. Occasionally Anne slanted back
- her parasol and waved an encouraging hand to her friend; But
- conversation at that distance was quite out of the question.
- Finally the rain ceased, the sun came out, and Diana ventured
- across the puddles of the yard.
-
- "Did you get very wet?" she asked anxiously.
-
- "Oh, no," returned Anne cheerfully. "My head and shoulders are
- quite dry and my skirt is only a little damp where the rain beat
- through the lathes. Don't pity me, Diana, for I haven't minded it
- at all. I kept thinking how much good the rain will do and how glad
- my garden must be for it, and imagining what the flowers and buds
- would think when the drops began to fall. I imagined out a most
- interesting dialogue between the asters and the sweet peas and the
- wild canaries in the lilac bush and the guardian spirit of the garden.
- When I go home I mean to write it down. I wish I had a pencil and
- paper to do it now, because I daresay I'll forget the best parts
- before I reach home."
-
- Diana the faithful had a pencil and discovered a sheet of wrapping
- paper in the box of the buggy. Anne folded up her dripping
- parasol, put on her hat, spread the wrapping paper on a shingle
- Diana handed up, and wrote out her garden idyl under conditions
- that could hardly be considered as favorable to literature.
- Nevertheless, the result was quite pretty, and Diana was
- "enraptured" when Anne read it to her.
-
- "Oh, Anne, it's sweet. . .just sweet. DO send it to the `Canadian Woman.'"
-
- Anne shook her head.
-
- "Oh, no, it wouldn't be suitable at all. There is no PLOT in it,
- you see. It's just a string of fancies. I like writing such things,
- but of course nothing of the sort would ever do for publication,
- for editors insist on plots, so Priscilla says. Oh, there's
- Miss Sarah Copp now. PLEASE, Diana, go and explain."
-
- Miss Sarah Copp was a small person, garbed in shabby black, with a hat
- chosen less for vain adornment than for qualities that would wear well.
- She looked as amazed as might be expected on seeing the curious tableau
- in her yard, but when she heard Diana's explanation she was all sympathy.
- She hurriedly unlocked the back door, produced the axe, and with a few
- skillfull blows set Anne free. The latter, somewhat tired and stiff,
- ducked down into the interior of her prison and thankfully emerged
- into liberty once more.
-
- "Miss Copp," she said earnestly. "I assure you I looked into your
- pantry window only to discover if you had a willow-ware platter.
- I didn't see anything else -- I didn't LOOK for anything else."
-
- "Bless you, that's all right," said Miss Sarah amiably. "You
- needn't worry -- there's no harm done. Thank goodness, we Copps
- keep our pantries presentable at all times and don't care who sees
- into them. As for that old duckhouse, I'm glad it's smashed, for
- maybe now Martha will agree to having it taken down. She never
- would before for fear it might come in handy sometime and I've had to
- whitewash it every spring. But you might as well argue with a post
- as with Martha. She went to town today -- I drove her to the station.
- And you want to buy my platter. Well, what will you give for it?"
-
- "Twenty dollars," said Anne, who was never meant to match business
- wits with a Copp, or she would not have offered her price at the start.
-
- "Well, I'll see," said Miss Sarah cautiously. "That platter is mine
- fortunately, or I'd never dare to sell it when Martha wasn't here.
- As it is, I daresay she'll raise a fuss. Martha's the boss
- of this establishment I can tell you. I'm getting awful tired of
- living under another woman's thumb. But come in, come in. You
- must be real tired and hungry. I'll do the best I can for you in
- the way of tea but I warn you not to expect anything but bread and
- butter and some cowcumbers. Martha locked up all the cake and
- cheese and preserves afore she went. She always does, because she
- says I'm too extravagant with them if company comes."
-
- The girls were hungry enough to do justice to any fare, and they
- enjoyed Miss Sarah's excellent bread and butter and "cowcumbers"
- thoroughly. When the meal was over Miss Sarah said,
-
- "I don't know as I mind selling the platter. But it's worth
- twenty-five dollars. It's a very old platter."
-
- Diana gave Anne's foot a gentle kick under the table, meaning,
- "Don't agree -- she'll let it go for twenty if you hold out."
- But Anne was not minded to take any chances in regard to that
- precious platter. She promptly agreed to give twenty-five and
- Miss Sarah looked as if she felt sorry she hadn't asked for thirty.
-
- "Well, I guess you may have it. I want all the money I can scare
- up just now. The fact is -- " Miss Sarah threw up her head
- importantly, with a proud flush on her thin cheeks -- "I'm going
- to be married -- to Luther Wallace. He wanted me twenty years ago.
- I liked him real well but he was poor then and father packed him off.
- I s'pose I shouldn't have let him go so meek but I was timid and
- frightened of father. Besides, I didn't know men were so skurse."
-
- When the girls were safely away, Diana driving and Anne holding
- the coveted platter carefully on her lap, the green, rain-freshened
- solitudes of the Tory Road were enlivened by ripples of girlish laughter.
-
- "I'll amuse your Aunt Josephine with the `strange eventful history'
- of this afternoon when I go to town tomorrow. We've had a rather
- trying time but it's over now. I've got the platter, and that rain
- has laid the dust beautifully. So `all's well that ends well.'"
-
- "We're not home yet," said Diana rather pessimistically, "and
- there's no telling what may happen before we are. You're such
- a girl to have adventures, Anne."
-
- "Having adventures comes natural to some people," said Anne
- serenely. "You just have a gift for them or you haven't."
-
-
-
-
- XIX
-
- Just a Happy Day
-
-
- "After all," Anne had said to Marilla once, "I believe the nicest and
- sweetest days are not those on which anything very splendid or wonderful
- or exciting happens but just those that bring simple little pleasures,
- following one another softly, like pearls slipping off a string."
-
- Life at Green Gables was full of just such days, for Anne's adventures
- and misadventures, like those of other people, did not all happen at once,
- but were sprinkled over the year, with long stretches of harmless, happy
- days between, filled with work and dreams and laughter and lessons.
- Such a day came late in August. In the forenoon Anne and Diana rowed
- the delighted twins down the pond to the sandshore to pick "sweet grass"
- and paddle in the surf, over which the wind was harping an old lyric
- learned when the world was young.
-
- In the afternoon Anne walked down to the old Irving place to see Paul.
- She found him stretched out on the grassy bank beside the thick fir
- grove that sheltered the house on the north, absorbed in a book of
- fairy tales. He sprang up radiantly at sight of her.
-
- "Oh, I'm so glad you've come, teacher," he said eagerly, "because
- Grandma's away. You'll stay and have tea with me, won't you?
- It's so lonesome to have tea all by oneself. YOU know, teacher.
- I've had serious thoughts of asking Young Mary Joe to sit down
- and eat her tea with me, but I expect Grandma wouldn't approve.
- She says the French have to be kept in their place. And anyhow,
- it's difficult to talk with Young Mary Joe. She just laughs and says,
- `Well, yous do beat all de kids I ever knowed.' That isn't my idea
- of conversation."
-
- "Of course I'll stay to tea," said Anne gaily. "I was dying to be
- asked. My mouth has been watering for some more of your grandma's
- delicious shortbread ever since I had tea here before."
-
- Paul looked very sober.
-
- "If it depended on me, teacher," he said, standing before Anne with
- his hands in his pockets and his beautiful little face shadowed with
- sudden care, "You should have shortbread with a right good will.
- But it depends on Mary Joe. I heard Grandma tell her before she
- left that she wasn't to give me any shortcake because it was too
- rich for little boys' stomachs. But maybe Mary Joe will cut some
- for you if I promise I won't eat any. Let us hope for the best."
-
- "Yes, let us," agreed Anne, whom this cheerful philosophy suited
- exactly, "and if Mary Joe proves hard-hearted and won't give me any
- shortbread it doesn't matter in the least, so you are not to worry
- over that."
-
- "You're sure you won't mind if she doesn't?" said Paul anxiously.
-
- "Perfectly sure, dear heart."
-
- "Then I won't worry," said Paul, with a long breath of relief,
- "especially as I really think Mary Joe will listen to reason.
- She's not a naturally unreasonable person, but she has learned
- by experience that it doesn't do to disobey Grandma's orders.
- Grandma is an excellent woman but people must do as she tells them.
- She was very much pleased with me this morning because I managed at
- last to eat all my plateful of porridge. It was a great effort but
- I succeeded. Grandma says she thinks she'll make a man of me yet.
- But, teacher, I want to ask you a very important question.
- You will answer it truthfully, won't you?"
-
- "I'll try," promised Anne.
-
- "Do you think I'm wrong in my upper story?" asked Paul, as if his
- very existence depended on her reply.
-
- "Goodness, no, Paul," exclaimed Anne in amazement. "Certainly
- you're not. What put such an idea into your head?"
-
- "Mary Joe. . .but she didn't know I heard her. Mrs. Peter Sloane's
- hired girl, Veronica, came to see Mary Joe last evening and I heard
- them talking in the kitchen as I was going through the hall.
- I heard Mary Joe say, `Dat Paul, he is de queeres' leetle boy.
- He talks dat queer. I tink dere's someting wrong in his upper story.'
- I couldn't sleep last night for ever so long, thinking of it, and
- wondering if Mary Joe was right. I couldn't bear to ask Grandma
- about it somehow, but I made up my mind I'd ask you. I'm so glad
- you think I'm all right in my upper story."
-
- "Of course you are. Mary Joe is a silly, ignorant girl, and you
- are never to worry about anything she says," said Anne indignantly,
- secretly resolving to give Mrs. Irving a discreet hint as to the
- advisability of restraining Mary Joe's tongue.
-
- "Well, that's a weight off my mind," said Paul. "I'm perfectly
- happy now, teacher, thanks to you. It wouldn't be nice to
- have something wrong in your upper story, would it, teacher?
- I suppose the reason Mary Joe imagines I have is because I tell
- her what I think about things sometimes."
-
- "It is a rather dangerous practice," admitted Anne, out of the
- depths of her own experience.
-
- "Well, by and by I'll tell you the thoughts I told Mary Joe and you
- can see for yourself if there's anything queer in them," said Paul,
- "but I'll wait till it begins to get dark. That is the time I ache
- to tell people things, and when nobody else is handy I just HAVE to
- tell Mary Joe. But after this I won't, if it makes her imagine I'm
- wrong in my upper story. I'll just ache and bear it."
-
- "And if the ache gets too bad you can come up to Green Gables and
- tell me your thoughts," suggested Anne, with all the gravity that
- endeared her to children, who so dearly love to be taken seriously.
-
- "Yes, I will. But I hope Davy won't be there when I go because he
- makes faces at me. I don't mind VERY much because he is such a
- little boy and I am quite a big one, but still it is not pleasant
- to have faces made at you. And Davy makes such terrible ones.
- Sometimes I am frightened he will never get his face straightened
- out again. He makes them at me in church when I ought to be thinking
- of sacred things. Dora likes me though, and I like her, but not so
- well as I did before she told Minnie May Barry that she meant to
- marry me when I grew up. I may marry somebody when I grow up but
- I'm far too young to be thinking of it yet, don't you think, teacher?"
-
- "Rather young," agreed teacher.
-
- "Speaking of marrying, reminds me of another thing that has been
- troubling me of late," continued Paul. "Mrs. Lynde was down here
- one day last week having tea with Grandma, and Grandma made me show
- her my little mother's picture. . .the one father sent me for my
- birthday present. I didn't exactly want to show it to Mrs. Lynde.
- Mrs. Lynde is a good, kind woman, but she isn't the sort of person
- you want to show your mother's picture to. YOU know, teacher.
- But of course I obeyed Grandma. Mrs. Lynde said she was very
- pretty ut kind of actressy looking, and must have been an awful lot
- younger than father. Then she said, `Some of these days your pa
- will be marrying again likely. How will you like to have a new ma,
- Master Paul? ' Well, the idea almost took my breath away, teacher,
- but I wasn't going to let Mrs. Lynde see THAT. I just looked her
- straight in the face. . .like this. . .and I said, `Mrs. Lynde,
- father made a pretty good job of picking out my first mother and I
- could trust him to pick out just as good a one the second time.'
- And I CAN trust him, teacher. But still, I hope, if he ever does
- give me a new mother, he'll ask my opinion about her before it's
- too late. There's Mary Joe coming to call us to tea. I'll go and
- consult with her about the shortbread."
-
- As a result of the "consultation," Mary Joe cut the shortbread and
- added a dish of preserves to the bill of fare. Anne poured the tea
- and she and Paul had a very merry meal in the dim old sitting room
- whose windows were open to the gulf breezes, and they talked so much
- "nonsense" that Mary Joe was quite scandalized and told Veronica
- the next evening that "de school mees" was as queer as Paul.
- After tea Paul took Anne up to his room to show her his
- mother's picture, which had been the mysterious birthday present
- kept by Mrs. Irving in the bookcase. Paul's little low-ceilinged
- room was a soft whirl of ruddy light from the sun that was setting
- over the sea and swinging shadows from the fir trees that grew
- close to the square, deep-set window. From out this soft glow
- and glamor shone a sweet, girlish face, with tender mother eyes,
- that was hanging on the wall at the foot of the bed.
-
- "That's my little mother," said Paul with loving pride. "I got
- Grandma to hang it there where I'd see it as soon as I opened my
- eyes in the morning. I never mind not having the light when I go
- to bed now, because it just seems as if my little mother was right
- here with me. Father knew just what I would like for a birthday
- present, although he never asked me. Isn't it wonderful how much
- fathers DO know?"
-
- "Your mother was very lovely, Paul, and you look a little like her.
- But her eyes and hair are darker than yours."
-
- "My eyes are the same color as father's," said Paul, flying
- about the room to heap all available cushions on the window seat,
- "but father's hair is gray. He has lots of it, but it is gray.
- You see, father is nearly fifty. That's ripe old age, isn't it?
- But it's only OUTSIDE he's old. INSIDE he's just as young as anybody.
- Now, teacher, please sit here; and I'll sit at your feet. May I lay
- my head against your knee? That's the way my little mother and I
- used to sit. Oh, this is real splendid, I think."
-
- "Now, I want to hear those thoughts which Mary Joe pronounces so queer,"
- said Anne, patting the mop of curls at her side. Paul never needed any
- coaxing to tell his thoughts. . .at least, to congenial souls.
-
- "I thought them out in the fir grove one night," he said dreamily.
- "Of course I didn't BELIEVE them but I THOUGHT them. YOU know,
- teacher. And then I wanted to tell them to somebody and there was
- nobody but Mary Joe. Mary Joe was in the pantry setting bread and
- I sat down on the bench beside her and I said, `Mary Joe, do you
- know what I think? I think the evening star is a lighthouse on the
- land where the fairies dwell.' And Mary Joe said, `Well, yous are
- de queer one. Dare ain't no such ting as fairies.' I was very much
- provoked. Of course, I knew there are no fairies; but that needn't
- prevent my thinking there is. You know, teacher. But I tried
- again quite patiently. I said, `Well then, Mary Joe, do you know
- what I think? I think an angel walks over the world after the sun
- sets. . .a great, tall, white angel, with silvery folded wings. . .
- and sings the flowers and birds to sleep. Children can hear him
- if they know how to listen.' Then Mary Joe held up her hands
- all over flour and said, `Well, yous are de queer leetle boy.
- Yous make me feel scare.' And she really did looked scared.
- I went out then and whispered the rest of my thoughts to the garden.
- There was a little birch tree in the garden and it died. Grandma says
- the salt spray killed it; but I think the dryad belonging to it was
- a foolish dryad who wandered away to see the world and got lost.
- And the little tree was so lonely it died of a broken heart."
-
- "And when the poor, foolish little dryad gets tired of the world
- and comes back to her tree HER heart will break," said Anne.
-
- "Yes; but if dryads are foolish they must take the consequences,
- just as if they were real people," said Paul gravely. "Do you know
- what I think about the new moon, teacher? I think it is a little
- golden boat full of dreams."
-
- "And when it tips on a cloud some of them spill out and fall into
- your sleep."
-
- "Exactly, teacher. Oh, you DO know. And I think the violets are
- little snips of the sky that fell down when the angels cut out
- holes for the stars to shine through. And the buttercups are made
- out of old sunshine; and I think the sweet peas will be butterflies
- when they go to heaven. Now, teacher, do you see anything so very
- queer about those thoughts?"
-
- "No, laddie dear, they are not queer at all; they are strange and
- beautiful thoughts for a little boy to think, and so people who
- couldn't think anything of the sort themselves, if they tried for a
- hundred years, think them queer. But keep on thinking them, Paul
- . . .some day you are going to be a poet, I believe."
-
- When Anne reached home she found a very different type of boyhood
- waiting to be put to bed. Davy was sulky; and when Anne had
- undressed him he bounced into bed and buried his face in the pillow.
-
- "Davy, you have forgotten to say your prayers," said Anne rebukingly.
-
- "No, I didn't forget," said Davy defiantly, "but I ain't going to
- say my prayers any more. I'm going to give up trying to be good,
- 'cause no matter how good I am you'd like Paul Irving better.
- So I might as well be bad and have the fun of it."
-
- "I don't like Paul Irving BETTER," said Anne seriously. "I like
- you just as well, only in a different way."
-
- "But I want you to like me the same way," pouted Davy.
-
- "You can't like different people the same way. You don't like Dora
- and me the same way, do you?"
-
- Davy sat up and reflected.
-
- "No. . .o. . .o," he admitted at last, "I like Dora because she's
- my sister but I like you because you're YOU."
-
- "And I like Paul because he is Paul and Davy because he is Davy,"
- said Anne gaily.
-
- "Well, I kind of wish I'd said my prayers then," said Davy, convinced
- by this logic. "But it's too much bother getting out now to say them.
- I'll say them twice over in the morning, Anne. Won't that do as well?"
-
- No, Anne was positive it would not do as well. So Davy scrambled
- out and knelt down at her knee. When he had finished his devotions
- he leaned back on his little, bare, brown heels and looked up at her.
-
- "Anne, I'm gooder than I used to be."
-
- "Yes, indeed you are, Davy," said Anne, who never hesitated to give
- credit where credit was due.
-
- "I KNOW I'm gooder," said Davy confidently, "and I'll tell you how
- I know it. Today Marilla give me two pieces of bread and jam, one
- for me and one for Dora. One was a good deal bigger than the other
- and Marilla didn't say which was mine. But I give the biggest
- piece to Dora. That was good of me, wasn't it?"
-
- "Very good, and very manly, Davy."
-
- "Of course," admitted Davy, "Dora wasn't very hungry and she only et
- half her slice and then she give the rest to me. But I didn't know
- she was going to do that when I give it to her, so I WAS good, Anne."
-
- In the twilight Anne sauntered down to the Dryad's Bubble and saw
- Gilbert Blythe coming down through the dusky Haunted Wood. She had
- a sudden realization that Gilbert was a schoolboy no longer. And
- how manly he looked -- the tall, frank-faced fellow, with the
- clear, straightforward eyes and the broad shoulders. Anne thought
- Gilbert was a very handsome lad, even though he didn't look at all
- like her ideal man. She and Diana had long ago decided what kind
- of a man they admired and their tastes seemed exactly similar. He
- must be very tall and distinguished looking, with melancholy,
- inscrutable eyes, and a melting, sympathetic voice. There was
- nothing either melancholy or inscrutable in Gilbert's physiognomy,
- but of course that didn't matter in friendship!
-
- Gilbert stretched himself out on the ferns beside the Bubble and
- looked approvingly at Anne. If Gilbert had been asked to describe
- his ideal woman the description would have answered point for point
- to Anne, even to those seven tiny freckles whose obnoxious presence
- still continued to vex her soul. Gilbert was as yet little more
- than a boy; but a boy has his dreams as have others, and in
- Gilbert's future there was always a girl with big, limpid gray
- eyes, and a face as fine and delicate as a flower. He had made up
- his mind, also, that his future must be worthy of its goddess.
- Even in quiet Avonlea there were temptations to be met and faced.
- White Sands youth were a rather "fast" set, and Gilbert was popular
- wherever he went. But he meant to keep himself worthy of Anne's
- friendship and perhaps some distant day her love; and he watched
- over word and thought and deed as jealously as if her clear eyes
- were to pass in judgment on it. She held over him the unconscious
- influence that every girl, whose ideals are high and pure, wields
- over her friends; an influence which would endure as long as she
- was faithful to those ideals and which she would as certainly lose
- if she were ever false to them. In Gilbert's eyes Anne's greatest
- charm was the fact that she never stooped to the petty practices of
- so many of the Avonlea girls -- the small jealousies, the little
- deceits and rivalries, the palpable bids for favor. Anne held
- herself apart from all this, not consciously or of design, but
- simply because anything of the sort was utterly foreign to her
- transparent, impulsive nature, crystal clear in its motives and
- aspirations.
-
- But Gilbert did not attempt to put his thoughts into words, for he
- had already too good reason to know that Anne would mercilessly and
- frostily nip all attempts at sentiment in the bud -- or laugh at him,
- which was ten times worse.
-
- "You look like a real dryad under that birch tree," he said teasingly.
-
- "I love birch trees," said Anne, laying her cheek against the creamy
- satin of the slim bole, with one of the pretty, caressing gestures
- that came so natural to her.
-
- "Then you'll be glad to hear that Mr. Major Spencer has decided
- to set out a row of white birches all along the road front of
- his farm, by way of encouraging the A.V.I.S.," said Gilbert.
- "He was talking to me about it today. Major Spencer is the most
- progressive and public-spirited man in Avonlea. And Mr. William
- Bell is going to set out a spruce hedge along his road front and up
- his lane. Our Society is getting on splendidly, Anne. It is past
- the experimental stage and is an accepted fact. The older folks
- are beginning to take an interest in it and the White Sands people
- are talking of starting one too. Even Elisha Wright has come
- around since that day the Americans from the hotel had the picnic
- at the shore. They praised our roadsides so highly and said they
- were so much prettier than in any other part of the Island. And
- when, in due time, the other farmers follow Mr. Spencer's good
- example and plant ornamental trees and hedges along their road
- fronts Avonlea will be the prettiest settlement in the province."
-
- "The Aids are talking of taking up the graveyard," said Anne, "and I
- hope they will, because there will have to be a subscription for that,
- and it would be no use for the Society to try it after the hall affair.
- But the Aids would never have stirred in the matter if the Society
- hadn't put it into their thoughts unofficially. Those trees we
- planted on the church grounds are flourishing, and the trustees
- have promised me that they will fence in the school grounds next year.
- If they do I'll have an arbor day and every scholar shall plant a tree;
- and we'll have a garden in the corner by the road."
-
- "We've succeeded in almost all our plans so far, except in getting the old
- Boulter house removed," said Gilbert, "and I've given THAT up in despair.
- Levi won't have it taken down just to vex us. There's a contrary streak
- in all the Boulters and it's strongly developed in him."
-
- "Julia Bell wants to send another committee to him, but I think the
- better way will just be to leave him severely alone," said Anne sagely.
-
- "And trust to Providence, as Mrs. Lynde says," smiled Gilbert.
- "Certainly, no more committees. They only aggravate him.
- Julia Bell thinks you can do anything, if you only have a committee
- to attempt it. Next spring, Anne, we must start an agitation for
- nice lawns and grounds. We'll sow good seed betimes this winter.
- I've a treatise here on lawns and lawnmaking and I'm going to prepare
- a paper on the subject soon. Well, I suppose our vacation is almost
- over. School opens Monday. Has Ruby Gillis got the Carmody school?"
-
- "Yes; Priscilla wrote that she had taken her own home school, so
- the Carmody trustees gave it to Ruby. I'm sorry Priscilla is not
- coming back, but since she can't I'm glad Ruby has got the school.
- She will be home for Saturdays and it will seem like old times,
- to have her and Jane and Diana and myself all together again."
-
- Marilla, just home from Mrs. Lynde's, was sitting on the back
- porch step when Anne returned to the house.
-
- "Rachel and I have decided to have our cruise to town tomorrow,"
- she said. "Mr. Lynde is feeling better this week and Rachel wants
- to go before he has another sick spell."
-
- "I intend to get up extra early tomorrow morning, for I've ever so
- much to do," said Anne virtuously. "For one thing, I'm going to
- shift the feathers from my old bedtick to the new one. I ought to
- have done it long ago but I've just kept putting it off. . .
- it's such a detestable task. It's a very bad habit to put off
- disagreeable things, and I never mean to again, or else I can't
- comfortably tell my pupils not to do it. That would be inconsistent.
- Then I want to make a cake for Mr. Harrison and finish my paper
- on gardens for the A.V.I.S., and write Stella, and wash and starch
- my muslin dress, and make Dora's new apron."
-
- "You won't get half done," said Marilla pessimistically. "I never yet
- planned to do a lot of things but something happened to prevent me."
-
-
-
-
- XX
-
- The Way It Often Happens
-
-
- Anne rose betimes the next morning and blithely greeted the fresh day,
- when the banners of the sunrise were shaken triumphantly across the
- pearly skies. Green Gables lay in a pool of sunshine, flecked with
- the dancing shadows of poplar and willow. Beyond the land was
- Mr. Harrison's wheatfield, a great, windrippled expanse of pale gold.
- The world was so beautiful that Anne spent ten blissful minutes
- hanging idly over the garden gate drinking the loveliness in.
-
- After breakfast Marilla made ready for her journey. Dora was to go
- with her, having been long promised this treat.
-
- "Now, Davy, you try to be a good boy and don't bother Anne," she
- straitly charged him. "If you are good I'll bring you a striped
- candy cane from town."
-
- For alas, Marilla had stooped to the evil habit of bribing people
- to be good!
-
- "I won't be bad on purpose, but s'posen I'm bad zacksidentally?"
- Davy wanted to know.
-
- "You'll have to guard against accidents," admonished Marilla.
- "Anne, if Mr. Shearer comes today get a nice roast and some steak.
- If he doesn't you'll have to kill a fowl for dinner tomorrow."
-
- Anne nodded.
-
- "I'm not going to bother cooking any dinner for just Davy and myself today,"
- she said. "That cold ham bone will do for noon lunch and I'll have some
- steak fried for you when you come home at night."
-
- "I'm going to help Mr. Harrison haul dulse this morning," announced Davy.
- "He asked me to, and I guess he'll ask me to dinner too. Mr. Harrison is
- an awful kind man. He's a real sociable man. I hope I'll be like him
- when I grow up. I mean BEHAVE like him. . .I don't want to LOOK like him.
- But I guess there's no danger, for Mrs. Lynde says I'm a very handsome child.
- Do you s'pose it'll last, Anne? I want to know"
-
- "I daresay it will," said Anne gravely. "You ARE a handsome boy, Davy,"
- . . .Marilla looked volumes of disapproval. . ."but you must live up to
- it and be just as nice and gentlemanly as you look to be."
-
- "And you told Minnie May Barry the other day, when you found her crying
- 'cause some one said she was ugly, that if she was nice and kind and
- loving people wouldn't mind her looks," said Davy discontentedly.
- "Seems to me you can't get out of being good in this world for
- some reason or 'nother. You just HAVE to behave."
-
- "Don't you want to be good?" asked Marilla, who had learned a great
- deal but had not yet learned the futility of asking such questions.
-
- "Yes, I want to be good but not TOO good," said Davy cautiously.
- "You don't have to be very good to be a Sunday School superintendent.
- Mr. Bell's that, and he's a real bad man."
-
- "Indeed he's not," said Marila indignantly.
-
- "He is. . .he says he is himself," asseverated Davy. "He said it
- when he prayed in Sunday School last Sunday. He said he was a vile
- worm and a miserable sinner and guilty of the blackest 'niquity.
- What did he do that was so bad, Marilla? Did he kill anybody?
- Or steal the collection cents? I want to know."
-
- Fortunately Mrs. Lynde came driving up the lane at this moment and
- Marilla made off, feeling that she had escaped from the snare of
- the fowler, and wishing devoutly that Mr. Bell were not quite so
- highly figurative in his public petitions, especially in the
- hearing of small boys who were always "wanting to know."
-
- Anne, left alone in her glory, worked with a will. The floor was
- swept, the beds made, the hens fed, the muslin dress washed and
- hung out on the line. Then Anne prepared for the transfer of
- feathers. She mounted to the garret and donned the first old dress
- that came to hand. . .a navy blue cashmere she had worn at
- fourteen. It was decidedly on the short side and as "skimpy" as
- the notable wincey Anne had worn upon the occasion of her debut at
- Green Gables; but at least it would not be materially injured by
- down and feathers. Anne completed her toilet by tying a big red
- and white spotted handkerchief that had belonged to Matthew over
- her head, and, thus accoutred, betook herself to the kitchen
- chamber, whither Marilla, before her departure, had helped her
- carry the feather bed.
-
- A cracked mirror hung by the chamber window and in an unlucky
- moment Anne looked into it. There were those seven freckles on her
- nose, more rampant than ever, or so it seemed in the glare of light
- from the unshaded window.
-
- "Oh, I forgot to rub that lotion on last night," she thought.
- "I'd better run down to the pantry and do it now."
-
- Anne had already suffered many things trying to remove those freckles.
- On one occasion the entire skin had peeled off her nose but the
- freckles remained. A few days previously she had found a recipe
- for a freckle lotion in a magazine and, as the ingredients were
- within her reach, she straightway compounded it, much to the disgust
- of Marilla, who thought that if Providence had placed freckles on
- your nose it was your bounden duty to leave them there.
-
- Anne scurried down to the pantry, which, always dim from the big
- willow growing close to the window, was now almost dark by reason
- of the shade drawn to exclude flies. Anne caught the bottle
- containing the lotion from the shelf and copiously anointed her
- nose therewith by means of a little sponge sacred to the purpose.
- This important duty done, she returned to her work. Any one who
- has ever shifted feathers from one tick to another will not need to
- be told that when Anne finished she was a sight to behold. Her
- dress was white with down and fluff, and her front hair, escaping from
- under the handkerchief, was adorned with a veritable halo of feathers.
- At this auspicious moment a knock sounded at the kitchen door.
-
- "That must be Mr. Shearer," thought Anne. "I'm in a dreadful mess
- but I'll have to run down as I am, for he's always in a hurry."
-
- Down flew Anne to the kitchen door. If ever a charitable floor did
- open to swallow up a miserable, befeathered damsel the Green Gables
- porch floor should promptly have engulfed Anne at that moment.
- On the doorstep were standing Priscilla Grant, golden and fair
- in silk attire, a short, stout gray-haired lady in a tweed suit,
- and another lady, tall stately, wonderfully gowned, with a
- beautiful, highbred face and large, black-lashed violet eyes,
- whom Anne "instinctively felt," as she would have said in her
- earlier days, to be Mrs. Charlotte E. Morgan.
-
- In the dismay of the moment one thought stood out from the
- confusion of Anne's mind and she grasped at it as at the proverbial
- straw. All Mrs. Morgan's heroines were noted for "rising to the
- occasion." No matter what their troubles were, they invariably rose
- to the occasion and showed their superiority over all ills of time,
- space, and quantity. Anne therefore felt it was HER duty to rise
- to the occasion and she did it, so perfectly that Priscilla
- afterward declared she never admired Anne Shirley more than
- at that moment. No matter what her outraged feelings were
- she did not show them. She greeted Priscilla and was introduced
- to her companions as calmly and composedly as if she had been
- arrayed in purple and fine linen. To be sure, it was somewhat
- of a shock to find that the lady she had instinctively felt
- to be Mrs. Morgan was not Mrs. Morgan at all, but an unknown
- Mrs. Pendexter, while the stout little gray-haired woman was
- Mrs. Morgan; but in the greater shock the lesser lost its power.
- Anne ushered her guests to the spare room and thence into the parlor,
- where she left them while she hastened out to help Priscilla
- unharness her horse.
-
- "It's dreadful to come upon you so unexpectedly as this,"
- apologized Priscilla, "but I did not know till last night that we
- were coming. Aunt Charlotte is going away Monday and she had
- promised to spend today with a friend in town. But last night her
- friend telephoned to her not to come because they were quarantined
- for scarlet fever. So I suggested we come here instead, for I knew
- you were longing to see her. We called at the White Sands Hotel and
- brought Mrs. Pendexter with us. She is a friend of aunt's and lives
- in New York and her husband is a millionaire. We can't stay very long,
- for Mrs. Pendexter has to be back at the hotel by five o'clock."
-
- Several times while they were putting away the horse Anne caught
- Priscilla looking at her in a furtive, puzzled way.
-
- "She needn't stare at me so," Anne thought a little resentfully.
- "If she doesn't KNOW what it is to change a feather bed she might
- IMAGINE it."
-
- When Priscilla had gone to the parlor, and before Anne could escape
- upstairs, Diana walked into the kitchen. Anne caught her astonished
- friend by the arm.
-
- "Diana Barry, who do you suppose is in that parlor at this very
- moment? Mrs. Charlotte E. Morgan. . .and a New York millionaire's
- wife. . .and here I am like THIS. . .and NOT A THING IN THE HOUSE
- FOR DINNER BUT A COLD HAM BONE, Diana!"
-
- By this time Anne had become aware that Diana was staring at her
- in precisely the same bewildered fashion as Priscilla had done.
- It was really too much.
-
- "Oh, Diana, don't look at me so," she implored. "YOU, at least,
- must know that the neatest person in the world couldn't empty
- feathers from one tick into another and remain neat in the process."
-
- "It. . .it. . .isn't the feathers," hesitated Diana. "It's. . .
- it's. . .your nose, Anne."
-
- "My nose? Oh, Diana, surely nothing has gone wrong with it!"
-
- Anne rushed to the little looking glass over the sink. One glance
- revealed the fatal truth. Her nose was a brilliant scarlet!
-
- Anne sat down on the sofa, her dauntless spirit subdued at last.
-
- "What is the matter with it?" asked Diana, curiosity overcoming delicacy.
-
- "I thought I was rubbing my freckle lotion on it, but I must have
- used that red dye Marilla has for marking the pattern on her rugs,"
- was the despairing response. "What shall I do?"
-
- "Wash it off," said Diana practically.
-
- "Perhaps it won't wash off. First I dye my hair; then I dye my nose.
- Marilla cut my hair off when I dyed it but that remedy would hardly be
- practicable in this case. Well, this is another punishment for vanity
- and I suppose I deserve it. . .though there's not much comfort in THAT.
- It is really almost enough to make one believe in ill-luck, though Mrs.
- Lynde says there is no such thing, because everything is foreordained."
-
- Fortunately the dye washed off easily and Anne, somewhat consoled,
- betook herself to the east gable while Diana ran home. Presently
- Anne came down again, clothed and in her right mind. The muslin
- dress she had fondly hoped to wear was bobbing merrily about on the
- line outside, so she was forced to content herself with her black
- lawn. She had the fire on and the tea steeping when Diana
- returned; the latter wore HER muslin, at least, and carried a
- covered platter in her hand.
-
- "Mother sent you this," she said, lifting the cover and displaying
- a nicely carved and jointed chicken to Anne's greatful eyes.
-
- The chicken was supplemented by light new bread, excellent butter
- and cheese, Marilla's fruit cake and a dish of preserved plums,
- floating in their golden syrup as in congealed summer sunshine.
- There was a big bowlful of pink-and-white asters also, by way of
- decoration; yet the spread seemed very meager beside the elaborate
- one formerly prepared for Mrs. Morgan.
-
- Anne's hungry guests, however, did not seem to think anything was
- lacking and they ate the simple viands with apparent enjoyment.
- But after the first few moments Anne thought no more of what was
- or was not on her bill of fare. Mrs. Morgan's appearance might be
- somewhat disappointing, as even her loyal worshippers had been
- forced to admit to each other; but she proved to be a delightful
- conversationalist. She had traveled extensively and was an
- excellent storyteller. She had seen much of men and women, and
- crystalized her experiences into witty little sentences and
- epigrams which made her hearers feel as if they were listening to
- one of the people in clever books. But under all her sparkle there
- was a strongly felt undercurrent of true, womanly sympathy and
- kindheartedness which won affection as easily as her brilliancy won
- admiration. Nor did she monopolize the conversation. She could
- draw others out as skillfully and fully as she could talk herself,
- and Anne and Diana found themselves chattering freely to her. Mrs.
- Pendexter said little; she merely smiled with her lovely eyes and lips,
- and ate chicken and fruit cake and preserves with such exquisite grace
- that she conveyed the impression of dining on ambrosia and honeydew.
- But then, as Anne said to Diana later on, anybody so divinely beautiful
- as Mrs. Pendexter didn't need to talk; it was enough for her just to LOOK.
-
- After dinner they all had a walk through Lover's Lane and Violet
- Vale and the Birch Path, then back through the Haunted Wood to the
- Dryad's Bubble, where they sat down and talked for a delightful
- last half hour. Mrs. Morgan wanted to know how the Haunted Wood
- came by its name, and laughed until she cried when she heard the
- story and Anne's dramatic account of a certain memorable walk
- through it at the witching hour of twilight.
-
- "It has indeed been a feast of reason and flow of soul, hasn't it?"
- said Anne, when her guests had gone and she and Diana were alone again.
- "I don't know which I enjoyed more. . .listening to Mrs. Morgan or
- gazing at Mrs. Pendexter. I believe we had a nicer time than if
- we'd known they were coming and been cumbered with much serving.
- You must stay to tea with me, Diana, and we'll talk it all over."
-
- "Priscilla says Mrs. Pendexter's husband's sister is married to an
- English earl; and yet she took a second helping of the plum preserves,"
- said Diana, as if the two facts were somehow incompatible.
-
- "I daresay even the English earl himself wouldn't have turned up his
- aristocratic nose at Marilla's plum preserves," said Anne proudly.
-
- Anne did not mention the misfortune which had befallen HER nose when she
- related the day's history to Marilla that evening. But she took the
- bottle of freckle lotion and emptied it out of the window.
-
- "I shall never try any beautifying messes again," she said, darkly
- resolute. "They may do for careful, deliberate people; but for
- anyone so hopelessly given over to making mistakes as I seem to be
- it's tempting fate to meddle with them."
-
-
-
-
- XXI
-
- Sweet Miss Lavendar
-
-
- School opened and Anne returned to her work, with fewer theories but
- considerably more experience. She had several new pupils, six- and
- seven-year-olds just venturing, round-eyed, into a world of wonder.
- Among them were Davy and Dora. Davy sat with Milty Boulter, who had been
- going to school for a year and was therefore quite a man of the world.
- Dora had made a compact at Sunday School the previous Sunday to sit
- with Lily Sloane; but Lily Sloane not coming the first day, she was
- temporarily assigned to Mirabel Cotton, who was ten years old and
- therefore, in Dora's eyes, one of the "big girls."
-
- "I think school is great fun," Davy told Marilla when he got home
- that night. "You said I'd find it hard to sit still and I did. . .
- you mostly do tell the truth, I notice. . .but you can wriggle
- your legs about under the desk and that helps a lot. It's splendid
- to have so many boys to play with. I sit with Milty Boulter and
- he's fine. He's longer than me but I'm wider. It's nicer to sit
- in the back seats but you can't sit there till your legs grow long
- enough to touch the floor. Milty drawed a picture of Anne on his
- slate and it was awful ugly and I told him if he made pictures of
- Anne like that I'd lick him at recess. I thought first I'd draw
- one of him and put horns and a tail on it, but I was afraid it
- would hurt his feelings, and Anne says you should never hurt
- anyone's feelings. It seems it's dreadful to have your feelings
- hurt. It's better to knock a boy down than hurt his feelings if
- you MUST do something. Milty said he wasn't scared of me but he'd
- just as soon call it somebody else to 'blige me, so he rubbed out
- Anne's name and printed Barbara Shaw's under it. Milty doesn't
- like Barbara 'cause she calls him a sweet little boy and once she
- patted him on his head."
-
- Dora said primly that she liked school; but she was very quiet,
- even for her; and when at twilight Marilla bade her go upstairs to
- bed she hesitated and began to cry.
-
- "I'm. . .I'm frightened," she sobbed. "I. . .I don't want to go
- upstairs alone in the dark."
-
- "What notion have you got into your head now?" demanded Marilla.
- "I'm sure you've gone to bed alone all summer and never been
- frightened before."
-
- Dora still continued to cry, so Anne picked her up, cuddled her
- sympathetically, and whispered,
-
- "Tell Anne all about it, sweetheart. What are you frightened of?"
-
- "Of. . .of Mirabel Cotton's uncle," sobbed Dora. "Mirabel Cotton told
- me all about her family today in school. Nearly everybody in her
- family has died. . .all her grandfathers and grandmothers and ever
- so many uncles and aunts. They have a habit of dying, Mirabel says.
- Mirabel's awful proud of having so many dead relations, and she told
- me what they all died of, and what they said, and how they looked in
- their coffins. And Mirabel says one of her uncles was seen walking
- around the house after he was buried. Her mother saw him. I don't
- mind the rest so much but I can't help thinking about that uncle."
-
- Anne went upstairs with Dora and sat by her until she fell asleep.
- The next day Mirabel Cotton was kept in at recess and "gently but
- firmly" given to understand that when you were so unfortunate as to
- possess an uncle who persisted in walking about houses after he had
- been decently interred it was not in good taste to talk about that
- eccentric gentleman to your deskmate of tender years. Mirabel
- thought this very harsh. The Cottons had not much to boast of.
- How was she to keep up her prestige among her schoolmates if she
- were forbidden to make capital out of the family ghost?
-
- September slipped by into a gold and crimson graciousness of October.
- One Friday evening Diana came over.
-
- "I'd a letter from Ella Kimball today, Anne, and she wants us to go over
- to tea tomorrow afternoon to meet her cousin, Irene Trent, from town.
- But we can't get one of our horses to go, for they'll all be in use
- tomorrow, and your pony is lame. . .so I suppose we can't go."
-
- "Why can't we walk?" suggested Anne. "If we go straight back
- through the woods we'll strike the West Grafton road not far from
- the Kimball place. I was through that way last winter and I know
- the road. It's no more than four miles and we won't have to walk
- home, for Oliver Kimball will be sure to drive us. He'll be only
- too glad of the excuse, for he goes to see Carrie Sloane and they
- say his father will hardly ever let him have a horse."
-
- It was accordingly arranged that they should walk, and the
- following afternoon they set out, going by way of Lover's Lane to
- the back of the Cuthbert farm, where they found a road leading into
- the heart of acres of glimmering beech and maple woods, which were
- all in a wondrous glow of flame and gold, lying in a great purple
- stillness and peace.
-
- "It's as if the year were kneeling to pray in a vast cathedral full
- of mellow stained light, isn't it?" said Anne dreamily. "It doesn't
- seem right to hurry through it, does it? It seems irreverent,
- like running in a church."
-
- "We MUST hurry though," said Diana, glancing at her watch.
- "We've left ourselves little enough time as it is."
-
- "Well, I'll walk fast but don't ask me to talk," said Anne, quickening
- her pace. "I just want to drink the day's loveliness in. . .I feel as
- if she were holding it out to my lips like a cup of airy wine and
- I'll take a sip at every step."
-
- Perhaps it was because she was so absorbed in "drinking it in" that
- Anne took the left turning when they came to a fork in the road.
- She should have taken the right, but ever afterward she counted it
- the most fortunate mistake of her life. They came out finally to a
- lonely, grassy road, with nothing in sight along it but ranks of
- spruce saplings.
-
- "Why, where are we?" exclaimed Diana in bewilderment. "This isn't
- the West Grafton road."
-
- "No, it's the base line road in Middle Grafton," said Anne, rather
- shamefacedly. "I must have taken the wrong turning at the fork.
- I don't know where we are exactly, but we must be all of three miles
- from Kimballs' still."
-
- "Then we can't get there by five, for it's half past four now,"
- said Diana, with a despairing look at her watch. "We'll arrive
- after they have had their tea, and they'll have all the bother of
- getting ours over again."
-
- "We'd better turn back and go home," suggested Anne humbly.
- But Diana, after consideration, vetoed this.
-
- "No, we may as well go and spend the evening, since we
- have come this far"
-
- A few yards further on the girls came to a place where
- the road forked again.
-
- "Which of these do we take?" asked Diana dubiously.
-
- Anne shook her head.
-
- "I don't know and we can't afford to make any more mistakes. Here
- is a gate and a lane leading right into the wood. There must be a
- house at the other side. Let us go down and inquire."
-
- "What a romantic old lane this it," said Diana, as they walked
- along its twists and turns. It ran under patriarchal old firs
- whose branches met above, creating a perpetual gloom in which
- nothing except moss could grow. On either hand were brown wood
- floors, crossed here and there by fallen lances of sunlight.
- All was very still and remote, as if the world and the cares
- of the world were far away.
-
- "I feel as if we were walking through an enchanted forest," said
- Anne in a hushed tone. "Do you suppose we'll ever find our way
- back to the real world again, Diana? We shall presently come to a
- palace with a spellbound princess in it, I think."
-
- Around the next turn they came in sight, not indeed of a palace,
- but of a little house almost as surprising as a palace would have
- been in this province of conventional wooden farmhouses, all as
- much alike in general characteristics as if they had grown from the
- same seed. Anne stopped short in rapture and Diana exclaimed,
- "Oh, I know where we are now. That is the little stone house where
- Miss Lavendar Lewis lives. . .Echo Lodge, she calls it, I think.
- I've often heard of it but I've never seen it before. Isn't it a
- romantic spot?"
-
- "It's the sweetest, prettiest place I ever saw or imagined," said
- Anne delightedly. "It looks like a bit out of a story book or a dream."
-
- The house was a low-eaved structure built of undressed blocks of
- red Island sandstone, with a little peaked roof out of which peered
- two dormer windows, with quaint wooden hoods over them, and two
- great chimneys. The whole house was covered with a luxuriant
- growth of ivy, finding easy foothold on the rough stonework and
- turned by autumn frosts to most beautiful bronze and wine-red tints.
-
- Before the house was an oblong garden into which the lane gate
- where the girls were standing opened. The house bounded it on
- one side; on the three others it was enclosed by an old stone dyke,
- so overgrown with moss and grass and ferns that it looked like a high,
- green bank. On the right and left the tall, dark spruces spread
- their palm-like branches over it; but below it was a little meadow,
- green with clover aftermath, sloping down to the blue loop of the
- Grafton River. No other house or clearing was in sight. . .nothing
- but hills and valleys covered with feathery young firs.
-
- "I wonder what sort of a person Miss Lewis is," speculated Diana as
- they opened the gate into the garden. "They say she is very peculiar."
-
- "She'll be interesting then," said Anne decidedly. "Peculiar people
- are always that at least, whatever else they are or are not.
- Didn't I tell you we would come to an enchanted palace?
- I knew the elves hadn't woven magic over that lane for nothing."
-
- "But Miss Lavendar Lewis is hardly a spellbound princess," laughed
- Diana. "She's an old maid. . .she's forty-five and quite gray,
- I've heard."
-
- "Oh, that's only part of the spell," asserted Anne confidently.
- "At heart she's young and beautiful still. . .and if we only knew
- how to unloose the spell she would step forth radiant and fair again.
- But we don't know how. . .it's always and only the prince who knows that
- . . .and Miss Lavendar's prince hasn't come yet. Perhaps some fatal
- mischance has befallen him. . .though THAT'S against the law of all
- fairy tales."
-
- "I'm afraid he came long ago and went away again," said Diana.
- "They say she used to be engaged to Stephan Irving. . .Paul's
- father. . .when they were young. But they quarreled and parted."
-
- "Hush," warned Anne. "The door is open."
-
- The girls paused in the porch under the tendrils of ivy and knocked
- at the open door. There was a patter of steps inside and a rather
- odd little personage presented herself. . .a girl of about
- fourteen, with a freckled face, a snub nose, a mouth so wide that
- it did really seem as if it stretched "from ear to ear," and two
- long braids of fair hair tied with two enormous bows of blue ribbon.
-
- "Is Miss Lewis at home?" asked Diana.
-
- "Yes, ma'am. Come in, ma'am. I'll tell Miss Lavendar you're here,
- ma'am. She's upstairs, ma'am."
-
- With this the small handmaiden whisked out of sight and the girls,
- left alone, looked about them with delighted eyes. The interior of
- this wonderful little house was quite as interesting as its exterior.
-
- The room had a low ceiling and two square, small-paned windows,
- curtained with muslin frills. All the furnishings were old-fashioned,
- but so well and daintily kept that the effect was delicious.
- But it must be candidly admitted that the most attractive feature,
- to two healthy girls who had just tramped four miles through autumn air,
- was a table, set out with pale blue china and laden with delicacies,
- while little golden-hued ferns scattered over the cloth gave it what
- Anne would have termed "a festal air."
-
- "Miss Lavendar must be expecting company to tea," she whispered.
- "There are six places set. But what a funny little girl she has.
- She looked like a messenger from pixy land. I suppose she could
- have told us the road, but I was curious to see Miss Lavendar.
- S. . .s. . .sh, she's coming."
-
- And with that Miss Lavendar Lewis was standing in the doorway.
- The girls were so surprised that they forgot good manners and
- simply stared. They had unconsciously been expecting to see
- the usual type of elderly spinster as known to their experience
- . . .a rather angular personage, with prim gray hair and spectacles.
- Nothing more unlike Miss Lavendar could possibly be imagined.
-
- She was a little lady with snow-white hair beautifully wavy and
- thick, and carefully arranged in becoming puffs and coils. Beneath
- it was an almost girlish face, pink cheeked and sweet lipped, with
- big soft brown eyes and dimples. . .actually dimples. She wore a
- very dainty gown of cream muslin with pale-hued roses on it. . .a
- gown which would have seemed ridiculously juvenile on most women of
- her age, but which suited Miss Lavendar so perfectly that you never
- thought about it at all.
-
- "Charlotta the Fourth says that you wished to see me," she said,
- in a voice that matched her appearance.
-
- "We wanted to ask the right road to West Grafton," said Diana.
- "We are invited to tea at Mr. Kimball's, but we took the wrong path
- coming through the woods and came out to the base line instead of the
- West Grafton road. Do we take the right or left turning at your gate?"
-
- "The left," said Miss Lavendar, with a hesitating glance at her tea table.
- Then she exclaimed, as if in a sudden little burst of resolution,
-
- "But oh, won't you stay and have tea with me? Please, do.
- Mr. Kimball's will have tea over before you get there.
- And Charlotta the Fourth and I will be so glad to have you."
-
- Diana looked mute inquiry at Anne.
-
- "We'd like to stay," said Anne promptly, for she had made up her mind that
- she wanted to know more of this surprising Miss Lavendar, "if it won't
- inconvenience you. But you are expecting other guests, aren't you?"
-
- Miss Lavendar looked at her tea table again, and blushed.
-
- "I know you'll think me dreadfully foolish," she said. "I AM
- foolish. . .and I'm ashamed of it when I'm found out, but never
- unless I AM found out. I'm not expecting anybody. . .I was just
- pretending I was. You see, I was so lonely. I love company. . .
- that is, the right kind of company. . .but so few people ever
- come here because it is so far out of the way. Charlotta the
- Fourth was lonely too. So I just pretended I was going to have a
- tea party. I cooked for it. . .and decorated the table for it. . .
- and set it with my mother's wedding china . . .and I dressed up
- for it." Diana secretly thought Miss Lavendar quite as peculiar as
- report had pictured her. The idea of a woman of forty-five
- playing at having a tea party, just as if she were a little girl!
- But Anne of the shining eyes exclaimed joyfuly, "Oh, do YOU imagine
- things too?"
-
- That "too" revealed a kindred spirit to Miss Lavendar.
-
- "Yes, I do," she confessed, boldly. "Of course it's silly in anybody
- as old as I am. But what is the use of being an independent old maid
- if you can't be silly when you want to, and when it doesn't hurt anybody?
- A person must have some compensations. I don't believe I could live
- at times if I didn't pretend things. I'm not often caught at it though,
- and Charlotta the Fourth never tells. But I'm glad to be caught today,
- for you have really come and I have tea all ready for you. Will you
- go up to the spare room and take off your hats? It's the white door
- at the head of the stairs. I must run out to the kitchen and see that
- Charlotta the Fourth isn't letting the tea boil. Charlotta the Fourth
- is a very good girl but she WILL let the tea boil."
-
- Miss Lavendar tripped off to the kitchen on hospitable thoughts intent
- and the girls found their way up to the spare room, an apartment as
- white as its door, lighted by the ivy-hung dormer window and looking,
- as Anne said, like the place where happy dreams grew.
-
- "This is quite an adventure, isn't it?" said Diana. "And isn't
- Miss Lavendar sweet, if she IS a little odd? She doesn't look a bit
- like an old maid."
-
- "She looks just as music sounds, I think," answered Anne.
-
- When they went down Miss Lavendar was carrying in the teapot,
- and behind her, looking vastly pleased, was Charlotta the Fourth,
- with a plate of hot biscuits.
-
- "Now, you must tell me your names," said Miss Lavendar. "I'm so
- glad you are young girls. I love young girls. It's so easy to
- pretend I'm a girl myself when I'm with them. I do hate". . .with
- a little grimace. . ."to believe I'm old. Now, who are you. . .
- just for convenience' sake? Diana Barry? And Anne Shirley? May I
- pretend that I've known you for a hundred years and call you Anne
- and Diana right away?"
-
- "You, may" the girls said both together.
-
- "Then just let's sit comfily down and eat everything," said Miss Lavendar
- happily. "Charlotta, you sit at the foot and help with the chicken.
- It is so fortunate that I made the sponge cake and doughnuts.
- Of course, it was foolish to do it for imaginary guests. . .
- I know Charlotta the Fourth thought so, didn't you, Charlotta?
- But you see how well it has turned out. Of course they wouldn't have
- been wasted, for Charlotta the Fourth and I could have eaten them
- through time. But sponge cake is not a thing that improves with time."
-
- That was a merry and memorable meal; and when it was over they all
- went out to the garden, lying in the glamor of sunset.
-
- "I do think you have the loveliest place here," said Diana,
- looking round her admiringly.
-
- "Why do you call it Echo Lodge?" asked Anne.
-
- "Charlotta," said Miss Lavendar, "go into the house and bring out
- the little tin horn that is hanging over the clock shelf."
-
- Charlotta the Fourth skipped off and returned with the horn.
-
- "Blow it, Charlotta," commanded Miss Lavendar.
-
- Charlotta accordingly blew, a rather raucous, strident blast.
- There was moment's stillness. . .and then from the woods over the
- river came a multitude of fairy echoes, sweet, elusive, silvery,
- as if all the "horns of elfland" were blowing against the sunset.
- Anne and Diana exclaimed in delight.
-
- "Now laugh, Charlotta. . .laugh loudly."
-
- Charlotta, who would probably have obeyed if Miss Lavendar had told
- her to stand on her head, climbed upon the stone bench and laughed
- loud and heartily. Back came the echoes, as if a host of pixy
- people were mimicking her laughter in the purple woodlands and
- along the fir-fringed points.
-
- "People always admire my echoes very much," said Miss Lavendar,
- as if the echoes were her personal property. "I love them myself.
- They are very good company. . .with a little pretending. On calm
- evenings Charlotta the Fourth and I often sit out here and amuse
- ourselves with them. Charlotta, take back the horn and hang it
- carefully in its place."
-
- "Why do you call her Charlotta the Fourth?" asked Diana, who was
- bursting with curiosity on this point.
-
- "Just to keep her from getting mixed up with other Charlottas in
- my thoughts," said Miss Lavendar seriously. "They all look so much
- alike there's no telling them apart. Her name isn't really
- Charlotta at all. It is. . .let me see. . .what is it? I THINK
- it's Leonora. . .yes, it IS Leonora. You see, it is this way.
- When mother died ten years ago I couldn't stay here alone. . .
- and I couldn't afford to pay the wages of a grown-up girl.
- So I got little Charlotta Bowman to come and stay with me for
- board and clothes. Her name really was Charlotta. . .she was
- Charlotta the First. She was just thirteen. She stayed with me
- till she was sixteen and then she went away to Boston, because she
- could do better there. Her sister came to stay with me then.
- Her name was Julietta. . .Mrs. Bowman had a weakness for fancy
- names I think. . .but she looked so like Charlotta that I
- kept calling her that all the time. . .and she didn't mind.
- So I just gave up trying to remember her right name.
- She was Charlotta the Second, and when she went away Evelina
- came and she was Charlotta the Third. Now I have Charlotta
- the Fourth; but when she is sixteen. . .she's fourteen now. . .
- she will want to go to Boston too, and what I shall do then I
- really do not know. Charlotta the Fourth is the last of the
- Bowman girls, and the best. The other Charlottas always let
- me see that they thought it silly of me to pretend things but
- Charlotta the Fourth never does, no matter what she may really think.
- I don't care what people think about me if they don't let me see it."
-
- "Well," said Diana looking regretfully at the setting sun.
- "I suppose we must go if we want to get to Mr. Kimball's before dark.
- We've had a lovely time, Miss Lewis."
-
- "Won't you come again to see me?" pleaded Miss Lavendar.
-
- Tall Anne put her arm about the little lady.
-
- "Indeed we shall," she promised. "Now that we have discovered you
- we'll wear out our welcome coming to see you. Yes, we must go. . .
- 'we must tear ourselves away,' as Paul Irving says every time he
- comes to Green Gables."
-
- "Paul Irving?" There was a subtle change in Miss Lavendar's voice.
- "Who is he? I didn't think there was anybody of that name in Avonlea."
-
- Anne felt vexed at her own heedlessness. She had forgotten about
- Miss Lavendar's old romance when Paul's name slipped out.
-
- "He is a little pupil of mine," she explained slowly. "He came
- from Boston last year to live with his grandmother, Mrs. Irving
- of the shore road."
-
- "Is he Stephen Irving's son?" Miss Lavendar asked, bending over her
- namesake border so that her face was hidden.
-
- "Yes."
-
- "I'm going to give you girls a bunch of lavendar apiece," said Miss
- Lavendar brightly, as if she had not heard the answer to her question.
- "It's very sweet, don't you think? Mother always loved it.
- She planted these borders long ago. Father named me Lavendar
- because he was so fond of it. The very first time he saw mother
- was when he visited her home in East Grafton with her brother. He
- fell in love with her at first sight; and they put him in the spare
- room bed to sleep and the sheets were scented with lavendar and he
- lay awake all night and thought of her. He always loved the scent
- of lavendar after that. . .and that was why he gave me the name.
- Don't forget to come back soon, girls dear. We'll be looking for
- you, Charlotta the Fourth and I."
-
- She opened the gate under the firs for them to pass through. She looked
- suddenly old and tired; the glow and radiance had faded from her face;
- her parting smile was as sweet with ineradicable youth as ever, but when
- the girls looked back from the first curve in the lane they saw her sitting
- on the old stone bench under the silver poplar in the middle of the garden
- with her head leaning wearily on her hand.
-
- "She does look lonely," said Diana softly. "We must come often to see her."
-
- "I think her parents gave her the only right and fitting name that
- could possibly be given her," said Anne. "If they had been so
- blind as to name her Elizabeth or Nellie or Muriel she must have
- been called Lavendar just the same, I think. It's so suggestive of
- sweetness and old-fashioned graces and `silk attire.' Now, my name
- just smacks of bread and butter, patchwork and chores."
-
- "Oh, I don't think so," said Diana. "Anne seems to me real stately
- and like a queen. But I'd like Kerrenhappuch if it happened to be
- your name. I think people make their names nice or ugly just by
- what they are themselves. I can't bear Josie or Gertie for names
- now but before I knew the Pye girls I thought them real pretty."
-
- "That's a lovely idea, Diana," said Anne enthusiastically.
- "Living so that you beautify your name, even if it wasn't
- beautiful to begin with. . .making it stand in people's
- thoughts for something so lovely and pleasant that they
- never think of it by itself. Thank you, Diana."
-
-
-
-
- XXII
-
- Odds and Ends
-
-
- "So you had tea at the stone house with Lavendar Lewis?" said Marilla
- at the breakfast table next morning. "What is she like now?
- It's over fifteen years since I saw her last. . .it was one
- Sunday in Grafton church. I suppose she has changed a great deal.
- Davy Keith, when you want something you can't reach, ask to have it
- passed and don't spread yourself over the table in that fashion.
- Did you ever see Paul Irving doing that when he was here to meals?"
-
- "But Paul's arms are longer'n mine," brumbled Davy. "They've had
- eleven years to grow and mine've only had seven. 'Sides, I DID ask,
- but you and Anne was so busy talking you didn't pay any 'tention.
- 'Sides, Paul's never been here to any meal escept tea, and it's easier
- to be p'lite at tea than at breakfast. You ain't half as hungry.
- It's an awful long while between supper and breakfast. Now, Anne,
- that spoonful ain't any bigger than it was last year and I'M ever
- so much bigger."
-
- "Of course, I don't know what Miss Lavendar used to look like but I
- don't fancy somehow that she has changed a great deal," said Anne,
- after she had helped Davy to maple syrup, giving him two spoonfuls
- to pacify him. "Her hair is snow-white but her face is fresh and
- almost girlish, and she has the sweetest brown eyes. . .such a
- pretty shade of wood-brown with little golden glints in them. . .
- and her voice makes you think of white satin and tinkling water
- and fairy bells all mixed up together."
-
- "She was reckoned a great beauty when she was a girl," said Marilla.
- "I never knew her very well but I liked her as far as I did know her.
- Some folks thought her peculiar even then. DAVY, if ever I catch you
- at such a trick again you'll be made to wait for your meals till
- everyone else is done, like the French."
-
- Most conversations between Anne and Marilla in the presence of the
- twins, were punctuated by these rebukes Davy-ward. In this instance,
- Davy, sad to relate, not being able to scoop up the last drops of
- his syrup with his spoon, had solved the difficulty by lifting his
- plate in both hands and applying his small pink tongue to it.
- Anne looked at him with such horrified eyes that the little
- sinner turned red and said, half shamefacedly, half defiantly,
-
- "There ain't any wasted that way."
-
- "People who are different from other people are always called
- peculiar," said Anne. "And Miss Lavendar is certainly different,
- though it's hard to say just where the difference comes in.
- Perhaps it is because she is one of those people who never grow old."
-
- "One might as well grow old when all your generation do," said
- Marilla, rather reckless of her pronouns. "If you don't, you don't
- fit in anywhere. Far as I can learn Lavendar Lewis has just
- dropped out of everything. She's lived in that out of the way
- place until everybody has forgotten her. That stone house is one
- of the oldest on the Island. Old Mr. Lewis built it eighty years
- ago when he came out from England. Davy, stop joggling Dora's elbow.
- Oh, I saw you! You needn't try to look innocent. What does make you
- behave so this morning?"
-
- "Maybe I got out of the wrong side of the bed," suggested Davy.
- "Milty Boulter says if you do that things are bound to go wrong
- with you all day. His grandmother told him. But which is the
- right side? And what are you to do when your bed's against the
- wall? I want to know."
-
- "I've always wondered what went wrong between Stephen Irving and
- Lavendar Lewis," continued Marilla, ignoring Davy. "They were
- certainly engaged twenty-five years ago and then all at once it was
- broken off. I don't know what the trouble was but it must have
- been something terrible, for he went away to the States and never
- come home since."
-
- "Perhaps it was nothing very dreadful after all. I think the
- little things in life often make more trouble than the big things,"
- said Anne, with one of those flashes of insight which experience
- could not have bettered. "Marilla, please don't say anything about
- my being at Miss Lavendar's to Mrs. Lynde. She'd be sure to ask a
- hundred questions and somehow I wouldn't like it. . .nor Miss
- Lavendar either if she knew, I feel sure."
-
- "I daresay Rachel would be curious," admitted Marilla, "though she
- hasn't as much time as she used to have for looking after other
- people's affairs. She's tied home now on account of Thomas; and
- she's feeling pretty downhearted, for I think she's beginning to
- lose hope of his ever getting better. Rachel will be left pretty
- lonely if anything happens to him, with all her children settled
- out west, except Eliza in town; and she doesn't like her husband."
-
- Marilla's pronouns slandered Eliza, who was very fond of her husband.
-
- "Rachel says if he'd only brace up and exert his will power he'd
- get better. But what is the use of asking a jellyfish to sit up
- straight?" continued Marilla. "Thomas Lynde never had any will
- power to exert. His mother ruled him till he married and then
- Rachel carried it on. It's a wonder he dared to get sick without
- asking her permission. But there, I shouldn't talk so. Rachel has
- been a good wife to him. He'd never have amounted to anything
- without her, that's certain. He was born to be ruled; and it's
- well he fell into the hands of a clever, capable manager like Rachel.
- He didn't mind her way. It saved him the bother of ever making up
- his own mind about anything. Davy, do stop squirming like an eel."
-
- "I've nothing else to do," protested Davy. "I can't eat any more,
- and it's no fun watching you and Anne eat."
-
- "Well, you and Dora go out and give the hens their wheat," said
- Marilla. "And don't you try to pull any more feathers out of the
- white rooster's tail either."
-
- "I wanted some feathers for an Injun headdress," said Davy sulkily.
- "Milty Boulter has a dandy one, made out of the feathers his mother
- give him when she killed their old white gobbler. You might let me
- have some. That rooster's got ever so many more'n he wants."
-
- "You may have the old feather duster in the garret," said Anne,
- "and I'll dye them green and red and yellow for you."
-
- "You do spoil that boy dreadfully," said Marilla, when Davy, with a
- radiant face, had followed prim Dora out. Marilla's education had
- made great strides in the past six years; but she had not yet been
- able to rid herself of the idea that it was very bad for a child to
- have too many of its wishes indulged.
-
- "All the boys of his class have Indian headdresses, and Davy wants
- one too," said Anne. "_I_ know how it feels. . .I'll never forget how
- I used to long for puffed sleeves when all the other girls had them.
- And Davy isn't being spoiled. He is improving every day. Think what
- a difference there is in him since he came here a year ago."
-
- "He certainly doesn't get into as much mischief since he began to
- go to school," acknowledged Marilla. "I suppose he works off the
- tendency with the other boys. But it's a wonder to me we haven't
- heard from Richard Keith before this. Never a word since last May."
-
- "I'll be afraid to hear from him," sighed Anne, beginning to clear
- away the dishes. "If a letter should come I'd dread opening it,
- for fear it would tell us to send the twins to him."
-
- A month later a letter did come. But it was not from Richard Keith.
- A friend of his wrote to say that Richard Keith had died of consumption
- a fortnight previously. The writer of the letter was the executor of
- his will and by that will the sum of two thousand dollars was left to
- Miss Marilla Cuthbert in trust for David and Dora Keith until they
- came of age or married. In the meantime the interest was to be used
- for their maintenance.
-
- "It seems dreadful to be glad of anything in connection with a death,"
- said Anne soberly. "I'm sorry for poor Mr. Keith; but I AM glad that
- we can keep the twins."
-
- "It's a very good thing about the money," said Marilla practically.
- "I wanted to keep them but I really didn't see how I could afford
- to do it, especially when they grew older. The rent of the farm
- doesn't do any more than keep the house and I was bound that not a
- cent of your money should be spent on them. You do far too much
- for them as it is. Dora didn't need that new hat you bought her
- any more than a cat needs two tails. But now the way is made clear
- and they are provided for."
-
- Davy and Dora were delighted when they heard that they were to live
- at Green Gables, "for good." The death of an uncle whom they had
- never seen could not weigh a moment in the balance against that.
- But Dora had one misgiving.
-
- "Was Uncle Richard buried?" she whispered to Anne.
-
- "Yes, dear, of course."
-
- "He. . .he. . .isn't like Mirabel Cotton's uncle, is he?" in a
- still more agitated whisper. "He won't walk about houses after
- being buried, will he, Anne?"
-
-
-
-
- XXIII
-
- Miss Lavendar's Romance
-
-
- "I think I'll take a walk through to Echo Lodge this evening," said Anne,
- one Friday afternoon in December.
-
- "It looks like snow," said Marilla dubiously.
-
- "I'll be there before the snow comes and I mean to stay all night.
- Diana can't go because she has company, and I'm sure Miss Lavendar will
- be looking for me tonight. It's a whole fortnight since I was there."
-
- Anne had paid many a visit to Echo Lodge since that October day.
- Sometimes she and Diana drove around by the road; sometimes they
- walked through the woods. When Diana could not go Anne went alone.
- Between her and Miss Lavendar had sprung up one of those fervent,
- helpful friendships possible only between a woman who has kept the
- freshness of youth in her heart and soul, and a girl whose
- imagination and intuition supplied the place of experience.
- Anne had at last discovered a real "kindred spirit," while into
- the little lady's lonely, sequestered life of dreams Anne and Diana
- came with the wholesome joy and exhilaration of the outer existence,
- which Miss Lavendar, "the world forgetting, by the world forgot,"
- had long ceased to share; they brought an atmosphere of youth
- and reality to the little stone house. Charlotta the Fourth
- always greeted them with her very widest smile. . .and Charlotta's
- smiles WERE fearfully wide. . .loving them for the sake of her
- adored mistress as well as for their own. Never had there been
- such "high jinks" held in the little stone house as were held there
- that beautiful, late-lingering autumn, when November seemed October
- over again, and even December aped the sunshine and hazes of summer.
-
- But on this particular day it seemed as if December had remembered
- that it was time for winter and had turned suddenly dull and
- brooding, with a windless hush predictive of coming snow.
- Nevertheless, Anne keenly enjoyed her walk through the great gray
- maze of the beechlands; though alone she never found it lonely; her
- imagination peopled her path with merry companions, and with these
- she carried on a gay, pretended conversation that was wittier and
- more fascinating than conversations are apt to be in real life,
- where people sometimes fail most lamentably to talk up to the
- requirements. In a "make believe" assembly of choice spirits
- everybody says just the thing you want her to say and so gives you
- the chance to say just what YOU want to say. Attended by this
- invisible company, Anne traversed the woods and arrived at the fir
- lane just as broad, feathery flakes began to flutter down softly.
-
- At the first bend she came upon Miss Lavendar, standing under a
- big, broad-branching fir. She wore a gown of warm, rich red, and
- her head and shoulders were wrapped in a silvery gray silk shawl.
-
- "You look like the queen of the fir wood fairies," called Anne merrily.
-
- "I thought you would come tonight, Anne," said Miss Lavendar,
- running forward. "And I'm doubly glad, for Charlotta the Fourth
- is away. Her mother is sick and she had to go home for the night.
- I should have been very lonely if you hadn't come. . .even the
- dreams and the echoes wouldn't have been enough company. Oh, Anne,
- how pretty you are," she added suddenly, looking up at the tall,
- slim girl with the soft rose-flush of walking on her face. "How
- pretty and how young! It's so delightful to be seventeen, isn't it?
- I do envy you," concluded Miss Lavendar candidly.
-
- "But you are only seventeen at heart," smiled Anne.
-
- "No, I'm old. . .or rather middle-aged, which is far worse,"
- sighed Miss Lavendar. "Sometimes I can pretend I'm not, but at
- other times I realize it. And I can't reconcile myself to it as
- most women seem to. I'm just as rebellious as I was when I
- discovered my first gray hair. Now, Anne, don't look as if you
- were trying to understand. Seventeen CAN'T understand. I'm going
- to pretend right away that I am seventeen too, and I can do it, now
- that you're here. You always bring youth in your hand like a gift.
- We're going to have a jolly evening. Tea first. . .what do you
- want for tea? We'll have whatever you like. Do think of something
- nice and indigestible."
-
- There were sounds of riot and mirth in the little stone house
- that night. What with cooking and feasting and making candy and
- laughing and "pretending," it is quite true that Miss Lavendar and
- Anne comported themselves in a fashion entirely unsuited to the
- dignity of a spinster of forty-five and a sedate schoolma'am.
- Then, when they were tired, they sat down on the rug before the
- grate in the parlor, lighted only by the soft fireshine and
- perfumed deliciously by Miss Lavendar's open rose-jar on the mantel.
- The wind had risen and was sighing and wailing around the eaves and
- the snow was thudding softly against the windows, as if a hundred
- storm sprites were tapping for entrance.
-
- "I'm so glad you're here, Anne," said Miss Lavendar, nibbling at
- her candy. "If you weren't I should be blue. . .very blue. . .
- almost navy blue. Dreams and make-believes are all very well in
- the daytime and the sunshine, but when dark and storm come they
- fail to satisfy. One wants real things then. But you don't know
- this. . .seventeen never knows it. At seventeen dreams DO satisfy
- because you think the realities are waiting for you further on.
- When I was seventeen, Anne, I didn't think forty-five would find me
- a white-haired little old maid with nothing but dreams to fill my life."
-
- "But you aren't an old maid," said Anne, smiling into Miss Lavendar's
- wistful woodbrown eyes. "Old maids are BORN. . .they don't BECOME."
-
- "Some are born old maids, some achieve old maidenhood, and some have
- old maidenhood thrust upon them," parodied Miss Lavendar whimsically.
-
- "You are one of those who have achieved it then," laughed Anne,
- "and you've done it so beautifully that if every old maid were
- like you they would come into the fashion, I think."
-
- "I always like to do things as well as possible," said Miss
- Lavendar meditatively, "and since an old maid I had to be I was
- determined to be a very nice one. People say I'm odd; but it's
- just because I follow my own way of being an old maid and refuse to
- copy the traditional pattern. Anne, did anyone ever tell you
- anything about Stephen Irving and me?"
-
- "Yes," said Anne candidly, "I've heard that you and he were engaged once."
-
- "So we were. . .twenty-five years ago. . .a lifetime ago. And we
- were to have been married the next spring. I had my wedding
- dress made, although nobody but mother and Stephen ever knew THAT.
- We'd been engaged in a way almost all our lives, you might say.
- When Stephen was a little boy his mother would bring him here when
- she came to see my mother; and the second time he ever came. . .
- he was nine and I was six. . .he told me out in the garden that
- he had pretty well made up his mind to marry me when he grew up.
- I remember that I said `Thank you'; and when he was gone I told
- mother very gravely that there was a great weight off my mind,
- because I wasn't frightened any more about having to be an old
- maid. How poor mother laughed!"
-
- "And what went wrong?" asked Anne breathlessly.
-
- "We had just a stupid, silly, commonplace quarrel. So commonplace
- that, if you'll believe me, I don't even remember just how it began.
- I hardly know who was the more to blame for it. Stephen did really
- begin it, but I suppose I provoked him by some foolishness of mine.
- He had a rival or two, you see. I was vain and coquettish and liked
- to tease him a little. He was a very high-strung, sensitive fellow.
- Well, we parted in a temper on both sides. But I thought it would all
- come right; and it would have if Stephen hadn't come back too soon.
- Anne, my dear, I'm sorry to say". . .Miss Lavendar dropped her voice
- as if she were about to confess a predilection for murdering people,
- "that I am a dreadfully sulky person. Oh, you needn't smile,. . .
- it's only too true. I DO sulk; and Stephen came back before I had
- finished sulking. I wouldn't listen to him and I wouldn't forgive him;
- and so he went away for good. He was too proud to come again. And
- then I sulked because he didn't come. I might have sent for him
- perhaps, but I couldn't humble myself to do that. I was just as
- proud as he was. . .pride and sulkiness make a very bad combination,
- Anne. But I could never care for anybody else and I didn't want to.
- I knew I would rather be an old maid for a thousand years than marry
- anybody who wasn't Stephen Irving. Well, it all seems like a dream now,
- of course. How sympathetic you look, Anne. . .as sympathetic as only
- seventeen can look. But don't overdo it. I'm really a very happy,
- contented little person in spite of my broken heart. My heart did break,
- if ever a heart did, when I realized that Stephen Irving was not coming back.
- But, Anne, a broken heart in real life isn't half as dreadful as it is
- in books. It's a good deal like a bad tooth. . .though you won't
- think THAT a very romantic simile. It takes spells of aching and
- gives you a sleepless night now and then, but between times it lets
- you enjoy life and dreams and echoes and peanut candy as if there
- were nothing the matter with it. And now you're looking disappointed.
- You don't think I'm half as interesting a person as you did five minutes
- ago when you believed I was always the prey of a tragic memory bravely
- hidden beneath external smiles. That's the worst. . .or the best. . .
- of real life, Anne. It WON'T let you be miserable. It keeps on trying
- to make you comfortable. . .and succeeding...even when you're determined
- to be unhappy and romantic. Isn't this candy scrumptious? I've eaten
- far more than is good for me already but I'm going to keep recklessly on."
-
- After a little silence Miss Lavendar said abruptly,
-
- "It gave me a shock to hear about Stephen's son that first day you
- were here, Anne. I've never been able to mention him to you since,
- but I've wanted to know all about him. What sort of a boy is he?"
-
- "He is the dearest, sweetest child I ever knew, Miss Lavendar. . .
- and he pretends things too, just as you and I do."
-
- "I'd like to see him," said Miss Lavendar softly, as if talking to herself.
- "I wonder if he looks anything like the little dream-boy who lives here
- with me. . .MY little dream-boy."
-
- "If you would like to see Paul I'll bring him through with me sometime,"
- said Anne.
-
- "I would like it. . .but not too soon. I want to get used to the thought.
- There might be more pain than pleasure in it. . .if he looked too much
- like Stephen. . .or if he didn't look enough like him. In a month's time
- you may bring him."
-
- Accordingly, a month later Anne and Paul walked through the woods
- to the stone house, and met Miss Lavendar in the lane. She had
- not been expecting them just then and she turned very pale.
-
- "So this is Stephen's boy," she said in a low tone, taking Paul's
- hand and looking at him as he stood, beautiful and boyish, in his
- smart little fur coat and cap. "He. . .he is very like his father."
-
- "Everybody says I'm a chip off the old block," remarked Paul,
- quite at his ease.
-
- Anne, who had been watching the little scene, drew a relieved breath.
- She saw that Miss Lavendar and Paul had "taken" to each other, and
- that there would be no constraint or stiffness. Miss Lavendar
- was a very sensible person, in spite of her dreams and romance,
- and after that first little betrayal she tucked her feelings
- out of sight and entertained Paul as brightly and naturally
- as if he were anybody's son who had come to see her.
- They all had a jolly afternoon together and such a feast of fat
- things by way of supper as would have made old Mrs. Irving hold up
- her hands in horror, believing that Paul's digestion would be
- ruined for ever.
-
- "Come again, laddie," said Miss Lavendar, shaking hands with him
- at parting.
-
- "You may kiss me if you like," said Paul gravely.
-
- Miss Lavendar stooped and kissed him.
-
- "How did you know I wanted to?" she whispered.
-
- "Because you looked at me just as my little mother used to do
- when she wanted to kiss me. As a rule, I don't like to be kissed.
- Boys don't. You know, Miss Lewis. But I think I rather like to
- have you kiss me. And of course I'll come to see you again.
- I think I'd like to have you for a particular friend of mine,
- if you don't object."
-
- "I. . .I don't think I shall object," said Miss Lavendar.
- She turned and went in very quickly; but a moment later she
- was waving a gay and smiling good-bye to them from the window.
-
- "I like Miss Lavendar," announced Paul, as they walked through the
- beech woods. "I like the way she looked at me, and I like her
- stone house, and I like Charlotta the Fourth. I wish Grandma
- Irving had a Charlotta the Fourth instead of a Mary Joe. I feel
- sure Charlotta the Fourth wouldn't think I was wrong in my upper
- story when I told her what I think about things. Wasn't that a
- splendid tea we had, teacher? Grandma says a boy shouldn't be
- thinking about what he gets to eat, but he can't help it sometimes
- when he is real hungry. YOU know, teacher. I don't think Miss
- Lavendar would make a boy eat porridge for breakfast if he didn't
- like it. She'd get things for him he did like. But of course". . .
- Paul was nothing if not fair-minded. . ."that mightn't be very good
- for him. It's very nice for a change though, teacher. YOU know."
-
-
-
-
- XXIV
-
- A Prophet in His Own Country
-
-
- One May day Avonlea folks were mildly excited over some "Avonlea Notes,"
- signed "Observer," which appeared in the Charlottetown `Daily Enterprise.'
- Gossip ascribed the authorship thereof to Charlie Sloane, partly because
- the said Charlie had indulged in similar literary flights in times past,
- and partly because one of the notes seemed to embody a sneer at Gilbert
- Blythe. Avonlea juvenile society persisted in regarding Gilbert Blythe
- and Charlie Sloane as rivals in the good graces of a certain damsel with
- gray eyes and an imagination.
-
- Gossip, as usual, was wrong. Gilbert Blythe, aided and abetted by
- Anne, had written the notes, putting in the one about himself as a
- blind. Only two of the notes have any bearing on this history:
-
- "Rumor has it that there will be a wedding in our village ere the
- daisies are in bloom. A new and highly respected citizen will lead
- to the hymeneal altar one of our most popular ladies.
-
- "Uncle Abe, our well-known weather prophet, predicts a violent
- storm of thunder and lightning for the evening of the twenty-third
- of May, beginning at seven o'clock sharp. The area of the storm
- will extend over the greater part of the Province. People traveling
- that evening will do well to take umbrellas and mackintoshes with them."
-
- "Uncle Abe really has predicted a storm for sometime this spring,"
- said Gilbert, "but do you suppose Mr. Harrison really does go to
- see Isabella Andrews?"
-
- "No," said Anne, laughing, "I'm sure he only goes to play checkers with
- Mr. Harrison Andrews, but Mrs. Lynde says she knows Isabella Andrews
- must be going to get married, she's in such good spirits this spring."
-
- Poor old Uncle Abe felt rather indignant over the notes. He suspected
- that "Observer" was making fun of him. He angrily denied having
- assigned any particular date for his storm but nobody believed him.
-
- Life in Avonlea continued on the smooth and even tenor of its way.
- The "planting" was put in; the Improvers celebrated an Arbor Day.
- Each Improver set out, or caused to be set out, five ornamental trees.
- As the society now numbered forty members, this meant a total of
- two hundred young trees. Early oats greened over the red fields;
- apple orchards flung great blossoming arms about the farmhouses
- and the Snow Queen adorned itself as a bride for her husband.
- Anne liked to sleep with her window open and let the cherry
- fragrance blow over her face all night. She thought it very
- poetical. Marilla thought she was risking her life.
-
- "Thanksgiving should be celebrated in the spring," said Anne
- one evening to Marilla, as they sat on the front door steps and
- listened to the silver-sweet chorus of the frogs. "I think it
- would be ever so much better than having it in November when
- everything is dead or asleep. Then you have to remember to be
- thankful; but in May one simply can't help being thankful. . .
- that they are alive, if for nothing else. I feel exactly as Eve
- must have felt in the garden of Eden before the trouble began.
- IS that grass in the hollow green or golden? It seems to me,
- Marilla, that a pearl of a day like this, when the blossoms are
- out and the winds don't know where to blow from next for sheer
- crazy delight must be pretty near as good as heaven."
-
- Marilla looked scandalized and glanced apprehensively around to
- make sure the twins were not within earshot. They came around the
- corner of the house just then.
-
- "Ain't it an awful nice-smelling evening?" asked Davy, sniffing
- delightedly as he swung a hoe in his grimy hands. He had been
- working in his garden. That spring Marilla, by way of turning
- Davy's passion for reveling in mud and clay into useful channels,
- had given him and Dora a small plot of ground for a garden.
- Both had eagerly gone to work in a characteristic fashion.
- Dora planted, weeded, and watered carefully, systematically,
- and dispassionately. As a result, her plot was already green
- with prim, orderly little rows of vegetables and annuals.
- Davy, however, worked with more zeal than discretion; he dug
- and hoed and raked and watered and transplanted so energetically
- that his seeds had no chance for their lives.
-
- "How is your garden coming on, Davy-boy?" asked Anne.
-
- "Kind of slow," said Davy with a sigh. "I don't know why the
- things don't grow better. Milty Boulter says I must have
- planted them in the dark of the moon and that's the whole trouble.
- He says you must never sow seeds or kill pork or cut your hair or
- do any 'portant thing in the wrong time of the moon. Is that true,
- Anne? I want to know."
-
- "Maybe if you didn't pull your plants up by the roots every other day
- to see how they're getting on `at the other end,' they'd do better,"
- said Marilla sarcastically.
-
- "I only pulled six of them up," protested Davy. "I wanted to see
- if there was grubs at the roots. Milty Boulter said if it wasn't
- the moon's fault it must be grubs. But I only found one grub.
- He was a great big juicy curly grub. I put him on a stone and got
- another stone and smashed him flat. He made a jolly SQUISH I tell you.
- I was sorry there wasn't more of them. Dora's garden was planted same
- time's mine and her things are growing all right. It CAN'T be the moon,"
- Davy concluded in a reflective tone.
-
- "Marilla, look at that apple tree," said Anne." Why, the thing is human.
- It is reaching out long arms to pick its own pink skirts daintily up and
- provoke us to admiration."
-
- "Those Yellow Duchess trees always bear well," said Marilla complacently.
- "That tree'll be loaded this year. I'm real glad. . .they're great for pies."
-
- But neither Marilla nor Anne nor anybody else was fated to make
- pies out of Yellow Duchess apples that year.
-
- The twenty-third of May came. . .an unseasonably warm day, as none
- realized more keenly than Anne and her little beehive of pupils,
- sweltering over fractions and syntax in the Avonlea schoolroom.
- A hot breeze blew all the forenoon; but after noon hour it died away
- into a heavy stillness. At half past three Anne heard a low rumble
- of thunder. She promptly dismissed school at once, so that the
- children might get home before the storm came.
-
- As they went out to the playground Anne perceived a certain shadow
- and gloom over the world in spite of the fact that the sun was
- still shining brightly. Annetta Bell caught her hand nervously.
-
- "Oh, teacher, look at that awful cloud!"
-
- Anne looked and gave an exclamation of dismay. In the northwest a
- mass of cloud, such as she had never in all her life beheld before,
- was rapidly rolling up. It was dead black, save where its curled
- and fringed edges showed a ghastly, livid white. There was
- something about it indescribably menacing as it gloomed up in the
- clear blue sky; now and again a bolt of lightning shot across it,
- followed by a savage growl. It hung so low that it almost seemed
- to be touching the tops of the wooded hills.
-
- Mr. Harmon Andrews came clattering up the hill in his truck wagon,
- urging his team of grays to their utmost speed. He pulled them to
- a halt opposite the school.
-
- "Guess Uncle Abe's hit it for once in his life, Anne," he shouted.
- "His storm's coming a leetle ahead of time. Did ye ever see the
- like of that cloud? Here, all you young ones, that are going my
- way, pile in, and those that ain't scoot for the post office if
- ye've more'n a quarter of a mile to go, and stay there till the
- shower's over."
-
- Anne caught Davy and Dora by the hands and flew down the hill,
- along the Birch Path, and past Violet Vale and Willowmere, as fast
- as the twins' fat legs could go. They reached Green Gables not a
- moment too soon and were joined at the door by Marilla, who had been
- hustling her ducks and chickens under shelter. As they dashed into
- the kitchen the light seemed to vanish, as if blown out by some
- mighty breath; the awful cloud rolled over the sun and a darkness
- as of late twilight fell across the world. At the same moment,
- with a crash of thunder and a blinding glare of lightning, the
- hail swooped down and blotted the landscape out in one white fury.
-
- Through all the clamor of the storm came the thud of torn branches
- striking the house and the sharp crack of breaking glass. In three
- minutes every pane in the west and north windows was broken and the
- hail poured in through the apertures covering the floor with stones,
- the smallest of which was as big as a hen's egg. For three quarters
- of an hour the storm raged unabated and no one who underwent it ever
- forgot it. Marilla, for once in her life shaken out of her composure
- by sheer terror, knelt by her rocking chair in a corner of the kitchen,
- gasping and sobbing between the deafening thunder peals. Anne, white
- as paper, had dragged the sofa away from the window and sat on it with
- a twin on either side. Davy at the first crash had howled, "Anne, Anne,
- is it the Judgment Day? Anne, Anne, I never meant to be naughty," and
- then had buried his face in Anne's lap and kept it there, his little
- body quivering. Dora, somewhat pale but quite composed, sat with her
- hand clasped in Anne's, quiet and motionless. It is doubtful if an
- earthquake would have disturbed Dora.
-
- Then, almost as suddenly as it began, the storm ceased. The hail
- stopped, the thunder rolled and muttered away to the eastward, and
- the sun burst out merry and radiant over a world so changed that it
- seemed an absurd thing to think that a scant three quarters of an
- hour could have effected such a transformation.
-
- Marilla rose from her knees, weak and trembling, and dropped on her rocker.
- Her face was haggard and she looked ten years older.
-
- "Have we all come out of that alive?" she asked solemnly.
-
- "You bet we have," piped Davy cheerfully, quite his own man again.
- "I wasn't a bit scared either. . .only just at the first. It come on
- a fellow so sudden. I made up my mind quick as a wink that I wouldn't
- fight Teddy Sloane Monday as I'd promised; but now maybe I will.
- Say, Dora, was you scared?"
-
- "Yes, I was a little scared," said Dora primly, "but I held tight
- to Anne's hand and said my prayers over and over again."
-
- "Well, I'd have said my prayers too if I'd have thought of it,"
- said Davy; "but," he added triumphantly, "you see I came through
- just as safe as you for all I didn't say them."
-
- Anne got Marilla a glassful of her potent currant wine. . .HOW
- potent it was Anne, in her earlier days, had had all too good
- reason to know. . .and then they went to the door to look out on
- the strange scene.
-
- Far and wide was a white carpet, knee deep, of hailstones; drifts
- of them were heaped up under the eaves and on the steps. When,
- three or four days later, those hailstones melted, the havoc they
- had wrought was plainly seen, for every green growing thing in the
- field or garden was cut off. Not only was every blossom stripped
- from the apple trees but great boughs and branches were wrenched
- away. And out of the two hundred trees set out by the Improvers by
- far the greater number were snapped off or torn to shreds.
-
- "Can it possibly be the same world it was an hour ago?" asked Anne,
- dazedly. "It MUST have taken longer than that to play such havoc."
-
- "The like of this has never been known in Prince Edward Island,"
- said Marilla, "never. I remember when I was a girl there was a
- bad storm, but it was nothing to this. We'll hear of terrible
- destruction, you may be sure."
-
- "I do hope none of the children were caught out in it," murmured
- Anne anxiously. As it was discovered later, none of the children
- had been, since all those who had any distance to go had taken Mr.
- Andrews' excellent advice and sought refuge at the post office.
-
- "There comes John Henry Carter," said Marilla.
-
- John Henry came wading through the hailstones with a rather scared grin.
-
- "Oh, ain't this awful, Miss Cuthbert? Mr. Harrison sent me over to
- see if yous had come out all right."
-
- "We're none of us killed," said Marilla grimly, "and none of the
- buildings was struck. I hope you got off equally well."
-
- "Yas'm. Not quite so well, ma'am. We was struck. The lightning
- knocked over the kitchen chimbly and come down the flue and knocked
- over Ginger's cage and tore a hole in the floor and went into the
- sullar. Yas'm."
-
- "Was Ginger hurt?" queried Anne.
-
- "Yas'm. He was hurt pretty bad. He was killed." Later on Anne
- went over to comfort Mr. Harrison. She found him sitting by the
- table, stroking Ginger's gay dead body with a trembling hand.
-
- "Poor Ginger won't call you any more names, Anne," he said mournfully.
-
- Anne could never have imagined herself crying on Ginger's account,
- but the tears came into her eyes.
-
- "He was all the company I had, Anne. . .and now he's dead. Well,
- well, I'm an old fool to care so much. I'll let on I don't care.
- I know you're going to say something sympathetic as soon as I
- stop talking. . .but don't. If you did I'd cry like a baby.
- Hasn't this been a terrible storm? I guess folks won't laugh
- at Uncle Abe's predictions again. Seems as if all the storms
- that he's been prophesying all his life that never happened came
- all at once. Beats all how he struck the very day though, don't it?
- Look at the mess we have here. I must hustle round and get some
- boards to patch up that hole in the floor."
-
- Avonlea folks did nothing the next day but visit each other and
- compare damages. The roads were impassable for wheels by reason of
- the hailstones, so they walked or rode on horseback. The mail came
- late with ill tidings from all over the province. Houses had been
- struck, people killed and injured; the whole telephone and
- telegraph system had been disorganized, and any number of young
- stock exposed in the fields had perished.
-
- Uncle Abe waded out to the blacksmith's forge early in the morning
- and spent the whole day there. It was Uncle Abe's hour of triumph
- and he enjoyed it to the full. It would be doing Uncle Abe an
- injustice to say that he was glad the storm had happened; but since
- it had to be he was very glad he had predicted it. . .to the very
- day, too. Uncle Abe forgot that he had ever denied setting the day.
- As for the trifling discrepancy in the hour, that was nothing.
-
- Gilbert arrived at Green Gables in the evening and found Marilla
- and Anne busily engaged in nailing strips of oilcloth over the
- broken windows.
-
- "Goodness only knows when we'll get glass for them," said Marilla.
- "Mr. Barry went over to Carmody this afternoon but not a pane
- could he get for love or money. Lawson and Blair were cleaned out
- by the Carmody people by ten o'clock. Was the storm bad at White
- Sands, Gilbert?"
-
- "I should say so. I was caught in the school with all the children
- and I thought some of them would go mad with fright. Three of them
- fainted, and two girls took hysterics, and Tommy Blewett did
- nothing but shriek at the top of his voice the whole time."
-
- "I only squealed once," said Davy proudly. "My garden was all
- smashed flat," he continued mournfully, "but so was Dora's," he
- added in a tone which indicated that there was yet balm in Gilead.
-
- Anne came running down from the west gable.
-
- "Oh, Gilbert, have you heard the news? Mr. Levi Boulter's old
- house was struck and burned to the ground. It seems to me that I'm
- dreadfully wicked to feel glad over THAT, when so much damage has
- been done. Mr. Boulter says he believes the A.V.I.S. magicked up
- that storm on purpose."
-
- "Well, one thing is certain," said Gilbert, laughing, "`Observer'
- has made Uncle Abe's reputation as a weather prophet. `Uncle Abe's
- storm' will go down in local history. It is a most extraordinary
- coincidence that it should have come on the very day we selected.
- I actually have a half guilty feeling, as if I really had `magicked'
- it up. We may as well rejoice over the old house being removed, for
- there's not much to rejoice over where our young trees are concerned.
- Not ten of them have escaped."
-
- "Ah, well, we'll just have to plant them over again next spring,"
- said Anne philosophically. "That is one good thing about this
- world. . .there are always sure to be more springs."
-
-
-
-
- XXV
-
- An Avonlea Scandal
-
-
- One blithe June morning, a fortnight after Uncle Abe's storm, Anne
- came slowly through the Green Gables yard from the garden, carrying
- in her hands two blighted stalks of white narcissus.
-
- "Look, Marilla," she said sorroly, holding up the flowers before
- the eyes of a grim lady, with her hair coifed in a green gingham
- apron, who was going into the house with a plucked chicken, "these
- are the only buds the storm spared. . .and even they are imperfect.
- I'm so sorry. . .I wanted some for Matthew's grave. He was always
- so fond of June lilies."
-
- "I kind of miss them myself," admitted Marilla, "though it doesn't
- seem right to lament over them when so many worse things have
- happened. . .all the crops destroyed as well as the fruit."
-
- "But people have sown their oats over again," said Anne comfortingly,
- "and Mr. Harrison says he thinks if we have a good summer they will
- come out all right though late. And my annuals are all coming up again
- . . .but oh, nothing can replace the June lilies. Poor little Hester
- Gray will have none either. I went all the way back to her garden
- last night but there wasn't one. I'm sure she'll miss them."
-
- "I don't think it's right for you to say such things, Anne, I
- really don't," said Marilla severely. "Hester Gray has been dead
- for thirty years and her spirit is in heaven. . .I hope."
-
- "Yes, but I believe she loves and remembers her garden here still,"
- said Anne. "I'm sure no matter how long I'd lived in heaven I'd like to
- look down and see somebody putting flowers on my grave. If I had had a
- garden here like Hester Gray's it would take me more than thirty years,
- even in heaven, to forget being homesick for it by spells."
-
- "Well, don't let the twins hear you talking like that," was Marilla's
- feeble protest, as she carried her chicken into the house.
-
- Anne pinned her narcissi on her hair and went to the lane gate,
- where she stood for awhile sunning herself in the June brightness
- before going in to attend to her Saturday morning duties. The world
- was growing lovely again; old Mother Nature was doing her best
- to remove the traces of the storm, and, though she was not to
- succeed fully for many a moon, she was really accomplishing wonders.
-
- "I wish I could just be idle all day today," Anne told a bluebird,
- who was singing and swinging on a willow bough, "but a schoolma'am,
- who is also helping to bring up twins, can't indulge in laziness,
- birdie. How sweet you are singing, little bird. You are just
- putting the feelings of my heart into song ever so much better than
- I could myself. Why, who is coming?"
-
- An express wagon was jolting up the lane, with two people on the
- front seat and a big trunk behind. When it drew near Anne
- recognized the driver as the son of the station agent at Bright
- River; but his companion was a stranger. . .a scrap of a woman who
- sprang nimbly down at the gate almost before the horse came to a
- standstill. She was a very pretty little person, evidently nearer
- fifty than forty, but with rosy cheeks, sparkling black eyes, and
- shining black hair, surmounted by a wonderful beflowered and
- beplumed bonnet. In spite of having driven eight miles over a
- dusty road she was as neat as if she had just stepped out of the
- proverbial bandbox.
-
- "Is this where Mr. James A. Harrison lives?" she inquired briskly.
-
- "No, Mr. Harrison lives over there," said Anne, quite lost in astonishment.
-
- "Well, I DID think this place seemed too tidy. . .MUCH too tidy for James A.
- to be living here, unless he has greatly changed since I knew him," chirped
- the little lady. "Is it true that James A. is going to be married to some
- woman living in this settlement?"
-
- "No, oh no," cried Anne, flushing so guiltily that the stranger looked
- curiously at her, as if she half suspected her of matrimonial designs on
- Mr. Harrison.
-
- "But I saw it in an Island paper," persisted the Fair Unknown. "A
- friend sent a marked copy to me. . .friends are always so ready to
- do such things. James A.'s name was written in over `new citizen.'"
-
- "Oh, that note was only meant as a joke," gasped Anne. "Mr. Harrison
- has no intention of marrying ANYBODY. I assure you he hasn't."
-
- "I'm very glad to hear it," said the rosy lady, climbing nimbly back
- to her seat in the wagon, "because he happens to be married already.
- _I_ am his wife. Oh, you may well look surprised. I suppose he has
- been masquerading as a bachelor and breaking hearts right and left.
- Well, well, James A.," nodding vigorously over the fields at the
- long white house, "your fun is over. I am here. . .though I wouldn't
- have bothered coming if I hadn't thought you were up to some mischief.
- I suppose," turning to Anne, "that parrot of his is as profane as ever?"
-
- "His parrot. . .is dead. . .I THINK," gasped poor Anne, who
- couldn't have felt sure of her own name at that precise moment.
-
- "Dead! Everything will be all right then," cried the rosy lady
- jubilantly. "I can manage James A. if that bird is out of the way."
-
- With which cryptic utterance she went joyfully on her way and Anne
- flew to the kitchen door to meet Marilla.
-
- "Anne, who was that woman?"
-
- "Marilla," said Anne solemnly, but with dancing eyes, "do I look as
- if I were crazy?"
-
- "Not more so than usual," said Marilla, with no thought of being sarcastic.
-
- "Well then, do you think I am awake?"
-
- "Anne, what nonsense has got into you? Who was that woman, I say?"
-
- "Marilla, if I'm not crazy and not asleep she can't be such stuff as dreams
- are made of. . .she must be real. Anyway, I'm sure I couldn't have
- imagined such a bonnet. She says she is Mr. Harrison's wife, Marilla."
-
- Marilla stared in her turn.
-
- "His wife! Anne Shirley! Then what has he been passing himself off
- as an unmarried man for?"
-
- "I don't suppose he did, really," said Anne, trying to be just.
- "He never said he wasn't married. People simply took it for
- granted. Oh Marilla, what will Mrs. Lynde say to this?"
-
- They found out what Mrs. Lynde had to say when she came up that
- evening. Mrs. Lynde wasn't surprised! Mrs. Lynde had always
- expected something of the sort! Mrs. Lynde had always known there
- was SOMETHING about Mr. Harrison!
-
- "To think of his deserting his wife!" she said indignantly.
- "It's like something you'd read of in the States, but who
- would expect such a thing to happen right here in Avonlea?"
-
- "But we don't know that he deserted her," protested Anne,
- determined to believe her friend innocent till he was proved
- guilty. "We don't know the rights of it at all."
-
- "Well, we soon will. I'm going straight over there," said Mrs.
- Lynde, who had never learned that there was such a word as delicacy
- in the dictionary. "I'm not supposed to know anything about her
- arrival, and Mr. Harrison was to bring some medicine for Thomas
- from Carmody today, so that will be a good excuse. I'll find out
- the whole story and come in and tell you on the way back."
-
- Mrs. Lynde rushed in where Anne had feared to tread. Nothing
- would have induced the latter to go over to the Harrison place;
- but she had her natural and proper share of curiosity and she
- felt secretly glad that Mrs. Lynde was going to solve the mystery.
- She and Marilla waited expectantly for that good lady's return, but
- waited in vain. Mrs. Lynde did not revisit Green Gables that night.
- Davy, arriving home at nine o'clock from the Boulter place, explained why.
-
- "I met Mrs. Lynde and some strange woman in the Hollow," he said,
- "and gracious, how they were talking both at once! Mrs. Lynde
- said to tell you she was sorry it was too late to call tonight.
- Anne, I'm awful hungry. We had tea at Milty's at four and I think
- Mrs. Boulter is real mean. She didn't give us any preserves or cake
- . . .and even the bread was skurce."
-
- "Davy, when you go visiting you must never criticize anything you
- are given to eat," said Anne solemnly. "It is very bad manners."
-
- "All right. . .I'll only think it," said Davy cheerfully.
- "Do give a fellow some supper, Anne."
-
- Anne looked at Marilla, who followed her into the pantry and shut
- the door cautiously.
-
- "You can give him some jam on his bread, I know what tea at Levi
- Boulter's is apt to be."
-
- Davy took his slice of bread and jam with a sigh.
-
- "It's a kind of disappointing world after all," he remarked.
- "Milty has a cat that takes fits. . .she's took a fit regular
- every day for three weeks. Milty says it's awful fun to watch her.
- I went down today on purpose to see her have one but the mean old
- thing wouldn't take a fit and just kept healthy as healthy, though
- Milty and me hung round all the afternoon and waited. But never mind"
- . . .Davy brightened up as the insidious comfort of the plum jam
- stole into his soul. . ."maybe I'll see her in one sometime yet.
- It doesn't seem likely she'd stop having them all at once when she's
- been so in the habit of it, does it? This jam is awful nice."
-
- Davy had no sorrows that plum jam could not cure.
-
- Sunday proved so rainy that there was no stirring abroad; but by
- Monday everybody had heard some version of the Harrison story. The
- school buzzed with it and Davy came home, full of information.
-
- "Marilla, Mr. Harrison has a new wife. . .well, not ezackly new,
- but they've stopped being married for quite a spell, Milty says.
- I always s'posed people had to keep on being married once they'd
- begun, but Milty says no, there's ways of stopping if you can't agree.
- Milty says one way is just to start off and leave your wife, and that's
- what Mr. Harrison did. Milty says Mr. Harrison left his wife because
- she throwed things at him. . .HARD things. . .and Arty Sloane says
- it was because she wouldn't let him smoke, and Ned Clay says it
- was 'cause she never let up scolding him. I wouldn't leave MY
- wife for anything like that. I'd just put my foot down and say,
- `Mrs. Davy, you've just got to do what'll please ME 'cause I'm a MAN.'
- THAT'D settle her pretty quick I guess. But Annetta Clay says SHE left
- HIM because he wouldn't scrape his boots at the door and she doesn't
- blame her. I'm going right over to Mr. Harrison's this minute to see
- what she's like."
-
- Davy soon returned, somewhat cast down.
-
- "Mrs. Harrison was away. . .she's gone to Carmody with Mrs. Rachel
- Lynde to get new paper for the parlor. And Mr. Harrison said to
- tell Anne to go over and see him `cause he wants to have a talk
- with her. And say, the floor is scrubbed, and Mr. Harrison is
- shaved, though there wasn't any preaching yesterday."
-
- The Harrison kitchen wore a very unfamiliar look to Anne. The floor
- was indeed scrubbed to a wonderful pitch of purity and so was every
- article of furniture in the room; the stove was polished until she
- could see her face in it; the walls were whitewashed and the window
- panes sparkled in the sunlight. By the table sat Mr. Harrison in
- his working clothes, which on Friday had been noted for sundry
- rents and tatters but which were now neatly patched and brushed.
- He was sprucely shaved and what little hair he had was carefully trimmed.
-
- "Sit down, Anne, sit down," said Mr. Harrison in a tone but two
- degrees removed from that which Avonlea people used at funerals.
- "Emily's gone over to Carmody with Rachel Lynde. . .she's struck
- up a lifelong friendship already with Rachel Lynde. Beats all how
- contrary women are. Well, Anne, my easy times are over. . .all over.
- It's neatness and tidiness for me for the rest of my natural life,
- I suppose."
-
- Mr. Harrison did his best to speak dolefully, but an irrepressible
- twinkle in his eye betrayed him.
-
- "Mr. Harrison, you are glad your wife is come back," cried Anne,
- shaking her finger at him. "You needn't pretend you're not,
- because I can see it plainly."
-
- Mr. Harrison relaxed into a sheepish smile.
-
- "Well. . .well. . .I'm getting used to it," he conceded. "I can't
- say I was sorry to see Emily. A man really needs some protection
- in a community like this, where he can't play a game of checkers
- with a neighbor without being accused of wanting to marry that
- neighbor's sister and having it put in the paper."
-
- "Nobody would have supposed you went to see Isabella Andrews if you
- hadn't pretended to be unmarried," said Anne severely.
-
- "I didn't pretend I was. If anybody'd have asked me if I was
- married I'd have said I was. But they just took it for granted.
- I wasn't anxious to talk about the matter. . .I was feeling too
- sore over it. It would have been nuts for Mrs. Rachel Lynde if
- she had known my wife had left me, wouldn't it now?"
-
- "But some people say that you left her."
-
- "She started it, Anne, she started it. I'm going to tell you
- the whole story, for I don't want you to think worse of me than I
- deserve. . .nor of Emily neither. But let's go out on the veranda.
- Everything is so fearful neat in here that it kind of makes me homesick.
- I suppose I'll get used to it after awhile but it eases me up to look
- at the yard. Emily hasn't had time to tidy it up yet."
-
- As soon as they were comfortably seated on the veranda Mr. Harrison
- began his tale of woe.
-
- "I lived in Scottsford, New Brunswick, before I came here, Anne.
- My sister kept house for me and she suited me fine; she was just
- reasonably tidy and she let me alone and spoiled me. . .so Emily says.
- But three years ago she died. Before she died she worried a lot about
- what was to become of me and finally she got me to promise I'd get married.
- She advised me to take Emily Scott because Emily had money of her own and was
- a pattern housekeeper. I said, says I, `Emily Scott wouldn't look at me.'
- `You ask her and see,' says my sister; and just to ease her mind I promised
- her I would. . .and I did. And Emily said she'd have me. Never was so
- surprised in my life, Anne. . .a smart pretty little woman like her and
- an old fellow like me. I tell you I thought at first I was in luck.
- Well, we were married and took a little wedding trip to St. John for
- a fortnight and then we went home. We got home at ten o'clock at night,
- and I give you my word, Anne, that in half an hour that woman was at
- work housecleaning. Oh, I know you're thinking my house needed it. . .
- you've got a very expressive face, Anne; your thoughts just come out
- on it like print. . .but it didn't, not that bad. It had got pretty
- mixed up while I was keeping bachelor's hall, I admit, but I'd got a
- woman to come in and clean it up before I was married and there'd
- been considerable painting and fixing done. I tell you if you
- took Emily into a brand new white marble palace she'd be into the
- scrubbing as soon as she could get an old dress on. Well, she
- cleaned house till one o'clock that night and at four she was up
- and at it again. And she kept on that way. . .far's I could see
- she never stopped. It was scour and sweep and dust everlasting,
- except on Sundays, and then she was just longing for Monday to
- begin again. But it was her way of amusing herself and I could
- have reconciled myself to it if she'd left me alone. But that she
- wouldn't do. She'd set out to make me over but she hadn't caught
- me young enough. I wasn't allowed to come into the house unless I
- changed my boots for slippers at the door. I darsn't smoke a pipe
- for my life unless I went to the barn. And I didn't use good
- enough grammar. Emily'd been a schoolteacher in her early life and
- she'd never got over it. Then she hated to see me eating with my
- knife. Well, there it was, pick and nag everlasting. But I
- s'pose, Anne, to be fair, _I_ was cantankerous too. I didn't
- try to improve as I might have done. . .I just got cranky and
- disagreeable when she found fault. I told her one day she hadn't
- complained of my grammar when I proposed to her. It wasn't an
- overly tactful thing to say. A woman would forgive a man for
- beating her sooner than for hinting she was too much pleased to
- get him. Well, we bickered along like that and it wasn't exactly
- pleasant, but we might have got used to each other after a spell if
- it hadn't been for Ginger. Ginger was the rock we split on at
- last. Emily didn't like parrots and she couldn't stand Ginger's
- profane habits of speech. I was attached to the bird for my
- brother the sailor's sake. My brother the sailor was a pet of
- mine when we were little tads and he'd sent Ginger to me when he
- was dying. I didn't see any sense in getting worked up over his
- swearing. There's nothing I hate worse'n profanity in a human
- being, but in a parrot, that's just repeating what it's heard with
- no more understanding of it than I'd have of Chinese, allowances
- might be made. But Emily couldn't see it that way. Women ain't
- logical. She tried to break Ginger of swearing but she hadn't any
- better success than she had in trying to make me stop saying `I
- seen' and `them things.' Seemed as if the more she tried the worse
- Ginger got, same as me.
-
- "Well, things went on like this, both of us getting raspier, till
- the CLIMAX came. Emily invited our minister and his wife to tea,
- and another minister and HIS wife that was visiting them. I'd
- promised to put Ginger away in some safe place where nobody would
- hear him. . .Emily wouldn't touch his cage with a ten-foot pole
- . . . and I meant to do it, for I didn't want the ministers to hear
- anything unpleasant in my house. But it slipped my mind. . .Emily
- was worrying me so much about clean collars and grammar that it
- wasn't any wonder. . .and I never thought of that poor parrot till
- we sat down to tea. Just as minister number one was in the very
- middle of saying grace, Ginger, who was on the veranda outside the
- dining room window, lifted up HIS voice. The gobbler had come
- into view in the yard and the sight of a gobbler always had an
- unwholesome effect on Ginger. He surpassed himself that time.
- You can smile, Anne, and I don't deny I've chuckled some over it
- since myself, but at the time I felt almost as much mortified as Emily.
- I went out and carried Ginger to the barn. I can't say I enjoyed
- the meal. I knew by the look of Emily that there was trouble
- brewing for Ginger and James A. When the folks went away I
- started for the cow pasture and on the way I did some thinking.
- I felt sorry for Emily and kind of fancied I hadn't been so thoughtful
- of her as I might; and besides, I wondered if the ministers would
- think that Ginger had learned his vocabulary from me. The long and
- short of it was, I decided that Ginger would have to be mercifully
- disposed of and when I'd druv the cows home I went in to tell Emily so.
- But there was no Emily and there was a letter on the table. . .just
- according to the rule in story books. Emily writ that I'd have to
- choose between her and Ginger; she'd gone back to her own house and
- there she would stay till I went and told her I'd got rid of that parrot.
-
- "I was all riled up, Anne, and I said she might stay till doomsday if
- she waited for that; and I stuck to it. I packed up her belongings
- and sent them after her. It made an awful lot of talk . . .Scottsford
- was pretty near as bad as Avonlea for gossip. . .and everybody
- sympathized with Emily. It kept me all cross and cantankerous
- and I saw I'd have to get out or I'd never have any peace.
- I concluded I'd come to the Island. I'd been here when I was
- a boy and I liked it; but Emily had always said she wouldn't
- live in a place where folks were scared to walk out after dark for
- fear they'd fall off the edge. So, just to be contrary, I moved
- over here. And that's all there is to it. I hadn't ever heard a
- word from or about Emily till I come home from the back field
- Saturday and found her scrubbing the floor but with the first
- decent dinner I'd had since she left me all ready on the table.
- She told me to eat it first and then we'd talk. . .by which I
- concluded that Emily had learned some lessons about getting along
- with a man. So she's here and she's going to stay. . .seeing that
- Ginger's dead and the Island's some bigger than she thought.
- There's Mrs. Lynde and her now. No, don't go, Anne. Stay and get
- acquainted with Emily. She took quite a notion to you Saturday. . .
- wanted to know who that handsome redhaired girl was at the next house."
-
- Mrs. Harrison welcomed Anne radiantly and insisted on her staying to tea.
-
- "James A. has been telling me all about you and how kind you've been,
- making cakes and things for him," she said. "I want to get acquainted
- with all my new neighbors just as soon as possible. Mrs. Lynde is a
- lovely woman, isn't she? So friendly."
-
- When Anne went home in the sweet June dusk, Mrs. Harrison went with her
- across the fields where the fireflies were lighting their starry lamps.
-
- "I suppose," said Mrs. Harrison confidentially, "that James A. has told
- you our story?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Then I needn't tell it, for James A. is a just man and he would
- tell the truth. The blame was far from being all on his side.
- I can see that now. I wasn't back in my own house an hour before I
- wished I hadn't been so hasty but I wouldn't give in. I see now that
- I expected too much of a man. And I was real foolish to mind his
- bad grammar. It doesn't matter if a man does use bad grammar so
- long as he is a good provider and doesn't go poking round the pantry
- to see how much sugar you've used in a week. I feel that James A.
- and I are going to be real happy now. I wish I knew who `Observer'
- is, so that I could thank him. I owe him a real debt of gratitude."
-
- Anne kept her own counsel and Mrs. Harrison never knew that her
- gratitude found its way to its object. Anne felt rather bewildered
- over the far-reaching consequences of those foolish "notes." They
- had reconciled a man to his wife and made the reputation of a prophet.
-
- Mrs. Lynde was in the Green Gables kitchen. She had been telling
- the whole story to Marilla.
-
- "Well, and how do you like Mrs. Harrison?" she asked Anne.
-
- "Very much. I think she's a real nice little woman."
-
- "That's exactly what she is," said Mrs. Rachel with emphasis,
- "and as I've just been sayin' to Marilla, I think we ought all
- to overlook Mr. Harrison's peculiarities for her sake and try to
- make her feel at home here, that's what. Well, I must get back.
- Thomas'll be wearying for me. I get out a little since Eliza came
- and he's seemed a lot better these past few days, but I never like
- to be long away from him. I hear Gilbert Blythe has resigned from
- White Sands. He'll be off to college in the fall, I suppose."
-
- Mrs. Rachel looked sharply at Anne, but Anne was bending over a sleepy
- Davy nodding on the sofa and nothing was to be read in her face.
- She carried Davy away, her oval girlish cheek pressed against his
- curly yellow head. As they went up the stairs Davy flung a tired
- arm about Anne's neck and gave her a warm hug and a sticky kiss.
-
- "You're awful nice, Anne. Milty Boulter wrote on his slate today
- and showed it to Jennie Sloane,
-
- "`Roses red and vi'lets blue,
- Sugar's sweet, and so are you"
-
- and that 'spresses my feelings for you ezackly, Anne."
-
-
-
-
- XXVI
-
- Around the Bend
-
-
- Thomas Lynde faded out of life as quietly and unobtrusively as he
- had lived it. His wife was a tender, patient, unwearied nurse.
- Sometimes Rachel had been a little hard on her Thomas in health,
- when his slowness or meekness had provoked her; but when he became
- ill no voice could be lower, no hand more gently skillful, no vigil
- more uncomplaining.
-
- "You've been a good wife to me, Rachel," he once said simply, when
- she was sitting by him in the dusk, holding his thin, blanched old
- hand in her work-hardened one. "A good wife. I'm sorry I ain't
- leaving you better off; but the children will look after you.
- They're all smart, capable children, just like their mother.
- A good mother. . .a good woman. . . ."
-
- He had fallen asleep then, and the next morning, just as the white
- dawn was creeping up over the pointed firs in the hollow, Marilla
- went softly into the east gable and wakened Anne.
-
- "Anne, Thomas Lynde is gone. . .their hired boy just brought the word.
- I'm going right down to Rachel."
-
- On the day after Thomas Lynde's funeral Marilla went about Green Gables
- with a strangely preoccupied air. Occasionally she looked at Anne,
- seemed on the point of saying something, then shook her head and
- buttoned up her mouth. After tea she went down to see Mrs. Rachel;
- and when she returned she went to the east gable, where Anne was
- correcting school exercises.
-
- "How is Mrs. Lynde tonight?" asked the latter.
-
- "She's feeling calmer and more composed," answered Marilla, sitting
- down on Anne's bed. . .a proceeding which betokened some unusual
- mental excitement, for in Marilla's code of household ethics to
- sit on a bed after it was made up was an unpardonable offense.
- "But she's very lonely. Eliza had to go home today. . .her son
- isn't well and she felt she couldn't stay any longer."
-
- "When I've finished these exercises I'll run down and chat awhile
- with Mrs. Lynde," said Anne. "I had intended to study some Latin
- composition tonight but it can wait."
-
- "I suppose Gilbert Blythe is going to college in the fall," said
- Marilla jerkily. "How would you like to go too, Anne?"
-
- Anne looked up in astonishment.
-
- "I would like it, of course, Marilla. But it isn't possible."
-
- "I guess it can be made possible. I've always felt that you should go.
- I've never felt easy to think you were giving it all up on my account."
-
- "But Marilla, I've never been sorry for a moment that I stayed home.
- I've been so happy. . .Oh, these past two years have just been delightful."
-
- "Oh, yes, I know you've been contented enough. But that isn't the
- question exactly. You ought to go on with your education. You've
- saved enough to put you through one year at Redmond and the money the
- stock brought in will do for another year. . .and there's scholarships
- and things you might win."
-
- "Yes, but I can't go, Marilla. Your eyes are better, of course;
- but I can't leave you alone with the twins. They need so much
- looking after."
-
- "I won't be alone with them. That's what I meant to discuss with you.
- I had a long talk with Rachel tonight. Anne, she's feeling dreadful
- bad over a good many things. She's not left very well off. It seems
- they mortgaged the farm eight years ago to give the youngest boy a
- start when he went west; and they've never been able to pay much more
- than the interest since. And then of course Thomas' illness has cost
- a good deal, one way or another. The farm will have to be sold and Rachel
- thinks there'll be hardly anything left after the bills are settled.
- She says she'll have to go and live with Eliza and it's breaking her
- heart to think of leaving Avonlea. A woman of her age doesn't make
- new friends and interests easy. And, Anne, as she talked about it
- the thought came to me that I would ask her to come and live with me,
- but I thought I ought to talk it over with you first before I said
- anything to her. If I had Rachel living with me you could go to college.
- How do you feel about it?"
-
- "I feel. . .as if. . .somebody. . .had handed me. . .the moon. . .and I
- didn't know. . .exactly. . .what to do. . .with it," said Anne dazedly.
- "But as for asking Mrs. Lynde to come here, that is for you to decide,
- Marilla. Do you think. . .are you sure. . .you would like it? Mrs. Lynde
- is a good woman and a kind neighbor, but. . .but. . ."
-
- "But she's got her faults, you mean to say? Well, she has, of course;
- but I think I'd rather put up with far worse faults than see Rachel
- go away from Avonlea. I'd miss her terrible. She's the only close
- friend I've got here and I'd be lost without her. We've been neighbors
- for forty-five years and we've never had a quarrel. . .though we came
- rather near it that time you flew at Mrs. Rachel for calling you homely
- and redhaired. Do you remember, Anne?"
-
- "I should think I do," said Anne ruefully. "People don't forget
- things like that. How I hated poor Mrs. Rachel at that moment!"
-
- "And then that `apology' you made her. Well, you were a handful,
- in all conscience, Anne. I did feel so puzzled and bewildered how
- to manage you. Matthew understood you better."
-
- "Matthew understood everything," said Anne softly, as she always
- spoke of him.
-
- "Well, I think it could be managed so that Rachel and I wouldn't
- clash at all. It always seemed to me that the reason two women
- can't get along in one house is that they try to share the same
- kitchen and get in each other's way. Now, if Rachel came here,
- she could have the north gable for her bedroom and the spare room
- for a kitchen as well as not, for we don't really need a spare room
- at all. She could put her stove there and what furniture she wanted
- to keep, and be real comfortable and independent. She'll have enough
- to live on of course...her children'll see to that...so all I'd be
- giving her would be house room. Yes, Anne, far as I'm concerned
- I'd like it."
-
- "Then ask her," said Anne promptly. "I'd be very sorry myself to
- see Mrs. Rachel go away."
-
- "And if she comes," continued Marilla, "You can go to college as well
- as not. She'll be company for me and she'll do for the twins what I
- can't do, so there's no reason in the world why you shouldn't go."
-
- Anne had a long meditation at her window that night. Joy and regret
- struggled together in her heart. She had come at last. . .suddenly
- and unexpectedly. . .to the bend in the road; and college was around it,
- with a hundred rainbow hopes and visions; but Anne realized as well that
- when she rounded that curve she must leave many sweet things behind. . .
- all the little simple duties and interests which had grown so dear to her
- in the last two years and which she had glorified into beauty and delight
- by the enthusiasm she had put into them. She must give up her school. . .
- and she loved every one of her pupils, even the stupid and naughty ones.
- The mere thought of Paul Irving made her wonder if Redmond were such a
- name to conjure with after all.
-
- "I've put out a lot of little roots these two years," Anne told the moon,
- "and when I'm pulled up they're going to hurt a great deal. But it's best
- to go, I think, and, as Marilla says, there's no good reason why I shouldn't.
- I must get out all my ambitions and dust them."
-
- Anne sent in her resignation the next day; and Mrs. Rachel, after
- a heart to heart talk with Marilla, gratefully accepted the offer
- of a home at Green Gables. She elected to remain in her own house
- for the summer, however; the farm was not to be sold until the fall
- and there were many arrangements to be made.
-
- "I certainly never thought of living as far off the road as Green Gables,"
- sighed Mrs. Rachel to herself. "But really, Green Gables doesn't seem as
- out of the world as it used to do. . .Anne has lots of company and the
- twins make it real lively. And anyhow, I'd rather live at the bottom
- of a well than leave Avonlea."
-
- These two decisions being noised abroad speedily ousted the arrival
- of Mrs. Harrison in popular gossip. Sage heads were shaken over
- Marilla Cuthbert's rash step in asking Mrs. Rachel to live with her.
- People opined that they wouldn't get on together. They were both
- "too fond of their own way," and many doleful predictions were made,
- none of which disturbed the parties in question at all. They had
- come to a clear and distinct understanding of the respective duties
- and rights of their new arrangements and meant to abide by them.
-
- "I won't meddle with you nor you with me," Mrs. Rachel had said decidedly,
- "and as for the twins, I'll be glad to do all I can for them; but I won't
- undertake to answer Davy's questions, that's what. I'm not an encyclopedia,
- neither am I a Philadelphia lawyer. You'll miss Anne for that."
-
- "Sometimes Anne's answers were about as queer as Davy's questions,"
- said Marilla drily. "The twins will miss her and no mistake; but
- her future can't be sacrificed to Davy's thirst for information.
- When he asks questions I can't answer I'll just tell him children
- should be seen and not heard. That was how I was brought up,
- and I don't know but what it was just as good a way as all these
- new-fangled notions for training children."
-
- "Well, Anne's methods seem to have worked fairly well with Davy,"
- said Mrs. Lynde smilingly. "He is a reformed character, that's what."
-
- "He isn't a bad little soul," conceded Marilla. "I never expected to get
- as fond of those children as I have. Davy gets round you somehow . . .and
- Dora is a lovely child, although she is. . .kind of. . .well, kind of. . ."
-
- "Monotonous? Exactly," supplied Mrs. Rachel. "Like a book where every
- page is the same, that's what. Dora will make a good, reliable woman but
- she'll never set the pond on fire. Well, that sort of folks are comfortable
- to have round, even if they're not as interesting as the other kind."
-
- Gilbert Blythe was probably the only person to whom the news of
- Anne's resignation brought unmixed pleasure. Her pupils looked
- upon it as a sheer catastrophe. Annetta Bell had hysterics when
- she went home. Anthony Pye fought two pitched and unprovoked
- battles with other boys by way of relieving his feelings. Barbara
- Shaw cried all night. Paul Irving defiantly told his grandmother
- that she needn't expect him to eat any porridge for a week.
-
- "I can't do it, Grandma," he said. "I don't really know if I can
- eat ANYTHING. I feel as if there was a dreadful lump in my throat.
- I'd have cried coming home from school if Jake Donnell hadn't been
- watching me. I believe I will cry after I go to bed. It wouldn't
- show on my eyes tomorrow, would it? And it would be such a relief.
- But anyway, I can't eat porridge. I'm going to need all my strength
- of mind to bear up against this, Grandma, and I won't have any left
- to grapple with porridge. Oh Grandma, I don't know what I'll do when
- my beautiful teacher goes away. Milty Boulter says he bets Jane Andrews
- will get the school. I suppose Miss Andrews is very nice. But I know
- she won't understand things like Miss Shirley."
-
- Diana also took a very pessimistic view of affairs.
-
- "It will be horribly lonesome here next winter," she mourned, one twilight
- when the moonlight was raining "airy silver" through the cherry boughs
- and filling the east gable with a soft, dream-like radiance in which
- the two girls sat and talked, Anne on her low rocker by the window,
- Diana sitting Turkfashion on the bed. "You and Gilbert will be gone
- . . .and the Allans too. They are going to call Mr. Allan to
- Charlottetown and of course he'll accept. It's too mean. We'll
- be vacant all winter, I suppose, and have to listen to a long
- string of candidates. . .and half of them won't be any good."
-
- "I hope they won't call Mr. Baxter from East Grafton here, anyhow,"
- said Anne decidedly. "He wants the call but he does preach such
- gloomy sermons. Mr. Bell says he's a minister of the old school,
- but Mrs. Lynde says there's nothing whatever the matter with him
- but indigestion. His wife isn't a very good cook, it seems, and
- Mrs. Lynde says that when a man has to eat sour bread two weeks
- out of three his theology is bound to get a kink in it somewhere.
- Mrs. Allan feels very badly about going away. She says everybody
- has been so kind to her since she came here as a bride that she
- feels as if she were leaving lifelong friends. And then, there's
- the baby's grave, you know. She says she doesn't see how she can
- go away and leave that. . .it was such a little mite of a thing
- and only three months old, and she says she is afraid it will miss
- its mother, although she knows better and wouldn't say so to Mr. Allan
- for anything. She says she has slipped through the birch grove back
- of the manse nearly every night to the graveyard and sung a little
- lullaby to it. She told me all about it last evening when I was
- up putting some of those early wild roses on Matthew's grave.
- I promised her that as long as I was in Avonlea I would put flowers
- on the baby's grave and when I was away I felt sure that. . ."
-
- "That I would do it," supplied Diana heartily. "Of course I will.
- And I'll put them on Matthew's grave too, for your sake, Anne."
-
- "Oh, thank you. I meant to ask you to if you would. And on little
- Hester Gray's too? Please don't forget hers. Do you know, I've
- thought and dreamed so much about little Hester Gray that she has
- become strangely real to me. I think of her, back there in her
- little garden in that cool, still, green corner; and I have a fancy
- that if I could steal back there some spring evening, just at the
- magic time 'twixt light and dark, and tiptoe so softly up the beech
- hill that my footsteps could not frighten her, I would find the
- garden just as it used to be, all sweet with June lilies and early
- roses, with the tiny house beyond it all hung with vines; and
- little Hester Gray would be there, with her soft eyes, and the wind
- ruffling her dark hair, wandering about, putting her fingertips
- under the chins of the lilies and whispering secrets with the roses;
- and I would go forward, oh, so softly, and hold out my hands and
- say to her, `Little Hester Gray, won't you let me be your playmate,
- for I love the roses too?' And we would sit down on the old bench
- and talk a little and dream a little, or just be beautifully silent
- together. And then the moon would rise and I would look around me
- . . .and there would be no Hester Gray and no little vine-hung house,
- and no roses. . .only an old waste garden starred with June lilies amid the
- grasses, and the wind sighing, oh, so sorrowfully in the cherry trees. And
- I would not know whether it had been real or if I had just imagined it all."
- Diana crawled up and got her back against the headboard of the bed.
- When your companion of twilight hour said such spooky things it was
- just as well not to be able to fancy there was anything behind you.
-
- "I'm afraid the Improvement Society will go down when you and
- Gilbert are both gone," she remarked dolefully.
-
- "Not a bit of fear of it," said Anne briskly, coming back from
- dreamland to the affairs of practical life. "It is too firmly
- established for that, especially since the older people are
- becoming so enthusiastic about it. Look what they are doing this
- summer for their lawns and lanes. Besides, I'll be watching for
- hints at Redmond and I'll write a paper for it next winter and
- send it over. Don't take such a gloomy view of things, Diana.
- And don't grudge me my little hour of gladness and jubilation now.
- Later on, when I have to go away, I'll feel anything but glad."
-
- "It's all right for you to be glad. . .you're going to college and
- you'll have a jolly time and make heaps of lovely new friends."
-
- "I hope I shall make new friends," said Anne thoughtfully.
- "The possibilities of making new friends help to make life very
- fascinating. But no matter how many friends I make they'll never
- be as dear to me as the old ones. . .especially a certain girl
- with black eyes and dimples. Can you guess who she is, Diana?"
-
- "But there'll be so many clever girls at Redmond," sighed Diana,
- "and I'm only a stupid little country girl who says `I seen'
- sometimes. . .though I really know better when I stop to think.
- Well, of course these past two years have really been too pleasant
- to last. I know SOMEBODY who is glad you are going to Redmond anyhow.
- Anne, I'm going to ask you a question. . .a serious question. Don't be
- vexed and do answer seriously. Do you care anything for Gilbert?"
-
- "Ever so much as a friend and not a bit in the way you mean," said Anne
- calmly and decidedly; she also thought she was speaking sincerely.
-
- Diana sighed. She wished, somehow, that Anne had answered differently.
-
- "Don't you mean EVER to be married, Anne?"
-
- "Perhaps. . .some day. . .when I meet the right one," said Anne,
- smiling dreamily up at the moonlight.
-
- "But how can you be sure when you do meet the right one?" persisted Diana.
-
- "Oh, I should know him. . .SOMETHING would tell me. You know what my
- ideal is, Diana."
-
- "But people's ideals change sometimes."
-
- "Mine won't. And I COULDN'T care for any man who didn't fulfill it."
-
- "What if you never meet him?"
-
- "Then I shall die an old maid," was the cheerful response. "I daresay
- it isn't the hardest death by any means."
-
- "Oh, I suppose the dying would be easy enough; it's the living an
- old maid I shouldn't like," said Diana, with no intention of being
- humorous. "Although I wouldn't mind being an old maid VERY much if
- I could be one like Miss Lavendar. But I never could be. When I'm
- forty-five I'll be horribly fat. And while there might be some
- romance about a thin old maid there couldn't possibly be any about
- a fat one. Oh, mind you, Nelson Atkins proposed to Ruby Gillis
- three weeks ago. Ruby told me all about it. She says she never
- had any intention of taking him, because any one who married him
- will have to go in with the old folks; but Ruby says that he made
- such a perfectly beautiful and romantic proposal that it simply
- swept her off her feet. But she didn't want to do anything rash so
- she asked for a week to consider; and two days later she was at a
- meeting of the Sewing Circle at his mother's and there was a book
- called `The Complete Guide to Etiquette,' lying on the parlor
- table. Ruby said she simply couldn't describe her feelings when in
- a section of it headed, `The Deportment of Courtship and Marriage,'
- she found the very proposal Nelson had made, word for word. She
- went home and wrote him a perfectly scathing refusal; and she says
- his father and mother have taken turns watching him ever since for
- fear he'll drown himself in the river; but Ruby says they needn't
- be afraid; for in the Deportment of Courtship and Marriage it told
- how a rejected lover should behave and there's nothing about
- drowning in THAT. And she says Wilbur Blair is literally pining
- away for her but she's perfectly helpless in the matter."
-
- Anne made an impatient movement.
-
- "I hate to say it. . .it seems so disloyal. . .but, well, I don't
- like Ruby Gillis now. I liked her when we went to school and
- Queen's together. . .though not so well as you and Jane of course.
- But this last year at Carmody she seems so different. . .so. . .so. . ."
-
- "I know," nodded Diana. "It's the Gillis coming out in her. . .
- she can't help it. Mrs. Lynde says that if ever a Gillis girl
- thought about anything but the boys she never showed it in her
- walk and conversation. She talks about nothing but boys and what
- compliments they pay her, and how crazy they all are about her at
- Carmody. And the strange thing is, they ARE, too. . ." Diana
- admitted this somewhat resentfully. "Last night when I saw her in
- Mr. Blair's store she whispered to me that she'd just made a new `mash.'
- I wouldn't ask her who it was, because I knew she was dying to BE asked.
- Well, it's what Ruby always wanted, I suppose. You remember even when
- she was little she always said she meant to have dozens of beaus when she
- grew up and have the very gayest time she could before she settled down.
- She's so different from Jane, isn't she? Jane is such a nice, sensible,
- lady-like girl."
-
- "Dear old Jane is a jewel," agreed Anne, "but," she added, leaning
- forward to bestow a tender pat on the plump, dimpled little hand
- hanging over her pillow, "there's nobody like my own Diana after all.
- Do you remember that evening we first met, Diana, and `swore'
- eternal friendship in your garden? We've kept that `oath,' I
- think. . .we've never had a quarrel nor even a coolness. I shall
- never forget the thrill that went over me the day you told me you
- loved me. I had had such a lonely, starved heart all through my
- childhood. I'm just beginning to realize how starved and lonely it
- really was. Nobody cared anything for me or wanted to be bothered
- with me. I should have been miserable if it hadn't been for that
- strange little dream-life of mine, wherein I imagined all the
- friends and love I craved. But when I came to Green Gables
- everything was changed. And then I met you. You don't know what
- your friendship meant to me. I want to thank you here and now,
- dear, for the warm and true affection you've always given me."
-
- "And always, always will," sobbed Diana. "I shall NEVER love anybody
- . . .any GIRL. . .half as well as I love you. And if I ever do marry
- and have a little girl of my own I'm going to name her ANNE."
-
-
-
-
- XXVII
-
- An Afternoon at the Stone House
-
-
- "Where are you going, all dressed up, Anne?" Davy wanted to know.
- "You look bully in that dress."
-
- Anne had come down to dinner in a new dress of pale green muslin
- . . .the first color she had worn since Matthew's death. It became
- her perfectly, bringing out all the delicate, flower-like tints of
- her face and the gloss and burnish of her hair.
-
- "Davy, how many times have I told you that you mustn't use that word,"
- she rebuked. "I'm going to Echo Lodge."
-
- "Take me with you," entreated Davy.
-
- "I would if I were driving. But I'm going to walk and it's too far
- for your eight-year-old legs. Besides, Paul is going with me and I
- fear you don't enjoy yourself in his company."
-
- "Oh, I like Paul lots better'n I did," said Davy, beginning to make
- fearful inroads into his pudding. "Since I've got pretty good
- myself I don't mind his being gooder so much. If I can keep
- on I'll catch up with him some day, both in legs and goodness.
- 'Sides, Paul's real nice to us second primer boys in school.
- He won't let the other big boys meddle with us and he shows us
- lots of games."
-
- "How came Paul to fall into the brook at noon hour yesterday?"
- asked Anne. "I met him on the playground, such a dripping figure
- that I sent him promptly home for clothes without waiting to find
- out what had happened."
-
- "Well, it was partly a zacksident," explained Davy. "He stuck
- his head in on purpose but the rest of him fell in zacksidentally.
- We was all down at the brook and Prillie Rogerson got mad at Paul
- about something. . .she's awful mean and horrid anyway, if she IS
- pretty. . .and said that his grandmother put his hair up in curl
- rags every night. Paul wouldn't have minded what she said, I guess,
- but Gracie Andrews laughed, and Paul got awful red, 'cause Gracie's
- his girl, you know. He's CLEAN GONE on her. . .brings her flowers
- and carries her books as far as the shore road. He got as red as
- a beet and said his grandmother didn't do any such thing and his
- hair was born curly. And then he laid down on the bank and stuck
- his head right into the spring to show them. Oh, it wasn't the
- spring we drink out of. . ." seeing a horrified look on Marilla's
- face. . ."it was the little one lower down. But the bank's awful
- slippy and Paul went right in. I tell you he made a bully splash.
- Oh, Anne, Anne, I didn't mean to say that. . .it just slipped out
- before I thought. He made a SPLENDID splash. But he looked so
- funny when he crawled out, all wet and muddy. The girls laughed
- more'n ever, but Gracie didn't laugh. She looked sorry. Gracie's
- a nice girl but she's got a snub nose. When I get big enough to
- have a girl I won't have one with a snub nose. . .I'll pick one
- with a pretty nose like yours, Anne."
-
- "A boy who makes such a mess of syrup all over his face when he is eating
- his pudding will never get a girl to look at him," said Marilla severely.
-
- "But I'll wash my face before I go courting," protested Davy,
- trying to improve matters by rubbing the back of his hand over the
- smears. "And I'll wash behind my ears too, without being told.
- I remembered to this morning, Marilla. I don't forget half as often
- as I did. But. . ." and Davy sighed. . ."there's so many corners
- about a fellow that it's awful hard to remember them all. Well, if
- I can't go to Miss Lavendar's I'll go over and see Mrs. Harrison.
- Mrs. Harrison's an awful nice woman, I tell you. She keeps a jar
- of cookies in her pantry a-purpose for little boys, and she always
- gives me the scrapings out of a pan she's mixed up a plum cake in.
- A good many plums stick to the sides, you see. Mr. Harrison was
- always a nice man, but he's twice as nice since he got married over
- again. I guess getting married makes folks nicer. Why don't YOU
- get married, Marilla? I want to know."
-
- Marilla's state of single blessedness had never been a sore point
- with her, so she answered amiably, with an exchange of significant looks
- with Anne, that she supposed it was because nobody would have her.
-
- "But maybe you never asked anybody to have you," protested Davy.
-
- "Oh, Davy," said Dora primly, shocked into speaking without being spoken to,
- "it's the MEN that have to do the asking."
-
- "I don't know why they have to do it ALWAYS," grumbled Davy.
- "Seems to me everything's put on the men in this world.
- Can I have some more pudding, Marilla?"
-
- "You've had as much as was good for you," said Marilla; but she
- gave him a moderate second helping.
-
- "I wish people could live on pudding. Why can't they, Marilla?
- I want to know."
-
- "Because they'd soon get tired of it."
-
- "I'd like to try that for myself," said skeptical Davy. "But I
- guess it's better to have pudding only on fish and company days
- than none at all. They never have any at Milty Boulter's.
- Milty says when company comes his mother gives them cheese and cuts
- it herself. . .one little bit apiece and one over for manners."
-
- "If Milty Boulter talks like that about his mother at least you
- needn't repeat it," said Marilla severely.
-
- "Bless my soul,". . .Davy had picked this expression up from
- Mr. Harrison and used it with great gusto. . ."Milty meant it
- as a compelment. He's awful proud of his mother, cause folks
- say she could scratch a living on a rock."
-
- "I. . .I suppose them pesky hens are in my pansy bed again,"
- said Marilla, rising and going out hurriedly.
-
- The slandered hens were nowhere near the pansy bed and Marilla did
- not even glance at it. Instead, she sat down on the cellar hatch
- and laughed until she was ashamed of herself.
-
- When Anne and Paul reached the stone house that afternoon they
- found Miss Lavendar and Charlotta the Fourth in the garden,
- weeding, raking, clipping, and trimming as if for dear life.
- Miss Lavendar herself, all gay and sweet in the frills and laces
- she loved, dropped her shears and ran joyously to meet her guests,
- while Charlotta the Fourth grinned cheerfully.
-
- "Welcome, Anne. I thought you'd come today. You belong to the
- afternoon so it brought you. Things that belong together are sure
- to come together. What a lot of trouble that would save some
- people if they only knew it. But they don't. . .and so they waste
- beautiful energy moving heaven and earth to bring things together
- that DON'T belong. And you, Paul. . .why, you've grown! You're
- half a head taller than when you were here before."
-
- "Yes, I've begun to grow like pigweed in the night, as Mrs. Lynde says,"
- said Paul, in frank delight over the fact. "Grandma says it's the
- porridge taking effect at last. Perhaps it is. Goodness knows. . ."
- Paul sighed deeply. . ."I've eaten enough to make anyone grow.
- I do hope, now that I've begun, I'll keep on till I'm as tall as father.
- He is six feet, you know, Miss Lavendar."
-
- Yes, Miss Lavendar did know; the flush on her pretty cheeks
- deepened a little; she took Paul's hand on one side and Anne's
- on the other and walked to the house in silence.
-
- "Is it a good day for the echoes, Miss Lavendar?" queried Paul anxiously.
- The day of his first visit had been too windy for echoes and Paul had
- been much disappointed.
-
- "Yes, just the best kind of a day," answered Miss Lavendar, rousing
- herself from her reverie. "But first we are all going to have
- something to eat. I know you two folks didn't walk all the way
- back here through those beechwoods without getting hungry, and
- Charlotta the Fourth and I can eat any hour of the day. . .we have
- such obliging appetites. So we'll just make a raid on the pantry.
- Fortunately it's lovely and full. I had a presentiment that I was
- going to have company today and Charlotta the Fourth and I prepared."
-
- "I think you are one of the people who always have nice things in
- their pantry," declared Paul. "Grandma's like that too. But she
- doesn't approve of snacks between meals. I wonder," he added
- meditatively, "if I OUGHT to eat them away from home when I know
- she doesn't approve."
-
- "Oh, I don't think she would disapprove after you have had a
- long walk. That makes a difference," said Miss Lavendar,
- exchanging amused glances with Anne over Paul's brown curls.
- "I suppose that snacks ARE extremely unwholesome. That is why
- we have them so often at Echo Lodge. We. . .Charlotta the Fourth
- and I. . .live in defiance of every known law of diet. We eat all
- sorts of indigestible things whenever we happen to think of it,
- by day or night; and we flourish like green bay trees. We are always
- intending to reform. When we read any article in a paper warning
- us against something we like we cut it out and pin it up on the
- kitchen wall so that we'll remember it. But we never can somehow
- . . .until after we've gone and eaten that very thing. Nothing has
- ever killed us yet; but Charlotta the Fourth has been known to have
- bad dreams after we had eaten doughnuts and mince pie and fruit
- cake before we went to bed."
-
- "Grandma lets me have a glass of milk and a slice of bread and butter
- before I go to bed; and on Sunday nights she puts jam on the bread,"
- said Paul. "So I'm always glad when it's Sunday night. . . for more
- reasons than one. Sunday is a very long day on the shore road.
- Grandma says it's all too short for her and that father never found
- Sundays tiresome when he was a little boy. It wouldn't seem so long
- if I could talk to my rock people but I never do that because Grandma
- doesn't approve of it on Sundays. I think a good deal; but I'm afraid
- my thoughts are worldly. Grandma says we should never think anything
- but religious thoughts on Sundays. But teacher here said once that
- every really beautiful thought was religious, no matter what it was about,
- or what day we thought it on. But I feel sure Grandma thinks that sermons
- and Sunday School lessons are the only things you can think truly
- religious thoughts about. And when it comes to a difference of opinion
- between Grandma and teacher I don't know what to do. In my heart". . .
- Paul laid his hand on his breast and raised very serious blue eyes to
- Miss Lavendar's immediately sympathetic face. . ."I agree with teacher.
- But then, you see, Grandma has brought father up HER way and made a
- brilliant success of him; and teacher has never brought anybody up yet,
- though she's helping with Davy and Dora. But you can't tell how they'll
- turn out till they ARE grown up. So sometimes I feel as if it might be
- safer to go by Grandma's opinions."
-
- "I think it would," agreed Anne solemnly. "Anyway, I daresay that
- if your Grandma and I both got down to what we really do mean,
- under our different ways of expressing it, we'd find out we both
- meant much the same thing. You'd better go by her way of expressing it,
- since it's been the result of experience. We'll have to wait until we see
- how the twins do turn out before we can be sure that my way is equally good."
- After lunch they went back to the garden, where Paul made the acquaintance
- of the echoes, to his wonder and delight, while Anne and Miss Lavendar sat
- on the stone bench under the poplar and talked.
-
- "So you are going away in the fall?" said Miss Lavendar wistfully.
- "I ought to be glad for your sake, Anne. . .but I'm horribly,
- selfishly sorry. I shall miss you so much. Oh, sometimes, I think
- it is of no use to make friends. They only go out of your life
- after awhile and leave a hurt that is worse than the emptiness
- before they came."
-
- "That sounds like something Miss Eliza Andrews might say but never
- Miss Lavendar," said Anne. "NOTHING is worse than emptiness. . .and
- I'm not going out of your life. There are such things as letters and
- vacations. Dearest, I'm afraid you're looking a little pale and tired."
-
- "Oh. . .hoo. . .hoo. . .hoo," went Paul on the dyke, where he had been
- making noises diligently. . .not all of them melodious in the making,
- but all coming back transmuted into the very gold and silver of sound
- by the fairy alchemists over the river. Miss Lavendar made an
- impatient movement with her pretty hands.
-
- "I'm just tired of everything. . .even of the echoes. There is nothing
- in my life but echoes. . .echoes of lost hopes and dreams and joys.
- They're beautiful and mocking. Oh Anne, it's horrid of me to talk
- like this when I have company. It's just that I'm getting old and
- it doesn't agree with me. I know I'll be fearfully cranky by the
- time I'm sixty. But perhaps all I need is a course of blue pills."
- At this moment Charlotta the Fourth, who had disappeared after lunch,
- returned, and announced that the northeast corner of Mr. John Kimball's
- pasture was red with early strawberries, and wouldn't Miss Shirley
- like to go and pick some.
-
- "Early strawberries for tea!" exclaimed Miss Lavendar. "Oh, I'm
- not so old as I thought. . .and I don't need a single blue pill!
- Girls, when you come back with your strawberries we'll have tea out
- here under the silver poplar. I'll have it all ready for you with
- home-grown cream."
-
- Anne and Charlotta the Fourth accordingly betook themselves back to
- Mr. Kimball's pasture, a green remote place where the air was as
- soft as velvet and fragrant as a bed of violets and golden as amber.
-
- "Oh, isn't it sweet and fresh back here?" breathed Anne. "I just
- feel as if I were drinking in the sunshine."
-
- "Yes, ma'am, so do I. That's just exactly how I feel too, ma'am,"
- agreed Charlotta the Fourth, who would have said precisely the same
- thing if Anne had remarked that she felt like a pelican of the
- wilderness. Always after Anne had visited Echo Lodge Charlotta the
- Fourth mounted to her little room over the kitchen and tried before
- her looking glass to speak and look and move like Anne. Charlotta
- could never flatter herself that she quite succeeded; but practice
- makes perfect, as Charlotta had learned at school, and she fondly
- hoped that in time she might catch the trick of that dainty uplift
- of chin, that quick, starry outflashing of eyes, that fashion of
- walking as if you were a bough swaying in the wind. It seemed so
- easy when you watched Anne. Charlotta the Fourth admired Anne
- wholeheartedly. It was not that she thought her so very handsome.
- Diana Barry's beauty of crimson cheek and black curls was much more
- to Charlotta the Fourth's taste than Anne's moonshine charm of
- luminous gray eyes and the pale, everchanging roses of her cheeks.
-
- "But I'd rather look like you than be pretty," she told Anne sincerely.
-
- Anne laughed, sipped the honey from the tribute, and cast away the sting.
- She was used to taking her compliments mixed. Public opinion never
- agreed on Anne's looks. People who had heard her called handsome
- met her and were disappointed. People who had heard her called
- plain saw her and wondered where other people's eyes were. Anne
- herself would never believe that she had any claim to beauty.
- When she looked in the glass all she saw was a little pale face
- with seven freckles on the nose thereof. Her mirror never revealed
- to her the elusive, ever-varying play of feeling that came and went
- over her features like a rosy illuminating flame, or the charm of
- dream and laughter alternating in her big eyes.
-
- While Anne was not beautiful in any strictly defined sense of the
- word she possessed a certain evasive charm and distinction of
- appearance that left beholders with a pleasurable sense of
- satisfaction in that softly rounded girlhood of hers, with all its
- strongly felt potentialities. Those who knew Anne best felt,
- without realizing that they felt it, that her greatest attraction
- was the aura of possibility surrounding her. . .the power of
- future development that was in her. She seemed to walk in an
- atmosphere of things about to happen.
-
- As they picked, Charlotta the Fourth confided to Anne her fears
- regarding Miss Lavendar. The warm-hearted little handmaiden was
- honestly worried over her adored mistress' condition.
-
- "Miss Lavendar isn't well, Miss Shirley, ma'am. I'm sure she isn't,
- though she never complains. She hasn't seemed like herself this
- long while, ma'am. . .not since that day you and Paul were here
- together before. I feel sure she caught cold that night, ma'am.
- After you and him had gone she went out and walked in the garden
- for long after dark with nothing but a little shawl on her.
- There was a lot of snow on the walks and I feel sure she got a
- chill, ma'am. Ever since then I've noticed her acting tired and
- lonesome like. She don't seem to take an interest in anything, ma'am.
- She never pretends company's coming, nor fixes up for it, nor nothing,
- ma'am. It's only when you come she seems to chirk up a bit. And the
- worst sign of all, Miss Shirley, ma'am. . ." Charlotta the Fourth
- lowered her voice as if she were about to tell some exceedingly
- weird and awful symptom indeed. . ."is that she never gets cross
- now when I breaks things. Why, Miss Shirley, ma'am, yesterday I
- bruk her green and yaller bowl that's always stood on the bookcase.
- Her grandmother brought it out from England and Miss Lavendar was
- awful choice of it. I was dusting it just as careful, Miss Shirley,
- ma'am, and it slipped out, so fashion, afore I could grab holt of it,
- and bruk into about forty millyun pieces. I tell you I was sorry
- and scared. I thought Miss Lavendar would scold me awful, ma'am;
- and I'd ruther she had than take it the way she did. She just
- come in and hardly looked at it and said, `It's no matter, Charlotta.
- Take up the pieces and throw them away.' Just like that, Miss Shirley,
- ma'am. . .`take up the pieces and throw them away,' as if it wasn't
- her grandmother's bowl from England. Oh, she isn't well and I feel
- awful bad about it. She's got nobody to look after her but me."
-
- Charlotta the Fourth's eyes brimmed up with tears. Anne patted the
- little brown paw holding the cracked pink cup sympathetically.
-
- "I think Miss Lavendar needs a change, Charlotta. She stays here
- alone too much. Can't we induce her to go away for a little trip?"
-
- Charlotta shook her head, with its rampant bows, disconsolately.
-
- "I don't think so, Miss Shirley, ma'am. Miss Lavendar hates visiting.
- She's only got three relations she ever visits and she says she
- just goes to see them as a family duty. Last time when she come
- home she said she wasn't going to visit for family duty no more.
- `I've come home in love with loneliness, Charlotta,' she says to me,
- `and I never want to stray from my own vine and fig tree again.
- My relations try so hard to make an old lady of me and it has
- a bad effect on me.' Just like that, Miss Shirley, ma'am.
- 'It has a very bad effect on me.' So I don't think it would
- do any good to coax her to go visiting."
-
- "We must see what can be done," said Anne decidedly, as she put
- the last possible berry in her pink cup. "Just as soon as I have
- my vacation I'll come through and spend a whole week with you.
- We'll have a picnic every day and pretend all sorts of interesting
- things, and see if we can't cheer Miss Lavendar up."
-
- "That will be the very thing, Miss Shirley, ma'am," exclaimed Charlotta
- the Fourth in rapture. She was glad for Miss Lavendar's sake and for
- her own too. With a whole week in which to study Anne constantly
- she would surely be able to learn how to move and behave like her.
-
- When the girls got back to Echo Lodge they found that Miss Lavendar
- and Paul had carried the little square table out of the kitchen to
- the garden and had everything ready for tea. Nothing ever tasted
- so delicious as those strawberries and cream, eaten under a great
- blue sky all curdled over with fluffy little white clouds, and in
- the long shadows of the wood with its lispings and its murmurings.
- After tea Anne helped Charlotta wash the dishes in the kitchen,
- while Miss Lavendar sat on the stone bench with Paul and heard
- all about his rock people. She was a good listener, this sweet
- Miss Lavendar, but just at the last it struck Paul that she had
- suddenly lost interest in the Twin Sailors.
-
- "Miss Lavendar, why do you look at me like that?" he asked gravely.
-
- "How do I look, Paul?"
-
- "Just as if you were looking through me at somebody I put you in mind of,"
- said Paul, who had such occasional flashes of uncanny insight that it
- wasn't quite safe to have secrets when he was about.
-
- "You do put me in mind of somebody I knew long ago," said Miss Lavendar
- dreamily.
-
- "When you were young?"
-
- "Yes, when I was young. Do I seem very old to you, Paul?"
-
- "Do you know, I can't make up my mind about that," said Paul
- confidentially. "Your hair looks old. . .I never knew a young
- person with white hair. But your eyes are as young as my beautiful
- teacher's when you laugh. I tell you what, Miss Lavendar". . .
- Paul's voice and face were as solemn as a judge's. . ."I think you
- would make a splendid mother. You have just the right look in
- your eyes. . . the look my little mother always had. I think
- it's a pity you haven't any boys of your own."
-
- "I have a little dream boy, Paul."
-
- "Oh, have you really? How old is he?"
-
- "About your age I think. He ought to be older because I dreamed
- him long before you were born. But I'll never let him get any
- older than eleven or twelve; because if I did some day he might
- grow up altogether and then I'd lose him."
-
- "I know," nodded Paul. "That's the beauty of dream-people. . .they
- stay any age you want them. You and my beautiful teacher and me
- myself are the only folks in the world that I know of that have
- dream-people. Isn't it funny and nice we should all know each
- other? But I guess that kind of people always find each other out.
- Grandma never has dream-people and Mary Joe thinks I'm wrong in the
- upper story because I have them. But I think it's splendid to have them.
- YOU know, Miss Lavendar. Tell me all about your little dream-boy."
-
- "He has blue eyes and curly hair. He steals in and wakens me with
- a kiss every morning. Then all day he plays here in the garden. . .
- and I play with him. Such games as we have. We run races and talk
- with the echoes; and I tell him stories. And when twilight comes. . ."
-
- "I know," interrupted Paul eagerly. "He comes and sits beside you. . .
- SO. . .because of course at twelve he'd be too big to climb into your lap
- . . .and lays his head on your shoulder. . .SO. . .and you put your arms
- about him and hold him tight, tight, and rest your cheek on his head. . .
- yes, that's the very way. Oh, you DO know, Miss Lavendar."
-
- Anne found the two of them there when she came out of the stone house,
- and something in Miss Lavendar's face made her hate to disturb them.
-
- "I'm afraid we must go, Paul, if we want to get home before dark.
- Miss Lavendar, I'm going to invite myself to Echo Lodge for a whole
- week pretty soon."
-
- "If you come for a week I'll keep you for two," threatened Miss Lavendar.
-
-
-
-
- XXVIII
-
- The Prince Comes Back to the Enchanted Palace
-
-
- The last day of school came and went. A triumphant
- "semi-annual examination" was held and Anne's pupils
- acquitted themselves splendidly. At the close they gave
- her an address and a writing desk. All the girls and ladies
- present cried, and some of the boys had it cast up to them
- later on that they cried too, although they always denied it.
-
- Mrs. Harmon Andrews, Mrs. Peter Sloane, and Mrs. William Bell
- walked home together and talked things over.
-
- "I do think it is such a pity Anne is leaving when the children seem
- so much attached to her," sighed Mrs. Peter Sloane, who had a habit
- of sighing over everything and even finished off her jokes that way.
- "To be sure," she added hastily, "we all know we'll have a good
- teacher next year too."
-
- "Jane will do her duty, I've no doubt," said Mrs. Andrews rather stiffly.
- "I don't suppose she'll tell the children quite so many fairy tales or
- spend so much time roaming about the woods with them. But she has her
- name on the Inspector's Roll of Honor and the Newbridge people are in
- a terrible state over her leaving."
-
- "I'm real glad Anne is going to college," said Mrs. Bell.
- "She has always wanted it and it will be a splendid thing for her."
-
- "Well, I don't know." Mrs. Andrews was determined not to agree fully
- with anybody that day. "I don't see that Anne needs any more education.
- She'll probably be marrying Gilbert Blythe, if his infatuation for her
- lasts till he gets through college, and what good will Latin and Greek
- do her then? If they taught you at college how to manage a man there
- might be some sense in her going."
-
- Mrs. Harmon Andrews, so Avonlea gossip whispered, had never
- learned how to manage her "man," and as a result the Andrews
- household was not exactly a model of domestic happiness.
-
- "I see that the Charlottetown call to Mr. Allan is up before the
- Presbytery," said Mrs. Bell. "That means we'll be losing him soon,
- I suppose."
-
- "They're not going before September," said Mrs. Sloane. "It will
- be a great loss to the community. . .though I always did think
- that Mrs. Allan dressed rather too gay for a minister's wife.
- But we are none of us perfect. Did you notice how neat and snug
- Mr. Harrison looked today? I never saw such a changed man. He goes
- to church every Sunday and has subscribed to the salary."
-
- "Hasn't that Paul Irving grown to be a big boy?" said Mrs. Andrews.
- "He was such a mite for his age when he came here. I declare I
- hardly knew him today. He's getting to look a lot like his father."
-
- "He's a smart boy," said Mrs. Bell.
-
- "He's smart enough, but". . .Mrs. Andrews lowered her voice. . ."I
- believe he tells queer stories. Gracie came home from school one
- day last week with the greatest rigmarole he had told her about
- people who lived down at the shore. . .stories there couldn't be a
- word of truth in, you know. I told Gracie not to believe them,
- and she said Paul didn't intend her to. But if he didn't what did
- he tell them to her for?"
-
- "Anne says Paul is a genius," said Mrs. Sloane.
-
- "He may be. You never know what to expect of them Americans,"
- said Mrs. Andrews. Mrs. Andrews' only acquaintance with the word
- "genius" was derived from the colloquial fashion of calling any
- eccentric individual "a queer genius." She probably thought,
- with Mary Joe, that it meant a person with something wrong
- in his upper story.
-
- Back in the schoolroom Anne was sitting alone at her desk, as she
- had sat on the first day of school two years before, her face
- leaning on her hand, her dewy eyes looking wistfully out of the
- window to the Lake of Shining Waters. Her heart was so wrung over
- the parting with her pupils that for a moment college had lost all
- its charm. She still felt the clasp of Annetta Bell's arms about
- her neck and heard the childish wail, "I'll NEVER love any teacher
- as much as you, Miss Shirley, never, never."
-
- For two years she had worked earnestly and faithfully, making many
- mistakes and learning from them. She had had her reward. She had
- taught her scholars something, but she felt that they had taught
- her much more. . .lessons of tenderness, self-control, innocent
- wisdom, lore of childish hearts. Perhaps she had not succeeded in
- "inspiring" any wonderful ambitions in her pupils, but she had
- taught them, more by her own sweet personality than by all her
- careful precepts, that it was good and necessary in the years that
- were before them to live their lives finely and graciously, holding
- fast to truth and courtesy and kindness, keeping aloof from all
- that savored of falsehood and meanness and vulgarity. They were,
- perhaps, all unconscious of having learned such lessons; but they
- would remember and practice them long after they had forgotten the
- capital of Afghanistan and the dates of the Wars of the Roses.
-
- "Another chapter in my life is closed," said Anne aloud, as she
- locked her desk. She really felt very sad over it; but the romance
- in the idea of that "closed chapter" did comfort her a little.
-
- Anne spent a fortnight at Echo Lodge early in her vacation and
- everybody concerned had a good time.
-
- She took Miss Lavendar on a shopping expedition to town and persuaded
- her to buy a new organdy dress; then came the excitement of cutting
- and making it together, while the happy Charlotta the Fourth basted
- and swept up clippings. Miss Lavendar had complained that she could
- not feel much interest in anything, but the sparkle came back to her
- eyes over her pretty dress.
-
- "What a foolish, frivolous person I must be," she sighed.
- "I'm wholesomely ashamed to think that a new dress. . .
- even it is a forget-me-not organdy. . .should exhilarate me so,
- when a good conscience and an extra contribution to Foreign Missions
- couldn't do it."
-
- Midway in her visit Anne went home to Green Gables for a day to mend
- the twins' stockings and settle up Davy's accumulated store of questions.
- In the evening she went down to the shore road to see Paul Irving.
- As she passed by the low, square window of the Irving sitting room
- she caught a glimpse of Paul on somebody's lap; but the next moment
- he came flying through the hall.
-
- "Oh, Miss Shirley," he cried excitedly, "you can't think what
- has happened! Something so splendid. Father is here. . .
- just think of that! Father is here! Come right in. Father,
- this is my beautiful teacher. YOU know, father."
-
- Stephen Irving came forward to meet Anne with a smile. He was a
- tall, handsome man of middle age, with iron-gray hair, deep-set,
- dark blue eyes, and a strong, sad face, splendidly modeled about
- chin and brow. Just the face for a hero of romance, Anne thought
- with a thrill of intense satisfaction. It was so disappointing to
- meet someone who ought to be a hero and find him bald or stooped,
- or otherwise lacking in manly beauty. Anne would have thought it
- dreadful if the object of Miss Lavendar's romance had not looked
- the part.
-
- "So this is my little son's `beautiful teacher,' of whom I have
- heard so much," said Mr. Irving with a hearty handshake. "Paul's
- letters have been so full of you, Miss Shirley, that I feel as if I
- were pretty well acquainted with you already. I want to thank you
- for what you have done for Paul. I think that your influence has
- been just what he needed. Mother is one of the best and dearest of
- women; but her robust, matter-of-fact Scotch common sense could not
- always understand a temperament like my laddie's. What was lacking in
- her you have supplied. Between you, I think Paul's training in these
- two past years has been as nearly ideal as a motherless boy's could be."
-
- Everybody likes to be appreciated. Under Mr. Irving's praise
- Anne's face "burst flower like into rosy bloom," and the busy,
- weary man of the world, looking at her, thought he had never seen a
- fairer, sweeter slip of girlhood than this little "down east"
- schoolteacher with her red hair and wonderful eyes.
-
- Paul sat between them blissfully happy.
-
- "I never dreamed father was coming," he said radiantly. "Even Grandma
- didn't know it. It was a great surprise. As a general thing. . ."
- Paul shook his brown curls gravely. . ."I don't like to be surprised.
- You lose all the fun of expecting things when you're surprised.
- But in a case like this it is all right. Father came last night
- after I had gone to bed. And after Grandma and Mary Joe had stopped
- being surprised he and Grandma came upstairs to look at me, not meaning
- to wake me up till morning. But I woke right up and saw father.
- I tell you I just sprang at him."
-
- "With a hug like a bear's," said Mr. Irving, putting his arms
- around Paul's shoulder smilingly. "I hardly knew my boy, he had
- grown so big and brown and sturdy."
-
- "I don't know which was the most pleased to see father, Grandma or I,"
- continued Paul. "Grandma's been in kitchen all day making the things
- father likes to eat. She wouldn't trust them to Mary Joe, she says.
- That's HER way of showing gladness. _I_ like best just to sit and
- talk to father. But I'm going to leave you for a little while now
- if you'll excuse me. I must get the cows for Mary Joe. That is one
- of my daily duties."
-
- When Paul had scampered away to do his "daily duty" Mr. Irving
- talked to Anne of various matters. But Anne felt that he was
- thinking of something else underneath all the time. Presently it
- came to the surface.
-
- "In Paul's last letter he spoke of going with you to visit an old. . .
- friend of mine. . .Miss Lewis at the stone house in Grafton.
- Do you know her well?"
-
- "Yes, indeed, she is a very dear friend of mine," was Anne's demure
- reply, which gave no hint of the sudden thrill that tingled over
- her from head to foot at Mr. Irving's question. Anne "felt
- instinctively" that romance was peeping at her around a corner.
-
- Mr. Irving rose and went to the window, looking out on a great,
- golden, billowing sea where a wild wind was harping. For a few
- moments there was silence in the little dark-walled room. Then he
- turned and looked down into Anne's sympathetic face with a smile,
- half-whimsical, half-tender.
-
- "I wonder how much you know," he said.
-
- "I know all about it," replied Anne promptly. "You see," she explained
- hastily, "Miss Lavendar and I are very intimate. She wouldn't tell
- things of such a sacred nature to everybody. We are kindred spirits."
-
- "Yes, I believe you are. Well, I am going to ask a favor of you.
- I would like to go and see Miss Lavendar if she will let me. Will
- you ask her if I may come?"
-
- Would she not? Oh, indeed she would! Yes, this was romance, the very,
- the real thing, with all the charm of rhyme and story and dream.
- It was a little belated, perhaps, like a rose blooming in October
- which should have bloomed in June; but none the less a rose,
- all sweetness and fragrance, with the gleam of gold in its heart.
- Never did Anne's feet bear her on a more willing errand than on
- that walk through the beechwoods to Grafton the next morning.
- She found Miss Lavendar in the garden. Anne was fearfully excited.
- Her hands grew cold and her voice trembled.
-
- "Miss Lavendar, I have something to tell you. . .something very important.
- Can you guess what it is?"
-
- Anne never supposed that Miss Lavendar could GUESS; but Miss Lavendar's
- face grew very pale and Miss Lavendar said in a quiet, still voice,
- from which all the color and sparkle that Miss Lavendar's voice usually
- suggested had faded.
-
- "Stephen Irving is home?"
-
- "How did you know? Who told you?" cried Anne disappointedly,
- vexed that her great revelation had been anticipated.
-
- "Nobody. I knew that must be it, just from the way you spoke."
-
- "He wants to come and see you," said Anne. "May I send him word
- that he may?"
-
- "Yes, of course," fluttered Miss Lavendar. "There is no reason why
- he shouldn't. He is only coming as any old friend might."
-
- Anne had her own opinion about that as she hastened into the house
- to write a note at Miss Lavendar's desk.
-
- "Oh, it's delightful to be living in a storybook," she thought gaily.
- "It will come out all right of course. . .it must. . .and Paul will
- have a mother after his own heart and everybody will be happy.
- But Mr. Irving will take Miss Lavendar away. . .and dear knows
- what will happen to the little stone house. . .and so there are
- two sides to it, as there seems to be to everything in this world."
- The important note was written and Anne herself carried it to the
- Grafton post office, where she waylaid the mail carrier and asked
- him to leave it at the Avonlea office.
-
- "It's so very important," Anne assured him anxiously. The mail
- carrier was a rather grumpy old personage who did not at all look
- the part of a messenger of Cupid; and Anne was none too certain
- that his memory was to be trusted. But he said he would do his
- best to remember and she had to be contented with that.
-
- Charlotta the Fourth felt that some mystery pervaded the stone
- house that afternoon. . .a mystery from which she was excluded.
- Miss Lavendar roamed about the garden in a distracted fashion.
- Anne, too, seemed possessed by a demon of unrest, and walked to
- and fro and went up and down. Charlotta the Fourth endured it
- till atience ceased to be a virtue; then she confronted Anne
- on the occasion of that romantic young person's third aimless
- peregrination through the kitchen.
-
- "Please, Miss Shirley, ma'am," said Charlotta the Fourth, with an
- indignant toss of her very blue bows, "it's plain to be seen you
- and Miss Lavendar have got a secret and I think, begging your
- pardon if I'm too forward, Miss Shirley, ma'am, that it's real
- mean not to tell me when we've all been such chums."
-
- "Oh, Charlotta dear, I'd have told you all about it if it were my
- secret. . .but it's Miss Lavendar's, you see. However, I'll tell
- you this much. . .and if nothing comes of it you must never
- breathe a word about it to a living soul. You see, Prince Charming
- is coming tonight. He came long ago, but in a foolish moment went
- away and wandered afar and forgot the secret of the magic pathway
- to the enchanted castle, where the princess was weeping her
- faithful heart out for him. But at last he remembered it again and
- the princess is waiting still. . .because nobody but her own dear
- prince could carry her off."
-
- "Oh, Miss Shirley, ma'am, what is that in prose?" gasped the
- mystified Charlotta.
-
- Anne laughed.
-
- "In prose, an old friend of Miss Lavendar's is coming to see her
- tonight."
-
- "Do you mean an old beau of hers?" demanded the literal Charlotta.
-
- "That is probably what I do mean. . .in prose," answered Anne gravely.
- "It is Paul's father. . .Stephen Irving. And goodness knows what will
- come of it, but let us hope for the best, Charlotta."
-
- "I hope that he'll marry Miss Lavendar," was Charlotta's unequivocal response.
- "Some women's intended from the start to be old maids, and I'm afraid I'm one
- of them, Miss Shirley, ma'am, because I've awful little patience with the men.
- But Miss Lavendar never was. And I've been awful worried, thinking what on
- earth she'd do when I got so big I'd HAVE to go to Boston. There ain't any
- more girls in our family and dear knows what she'd do if she got some
- stranger that might laugh at her pretendings and leave things lying round
- out of their place and not be willing to be called Charlotta the Fifth.
- She might get someone who wouldn't be as unlucky as me in breaking dishes
- but she'd never get anyone who'd love her better."
-
- And the faithful little handmaiden dashed to the oven door with a sniff.
-
- They went through the form of having tea as usual that night at
- Echo Lodge; but nobody really ate anything. After tea Miss Lavendar
- went to her room and put on her new forget-me-not organdy,
- while Anne did her hair for her. Both were dreadfully excited;
- but Miss Lavendar pretended to be very calm and indifferent.
-
- "I must really mend that rent in the curtain tomorrow," she said
- anxiously, inspecting it as if it were the only thing of any
- importance just then. "Those curtains have not worn as well as
- they should, considering the price I paid. Dear me, Charlotta
- has forgotten to dust the stair railing AGAIN. I really MUST
- speak to her about it."
-
- Anne was sitting on the porch steps when Stephen Irving came down
- the lane and across the garden.
-
- "This is the one place where time stands still," he said, looking
- around him with delighted eyes. "There is nothing changed about
- this house or garden since I was here twenty-five years ago.
- It makes me feel young again."
-
- "You know time always does stand still in an enchanted palace," said Anne
- seriously. "It is only when the prince comes that things begin to happen."
-
- Mr. Irving smiled a little sadly into her uplifted face, all astar with
- its youth and promise.
-
- "Sometimes the prince comes too late," he said. He did not ask Anne to
- translate her remark into prose. Like all kindred spirits he "understood."
-
- "Oh, no, not if he is the real prince coming to the true princess,"
- said Anne, shaking her red head decidedly, as she opened the parlor door.
- When he had gone in she shut it tightly behind him and turned to confront
- Charlotta the Fourth, who was in the hall, all "nods and becks and
- wreathed smiles."
-
- "Oh, Miss Shirley, ma'am," she breathed, "I peeked from the kitchen
- window. . .and he's awful handsome. . .and just the right age for
- Miss Lavendar. And oh, Miss Shirley, ma'am, do you think it would
- be much harm to listen at the door?"
-
- "It would be dreadful, Charlotta," said Anne firmly, "so just you
- come away with me out of the reach of temptation."
-
- "I can't do anything, and it's awful to hang round just waiting," sighed
- Charlotta. "What if he don't propose after all, Miss Shirley, ma'am?
- You can never be sure of them men. My older sister, Charlotta the First,
- thought she was engaged to one once. But it turned out HE had a
- different opinion and she says she'll never trust one of them again.
- And I heard of another case where a man thought he wanted one girl
- awful bad when it was really her sister he wanted all the time.
- When a man don't know his own mind, Miss Shirley, ma'am, how's
- a poor woman going to be sure of it?"
-
- "We'll go to the kitchen and clean the silver spoons," said Anne.
- "That's a task which won't require much thinking fortunately. . .
- for I COULDN'T think tonight. And it will pass the time."
-
- It passed an hour. Then, just as Anne laid down the last shining spoon,
- they heard the front door shut. Both sought comfort fearfully in each
- other's eyes.
-
- "Oh, Miss Shirley, ma'am," gasped Charlotta, "if he's going away this
- early there's nothing into it and never will be." They flew to the window.
- Mr. Irving had no intention of going away. He and Miss Lavendar were
- strolling slowly down the middle path to the stone bench.
-
- "Oh, Miss Shirley, ma'am, he's got his arm around her waist,"
- whispered Charlotta the Fourth delightedly. "He must have proposed
- to her or she'd never allow it."
-
- Anne caught Charlotta the Fourth by her own plump waist and danced
- her around the kitchen until they were both out of breath.
-
- "Oh, Charlotta," she cried gaily, "I'm neither a prophetess nor the
- daughter of a prophetess but I'm going to make a prediction.
- There'll be a wedding in this old stone house before the maple
- leaves are red. Do you want that translated into prose, Charlotta?"
-
- "No, I can understand that," said Charlotta. "A wedding ain't
- poetry. Why, Miss Shirley, ma'am, you're crying! What for?"
-
- "Oh, because it's all so beautiful. . .and story bookish. . .and
- romantic. . .and sad," said Anne, winking the tears out of her
- eyes. "It's all perfectly lovely. . .but there's a little sadness
- mixed up in it too, somehow."
-
- "Oh, of course there's a resk in marrying anybody," conceded
- Charlotta the Fourth, "but, when all's said and done, Miss Shirley,
- ma'am, there's many a worse thing than a husband."
-
-
-
-
- XXIX
-
- Poetry and Prose
-
-
- For the next month Anne lived in what, for Avonlea, might be called
- a whirl of excitement. The preparation of her own modest outfit
- for Redmond was of secondary importance. Miss Lavendar was getting
- ready to be married and the stone house was the scene of endless
- consultations and plannings and discussions, with Charlotta the Fourth
- hovering on the outskirts of things in agitated delight and wonder.
- Then the dressmaker came, and there was the rapture and wretchedness
- of choosing fashions and being fitted. Anne and Diana spent half their
- time at Echo Lodge and there were nights when Anne could not sleep for
- wondering whether she had done right in advising Miss Lavendar to select
- brown rather than navy blue for her traveling dress, and to have her
- gray silk made princess.
-
- Everybody concerned in Miss Lavendar's story was very happy.
- Paul Irving rushed to Green Gables to talk the news over with
- Anne as soon as his father had told him.
-
- "I knew I could trust father to pick me out a nice little second mother,"
- he said proudly. "It's a fine thing to have a father you can depend on,
- teacher. I just love Miss Lavendar. Grandma is pleased, too. She says
- she's real glad father didn't pick out an American for his second wife,
- because, although it turned out all right the first time, such a thing
- wouldn't be likely to happen twice. Mrs. Lynde says she thoroughly
- approves of the match and thinks its likely Miss Lavendar will give
- up her queer notions and be like other people, now that she's going to
- be married. But I hope she won't give her queer notions up, teacher,
- because I like them. And I don't want her to be like other people.
- There are too many other people around as it is. YOU know, teacher."
-
- Charlotta the Fourth was another radiant person.
-
- "Oh, Miss Shirley, ma'am, it has all turned out so beautiful.
- When Mr. Irving and Miss Lavendar come back from their tower
- I'm to go up to Boston and live with them. . .and me only fifteen,
- and the other girls never went till they were sixteen. Ain't
- Mr. Irving splendid? He just worships the ground she treads on
- and it makes me feel so queer sometimes to see the look in his eyes
- when he's watching her. It beggars description, Miss Shirley, ma'am.
- I'm awful thankful they're so fond of each other. It's the best way,
- when all's said and done, though some folks can get along without it.
- I've got an aunt who has been married three times and says she married
- the first time for love and the last two times for strictly business,
- and was happy with all three except at the times of the funerals.
- But I think she took a resk, Miss Shirley, ma'am."
-
- "Oh, it's all so romantic," breathed Anne to Marilla that night.
- "If I hadn't taken the wrong path that day we went to Mr. Kimball's
- I'd never have known Miss Lavendar; and if I hadn't met her I'd
- never have taken Paul there. . .and he'd never have written to his
- father about visiting Miss Lavendar just as Mr. Irving was starting for
- San Francisco. Mr. Irving says whenever he got that letter he made
- up his mind to send his partner to San Francisco and come here instead.
- He hadn't heard anything of Miss Lavendar for fifteen years. Somebody
- had told him then that she was to be married and he thought she was and
- never asked anybody anything about her. And now everything has come right.
- And I had a hand in bringing it about. Perhaps, as Mrs. Lynde says,
- everything is foreordained and it was bound to happen anyway. But even so,
- it's nice to think one was an instrument used by predestination. Yes indeed,
- it's very romantic."
-
- "I can't see that it's so terribly romantic at all," said Marilla
- rather crisply. Marilla thought Anne was too worked up about it
- and had plenty to do with getting ready for college without "traipsing"
- to Echo Lodge two days out of three helping Miss Lavendar. "In the
- first place two young fools quarrel and turn sulky; then Steve Irving
- goes to the States and after a spell gets married up there and is
- perfectly happy from all accounts. Then his wife dies and after
- a decent interval he thinks he'll come home and see if his first
- fancy'll have him. Meanwhile, she's been living single, probably
- because nobody nice enough came along to want her, and they meet and
- agree to be married after all. Now, where is the romance in all that?"
-
- "Oh, there isn't any, when you put it that way," gasped Anne,
- rather as if somebody had thrown cold water over her. "I suppose
- that's how it looks in prose. But it's very different if you look
- at it through poetry. . .and _I_ think it's nicer. . ." Anne recovered
- herself and her eyes shone and her cheeks flushed. . ."to look at
- it through poetry."
-
- Marilla glanced at the radiant young face and refrained from
- further sarcastic comments. Perhaps some realization came to her
- that after all it was better to have, like Anne, "the vision and
- the faculty divine". . .that gift which the world cannot bestow or
- take away, of looking at life through some transfiguring. . .or
- revealing?. . .medium, whereby everything seemed apparelled in
- celestial light, wearing a glory and a freshness not visible to
- those who, like herself and Charlotta the Fourth, looked at things
- only through prose.
-
- "When's the wedding to be?" she asked after a pause.
-
- "The last Wednesday in August. They are to be married in the
- garden under the honeysuckle trellis. . .the very spot where
- Mr. Irving proposed to her twenty-five years ago. Marilla, that
- IS romantic, even in prose. There's to be nobody there except
- Mrs. Irving and Paul and Gilbert and Diana and I, and Miss Lavendar's
- cousins. And they will leave on the six o'clock train for a trip
- to the Pacific coast. When they come back in the fall Paul and
- Charlotta the Fourth are to go up to Boston to live with them.
- But Echo Lodge is to be left just as it is. . .only of course they'll
- sell the hens and cow, and board up the windows. . .and every summer
- they're coming down to live in it. I'm so glad. It would have
- hurt me dreadfully next winter at Redmond to think of that dear
- stone house all stripped and deserted, with empty rooms. . .or far
- worse still, with other people living in it. But I can think of it
- now, just as I've always seen it, waiting happily for the summer to
- bring life and laughter back to it again."
-
- There was more romance in the world than that which had fallen
- to the share of the middle-aged lovers of the stone house.
- Anne stumbled suddenly on it one evening when she went over to
- Orchard Slope by the wood cut and came out into the Barry garden.
- Diana Barry and Fred Wright were standing together under the big willow.
- Diana was leaning against the gray trunk, her lashes cast down on
- very crimson cheeks. One hand was held by Fred, who stood with his
- face bent toward her, stammering something in low earnest tones.
- There were no other people in the world except their two selves at
- that magic moment; so neither of them saw Anne, who, after one
- dazed glance of comprehension, turned and sped noiselessly back
- through the spruce wood, never stopping till she gained her own
- gable room, where she sat breathlessly down by her window and tried
- to collect her scattered wits.
-
- "Diana and Fred are in love with each other," she gasped.
- "Oh, it does seem so. . .so. . .so HOPELESSLY grown up."
-
- Anne, of late, had not been without her suspicions that Diana was
- proving false to the melancholy Byronic hero of her early dreams.
- But as "things seen are mightier than things heard," or suspected,
- the realization that it was actually so came to her with almost the
- shock of perfect surprise. This was succeeded by a queer, little
- lonely feeling. . .as if, somehow, Diana had gone forward into a
- new world, shutting a gate behind her, leaving Anne on the outside.
-
- "Things are changing so fast it almost frightens me," Anne thought,
- a little sadly. "And I'm afraid that this can't help making some
- difference between Diana and me. I'm sure I can't tell her all my
- secrets after this. . .she might tell Fred. And what CAN she see
- in Fred? He's very nice and jolly. . .but he's just Fred Wright."
-
- It is always a very puzzling question. . .what can somebody see in
- somebody else? But how fortunate after all that it is so, for if
- everybody saw alike. . .well, in that case, as the old Indian said,
- "Everybody would want my squaw." It was plain that Diana DID see
- something in Fred Wright, however Anne's eyes might be holden.
- Diana came to Green Gables the next evening, a pensive, shy young
- lady, and told Anne the whole story in the dusky seclusion of the
- east gable. Both girls cried and kissed and laughed.
-
- "I'm so happy," said Diana, "but it does seem ridiculous to think
- of me being engaged."
-
- "What is it really like to be engaged?" asked Anne curiously.
-
- "Well, that all depends on who you're engaged to," answered Diana,
- with that maddening air of superior wisdom always assumed by those
- who are engaged over those who are not. "It's perfectly lovely to
- be engaged to Fred. . .but I think it would be simply horrid to be
- engaged to anyone else."
-
- "There's not much comfort for the rest of us in that, seeing that
- there is only one Fred," laughed Anne.
-
- "Oh, Anne, you don't understand," said Diana in vexation. "I didn't
- mean THAT. . .it's so hard to explain. Never mind, you'll understand
- sometime, when your own turn comes."
-
- "Bless you, dearest of Dianas, I understand now. What is an imagination
- for if not to enable you to peep at life through other people's eyes?"
-
- "You must be my bridesmaid, you know, Anne. Promise me that. . .
- wherever you may be when I'm married."
-
- "I'll come from the ends of the earth if necessary," promised Anne solemnly.
-
- "Of course, it won't be for ever so long yet," said Diana, blushing.
- "Three years at the very least. . .for I'm only eighteen and mother
- says no daughter of hers shall be married before she's twenty-one.
- Besides, Fred's father is going to buy the Abraham Fletcher farm
- for him and he says he's got to have it two thirds paid for before
- he'll give it to him in his own name. But three years isn't any too
- much time to get ready for housekeeping, for I haven't a speck of fancy
- work made yet. But I'm going to begin crocheting doilies tomorrow.
- Myra Gillis had thirty-seven doilies when she was married and I'm
- determined I shall have as many as she had."
-
- "I suppose it would be perfectly impossible to keep house with only
- thirty-six doilies," conceded Anne, with a solemn face but dancing eyes.
-
- Diana looked hurt.
-
- "I didn't think you'd make fun of me, Anne," she said reproachfully.
-
- "Dearest, I wasn't making fun of you," cried Anne repentantly.
- "I was only teasing you a bit. I think you'll make the sweetest
- little housekeeper in the world. And I think it's perfectly lovely
- of you to be planning already for your home o'dreams."
-
- Anne had no sooner uttered the phrase, "home o'dreams," than it
- captivated her fancy and she immediately began the erection of one
- of her own. It was, of course, tenanted by an ideal master, dark,
- proud, and melancholy; but oddly enough, Gilbert Blythe persisted
- in hanging about too, helping her arrange pictures, lay out gardens,
- and accomplish sundry other tasks which a proud and melancholy hero
- evidently considered beneath his dignity. Anne tried to banish
- Gilbert's image from her castle in Spain but, somehow, he went
- on being there, so Anne, being in a hurry, gave up the attempt
- and pursued her aerial architecture with such success that her
- "home o'dreams" was built and furnished before Diana spoke again.
-
- "I suppose, Anne, you must think it's funny I should like Fred so
- well when he's so different from the kind of man I've always said I
- would marry. . .the tall, slender kind? But somehow I wouldn't
- want Fred to be tall and slender. . .because, don't you see, he
- wouldn't be Fred then. Of course," added Diana rather dolefully,
- "we will be a dreadfully pudgy couple. But after all that's better
- than one of us being short and fat and the other tall and lean,
- like Morgan Sloane and his wife. Mrs. Lynde says it always makes
- her think of the long and short of it when she sees them together."
-
- "Well," said Anne to herself that night, as she brushed her hair
- before her gilt framed mirror, "I am glad Diana is so happy and
- satisfied. But when my turn comes. . .if it ever does. . .I do
- hope there'll be something a little more thrilling about it. But
- then Diana thought so too, once. I've heard her say time and again
- she'd never get engaged any poky commonplace way. . .he'd HAVE to
- do something splendid to win her. But she has changed. Perhaps
- I'll change too. But I won't. . .and I'm determined I won't. Oh,
- I think these engagements are dreadfully unsettling things when
- they happen to your intimate friends."
-
-
-
-
- XXX
-
- A Wedding at the Stone House
-
- The last week in August came. Miss Lavendar was to be married in it.
- Two weeks later Anne and Gilbert would leave for Redmond College.
- In a week's time Mrs. Rachel Lynde would move to Green Gables and
- set up her lares and penates in the erstwhile spare room, which was
- already prepared for her coming. She had sold all her superfluous
- household plenishings by auction and was at present reveling in the
- congenial occupation of helping the Allans pack up. Mr. Allan was
- to preach his farewell sermon the next Sunday. The old order was
- changing rapidly to give place to the new, as Anne felt with a
- little sadness threading all her excitement and happiness.
-
- "Changes ain't totally pleasant but they're excellent things,"
- said Mr. Harrison philosophically. "Two years is about long
- enough for things to stay exactly the same. If they stayed
- put any longer they might grow mossy."
-
- Mr. Harrison was smoking on his veranda. His wife had
- self-sacrificingly told that he might smoke in the house
- if he took care to sit by an open window. Mr. Harrison
- rewarded this concession by going outdoors altogether to
- smoke in fine weather, and so mutual goodwill reigned.
-
- Anne had come over to ask Mrs. Harrison for some of her yellow dahlias.
- She and Diana were going through to Echo Lodge that evening to help
- Miss Lavendar and Charlotta the Fourth with their final preparations
- for the morrow's bridal. Miss Lavendar herself never had dahlias;
- she did not like them and they would not have suited the fine
- retirement of her old-fashioned garden. But flowers of any kind
- were rather scarce in Avonlea and the neighboring districts that summer,
- thanks to Uncle Abe's storm; and Anne and Diana thought that a certain
- old cream-colored stone jug, usually kept sacred to doughnuts, brimmed
- over with yellow dahlias, would be just the thing to set in a dim angle
- of the stone house stairs, against the dark background of red hall paper.
-
- "I s'pose you'll be starting off for college in a fortnight's time?"
- continued Mr. Harrison. "Well, we're going to miss you an awful lot,
- Emily and me. To be sure, Mrs. Lynde'll be over there in your place.
- There ain't nobody but a substitute can be found for them."
-
- The irony of Mr. Harrison's tone is quite untransferable to paper.
- In spite of his wife's intimacy with Mrs. Lynde, the best that could
- be said of the relationship between her and Mr. Harrison even under
- the new regime, was that they preserved an armed neutrality.
-
- "Yes, I'm going," said Anne. "I'm very glad with my head. . .and
- very sorry with my heart."
-
- "I s'pose you'll be scooping up all the honors that are lying round
- loose at Redmond."
-
- "I may try for one or two of them," confessed Anne, "but I
- don't care so much for things like that as I did two years ago.
- What I want to get out of my college course is some knowledge of
- the best way of living life and doing the most and best with it.
- I want to learn to understand and help other people and myself."
-
- Mr. Harrison nodded.
-
- "That's the idea exactly. That's what college ought to be for,
- instead of for turning out a lot of B.A.'s, so chock full of
- book-learning and vanity that there ain't room for anything else.
- You're all right. College won't be able to do you much harm,
- I reckon."
-
- Diana and Anne drove over to Echo Lodge after tea, taking with them
- all the flowery spoil that several predatory expeditions in their
- own and their neighbors' gardens had yielded. They found the stone
- house agog with excitement. Charlotta the Fourth was flying around
- with such vim and briskness that her blue bows seemed really to possess
- the power of being everywhere at once. Like the helmet of Navarre,
- Charlotta's blue bows waved ever in the thickest of the fray.
-
- "Praise be to goodness you've come," she said devoutly, "for
- there's heaps of things to do. . .and the frosting on that cake
- WON'T harden. . .and there's all the silver to be rubbed up yet. . .
- and the horsehair trunk to be packed. . .and the roosters for the
- chicken salad are running out there beyant the henhouse yet,
- crowing, Miss Shirley, ma'am. And Miss Lavendar ain't to be
- trusted to do a thing. I was thankful when Mr. Irving came
- a few minutes ago and took her off for a walk in the woods.
- Courting's all right in its place, Miss Shirley, ma'am, but if
- you try to mix it up with cooking and scouring everything's spoiled.
- That's MY opinion, Miss Shirley, ma'am."
-
- Anne and Diana worked so heartily that by ten o'clock even
- Charlotta the Fourth was satisfied. She braided her hair in
- innumerable plaits and took her weary little bones off to bed.
-
- "But I'm sure I shan't sleep a blessed wink, Miss Shirley, ma'am,
- for fear that something'll go wrong at the last minute. . .the cream
- won't whip. . .or Mr. Irving'll have a stroke and not be able to come."
-
- "He isn't in the habit of having strokes, is he?" asked Diana, the
- dimpled corners of her mouth twitching. To Diana, Charlotta the Fourth
- was, if not exactly a thing of beauty, certainly a joy forever.
-
- "They're not things that go by habit," said Charlotta the Fourth
- with dignity. "They just HAPPEN. . .and there you are. ANYBODY
- can have a stroke. You don't have to learn how. Mr. Irving looks
- a lot like an uncle of mine that had one once just as he was
- sitting down to dinner one day. But maybe everything'll go all
- right. In this world you've just got to hope for the best and
- prepare for the worst and take whatever God sends."
-
- "The only thing I'm worried about is that it won't be fine tomorrow,"
- said Diana. "Uncle Abe predicted rain for the middle of the week,
- and ever since the big storm I can't help believing there's a good
- deal in what Uncle Abe says."
-
- Anne, who knew better than Diana just how much Uncle Abe had to do
- with the storm, was not much disturbed by this. She slept the
- sleep of the just and weary, and was roused at an unearthly hour by
- Charlotta the Fourth.
-
- "Oh, Miss Shirley, ma'am, it's awful to call you so early," came
- wailing through the keyhole, "but there's so much to do yet. . .and oh,
- Miss Shirley, ma'am, I'm skeered it's going to rain and I wish
- you'd get up and tell me you think it ain't." Anne flew to the
- window, hoping against hope that Charlotta the Fourth was saying
- this merely by way of rousing her effectually. But alas, the
- morning did look unpropitious. Below the window Miss Lavendar's
- garden, which should have been a glory of pale virgin sunshine, lay
- dim and windless; and the sky over the firs was dark with moody clouds.
-
- "Isn't it too mean!" said Diana.
-
- "We must hope for the best," said Anne determinedly. "If it only
- doesn't actually rain, a cool, pearly gray day like this would
- really be nicer than hot sunshine."
-
- "But it will rain," mourned Charlotta, creeping into the room, a
- figure of fun, with her many braids wound about her head, the ends,
- tied up with white thread, sticking out in all directions. "It'll
- hold off till the last minute and then pour cats and dogs. And all
- the folks will get sopping. . .and track mud all over the house. . .
- and they won't be able to be married under the honeysuckle. . .and
- it's awful unlucky for no sun to shine on a bride, say what you will,
- Miss Shirley, ma'am. _I_ knew things were going too well to last."
-
- Charlotta the Fourth seemed certainly to have borrowed a leaf out
- of Miss Eliza Andrews' book.
-
- It did not rain, though it kept on looking as if it meant to.
- By noon the rooms were decorated, the table beautifully laid;
- and upstairs was waiting a bride, "adorned for her husband."
-
- "You do look sweet," said Anne rapturously.
-
- "Lovely," echoed Diana.
-
- "Everything's ready, Miss Shirley, ma'am, and nothing dreadful has
- happened YET," was Charlotta's cheerful statement as she betook
- herself to her little back room to dress. Out came all the braids;
- the resultant rampant crinkliness was plaited into two tails and
- tied, not with two bows alone, but with four, of brand-new ribbon,
- brightly blue. The two upper bows rather gave the impression of
- overgrown wings sprouting from Charlotta's neck, somewhat after the
- fashion of Raphael's cherubs. But Charlotta the Fourth thought
- them very beautiful, and after she had rustled into a white dress,
- so stiffly starched that it could stand alone, she surveyed herself
- in her glass with great satisfaction. . .a satisfaction which lasted
- until she went out in the hall and caught a glimpse through the spare
- room door of a tall girl in some softly clinging gown, pinning white,
- star-like flowers on the smooth ripples of her ruddy hair.
-
- "Oh, I'll NEVER be able to look like Miss Shirley," thought poor
- Charlotta despairingly. "You just have to be born so, I guess. . .
- don't seem's if any amount of practice could give you that AIR."
-
- By one o'clock the guests had come, including Mr. and Mrs. Allan,
- for Mr. Allan was to perform the ceremony in the absence of the
- Grafton minister on his vacation. There was no formality about
- the marriage. Miss Lavendar came down the stairs to meet her
- bridegroom at the foot, and as he took her hand she lifted her big
- brown eyes to his with a look that made Charlotta the Fourth, who
- intercepted it, feel queerer than ever. They went out to the
- honeysuckle arbor, where Mr. Allan was awaiting them. The guests
- grouped themselves as they pleased. Anne and Diana stood by the
- old stone bench, with Charlotta the Fourth between them, desperately
- clutching their hands in her cold, tremulous little paws.
-
- Mr. Allan opened his blue book and the ceremony proceeded. Just as
- Miss Lavendar and Stephen Irving were pronounced man and wife a very
- beautiful and symbolic thing happened. The sun suddenly burst through
- the gray and poured a flood of radiance on the happy bride. Instantly
- the garden was alive with dancing shadows and flickering lights.
-
- "What a lovely omen," thought Anne, as she ran to kiss the bride.
- Then the three girls left the rest of the guests laughing around
- the bridal pair while they flew into the house to see that all was
- in readiness for the feast.
-
- "Thanks be to goodness, it's over, Miss Shirley, ma'am," breathed
- Charlotta the Fourth, "and they're married safe and sound, no
- matter what happens now. The bags of rice are in the pantry,
- ma'am, and the old shoes are behind the door, and the cream for
- whipping is on the sullar steps."
-
- At half past two Mr. and Mrs. Irving left, and everybody went to
- Bright River to see them off on the afternoon train. As Miss
- Lavendar. . .I beg her pardon, Mrs. Irving. . .stepped from the
- door of her old home Gilbert and the girls threw the rice and
- Charlotta the Fourth hurled an old shoe with such excellent aim
- that she struck Mr. Allan squarely on the head. But it was
- reserved for Paul to give the prettiest send-off. He popped out of
- the porch ringing furiously a huge old brass dinner bell which had
- adorned the dining room mantel. Paul's only motive was to make a
- joyful noise; but as the clangor died away, from point and curve
- and hill across the river came the chime of "fairy wedding bells,"
- ringing clearly, sweetly, faintly and more faint, as if Miss
- Lavendar's beloved echoes were bidding her greeting and farewell.
- And so, amid this benediction of sweet sounds, Miss Lavendar drove
- away from the old life of dreams and make-believes to a fuller life
- of realities in the busy world beyond.
-
- Two hours later Anne and Charlotta the Fourth came down the lane again.
- Gilbert had gone to West Grafton on an errand and Diana had to keep an
- engagement at home. Anne and Charlotta had come back to put things in
- order and lock up the little stone house. The garden was a pool of
- late golden sunshine, with butterflies hovering and bees booming;
- but the little house had already that indefinable air of desolation
- which always follows a festivity.
-
- "Oh dear me, don't it look lonesome?" sniffed Charlotta the Fourth,
- who had been crying all the way home from the station. "A wedding
- ain't much cheerfuller than a funeral after all, when it's all
- over, Miss Shirley, ma'am."
-
- A busy evening followed. The decorations had to be removed,
- the dishes washed, the uneaten delicacies packed into a basket for
- the delectation of Charlotta the Fourth's young brothers at home.
- Anne would not rest until everything was in apple-pie order; after
- Charlotta had gone home with her plunder Anne went over the still
- rooms, feeling like one who trod alone some banquet hall deserted,
- and closed the blinds. Then she locked the door and sat down under
- the silver poplar to wait for Gilbert, feeling very tired but still
- unweariedly thinking "long, long thoughts."
-
- "What are you thinking of, Anne?" asked Gilbert, coming down the
- walk. He had left his horse and buggy out at the road.
-
- "Of Miss Lavendar and Mr. Irving," answered Anne dreamily. "Isn't
- it beautiful to think how everything has turned out. . .how they
- have come together again after all the years of separation and
- misunderstanding?"
-
- "Yes, it's beautiful," said Gilbert, looking steadily down into
- Anne's uplifted face, "but wouldn't it have been more beautiful still,
- Anne, if there had been NO separation or misunderstanding. . .
- if they had come hand in hand all the way through life, with no
- memories behind them but those which belonged to each other?"
-
- For a moment Anne's heart fluttered queerly and for the first time
- her eyes faltered under Gilbert's gaze and a rosy flush stained the
- paleness of her face. It was as if a veil that had hung before
- her inner consciousness had been lifted, giving to her view a
- revelation of unsuspected feelings and realities. Perhaps, after
- all, romance did not come into one's life with pomp and blare, like
- a gay knight riding down; perhaps it crept to one's side like an
- old friend through quiet ways; perhaps it revealed itself in
- seeming prose, until some sudden shaft of illumination flung
- athwart its pages betrayed the rhythm and the music, perhaps. . .
- perhaps. . .love unfolded naturally out of a beautiful friendship,
- as a golden-hearted rose slipping from its green sheath.
-
- Then the veil dropped again; but the Anne who walked up the dark
- lane was not quite the same Anne who had driven gaily down it the
- evening before. The page of girlhood had been turned, as by an
- unseen finger, and the page of womanhood was before her with all
- its charm and mystery, its pain and gladness.
-
- Gilbert wisely said nothing more; but in his silence he read the
- history of the next four years in the light of Anne's remembered
- blush. Four years of earnest, happy work. . .and then the guerdon
- of a useful knowledge gained and a sweet heart won.
-
- Behind them in the garden the little stone house brooded among the
- shadows. It was lonely but not forsaken. It had not yet done with
- dreams and laughter and the joy of life; there were to be future
- summers for the little stone house; meanwhile, it could wait. And
- over the river in purple durance the echoes bided their time.
-
-
- End of Project Gutenberg Etext of Anne of Avonlea.
-
-
- The correct words were obtained from the L.C. Page & Company, Inc.
- edition of this book copyright 1909 - Thirteenth Impression, April 1911.
-
- Italic emphases have been CAPITALIZED for emphasis, other italics, such
- as titles have been `Placed in Single Quotes.' Italic I's are _I_.
-
- Most spellings and combined words have been left as they were in the
- majority of the editions orginally published. Some spelling errors
- we presume were not intended have been corrected.
-
-