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-
- ANNE of the ISLAND
-
- by
-
- Lucy Maud Montgomery
-
-
-
-
- to
- all the girls all over the world
- who have "wanted more" about
- ANNE
-
-
-
- All precious things discovered late
- To those that seek them issue forth,
- For Love in sequel works with Fate,
- And draws the veil from hidden worth.
- -TENNYSON
-
-
-
- Table of Contents
-
- I The Shadow of Change . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- II Garlands of Autumn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- III Greeting and Farewell. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
- IV April's Lady . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
- V Letters from Home. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
- VI In the Park. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
- VII Home Again . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
- VIII Anne's First Proposal. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .105
- IX An Unwelcome Lover and a Welcome Friend. . . . . . .113
- X Patty's Place. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .126
- XI The Round of Life. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .139
- XII "Averil's Atonement" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .153
- XIII The Way of Transgressors . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165
- XIV The Summons. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .181
- XV A Dream Turned Upside Down . . . . . . . . . . . . .194
- XVI Adjusted Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .202
- XVII A Letter from Davy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .219
- XVIII Miss Josepine Remembers the Anne-girl. . . . . . . .225
- XIX An Interlude . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .234
- XX Gilbert Speaks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .240
- XXI Roses of Yesterday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .249
- XXII Spring and Anne Return to Green Gables . . . . . . .256
- XXIII Paul Cannot Find the Rock People . . . . . . . . . .263
- XXIV Enter Jonas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .269
- XXV Enter Prince Charming. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .278
- XXVI Enter Christine. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .288
- XXVII Mutual Confidences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .294
- XXVIII A June Evening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .303
- XXIX Diana's Wedding. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .311
- XXX Mrs. Skinner's Romance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .317
- XXXI Anne to Philippa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .323
- XXXII Tea with Mrs. Douglas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .328
- XXXIII "He Just Kept Coming and Coming" . . . . . . . . . .336
- XXXIV John Douglas Speaks at Last. . . . . . . . . . . . .342
- XXXV The Last Redmond Year Opens. . . . . . . . . . . . .350
- XXXV1 The Gardners' Call . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .361
- XXXVII Full-fledged B.A.'s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .370
- XXXVIII False Dawn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .379
- XXXIX Deals with Weddings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .388
- XL A Book of Revelation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .400
- XLI Love Takes Up the Glass of Time. . . . . . . . . . .407
-
-
-
-
-
- ANNE of the ISLAND
- by
- Lucy Maud Montgomery
-
-
-
-
- Chapter I
-
- The Shadow of Change
-
-
- "Harvest is ended and summer is gone," quoted Anne Shirley,
- gazing across the shorn fields dreamily. She and Diana Barry had
- been picking apples in the Green Gables orchard, but were now
- resting from their labors in a sunny corner, where airy fleets of
- thistledown drifted by on the wings of a wind that was still
- summer-sweet with the incense of ferns in the Haunted Wood.
-
- But everything in the landscape around them spoke of autumn.
- The sea was roaring hollowly in the distance, the fields were bare
- and sere, scarfed with golden rod, the brook valley below Green
- Gables overflowed with asters of ethereal purple, and the Lake of
- Shining Waters was blue -- blue -- blue; not the changeful blue
- of spring, nor the pale azure of summer, but a clear, steadfast,
- serene blue, as if the water were past all moods and tenses of emotion
- and had settled down to a tranquility unbroken by fickle dreams.
-
- "It has been a nice summer," said Diana, twisting the new ring on
- her left hand with a smile. "And Miss Lavendar's wedding seemed
- to come as a sort of crown to it. I suppose Mr. and Mrs. Irving
- are on the Pacific coast now."
-
- "It seems to me they have been gone long enough to go around the world,"
- sighed Anne.
-
- "I can't believe it is only a week since they were married.
- Everything has changed. Miss Lavendar and Mr. and Mrs. Allan gone
- -- how lonely the manse looks with the shutters all closed!
- I went past it last night, and it made me feel as if everybody
- in it had died."
-
- "We'll never get another minister as nice as Mr. Allan," said Diana,
- with gloomy conviction. "I suppose we'll have all kinds of supplies
- this winter, and half the Sundays no preaching at all. And you and
- Gilbert gone -- it will be awfully dull."
-
- "Fred will be here," insinuated Anne slyly.
-
- "When is Mrs. Lynde going to move up?" asked Diana, as if she
- had not heard Anne's remark.
-
- "Tomorrow. I'm glad she's coming -- but it will be another change.
- Marilla and I cleared everything out of the spare room yesterday.
- Do you know, I hated to do it? Of course, it was silly -- but
- it did seem as if we were committing sacrilege. That old spare
- room has always seemed like a shrine to me. When I was a child
- I thought it the most wonderful apartment in the world. You
- remember what a consuming desire I had to sleep in a spare room bed
- -- but not the Green Gables spare room. Oh, no, never there!
- It would have been too terrible -- I couldn't have slept a wink
- from awe. I never WALKED through that room when Marilla sent me in
- on an errand -- no, indeed, I tiptoed through it and held my breath,
- as if I were in church, and felt relieved when I got out of it.
- The pictures of George Whitefield and the Duke of Wellington
- hung there, one on each side of the mirror, and frowned so sternly
- at me all the time I was in, especially if I dared peep in the mirror,
- which was the only one in the house that didn't twist my face a little.
- I always wondered how Marilla dared houseclean that room. And now it's
- not only cleaned but stripped bare. George Whitefield and the Duke
- have been relegated to the upstairs hall. `So passes the glory of
- this world,' " concluded Anne, with a laugh in which there was a
- little note of regret. It is never pleasant to have our old
- shrines desecrated, even when we have outgrown them.
-
- "I'll be so lonesome when you go," moaned Diana for the hundredth time.
- "And to think you go next week!"
-
- "But we're together still," said Anne cheerily. "We mustn't let next
- week rob us of this week's joy. I hate the thought of going myself
- -- home and I are such good friends. Talk of being lonesome!
- It's I who should groan. YOU'LL be here with any number of your
- old friends -- AND Fred! While I shall be alone among strangers,
- not knowing a soul!"
-
- "EXCEPT Gilbert -- AND Charlie Sloane," said Diana, imitating
- Anne's italics and slyness.
-
- "Charlie Sloane will be a great comfort, of course," agreed Anne
- sarcastically; whereupon both those irresponsible damsels laughed.
- Diana knew exactly what Anne thought of Charlie Sloane; but,
- despite sundry confidential talks, she did not know just what
- Anne thought of Gilbert Blythe. To be sure, Anne herself
- did not know that.
-
- "The boys may be boarding at the other end of Kingsport, for all
- I know," Anne went on. "I am glad I'm going to Redmond, and I am
- sure I shall like it after a while. But for the first few weeks
- I know I won't. I shan't even have the comfort of looking forward
- to the weekend visit home, as I had when I went to Queen's.
- Christmas will seem like a thousand years away."
-
- "Everything is changing -- or going to change," said Diana sadly.
- "I have a feeling that things will never be the same again, Anne."
-
- "We have come to a parting of the ways, I suppose," said Anne
- thoughtfully. "We had to come to it. Do you think, Diana, that
- being grown-up is really as nice as we used to imagine it would
- be when we were children?"
-
- "I don't know -- there are SOME nice things about it," answered
- Diana, again caressing her ring with that little smile which
- always had the effect of making Anne feel suddenly left out and
- inexperienced. "But there are so many puzzling things, too.
- Sometimes I feel as if being grown-up just frightened me -- and
- then I would give anything to be a little girl again."
-
- "I suppose we'll get used to being grownup in time," said Anne
- cheerfully. "There won't be so many unexpected things about it
- by and by -- though, after all, I fancy it's the unexpected
- things that give spice to life. We're eighteen, Diana. In two
- more years we'll be twenty. When I was ten I thought twenty was
- a green old age. In no time you'll be a staid, middle-aged
- matron, and I shall be nice, old maid Aunt Anne, coming to visit
- you on vacations. You'll always keep a corner for me, won't you,
- Di darling? Not the spare room, of course -- old maids can't
- aspire to spare rooms, and I shall be as 'umble as Uriah Heep,
- and quite content with a little over-the-porch or off-the-parlor
- cubby hole."
-
- "What nonsense you do talk, Anne," laughed Diana. "You'll marry
- somebody splendid and handsome and rich -- and no spare room in
- Avonlea will be half gorgeous enough for you -- and you'll turn
- up your nose at all the friends of your youth."
-
- "That would be a pity; my nose is quite nice, but I fear turning
- it up would spoil it," said Anne, patting that shapely organ.
- "I haven't so many good features that I could afford to spoil
- those I have; so, even if I should marry the King of the Cannibal
- Islands, I promise you I won't turn up my nose at you, Diana."
-
- With another gay laugh the girls separated, Diana to return to
- Orchard Slope, Anne to walk to the Post Office. She found a
- letter awaiting her there, and when Gilbert Blythe overtook her
- on the bridge over the Lake of Shining Waters she was sparkling
- with the excitement of it.
-
- "Priscilla Grant is going to Redmond, too," she exclaimed.
- "Isn't that splendid? I hoped she would, but she didn't think
- her father would consent. He has, however, and we're to board
- together. I feel that I can face an army with banners -- or all
- the professors of Redmond in one fell phalanx -- with a chum like
- Priscilla by my side."
-
- "I think we'll like Kingsport," said Gilbert. "It's a nice old
- burg, they tell me, and has the finest natural park in the world.
- I've heard that the scenery in it is magnificent."
-
- "I wonder if it will be -- can be -- any more beautiful than this,"
- murmured Anne, looking around her with the loving, enraptured eyes
- of those to whom "home" must always be the loveliest spot in the world,
- no matter what fairer lands may lie under alien stars.
-
- They were leaning on the bridge of the old pond, drinking deep of
- the enchantment of the dusk, just at the spot where Anne had climbed
- from her sinking Dory on the day Elaine floated down to Camelot.
- The fine, empurpling dye of sunset still stained the western skies,
- but the moon was rising and the water lay like a great, silver dream
- in her light. Remembrance wove a sweet and subtle spell over the
- two young creatures.
-
- "You are very quiet, Anne," said Gilbert at last.
-
- "I'm afraid to speak or move for fear all this wonderful beauty
- will vanish just like a broken silence," breathed Anne.
-
- Gilbert suddenly laid his hand over the slender white one lying
- on the rail of the bridge. His hazel eyes deepened into darkness,
- his still boyish lips opened to say something of the dream and hope
- that thrilled his soul. But Anne snatched her hand away and
- turned quickly. The spell of the dusk was broken for her.
-
- "I must go home," she exclaimed, with a rather overdone carelessness.
- "Marilla had a headache this afternoon, and I'm sure the twins will
- be in some dreadful mischief by this time. I really shouldn't have
- stayed away so long."
-
- She chattered ceaselessly and inconsequently until they reached
- the Green Gables lane. Poor Gilbert hardly had a chance to get
- a word in edgewise. Anne felt rather relieved when they parted.
- There had been a new, secret self-consciousness in her heart with
- regard to Gilbert, ever since that fleeting moment of revelation
- in the garden of Echo Lodge. Something alien had intruded into
- the old, perfect, school-day comradeship -- something that
- threatened to mar it.
-
- "I never felt glad to see Gilbert go before," she thought, half-
- resentfully, half-sorrowfully, as she walked alone up the lane.
- "Our friendship will be spoiled if he goes on with this nonsense.
- It mustn't be spoiled -- I won't let it. Oh, WHY can't boys be
- just sensible!"
-
- Anne had an uneasy doubt that it was not strictly "sensible" that
- she should still feel on her hand the warm pressure of Gilbert's,
- as distinctly as she had felt it for the swift second his had
- rested there; and still less sensible that the sensation was far
- from being an unpleasant one -- very different from that which
- had attended a similar demonstration on Charlie Sloane's part,
- when she had been sitting out a dance with him at a White Sands
- party three nights before. Anne shivered over the disagreeable
- recollection. But all problems connected with infatuated swains
- vanished from her mind when she entered the homely, unsentimental
- atmosphere of the Green Gables kitchen where an eight-year-old
- boy was crying grievously on the sofa.
-
- "What is the matter, Davy?" asked Anne, taking him up in her arms.
- "Where are Marilla and Dora?"
-
- "Marilla's putting Dora to bed," sobbed Davy, "and I'm crying
- 'cause Dora fell down the outside cellar steps, heels over head,
- and scraped all the skin off her nose, and -- "
-
- "Oh, well, don't cry about it, dear. Of course, you are sorry
- for her, but crying won't help her any. She'll be all right
- tomorrow. Crying never helps any one, Davy-boy, and -- "
-
- "I ain't crying 'cause Dora fell down cellar," said Davy, cutting
- short Anne's wellmeant preachment with increasing bitterness.
- "I'm crying, cause I wasn't there to see her fall. I'm always
- missing some fun or other, seems to me."
-
- "Oh, Davy!" Anne choked back an unholy shriek of laughter.
- "Would you call it fun to see poor little Dora fall down the
- steps and get hurt?"
-
- "She wasn't MUCH hurt," said Davy, defiantly. "'Course, if
- she'd been killed I'd have been real sorry, Anne. But the Keiths
- ain't so easy killed. They're like the Blewetts, I guess. Herb
- Blewett fell off the hayloft last Wednesday, and rolled right
- down through the turnip chute into the box stall, where they had
- a fearful wild, cross horse, and rolled right under his heels.
- And still he got out alive, with only three bones broke. Mrs.
- Lynde says there are some folks you can't kill with a meat-axe.
- Is Mrs. Lynde coming here tomorrow, Anne?"
-
- "Yes, Davy, and I hope you'll be always very nice and good to her."
-
- "I'll be nice and good. But will she ever put me to bed at nights, Anne?"
-
- "Perhaps. Why?"
-
- "'Cause," said Davy very decidedly, "if she does I won't say my
- prayers before her like I do before you, Anne."
-
- "Why not?"
-
- "'Cause I don't think it would be nice to talk to God before
- strangers, Anne. Dora can say hers to Mrs. Lynde if she likes,
- but _I_ won't. I'll wait till she's gone and then say 'em. Won't
- that be all right, Anne?"
-
- "Yes, if you are sure you won't forget to say them, Davy-boy."
-
- "Oh, I won't forget, you bet. I think saying my prayers is great fun.
- But it won't be as good fun saying them alone as saying them to you.
- I wish you'd stay home, Anne. I don't see what you want to go away
- and leave us for."
-
- "I don't exactly WANT to, Davy, but I feel I ought to go."
-
- "If you don't want to go you needn't. You're grown up. When _I_'m
- grown up I'm not going to do one single thing I don't want to do, Anne."
-
- "All your life, Davy, you'll find yourself doing things you don't
- want to do."
-
- "I won't," said Davy flatly. "Catch me! I have to do things I
- don't want to now 'cause you and Marilla'll send me to bed if I don't.
- But when I grow up you can't do that, and there'll be nobody to tell me
- not to do things. Won't I have the time! Say, Anne, Milty Boulter says
- his mother says you're going to college to see if you can catch a man.
- Are you, Anne? I want to know."
-
- For a second Anne burned with resentment. Then she laughed,
- reminding herself that Mrs. Boulter's crude vulgarity of thought
- and speech could not harm her.
-
- "No, Davy, I'm not. I'm going to study and grow and learn about many things."
-
- "What things?"
-
- "`Shoes and ships and sealing wax
- And cabbages and kings,'"
-
- quoted Anne.
-
- "But if you DID want to catch a man how would you go about it?
- I want to know," persisted Davy, for whom the subject evidently
- possessed a certain fascination.
-
- "You'd better ask Mrs. Boulter," said Anne thoughtlessly. "I
- think it's likely she knows more about the process than I do."
-
- "I will, the next time I see her," said Davy gravely.
-
- "Davy! If you do!" cried Anne, realizing her mistake.
-
- "But you just told me to," protested Davy aggrieved.
-
- "It's time you went to bed," decreed Anne, by way of getting out
- of the scrape.
-
- After Davy had gone to bed Anne wandered down to Victoria Island
- and sat there alone, curtained with fine-spun, moonlit gloom,
- while the water laughed around her in a duet of brook and wind.
- Anne had always loved that brook. Many a dream had she spun over
- its sparkling water in days gone by. She forgot lovelorn youths,
- and the cayenne speeches of malicious neighbors, and all the
- problems of her girlish existence. In imagination she sailed
- over storied seas that wash the distant shining shores of "faery
- lands forlorn," where lost Atlantis and Elysium lie, with the
- evening star for pilot, to the land of Heart's Desire. And she
- was richer in those dreams than in realities; for things seen
- pass away, but the things that are unseen are eternal.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter II
-
- Garlands of Autumn
-
-
- The following week sped swiftly, crowded with innumerable "last things,"
- as Anne called them. Good-bye calls had to be made and received, being
- pleasant or otherwise, according to whether callers and called-upon were
- heartily in sympathy with Anne's hopes, or thought she was too much
- puffed-up over going to college and that it was their duty to "take her
- down a peg or two."
-
- The A.V.I.S. gave a farewell party in honor of Anne and Gilbert
- one evening at the home of Josie Pye, choosing that place, partly
- because Mr. Pye's house was large and convenient, partly because
- it was strongly suspected that the Pye girls would have nothing
- to do with the affair if their offer of the house for the party
- was not accepted. It was a very pleasant little time, for the
- Pye girls were gracious, and said and did nothing to mar the
- harmony of the occasion -- which was not according to their wont.
- Josie was unusually amiable -- so much so that she even remarked
- condescendingly to Anne,
-
- "Your new dress is rather becoming to you, Anne. Really, you
- look ALMOST PRETTY in it."
-
- "How kind of you to say so," responded Anne, with dancing eyes.
- Her sense of humor was developing, and the speeches that would
- have hurt her at fourteen were becoming merely food for amusement
- now. Josie suspected that Anne was laughing at her behind those
- wicked eyes; but she contented herself with whispering to Gertie,
- as they went downstairs, that Anne Shirley would put on more airs
- than ever now that she was going to college -- you'd see!
-
- All the "old crowd" was there, full of mirth and zest and
- youthful lightheartedness. Diana Barry, rosy and dimpled,
- shadowed by the faithful Fred; Jane Andrews, neat and sensible
- and plain; Ruby Gillis, looking her handsomest and brightest in a
- cream silk blouse, with red geraniums in her golden hair; Gilbert
- Blythe and Charlie Sloane, both trying to keep as near the
- elusive Anne as possible; Carrie Sloane, looking pale and
- melancholy because, so it was reported, her father would not
- allow Oliver Kimball to come near the place; Moody Spurgeon
- MacPherson, whose round face and objectionable ears were as round
- and objectionable as ever; and Billy Andrews, who sat in a corner all
- the evening, chuckled when any one spoke to him, and watched Anne
- Shirley with a grin of pleasure on his broad, freckled countenance.
-
- Anne had known beforehand of the party, but she had not known
- that she and Gilbert were, as the founders of the Society, to be
- presented with a very complimentary "address" and "tokens of
- respect" -- in her case a volume of Shakespeare's plays, in
- Gilbert's a fountain pen. She was so taken by surprise and
- pleased by the nice things said in the address, read in Moody
- Spurgeon's most solemn and ministerial tones, that the tears
- quite drowned the sparkle of her big gray eyes. She had worked
- hard and faithfully for the A.V.I.S., and it warmed the cockles
- of her heart that the members appreciated her efforts so sincerely.
- And they were all so nice and friendly and jolly -- even the Pye
- girls had their merits; at that moment Anne loved all the world.
-
- She enjoyed the evening tremendously, but the end of it rather
- spoiled all. Gilbert again made the mistake of saying something
- sentimental to her as they ate their supper on the moonlit
- verandah; and Anne, to punish him, was gracious to Charlie Sloane
- and allowed the latter to walk home with her. She found,
- however, that revenge hurts nobody quite so much as the one who
- tries to inflict it. Gilbert walked airily off with Ruby Gillis,
- and Anne could hear them laughing and talking gaily as they
- loitered along in the still, crisp autumn air. They were
- evidently having the best of good times, while she was horribly
- bored by Charlie Sloane, who talked unbrokenly on, and never,
- even by accident, said one thing that was worth listening to.
- Anne gave an occasional absent "yes" or "no," and thought how
- beautiful Ruby had looked that night, how very goggly Charlie's
- eyes were in the moonlight -- worse even than by daylight -- and
- that the world, somehow, wasn't quite such a nice place as she
- had believed it to be earlier in the evening.
-
- "I'm just tired out -- that is what is the matter with me,"
- she said, when she thankfully found herself alone in her own room.
- And she honestly believed it was. But a certain little gush of joy,
- as from some secret, unknown spring, bubbled up in her heart
- the next evening, when she saw Gilbert striding down through the
- Haunted Wood and crossing the old log bridge with that firm,
- quick step of his. So Gilbert was not going to spend this last
- evening with Ruby Gillis after all!
-
- "You look tired, Anne," he said.
-
- "I am tired, and, worse than that, I'm disgruntled. I'm tired
- because I've been packing my trunk and sewing all day. But I'm
- disgruntled because six women have been here to say good-bye to
- me, and every one of the six managed to say something that seemed
- to take the color right out of life and leave it as gray and
- dismal and cheerless as a November morning."
-
- "Spiteful old cats!" was Gilbert's elegant comment.
-
- "Oh, no, they weren't," said Anne seriously. "That is just the
- trouble. If they had been spiteful cats I wouldn't have minded
- them. But they are all nice, kind, motherly souls, who like me
- and whom I like, and that is why what they said, or hinted, had
- such undue weight with me. They let me see they thought I was
- crazy going to Redmond and trying to take a B.A., and ever since
- I've been wondering if I am. Mrs. Peter Sloane sighed and said
- she hoped my strength would hold out till I got through; and at
- once I saw myself a hopeless victim of nervous prostration at the
- end of my third year; Mrs. Eben Wright said it must cost an awful
- lot to put in four years at Redmond; and I felt all over me that
- it was unpardonable of me to squander Marilla's money and my own
- on such a folly. Mrs. Jasper Bell said she hoped I wouldn't let
- college spoil me, as it did some people; and I felt in my bones
- that the end of my four Redmond years would see me a most
- insufferable creature, thinking I knew it all, and looking down
- on everything and everybody in Avonlea; Mrs. Elisha Wright said
- she understood that Redmond girls, especially those who belonged
- to Kingsport, were 'dreadful dressy and stuck-up,' and she
- guessed I wouldn't feel much at home among them; and I saw
- myself, a snubbed, dowdy, humiliated country girl, shuffling
- through Redmond's classic halls in coppertoned boots."
-
- Anne ended with a laugh and a sigh commingled. With her sensitive
- nature all disapproval had weight, even the disapproval of those
- for whose opinions she had scant respect. For the time being life
- was savorless, and ambition had gone out like a snuffed candle.
-
- "You surely don't care for what they said," protested Gilbert.
- "You know exactly how narrow their outlook on life is, excellent
- creatures though they are. To do anything THEY have never done
- is anathema maranatha. You are the first Avonlea girl who has
- ever gone to college; and you know that all pioneers are considered
- to be afflicted with moonstruck madness."
-
- "Oh, I know. But FEELING is so different from KNOWING. My common
- sense tells me all you can say, but there are times when common
- sense has no power over me. Common nonsense takes possession of
- my soul. Really, after Mrs. Elisha went away I hardly had the
- heart to finish packing."
-
- "You're just tired, Anne. Come, forget it all and take a walk
- with me -- a ramble back through the woods beyond the marsh.
- There should be something there I want to show you."
-
- "Should be! Don't you know if it is there?"
-
- "No. I only know it should be, from something I saw there in spring.
- Come on. We'll pretend we are two children again and we'll go the
- way of the wind."
-
- They started gaily off. Anne, remembering the unpleasantness of
- the preceding evening, was very nice to Gilbert; and Gilbert, who
- was learning wisdom, took care to be nothing save the schoolboy
- comrade again. Mrs. Lynde and Marilla watched them from the
- kitchen window.
-
- "That'll be a match some day," Mrs. Lynde said approvingly.
-
- Marilla winced slightly. In her heart she hoped it would, but it
- went against her grain to hear the matter spoken of in Mrs. Lynde's
- gossipy matter-of-fact way.
-
- "They're only children yet," she said shortly.
-
- Mrs. Lynde laughed good-naturedly.
-
- "Anne is eighteen; I was married when I was that age. We old
- folks, Marilla, are too much given to thinking children never
- grow up, that's what. Anne is a young woman and Gilbert's a man,
- and he worships the ground she walks on, as any one can see.
- He's a fine fellow, and Anne can't do better. I hope she won't
- get any romantic nonsense into her head at Redmond. I don't
- approve of them coeducational places and never did, that's what.
- I don't believe," concluded Mrs. Lynde solemnly, "that the
- students at such colleges ever do much else than flirt."
-
- "They must study a little," said Marilla, with a smile.
-
- "Precious little," sniffed Mrs. Rachel. "However, I think Anne
- will. She never was flirtatious. But she doesn't appreciate
- Gilbert at his full value, that's what. Oh, I know girls!
- Charlie Sloane is wild about her, too, but I'd never advise her
- to marry a Sloane. The Sloanes are good, honest, respectable people,
- of course. But when all's said and done, they're SLOANES."
-
- Marilla nodded. To an outsider, the statement that Sloanes were
- Sloanes might not be very illuminating, but she understood.
- Every village has such a family; good, honest, respectable people
- they may be, but SLOANES they are and must ever remain, though
- they speak with the tongues of men and angels.
-
- Gilbert and Anne, happily unconscious that their future was thus
- being settled by Mrs. Rachel, were sauntering through the shadows
- of the Haunted Wood. Beyond, the harvest hills were basking in
- an amber sunset radiance, under a pale, aerial sky of rose and blue.
- The distant spruce groves were burnished bronze, and their long shadows
- barred the upland meadows. But around them a little wind sang among
- the fir tassels, and in it there was the note of autumn.
-
- "This wood really is haunted now -- by old memories," said Anne,
- stooping to gather a spray of ferns, bleached to waxen whiteness
- by frost. "It seems to me that the little girls Diana and I used
- to be play here still, and sit by the Dryad's Bubble in the
- twilights, trysting with the ghosts. Do you know, I can never go
- up this path in the dusk without feeling a bit of the old fright
- and shiver? There was one especially horrifying phantom which we
- created -- the ghost of the murdered child that crept up behind
- you and laid cold fingers on yours. I confess that, to this day,
- I cannot help fancying its little, furtive footsteps behind me
- when I come here after nightfall. I'm not afraid of the White
- Lady or the headless man or the skeletons, but I wish I had never
- imagined that baby's ghost into existence. How angry Marilla
- and Mrs. Barry were over that affair," concluded Anne, with
- reminiscent laughter.
-
- The woods around the head of the marsh were full of purple vistas,
- threaded with gossamers. Past a dour plantation of gnarled spruces
- and a maple-fringed, sun-warm valley they found the "something"
- Gilbert was looking for.
-
- "Ah, here it is," he said with satisfaction.
-
- "An apple tree -- and away back here!" exclaimed Anne delightedly.
-
- "Yes, a veritable apple-bearing apple tree, too, here in the very
- midst of pines and beeches, a mile away from any orchard. I was
- here one day last spring and found it, all white with blossom.
- So I resolved I'd come again in the fall and see if it had been
- apples. See, it's loaded. They look good, too -- tawny as
- russets but with a dusky red cheek. Most wild seedlings are
- green and uninviting."
-
- "I suppose it sprang years ago from some chance-sown seed," said
- Anne dreamily." And how it has grown and flourished and held its
- own here all alone among aliens, the brave determined thing!"
-
- "Here's a fallen tree with a cushion of moss. Sit down, Anne --
- it will serve for a woodland throne. I'll climb for some apples.
- They all grow high -- the tree had to reach up to the sunlight."
-
- The apples proved to be delicious. Under the tawny skin was a
- white, white flesh, faintly veined with red; and, besides their
- own proper apple taste, they had a certain wild, delightful tang
- no orchard-grown apple ever possessed.
-
- "The fatal apple of Eden couldn't have had a rarer flavor,"
- commented Anne. "But it's time we were going home. See, it was
- twilight three minutes ago and now it's moonlight. What a pity
- we couldn't have caught the moment of transformation. But such
- moments never are caught, I suppose."
-
- "Let's go back around the marsh and home by way of Lover's Lane.
- Do you feel as disgruntled now as when you started out, Anne?"
-
- "Not I. Those apples have been as manna to a hungry soul. I feel
- that I shall love Redmond and have a splendid four years there."
-
- "And after those four years -- what?"
-
- "Oh, there's another bend in the road at their end," answered
- Anne lightly. "I've no idea what may be around it -- I don't
- want to have. It's nicer not to know."
-
- Lover's Lane was a dear place that night, still and mysteriously
- dim in the pale radiance of the moonlight. They loitered through
- it in a pleasant chummy silence, neither caring to talk.
-
- "If Gilbert were always as he has been this evening how nice and
- simple everything would be," reflected Anne.
-
- Gilbert was looking at Anne, as she walked along. In her light dress,
- with her slender delicacy, she made him think of a white iris.
-
- "I wonder if I can ever make her care for me," he thought, with a
- pang of self-destruct.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter III
-
- Greeting and Farewell
-
-
- Charlie Sloane, Gilbert Blythe and Anne Shirley left Avonlea the
- following Monday morning. Anne had hoped for a fine day. Diana
- was to drive her to the station and they wanted this, their last
- drive together for some time, to be a pleasant one. But when Anne
- went to bed Sunday night the east wind was moaning around Green
- Gables with an ominous prophecy which was fulfilled in the morning.
- Anne awoke to find raindrops pattering against her window and
- shadowing the pond's gray surface with widening rings; hills and
- sea were hidden in mist, and the whole world seemed dim and dreary.
- Anne dressed in the cheerless gray dawn, for an early start was
- necessary to catch the boat train; she struggled against the tears
- that WOULD well up in her eyes in spite of herself. She was leaving
- the home that was so dear to her, and something told her that she was
- leaving it forever, save as a holiday refuge. Things would never be
- the same again; coming back for vacations would not be living there.
- And oh, how dear and beloved everything was -- that little white porch room,
- sacred to the dreams of girlhood, the old Snow Queen at the window,
- the brook in the hollow, the Dryad's Bubble, the Haunted Woods,
- and Lover's Lane -- all the thousand and one dear spots where memories
- of the old years bided. Could she ever be really happy anywhere else?
-
- Breakfast at Green Gables that morning was a rather doleful meal.
- Davy, for the first time in his life probably, could not eat, but
- blubbered shamelessly over his porridge. Nobody else seemed to
- have much appetite, save Dora, who tucked away her rations comfortably.
- Dora, like the immortal and most prudent Charlotte, who "went on
- cutting bread and butter" when her frenzied lover's body had been
- carried past on a shutter, was one of those fortunate creatures
- who are seldom disturbed by anything. Even at eight it took a
- great deal to ruffle Dora's placidity. She was sorry Anne was
- going away, of course, but was that any reason why she should
- fail to appreciate a poached egg on toast? Not at all. And,
- seeing that Davy could not eat his, Dora ate it for him.
-
- Promptly on time Diana appeared with horse and buggy, her rosy
- face glowing above her raincoat. The good-byes had to be said
- then somehow. Mrs. Lynde came in from her quarters to give Anne
- a hearty embrace and warn her to be careful of her health,
- whatever she did. Marilla, brusque and tearless, pecked Anne's
- cheek and said she supposed they'd hear from her when she got
- settled. A casual observer might have concluded that Anne's
- going mattered very little to her -- unless said observer had
- happened to get a good look in her eyes. Dora kissed Anne primly
- and squeezed out two decorous little tears; but Davy, who had
- been crying on the back porch step ever since they rose from the
- table, refused to say good-bye at all. When he saw Anne coming
- towards him he sprang to his feet, bolted up the back stairs, and
- hid in a clothes closet, out of which he would not come. His muffled
- howls were the last sounds Anne heard as she left Green Gables.
-
- It rained heavily all the way to Bright River, to which station
- they had to go, since the branch line train from Carmody did not
- connect with the boat train. Charlie and Gilbert were on the
- station platform when they reached it, and the train was whistling.
- Anne had just time to get her ticket and trunk check, say a hurried
- farewell to Diana, and hasten on board. She wished she were going back
- with Diana to Avonlea; she knew she was going to die of homesickness.
- And oh, if only that dismal rain would stop pouring down as if the
- whole world were weeping over summer vanished and joys departed!
- Even Gilbert's presence brought her no comfort, for Charlie Sloane
- was there, too, and Sloanishness could be tolerated only in fine weather.
- It was absolutely insufferable in rain.
-
- But when the boat steamed out of Charlottetown harbor things took
- a turn for the better. The rain ceased and the sun began to
- burst out goldenly now and again between the rents in the clouds,
- burnishing the gray seas with copper-hued radiance, and lighting
- up the mists that curtained the Island's red shores with gleams
- of gold foretokening a fine day after all. Besides, Charlie
- Sloane promptly became so seasick that he had to go below, and
- Anne and Gilbert were left alone on deck.
-
- "I am very glad that all the Sloanes get seasick as soon as they
- go on water," thought Anne mercilessly. "I am sure I couldn't
- take my farewell look at the `ould sod' with Charlie standing
- there pretending to look sentimentally at it, too."
-
- "Well, we're off," remarked Gilbert unsentimentally.
-
- "Yes, I feel like Byron's `Childe Harold' -- only it isn't really
- my `native shore' that I'm watching," said Anne, winking her gray
- eyes vigorously. "Nova Scotia is that, I suppose. But one's
- native shore is the land one loves the best, and that's good old
- P.E.I. for me. I can't believe I didn't always live here.
- Those eleven years before I came seem like a bad dream.
- It's seven years since I crossed on this boat -- the evening
- Mrs. Spencer brought me over from Hopetown. I can see myself,
- in that dreadful old wincey dress and faded sailor hat, exploring
- decks and cabins with enraptured curiosity. It was a fine evening;
- and how those red Island shores did gleam in the sunshine. Now I'm
- crossing the strait again. Oh, Gilbert, I do hope I'll like Redmond
- and Kingsport, but I'm sure I won't!"
-
- "Where's all your philosophy gone, Anne?"
-
- "It's all submerged under a great, swamping wave of loneliness
- and homesickness. I've longed for three years to go to Redmond
- -- and now I'm going -- and I wish I weren't! Never mind! I
- shall be cheerful and philosophical again after I have just one
- good cry. I MUST have that, `as a went' -- and I'll have to wait
- until I get into my boardinghouse bed tonight, wherever it may
- be, before I can have it. Then Anne will be herself again. I
- wonder if Davy has come out of the closet yet."
-
- It was nine that night when their train reached Kingsport, and
- they found themselves in the blue-white glare of the crowded station.
- Anne felt horribly bewildered, but a moment later she was seized by
- Priscilla Grant, who had come to Kingsport on Saturday.
-
- "Here you are, beloved! And I suppose you're as tired as I was
- when I got here Saturday night."
-
- "Tired! Priscilla, don't talk of it. I'm tired, and green,
- and provincial, and only about ten years old. For pity's sake
- take your poor, broken-down chum to some place where she can
- hear herself think."
-
- "I'll take you right up to our boardinghouse. I've a cab ready outside."
-
- "It's such a blessing you're here, Prissy. If you weren't I
- think I should just sit down on my suitcase, here and now, and
- weep bitter tears. What a comfort one familiar face is in a
- howling wilderness of strangers!"
-
- "Is that Gilbert Blythe over there, Anne? How he has grown up
- this past year! He was only a schoolboy when I taught in Carmody.
- And of course that's Charlie Sloane. HE hasn't changed -- couldn't!
- He looked just like that when he was born, and he'll look like that
- when he's eighty. This way, dear. We'll be home in twenty minutes."
-
- "Home!" groaned Anne. "You mean we'll be in some horrible boardinghouse,
- in a still more horrible hall bedroom, looking out on a dingy back yard."
-
- "It isn't a horrible boardinghouse, Anne-girl. Here's our cab.
- Hop in -- the driver will get your trunk. Oh, yes, the boardinghouse
- -- it's really a very nice place of its kind, as you'll admit tomorrow
- morning when a good night's sleep has turned your blues rosy pink.
- It's a big, old-fashioned, gray stone house on St. John Street,
- just a nice little constitutional from Redmond. It used to be the
- `residence' of great folk, but fashion has deserted St. John Street
- and its houses only dream now of better days. They're so big that
- people living in them have to take boarders just to fill up. At least,
- that is the reason our landladies are very anxious to impress on us.
- They're delicious, Anne -- our landladies, I mean."
-
- "How many are there?"
-
- "Two. Miss Hannah Harvey and Miss Ada Harvey. They were born twins
- about fifty years ago."
-
- "I can't get away from twins, it seems," smiled Anne. "Wherever I
- go they confront me."
-
- "Oh, they're not twins now, dear. After they reached the age of
- thirty they never were twins again. Miss Hannah has grown old,
- not too gracefully, and Miss Ada has stayed thirty, less
- gracefully still. I don't know whether Miss Hannah can smile or
- not; I've never caught her at it so far, but Miss Ada smiles all
- the time and that's worse. However, they're nice, kind souls,
- and they take two boarders every year because Miss Hannah's
- economical soul cannot bear to `waste room space' -- not because
- they need to or have to, as Miss Ada has told me seven times
- since Saturday night. As for our rooms, I admit they are hall
- bedrooms, and mine does look out on the back yard. Your room is
- a front one and looks out on Old St. John's graveyard, which is
- just across the street."
-
- "That sounds gruesome," shivered Anne. "I think I'd rather have
- the back yard view."
-
- "Oh, no, you wouldn't. Wait and see. Old St. John's is a
- darling place. It's been a graveyard so long that it's ceased to
- be one and has become one of the sights of Kingsport. I was all
- through it yesterday for a pleasure exertion. There's a big
- stone wall and a row of enormous trees all around it, and rows of
- trees all through it, and the queerest old tombstones, with the
- queerest and quaintest inscriptions. You'll go there to study, Anne,
- see if you don't. Of course, nobody is ever buried there now.
- But a few years ago they put up a beautiful monument to the
- memory of Nova Scotian soldiers who fell in the Crimean War.
- It is just opposite the entrance gates and there's `scope for
- imagination' in it, as you used to say. Here's your trunk at
- last -- and the boys coming to say good night. Must I really
- shake hands with Charlie Sloane, Anne? His hands are always so
- cold and fishy-feeling. We must ask them to call occasionally.
- Miss Hannah gravely told me we could have `young gentlemen
- callers' two evenings in the week, if they went away at a
- reasonable hour; and Miss Ada asked me, smiling, please to be
- sure they didn't sit on her beautiful cushions. I promised to
- see to it; but goodness knows where else they CAN sit, unless
- they sit on the floor, for there are cushions on EVERYTHING.
- Miss Ada even has an elaborate Battenburg one on top of the piano."
-
- Anne was laughing by this time. Priscilla's gay chatter had the
- intended effect of cheering her up; homesickness vanished for the
- time being, and did not even return in full force when she
- finally found herself alone in her little bedroom. She went to
- her window and looked out. The street below was dim and quiet.
- Across it the moon was shining above the trees in Old St. John's,
- just behind the great dark head of the lion on the monument.
- Anne wondered if it could have been only that morning that
- she had left Green Gables. She had the sense of a long
- passage of time which one day of change and travel gives.
-
- "I suppose that very moon is looking down on Green Gables now,"
- she mused. "But I won't think about it -- that way homesickness
- lies. I'm not even going to have my good cry. I'll put that off
- to a more convenient season, and just now I'll go calmly and
- sensibly to bed and to sleep."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IV
-
- April's Lady
-
-
- Kingsport is a quaint old town, hearking back to early Colonial
- days, and wrapped in its ancient atmosphere, as some fine old dame
- in garments fashioned like those of her youth. Here and there
- it sprouts out into modernity, but at heart it is still unspoiled;
- it is full of curious relics, and haloed by the romance of many
- legends of the past. Once it was a mere frontier station on the
- fringe of the wilderness, and those were the days when Indians
- kept life from being monotonous to the settlers. Then it grew
- to be a bone of contention between the British and the French,
- being occupied now by the one and now by the other, emerging from
- each occupation with some fresh scar of battling nations branded on it.
-
- It has in its park a martello tower, autographed all over
- by tourists, a dismantled old French fort on the hills beyond
- the town, and several antiquated cannon in its public squares.
- It has other historic spots also, which may be hunted out by the
- curious, and none is more quaint and delightful than Old St. John's
- Cemetery at the very core of the town, with streets of quiet,
- old-time houses on two sides, and busy, bustling, modern
- thoroughfares on the others. Every citizen of Kingsport feels a
- thrill of possessive pride in Old St. John's, for, if he be of
- any pretensions at all, he has an ancestor buried there, with a
- queer, crooked slab at his head, or else sprawling protectively
- over the grave, on which all the main facts of his history are
- recorded. For the most part no great art or skill was lavished
- on those old tombstones. The larger number are of roughly
- chiselled brown or gray native stone, and only in a few cases is
- there any attempt at ornamentation. Some are adorned with skull
- and cross-bones, and this grizzly decoration is frequently
- coupled with a cherub's head. Many are prostrate and in ruins.
- Into almost all Time's tooth has been gnawing, until some
- inscriptions have been completely effaced, and others can only be
- deciphered with difficulty. The graveyard is very full and very
- bowery, for it is surrounded and intersected by rows of elms and
- willows, beneath whose shade the sleepers must lie very dreamlessly,
- forever crooned to by the winds and leaves over them, and quite
- undisturbed by the clamor of traffic just beyond.
-
- Anne took the first of many rambles in Old St. John's the next afternoon.
- She and Priscilla had gone to Redmond in the forenoon and registered as
- students, after which there was nothing more to do that day. The girls
- gladly made their escape, for it was not exhilarating to be surrounded
- by crowds of strangers, most of whom had a rather alien appearance,
- as if not quite sure where they belonged.
-
- The "freshettes" stood about in detached groups of two or three,
- looking askance at each other; the "freshies," wiser in their day
- and generation, had banded themselves together on the big
- staircase of the entrance hall, where they were shouting out
- glees with all the vigor of youthful lungs, as a species of
- defiance to their traditional enemies, the Sophomores, a few of
- whom were prowling loftily about, looking properly disdainful of
- the "unlicked cubs" on the stairs. Gilbert and Charlie were
- nowhere to be seen.
-
- "Little did I think the day would ever come when I'd be glad of
- the sight of a Sloane," said Priscilla, as they crossed the
- campus, "but I'd welcome Charlie's goggle eyes almost
- ecstatically. At least, they'd be familiar eyes."
-
- "Oh," sighed Anne. "I can't describe how I felt when I was
- standing there, waiting my turn to be registered -- as
- insignificant as the teeniest drop in a most enormous bucket.
- It's bad enough to feel insignificant, but it's unbearable to
- have it grained into your soul that you will never, can never,
- be anything but insignificant, and that is how I did feel --
- as if I were invisible to the naked eye and some of those Sophs
- might step on me. I knew I would go down to my grave unwept,
- unhonored and unsung."
-
- "Wait till next year," comforted Priscilla. "Then we'll be able
- to look as bored and sophisticated as any Sophomore of them all.
- No doubt it is rather dreadful to feel insignificant; but I think
- it's better than to feel as big and awkward as I did -- as if I were
- sprawled all over Redmond. That's how I felt -- I suppose because
- I was a good two inches taller than any one else in the crowd.
- I wasn't afraid a Soph might walk over me; I was afraid they'd take
- me for an elephant, or an overgrown sample of a potato-fed Islander."
-
- "I suppose the trouble is we can't forgive big Redmond for not
- being little Queen's," said Anne, gathering about her the shreds
- of her old cheerful philosophy to cover her nakedness of spirit.
- "When we left Queen's we knew everybody and had a place of our own.
- I suppose we have been unconsciously expecting to take life
- up at Redmond just where we left off at Queen's, and now we feel
- as if the ground had slipped from under our feet. I'm thankful
- that neither Mrs. Lynde nor Mrs. Elisha Wright know, or ever
- will know, my state of mind at present. They would exult in
- saying `I told you so,' and be convinced it was the beginning of
- the end. Whereas it is just the end of the beginning."
-
- "Exactly. That sounds more Anneish. In a little while we'll be
- acclimated and acquainted, and all will be well. Anne, did you
- notice the girl who stood alone just outside the door of the
- coeds' dressing room all the morning -- the pretty one with the
- brown eyes and crooked mouth?"
-
- "Yes, I did. I noticed her particularly because she seemed the
- only creature there who LOOKED as lonely and friendless as I FELT.
- I had YOU, but she had no one."
-
- "I think she felt pretty all-by-herselfish, too. Several times I
- saw her make a motion as if to cross over to us, but she never
- did it -- too shy, I suppose. I wished she would come. If I hadn't
- felt so much like the aforesaid elephant I'd have gone to her.
- But I couldn't lumber across that big hall with all those boys
- howling on the stairs. She was the prettiest freshette I saw today,
- but probably favor is deceitful and even beauty is vain on your
- first day at Redmond," concluded Priscilla with a laugh.
-
- "I'm going across to Old St. John's after lunch," said Anne.
- "I don't know that a graveyard is a very good place to go to get
- cheered up, but it seems the only get-at-able place where there
- are trees, and trees I must have. I'll sit on one of those old
- slabs and shut my eyes and imagine I'm in the Avonlea woods."
-
- Anne did not do that, however, for she found enough of interest
- in Old St. John's to keep her eyes wide open. They went in by
- the entrance gates, past the simple, massive, stone arch
- surmounted by the great lion of England.
-
- "`And on Inkerman yet the wild bramble is gory,
- And those bleak heights henceforth shall be famous in story,'"
-
- quoted Anne, looking at it with a thrill. They found themselves
- in a dim, cool, green place where winds were fond of purring.
- Up and down the long grassy aisles they wandered, reading the
- quaint, voluminous epitaphs, carved in an age that had more
- leisure than our own.
-
- "`Here lieth the body of Albert Crawford, Esq.,'" read Anne
- from a worn, gray slab, "`for many years Keeper of His Majesty's
- Ordnance at Kingsport. He served in the army till the peace of
- 1763, when he retired from bad health. He was a brave officer,
- the best of husbands, the best of fathers, the best of friends.
- He died October 29th, 1792, aged 84 years.' There's an epitaph
- for you, Prissy. There is certainly some `scope for imagination'
- in it. How full such a life must have been of adventure! And as
- for his personal qualities, I'm sure human eulogy couldn't go
- further. I wonder if they told him he was all those best things
- while he was alive."
-
- "Here's another," said Priscilla. "Listen --
-
- `To the memory of Alexander Ross, who died on the 22nd of September,
- 1840, aged 43 years. This is raised as a tribute of affection by one
- whom he served so faithfully for 27 years that he was regarded as a friend,
- deserving the fullest confidence and attachment.' "
-
- "A very good epitaph," commented Anne thoughtfully. "I wouldn't
- wish a better. We are all servants of some sort, and if the fact
- that we are faithful can be truthfully inscribed on our tombstones
- nothing more need be added. Here's a sorrowful little gray stone,
- Prissy -- `to the memory of a favorite child.' And here is another
- `erected to the memory of one who is buried elsewhere.' I wonder
- where that unknown grave is. Really, Pris, the graveyards of today
- will never be as interesting as this. You were right -- I shall
- come here often. I love it already. I see we're not alone here
- -- there's a girl down at the end of this avenue."
-
- "Yes, and I believe it's the very girl we saw at Redmond this morning.
- I've been watching her for five minutes. She has started to come up
- the avenue exactly half a dozen times, and half a dozen times has she
- turned and gone back. Either she's dreadfully shy or she has got
- something on her conscience. Let's go and meet her. It's easier
- to get acquainted in a graveyard than at Redmond, I believe."
-
- They walked down the long grassy arcade towards the stranger, who
- was sitting on a gray slab under an enormous willow. She was
- certainly very pretty, with a vivid, irregular, bewitching type
- of prettiness. There was a gloss as of brown nuts on her
- satin-smooth hair and a soft, ripe glow on her round cheeks.
- Her eyes were big and brown and velvety, under oddly-pointed
- black brows, and her crooked mouth was rose-red. She wore a
- smart brown suit, with two very modish little shoes peeping
- from beneath it; and her hat of dull pink straw, wreathed with
- golden-brown poppies, had the indefinable, unmistakable air
- which pertains to the "creation" of an artist in millinery.
- Priscilla had a sudden stinging consciousness that her own hat
- had been trimmed by her village store milliner, and Anne wondered
- uncomfortably if the blouse she had made herself, and which Mrs.
- Lynde had fitted, looked VERY countrified and home-made besides
- the stranger's smart attire. For a moment both girls felt like
- turning back.
-
- But they had already stopped and turned towards the gray slab.
- It was too late to retreat, for the brown-eyed girl had evidently
- concluded that they were coming to speak to her. Instantly she
- sprang up and came forward with outstretched hand and a gay,
- friendly smile in which there seemed not a shadow of either
- shyness or burdened conscience.
-
- "Oh, I want to know who you two girls are," she exclaimed eagerly.
- "I've been DYING to know. I saw you at Redmond this morning.
- Say, wasn't it AWFUL there? For the time I wished I had stayed
- home and got married."
-
- Anne and Priscilla both broke into unconstrained laughter at this
- unexpected conclusion. The brown-eyed girl laughed, too.
-
- "I really did. I COULD have, you know. Come, let's all sit down
- on this gravestone and get acquainted. It won't be hard. I know
- we're going to adore each other -- I knew it as soon as I saw you
- at Redmond this morning. I wanted so much to go right over and
- hug you both."
-
- "Why didn't you?" asked Priscilla.
-
- "Because I simply couldn't make up my mind to do it. I never can
- make up my mind about anything myself -- I'm always afflicted
- with indecision. Just as soon as I decide to do something I feel
- in my bones that another course would be the correct one. It's a
- dreadful misfortune, but I was born that way, and there is no use
- in blaming me for it, as some people do. So I couldn't make up
- my mind to go and speak to you, much as I wanted to."
-
- "We thought you were too shy," said Anne.
-
- "No, no, dear. Shyness isn't among the many failings -- or
- virtues -- of Philippa Gordon -- Phil for short. Do call me Phil
- right off. Now, what are your handles?"
-
- "She's Priscilla Grant," said Anne, pointing.
-
- "And SHE'S Anne Shirley," said Priscilla, pointing in turn.
-
- "And we're from the Island," said both together.
-
- "I hail from Bolingbroke, Nova Scotia," said Philippa.
-
- "Bolingbroke!" exclaimed Anne. "Why, that is where I was born."
-
- "Do you really mean it? Why, that makes you a Bluenose after all."
-
- "No, it doesn't," retorted Anne. "Wasn't it Dan O'Connell who
- said that if a man was born in a stable it didn't make him a horse?
- I'm Island to the core."
-
- "Well, I'm glad you were born in Bolingbroke anyway. It makes us
- kind of neighbors, doesn't it? And I like that, because when I tell
- you secrets it won't be as if I were telling them to a stranger.
- I have to tell them. I can't keep secrets -- it's no use to try.
- That's my worst failing -- that, and indecision, as aforesaid.
- Would you believe it? -- it took me half an hour to decide which
- hat to wear when I was coming here -- HERE, to a graveyard!
- At first I inclined to my brown one with the feather;
- but as soon as I put it on I thought this pink one with the
- floppy brim would be more becoming. When I got IT pinned in
- place I liked the brown one better. At last I put them close
- together on the bed, shut my eyes, and jabbed with a hat pin.
- The pin speared the pink one, so I put it on. It is becoming,
- isn't it? Tell me, what do you think of my looks?"
-
- At this naive demand, made in a perfectly serious tone, Priscilla
- laughed again. But Anne said, impulsively squeezing Philippa's
- hand,
-
- "We thought this morning that you were the prettiest girl we saw
- at Redmond."
-
- Philippa's crooked mouth flashed into a bewitching, crooked smile
- over very white little teeth.
-
- "I thought that myself," was her next astounding statement,
- "but I wanted some one else's opinion to bolster mine up.
- I can't decide even on my own appearance. Just as soon as I've
- decided that I'm pretty I begin to feel miserably that I'm not.
- Besides, have a horrible old great-aunt who is always saying to me,
- with a mournful sigh, `You were such a pretty baby. It's strange how
- children change when they grow up.' I adore aunts, but I detest great-
- aunts. Please tell me quite often that I am pretty, if you don't mind.
- I feel so much more comfortable when I can believe I'm pretty. And
- I'll be just as obliging to you if you want me to -- I CAN be, with
- a clear conscience."
-
- "Thanks," laughed Anne, "but Priscilla and I are so firmly convinced
- of our own good looks that we don't need any assurance about them,
- so you needn't trouble."
-
- "Oh, you're laughing at me. I know you think I'm abominably vain,
- but I'm not. There really isn't one spark of vanity in me.
- And I'm never a bit grudging about paying compliments to other
- girls when they deserve them. I'm so glad I know you folks.
- I came up on Saturday and I've nearly died of homesickness
- ever since. It's a horrible feeling, isn't it? In Bolingbroke
- I'm an important personage, and in Kingsport I'm just nobody!
- There were times when I could feel my soul turning a delicate blue.
- Where do you hang out?"
-
- "Thirty-eight St. John's Street."
-
- "Better and better. Why, I'm just around the corner on Wallace Street.
- I don't like my boardinghouse, though. It's bleak and lonesome, and
- my room looks out on such an unholy back yard. It's the ugliest place
- in the world. As for cats -- well, surely ALL the Kingsport cats can't
- congregate there at night, but half of them must. I adore cats on
- hearth rugs, snoozing before nice, friendly fires, but cats in back
- yards at midnight are totally different animals. The first night
- I was here I cried all night, and so did the cats. You should have
- seen my nose in the morning. How I wished I had never left home!"
-
- "I don't know how you managed to make up your mind to come to
- Redmond at all, if you are really such an undecided person," said
- amused Priscilla.
-
- "Bless your heart, honey, I didn't. It was father who wanted me
- to come here. His heart was set on it -- why, I don't know. It
- seems perfectly ridiculous to think of me studying for a B.A.
- degree, doesn't it? Not but what I can do it, all right.
- I have heaps of brains."
-
- "Oh!" said Priscilla vaguely.
-
- "Yes. But it's such hard work to use them. And B.A.'s are such
- learned, dignified, wise, solemn creatures -- they must be. No,
- _I_ didn't want to come to Redmond. I did it just to oblige father.
- He IS such a duck. Besides, I knew if I stayed home I'd have to
- get married. Mother wanted that -- wanted it decidedly. Mother
- has plenty of decision. But I really hated the thought of
- being married for a few years yet. I want to have heaps of fun
- before I settle down. And, ridiculous as the idea of my being a
- B.A. is, the idea of my being an old married woman is still more
- absurd, isn't it? I'm only eighteen. No, I concluded I would
- rather come to Redmond than be married. Besides, how could I
- ever have made up my mind which man to marry?"
-
- "Were there so many?" laughed Anne.
-
- "Heaps. The boys like me awfully -- they really do. But there
- were only two that mattered. The rest were all too young and too
- poor. I must marry a rich man, you know."
-
- "Why must you?"
-
- "Honey, you couldn't imagine ME being a poor man's wife, could you?
- I can't do a single useful thing, and I am VERY extravagant. Oh, no,
- my husband must have heaps of money. So that narrowed them down to two.
- But I couldn't decide between two any easier than between two hundred.
- I knew perfectly well that whichever one I chose I'd regret all my life
- that I hadn't married the other."
-
- "Didn't you -- love -- either of them?" asked Anne, a little hesitatingly.
- It was not easy for her to speak to a stranger of the great mystery and
- transformation of life.
-
- "Goodness, no. _I_ couldn't love anybody. It isn't in me.
- Besides I wouldn't want to. Being in love makes you a perfect
- slave, _I_ think. And it would give a man such power to hurt you.
- I'd be afraid. No, no, Alec and Alonzo are two dear boys, and I like
- them both so much that I really don't know which I like the better.
- That is the trouble. Alec is the best looking, of course, and I
- simply couldn't marry a man who wasn't handsome. He is good-tempered
- too, and has lovely, curly, black hair. He's rather too perfect --
- I don't believe I'd like a perfect husband -- somebody I could never
- find fault with."
-
- "Then why not marry Alonzo?" asked Priscilla gravely.
-
- "Think of marrying a name like Alonzo!" said Phil dolefully.
- "I don't believe I could endure it. But he has a classic nose,
- and it WOULD be a comfort to have a nose in the family that could
- be depended on. I can't depend on mine. So far, it takes after the
- Gordon pattern, but I'm so afraid it will develop Byrne tendencies
- as I grow older. I examine it every day anxiously to make sure it's
- still Gordon. Mother was a Byrne and has the Byrne nose in the
- Byrnest degree. Wait till you see it. I adore nice noses.
- Your nose is awfully nice, Anne Shirley. Alonzo's nose nearly
- turned the balance in his favor. But ALONZO! No, I couldn't decide.
- If I could have done as I did with the hats -- stood them both up
- together, shut my eyes, and jabbed with a hatpin -- it would have
- been quite easy."
-
- "What did Alec and Alonzo feel like when you came away?" queried Priscilla.
-
- "Oh, they still have hope. I told them they'd have to wait
- till I could make up my mind. They're quite willing to wait.
- They both worship me, you know. Meanwhile, I intend to have
- a good time. I expect I shall have heaps of beaux at Redmond.
- I can't be happy unless I have, you know. But don't you think
- the freshmen are fearfully homely?
-
- I saw only one really handsome fellow among them. He went away
- before you came. I heard his chum call him Gilbert. His chum
- had eyes that stuck out THAT FAR. But you're not going yet, girls?
- Don't go yet."
-
- "I think we must," said Anne, rather coldly. "It's getting late,
- and I've some work to do."
-
- "But you'll both come to see me, won't you?" asked Philippa,
- getting up and putting an arm around each. "And let me come to
- see you. I want to be chummy with you. I've taken such a fancy
- to you both. And I haven't quite disgusted you with my frivolity,
- have I?"
-
- "Not quite," laughed Anne, responding to Phil's squeeze, with a
- return of cordiality.
-
- "Because I'm not half so silly as I seem on the surface, you
- know. You just accept Philippa Gordon, as the Lord made her,
- with all her faults, and I believe you'll come to like her.
- Isn't this graveyard a sweet place? I'd love to be buried here.
- Here's a grave I didn't see before -- this one in the iron
- railing -- oh, girls, look, see -- the stone says it's the grave
- of a middy who was killed in the fight between the Shannon and
- the Chesapeake. Just fancy!"
-
- Anne paused by the railing and looked at the worn stone, her pulses
- thrilling with sudden excitement. The old graveyard, with its
- over-arching trees and long aisles of shadows, faded from her sight.
- Instead, she saw the Kingsport Harbor of nearly a century agone.
- Out of the mist came slowly a great frigate, brilliant with
- "the meteor flag of England." Behind her was another, with
- a still, heroic form, wrapped in his own starry flag, lying on
- the quarter deck -- the gallant Lawrence. Time's finger had
- turned back his pages, and that was the Shannon sailing
- triumphant up the bay with the Chesapeake as her prize.
-
- "Come back, Anne Shirley -- come back," laughed Philippa, pulling
- her arm. "You're a hundred years away from us. Come back."
-
- Anne came back with a sigh; her eyes were shining softly.
-
- "I've always loved that old story," she said, "and although the
- English won that victory, I think it was because of the brave,
- defeated commander I love it. This grave seems to bring it so
- near and make it so real. This poor little middy was only
- eighteen. He `died of desperate wounds received in gallant
- action' -- so reads his epitaph. It is such as a soldier might
- wish for."
-
- Before she turned away, Anne unpinned the little cluster of
- purple pansies she wore and dropped it softly on the grave of the
- boy who had perished in the great sea-duel.
-
- "Well, what do you think of our new friend?" asked Priscilla,
- when Phil had left them.
-
- "I like her. There is something very lovable about her, in spite
- of all her nonsense. I believe, as she says herself, that she
- isn't half as silly as she sounds. She's a dear, kissable baby
- -- and I don't know that she'll ever really grow up."
-
- "I like her, too," said Priscilla, decidedly. "She talks as much
- about boys as Ruby Gillis does. But it always enrages or sickens
- me to hear Ruby, whereas I just wanted to laugh good-naturedly at
- Phil. Now, what is the why of that?"
-
- "There is a difference," said Anne meditatively. "I think it's
- because Ruby is really so CONSCIOUS of boys. She plays at love
- and love-making. Besides, you feel, when she is boasting of her
- beaux that she is doing it to rub it well into you that you
- haven't half so many. Now, when Phil talks of her beaux it
- sounds as if she was just speaking of chums. She really looks
- upon boys as good comrades, and she is pleased when she has
- dozens of them tagging round, simply because she likes to be
- popular and to be thought popular. Even Alex and Alonzo -- I'll
- never be able to think of those two names separately after this
- -- are to her just two playfellows who want her to play with them
- all their lives. I'm glad we met her, and I'm glad we went to
- Old St. John's. I believe I've put forth a tiny soul-root into
- Kingsport soil this afternoon. I hope so. I hate to feel transplanted."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter V
-
- Letters from Home
-
-
- For the next three weeks Anne and Priscilla continued to feel as
- strangers in a strange land. Then, suddenly, everything seemed
- to fall into focus -- Redmond, professors, classes, students,
- studies, social doings. Life became homogeneous again, instead
- of being made up of detached fragments. The Freshmen, instead of
- being a collection of unrelated individuals, found themselves a
- class, with a class spirit, a class yell, class interests, class
- antipathies and class ambitions. They won the day in the annual
- "Arts Rush" against the Sophomores, and thereby gained the
- respect of all the classes, and an enormous, confidence-giving
- opinion of themselves. For three years the Sophomores had won in
- the "rush"; that the victory of this year perched upon the
- Freshmen's banner was attributed to the strategic generalship of
- Gilbert Blythe, who marshalled the campaign and originated
- certain new tactics, which demoralized the Sophs and swept the
- Freshmen to triumph. As a reward of merit he was elected
- president of the Freshman Class, a position of honor and
- responsibility -- from a Fresh point of view, at least -- coveted
- by many. He was also invited to join the "Lambs" -- Redmondese
- for Lamba Theta -- a compliment rarely paid to a Freshman. As a
- preparatory initiation ordeal he had to parade the principal
- business streets of Kingsport for a whole day wearing a sunbonnet
- and a voluminous kitchen apron of gaudily flowered calico. This
- he did cheerfully, doffing his sunbonnet with courtly grace when
- he met ladies of his acquaintance. Charlie Sloane, who had not
- been asked to join the Lambs, told Anne he did not see how Blythe
- could do it, and HE, for his part, could never humiliate himself so.
-
- "Fancy Charlie Sloane in a `caliker' apron and a `sunbunnit,' "
- giggled Priscilla. "He'd look exactly like his old Grandmother
- Sloane. Gilbert, now, looked as much like a man in them as in
- his own proper habiliments."
-
- Anne and Priscilla found themselves in the thick of the social
- life of Redmond. That this came about so speedily was due in
- great measure to Philippa Gordon. Philippa was the daughter of a
- rich and well-known man, and belonged to an old and exclusive
- "Bluenose" family. This, combined with her beauty and charm -- a
- charm acknowledged by all who met her -- promptly opened the
- gates of all cliques, clubs and classes in Redmond to her; and
- where she went Anne and Priscilla went, too. Phil "adored" Anne
- and Priscilla, especially Anne. She was a loyal little soul,
- crystal-free from any form of snobbishness. "Love me, love my
- friends" seemed to be her unconscious motto. Without effort,
- she took them with her into her ever widening circle of
- acquaintanceship, and the two Avonlea girls found their social
- pathway at Redmond made very easy and pleasant for them, to the
- envy and wonderment of the other freshettes, who, lacking
- Philippa's sponsorship, were doomed to remain rather on the
- fringe of things during their first college year.
-
- To Anne and Priscilla, with their more serious views of life,
- Phil remained the amusing, lovable baby she had seemed on their
- first meeting. Yet, as she said herself, she had "heaps" of
- brains. When or where she found time to study was a mystery, for
- she seemed always in demand for some kind of "fun," and her home
- evenings were crowded with callers. She had all the "beaux" that
- heart could desire, for nine-tenths of the Freshmen and a big
- fraction of all the other classes were rivals for her smiles.
- She was naively delighted over this, and gleefully recounted each
- new conquest to Anne and Priscilla, with comments that might have
- made the unlucky lover's ears burn fiercely.
-
- "Alec and Alonzo don't seem to have any serious rival yet,"
- remarked Anne, teasingly.
-
- "Not one," agreed Philippa. "I write them both every week and
- tell them all about my young men here. I'm sure it must amuse them.
- But, of course, the one I like best I can't get. Gilbert Blythe
- won't take any notice of me, except to look at me as if I were a
- nice little kitten he'd like to pat. Too well I know the reason.
- I owe you a grudge, Queen Anne. I really ought to hate you and
- instead I love you madly, and I'm miserable if I don't see you
- every day. You're different from any girl I ever knew before.
- When you look at me in a certain way I feel what an
- insignificant, frivolous little beast I am, and I long to
- be better and wiser and stronger. And then I make good
- resolutions; but the first nice-looking mannie who comes my way
- knocks them all out of my head. Isn't college life magnificent?
- It's so funny to think I hated it that first day. But if I hadn't
- I might never got really acquainted with you. Anne, please tell me
- over again that you like me a little bit. I yearn to hear it."
-
- "I like you a big bit -- and I think you're a dear, sweet,
- adorable, velvety, clawless, little -- kitten," laughed Anne,
- "but I don't see when you ever get time to learn your lessons."
-
- Phil must have found time for she held her own in every class of
- her year. Even the grumpy old professor of Mathematics, who
- detested coeds, and had bitterly opposed their admission to
- Redmond, couldn't floor her. She led the freshettes everywhere,
- except in English, where Anne Shirley left her far behind. Anne
- herself found the studies of her Freshman year very easy, thanks
- in great part to the steady work she and Gilbert had put in
- during those two past years in Avonlea. This left her more time
- for a social life which she thoroughly enjoyed. But never for a
- moment did she forget Avonlea and the friends there. To her, the
- happiest moments in each week were those in which letters came
- from home. It was not until she had got her first letters that
- she began to think she could ever like Kingsport or feel at home
- there. Before they came, Avonlea had seemed thousands of miles
- away; those letters brought it near and linked the old life to
- the new so closely that they began to seem one and the same,
- instead of two hopelessly segregated existences. The first batch
- contained six letters, from Jane Andrews, Ruby Gillis, Diana
- Barry, Marilla, Mrs. Lynde and Davy. Jane's was a copperplate
- production, with every "t" nicely crossed and every "i" precisely
- dotted, and not an interesting sentence in it. She never
- mentioned the school, concerning which Anne was avid to hear; she
- never answered one of the questions Anne had asked in her letter.
- But she told Anne how many yards of lace she had recently
- crocheted, and the kind of weather they were having in Avonlea,
- and how she intended to have her new dress made, and the way she
- felt when her head ached. Ruby Gillis wrote a gushing epistle
- deploring Anne's absence, assuring her she was horribly missed in
- everything, asking what the Redmond "fellows" were like, and
- filling the rest with accounts of her own harrowing experiences
- with her numerous admirers. It was a silly, harmless letter, and
- Anne would have laughed over it had it not been for the postscript.
- "Gilbert seems to be enjoying Redmond, judging from his letters,"
- wrote Ruby. "I don't think Charlie is so stuck on it."
-
- So Gilbert was writing to Ruby! Very well. He had a perfect
- right to, of course. Only -- !! Anne did not know that Ruby had
- written the first letter and that Gilbert had answered it from
- mere courtesy. She tossed Ruby's letter aside contemptuously.
- But it took all Diana's breezy, newsy, delightful epistle to
- banish the sting of Ruby's postscript. Diana's letter contained
- a little too much Fred, but was otherwise crowded and crossed
- with items of interest, and Anne almost felt herself back in
- Avonlea while reading it. Marilla's was a rather prim and
- colorless epistle, severely innocent of gossip or emotion.
- Yet somehow it conveyed to Anne a whiff of the wholesome, simple
- life at Green Gables, with its savor of ancient peace, and the
- steadfast abiding love that was there for her. Mrs. Lynde's
- letter was full of church news. Having broken up housekeeping,
- Mrs. Lynde had more time than ever to devote to church affairs
- and had flung herself into them heart and soul. She was at
- present much worked up over the poor "supplies" they were having
- in the vacant Avonlea pulpit.
-
- "I don't believe any but fools enter the ministry nowadays," she
- wrote bitterly. "Such candidates as they have sent us, and such
- stuff as they preach! Half of it ain't true, and, what's worse,
- it ain't sound doctrine. The one we have now is the worst of the
- lot. He mostly takes a text and preaches about something else.
- And he says he doesn't believe all the heathen will be eternally
- lost. The idea! If they won't all the money we've been giving
- to Foreign Missions will be clean wasted, that's what! Last
- Sunday night he announced that next Sunday he'd preach on the
- axe-head that swam. I think he'd better confine himself to the
- Bible and leave sensational subjects alone. Things have come to
- a pretty pass if a minister can't find enough in Holy Writ to
- preach about, that's what. What church do you attend, Anne? I
- hope you go regularly. People are apt to get so careless about
- church-going away from home, and I understand college students
- are great sinners in this respect. I'm told many of them actually
- study their lessons on Sunday. I hope you'll never sink that low,
- Anne. Remember how you were brought up. And be very careful what
- friends you make. You never know what sort of creatures are in
- them colleges. Outwardly they may be as whited sepulchers and
- inwardly as ravening wolves, that's what. You'd better not have
- anything to say to any young man who isn't from the Island.
-
- "I forgot to tell you what happened the day the minister called
- here. It was the funniest thing I ever saw. I said to Marilla,
- `If Anne had been here wouldn't she have had a laugh?' Even
- Marilla laughed. You know he's a very short, fat little man with
- bow legs. Well, that old pig of Mr. Harrison's -- the big, tall
- one -- had wandered over here that day again and broke into the
- yard, and it got into the back porch, unbeknowns to us, and it
- was there when the minister appeared in the doorway. It made one
- wild bolt to get out, but there was nowhere to bolt to except
- between them bow legs. So there it went, and, being as it was so
- big and the minister so little, it took him clean off his feet
- and carried him away. His hat went one way and his cane another,
- just as Marilla and I got to the door. I'll never forget the
- look of him. And that poor pig was near scared to death. I'll
- never be able to read that account in the Bible of the swine that
- rushed madly down the steep place into the sea without seeing
- Mr. Harrison's pig careering down the hill with that minister.
- I guess the pig thought he had the Old Boy on his back instead
- of inside of him. I was thankful the twins weren't about.
- It wouldn't have been the right thing for them to have seen
- a minister in such an undignified predicament. Just before
- they got to the brook the minister jumped off or fell off.
- The pig rushed through the brook like mad and up through the woods.
- Marilla and I run down and helped the minister get up and brush
- his coat. He wasn't hurt, but he was mad. He seemed to hold
- Marilla and me responsible for it all, though we told him the pig
- didn't belong to us, and had been pestering us all summer.
- Besides, what did he come to the back door for? You'd never have
- caught Mr. Allan doing that. It'll be a long time before we get
- a man like Mr. Allan. But it's an ill wind that blows no good.
- We've never seen hoof or hair of that pig since, and it's my
- belief we never will.
-
- "Things is pretty quiet in Avonlea. I don't find Green Gables
- as lonesome as I expected. I think I'll start another cotton
- warp quilt this winter. Mrs. Silas Sloane has a handsome new
- apple-leaf pattern.
-
- "When I feel that I must have some excitement I read the murder
- trials in that Boston paper my niece sends me. I never used to
- do it, but they're real interesting. The States must be an awful
- place. I hope you'll never go there, Anne. But the way girls
- roam over the earth now is something terrible. It always makes
- me think of Satan in the Book of Job, going to and fro and walking
- up and down. I don't believe the Lord ever intended it, that's what.
-
- "Davy has been pretty good since you went away. One day he was
- bad and Marilla punished him by making him wear Dora's apron all
- day, and then he went and cut all Dora's aprons up. I spanked
- him for that and then he went and chased my rooster to death.
-
- "The MacPhersons have moved down to my place. She's a great
- housekeeper and very particular. She's rooted all my June lilies
- up because she says they make a garden look so untidy. Thomas
- set them lilies out when we were married. Her husband seems a
- nice sort of a man, but she can't get over being an old maid,
- that's what.
-
- "Don't study too hard, and be sure and put your winter
- underclothes on as soon as the weather gets cool.
- Marilla worries a lot about you, but I tell her you've
- got a lot more sense than I ever thought you would have
- at one time, and that you'll be all right."
-
- Davy's letter plunged into a grievance at the start.
-
- "Dear anne, please write and tell marilla not to tie me to the
- rale of the bridge when I go fishing the boys make fun of me when
- she does. Its awful lonesome here without you but grate fun in
- school. Jane andrews is crosser than you. I scared mrs. lynde
- with a jacky lantern last nite. She was offel mad and she was
- mad cause I chased her old rooster round the yard till he fell
- down ded. I didn't mean to make him fall down ded. What made
- him die, anne, I want to know. mrs. lynde threw him into the
- pig pen she mite of sold him to mr. blair. mr. blair is giving
- 50 sense apeace for good ded roosters now. I herd mrs. lynde
- asking the minister to pray for her. What did she do that was so
- bad, anne, I want to know. I've got a kite with a magnificent
- tail, anne. Milty bolter told me a grate story in school
- yesterday. it is troo. old Joe Mosey and Leon were playing
- cards one nite last week in the woods. The cards were on a stump
- and a big black man bigger than the trees come along and grabbed
- the cards and the stump and disapered with a noys like thunder.
- Ill bet they were skared. Milty says the black man was the old
- harry. was he, anne, I want to know. Mr. kimball over at
- spenservale is very sick and will have to go to the hospitable.
- please excuse me while I ask marilla if thats spelled rite.
- Marilla says its the silem he has to go to not the other place.
- He thinks he has a snake inside of him. whats it like to have a
- snake inside of you, anne. I want to know. mrs. lawrence bell
- is sick to. mrs. lynde says that all that is the matter with
- her is that she thinks too much about her insides."
-
- "I wonder," said Anne, as she folded up her letters, "what Mrs.
- Lynde would think of Philippa."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VI
-
- In the Park
-
-
- "What are you going to do with yourselves today, girls?"
- asked Philippa, popping into Anne's room one Saturday afternoon.
-
- "We are going for a walk in the park," answered Anne. "I ought to
- stay in and finish my blouse. But I couldn't sew on a day like this.
- There's something in the air that gets into my blood and makes a sort
- of glory in my soul. My fingers would twitch and I'd sew a crooked seam.
- So it's ho for the park and the pines."
-
- "Does `we' include any one but yourself and Priscilla?"
-
- "Yes, it includes Gilbert and Charlie, and we'll be very glad if
- it will include you, also."
-
- "But," said Philippa dolefully, "if I go I'll have to be gooseberry,
- and that will be a new experience for Philippa Gordon."
-
- "Well, new experiences are broadening. Come along, and you'll be
- able to sympathize with all poor souls who have to play
- gooseberry often. But where are all the victims?"
-
- "Oh, I was tired of them all and simply couldn't be bothered with
- any of them today. Besides, I've been feeling a little blue --
- just a pale, elusive azure. It isn't serious enough for anything
- darker. I wrote Alec and Alonzo last week. I put the letters
- into envelopes and addressed them, but I didn't seal them up.
- That evening something funny happened. That is, Alec would think
- it funny, but Alonzo wouldn't be likely to. I was in a hurry, so
- I snatched Alec's letter -- as I thought -- out of the envelope
- and scribbled down a postscript. Then I mailed both letters. I
- got Alonzo's reply this morning. Girls, I had put that postscript
- to his letter and he was furious. Of course he'll get over it --
- and I don't care if he doesn't -- but it spoiled my day.
- So I thought I'd come to you darlings to get cheered up.
- After the football season opens I won't have any spare Saturday
- afternoons. I adore football. I've got the most gorgeous
- cap and sweater striped in Redmond colors to wear to the games.
- To be sure, a little way off I'll look like a walking barber's pole.
- Do you know that that Gilbert of yours has been elected Captain of
- the Freshman football team?"
-
- "Yes, he told us so last evening," said Priscilla, seeing that
- outraged Anne would not answer. "He and Charlie were down.
- We knew they were coming, so we painstakingly put out of sight
- or out of reach all Miss Ada's cushions. That very elaborate one
- with the raised embroidery I dropped on the floor in the corner
- behind the chair it was on. I thought it would be safe there.
- But would you believe it? Charlie Sloane made for that chair,
- noticed the cushion behind it, solemnly fished it up, and sat on
- it the whole evening. Such a wreck of a cushion as it was! Poor
- Miss Ada asked me today, still smiling, but oh, so reproachfully,
- why I had allowed it to be sat upon. I told her I hadn't -- that
- it was a matter of predestination coupled with inveterate
- Sloanishness and I wasn't a match for both combined."
-
- "Miss Ada's cushions are really getting on my nerves," said Anne.
- "She finished two new ones last week, stuffed and embroidered
- within an inch of their lives. There being absolutely no other
- cushionless place to put them she stood them up against the wall
- on the stair landing. They topple over half the time and if we
- come up or down the stairs in the dark we fall over them. Last
- Sunday, when Dr. Davis prayed for all those exposed to the
- perils of the sea, I added in thought `and for all those who live
- in houses where cushions are loved not wisely but too well!'
- There! we're ready, and I see the boys coming through Old St. John's.
- Do you cast in your lot with us, Phil?"
-
- "I'll go, if I can walk with Priscilla and Charlie. That will be
- a bearable degree of gooseberry. That Gilbert of yours is a
- darling, Anne, but why does he go around so much with Goggle-eyes?"
-
- Anne stiffened. She had no great liking for Charlie Sloane; but
- he was of Avonlea, so no outsider had any business to laugh at him.
-
- "Charlie and Gilbert have always been friends," she said coldly.
- "Charlie is a nice boy. He's not to blame for his eyes."
-
- "Don't tell me that! He is! He must have done something
- dreadful in a previous existence to be punished with such eyes.
- Pris and I are going to have such sport with him this afternoon.
- We'll make fun of him to his face and he'll never know it."
-
- Doubtless, "the abandoned P's," as Anne called them, did carry
- out their amiable intentions. But Sloane was blissfully
- ignorant; he thought he was quite a fine fellow to be walking
- with two such coeds, especially Philippa Gordon, the class beauty
- and belle. It must surely impress Anne. She would see that some
- people appreciated him at his real value.
-
- Gilbert and Anne loitered a little behind the others, enjoying
- the calm, still beauty of the autumn afternoon under the pines of
- the park, on the road that climbed and twisted round the harbor shore.
-
- "The silence here is like a prayer, isn't it?" said Anne,
- her face upturned to the shining sky. "How I love the pines!
- They seem to strike their roots deep into the romance of all the ages.
- It is so comforting to creep away now and then for a good talk with them.
- I always feel so happy out here."
-
- "`And so in mountain solitudes o'ertaken
- As by some spell divine,
- Their cares drop from them like the needles shaken
- From out the gusty pine,'"
-
- quoted Gilbert.
-
- "They make our little ambitions seem rather petty, don't they, Anne?"
-
- "I think, if ever any great sorrow came to me, I would come to the
- pines for comfort," said Anne dreamily.
-
- "I hope no great sorrow ever will come to you, Anne," said Gilbert,
- who could not connect the idea of sorrow with the vivid, joyous
- creature beside him, unwitting that those who can soar to the
- highest heights can also plunge to the deepest depths, and that
- the natures which enjoy most keenly are those which also suffer
- most sharply.
-
- "But there must -- sometime," mused Anne. "Life seems like a cup
- of glory held to my lips just now. But there must be some
- bitterness in it -- there is in every cup. I shall taste mine
- some day. Well, I hope I shall be strong and brave to meet it.
- And I hope it won't be through my own fault that it will come.
- Do you remember what Dr. Davis said last Sunday evening -- that
- the sorrows God sent us brought comfort and strength with them,
- while the sorrows we brought on ourselves, through folly or
- wickedness, were by far the hardest to bear? But we mustn't talk
- of sorrow on an afternoon like this. It's meant for the sheer
- joy of living, isn't it?"
-
- "If I had my way I'd shut everything out of your life but
- happiness and pleasure, Anne," said Gilbert in the tone that
- meant "danger ahead."
-
- "Then you would be very unwise," rejoined Anne hastily. "I'm sure
- no life can be properly developed and rounded out without some
- trial and sorrow -- though I suppose it is only when we are pretty
- comfortable that we admit it. Come -- the others have got to the
- pavilion and are beckoning to us."
-
- They all sat down in the little pavilion to watch an autumn
- sunset of deep red fire and pallid gold. To their left lay
- Kingsport, its roofs and spires dim in their shroud of violet smoke.
- To their right lay the harbor, taking on tints of rose and copper as
- it stretched out into the sunset. Before them the water shimmered,
- satin smooth and silver gray, and beyond, clean shaven William's
- Island loomed out of the mist, guarding the town like a sturdy bulldog.
- Its lighthouse beacon flared through the mist like a baleful star,
- and was answered by another in the far horizon.
-
- "Did you ever see such a strong-looking place?" asked Philippa.
- "I don't want William's Island especially, but I'm sure I couldn't
- get it if I did. Look at that sentry on the summit of the fort,
- right beside the flag. Doesn't he look as if he had stepped out
- of a romance?"
-
- "Speaking of romance," said Priscilla, "we've been looking for
- heather -- but, of course, we couldn't find any. It's too late
- in the season, I suppose."
-
- "Heather!" exclaimed Anne. "Heather doesn't grow in America,
- does it?"
-
- "There are just two patches of it in the whole continent," said Phil,
- "one right here in the park, and one somewhere else in Nova Scotia,
- I forget where. The famous Highland Regiment, the Black Watch,
- camped here one year, and, when the men shook out the straw of
- their beds in the spring, some seeds of heather took root."
-
- "Oh, how delightful!" said enchanted Anne.
-
- "Let's go home around by Spofford Avenue," suggested Gilbert.
- "We can see all `the handsome houses where the wealthy nobles
- dwell.' Spofford Avenue is the finest residential street in
- Kingsport. Nobody can build on it unless he's a millionaire."
-
- "Oh, do," said Phil. "There's a perfectly killing little place I
- want to show you, Anne. IT wasn't built by a millionaire. It's
- the first place after you leave the park, and must have grown
- while Spofford Avenue was still a country road. It DID grow --
- it wasn't built! I don't care for the houses on the Avenue.
- They're too brand new and plateglassy. But this little spot is a
- dream -- and its name -- but wait till you see it."
-
- They saw it as they walked up the pine-fringed hill from the park.
- Just on the crest, where Spofford Avenue petered out into a
- plain road, was a little white frame house with groups of pines
- on either side of it, stretching their arms protectingly over its
- low roof. It was covered with red and gold vines, through which
- its green-shuttered windows peeped. Before it was a tiny garden,
- surrounded by a low stone wall. October though it was, the
- garden was still very sweet with dear, old-fashioned, unworldly
- flowers and shrubs -- sweet may, southern-wood, lemon verbena,
- alyssum, petunias, marigolds and chrysanthemums. A tiny brick
- wall, in herring-bone pattern, led from the gate to the front
- porch. The whole place might have been transplanted from some
- remote country village; yet there was something about it that
- made its nearest neighbor, the big lawn-encircled palace of a
- tobacco king, look exceedingly crude and showy and ill-bred by
- contrast. As Phil said, it was the difference between being born
- and being made.
-
- "It's the dearest place I ever saw," said Anne delightedly. "It
- gives me one of my old, delightful funny aches. It's dearer and
- quainter than even Miss Lavendar's stone house."
-
- "It's the name I want you to notice especially," said Phil.
- "Look -- in white letters, around the archway over the gate.
- `Patty's Place.' Isn't that killing? Especially on this Avenue
- of Pinehursts and Elmwolds and Cedarcrofts? `Patty's Place,'
- if you please! I adore it."
-
- "Have you any idea who Patty is?" asked Priscilla.
-
- "Patty Spofford is the name of the old lady who owns it, I've
- discovered. She lives there with her niece, and they've lived
- there for hundreds of years, more or less -- maybe a little less,
- Anne. Exaggeration is merely a flight of poetic fancy. I understand
- that wealthy folk have tried to buy the lot time and again -- it's
- really worth a small fortune now, you know -- but `Patty' won't sell
- upon any consideration. And there's an apple orchard behind the house
- in place of a back yard -- you'll see it when we get a little past --
- a real apple orchard on Spofford Avenue!"
-
- "I'm going to dream about `Patty's Place' tonight," said Anne.
- "Why, I feel as if I belonged to it. I wonder if, by any chance,
- we'll ever see the inside of it."
-
- "It isn't likely," said Priscilla.
-
- Anne smiled mysteriously.
-
- "No, it isn't likely. But I believe it will happen. I have a
- queer, creepy, crawly feeling -- you can call it a presentiment,
- if you like -- that `Patty's Place' and I are going to be better
- acquainted yet."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VII
-
- Home Again
-
-
- Those first three weeks at Redmond had seemed long; but the rest
- of the term flew by on wings of wind. Before they realized it
- the Redmond students found themselves in the grind of Christmas
- examinations, emerging therefrom more or less triumphantly. The
- honor of leading in the Freshman classes fluctuated between Anne,
- Gilbert and Philippa; Priscilla did very well; Charlie Sloane
- scraped through respectably, and comported himself as complacently
- as if he had led in everything.
-
- "I can't really believe that this time tomorrow I'll be in Green Gables,"
- said Anne on the night before departure. "But I shall be. And you, Phil,
- will be in Bolingbroke with Alec and Alonzo."
-
- "I'm longing to see them," admitted Phil, between the chocolate
- she was nibbling. "They really are such dear boys, you know.
- There's to be no end of dances and drives and general jamborees.
- I shall never forgive you, Queen Anne, for not coming home with
- me for the holidays."
-
- "`Never' means three days with you, Phil. It was dear of you to
- ask me -- and I'd love to go to Bolingbroke some day. But I
- can't go this year -- I MUST go home. You don't know how my
- heart longs for it."
-
- "You won't have much of a time," said Phil scornfully. "There'll
- be one or two quilting parties, I suppose; and all the old
- gossips will talk you over to your face and behind your back.
- You'll die of lonesomeness, child."
-
- "In Avonlea?" said Anne, highly amused.
-
- "Now, if you'd come with me you'd have a perfectly gorgeous time.
- Bolingbroke would go wild over you, Queen Anne -- your hair and
- your style and, oh, everything! You're so DIFFERENT. You'd be
- such a success -- and I would bask in reflected glory -- `not the
- rose but near the rose.' Do come, after all, Anne."
-
- "Your picture of social triumphs is quite fascinating, Phil, but
- I'll paint one to offset it. I'm going home to an old country
- farmhouse, once green, rather faded now, set among leafless apple
- orchards. There is a brook below and a December fir wood beyond,
- where I've heard harps swept by the fingers of rain and wind.
- There is a pond nearby that will be gray and brooding now. There
- will be two oldish ladies in the house, one tall and thin, one
- short and fat; and there will be two twins, one a perfect model,
- the other what Mrs. Lynde calls a `holy terror.' There will be a
- little room upstairs over the porch, where old dreams hang thick,
- and a big, fat, glorious feather bed which will almost seem the
- height of luxury after a boardinghouse mattress. How do you like
- my picture, Phil?"
-
- "It seems a very dull one," said Phil, with a grimace.
-
- "Oh, but I've left out the transforming thing," said Anne softly.
- "There'll be love there, Phil -- faithful, tender love, such as
- I'll never find anywhere else in the world -- love that's waiting
- for me. That makes my picture a masterpiece, doesn't it, even if
- the colors are not very brilliant?"
-
- Phil silently got up, tossed her box of chocolates away, went up
- to Anne, and put her arms about her.
-
- "Anne, I wish I was like you," she said soberly.
-
- Diana met Anne at the Carmody station the next night, and they
- drove home together under silent, star-sown depths of sky. Green
- Gables had a very festal appearance as they drove up the lane.
- There was a light in every window, the glow breaking out through
- the darkness like flame-red blossoms swung against the dark
- background of the Haunted Wood. And in the yard was a brave
- bonfire with two gay little figures dancing around it, one of
- which gave an unearthly yell as the buggy turned in under the poplars.
-
- "Davy means that for an Indian war-whoop," said Diana. "Mr.
- Harrison's hired boy taught it to him, and he's been practicing
- it up to welcome you with. Mrs. Lynde says it has worn her
- nerves to a frazzle. He creeps up behind her, you know, and then
- lets go. He was determined to have a bonfire for you, too. He's
- been piling up branches for a fortnight and pestering Marilla to
- be let pour some kerosene oil over it before setting it on fire.
- I guess she did, by the smell, though Mrs. Lynde said up to the last
- that Davy would blow himself and everybody else up if he was let."
-
- Anne was out of the buggy by this time, and Davy was rapturously
- hugging her knees, while even Dora was clinging to her hand.
-
- "Isn't that a bully bonfire, Anne? Just let me show you how to
- poke it -- see the sparks? I did it for you, Anne, 'cause I was
- so glad you were coming home."
-
- The kitchen door opened and Marilla's spare form darkened against
- the inner light. She preferred to meet Anne in the shadows, for
- she was horribly afraid that she was going to cry with joy --
- she, stern, repressed Marilla, who thought all display of deep
- emotion unseemly. Mrs. Lynde was behind her, sonsy, kindly,
- matronly, as of yore. The love that Anne had told Phil was
- waiting for her surrounded her and enfolded her with its blessing
- and its sweetness. Nothing, after all, could compare with old ties,
- old friends, and old Green Gables! How starry Anne's eyes were
- as they sat down to the loaded supper table, how pink her cheeks,
- how silver-clear her laughter! And Diana was going to stay all
- night, too. How like the dear old times it was! And the
- rose-bud tea-set graced the table! With Marilla the force of
- nature could no further go.
-
- "I suppose you and Diana will now proceed to talk all night,"
- said Marilla sarcastically, as the girls went upstairs.
- Marilla was always sarcastic after any self-betrayal.
-
- "Yes," agreed Anne gaily, "but I'm going to put Davy to bed first.
- He insists on that."
-
- "You bet," said Davy, as they went along the hall. "I want somebody
- to say my prayers to again. It's no fun saying them alone."
-
- "You don't say them alone, Davy. God is always with you to hear you."
-
- "Well, I can't see Him," objected Davy. "I want to pray to somebody
- I can see, but I WON'T say them to Mrs. Lynde or Marilla, there now!"
-
- Nevertheless, when Davy was garbed in his gray flannel nighty, he
- did not seem in a hurry to begin. He stood before Anne,
- shuffling one bare foot over the other, and looked undecided.
-
- "Come, dear, kneel down," said Anne.
-
- Davy came and buried his head in Anne's lap, but he did not kneel down.
-
- "Anne," he said in a muffled voice. "I don't feel like praying after all.
- I haven't felt like it for a week now. I -- I DIDN'T pray last night nor
- the night before."
-
- "Why not, Davy?" asked Anne gently.
-
- "You -- you won't be mad if I tell you?" implored Davy.
-
- Anne lifted the little gray-flannelled body on her knee and
- cuddled his head on her arm.
-
- "Do I ever get `mad' when you tell me things, Davy?"
-
- "No-o-o, you never do. But you get sorry, and that's worse.
- You'll be awful sorry when I tell you this, Anne -- and you'll
- be 'shamed of me, I s'pose."
-
- "Have you done something naughty, Davy, and is that why you can't
- say your prayers?"
-
- "No, I haven't done anything naughty -- yet. But I want to do it."
-
- "What is it, Davy?"
-
- "I -- I want to say a bad word, Anne," blurted out Davy, with a
- desperate effort. "I heard Mr. Harrison's hired boy say it one
- day last week, and ever since I've been wanting to say it ALL the
- time -- even when I'm saying my prayers."
-
- "Say it then, Davy."
-
- Davy lifted his flushed face in amazement.
-
- "But, Anne, it's an AWFUL bad word."
-
- "SAY IT!"
-
- Davy gave her another incredulous look, then in a low voice he
- said the dreadful word. The next minute his face was burrowing
- against her.
-
- "Oh, Anne, I'll never say it again -- never. I'll never WANT to
- say it again. I knew it was bad, but I didn't s'pose it was so
- -- so -- I didn't s'pose it was like THAT."
-
- "No, I don't think you'll ever want to say it again, Davy -- or
- think it, either. And I wouldn't go about much with Mr. Harrison's
- hired boy if I were you."
-
- "He can make bully war-whoops," said Davy a little regretfully.
-
- "But you don't want your mind filled with bad words, do you, Davy
- -- words that will poison it and drive out all that is good and manly?"
-
- "No," said Davy, owl-eyed with introspection.
-
- "Then don't go with those people who use them. And now do you
- feel as if you could say your prayers, Davy?"
-
- "Oh, yes," said Davy, eagerly wriggling down on his knees, "I can
- say them now all right. I ain't scared now to say `if I should
- die before I wake,' like I was when I was wanting to say that word."
-
- Probably Anne and Diana did empty out their souls to each other
- that night, but no record of their confidences has been preserved.
- They both looked as fresh and bright-eyed at breakfast as only
- youth can look after unlawful hours of revelry and confession.
- There had been no snow up to this time, but as Diana crossed
- the old log bridge on her homeward way the white flakes were
- beginning to flutter down over the fields and woods, russet
- and gray in their dreamless sleep. Soon the far-away slopes
- and hills were dim and wraith-like through their gauzy scarfing,
- as if pale autumn had flung a misty bridal veil over her hair
- and was waiting for her wintry bridegroom. So they had a white
- Christmas after all, and a very pleasant day it was. In the
- forenoon letters and gifts came from Miss Lavendar and Paul;
- Anne opened them in the cheerful Green Gables kitchen, which was
- filled with what Davy, sniffing in ecstasy, called "pretty smells."
-
- "Miss Lavendar and Mr. Irving are settled in their new home now,"
- reported Anne. "I am sure Miss Lavendar is perfectly happy --
- I know it by the general tone of her letter -- but there's a
- note from Charlotta the Fourth. She doesn't like Boston at all,
- and she is fearfully homesick. Miss Lavendar wants me to go
- through to Echo Lodge some day while I'm home and light a fire to
- air it, and see that the cushions aren't getting moldy. I think
- I'll get Diana to go over with me next week, and we can spend the
- evening with Theodora Dix. I want to see Theodora. By the way,
- is Ludovic Speed still going to see her?"
-
- "They say so," said Marilla, "and he's likely to continue it.
- Folks have given up expecting that that courtship will ever
- arrive anywhere."
-
- "I'd hurry him up a bit, if I was Theodora, that's what," said
- Mrs. Lynde. And there is not the slightest doubt but that she would.
-
- There was also a characteristic scrawl from Philippa, full of
- Alec and Alonzo, what they said and what they did, and how they
- looked when they saw her.
-
- "But I can't make up my mind yet which to marry," wrote Phil.
- "I do wish you had come with me to decide for me. Some one
- will have to. When I saw Alec my heart gave a great thump and I
- thought, `He might be the right one.' And then, when Alonzo came,
- thump went my heart again. So that's no guide, though it should be,
- according to all the novels I've ever read. Now, Anne, YOUR heart
- wouldn't thump for anybody but the genuine Prince Charming, would it?
- There must be something radically wrong with mine. But I'm having a
- perfectly gorgeous time. How I wish you were here! It's snowing
- today, and I'm rapturous. I was so afraid we'd have a green
- Christmas and I loathe them. You know, when Christmas is a dirty
- grayey-browney affair, looking as if it had been left over a hundred
- years ago and had been in soak ever since, it is called a GREEN Christmas!
- Don't ask me why. As Lord Dundreary says, `there are thome thingth no
- fellow can underthtand.'
-
- "Anne, did you ever get on a street car and then discover that you
- hadn't any money with you to pay your fare? I did, the other day.
- It's quite awful. I had a nickel with me when I got on the car.
- I thought it was in the left pocket of my coat. When I got
- settled down comfortably I felt for it. It wasn't there.
- I had a cold chill. I felt in the other pocket. Not there.
- I had another chill. Then I felt in a little inside pocket.
- All in vain. I had two chills at once.
-
- "I took off my gloves, laid them on the seat, and went over all
- my pockets again. It was not there. I stood up and shook myself,
- and then looked on the floor. The car was full of people, who
- were going home from the opera, and they all stared at me, but
- I was past caring for a little thing like that.
-
- "But I could not find my fare. I concluded I must have put it in
- my mouth and swallowed it inadvertently.
-
- "I didn't know what to do. Would the conductor, I wondered, stop
- the car and put me off in ignominy and shame? Was it possible
- that I could convince him that I was merely the victim of my own
- absentmindedness, and not an unprincipled creature trying to
- obtain a ride upon false pretenses? How I wished that Alec
- or Alonzo were there. But they weren't because I wanted them.
- If I HADN'T wanted them they would have been there by the dozen.
- And I couldn't decide what to say to the conductor when he came
- around. As soon as I got one sentence of explanation mapped out
- in my mind I felt nobody could believe it and I must compose
- another. It seemed there was nothing to do but trust in
- Providence, and for all the comfort that gave me I might as well
- have been the old lady who, when told by the captain during a
- storm that she must put her trust in the Almighty exclaimed,
- `Oh, Captain, is it as bad as that?'
-
- "Just at the conventional moment, when all hope had fled, and
- the conductor was holding out his box to the passenger next to me,
- I suddenly remembered where I had put that wretched coin of the realm.
- I hadn't swallowed it after all. I meekly fished it out of the
- index finger of my glove and poked it in the box. I smiled at
- everybody and felt that it was a beautiful world."
-
- The visit to Echo Lodge was not the least pleasant of many
- pleasant holiday outings. Anne and Diana went back to it by the
- old way of the beech woods, carrying a lunch basket with them.
- Echo Lodge, which had been closed ever since Miss Lavendar's
- wedding, was briefly thrown open to wind and sunshine once more,
- and firelight glimmered again in the little rooms. The perfume
- of Miss Lavendar's rose bowl still filled the air. It was hardly
- possible to believe that Miss Lavendar would not come tripping in
- presently, with her brown eyes a-star with welcome, and that
- Charlotta the Fourth, blue of bow and wide of smile, would not
- pop through the door. Paul, too, seemed hovering around, with
- his fairy fancies.
-
- "It really makes me feel a little bit like a ghost revisiting the
- old time glimpses of the moon," laughed Anne. "Let's go out and
- see if the echoes are at home. Bring the old horn. It is still
- behind the kitchen door."
-
- The echoes were at home, over the white river, as silver-clear
- and multitudinous as ever; and when they had ceased to answer the
- girls locked up Echo Lodge again and went away in the perfect
- half hour that follows the rose and saffron of a winter sunset.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VIII
-
- Anne's First Proposal
-
-
- The old year did not slip away in a green twilight, with a
- pinky-yellow sunset. Instead, it went out with a wild, white
- bluster and blow. It was one of the nights when the storm-wind
- hurtles over the frozen meadows and black hollows, and moans
- around the eaves like a lost creature, and drives the snow
- sharply against the shaking panes.
-
- "Just the sort of night people like to cuddle down between their
- blankets and count their mercies," said Anne to Jane Andrews, who
- had come up to spend the afternoon and stay all night. But when
- they were cuddled between their blankets, in Anne's little porch
- room, it was not her mercies of which Jane was thinking.
-
- "Anne," she said very solemnly, "I want to tell you something. May I"
-
- Anne was feeling rather sleepy after the party Ruby Gillis had
- given the night before. She would much rather have gone to sleep
- than listen to Jane's confidences, which she was sure would bore her.
- She had no prophetic inkling of what was coming. Probably Jane was
- engaged, too; rumor averred that Ruby Gillis was engaged to the
- Spencervale schoolteacher, about whom all the girls were said
- to be quite wild.
-
- "I'll soon be the only fancy-free maiden of our old quartet,"
- thought Anne, drowsily. Aloud she said, "Of course."
-
- "Anne," said Jane, still more solemnly, "what do you think of my
- brother Billy?"
-
- Anne gasped over this unexpected question, and floundered
- helplessly in her thoughts. Goodness, what DID she think of
- Billy Andrews? She had never thought ANYTHING about him --
- round-faced, stupid, perpetually smiling, good-natured Billy
- Andrews. Did ANYBODY ever think about Billy Andrews?
-
- "I -- I don't understand, Jane," she stammered. "What do you
- mean -- exactly?"
-
- "Do you like Billy?" asked Jane bluntly.
-
- "Why -- why -- yes, I like him, of course," gasped Anne,
- wondering if she were telling the literal truth. Certainly she
- did not DISlike Billy. But could the indifferent tolerance with
- which she regarded him, when he happened to be in her range of
- vision, be considered positive enough for liking? WHAT was Jane
- trying to elucidate?
-
- "Would you like him for a husband?" asked Jane calmly.
-
- "A husband!" Anne had been sitting up in bed, the better to
- wrestle with the problem of her exact opinion of Billy Andrews.
- Now she fell flatly back on her pillows, the very breath gone
- out of her. "Whose husband?"
-
- "Yours, of course," answered Jane. "Billy wants to marry you.
- He's always been crazy about you -- and now father has given him
- the upper farm in his own name and there's nothing to prevent him
- from getting married. But he's so shy he couldn't ask you
- himself if you'd have him, so he got me to do it. I'd rather not
- have, but he gave me no peace till I said I would, if I got a
- good chance. What do you think about it, Anne?"
-
- Was it a dream? Was it one of those nightmare things in which
- you find yourself engaged or married to some one you hate or
- don't know, without the slightest idea how it ever came about?
- No, she, Anne Shirley, was lying there, wide awake, in her own bed,
- and Jane Andrews was beside her, calmly proposing for her brother Billy.
- Anne did not know whether she wanted to writhe or laugh; but she could
- do neither, for Jane's feelings must not be hurt.
-
- "I -- I couldn't marry Bill, you know, Jane," she managed to gasp.
- "Why, such an idea never occurred to me -- never!"
-
- "I don't suppose it did," agreed Jane. "Billy has always been far
- too shy to think of courting. But you might think it over, Anne.
- Billy is a good fellow. I must say that, if he is my brother.
- He has no bad habits and he's a great worker, and you can depend
- on him. `A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.' He told me to
- tell you he'd be quite willing to wait till you got through college,
- if you insisted, though he'd RATHER get married this spring before
- the planting begins. He'd always be very good to you, I'm sure,
- and you know, Anne, I'd love to have you for a sister."
-
- "I can't marry Billy," said Anne decidedly. She had recovered
- her wits, and was even feeling a little angry. It was all so
- ridiculous. "There is no use thinking of it, Jane. I don't care
- anything for him in that way, and you must tell him so."
-
- "Well, I didn't suppose you would," said Jane with a resigned
- sigh, feeling that she had done her best. "I told Billy I didn't
- believe it was a bit of use to ask you, but he insisted. Well,
- you've made your decision, Anne, and I hope you won't regret it."
-
- Jane spoke rather coldly. She had been perfectly sure that the
- enamored Billy had no chance at all of inducing Anne to marry him.
- Nevertheless, she felt a little resentment that Anne Shirley,
- who was, after all, merely an adopted orphan, without kith or kin,
- should refuse her brother -- one of the Avonlea Andrews. Well,
- pride sometimes goes before a fall, Jane reflected ominously.
-
- Anne permitted herself to smile in the darkness over the idea
- that she might ever regret not marrying Billy Andrews.
-
- "I hope Billy won't feel very badly over it," she said nicely.
-
- Jane made a movement as if she were tossing her head on her pillow.
-
- "Oh, he won't break his heart. Billy has too much good sense for that.
- He likes Nettie Blewett pretty well, too, and mother would rather he
- married her than any one. She's such a good manager and saver.
- I think, when Billy is once sure you won't have him, he'll take Nettie.
- Please don't mention this to any one, will you, Anne?"
-
- "Certainly not," said Anne, who had no desire whatever to publish
- abroad the fact that Billy Andrews wanted to marry her, preferring her,
- when all was said and done, to Nettie Blewett. Nettie Blewett!
-
- "And now I suppose we'd better go to sleep," suggested Jane.
-
- To sleep went Jane easily and speedily; but, though very unlike
- MacBeth in most respects, she had certainly contrived to murder
- sleep for Anne. That proposed-to damsel lay on a wakeful pillow
- until the wee sma's, but her meditations were far from being romantic.
- It was not, however, until the next morning that she had an opportunity
- to indulge in a good laugh over the whole affair. When Jane had gone home
- -- still with a hint of frost in voice and manner because Anne had declined
- so ungratefully and decidedly the honor of an alliance with the House of
- Andrews -- Anne retreated to the porch room, shut the door, and had her
- laugh out at last.
-
- "If I could only share the joke with some one!" she thought.
- "But I can't. Diana is the only one I'd want to tell, and, even
- if I hadn't sworn secrecy to Jane, I can't tell Diana things now.
- She tells everything to Fred -- I know she does. Well, I've had
- my first proposal. I supposed it would come some day -- but I
- certainly never thought it would be by proxy. It's awfully funny
- -- and yet there's a sting in it, too, somehow."
-
- Anne knew quite well wherein the sting consisted, though she
- did not put it into words. She had had her secret dreams of
- the first time some one should ask her the great question.
- And it had, in those dreams, always been very romantic and beautiful:
- and the "some one" was to be very handsome and dark-eyed and
- distinguished-looking and eloquent, whether he were Prince Charming
- to be enraptured with "yes," or one to whom a regretful, beautifully
- worded, but hopeless refusal must be given. If the latter, the
- refusal was to be expressed so delicately that it would be next best
- thing to acceptance, and he would go away, after kissing her hand,
- assuring her of his unalterable, life-long devotion. And it would
- always be a beautiful memory, to be proud of and a little sad about, also.
-
- And now, this thrilling experience had turned out to be merely grotesque.
- Billy Andrews had got his sister to propose for him because his father had
- given him the upper farm; and if Anne wouldn't "have him" Nettie Blewett would.
- There was romance for you, with a vengeance! Anne laughed -- and then sighed.
- The bloom had been brushed from one little maiden dream. Would the painful
- process go on until everything became prosaic and hum-drum?
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IX
-
-
- An Unwelcome Lover and a Welcome Friend
-
-
- The second term at Redmond sped as quickly as had the first --
- "actually whizzed away," Philippa said. Anne enjoyed it
- thoroughly in all its phases -- the stimulating class rivalry,
- the making and deepening of new and helpful friendships, the gay
- little social stunts, the doings of the various societies of
- which she was a member, the widening of horizons and interests.
- She studied hard, for she had made up her mind to win the Thorburn
- Scholarship in English. This being won, meant that she could
- come back to Redmond the next year without trenching on Marilla's
- small savings -- something Anne was determined she would not do.
-
- Gilbert, too, was in full chase after a scholarship, but found
- plenty of time for frequent calls at Thirty-eight, St. John's.
- He was Anne's escort at nearly all the college affairs, and she
- knew that their names were coupled in Redmond gossip. Anne raged
- over this but was helpless; she could not cast an old friend like
- Gilbert aside, especially when he had grown suddenly wise and
- wary, as behooved him in the dangerous proximity of more than one
- Redmond youth who would gladly have taken his place by the side
- of the slender, red-haired coed, whose gray eyes were as alluring
- as stars of evening. Anne was never attended by the crowd of
- willing victims who hovered around Philippa's conquering march
- through her Freshman year; but there was a lanky, brainy Freshie,
- a jolly, little, round Sophomore, and a tall, learned Junior who
- all liked to call at Thirty-eight, St. John's, and talk over
- 'ologies and 'isms, as well as lighter subjects, with Anne, in
- the becushioned parlor of that domicile. Gilbert did not love
- any of them, and he was exceedingly careful to give none of them
- the advantage over him by any untimely display of his real
- feelings Anne-ward. To her he had become again the boy-comrade
- of Avonlea days, and as such could hold his own against any
- smitten swain who had so far entered the lists against him.
- As a companion, Anne honestly acknowledged nobody could be so
- satisfactory as Gilbert; she was very glad, so she told herself,
- that he had evidently dropped all nonsensical ideas -- though she
- spent considerable time secretly wondering why.
-
- Only one disagreeable incident marred that winter. Charlie Sloane,
- sitting bolt upright on Miss Ada's most dearly beloved cushion,
- asked Anne one night if she would promise "to become Mrs. Charlie
- Sloane some day." Coming after Billy Andrews' proxy effort,
- this was not quite the shock to Anne's romantic sensibilities
- that it would otherwise have been; but it was certainly another
- heart-rending disillusion. She was angry, too, for she felt that
- she had never given Charlie the slightest encouragement to suppose
- such a thing possible. But what could you expect of a Sloane,
- as Mrs. Rachel Lynde would ask scornfully? Charlie's whole attitude,
- tone, air, words, fairly reeked with Sloanishness. "He was conferring
- a great honor -- no doubt whatever about that. And when Anne, utterly
- insensible to the honor, refused him, as delicately and considerately
- as she could -- for even a Sloane had feelings which ought not to be
- unduly lacerated -- Sloanishness still further betrayed itself.
- Charlie certainly did not take his dismissal as Anne's imaginary
- rejected suitors did. Instead, he became angry, and showed it;
- he said two or three quite nasty things; Anne's temper flashed up
- mutinously and she retorted with a cutting little speech whose
- keenness pierced even Charlie's protective Sloanishness and
- reached the quick; he caught up his hat and flung himself out of
- the house with a very red face; Anne rushed upstairs, falling twice
- over Miss Ada's cushions on the way, and threw herself on her bed,
- in tears of humiliation and rage. Had she actually stooped to
- quarrel with a Sloane? Was it possible anything Charlie Sloane
- could say had power to make her angry? Oh, this was degradation,
- indeed -- worse even than being the rival of Nettie Blewett!
-
- "I wish I need never see the horrible creature again," she sobbed
- vindictively into her pillows.
-
- She could not avoid seeing him again, but the outraged Charlie
- took care that it should not be at very close quarters. Miss
- Ada's cushions were henceforth safe from his depredations,
- and when he met Anne on the street, or in Redmond's halls,
- his bow was icy in the extreme. Relations between these two
- old schoolmates continued to be thus strained for nearly a year!
- Then Charlie transferred his blighted affections to a round,
- rosy, snub-nosed, blue-eyed, little Sophomore who appreciated
- them as they deserved, whereupon he forgave Anne and condescended
- to be civil to her again; in a patronizing manner intended to
- show her just what she had lost.
-
- One day Anne scurried excitedly into Priscilla's room.
-
- "Read that," she cried, tossing Priscilla a letter. "It's from
- Stella -- and she's coming to Redmond next year -- and what do
- you think of her idea? I think it's a perfectly splendid one,
- if we can only carry it out. Do you suppose we can, Pris?"
-
- "I'll be better able to tell you when I find out what it is,"
- said Priscilla, casting aside a Greek lexicon and taking up
- Stella's letter. Stella Maynard had been one of their chums at
- Queen's Academy and had been teaching school ever since.
-
- "But I'm going to give it up, Anne dear," she wrote, "and go to
- college next year. As I took the third year at Queen's I can
- enter the Sophomore year. I'm tired of teaching in a back
- country school. Some day I'm going to write a treatise on
- `The Trials of a Country Schoolmarm.' It will be a harrowing bit
- of realism. It seems to be the prevailing impression that we live
- in clover, and have nothing to do but draw our quarter's salary.
- My treatise shall tell the truth about us. Why, if a week should
- pass without some one telling me that I am doing easy work for
- big pay I would conclude that I might as well order my ascension
- robe `immediately and to onct.' `Well, you get your money easy,'
- some rate-payer will tell me, condescendingly. `All you have to
- do is to sit there and hear lessons.' I used to argue the matter
- at first, but I'm wiser now. Facts are stubborn things, but
- as some one has wisely said, not half so stubborn as fallacies.
- So I only smile loftily now in eloquent silence. Why, I have nine
- grades in my school and I have to teach a little of everything,
- from investigating the interiors of earthworms to the study of
- the solar system. My youngest pupil is four -- his mother sends
- him to school to `get him out of the way' -- and my oldest twenty
- -- it `suddenly struck him' that it would be easier to go to
- school and get an education than follow the plough any longer.
- In the wild effort to cram all sorts of research into six hours a
- day I don't wonder if the children feel like the little boy who
- was taken to see the biograph. `I have to look for what's coming
- next before I know what went last,' he complained. I feel like
- that myself.
-
- "And the letters I get, Anne! Tommy's mother writes me that
- Tommy is not coming on in arithmetic as fast as she would like.
- He is only in simple reduction yet, and Johnny Johnson is in
- fractions, and Johnny isn't half as smart as her Tommy, and she
- can't understand it. And Susy's father wants to know why Susy
- can't write a letter without misspelling half the words, and
- Dick's aunt wants me to change his seat, because that bad Brown
- boy he is sitting with is teaching him to say naughty words.
-
- "As to the financial part -- but I'll not begin on that. Those
- whom the gods wish to destroy they first make country schoolmarms!
-
- "There, I feel better, after that growl. After all, I've enjoyed
- these past two years. But I'm coming to Redmond.
-
- "And now, Anne, I've a little plan. You know how I loathe boarding.
- I've boarded for four years and I'm so tired of it. I don't feel like
- enduring three years more of it.
-
- Now, why can't you and Priscilla and I club together, rent
- a little house somewhere in Kingsport, and board ourselves?
- It would be cheaper than any other way. Of course, we would
- have to have a housekeeper and I have one ready on the spot.
- You've heard me speak of Aunt Jamesina? She's the sweetest
- aunt that ever lived, in spite of her name. She can't help that!
- She was called Jamesina because her father, whose name was James,
- was drowned at sea a month before she was born. I always call her
- Aunt Jimsie. Well, her only daughter has recently married and
- gone to the foreign mission field. Aunt Jamesina is left alone
- in a great big house, and she is horribly lonesome. She will
- come to Kingsport and keep house for us if we want her, and I
- know you'll both love her. The more I think of the plan the more
- I like it. We could have such good, independent times.
-
- "Now, if you and Priscilla agree to it, wouldn't it be a good
- idea for you, who are on the spot, to look around and see if you
- can find a suitable house this spring? That would be better than
- leaving it till the fall. If you could get a furnished one so
- much the better, but if not, we can scare up a few sticks of
- finiture between us and old family friends with attics. Anyhow,
- decide as soon as you can and write me, so that Aunt Jamesina
- will know what plans to make for next year."
-
- "I think it's a good idea," said Priscilla.
-
- "So do I," agreed Anne delightedly. "Of course, we have a nice
- boardinghouse here, but, when all's said and done, a boardinghouse
- isn't home. So let's go house-hunting at once, before exams come on."
-
- "I'm afraid it will be hard enough to get a really suitable house,"
- warned Priscilla. "Don't expect too much, Anne. Nice houses in
- nice localities will probably be away beyond our means. We'll likely
- have to content ourselves with a shabby little place on some street
- whereon live people whom to know is to be unknown, and make life
- inside compensate for the outside."
-
- Accordingly they went house-hunting, but to find just what
- they wanted proved even harder than Priscilla had feared.
- Houses there were galore, furnished and unfurnished; but one
- was too big, another too small; this one too expensive, that
- one too far from Redmond. Exams were on and over; the last
- week of the term came and still their "house o'dreams," as
- Anne called it, remained a castle in the air.
-
- "We shall have to give up and wait till the fall, I suppose," said
- Priscilla wearily, as they rambled through the park on one of April's
- darling days of breeze and blue, when the harbor was creaming and
- shimmering beneath the pearl-hued mists floating over it. "We may
- find some shack to shelter us then; and if not, boardinghouses we
- shall have always with us."
-
- "I'm not going to worry about it just now, anyway, and spoil this
- lovely afternoon," said Anne, gazing around her with delight.
- The fresh chill air was faintly charged with the aroma of pine
- balsam, and the sky above was crystal clear and blue -- a great
- inverted cup of blessing. "Spring is singing in my blood today,
- and the lure of April is abroad on the air. I'm seeing visions
- and dreaming dreams, Pris. That's because the wind is from the
- west. I do love the west wind. It sings of hope and gladness,
- doesn't it? When the east wind blows I always think of sorrowful
- rain on the eaves and sad waves on a gray shore. When I get old
- I shall have rheumatism when the wind is east."
-
- "And isn't it jolly when you discard furs and winter garments
- for the first time and sally forth, like this, in spring attire?"
- laughed Priscilla. "Don't you feel as if you had been made over new?"
-
- "Everything is new in the spring," said Anne. "Springs themselves
- are always so new, too. No spring is ever just like any other spring.
- It always has something of its own to be its own peculiar sweetness.
- See how green the grass is around that little pond, and how the willow
- buds are bursting."
-
- "And exams are over and gone -- the time of Convocation will come
- soon -- next Wednesday. This day next week we'll be home."
-
- "I'm glad," said Anne dreamily. "There are so many things I want
- to do. I want to sit on the back porch steps and feel the breeze
- blowing down over Mr. Harrison's fields. I want to hunt ferns
- in the Haunted Wood and gather violets in Violet Vale. Do you
- remember the day of our golden picnic, Priscilla? I want to hear
- the frogs singing and the poplars whispering. But I've learned
- to love Kingsport, too, and I'm glad I'm coming back next fall.
- If I hadn't won the Thorburn I don't believe I could have. I
- COULDN'T take any of Marilla's little hoard."
-
- "If we could only find a house!" sighed Priscilla. "Look over
- there at Kingsport, Anne -- houses, houses everywhere, and not
- one for us."
-
- "Stop it, Pris. `The best is yet to be.' Like the old Roman,
- we'll find a house or build one. On a day like this there's
- no such word as fail in my bright lexicon."
-
- They lingered in the park until sunset, living in the amazing
- miracle and glory and wonder of the springtide; and they went
- home as usual, by way of Spofford Avenue, that they might have
- the delight of looking at Patty's Place.
-
- "I feel as if something mysterious were going to happen right
- away -- `by the pricking of my thumbs,' " said Anne, as they went
- up the slope. "It's a nice story-bookish feeling. Why -- why --
- why! Priscilla Grant, look over there and tell me if it's true,
- or am I seein' things?"
-
- Priscilla looked. Anne's thumbs and eyes had not deceived her.
- Over the arched gateway of Patty's Place dangled a little, modest
- sign. It said "To Let, Furnished. Inquire Within."
-
- "Priscilla," said Anne, in a whisper, "do you suppose it's
- possible that we could rent Patty's Place?"
-
- "No, I don't," averred Priscilla. "It would be too good to be
- true. Fairy tales don't happen nowadays. I won't hope, Anne.
- The disappointment would be too awful to bear. They're sure to
- want more for it than we can afford. Remember, it's on Spofford
- Avenue."
-
- "We must find out anyhow," said Anne resolutely. "It's too late
- to call this evening, but we'll come tomorrow. Oh, Pris, if we
- can get this darling spot! I've always felt that my fortunes
- were linked with Patty's Place, ever since I saw it first."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter X
-
- Patty's Place
-
-
- The next evening found them treading resolutely the herring-bone
- walk through the tiny garden. The April wind was filling the
- pine trees with its roundelay, and the grove was alive with robins
- -- great, plump, saucy fellows, strutting along the paths.
- The girls rang rather timidly, and were admitted by a grim and
- ancient handmaiden. The door opened directly into a large
- living-room, where by a cheery little fire sat two other ladies,
- both of whom were also grim and ancient. Except that one looked
- to be about seventy and the other fifty, there seemed little
- difference between them. Each had amazingly big, light-blue eyes
- behind steel-rimmed spectacles; each wore a cap and a gray shawl;
- each was knitting without haste and without rest; each rocked
- placidly and looked at the girls without speaking; and just
- behind each sat a large white china dog, with round green spots
- all over it, a green nose and green ears. Those dogs captured
- Anne's fancy on the spot; they seemed like the twin guardian
- deities of Patty's Place.
-
- For a few minutes nobody spoke. The girls were too nervous to
- find words, and neither the ancient ladies nor the china dogs
- seemed conversationally inclined. Anne glanced about the room.
- What a dear place it was! Another door opened out of it directly
- into the pine grove and the robins came boldly up on the very step.
- The floor was spotted with round, braided mats, such as Marilla
- made at Green Gables, but which were considered out of date
- everywhere else, even in Avonlea. And yet here they were on
- Spofford Avenue! A big, polished grandfather's clock ticked
- loudly and solemnly in a corner. There were delightful little
- cupboards over the mantelpiece, behind whose glass doors gleamed
- quaint bits of china. The walls were hung with old prints and
- silhouettes. In one corner the stairs went up, and at the first
- low turn was a long window with an inviting seat. It was all
- just as Anne had known it must be.
-
- By this time the silence had grown too dreadful, and Priscilla
- nudged Anne to intimate that she must speak.
-
- "We -- we -- saw by your sign that this house is to let," said Anne
- faintly, addressing the older lady, who was evidently Miss Patty Spofford.
-
- "Oh, yes," said Miss Patty. "I intended to take that sign down today."
-
- "Then -- then we are too late," said Anne sorrowfully. "You've let it
- to some one else?"
-
- "No, but we have decided not to let it at all."
-
- "Oh, I'm so sorry," exclaimed Anne impulsively. "I love this place so.
- I did hope we could have got it."
-
- Then did Miss Patty lay down her knitting, take off her specs,
- rub them, put them on again, and for the first time look at Anne
- as at a human being. The other lady followed her example so
- perfectly that she might as well have been a reflection in a mirror.
-
- "You LOVE it," said Miss Patty with emphasis. "Does that mean
- that you really LOVE it? Or that you merely like the looks of it?
- The girls nowadays indulge in such exaggerated statements that one
- never can tell what they DO mean. It wasn't so in my young days.
- THEN a girl did not say she LOVED turnips, in just the same tone
- as she might have said she loved her mother or her Savior."
-
- Anne's conscience bore her up.
-
- "I really do love it," she said gently. "I've loved it ever since
- I saw it last fall. My two college chums and I want to keep house
- next year instead of boarding, so we are looking for a little place
- to rent; and when I saw that this house was to let I was so happy."
-
- "If you love it, you can have it," said Miss Patty. "Maria and I
- decided today that we would not let it after all, because we did
- not like any of the people who have wanted it. We don't HAVE to
- let it. We can afford to go to Europe even if we don't let it.
- It would help us out, but not for gold will I let my home pass
- into the possession of such people as have come here and looked
- at it. YOU are different. I believe you do love it and will be
- good to it. You can have it."
-
- "If -- if we can afford to pay what you ask for it," hesitated Anne.
-
- Miss Patty named the amount required. Anne and Priscilla looked
- at each other. Priscilla shook her head.
-
- "I'm afraid we can't afford quite so much," said Anne, choking
- back her disappointment. "You see, we are only college girls
- and we are poor."
-
- "What were you thinking you could afford?" demanded Miss Patty,
- ceasing not to knit.
-
- Anne named her amount. Miss Patty nodded gravely.
-
- "That will do. As I told you, it is not strictly necessary that
- we should let it at all. We are not rich, but we have enough to
- go to Europe on. I have never been in Europe in my life, and never
- expected or wanted to go. But my niece there, Maria Spofford, has
- taken a fancy to go. Now, you know a young person like Maria can't
- go globetrotting alone."
-
- "No -- I -- I suppose not," murmured Anne, seeing that Miss Patty
- was quite solemnly in earnest.
-
- "Of course not. So I have to go along to look after her. I expect to
- enjoy it, too; I'm seventy years old, but I'm not tired of living yet.
- I daresay I'd have gone to Europe before if the idea had occurred to me.
- We shall be away for two years, perhaps three. We sail in June and we
- shall send you the key, and leave all in order for you to take
- possession when you choose. We shall pack away a few things we
- prize especially, but all the rest will be left."
-
- "Will you leave the china dogs?" asked Anne timidly.
-
- "Would you like me to?"
-
- "Oh, indeed, yes. They are delightful."
-
- A pleased expression came into Miss Patty's face.
-
- "I think a great deal of those dogs," she said proudly. "They are
- over a hundred years old, and they have sat on either side of this
- fireplace ever since my brother Aaron brought them from London
- fifty years ago. Spofford Avenue was called after my brother Aaron."
-
- "A fine man he was," said Miss Maria, speaking for the first time.
- "Ah, you don't see the like of him nowadays."
-
- "He was a good uncle to you, Maria," said Miss Patty, with evident emotion.
- "You do well to remember him."
-
- "I shall always remember him," said Miss Maria solemnly. "I can see him,
- this minute, standing there before that fire, with his hands under his
- coat-tails, beaming on us."
-
- Miss Maria took out her handkerchief and wiped her eyes; but Miss Patty
- came resolutely back from the regions of sentiment to those of business.
-
- "I shall leave the dogs where they are, if you will promise to be
- very careful of them," she said. "Their names are Gog and Magog.
- Gog looks to the right and Magog to the left. And there's just
- one thing more. You don't object, I hope, to this house being
- called Patty's Place?"
-
- "No, indeed. We think that is one of the nicest things about it."
-
- "You have sense, I see," said Miss Patty in a tone of great satisfaction.
- "Would you believe it? All the people who came here to rent the house
- wanted to know if they couldn't take the name off the gate during their
- occupation of it. I told them roundly that the name went with the house.
- This has been Patty's Place ever since my brother Aaron left it to me in
- his will, and Patty's Place it shall remain until I die and Maria dies.
- After that happens the next possessor can call it any fool name he likes,"
- concluded Miss Patty, much as she might have said, "After that -- the deluge."
- "And now, wouldn't you like to go over the house and see it all before we
- consider the bargain made?"
-
- Further exploration still further delighted the girls. Besides the
- big living-room, there was a kitchen and a small bedroom downstairs.
- Upstairs were three rooms, one large and two small. Anne took an
- especial fancy to one of the small ones, looking out into the big pines,
- and hoped it would be hers. It was papered in pale blue and had a
- little, old-timey toilet table with sconces for candles. There was
- a diamond-paned window with a seat under the blue muslin frills that
- would be a satisfying spot for studying or dreaming.
-
- "It's all so delicious that I know we are going to wake up and find
- it a fleeting vision of the night," said Priscilla as they went away.
-
- "Miss Patty and Miss Maria are hardly such stuff as dreams are
- made of," laughed Anne. "Can you fancy them `globe-trotting' --
- especially in those shawls and caps?"
-
- "I suppose they'll take them off when they really begin to trot,"
- said Priscilla, "but I know they'll take their knitting with
- them everywhere. They simply couldn't be parted from it.
- They will walk about Westminster Abbey and knit, I feel sure.
- Meanwhile, Anne, we shall be living in Patty's Place -- and on
- Spofford Avenue. I feel like a millionairess even now."
-
- "I feel like one of the morning stars that sang for joy," said Anne.
-
- Phil Gordon crept into Thirty-eight, St. John's, that night and
- flung herself on Anne's bed.
-
- "Girls, dear, I'm tired to death. I feel like the man without a country --
- or was it without a shadow? I forget which. Anyway, I've been packing up."
-
- "And I suppose you are worn out because you couldn't decide which
- things to pack first, or where to put them," laughed Priscilla.
-
- "E-zackly. And when I had got everything jammed in somehow, and
- my landlady and her maid had both sat on it while I locked it, I
- discovered I had packed a whole lot of things I wanted for
- Convocation at the very bottom. I had to unlock the old thing
- and poke and dive into it for an hour before I fished out what I
- wanted. I would get hold of something that felt like what I was
- looking for, and I'd yank it up, and it would be something else.
- No, Anne, I did NOT swear."
-
- "I didn't say you did."
-
- "Well, you looked it. But I admit my thoughts verged on the profane.
- And I have such a cold in the head -- I can do nothing but sniffle,
- sigh and sneeze. Isn't that alliterative agony for you? Queen Anne,
- do say something to cheer me up."
-
- "Remember that next Thursday night, you'll be back in the land of
- Alec and Alonzo," suggested Anne.
-
- Phil shook her head dolefully.
-
- "More alliteration. No, I don't want Alec and Alonzo when I have
- a cold in the head. But what has happened you two? Now that I look
- at you closely you seem all lighted up with an internal iridescence.
- Why, you're actually SHINING! What's up?"
-
- "We are going to live in Patty's Place next winter," said Anne triumphantly.
- "Live, mark you, not board! We've rented it, and Stella Maynard is coming,
- and her aunt is going to keep house for us."
-
- Phil bounced up, wiped her nose, and fell on her knees before Anne.
-
- "Girls -- girls -- let me come, too. Oh, I'll be so good. If
- there's no room for me I'll sleep in the little doghouse in the
- orchard -- I've seen it. Only let me come."
-
- "Get up, you goose."
-
- "I won't stir off my marrow bones till you tell me I can live
- with you next winter."
-
- Anne and Priscilla looked at each other. Then Anne said slowly,
- "Phil dear, we'd love to have you. But we may as well speak plainly.
- I'm poor -- Pris is poor -- Stella Maynard is poor -- our housekeeping
- will have to be very simple and our table plain. You'd have to live as
- we would. Now, you are rich and your boardinghouse fare attests the fact."
-
- "Oh, what do I care for that?" demanded Phil tragically.
- "Better a dinner of herbs where your chums are than a stalled ox
- in a lonely boardinghouse. Don't think I'm ALL stomach, girls.
- I'll be willing to live on bread and water -- with just a LEETLE
- jam -- if you'll let me come."
-
- "And then," continued Anne, "there will be a good deal of work to be done.
- Stella's aunt can't do it all. We all expect to have our chores to do.
- Now, you -- "
-
- "Toil not, neither do I spin," finished Philippa. "But I'll learn
- to do things. You'll only have to show me once. I CAN make my
- own bed to begin with. And remember that, though I can't cook,
- I CAN keep my temper. That's something. And I NEVER growl about
- the weather. That's more. Oh, please, please! I never wanted
- anything so much in my life -- and this floor is awfully hard."
-
- "There's just one more thing," said Priscilla resolutely.
- "You, Phil, as all Redmond knows, entertain callers almost every
- evening. Now, at Patty's Place we can't do that. We have decided
- that we shall be at home to our friends on Friday evenings only.
- If you come with us you'll have to abide by that rule."
-
- "Well, you don't think I'll mind that, do you? Why, I'm glad of it.
- I knew I should have had some such rule myself, but I hadn't
- enough decision to make it or stick to it. When I can shuffle
- off the responsibility on you it will be a real relief. If you
- won't let me cast in my lot with you I'll die of the disappointment
- and then I'll come back and haunt you. I'll camp on the very doorstep
- of Patty's Place and you won't be able to go out or come in without
- falling over my spook."
-
- Again Anne and Priscilla exchanged eloquent looks.
-
- "Well," said Anne, "of course we can't promise to take you until
- we've consulted with Stella; but I don't think she'll object,
- and, as far as we are concerned, you may come and glad welcome."
-
- "If you get tired of our simple life you can leave us, and no
- questions asked," added Priscilla.
-
- Phil sprang up, hugged them both jubilantly, and went on her way
- rejoicing.
-
- "I hope things will go right," said Priscilla soberly.
-
- "We must MAKE them go right," avowed Anne. "I think Phil will
- fit into our 'appy little 'ome very well."
-
- "Oh, Phil's a dear to rattle round with and be chums. And, of course,
- the more there are of us the easier it will be on our slim purses.
- But how will she be to live with? You have to summer and winter with
- any one before you know if she's LIVABLE or not."
-
- "Oh, well, we'll all be put to the test, as far as that goes.
- And we must quit us like sensible folk, living and let live.
- Phil isn't selfish, though she's a little thoughtless, and I
- believe we will all get on beautifully in Patty's Place."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XI
-
- The Round of Life
-
-
- Anne was back in Avonlea with the luster of the Thorburn Scholarship
- on her brow. People told her she hadn't changed much, in a tone
- which hinted they were surprised and a little disappointed she hadn't.
- Avonlea had not changed, either. At least, so it seemed at first.
- But as Anne sat in the Green Gables pew, on the first Sunday after
- her return, and looked over the congregation, she saw several little
- changes which, all coming home to her at once, made her realize that
- time did not quite stand still, even in Avonlea. A new minister was in
- the pulpit. In the pews more than one familiar face was missing forever.
- Old "Uncle Abe," his prophesying over and done with, Mrs. Peter Sloane,
- who had sighed, it was to be hoped, for the last time, Timothy Cotton,
- who, as Mrs. Rachel Lynde said "had actually managed to die at last
- after practicing at it for twenty years," and old Josiah Sloane, whom
- nobody knew in his coffin because he had his whiskers neatly trimmed,
- were all sleeping in the little graveyard behind the church. And Billy
- Andrews was married to Nettie Blewett! They "appeared out" that Sunday.
- When Billy, beaming with pride and happiness, showed his be-plumed and
- be-silked bride into the Harmon Andrews' pew, Anne dropped her lids to
- hide her dancing eyes. She recalled the stormy winter night of the
- Christmas holidays when Jane had proposed for Billy. He certainly
- had not broken his heart over his rejection. Anne wondered if Jane
- had also proposed to Nettie for him, or if he had mustered enough
- spunk to ask the fateful question himself. All the Andrews family
- seemed to share in his pride and pleasure, from Mrs. Harmon in the
- pew to Jane in the choir. Jane had resigned from the Avonlea school
- and intended to go West in the fall.
-
- "Can't get a beau in Avonlea, that's what," said Mrs. Rachel Lynde
- scornfully. "SAYS she thinks she'll have better health out West.
- I never heard her health was poor before."
-
- "Jane is a nice girl," Anne had said loyally. "She never tried
- to attract attention, as some did."
-
- "Oh, she never chased the boys, if that's what you mean," said
- Mrs. Rachel. "But she'd like to be married, just as much as
- anybody, that's what. What else would take her out West to some
- forsaken place whose only recommendation is that men are plenty
- and women scarce? Don't you tell me!"
-
- But it was not at Jane, Anne gazed that day in dismay and surprise.
- It was at Ruby Gillis, who sat beside her in the choir. What had
- happened to Ruby? She was even handsomer than ever; but her blue
- eyes were too bright and lustrous, and the color of her cheeks was
- hectically brilliant; besides, she was very thin; the hands that
- held her hymn-book were almost transparent in their delicacy.
-
- "Is Ruby Gillis ill?" Anne asked of Mrs. Lynde, as they went
- home from church.
-
- "Ruby Gillis is dying of galloping consumption," said Mrs. Lynde
- bluntly. "Everybody knows it except herself and her FAMILY.
- They won't give in. If you ask THEM, she's perfectly well.
- She hasn't been able to teach since she had that attack of
- congestion in the winter, but she says she's going to teach
- again in the fall, and she's after the White Sands school.
- She'll be in her grave, poor girl, when White Sands school opens,
- that's what."
-
- Anne listened in shocked silence. Ruby Gillis, her old school-chum,
- dying? Could it be possible? Of late years they had grown apart;
- but the old tie of school-girl intimacy was there, and made itself
- felt sharply in the tug the news gave at Anne's heartstrings.
- Ruby, the brilliant, the merry, the coquettish! It was impossible
- to associate the thought of her with anything like death. She had
- greeted Anne with gay cordiality after church, and urged her to
- come up the next evening.
-
- "I'll be away Tuesday and Wednesday evenings," she had whispered
- triumphantly. "There's a concert at Carmody and a party at White
- Sands. Herb Spencer's going to take me. He's my LATEST. Be sure
- to come up tomorrow. I'm dying for a good talk with you. I want
- to hear all about your doings at Redmond."
-
- Anne knew that Ruby meant that she wanted to tell Anne all about
- her own recent flirtations, but she promised to go, and Diana
- offered to go with her.
-
- "I've been wanting to go to see Ruby for a long while," she told Anne,
- when they left Green Gables the next evening, "but I really couldn't
- go alone. It's so awful to hear Ruby rattling on as she does, and
- pretending there is nothing the matter with her, even when she can
- hardly speak for coughing. She's fighting so hard for her life,
- and yet she hasn't any chance at all, they say."
-
- The girls walked silently down the red, twilit road. The robins
- were singing vespers in the high treetops, filling the golden air
- with their jubilant voices. The silver fluting of the frogs came
- from marshes and ponds, over fields where seeds were beginning to
- stir with life and thrill to the sunshine and rain that had
- drifted over them. The air was fragrant with the wild, sweet,
- wholesome smell of young raspberry copses. White mists were
- hovering in the silent hollows and violet stars were shining
- bluely on the brooklands.
-
- "What a beautiful sunset," said Diana. "Look, Anne, it's just like
- a land in itself, isn't it? That long, low back of purple cloud
- is the shore, and the clear sky further on is like a golden sea."
-
- "If we could sail to it in the moonshine boat Paul wrote of in
- his old composition -- you remember? -- how nice it would be,"
- said Anne, rousing from her reverie. "Do you think we could find
- all our yesterdays there, Diana -- all our old springs and
- blossoms? The beds of flowers that Paul saw there are the roses
- that have bloomed for us in the past?"
-
- "Don't!" said Diana. "You make me feel as if we were old women
- with everything in life behind us."
-
- "I think I've almost felt as if we were since I heard about poor Ruby,"
- said Anne. "If it is true that she is dying any other sad thing might
- be true, too."
-
- "You don't mind calling in at Elisha Wright's for a moment, do you?"
- asked Diana. "Mother asked me to leave this little dish of jelly
- for Aunt Atossa."
-
- "Who is Aunt Atossa?"
-
- "Oh, haven't you heard? She's Mrs. Samson Coates of Spencervale
- -- Mrs. Elisha Wright's aunt. She's father's aunt, too. Her
- husband died last winter and she was left very poor and lonely,
- so the Wrights took her to live with them. Mother thought we
- ought to take her, but father put his foot down. Live with Aunt
- Atossa he would not."
-
- "Is she so terrible?" asked Anne absently.
-
- "You'll probably see what she's like before we can get away,"
- said Diana significantly. "Father says she has a face like a
- hatchet -- it cuts the air. But her tongue is sharper still."
-
- Late as it was Aunt Atossa was cutting potato sets in the Wright
- kitchen. She wore a faded old wrapper, and her gray hair was
- decidedly untidy. Aunt Atossa did not like being "caught in a
- kilter," so she went out of her way to be disagreeable.
-
- "Oh, so you're Anne Shirley?" she said, when Diana introduced Anne.
- "I've heard of you." Her tone implied that she had heard nothing good.
- "Mrs. Andrews was telling me you were home. She said you had improved
- a good deal."
-
- There was no doubt Aunt Atossa thought there was plenty of room for
- further improvement. She ceased not from cutting sets with much energy.
-
- "Is it any use to ask you to sit down?" she inquired sarcastically.
- "Of course, there's nothing very entertaining here for you. The rest
- are all away."
-
- "Mother sent you this little pot of rhubarb jelly," said Diana
- pleasantly. "She made it today and thought you might like some."
-
- "Oh, thanks," said Aunt Atossa sourly. "I never fancy your
- mother's jelly -- she always makes it too sweet. However, I'll
- try to worry some down. My appetite's been dreadful poor this
- spring. I'm far from well," continued Aunt Atossa solemnly, "but
- still I keep a-doing. People who can't work aren't wanted here.
- If it isn't too much trouble will you be condescending enough
- to set the jelly in the pantry? I'm in a hurry to get these spuds
- done tonight. I suppose you two LADIES never do anything like this.
- You'd be afraid of spoiling your hands."
-
- "I used to cut potato sets before we rented the farm," smiled Anne.
-
- "I do it yet," laughed Diana. "I cut sets three days last week.
- Of course," she added teasingly, "I did my hands up in lemon
- juice and kid gloves every night after it."
-
- Aunt Atossa sniffed.
-
- "I suppose you got that notion out of some of those silly
- magazines you read so many of. I wonder your mother allows you.
- But she always spoiled you. We all thought when George married
- her she wouldn't be a suitable wife for him."
-
- Aunt Atossa sighed heavily, as if all forebodings upon the
- occasion of George Barry's marriage had been amply and darkly
- fulfilled.
-
- "Going, are you?" she inquired, as the girls rose. "Well, I
- suppose you can't find much amusement talking to an old woman
- like me. It's such a pity the boys ain't home."
-
- "We want to run in and see Ruby Gillis a little while," explained Diana.
-
- "Oh, anything does for an excuse, of course," said Aunt Atossa, amiably.
- "Just whip in and whip out before you have time to say how-do decently.
- It's college airs, I s'pose. You'd be wiser to keep away from Ruby Gillis.
- The doctors say consumption's catching. I always knew Ruby'd get something,
- gadding off to Boston last fall for a visit. People who ain't content to
- stay home always catch something."
-
- "People who don't go visiting catch things, too. Sometimes they even die,"
- said Diana solemnly.
-
- "Then they don't have themselves to blame for it," retorted Aunt Atossa
- triumphantly. "I hear you are to be married in June, Diana."
-
- "There is no truth in that report," said Diana, blushing.
-
- "Well, don't put it off too long," said Aunt Atossa significantly.
- "You'll fade soon -- you're all complexion and hair. And the Wrights
- are terrible fickle. You ought to wear a hat, MISS SHIRLEY. Your nose
- is freckling scandalous. My, but you ARE redheaded! Well, I s'pose
- we're all as the Lord made us! Give Marilla Cuthbert my respects.
- She's never been to see me since I come to Avonlea, but I s'pose I
- oughtn't to complain. The Cuthberts always did think themselves
- a cut higher than any one else round here."
-
- "Oh, isn't she dreadful?" gasped Diana, as they escaped down the lane.
-
- "She's worse than Miss Eliza Andrews," said Anne. "But then think
- of living all your life with a name like Atossa! Wouldn't it sour
- almost any one? She should have tried to imagine her name was Cordelia.
- It might have helped her a great deal. It certainly helped me in the
- days when I didn't like ANNE."
-
- "Josie Pye will be just like her when she grows up," said Diana.
- "Josie's mother and Aunt Atossa are cousins, you know. Oh, dear,
- I'm glad that's over. She's so malicious -- she seems to put a
- bad flavor in everything. Father tells such a funny story about her.
- One time they had a minister in Spencervale who was a very good,
- spiritual man but very deaf. He couldn't hear any ordinary
- conversation at all. Well, they used to have a prayer meeting on
- Sunday evenings, and all the church members present would get up
- and pray in turn, or say a few words on some Bible verse. But
- one evening Aunt Atossa bounced up. She didn't either pray or
- preach. Instead, she lit into everybody else in the church and
- gave them a fearful raking down, calling them right out by name
- and telling them how they all had behaved, and casting up all the
- quarrels and scandals of the past ten years. Finally she wound
- up by saying that she was disgusted with Spencervale church and
- she never meant to darken its door again, and she hoped a fearful
- judgment would come upon it. Then she sat down out of breath,
- and the minister, who hadn't heard a word she said, immediately
- remarked, in a very devout voice, `amen! The Lord grant our dear
- sister's prayer!' You ought to hear father tell the story."
-
- "Speaking of stories, Diana," remarked Anne, in a significant,
- confidential tone, "do you know that lately I have been wondering
- if I could write a short story -- a story that would be good
- enough to be published?"
-
- "Why, of course you could," said Diana, after she had grasped the
- amazing suggestion. "You used to write perfectly thrilling stories
- years ago in our old Story Club."
-
- "Well, I hardly meant one of that kind of stories," smiled Anne.
- "I've been thinking about it a little of late, but I'm almost
- afraid to try, for, if I should fail, it would be too humiliating."
-
- "I heard Priscilla say once that all Mrs. Morgan's first stories
- were rejected. But I'm sure yours wouldn't be, Anne, for it's
- likely editors have more sense nowadays."
-
- "Margaret Burton, one of the Junior girls at Redmond, wrote a
- story last winter and it was published in the Canadian Woman.
- I really do think I could write one at least as good."
-
- "And will you have it published in the Canadian Woman?"
-
- "I might try one of the bigger magazines first. It all depends
- on what kind of a story I write."
-
- "What is it to be about?"
-
- "I don't know yet. I want to get hold of a good plot. I believe
- this is very necessary from an editor's point of view. The only
- thing I've settled on is the heroine's name. It is to be AVERIL
- LESTER. Rather pretty, don't you think? Don't mention this to
- any one, Diana. I haven't told anybody but you and Mr. Harrison.
- HE wasn't very encouraging -- he said there was far too much
- trash written nowadays as it was, and he'd expected something
- better of me, after a year at college."
-
- "What does Mr. Harrison know about it?" demanded Diana scornfully.
-
- They found the Gillis home gay with lights and callers. Leonard
- Kimball, of Spencervale, and Morgan Bell, of Carmody, were glaring
- at each other across the parlor. Several merry girls had dropped in.
- Ruby was dressed in white and her eyes and cheeks were very brilliant.
- She laughed and chattered incessantly, and after the other girls had
- gone she took Anne upstairs to display her new summer dresses.
-
- "I've a blue silk to make up yet, but it's a little heavy for
- summer wear. I think I'll leave it until the fall. I'm going
- to teach in White Sands, you know. How do you like my hat?
- That one you had on in church yesterday was real dinky.
- But I like something brighter for myself. Did you notice
- those two ridiculous boys downstairs? They've both come
- determined to sit each other out. I don't care a single bit
- about either of them, you know. Herb Spencer is the one I like.
- Sometimes I really do think he's MR. RIGHT. At Christmas I
- thought the Spencervale schoolmaster was that. But I found
- out something about him that turned me against him. He nearly
- went insane when I turned him down. I wish those two boys hadn't
- come tonight. I wanted to have a nice good talk with you, Anne,
- and tell you such heaps of things. You and I were always good
- chums, weren't we?"
-
- Ruby slipped her arm about Anne's waist with a shallow little laugh.
- But just for a moment their eyes met, and, behind all the luster
- of Ruby's, Anne saw something that made her heart ache.
-
- "Come up often, won't you, Anne?" whispered Ruby. "Come alone --
- I want you."
-
- "Are you feeling quite well, Ruby?"
-
- "Me! Why, I'm perfectly well. I never felt better in my life.
- Of course, that congestion last winter pulled me down a little.
- But just see my color. I don't look much like an invalid, I'm sure."
-
- Ruby's voice was almost sharp. She pulled her arm away from Anne,
- as if in resentment, and ran downstairs, where she was gayer than
- ever, apparently so much absorbed in bantering her two swains that
- Diana and Anne felt rather out of it and soon went away.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XII
-
- "Averil's Atonement"
-
-
- "What are you dreaming of, Anne?"
-
- The two girls were loitering one evening in a fairy hollow of the
- brook. Ferns nodded in it, and little grasses were green, and
- wild pears hung finely-scented, white curtains around it.
-
- Anne roused herself from her reverie with a happy sigh.
-
- "I was thinking out my story, Diana."
-
- "Oh, have you really begun it?" cried Diana, all alight with
- eager interest in a moment.
-
- "Yes, I have only a few pages written, but I have it all pretty
- well thought out. I've had such a time to get a suitable plot.
- None of the plots that suggested themselves suited a girl named
- AVERIL."
-
- "Couldn't you have changed her name?"
-
- "No, the thing was impossible. I tried to, but I couldn't do it,
- any more than I could change yours. AVERIL was so real to me
- that no matter what other name I tried to give her I just thought
- of her as AVERIL behind it all. But finally I got a plot that
- matched her. Then came the excitement of choosing names for
- all my characters. You have no idea how fascinating that is.
- I've lain awake for hours thinking over those names. The hero's
- name is PERCEVAL DALRYMPLE."
-
- "Have you named ALL the characters?" asked Diana wistfully. "If
- you hadn't I was going to ask you to let me name one -- just some
- unimportant person. I'd feel as if I had a share in the story then."
-
- "You may name the little hired boy who lived with the LESTERS,"
- conceded Anne. "He is not very important, but he is the only one
- left unnamed."
-
- "Call him RAYMOND FITZOSBORNE," suggested Diana, who had a store
- of such names laid away in her memory, relics of the old "Story
- Club," which she and Anne and Jane Andrews and Ruby Gillis had
- had in their schooldays.
-
- Anne shook her head doubtfully.
-
- "I'm afraid that is too aristocratic a name for a chore boy,
- Diana. I couldn't imagine a Fitzosborne feeding pigs and picking
- up chips, could you?"
-
- Diana didn't see why, if you had an imagination at all, you
- couldn't stretch it to that extent; but probably Anne knew best,
- and the chore boy was finally christened ROBERT RAY, to be called
- BOBBY should occasion require.
-
- "How much do you suppose you'll get for it?" asked Diana.
-
- But Anne had not thought about this at all. She was in pursuit
- of fame, not filthy lucre, and her literary dreams were as yet
- untainted by mercenary considerations.
-
- "You'll let me read it, won't you?" pleaded Diana.
-
- "When it is finished I'll read it to you and Mr. Harrison, and I
- shall want you to criticize it SEVERELY. No one else shall see
- it until it is published."
-
- "How are you going to end it -- happily or unhappily?"
-
- "I'm not sure. I'd like it to end unhappily, because that would
- be so much more romantic. But I understand editors have a prejudice
- against sad endings. I heard Professor Hamilton say once that nobody
- but a genius should try to write an unhappy ending.
-
- And," concluded Anne modestly, "I'm anything but a genius."
-
- "Oh I like happy endings best. You'd better let him marry her,"
- said Diana, who, especially since her engagement to Fred, thought
- this was how every story should end.
-
- "But you like to cry over stories?"
-
- "Oh, yes, in the middle of them. But I like everything to come
- right at last."
-
- "I must have one pathetic scene in it," said Anne thoughtfully.
- "I might let ROBERT RAY be injured in an accident and have a
- death scene."
-
- "No, you mustn't kill BOBBY off," declared Diana, laughing.
- "He belongs to me and I want him to live and flourish. Kill
- somebody else if you have to."
-
- For the next fortnight Anne writhed or reveled, according to
- mood, in her literary pursuits. Now she would be jubilant over a
- brilliant idea, now despairing because some contrary character
- would NOT behave properly. Diana could not understand this.
-
- "MAKE them do as you want them to," she said.
-
- "I can't," mourned Anne. "Averil is such an unmanageable heroine.
- She WILL do and say things I never meant her to. Then that spoils
- everything that went before and I have to write it all over again."
-
- Finally, however, the story was finished, and Anne read it to
- Diana in the seclusion of the porch gable. She had achieved her
- "pathetic scene" without sacrificing ROBERT RAY, and she kept a
- watchful eye on Diana as she read it. Diana rose to the occasion
- and cried properly; but, when the end came, she looked a little
- disappointed.
-
- "Why did you kill MAURICE LENNOX?" she asked reproachfully.
-
- "He was the villain," protested Anne. "He had to be punished."
-
- "I like him best of them all," said unreasonable Diana.
-
- "Well, he's dead, and he'll have to stay dead," said Anne,
- rather resentfully. "If I had let him live he'd have gone
- on persecuting AVERIL and PERCEVAL."
-
- "Yes -- unless you had reformed him."
-
- "That wouldn't have been romantic, and, besides, it would have
- made the story too long."
-
- "Well, anyway, it's a perfectly elegant story, Anne, and will
- make you famous, of that I'm sure. Have you got a title for it?"
-
- "Oh, I decided on the title long ago. I call it AVERIL'S
- ATONEMENT. Doesn't that sound nice and alliterative? Now,
- Diana, tell me candidly, do you see any faults in my story?"
-
- "Well," hesitated Diana, "that part where AVERIL makes the cake
- doesn't seem to me quite romantic enough to match the rest. It's
- just what anybody might do. Heroines shouldn't do cooking, _I_ think."
-
- "Why, that is where the humor comes in, and it's one of the best
- parts of the whole story," said Anne. And it may be stated that
- in this she was quite right.
-
- Diana prudently refrained from any further criticism, but
- Mr. Harrison was much harder to please. First he told her
- there was entirely too much description in the story.
-
- "Cut out all those flowery passages," he said unfeelingly.
-
- Anne had an uncomfortable conviction that Mr. Harrison was right,
- and she forced herself to expunge most of her beloved descriptions,
- though it took three re-writings before the story could be pruned
- down to please the fastidious Mr. Harrison.
-
- "I've left out ALL the descriptions but the sunset," she said at last.
- "I simply COULDN'T let it go. It was the best of them all."
-
- "It hasn't anything to do with the story," said Mr. Harrison,
- "and you shouldn't have laid the scene among rich city people.
- What do you know of them? Why didn't you lay it right here in
- Avonlea -- changing the name, of course, or else Mrs. Rachel
- Lynde would probably think she was the heroine."
-
- "Oh, that would never have done," protested Anne. "Avonlea is
- the dearest place in the world, but it isn't quite romantic
- enough for the scene of a story."
-
- "I daresay there's been many a romance in Avonlea -- and many a
- tragedy, too," said Mr. Harrison drily. "But your folks ain't
- like real folks anywhere. They talk too much and use too
- high-flown language. There's one place where that DALRYMPLE chap
- talks even on for two pages, and never lets the girl get a word in
- edgewise. If he'd done that in real life she'd have pitched him."
-
- "I don't believe it," said Anne flatly. In her secret soul she
- thought that the beautiful, poetical things said to AVERIL would
- win any girl's heart completely. Besides, it was gruesome to hear
- of AVERIL, the stately, queen-like AVERIL, "pitching" any one.
- AVERIL "declined her suitors."
-
- "Anyhow," resumed the merciless Mr. Harrison, "I don't see why
- MAURICE LENNOX didn't get her. He was twice the man the other is.
- He did bad things, but he did them. Perceval hadn't time for
- anything but mooning."
-
- "Mooning." That was even worse than "pitching!"
-
- "MAURICE LENNOX was the villain," said Anne indignantly.
- "I don't see why every one likes him better than PERCEVAL."
-
- "Perceval is too good. He's aggravating. Next time you write
- about a hero put a little spice of human nature in him."
-
- "AVERIL couldn't have married MAURICE. He was bad."
-
- "She'd have reformed him. You can reform a man; you can't reform
- a jelly-fish, of course. Your story isn't bad -- it's kind of
- interesting, I'll admit. But you're too young to write a story
- that would be worth while. Wait ten years."
-
- Anne made up her mind that the next time she wrote a story she
- wouldn't ask anybody to criticize it. It was too discouraging.
- She would not read the story to Gilbert, although she told him
- about it.
-
- "If it is a success you'll see it when it is published, Gilbert,
- but if it is a failure nobody shall ever see it."
-
- Marilla knew nothing about the venture. In imagination Anne saw
- herself reading a story out of a magazine to Marilla, entrapping
- her into praise of it -- for in imagination all things are
- possible -- and then triumphantly announcing herself the author.
-
- One day Anne took to the Post Office a long, bulky envelope,
- addressed, with the delightful confidence of youth and
- inexperience, to the very biggest of the "big" magazines.
- Diana was as excited over it as Anne herself.
-
- "How long do you suppose it will be before you hear from it?"
- she asked.
-
- "It shouldn't be longer than a fortnight. Oh, how happy and
- proud I shall be if it is accepted!"
-
- "Of course it will be accepted, and they will likely ask you to
- send them more. You may be as famous as Mrs. Morgan some day,
- Anne, and then how proud I'll be of knowing you," said Diana, who
- possessed, at least, the striking merit of an unselfish
- admiration of the gifts and graces of her friends.
-
- A week of delightful dreaming followed, and then came a bitter awakening.
- One evening Diana found Anne in the porch gable, with suspicious-looking
- eyes. On the table lay a long envelope and a crumpled manuscript.
-
- "Anne, your story hasn't come back?" cried Diana incredulously.
-
- "Yes, it has," said Anne shortly.
-
- "Well, that editor must be crazy. What reason did he give?"
-
- "No reason at all. There is just a printed slip saying that it
- wasn't found acceptable."
-
- "I never thought much of that magazine, anyway," said Diana hotly.
- "The stories in it are not half as interesting as those in the
- Canadian Woman, although it costs so much more. I suppose
- the editor is prejudiced against any one who isn't a Yankee.
- Don't be discouraged, Anne. Remember how Mrs. Morgan's stories
- came back. Send yours to the Canadian Woman."
-
- "I believe I will," said Anne, plucking up heart. "And if it is
- published I'll send that American editor a marked copy. But I'll
- cut the sunset out. I believe Mr. Harrison was right."
-
- Out came the sunset; but in spite of this heroic mutilation the
- editor of the Canadian Woman sent Averil's Atonement back so
- promptly that the indignant Diana declared that it couldn't have
- been read at all, and vowed she was going to stop her subscription
- immediately. Anne took this second rejection with the calmness of
- despair. She locked the story away in the garret trunk where the
- old Story Club tales reposed; but first she yielded to Diana's
- entreaties and gave her a copy.
-
- "This is the end of my literary ambitions," she said bitterly.
-
- She never mentioned the matter to Mr. Harrison, but one evening
- he asked her bluntly if her story had been accepted.
-
- "No, the editor wouldn't take it," she answered briefly.
-
- Mr. Harrison looked sidewise at the flushed, delicate profile.
-
- "Well, I suppose you'll keep on writing them," he said encouragingly.
-
- "No, I shall never try to write a story again," declared Anne, with
- the hopeless finality of nineteen when a door is shut in its face.
-
- "I wouldn't give up altogether," said Mr. Harrison reflectively. "I'd
- write a story once in a while, but I wouldn't pester editors with it.
- I'd write of people and places like I knew, and I'd make my characters
- talk everyday English; and I'd let the sun rise and set in the usual
- quiet way without much fuss over the fact. If I had to have villains
- at all, I'd give them a chance, Anne -- I'd give them a chance.
- There are some terrible bad men in the world, I suppose, but you'd
- have to go a long piece to find them -- though Mrs. Lynde believes we're
- all bad. But most of us have got a little decency somewhere in us.
- Keep on writing, Anne."
-
- "No. It was very foolish of me to attempt it. When I'm through
- Redmond I'll stick to teaching. I can teach. I can't write stories."
-
- "It'll be time for you to be getting a husband when you're
- through Redmond," said Mr. Harrison. "I don't believe in
- putting marrying off too long -- like I did."
-
- Anne got up and marched home. There were times when Mr. Harrison
- was really intolerable. "Pitching," "mooning," and "getting a
- husband." Ow!!
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIII
-
- The Way of Transgressors
-
-
- Davy and Dora were ready for Sunday School. They were going alone,
- which did not often happen, for Mrs. Lynde always attended Sunday School.
- But Mrs. Lynde had twisted her ankle and was lame, so she was staying
- home this morning. The twins were also to represent the family at church,
- for Anne had gone away the evening before to spend Sunday with friends
- in Carmody, and Marilla had one of her headaches.
-
- Davy came downstairs slowly. Dora was waiting in the hall for him, having
- been made ready by Mrs. Lynde. Davy had attended to his own preparations.
- He had a cent in his pocket for the Sunday School collection, and a five-cent
- piece for the church collection; he carried his Bible in one hand and his
- Sunday School quarterly in the other; he knew his lesson and his Golden Text
- and his catechism question perfectly. Had he not studied them -- perforce
- -- in Mrs. Lynde's kitchen, all last Sunday afternoon? Davy, therefore,
- should have been in a placid frame of mind. As a matter of fact, despite
- text and catechism, he was inwardly as a ravening wolf.
-
- Mrs. Lynde limped out of her kitchen as he joined Dora.
-
- "Are you clean?" she demanded severely.
-
- "Yes -- all of me that shows," Davy answered with a defiant scowl.
-
- Mrs. Rachel sighed. She had her suspicions about Davy's neck
- and ears. But she knew that if she attempted to make a personal
- examination Davy would likely take to his heels and she could not
- pursue him today.
-
- "Well, be sure you behave yourselves," she warned them. "Don't walk
- in the dust. Don't stop in the porch to talk to the other children.
- Don't squirm or wriggle in your places. Don't forget the Golden Text.
- Don't lose your collection or forget to put it in. Don't whisper at
- prayer time, and don't forget to pay attention to the sermon."
-
- Davy deigned no response. He marched away down the lane,
- followed by the meek Dora. But his soul seethed within.
- Davy had suffered, or thought he had suffered, many things at the
- hands and tongue of Mrs. Rachel Lynde since she had come to Green
- Gables, for Mrs. Lynde could not live with anybody, whether they
- were nine or ninety, without trying to bring them up properly.
- And it was only the preceding afternoon that she had interfered
- to influence Marilla against allowing Davy to go fishing with the
- Timothy Cottons. Davy was still boiling over this.
-
- As soon as he was out of the lane Davy stopped and twisted his
- countenance into such an unearthly and terrific contortion that Dora,
- although she knew his gifts in that respect, was honestly alarmed lest
- he should never in the world be able to get it straightened out again.
-
- "Darn her," exploded Davy.
-
- "Oh, Davy, don't swear," gasped Dora in dismay.
-
- "`Darn' isn't swearing -- not real swearing. And I don't care
- if it is," retorted Davy recklessly.
-
- "Well, if you MUST say dreadful words don't say them on Sunday," pleaded Dora.
-
- Davy was as yet far from repentance, but in his secret soul he felt that,
- perhaps, he had gone a little too far.
-
- "I'm going to invent a swear word of my own," he declared.
-
- "God will punish you if you do," said Dora solemnly.
-
- "Then I think God is a mean old scamp," retorted Davy. "Doesn't
- He know a fellow must have some way of 'spressing his feelings?"
-
- "Davy!!!" said Dora. She expected that Davy would be struck down
- dead on the spot. But nothing happened.
-
- "Anyway, I ain't going to stand any more of Mrs. Lynde's bossing,"
- spluttered Davy. "Anne and Marilla may have the right to boss me,
- but SHE hasn't. I'm going to do every single thing she told me not to do.
- You watch me."
-
- In grim, deliberate silence, while Dora watched him with the
- fascination of horror, Davy stepped off the green grass of the
- roadside, ankle deep into the fine dust which four weeks of
- rainless weather had made on the road, and marched along in it,
- shuffling his feet viciously until he was enveloped in a hazy cloud.
-
- "That's the beginning," he announced triumphantly." And I'm
- going to stop in the porch and talk as long as there's anybody
- there to talk to. I'm going to squirm and wriggle and whisper,
- and I'm going to say I don't know the Golden Text. And I'm going
- to throw away both of my collections RIGHT NOW."
-
- And Davy hurled cent and nickel over Mr. Barry's fence with
- fierce delight.
-
- "Satan made you do that," said Dora reproachfully.
-
- "He didn't," cried Davy indignantly. "I just thought it out for myself.
- And I've thought of something else. I'm not going to Sunday School or
- church at all. I'm going up to play with the Cottons. They told me
- yesterday they weren't going to Sunday School today, 'cause their mother
- was away and there was nobody to make them. Come along, Dora, we'll have
- a great time."
-
- "I don't want to go," protested Dora.
-
- "You've got to," said Davy. "If you don't come I'll tell Marilla
- that Frank Bell kissed you in school last Monday."
-
- "I couldn't help it. I didn't know he was going to," cried Dora,
- blushing scarlet.
-
- "Well, you didn't slap him or seem a bit cross," retorted Davy.
- "I'll tell her THAT, too, if you don't come. We'll take the
- short cut up this field."
-
- "I'm afraid of those cows," protested poor Dora, seeing a
- prospect of escape.
-
- "The very idea of your being scared of those cows," scoffed Davy.
- "Why, they're both younger than you."
-
- "They're bigger," said Dora.
-
- "They won't hurt you. Come along, now. This is great. When I
- grow up I ain't going to bother going to church at all. I
- believe I can get to heaven by myself."
-
- "You'll go to the other place if you break the Sabbath day,"
- said unhappy Dora, following him sorely against her will.
-
- But Davy was not scared -- yet. Hell was very far off, and the
- delights of a fishing expedition with the Cottons were very near.
- He wished Dora had more spunk. She kept looking back as if she
- were going to cry every minute, and that spoiled a fellow's fun.
- Hang girls, anyway. Davy did not say "darn" this time, even in thought.
- He was not sorry -- yet -- that he had said it once, but it might be
- as well not to tempt the Unknown Powers too far on one day.
-
- The small Cottons were playing in their back yard, and hailed
- Davy's appearance with whoops of delight. Pete, Tommy, Adolphus,
- and Mirabel Cotton were all alone. Their mother and older
- sisters were away. Dora was thankful Mirabel was there, at least.
- She had been afraid she would be alone in a crowd of boys. Mirabel
- was almost as bad as a boy -- she was so noisy and sunburned and reckless.
- But at least she wore dresses.
-
- "We've come to go fishing," announced Davy.
-
- "Whoop," yelled the Cottons. They rushed away to dig worms at once,
- Mirabel leading the van with a tin can. Dora could have sat down
- and cried. Oh, if only that hateful Frank Bell had never kissed her!
- Then she could have defied Davy, and gone to her beloved Sunday School.
-
- They dared not, of course, go fishing on the pond, where they
- would be seen by people going to church. They had to resort to
- the brook in the woods behind the Cotton house. But it was full
- of trout, and they had a glorious time that morning -- at least
- the Cottons certainly had, and Davy seemed to have it. Not being
- entirely bereft of prudence, he had discarded boots and stockings
- and borrowed Tommy Cotton's overalls. Thus accoutered, bog and
- marsh and undergrowth had no terrors for him. Dora was frankly
- and manifestly miserable. She followed the others in their
- peregrinations from pool to pool, clasping her Bible and
- quarterly tightly and thinking with bitterness of soul of her
- beloved class where she should be sitting that very moment,
- before a teacher she adored. Instead, here she was roaming the
- woods with those half-wild Cottons, trying to keep her boots clean
- and her pretty white dress free from rents and stains. Mirabel
- had offered the loan of an apron but Dora had scornfully refused.
-
- The trout bit as they always do on Sundays. In an hour the
- transgressors had all the fish they wanted, so they returned to
- the house, much to Dora's relief. She sat primly on a hencoop in
- the yard while the others played an uproarious game of tag; and
- then they all climbed to the top of the pig-house roof and cut
- their initials on the saddleboard. The flat-roofed henhouse and
- a pile of straw beneath gave Davy another inspiration. They
- spent a splendid half hour climbing on the roof and diving off
- into the straw with whoops and yells.
-
- But even unlawful pleasures must come to an end. When the rumble
- of wheels over the pond bridge told that people were going home
- from church Davy knew they must go. He discarded Tommy's overalls,
- resumed his own rightful attire, and turned away from his string
- of trout with a sigh. No use to think of taking them home.
-
- "Well, hadn't we a splendid time?" he demanded defiantly, as they
- went down the hill field.
-
- "I hadn't," said Dora flatly. "And I don't believe you had --
- really -- either," she added, with a flash of insight that was
- not to be expected of her.
-
- "I had so," cried Davy, but in the voice of one who doth protest too much.
- "No wonder you hadn't -- just sitting there like a -- like a mule."
-
- "I ain't going to, 'sociate with the Cottons," said Dora loftily.
-
- "The Cottons are all right," retorted Davy. "And they have far better
- times than we have. They do just as they please and say just what they
- like before everybody. _I_'m going to do that, too, after this."
-
- "There are lots of things you wouldn't dare say before everybody,"
- averred Dora.
-
- "No, there isn't."
-
- "There is, too. Would you," demanded Dora gravely, "would you
- say `tomcat' before the minister?"
-
- This was a staggerer. Davy was not prepared for such a concrete
- example of the freedom of speech. But one did not have to be
- consistent with Dora.
-
- "Of course not," he admitted sulkily.
-
- "`Tomcat' isn't a holy word. I wouldn't mention such an animal
- before a minister at all."
-
- "But if you had to?" persisted Dora.
-
- "I'd call it a Thomas pussy," said Davy.
-
- "_I_ think `gentleman cat' would be more polite," reflected Dora.
-
- "YOU thinking!" retorted Davy with withering scorn.
-
- Davy was not feeling comfortable, though he would have died
- before he admitted it to Dora. Now that the exhilaration of
- truant delights had died away, his conscience was beginning to
- give him salutary twinges. After all, perhaps it would have been
- better to have gone to Sunday School and church. Mrs. Lynde
- might be bossy; but there was always a box of cookies in her
- kitchen cupboard and she was not stingy. At this inconvenient
- moment Davy remembered that when he had torn his new school pants
- the week before, Mrs. Lynde had mended them beautifully and
- never said a word to Marilla about them.
-
- But Davy's cup of iniquity was not yet full. He was to discover
- that one sin demands another to cover it. They had dinner with
- Mrs. Lynde that day, and the first thing she asked Davy was,
-
- "Were all your class in Sunday School today?"
-
- "Yes'm," said Davy with a gulp. "All were there -- 'cept one."
-
- "Did you say your Golden Text and catechism?"
-
- "Yes'm."
-
- "Did you put your collection in?"
-
- "Yes'm."
-
- "Was Mrs. Malcolm MacPherson in church?"
-
- "I don't know." This, at least, was the truth, thought wretched Davy.
-
- "Was the Ladies' Aid announced for next week?"
-
- "Yes'm" -- quakingly.
-
- "Was prayer-meeting?"
-
- "I -- I don't know."
-
- "YOU should know. You should listen more attentively to the announcements.
- What was Mr. Harvey's text?"
-
- Davy took a frantic gulp of water and swallowed it and the last
- protest of conscience together. He glibly recited an old Golden
- Text learned several weeks ago. Fortunately Mrs. Lynde now
- stopped questioning him; but Davy did not enjoy his dinner.
-
- He could only eat one helping of pudding.
-
- "What's the matter with you?" demanded justly astonished Mrs. Lynde.
- "Are you sick?"
-
- "No," muttered Davy.
-
- "You look pale. You'd better keep out of the sun this afternoon,"
- admonished Mrs. Lynde.
-
- "Do you know how many lies you told Mrs. Lynde?" asked Dora
- reproachfully, as soon as they were alone after dinner.
-
- Davy, goaded to desperation, turned fiercely.
-
- "I don't know and I don't care," he said. "You just shut up,
- Dora Keith."
-
- Then poor Davy betook himself to a secluded retreat behind the
- woodpile to think over the way of transgressors.
-
- Green Gables was wrapped in darkness and silence when Anne
- reached home. She lost no time going to bed, for she was very
- tired and sleepy. There had been several Avonlea jollifications
- the preceding week, involving rather late hours. Anne's head was
- hardly on her pillow before she was half asleep; but just then
- her door was softly opened and a pleading voice said, "Anne."
-
- Anne sat up drowsily.
-
- "Davy, is that you? What is the matter?"
-
- A white-clad figure flung itself across the floor and on to the bed.
-
- "Anne," sobbed Davy, getting his arms about her neck. "I'm awful
- glad you're home. I couldn't go to sleep till I'd told somebody."
-
- "Told somebody what?"
-
- "How mis'rubul I am."
-
- "Why are you miserable, dear?"
-
- "'Cause I was so bad today, Anne. Oh, I was awful bad --
- badder'n I've ever been yet."
-
- "What did you do?"
-
- "Oh, I'm afraid to tell you. You'll never like me again, Anne.
- I couldn't say my prayers tonight. I couldn't tell God what
- I'd done. I was 'shamed to have Him know."
-
- "But He knew anyway, Davy."
-
- "That's what Dora said. But I thought p'raps He mightn't have
- noticed just at the time. Anyway, I'd rather tell you first."
-
- "WHAT is it you did?"
-
- Out it all came in a rush.
-
- "I run away from Sunday School -- and went fishing with the
- Cottons -- and I told ever so many whoppers to Mrs. Lynde -- oh!
- 'most half a dozen -- and -- and -- I -- I said a swear word,
- Anne -- a pretty near swear word, anyhow -- and I called God names."
-
- There was silence. Davy didn't know what to make of it. Was
- Anne so shocked that she never would speak to him again?
-
- "Anne, what are you going to do to me?" he whispered.
-
- "Nothing, dear. You've been punished already, I think."
-
- "No, I haven't. Nothing's been done to me."
-
- "You've been very unhappy ever since you did wrong, haven't you?"
-
- "You bet!" said Davy emphatically.
-
- "That was your conscience punishing you, Davy."
-
- "What's my conscience? I want to know."
-
- "It's something in you, Davy, that always tells you when you are
- doing wrong and makes you unhappy if you persist in doing it.
- Haven't you noticed that?"
-
- "Yes, but I didn't know what it was. I wish I didn't have it.
- I'd have lots more fun. Where is my conscience, Anne? I want to know.
- Is it in my stomach?"
-
- "No, it's in your soul," answered Anne, thankful for the
- darkness, since gravity must be preserved in serious matters.
-
- "I s'pose I can't get clear of it then," said Davy with a sigh.
- "Are you going to tell Marilla and Mrs. Lynde on me, Anne?"
-
- "No, dear, I'm not going to tell any one. You are sorry you were
- naughty, aren't you?"
-
- "You bet!"
-
- "And you'll never be bad like that again."
-
- "No, but -- " added Davy cautiously, "I might be bad some other way."
-
- "You won't say naughty words, or run away on Sundays, or tell falsehoods
- to cover up your sins?"
-
- "No. It doesn't pay," said Davy.
-
- "Well, Davy, just tell God you are sorry and ask Him to forgive you."
-
- "Have YOU forgiven me, Anne?"
-
- "Yes, dear."
-
- "Then," said Davy joyously, "I don't care much whether God does or not."
-
- "Davy!"
-
- "Oh -- I'll ask Him -- I'll ask Him," said Davy quickly,
- scrambling off the bed, convinced by Anne's tone that he must
- have said something dreadful. "I don't mind asking Him, Anne.
- -- Please, God, I'm awful sorry I behaved bad today and
- I'll try to be good on Sundays always and please forgive me.
- -- There now, Anne."
-
- "Well, now, run off to bed like a good boy."
-
- "All right. Say, I don't feel mis'rubul any more. I feel fine.
- Good night."
-
- "Good night."
-
- Anne slipped down on her pillows with a sigh of relief. Oh --
- how sleepy -- she was! In another second --
-
- "Anne!" Davy was back again by her bed. Anne dragged her eyes open.
-
- "What is it now, dear?" she asked, trying to keep a note of
- impatience out of her voice.
-
- "Anne, have you ever noticed how Mr. Harrison spits? Do you
- s'pose, if I practice hard, I can learn to spit just like him?"
-
- Anne sat up.
-
- "Davy Keith," she said, "go straight to your bed and don't let me
- catch you out of it again tonight! Go, now!"
-
- Davy went, and stood not upon the order of his going.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIV
-
- The Summons
-
-
- Anne was sitting with Ruby Gillis in the Gillis' garden after the day
- had crept lingeringly through it and was gone. It had been a warm,
- smoky summer afternoon. The world was in a splendor of out-flowering.
- The idle valleys were full of hazes. The woodways were pranked with
- shadows and the fields with the purple of the asters.
-
- Anne had given up a moonlight drive to the White Sands beach that
- she might spend the evening with Ruby. She had so spent many
- evenings that summer, although she often wondered what good it did
- any one, and sometimes went home deciding that she could not go again.
-
- Ruby grew paler as the summer waned; the White Sands school was
- given up -- "her father thought it better that she shouldn't
- teach till New Year's" -- and the fancy work she loved oftener
- and oftener fell from hands grown too weary for it. But she was
- always gay, always hopeful, always chattering and whispering of
- her beaux, and their rivalries and despairs. It was this that
- made Anne's visits hard for her. What had once been silly or
- amusing was gruesome, now; it was death peering through a wilful
- mask of life. Yet Ruby seemed to cling to her, and never let her
- go until she had promised to come again soon. Mrs. Lynde
- grumbled about Anne's frequent visits, and declared she would
- catch consumption; even Marilla was dubious.
-
- "Every time you go to see Ruby you come home looking tired out,"
- she said.
-
- "It's so very sad and dreadful," said Anne in a low tone. "Ruby
- doesn't seem to realize her condition in the least. And yet I
- somehow feel she needs help -- craves it -- and I want to give it
- to her and can't. All the time I'm with her I feel as if I were
- watching her struggle with an invisible foe -- trying to push it
- back with such feeble resistance as she has. That is why I come
- home tired."
-
- But tonight Anne did not feel this so keenly. Ruby was strangely
- quiet. She said not a word about parties and drives and dresses
- and "fellows." She lay in the hammock, with her untouched work
- beside her, and a white shawl wrapped about her thin shoulders.
- Her long yellow braids of hair -- how Anne had envied those
- beautiful braids in old schooldays! -- lay on either side of her.
- She had taken the pins out -- they made her head ache, she said.
- The hectic flush was gone for the time, leaving her pale and childlike.
-
- The moon rose in the silvery sky, empearling the clouds
- around her. Below, the pond shimmered in its hazy radiance.
- Just beyond the Gillis homestead was the church, with the old
- graveyard beside it. The moonlight shone on the white stones,
- bringing them out in clear-cut relief against the dark trees behind.
-
- "How strange the graveyard looks by moonlight!" said Ruby suddenly.
- "How ghostly!" she shuddered. "Anne, it won't be long now before
- I'll be lying over there. You and Diana and all the rest will be
- going about, full of life -- and I'll be there -- in the old graveyard
- -- dead!"
-
- The surprise of it bewildered Anne. For a few moments she could not speak.
-
- "You know it's so, don't you?" said Ruby insistently.
-
- "Yes, I know," answered Anne in a low tone. "Dear Ruby, I know."
-
- "Everybody knows it," said Ruby bitterly. "I know it -- I've
- known it all summer, though I wouldn't give in. And, oh, Anne"
- -- she reached out and caught Anne's hand pleadingly, impulsively
- -- "I don't want to die. I'm AFRAID to die."
-
- "Why should you be afraid, Ruby?" asked Anne quietly.
-
- "Because -- because -- oh, I'm not afraid but that I'll go to
- heaven, Anne. I'm a church member. But -- it'll be all so
- different. I think -- and think -- and I get so frightened --
- and -- and -- homesick. Heaven must be very beautiful, of course,
- the Bible says so -- but, Anne, IT WON'T BE WHAT I'VE BEEN USED TO."
-
- Through Anne's mind drifted an intrusive recollection of a funny
- story she had heard Philippa Gordon tell -- the story of some old
- man who had said very much the same thing about the world to come.
- It had sounded funny then -- she remembered how she and
- Priscilla had laughed over it. But it did not seem in the
- least humorous now, coming from Ruby's pale, trembling lips.
- It was sad, tragic -- and true! Heaven could not be what Ruby had
- been used to. There had been nothing in her gay, frivolous life,
- her shallow ideals and aspirations, to fit her for that great change,
- or make the life to come seem to her anything but alien and
- unreal and undesirable. Anne wondered helplessly what she could
- say that would help her. Could she say anything? "I think, Ruby,"
- she began hesitatingly -- for it was difficult for Anne to speak
- to any one of the deepest thoughts of her heart, or the new
- ideas that had vaguely begun to shape themselves in her mind,
- concerning the great mysteries of life here and hereafter,
- superseding her old childish conceptions, and it was hardest of
- all to speak of them to such as Ruby Gillis -- "I think, perhaps,
- we have very mistaken ideas about heaven -- what it is and what
- it holds for us. I don't think it can be so very different from
- life here as most people seem to think. I believe we'll just go
- on living, a good deal as we live here -- and be OURSELVES just
- the same -- only it will be easier to be good and to -- follow
- the highest. All the hindrances and perplexities will be taken
- away, and we shall see clearly. Don't be afraid, Ruby."
-
- "I can't help it," said Ruby pitifully. "Even if what you say
- about heaven is true -- and you can't be sure -- it may be only
- that imagination of yours -- it won't be JUST the same. It CAN'T be.
- I want to go on living HERE. I'm so young, Anne. I haven't had
- my life. I've fought so hard to live -- and it isn't any use
- -- I have to die -- and leave EVERYTHING I care for." Anne sat
- in a pain that was almost intolerable. She could not tell
- comforting falsehoods; and all that Ruby said was so horribly
- true. She WAS leaving everything she cared for. She had laid up
- her treasures on earth only; she had lived solely for the little
- things of life -- the things that pass -- forgetting the great
- things that go onward into eternity, bridging the gulf between
- the two lives and making of death a mere passing from one
- dwelling to the other -- from twilight to unclouded day. God
- would take care of her there -- Anne believed -- she would learn
- -- but now it was no wonder her soul clung, in blind helplessness,
- to the only things she knew and loved.
-
- Ruby raised herself on her arm and lifted up her bright, beautiful
- blue eyes to the moonlit skies.
-
- "I want to live," she said, in a trembling voice. "I want to
- live like other girls. I -- I want to be married, Anne -- and --
- and -- have little children. You know I always loved babies, Anne.
- I couldn't say this to any one but you. I know you understand.
- And then poor Herb -- he -- he loves me and I love him, Anne.
- The others meant nothing to me, but HE does -- and if I could
- live I would be his wife and be so happy. Oh, Anne, it's hard."
-
- Ruby sank back on her pillows and sobbed convulsively. Anne
- pressed her hand in an agony of sympathy -- silent sympathy,
- which perhaps helped Ruby more than broken, imperfect words could
- have done; for presently she grew calmer and her sobs ceased.
-
- "I'm glad I've told you this, Anne," she whispered. "It has
- helped me just to say it all out. I've wanted to all summer --
- every time you came. I wanted to talk it over with you -- but
- I COULDN'T. It seemed as if it would make death so SURE if I
- SAID I was going to die, or if any one else said it or hinted it.
- I wouldn't say it, or even think it. In the daytime, when people
- were around me and everything was cheerful, it wasn't so hard to
- keep from thinking of it. But in the night, when I couldn't sleep
- -- it was so dreadful, Anne. I couldn't get away from it then.
- Death just came and stared me in the face, until I got so frightened
- I could have screamed.
-
- "But you won't be frightened any more, Ruby, will you? You'll be brave,
- and believe that all is going to be well with you."
-
- "I'll try. I'll think over what you have said, and try to believe it.
- And you'll come up as often as you can, won't you, Anne?"
-
- "Yes, dear."
-
- "It -- it won't be very long now, Anne. I feel sure of that.
- And I'd rather have you than any one else. I always liked you
- best of all the girls I went to school with. You were never
- jealous, or mean, like some of them were. Poor Em White was up
- to see me yesterday. You remember Em and I were such chums for
- three years when we went to school? And then we quarrelled the
- time of the school concert. We've never spoken to each other
- since. Wasn't it silly? Anything like that seems silly NOW.
- But Em and I made up the old quarrel yesterday. She said she'd
- have spoken years ago, only she thought I wouldn't. And I never
- spoke to her because I was sure she wouldn't speak to me. Isn't
- it strange how people misunderstand each other, Anne?"
-
- "Most of the trouble in life comes from misunderstanding, I think,"
- said Anne. "I must go now, Ruby. It's getting late -- and you
- shouldn't be out in the damp."
-
- "You'll come up soon again."
-
- "Yes, very soon. And if there's anything I can do to help you
- I'll be so glad."
-
- "I know. You HAVE helped me already. Nothing seems quite so
- dreadful now. Good night, Anne."
-
- "Good night, dear."
-
- Anne walked home very slowly in the moonlight. The evening had
- changed something for her. Life held a different meaning, a
- deeper purpose. On the surface it would go on just the same; but
- the deeps had been stirred. It must not be with her as with poor
- butterfly Ruby. When she came to the end of one life it must not
- be to face the next with the shrinking terror of something wholly
- different -- something for which accustomed thought and ideal and
- aspiration had unfitted her. The little things of life, sweet
- and excellent in their place, must not be the things lived for;
- the highest must be sought and followed; the life of heaven must
- be begun here on earth.
-
- That good night in the garden was for all time. Anne never saw
- Ruby in life again. The next night the A.V.I.S. gave a farewell
- party to Jane Andrews before her departure for the West. And,
- while light feet danced and bright eyes laughed and merry tongues
- chattered, there came a summons to a soul in Avonlea that might
- not be disregarded or evaded. The next morning the word went
- from house to house that Ruby Gillis was dead. She had died in
- her sleep, painlessly and calmly, and on her face was a smile --
- as if, after all, death had come as a kindly friend to lead her
- over the threshold, instead of the grisly phantom she had dreaded.
-
- Mrs. Rachel Lynde said emphatically after the funeral that Ruby
- Gillis was the handsomest corpse she ever laid eyes on. Her
- loveliness, as she lay, white-clad, among the delicate flowers
- that Anne had placed about her, was remembered and talked of for
- years in Avonlea. Ruby had always been beautiful; but her beauty
- had been of the earth, earthy; it had had a certain insolent
- quality in it, as if it flaunted itself in the beholder's eye;
- spirit had never shone through it, intellect had never refined it.
- But death had touched it and consecrated it, bringing out delicate
- modelings and purity of outline never seen before -- doing what life
- and love and great sorrow and deep womanhood joys might have done
- for Ruby. Anne, looking down through a mist of tears, at her old
- playfellow, thought she saw the face God had meant Ruby to have,
- and remembered it so always.
-
- Mrs. Gillis called Anne aside into a vacant room before the
- funeral procession left the house, and gave her a small packet.
-
- "I want you to have this," she sobbed. "Ruby would have liked you
- to have it. It's the embroidered centerpiece she was working at.
- It isn't quite finished -- the needle is sticking in it just where
- her poor little fingers put it the last time she laid it down, the
- afternoon before she died."
-
- "There's always a piece of unfinished work left," said Mrs. Lynde,
- with tears in her eyes. "But I suppose there's always some one
- to finish it."
-
- "How difficult it is to realize that one we have always known
- can really be dead," said Anne, as she and Diana walked home.
- "Ruby is the first of our schoolmates to go. One by one, sooner
- or later, all the rest of us must follow."
-
- "Yes, I suppose so," said Diana uncomfortably. She did not
- want to talk of that. She would have preferred to have discussed
- the details of the funeral -- the splendid white velvet casket
- Mr. Gillis had insisted on having for Ruby -- "the Gillises must
- always make a splurge, even at funerals," quoth Mrs. Rachel Lynde
- -- Herb Spencer's sad face, the uncontrolled, hysteric grief of
- one of Ruby's sisters -- but Anne would not talk of these things.
- She seemed wrapped in a reverie in which Diana felt lonesomely
- that she had neither lot nor part.
-
- "Ruby Gillis was a great girl to laugh," said Davy suddenly.
- "Will she laugh as much in heaven as she did in Avonlea, Anne?
- I want to know."
-
- "Yes, I think she will," said Anne.
-
- "Oh, Anne," protested Diana, with a rather shocked smile.
-
- "Well, why not, Diana?" asked Anne seriously. "Do you think
- we'll never laugh in heaven?"
-
- "Oh -- I -- I don't know" floundered Diana. "It doesn't seem
- just right, somehow. You know it's rather dreadful to laugh in
- church."
-
- "But heaven won't be like church -- all the time," said Anne.
-
- "I hope it ain't," said Davy emphatically. "If it is I don't
- want to go. Church is awful dull. Anyway, I don't mean to go
- for ever so long. I mean to live to be a hundred years old, like
- Mr. Thomas Blewett of White Sands. He says he's lived so long
- 'cause he always smoked tobacco and it killed all the germs.
- Can I smoke tobacco pretty soon, Anne?"
-
- "No, Davy, I hope you'll never use tobacco," said Anne absently.
-
- "What'll you feel like if the germs kill me then?" demanded Davy.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XV
-
- A Dream Turned Upside Down
-
-
- "Just one more week and we go back to Redmond," said Anne.
- She was happy at the thought of returning to work, classes
- and Redmond friends. Pleasing visions were also being woven
- around Patty's Place. There was a warm pleasant sense of home
- in the thought of it, even though she had never lived there.
-
- But the summer had been a very happy one, too -- a time of glad living
- with summer suns and skies, a time of keen delight in wholesome things;
- a time of renewing and deepening of old friendships; a time in which
- she had learned to live more nobly, to work more patiently, to play
- more heartily.
-
- "All life lessons are not learned at college," she thought.
- "Life teaches them everywhere."
-
- But alas, the final week of that pleasant vacation was spoiled for Anne,
- by one of those impish happenings which are like a dream turned upside down.
-
- "Been writing any more stories lately?" inquired Mr. Harrison genially
- one evening when Anne was taking tea with him and Mrs. Harrison.
-
- "No," answered Anne, rather crisply.
-
- "Well, no offense meant. Mrs. Hiram Sloane told me the other
- day that a big envelope addressed to the Rollings Reliable Baking
- Powder Company of Montreal had been dropped into the post office
- box a month ago, and she suspicioned that somebody was trying for
- the prize they'd offered for the best story that introduced the
- name of their baking powder. She said it wasn't addressed in
- your writing, but I thought maybe it was you."
-
- "Indeed, no! I saw the prize offer, but I'd never dream of
- competing for it. I think it would be perfectly disgraceful to
- write a story to advertise a baking powder. It would be almost
- as bad as Judson Parker's patent medicine fence."
-
- So spake Anne loftily, little dreaming of the valley of
- humiliation awaiting her. That very evening Diana popped into
- the porch gable, bright-eyed and rosy cheeked, carrying a letter.
-
- "Oh, Anne, here's a letter for you. I was at the office, so I
- thought I'd bring it along. Do open it quick. If it is what I
- believe it is I shall just be wild with delight." Anne, puzzled,
- opened the letter and glanced over the typewritten contents.
-
-
- Miss Anne Shirley,
- Green Gables,
- Avonlea, P.E. Island.
-
- "DEAR MADAM: We have much pleasure in informing you that
- your charming story `Averil's Atonement' has won the prize
- of twenty-five dollars offered in our recent competition.
- We enclose the check herewith. We are arranging for the
- publication of the story in several prominent Canadian
- newspapers, and we also intend to have it printed in
- pamphlet form for distribution among our patrons.
- Thanking you for the interest you have shown in
- our enterprise, we remain,
-
- Yours very truly,
- THE ROLLINGS RELIABLE
- BAKING POWDER Co."
-
-
- "I don't understand," said Anne, blankly.
-
- Diana clapped her hands.
-
- "Oh, I KNEW it would win the prize -- I was sure of it.
- _I_ sent your story into the competition, Anne."
-
- "Diana -- Barry!"
-
- "Yes, I did," said Diana gleefully, perching herself on the bed.
- "When I saw the offer I thought of your story in a minute, and at
- first I thought I'd ask you to send it in. But then I was afraid
- you wouldn't -- you had so little faith left in it. So I just
- decided I'd send the copy you gave me, and say nothing about it.
- Then, if it didn't win the prize, you'd never know and you wouldn't
- feel badly over it, because the stories that failed were not to be
- returned, and if it did you'd have such a delightful surprise."
-
- Diana was not the most discerning of mortals, but just at this
- moment it struck her that Anne was not looking exactly overjoyed.
- The surprise was there, beyond doubt -- but where was the delight?
-
- "Why, Anne, you don't seem a bit pleased!" she exclaimed.
-
- Anne instantly manufactured a smile and put it on.
-
- "Of course I couldn't be anything but pleased over your unselfish
- wish to give me pleasure," she said slowly. "But you know -- I'm
- so amazed -- I can't realize it -- and I don't understand. There
- wasn't a word in my story about -- about -- " Anne choked a little
- over the word -- "baking powder."
-
- "Oh, _I_ put that in," said Diana, reassured. "It was as easy as
- wink -- and of course my experience in our old Story Club helped me.
- You know the scene where Averil makes the cake? Well, I just stated
- that she used the Rollings Reliable in it, and that was why it turned
- out so well; and then, in the last paragraph, where PERCEVAL clasps
- AVERIL in his arms and says, `Sweetheart, the beautiful coming years
- will bring us the fulfilment of our home of dreams,' I added, `in which
- we will never use any baking powder except Rollings Reliable.'"
-
- "Oh," gasped poor Anne, as if some one had dashed cold water on her.
-
- "And you've won the twenty-five dollars," continued Diana jubilantly.
- "Why, I heard Priscilla say once that the Canadian Woman only pays
- five dollars for a story!"
-
- Anne held out the hateful pink slip in shaking fingers.
-
- "I can't take it -- it's yours by right, Diana. You sent the
- story in and made the alterations. I -- I would certainly never
- have sent it. So you must take the check."
-
- "I'd like to see myself," said Diana scornfully. "Why, what I
- did wasn't any trouble. The honor of being a friend of the
- prizewinner is enough for me. Well, I must go. I should have
- gone straight home from the post office for we have company.
- But I simply had to come and hear the news. I'm so glad for
- your sake, Anne."
-
- Anne suddenly bent forward, put her arms about Diana, and kissed
- her cheek.
-
- "I think you are the sweetest and truest friend in the world,
- Diana," she said, with a little tremble in her voice, "and I
- assure you I appreciate the motive of what you've done."
-
- Diana, pleased and embarrassed, got herself away, and poor Anne,
- after flinging the innocent check into her bureau drawer as if it
- were blood-money, cast herself on her bed and wept tears of shame
- and outraged sensibility. Oh, she could never live this down -- never!
-
- Gilbert arrived at dusk, brimming over with congratulations,
- for he had called at Orchard Slope and heard the news. But his
- congratulations died on his lips at sight of Anne's face.
-
- "Why, Anne, what is the matter? I expected to find you radiant
- over winning Rollings Reliable prize. Good for you!"
-
- "Oh, Gilbert, not you," implored Anne, in an ET-TU BRUTE tone.
- "I thought YOU would understand. Can't you see how awful it is?"
-
- "I must confess I can't. WHAT is wrong?"
-
- "Everything," moaned Anne. "I feel as if I were disgraced forever.
- What do you think a mother would feel like if she found her
- child tattooed over with a baking powder advertisement?
- I feel just the same. I loved my poor little story, and I
- wrote it out of the best that was in me. And it is SACRILEGE to
- have it degraded to the level of a baking powder advertisement.
- Don't you remember what Professor Hamilton used to tell us in the
- literature class at Queen's? He said we were never to write a
- word for a low or unworthy motive, but always to cling to the
- very highest ideals. What will he think when he hears I've
- written a story to advertise Rollings Reliable? And, oh, when it
- gets out at Redmond! Think how I'll be teased and laughed at!"
-
- "That you won't," said Gilbert, wondering uneasily if it were
- that confounded Junior's opinion in particular over which Anne
- was worried. "The Reds will think just as I thought -- that you,
- being like nine out of ten of us, not overburdened with worldly
- wealth, had taken this way of earning an honest penny to help
- yourself through the year. I don't see that there's anything low
- or unworthy about that, or anything ridiculous either. One would
- rather write masterpieces of literature no doubt -- but meanwhile
- board and tuition fees have to be paid."
-
- This commonsense, matter-of-fact view of the case cheered Anne a
- little. At least it removed her dread of being laughed at,
- though the deeper hurt of an outraged ideal remained.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVI
-
- Adjusted Relationships
-
-
- "It's the homiest spot I ever saw -- it's homier than home,"
- avowed Philippa Gordon, looking about her with delighted eyes.
- They were all assembled at twilight in the big living-room at
- Patty's Place -- Anne and Priscilla, Phil and Stella, Aunt Jamesina,
- Rusty, Joseph, the Sarah-Cat, and Gog and Magog. The firelight
- shadows were dancing over the walls; the cats were purring;
- and a huge bowl of hothouse chrysanthemums, sent to Phil by one
- of the victims, shone through the golden gloom like creamy moons.
-
- It was three weeks since they had considered themselves settled,
- and already all believed the experiment would be a success. The
- first fortnight after their return had been a pleasantly exciting
- one; they had been busy setting up their household goods, organizing
- their little establishment, and adjusting different opinions.
-
- Anne was not over-sorry to leave Avonlea when the time came to
- return to college. The last few days of her vacation had not
- been pleasant. Her prize story had been published in the Island
- papers; and Mr. William Blair had, upon the counter of his
- store, a huge pile of pink, green and yellow pamphlets,
- containing it, one of which he gave to every customer. He sent a
- complimentary bundle to Anne, who promptly dropped them all in
- the kitchen stove. Her humiliation was the consequence of her
- own ideals only, for Avonlea folks thought it quite splendid
- that she should have won the prize. Her many friends regarded
- her with honest admiration; her few foes with scornful envy.
- Josie Pye said she believed Anne Shirley had just copied the story;
- she was sure she remembered reading it in a paper years before.
- The Sloanes, who had found out or guessed that Charlie had been
- "turned down," said they didn't think it was much to be proud of;
- almost any one could have done it, if she tried. Aunt Atossa
- told Anne she was very sorry to hear she had taken to writing
- novels; nobody born and bred in Avonlea would do it; that was
- what came of adopting orphans from goodness knew where, with
- goodness knew what kind of parents. Even Mrs. Rachel Lynde was
- darkly dubious about the propriety of writing fiction, though she
- was almost reconciled to it by that twenty-five dollar check.
-
- "It is perfectly amazing, the price they pay for such lies,
- that's what," she said, half-proudly, half-severely.
-
- All things considered, it was a relief when going-away time came.
- And it was very jolly to be back at Redmond, a wise, experienced
- Soph with hosts of friends to greet on the merry opening day.
- Pris and Stella and Gilbert were there, Charlie Sloane, looking
- more important than ever a Sophomore looked before, Phil, with
- the Alec-and-Alonzo question still unsettled, and Moody Spurgeon
- MacPherson. Moody Spurgeon had been teaching school ever since
- leaving Queen's, but his mother had concluded it was high time
- he gave it up and turned his attention to learning how to be a
- minister. Poor Moody Spurgeon fell on hard luck at the very
- beginning of his college career. Half a dozen ruthless Sophs,
- who were among his fellow-boarders, swooped down upon him one
- night and shaved half of his head. In this guise the luckless
- Moody Spurgeon had to go about until his hair grew again. He
- told Anne bitterly that there were times when he had his doubts
- as to whether he was really called to be a minister.
-
- Aunt Jamesina did not come until the girls had Patty's Place
- ready for her. Miss Patty had sent the key to Anne, with a
- letter in which she said Gog and Magog were packed in a box under
- the spare-room bed, but might be taken out when wanted; in a
- postscript she added that she hoped the girls would be careful
- about putting up pictures. The living room had been newly
- papered five years before and she and Miss Maria did not want any
- more holes made in that new paper than was absolutely necessary.
- For the rest she trusted everything to Anne.
-
- How those girls enjoyed putting their nest in order! As Phil said,
- it was almost as good as getting married. You had the fun of
- homemaking without the bother of a husband. All brought something
- with them to adorn or make comfortable the little house. Pris and
- Phil and Stella had knick-knacks and pictures galore, which latter
- they proceeded to hang according to taste, in reckless disregard
- of Miss Patty's new paper.
-
- "We'll putty the holes up when we leave, dear -- she'll never know,"
- they said to protesting Anne.
-
- Diana had given Anne a pine needle cushion and Miss Ada had given
- both her and Priscilla a fearfully and wonderfully embroidered one.
- Marilla had sent a big box of preserves, and darkly hinted at a
- hamper for Thanksgiving, and Mrs. Lynde gave Anne a patchwork quilt
- and loaned her five more.
-
- "You take them," she said authoritatively. "They might as well be
- in use as packed away in that trunk in the garret for moths to gnaw."
-
- No moths would ever have ventured near those quilts, for they
- reeked of mothballs to such an extent that they had to be hung in
- the orchard of Patty's Place a full fortnight before they could
- be endured indoors. Verily, aristocratic Spofford Avenue had
- rarely beheld such a display. The gruff old millionaire who
- lived "next door" came over and wanted to buy the gorgeous red
- and yellow "tulip-pattern" one which Mrs. Rachel had given Anne.
- He said his mother used to make quilts like that, and by Jove, he
- wanted one to remind him of her. Anne would not sell it, much to
- his disappointment, but she wrote all about it to Mrs. Lynde.
- That highly-gratified lady sent word back that she had one just
- like it to spare, so the tobacco king got his quilt after all,
- and insisted on having it spread on his bed, to the disgust of
- his fashionable wife.
-
- Mrs. Lynde's quilts served a very useful purpose that winter.
- Patty's Place for all its many virtues, had its faults also.
- It was really a rather cold house; and when the frosty nights
- came the girls were very glad to snuggle down under Mrs. Lynde's
- quilts, and hoped that the loan of them might be accounted unto
- her for righteousness. Anne had the blue room she had coveted
- at sight. Priscilla and Stella had the large one. Phil was
- blissfully content with the little one over the kitchen; and
- Aunt Jamesina was to have the downstairs one off the living-room.
- Rusty at first slept on the doorstep.
-
- Anne, walking home from Redmond a few days after her return,
- became aware that the people that she met surveyed her with a
- covert, indulgent smile. Anne wondered uneasily what was the
- matter with her. Was her hat crooked? Was her belt loose?
- Craning her head to investigate, Anne, for the first time,
- saw Rusty.
-
- Trotting along behind her, close to her heels, was quite the
- most forlorn specimen of the cat tribe she had ever beheld.
- The animal was well past kitten-hood, lank, thin, disreputable
- looking. Pieces of both ears were lacking, one eye was
- temporarily out of repair, and one jowl ludicrously swollen.
- As for color, if a once black cat had been well and thoroughly
- singed the result would have resembled the hue of this waif's
- thin, draggled, unsightly fur.
-
- Anne "shooed," but the cat would not "shoo." As long as she
- stood he sat back on his haunches and gazed at her reproachfully
- out of his one good eye; when she resumed her walk he followed.
- Anne resigned herself to his company until she reached the gate
- of Patty's Place, which she coldly shut in his face, fondly
- supposing she had seen the last of him. But when, fifteen
- minutes later, Phil opened the door, there sat the rusty-brown
- cat on the step. More, he promptly darted in and sprang upon
- Anne's lap with a half-pleading, half-triumphant "miaow."
-
- "Anne," said Stella severely, "do you own that animal?"
-
- "No, I do NOT," protested disgusted Anne. "The creature followed
- me home from somewhere. I couldn't get rid of him. Ugh, get down.
- I like decent cats reasonably well; but I don't like beasties of
- your complexion."
-
- Pussy, however, refused to get down. He coolly curled up in
- Anne's lap and began to purr.
-
- "He has evidently adopted you," laughed Priscilla.
-
- "I won't BE adopted," said Anne stubbornly.
-
- "The poor creature is starving," said Phil pityingly. "Why, his
- bones are almost coming through his skin."
-
- "Well, I'll give him a square meal and then he must return to
- whence he came," said Anne resolutely.
-
- The cat was fed and put out. In the morning he was still
- on the doorstep. On the doorstep he continued to sit, bolting
- in whenever the door was opened. No coolness of welcome had
- the least effect on him; of nobody save Anne did he take the
- least notice. Out of compassion the girls fed him; but when
- a week had passed they decided that something must be done.
- The cat's appearance had improved. His eye and cheek had
- resumed their normal appearance; he was not quite so thin;
- and he had been seen washing his face.
-
- "But for all that we can't keep him," said Stella. "Aunt Jimsie
- is coming next week and she will bring the Sarah-cat with her.
-
- We can't keep two cats; and if we did this Rusty Coat would
- fight all the time with the Sarah-cat. He's a fighter by nature.
- He had a pitched battle last evening with the tobacco-king's cat
- and routed him, horse, foot and artillery."
-
- "We must get rid of him," agreed Anne, looking darkly at the
- subject of their discussion, who was purring on the hearth rug
- with an air of lamb-like meekness. "But the question is -- how?
- How can four unprotected females get rid of a cat who won't be
- got rid of?"
-
- We must chloroform him," said Phil briskly. "That is the most
- humane way."
-
- "Who of us knows anything about chloroforming a cat?" demanded
- Anne gloomily.
-
- "I do, honey. It's one of my few -- sadly few -- useful accomplishments.
- I've disposed of several at home. You take the cat in the morning and
- give him a good breakfast. Then you take an old burlap bag -- there's
- one in the back porch -- put the cat on it and turn over him a wooden box.
- Then take a two-ounce bottle of chloroform, uncork it, and slip it under
- the edge of the box. Put a heavy weight on top of the box and leave it
- till evening. The cat will be dead, curled up peacefully as if he
- were asleep. No pain -- no struggle."
-
- "It sounds easy," said Anne dubiously.
-
- "It IS easy. Just leave it to me. I'll see to it," said Phil reassuringly.
-
- Accordingly the chloroform was procured, and the next morning Rusty was
- lured to his doom. He ate his breakfast, licked his chops, and climbed
- into Anne's lap. Anne's heart misgave her. This poor creature loved her
- -- trusted her. How could she be a party to this destruction?
-
- "Here, take him," she said hastily to Phil. "I feel like a murderess."
-
- "He won't suffer, you know," comforted Phil, but Anne had fled.
-
- The fatal deed was done in the back porch. Nobody went near it
- that day. But at dusk Phil declared that Rusty must be buried.
-
- "Pris and Stella must dig his grave in the orchard," declared Phil,
- "and Anne must come with me to lift the box off. That's the part
- I always hate."
-
- The two conspirators tip-toed reluctantly to the back porch.
- Phil gingerly lifted the stone she had put on the box. Suddenly,
- faint but distinct, sounded an unmistakable mew under the box.
-
- "He -- he isn't dead," gasped Anne, sitting blankly down on the
- kitchen doorstep.
-
- "He must be," said Phil incredulously.
-
- Another tiny mew proved that he wasn't. The two girls stared at
- each other."
-
- What will we do?" questioned Anne.
-
- "Why in the world don't you come?" demanded Stella, appearing in
- the doorway. "We've got the grave ready. `What silent still and
- silent all?'" she quoted teasingly.
-
- "`Oh, no, the voices of the dead Sound like the distant torrent's fall,'"
- promptly counter-quoted Anne, pointing solemnly to the box.
-
- A burst of laughter broke the tension.
-
- "We must leave him here till morning," said Phil, replacing the stone.
- "He hasn't mewed for five minutes. Perhaps the mews we heard were his
- dying groan. Or perhaps we merely imagined them, under the strain of
- our guilty consciences."
-
- But, when the box was lifted in the morning, Rusty bounded at one gay
- leap to Anne's shoulder where he began to lick her face affectionately.
- Never was there a cat more decidedly alive.
-
- "Here's a knot hole in the box," groaned Phil. "I never saw it.
- That's why he didn't die. Now, we've got to do it all over again."
-
- "No, we haven't," declared Anne suddenly. "Rusty isn't going to be
- killed again. He's my cat -- and you've just got to make the best of it."
-
- "Oh, well, if you'll settle with Aunt Jimsie and the Sarah-cat,"
- said Stella, with the air of one washing her hands of the whole affair.
-
- From that time Rusty was one of the family. He slept o'nights on the
- scrubbing cushion in the back porch and lived on the fat of the land.
- By the time Aunt Jamesina came he was plump and glossy and tolerably
- respectable. But, like Kipling's cat, he "walked by himself."
- His paw was against every cat, and every cat's paw against him.
- One by one he vanquished the aristocratic felines of Spofford Avenue.
- As for human beings, he loved Anne and Anne alone. Nobody else even
- dared stroke him. An angry spit and something that sounded much like
- very improper language greeted any one who did.
-
- "The airs that cat puts on are perfectly intolerable," declared Stella.
-
- "Him was a nice old pussens, him was," vowed Anne, cuddling her pet defiantly.
-
- "Well, I don't know how he and the Sarah-cat will ever make out
- to live together," said Stella pesimistically. "Cat-fights in
- the orchard o'nights are bad enough. But cat-fights here in the
- livingroom are unthinkable." In due time Aunt Jamesina arrived.
- Anne and Priscilla and Phil had awaited her advent rather dubiously;
- but when Aunt Jamesina was enthroned in the rocking chair before the
- open fire they figuratively bowed down and worshipped her.
-
- Aunt Jamesina was a tiny old woman with a little, softly-triangular face,
- and large, soft blue eyes that were alight with unquenchable youth, and
- as full of hopes as a girl's. She had pink cheeks and snow-white hair
- which she wore in quaint little puffs over her ears.
-
- "It's a very old-fashioned way," she said, knitting industriously
- at something as dainty and pink as a sunset cloud. "But _I_ am old-fashioned.
- My clothes are, and it stands to reason my opinions are, too. I don't say
- they're any the better of that, mind you. In fact, I daresay they're a good
- deal the worse. But they've worn nice and easy. New shoes are smarter than
- old ones, but the old ones are more comfortable. I'm old enough to indulge
- myself in the matter of shoes and opinions. I mean to take it real easy here.
- I know you expect me to look after you and keep you proper, but I'm not going
- to do it.
-
- You're old enough to know how to behave if you're ever going to be.
- So, as far as I am concerned," concluded Aunt Jamesina, with a twinkle
- in her young eyes, "you can all go to destruction in your own way."
-
- "Oh, will somebody separate those cats?" pleaded Stella, shudderingly.
-
- Aunt Jamesina had brought with her not only the Sarah-cat but Joseph.
- Joseph, she explained, had belonged to a dear friend of hers who had
- gone to live in Vancouver.
-
- "She couldn't take Joseph with her so she begged me to take him.
- I really couldn't refuse. He's a beautiful cat -- that is, his
- disposition is beautiful. She called him Joseph because his coat
- is of many colors."
-
- It certainly was. Joseph, as the disgusted Stella said, looked
- like a walking rag-bag. It was impossible to say what his ground
- color was. His legs were white with black spots on them.
- His back was gray with a huge patch of yellow on one side and a
- black patch on the other. His tail was yellow with a gray tip.
- One ear was black and one yellow. A black patch over one eye gave
- him a fearfully rakish look. In reality he was meek and inoffensive,
- of a sociable disposition. In one respect, if in no other, Joseph
- was like a lily of the field. He toiled not neither did he spin
- or catch mice. Yet Solomon in all his glory slept not on softer
- cushions, or feasted more fully on fat things.
-
- Joseph and the Sarah-cat arrived by express in separate boxes.
- After they had been released and fed, Joseph selected the cushion
- and corner which appealed to him, and the Sarah-cat gravely sat
- herself down before the fire and proceeded to wash her face. She
- was a large, sleek, gray-and-white cat, with an enormous dignity
- which was not at all impaired by any consciousness of her plebian
- origin. She had been given to Aunt Jamesina by her washerwoman.
-
- "Her name was Sarah, so my husband always called puss the
- Sarah-cat," explained Aunt Jamesina. "She is eight years old,
- and a remarkable mouser. Don't worry, Stella. The Sarah-cat
- NEVER fights and Joseph rarely."
-
- "They'll have to fight here in self-defense," said Stella.
-
- At this juncture Rusty arrived on the scene. He bounded
- joyously half way across the room before he saw the intruders.
- Then he stopped short; his tail expanded until it was as big as
- three tails. The fur on his back rose up in a defiant arch;
- Rusty lowered his head, uttered a fearful shriek of hatred and
- defiance, and launched himself at the Sarah-cat.
-
- The stately animal had stopped washing her face and was looking
- at him curiously. She met his onslaught with one contemptuous
- sweep of her capable paw. Rusty went rolling helplessly over on
- the rug; he picked himself up dazedly. What sort of a cat was
- this who had boxed his ears? He looked dubiously at the Sarah-cat.
- Would he or would he not? The Sarah-cat deliberately turned her
- back on him and resumed her toilet operations. Rusty decided that
- he would not. He never did. From that time on the Sarah-cat ruled
- the roost. Rusty never again interfered with her.
-
- But Joseph rashly sat up and yawned. Rusty, burning to avenge
- his disgrace, swooped down upon him. Joseph, pacific by nature,
- could fight upon occasion and fight well. The result was a
- series of drawn battles. Every day Rusty and Joseph fought at
- sight. Anne took Rusty's part and detested Joseph. Stella was
- in despair. But Aunt Jamesina only laughed.
-
- Let them fight it out," she said tolerantly. "They'll make friends
- after a bit. Joseph needs some exercise -- he was getting too fat.
- And Rusty has to learn he isn't the only cat in the world."
-
- Eventually Joseph and Rusty accepted the situation and from sworn
- enemies became sworn friends. They slept on the same cushion with
- their paws about each other, and gravely washed each other's faces.
-
- "We've all got used to each other," said Phil. "And I've learned
- how to wash dishes and sweep a floor."
-
- "But you needn't try to make us believe you can chloroform a cat,"
- laughed Anne.
-
- "It was all the fault of the knothole," protested Phil.
-
- "It was a good thing the knothole was there," said Aunt Jamesina
- rather severely. "Kittens HAVE to be drowned, I admit, or the
- world would be overrun. But no decent, grown-up cat should be
- done to death -- unless he sucks eggs."
-
- "You wouldn't have thought Rusty very decent if you'd seen him when
- he came here," said Stella. "He positively looked like the Old Nick."
-
- "I don't believe Old Nick can be so very, ugly" said Aunt Jamesina
- reflectively. "He wouldn't do so much harm if he was. _I_ always
- think of him as a rather handsome gentleman."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVII
-
- A Letter from Davy
-
-
- "It's beginning to snow, girls," said Phil, coming in one
- November evening, "and there are the loveliest little stars and
- crosses all over the garden walk. I never noticed before what
- exquisite things snowflakes really are. One has time to notice
- things like that in the simple life. Bless you all for permitting
- me to live it. It's really delightful to feel worried because
- butter has gone up five cents a pound."
-
- "Has it?" demanded Stella, who kept the household accounts.
-
- "It has -- and here's your butter. I'm getting quite expert at marketing.
- It's better fun than flirting," concluded Phil gravely.
-
- "Everything is going up scandalously," sighed Stella.
-
- "Never mind. Thank goodness air and salvation are still free,"
- said Aunt Jamesina.
-
- "And so is laughter," added Anne. "There's no tax on it yet
- and that is well, because you're all going to laugh presently.
- I'm going to read you Davy's letter. His spelling has improved
- immensely this past year, though he is not strong on apostrophes,
- and he certainly possesses the gift of writing an interesting letter.
- Listen and laugh, before we settle down to the evening's study-grind."
-
- "Dear Anne," ran Davy's letter, "I take my pen to tell you that
- we are all pretty well and hope this will find you the same.
- It's snowing some today and Marilla says the old woman in the sky
- is shaking her feather beds. Is the old woman in the sky God's
- wife, Anne? I want to know.
-
- "Mrs. Lynde has been real sick but she is better now. She fell
- down the cellar stairs last week. When she fell she grabbed hold
- of the shelf with all the milk pails and stewpans on it, and it
- gave way and went down with her and made a splendid crash.
- Marilla thought it was an earthquake at first.
-
- One of the stewpans was all dinged up and Mrs. Lynde straned her ribs.
- The doctor came and gave her medicine to rub on her ribs but
- she didn't under stand him and took it all inside instead.
- The doctor said it was a wonder it dident kill her but it dident
- and it cured her ribs and Mrs. Lynde says doctors dont know much
- anyhow. But we couldent fix up the stewpan. Marilla had to
- throw it out. Thanksgiving was last week. There was no school
- and we had a great dinner. I et mince pie and rost turkey and
- frut cake and donuts and cheese and jam and choklut cake.
- Marilla said I'd die but I dident. Dora had earake after it,
- only it wasent in her ears it was in her stummick. I dident
- have earake anywhere.
-
- "Our new teacher is a man. He does things for jokes. Last week
- he made all us third-class boys write a composishun on what kind
- of a wife we'd like to have and the girls on what kind of a
- husband. He laughed fit to kill when he read them. This was
- mine. I thought youd like to see it.
-
- "`The kind of a wife I'd like to Have.
-
- "`She must have good manners and get my meals on time and do
- what I tell her and always be very polite to me. She must be
- fifteen yers old. She must be good to the poor and keep her
- house tidy and be good tempered and go to church regularly.
- She must be very handsome and have curly hair. If I get a wife
- that is just what I like Ill be an awful good husband to her.
- I think a woman ought to be awful good to her husband. Some poor
- women havent any husbands.
-
- `THE END.'"
-
-
- "I was at Mrs. Isaac Wrights funeral at White Sands last week.
- The husband of the corpse felt real sorry. Mrs. Lynde says
- Mrs. Wrights grandfather stole a sheep but Marilla says we mustent
- speak ill of the dead. Why mustent we, Anne? I want to know.
- It's pretty safe, ain't it?
-
- "Mrs. Lynde was awful mad the other day because I asked her if
- she was alive in Noah's time. I dident mean to hurt her feelings.
- I just wanted to know. Was she, Anne?
-
- "Mr. Harrison wanted to get rid of his dog. So he hunged him
- once but he come to life and scooted for the barn while Mr.
- Harrison was digging the grave, so he hunged him again and he
- stayed dead that time. Mr. Harrison has a new man working for him.
- He's awful okward. Mr. Harrison says he is left handed in both
- his feet. Mr. Barry's hired man is lazy. Mrs. Barry says that
- but Mr. Barry says he aint lazy exactly only he thinks it easier
- to pray for things than to work for them.
-
- "Mrs. Harmon Andrews prize pig that she talked so much of died
- in a fit. Mrs. Lynde says it was a judgment on her for pride.
- But I think it was hard on the pig. Milty Boulter has been sick.
- The doctor gave him medicine and it tasted horrid. I offered to
- take it for him for a quarter but the Boulters are so mean.
- Milty says he'd rather take it himself and save his money.
- I asked Mrs. Boulter how a person would go about catching a man and
- she got awful mad and said she dident know, shed never chased men.
-
- "The A.V.I.S. is going to paint the hall again. They're tired
- of having it blue.
-
- "The new minister was here to tea last night. He took three
- pieces of pie.
-
- If I did that Mrs. Lynde would call me piggy. And he et fast and
- took big bites and Marilla is always telling me not to do that.
- Why can ministers do what boys can't? I want to know.
-
- "I haven't any more news. Here are six kisses. xxxxxx. Dora
- sends one. Heres hers. x.
-
- "Your loving friend
- DAVID KEITH"
-
-
- "P.S. Anne, who was the devils father? I want to know."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVIII
-
- Miss Josepine Remembers the Anne-girl
-
-
- When Christmas holidays came the girls of Patty's Place scattered to
- their respective homes, but Aunt Jamesina elected to stay where she was.
-
- "I couldn't go to any of the places I've been invited and take
- those three cats," she said. "And I'm not going to leave the
- poor creatures here alone for nearly three weeks. If we had any
- decent neighbors who would feed them I might, but there's nothing
- except millionaires on this street. So I'll stay here and keep
- Patty's Place warm for you."
-
- Anne went home with the usual joyous anticipations -- which were
- not wholly fulfilled. She found Avonlea in the grip of such an
- early, cold, and stormy winter as even the "oldest inhabitant"
- could not recall. Green Gables was literally hemmed in by huge
- drifts. Almost every day of that ill-starred vacation it stormed
- fiercely; and even on fine days it drifted unceasingly. No
- sooner were the roads broken than they filled in again. It was
- almost impossible to stir out. The A.V.I.S. tried, on three
- evenings, to have a party in honor of the college students, and
- on each evening the storm was so wild that nobody could go, so
- they gave up the attempt in despair. Anne, despite her love of
- and loyalty to Green Gables, could not help thinking longingly of
- Patty's Place, its cosy open fire, Aunt Jamesina's mirthful eyes,
- the three cats, the merry chatter of the girls, the pleasantness
- of Friday evenings when college friends dropped in to talk of
- grave and gay.
-
- Anne was lonely; Diana, during the whole of the holidays, was
- imprisoned at home with a bad attack of bronchitis. She could
- not come to Green Gables and it was rarely Anne could get to
- Orchard Slope, for the old way through the Haunted Wood was
- impassable with drifts, and the long way over the frozen Lake of
- Shining Waters was almost as bad. Ruby Gillis was sleeping in
- the white-heaped graveyard; Jane Andrews was teaching a school on
- western prairies. Gilbert, to be sure, was still faithful, and
- waded up to Green Gables every possible evening. But Gilbert's
- visits were not what they once were. Anne almost dreaded them.
- It was very disconcerting to look up in the midst of a sudden
- silence and find Gilbert's hazel eyes fixed upon her with a quite
- unmistakable expression in their grave depths; and it was still
- more disconcerting to find herself blushing hotly and
- uncomfortably under his gaze, just as if -- just as if -- well,
- it was very embarrassing. Anne wished herself back at Patty's
- Place, where there was always somebody else about to take the
- edge off a delicate situation. At Green Gables Marilla went
- promptly to Mrs. Lynde's domain when Gilbert came and insisted
- on taking the twins with her. The significance of this was
- unmistakable and Anne was in a helpless fury over it.
-
- Davy, however, was perfectly happy. He reveled in getting out in
- the morning and shoveling out the paths to the well and henhouse.
- He gloried in the Christmas-tide delicacies which Marilla and
- Mrs. Lynde vied with each other in preparing for Anne, and he
- was reading an enthralling tale, in a school library book, of a
- wonderful hero who seemed blessed with a miraculous faculty for
- getting into scrapes from which he was usually delivered by an
- earthquake or a volcanic explosion, which blew him high and dry
- out of his troubles, landed him in a fortune, and closed the
- story with proper ECLAT.
-
- "I tell you it's a bully story, Anne," he said ecstatically.
- "I'd ever so much rather read it than the Bible."
-
- "Would you?" smiled Anne.
-
- Davy peered curiously at her.
-
- "You don't seem a bit shocked, Anne. Mrs. Lynde was awful
- shocked when I said it to her."
-
- "No, I'm not shocked, Davy. I think it's quite natural that a
- nine-year-old boy would sooner read an adventure story than the
- Bible. But when you are older I hope and think that you will
- realize what a wonderful book the Bible is."
-
- "Oh, I think some parts of it are fine," conceded Davy. "That
- story about Joseph now -- it's bully. But if I'd been Joseph _I_
- wouldn't have forgive the brothers. No, siree, Anne. I'd have
- cut all their heads off. Mrs. Lynde was awful mad when I said that
- and shut the Bible up and said she'd never read me any more of it if
- I talked like that. So I don't talk now when she reads it Sunday
- afternoons; I just think things and say them to Milty Boulter next
- day in school. I told Milty the story about Elisha and the bears
- and it scared him so he's never made fun of Mr. Harrison's bald
- head once. Are there any bears on P.E. Island, Anne? I want to know."
-
- "Not nowadays," said Anne, absently, as the wind blew a scud of
- snow against the window. "Oh, dear, will it ever stop storming."
-
- "God knows," said Davy airily, preparing to resume his reading.
-
- Anne WAS shocked this time.
-
- "Davy!" she exclaimed reproachfully.
-
- "Mrs. Lynde says that," protested Davy. "One night last week
- Marilla said `Will Ludovic Speed and Theodora Dix EVER get
- married" and Mrs. Lynde said, `God knows' -- just like that."
-
- "Well, it wasn't right for her to say it," said Anne, promptly
- deciding upon which horn of this dilemma to empale herself.
- "It isn't right for anybody to take that name in vain or
- speak it lightly, Davy. Don't ever do it again."
-
- "Not if I say it slow and solemn, like the minister?" queried
- Davy gravely.
-
- "No, not even then."
-
- "Well, I won't. Ludovic Speed and Theodora Dix live in Middle
- Grafton and Mrs. Rachel says he has been courting her for a
- hundred years. Won't they soon be too old to get married, Anne?
- I hope Gilbert won't court YOU that long. When are you going to
- be married, Anne? Mrs. Lynde says it's a sure thing."
-
- "Mrs. Lynde is a --" began Anne hotly; then stopped. "Awful old
- gossip," completed Davy calmly. "That's what every one calls her.
- But is it a sure thing, Anne? I want to know."
-
- "You're a very silly little boy, Davy," said Anne, stalking
- haughtily out of the room. The kitchen was deserted and she sat
- down by the window in the fast falling wintry twilight. The sun
- had set and the wind had died down. A pale chilly moon looked
- out behind a bank of purple clouds in the west. The sky faded
- out, but the strip of yellow along the western horizon grew
- brighter and fiercer, as if all the stray gleams of light were
- concentrating in one spot; the distant hills, rimmed with
- priest-like firs, stood out in dark distinctness against it.
- Anne looked across the still, white fields, cold and lifeless
- in the harsh light of that grim sunset, and sighed. She was
- very lonely; and she was sad at heart; for she was wondering
- if she would be able to return to Redmond next year. It did not
- seem likely. The only scholarship possible in the Sophomore year
- was a very small affair. She would not take Marilla's money;
- and there seemed little prospect of being able to earn enough
- in the summer vacation.
-
- "I suppose I'll just have to drop out next year," she thought
- drearily, "and teach a district school again until I earn enough
- to finish my course. And by that time all my old class will have
- graduated and Patty's Place will be out of the question. But there!
- I'm not going to be a coward. I'm thankful I can earn my way through
- if necessary."
-
- "Here's Mr. Harrison wading up the lane," announced Davy, running out.
- "I hope he's brought the mail. It's three days since we got it.
- I want to see what them pesky Grits are doing. I'm a Conservative, Anne.
- And I tell you, you have to keep your eye on them Grits."
-
- Mr. Harrison had brought the mail, and merry letters from Stella
- and Priscilla and Phil soon dissipated Anne's blues. Aunt Jamesina,
- too, had written, saying that she was keeping the hearth-fire alight,
- and that the cats were all well, and the house plants doing fine.
-
- "The weather has been real cold," she wrote, "so I let the cats sleep
- in the house -- Rusty and Joseph on the sofa in the living-room, and
- the Sarah-cat on the foot of my bed. It's real company to hear her
- purring when I wake up in the night and think of my poor daughter in
- the foreign field. If it was anywhere but in India I wouldn't worry,
- but they say the snakes out there are terrible. It takes all the
- Sarah-cats's purring to drive away the thought of those snakes.
- I have enough faith for everything but the snakes. I can't think
- why Providence ever made them. Sometimes I don't think He did.
- I'm inclined to believe the Old Harry had a hand in making THEM."
-
- Anne had left a thin, typewritten communication till the last,
- thinking it unimportant. When she had read it she sat very
- still, with tears in her eyes.
-
- "What is the matter, Anne?" asked Marilla.
-
- "Miss Josephine Barry is dead," said Anne, in a low tone.
-
- "So she has gone at last," said Marilla. "Well, she has been
- sick for over a year, and the Barrys have been expecting to hear
- of her death any time. It is well she is at rest for she has
- suffered dreadfully, Anne. She was always kind to you."
-
- "She has been kind to the last, Marilla. This letter is from her lawyer.
- She has left me a thousand dollars in her will."
-
- "Gracious, ain't that an awful lot of money," exclaimed Davy.
- "She's the woman you and Diana lit on when you jumped into
- the spare room bed, ain't she? Diana told me that story.
- Is that why she left you so much?"
-
- "Hush, Davy," said Anne gently. She slipped away to the porch
- gable with a full heart, leaving Marilla and Mrs. Lynde to talk
- over the news to their hearts' content.
-
- "Do you s'pose Anne will ever get married now?" speculated Davy
- anxiously. "When Dorcas Sloane got married last summer she said
- if she'd had enough money to live on she'd never have been
- bothered with a man, but even a widower with eight children was
- better'n living with a sister-in-law."
-
- "Davy Keith, do hold your tongue," said Mrs. Rachel severely.
- "The way you talk is scandalous for a small boy, that's what."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIX
-
- An Interlude
-
-
- "To think that this is my twentieth birthday, and that I've left
- my teens behind me forever," said Anne, who was curled up on the
- hearth-rug with Rusty in her lap, to Aunt Jamesina who was reading
- in her pet chair. They were alone in the living room. Stella and
- Priscilla had gone to a committee meeting and Phil was upstairs
- adorning herself for a party.
-
- "I suppose you feel kind of, sorry" said Aunt Jamesina. "The teens are
- such a nice part of life. I'm glad I've never gone out of them myself."
-
- Anne laughed.
-
- "You never will, Aunty. You'll be eighteen when you should be a
- hundred. Yes, I'm sorry, and a little dissatisfied as well.
- Miss Stacy told me long ago that by the time I was twenty my
- character would be formed, for good or evil. I don't feel that
- it's what it should be. It's full of flaws."
-
- "So's everybody's," said Aunt Jamesina cheerfully. "Mine's cracked
- in a hundred places. Your Miss Stacy likely meant that when you are
- twenty your character would have got its permanent bent in one direction
- or 'tother, and would go on developing in that line. Don't worry over it,
- Anne. Do your duty by God and your neighbor and yourself, and have a good
- time. That's my philosophy and it's always worked pretty well. Where's
- Phil off to tonight?"
-
- "She's going to a dance, and she's got the sweetest dress for it
- -- creamy yellow silk and cobwebby lace. It just suits those
- brown tints of hers."
-
- "There's magic in the words `silk' and `lace,' isn't there?" said
- Aunt Jamesina. "The very sound of them makes me feel like
- skipping off to a dance. And YELLOW silk. It makes one think of
- a dress of sunshine. I always wanted a yellow silk dress, but
- first my mother and then my husband wouldn't hear of it. The
- very first thing I'm going to do when I get to heaven is to get a
- yellow silk dress."
-
- Amid Anne's peal of laughter Phil came downstairs, trailing clouds
- of glory, and surveyed herself in the long oval mirror on the wall.
-
- "A flattering looking glass is a promoter of amiability," she
- said. "The one in my room does certainly make me green. Do I
- look pretty nice, Anne?"
-
- "Do you really know how pretty you are, Phil?" asked Anne,
- in honest admiration.
-
- "Of course I do. What are looking glasses and men for? That wasn't
- what I meant. Are all my ends tucked in? Is my skirt straight?
- And would this rose look better lower down? I'm afraid it's too high
- -- it will make me look lop-sided. But I hate things tickling my ears."
-
- "Everything is just right, and that southwest dimple of yours is lovely."
-
- "Anne, there's one thing in particular I like about you -- you're
- so ungrudging. There isn't a particle of envy in you."
-
- "Why should she be envious?" demanded Aunt Jamesina. "She's not quite
- as goodlooking as you, maybe, but she's got a far handsomer nose."
-
- "I know it," conceded Phil.
-
- "My nose always has been a great comfort to me," confessed Anne.
-
- "And I love the way your hair grows on your forehead, Anne. And
- that one wee curl, always looking as if it were going to drop,
- but never dropping, is delicious. But as for noses, mine is a
- dreadful worry to me. I know by the time I'm forty it will be
- Byrney. What do you think I'll look like when I'm forty, Anne?"
-
- "Like an old, matronly, married woman," teased Anne.
-
- "I won't," said Phil, sitting down comfortably to wait for her escort.
- "Joseph, you calico beastie, don't you dare jump on my lap. I won't go
- to a dance all over cat hairs. No, Anne, I WON'T look matronly. But no
- doubt I'll be married."
-
- "To Alec or Alonzo?" asked Anne.
-
- "To one of them, I suppose," sighed Phil, "if I can ever decide which."
-
- "It shouldn't be hard to decide," scolded Aunt Jamesina.
-
- "I was born a see-saw Aunty, and nothing can ever prevent me from teetering."
-
- "You ought to be more levelheaded, Philippa."
-
- "It's best to be levelheaded, of course," agreed Philippa, "but you miss
- lots of fun. As for Alec and Alonzo, if you knew them you'd understand
- why it's difficult to choose between them. They're equally nice."
-
- "Then take somebody who is nicer" suggested Aunt Jamesina.
- "There's that Senior who is so devoted to you -- Will Leslie.
- He has such nice, large, mild eyes."
-
- "They're a little bit too large and too mild -- like a cow's,"
- said Phil cruelly.
-
- "What do you say about George Parker?"
-
- "There's nothing to say about him except that he always looks as
- if he had just been starched and ironed."
-
- "Marr Holworthy then. You can't find a fault with him."
-
- "No, he would do if he wasn't poor. I must marry a rich man,
- Aunt Jamesina. That -- and good looks -- is an indispensable
- qualification. I'd marry Gilbert Blythe if he were rich."
-
- "Oh, would you?" said Anne, rather viciously.
-
- "We don't like that idea a little bit, although we don't want
- Gilbert ourselves, oh, no," mocked Phil. "But don't let's talk
- of disagreeable subjects. I'll have to marry sometime, I suppose,
- but I shall put off the evil day as long as I can."
-
- "You mustn't marry anybody you don't love, Phil, when all's said
- and done," said Aunt Jamesina.
-
- "`Oh, hearts that loved in the good old way
- Have been out o' the fashion this many a day.'"
-
- trilled Phil mockingly. "There's the carriage. I fly -- Bi-bi,
- you two old-fashioned darlings."
-
- When Phil had gone Aunt Jamesina looked solemnly at Anne.
-
- "That girl is pretty and sweet and goodhearted, but do you think
- she is quite right in her mind, by spells, Anne?"
-
- "Oh, I don't think there's anything the matter with Phil's mind,"
- said Anne, hiding a smile. "It's just her way of talking."
-
- Aunt Jamesina shook her head.
-
- "Well, I hope so, Anne. I do hope so, because I love her. But _I_
- can't understand her -- she beats me. She isn't like any of the
- girls I ever knew, or any of the girls I was myself."
-
- "How many girls were you, Aunt Jimsie?"
-
- "About half a dozen, my dear."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XX
-
- Gilbert Speaks
-
-
- "This has been a dull, prosy day," yawned Phil, stretching
- herself idly on the sofa, having previously dispossessed two
- exceedingly indignant cats.
-
- Anne looked up from Pickwick Papers. Now that spring
- examinations were over she was treating herself to Dickens.
-
- "It has been a prosy day for us," she said thoughtfully, "but to
- some people it has been a wonderful day. Some one has been
- rapturously happy in it. Perhaps a great deed has been done
- somewhere today -- or a great poem written -- or a great man born.
- And some heart has been broken, Phil."
-
- "Why did you spoil your pretty thought by tagging that last
- sentence on, honey?" grumbled Phil. "I don't like to think of
- broken hearts -- or anything unpleasant."
-
- "Do you think you'll be able to shirk unpleasant things all your
- life, Phil?"
-
- "Dear me, no. Am I not up against them now? You don't call Alec and
- Alonzo pleasant things, do you, when they simply plague my life out?"
-
- "You never take anything seriously, Phil."
-
- "Why should I? There are enough folks who do. The world needs
- people like me, Anne, just to amuse it. It would be a terrible
- place if EVERYBODY were intellectual and serious and in deep,
- deadly earnest. MY mission is, as Josiah Allen says, `to charm
- and allure.' Confess now. Hasn't life at Patty's Place been
- really much brighter and pleasanter this past winter because
- I've been here to leaven you?"
-
- "Yes, it has," owned Anne.
-
- "And you all love me -- even Aunt Jamesina, who thinks I'm stark mad.
- So why should I try to be different? Oh, dear, I'm so sleepy. I was
- awake until one last night, reading a harrowing ghost story. I read
- it in bed, and after I had finished it do you suppose I could get out
- of bed to put the light out? No! And if Stella had not fortunately
- come in late that lamp would have burned good and bright till morning.
- When I heard Stella I called her in, explained my predicament, and got
- her to put out the light. If I had got out myself to do it I knew
- something would grab me by the feet when I was getting in again.
- By the way, Anne, has Aunt Jamesina decided what to do this summer?"
-
- "Yes, she's going to stay here. I know she's doing it for the
- sake of those blessed cats, although she says it's too much
- trouble to open her own house, and she hates visiting."
-
- "What are you reading?"
-
- "Pickwick."
-
- "That's a book that always makes me hungry," said Phil. "There's so
- much good eating in it. The characters seem always to be reveling
- on ham and eggs and milk punch. I generally go on a cupboard rummage
- after reading Pickwick. The mere thought reminds me that I'm starving.
- Is there any tidbit in the pantry, Queen Anne?"
-
- "I made a lemon pie this morning. You may have a piece of it."
-
- Phil dashed out to the pantry and Anne betook herself to the
- orchard in company with Rusty. It was a moist, pleasantly-
- odorous night in early spring. The snow was not quite all gone
- from the park; a little dingy bank of it yet lay under the pines
- of the harbor road, screened from the influence of April suns.
- It kept the harbor road muddy, and chilled the evening air.
- But grass was growing green in sheltered spots and Gilbert
- had found some pale, sweet arbutus in a hidden corner.
- He came up from the park, his hands full of it.
-
- Anne was sitting on the big gray boulder in the orchard looking
- at the poem of a bare, birchen bough hanging against the pale red
- sunset with the very perfection of grace. She was building a
- castle in air -- a wondrous mansion whose sunlit courts and
- stately halls were steeped in Araby's perfume, and where she
- reigned queen and chatelaine. She frowned as she saw Gilbert
- coming through the orchard. Of late she had managed not to be
- left alone with Gilbert. But he had caught her fairly now; and
- even Rusty had deserted her.
-
- Gilbert sat down beside her on the boulder and held out his Mayflowers.
-
- "Don't these remind you of home and our old schoolday picnics, Anne?"
-
- Anne took them and buried her face in them.
-
- "I'm in Mr. Silas Sloane's barrens this very minute," she said rapturously.
-
- "I suppose you will be there in reality in a few days?"
-
- "No, not for a fortnight. I'm going to visit with Phil in Bolingbroke
- before I go home. You'll be in Avonlea before I will."
-
- "No, I shall not be in Avonlea at all this summer, Anne. I've been
- offered a job in the Daily News office and I'm going to take it."
-
- "Oh," said Anne vaguely. She wondered what a whole Avonlea summer
- would be like without Gilbert. Somehow she did not like the prospect.
- "Well," she concluded flatly, "it is a good thing for you, of course."
-
- "Yes, I've been hoping I would get it. It will help me out next year."
-
- "You mustn't work too HARD," said Anne, without any very clear
- idea of what she was saying. She wished desperately that Phil
- would come out. "You've studied very constantly this winter.
- Isn't this a delightful evening? Do you know, I found a cluster
- of white violets under that old twisted tree over there today?
- I felt as if I had discovered a gold mine."
-
- "You are always discovering gold mines," said Gilbert -- also absently.
-
- "Let us go and see if we can find some more," suggested Anne eagerly.
- "I'll call Phil and -- "
-
- "Never mind Phil and the violets just now, Anne," said Gilbert quietly,
- taking her hand in a clasp from which she could not free it. "There is
- something I want to say to you."
-
- "Oh, don't say it," cried Anne, pleadingly. "Don't -- PLEASE, Gilbert."
-
- "I must. Things can't go on like this any longer. Anne, I love you.
- You know I do. I -- I can't tell you how much. Will you promise me
- that some day you'll be my wife?"
-
- "I -- I can't," said Anne miserably. "Oh, Gilbert -- you --
- you've spoiled everything."
-
- "Don't you care for me at all?" Gilbert asked after a very
- dreadful pause, during which Anne had not dared to look up.
-
- "Not -- not in that way. I do care a great deal for you as a friend.
- But I don't love you, Gilbert."
-
- "But can't you give me some hope that you will -- yet?"
-
- "No, I can't," exclaimed Anne desperately. "I never, never can
- love you -- in that way -- Gilbert. You must never speak of this
- to me again."
-
- There was another pause -- so long and so dreadful that Anne was
- driven at last to look up. Gilbert's face was white to the lips.
- And his eyes -- but Anne shuddered and looked away. There was
- nothing romantic about this. Must proposals be either grotesque
- or -- horrible? Could she ever forget Gilbert's face?
-
- "Is there anybody else?" he asked at last in a low voice.
-
- "No -- no," said Anne eagerly. "I don't care for any one like
- THAT -- and I LIKE you better than anybody else in the world,
- Gilbert. And we must -- we must go on being friends, Gilbert."
-
- Gilbert gave a bitter little laugh.
-
- "Friends! Your friendship can't satisfy me, Anne. I want your love
- -- and you tell me I can never have that."
-
- "I'm sorry. Forgive me, Gilbert," was all Anne could say.
- Where, oh, where were all the gracious and graceful speeches
- wherewith, in imagination, she had been wont to dismiss
- rejected suitors?
-
- Gilbert released her hand gently.
-
- "There isn't anything to forgive. There have been times when I thought
- you did care. I've deceived myself, that's all. Goodbye, Anne."
-
- Anne got herself to her room, sat down on her window seat behind
- the pines, and cried bitterly. She felt as if something incalculably
- precious had gone out of her life. It was Gilbert's friendship,
- of course. Oh, why must she lose it after this fashion?
-
- "What is the matter, honey?" asked Phil, coming in through
- the moonlit gloom.
-
- Anne did not answer. At that moment she wished Phil were a
- thousand miles away.
-
- "I suppose you've gone and refused Gilbert Blythe. You are an idiot,
- Anne Shirley!"
-
- "Do you call it idiotic to refuse to marry a man I don't love?"
- said Anne coldly, goaded to reply.
-
- "You don't know love when you see it. You've tricked something
- out with your imagination that you think love, and you expect the
- real thing to look like that. There, that's the first sensible
- thing I've ever said in my life. I wonder how I managed it?"
-
- "Phil," pleaded Anne, "please go away and leave me alone for
- a little while. My world has tumbled into pieces. I want to
- reconstruct it."
-
- "Without any Gilbert in it?" said Phil, going.
-
- A world without any Gilbert in it! Anne repeated the words drearily.
- Would it not be a very lonely, forlorn place? Well, it was all
- Gilbert's fault. He had spoiled their beautiful comradeship.
- She must just learn to live without it.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXI
-
- Roses of Yesterday
-
-
- The fortnight Anne spent in Bolingbroke was a very pleasant one,
- with a little under current of vague pain and dissatisfaction
- running through it whenever she thought about Gilbert. There was
- not, however, much time to think about him. "Mount Holly," the
- beautiful old Gordon homestead, was a very gay place, overrun by
- Phil's friends of both sexes. There was quite a bewildering
- succession of drives, dances, picnics and boating parties, all
- expressively lumped together by Phil under the head of "jamborees";
- Alec and Alonzo were so constantly on hand that Anne wondered if
- they ever did anything but dance attendance on that will-o'-the-wisp
- of a Phil. They were both nice, manly fellows, but Anne would not
- be drawn into any opinion as to which was the nicer.
-
- "And I depended so on you to help me make up my mind which of them I
- should promise to marry," mourned Phil.
-
- "You must do that for yourself. You are quite expert at making
- up your mind as to whom other people should marry," retorted Anne,
- rather caustically.
-
- "Oh, that's a very different thing," said Phil, truly.
-
- But the sweetest incident of Anne's sojourn in Bolingbroke was the
- visit to her birthplace -- the little shabby yellow house in an
- out-of-the-way street she had so often dreamed about. She looked
- at it with delighted eyes, as she and Phil turned in at the gate.
-
- "It's almost exactly as I've pictured it," she said. "There is
- no honeysuckle over the windows, but there is a lilac tree by the
- gate, and -- yes, there are the muslin curtains in the windows.
- How glad I am it is still painted yellow."
-
- A very tall, very thin woman opened the door.
-
- "Yes, the Shirleys lived here twenty years ago," she said, in
- answer to Anne's question. "They had it rented. I remember 'em.
- They both died of fever at onct. It was turrible sad. They left
- a baby. I guess it's dead long ago. It was a sickly thing. Old
- Thomas and his wife took it -- as if they hadn't enough of their own."
-
- "It didn't die," said Anne, smiling. "I was that baby."
-
- "You don't say so! Why, you have grown," exclaimed the woman,
- as if she were much surprised that Anne was not still a baby.
- "Come to look at you, I see the resemblance. You're complected
- like your pa. He had red hair. But you favor your ma in your
- eyes and mouth. She was a nice little thing. My darter went to
- school to her and was nigh crazy about her. They was buried in
- the one grave and the School Board put up a tombstone to them as
- a reward for faithful service. Will you come in?"
-
- "Will you let me go all over the house?" asked Anne eagerly.
-
- "Laws, yes, you can if you like. 'Twon't take you long -- there
- ain't much of it. I keep at my man to build a new kitchen, but
- he ain't one of your hustlers. The parlor's in there and there's
- two rooms upstairs. Just prowl about yourselves. I've got to
- see to the baby. The east room was the one you were born in.
- I remember your ma saying she loved to see the sunrise; and I
- mind hearing that you was born just as the sun was rising and
- its light on your face was the first thing your ma saw."
-
- Anne went up the narrow stairs and into that little east room
- with a full heart. It was as a shrine to her. Here her mother
- had dreamed the exquisite, happy dreams of anticipated motherhood;
- here that red sunrise light had fallen over them both in the sacred
- hour of birth; here her mother had died. Anne looked about her
- reverently, her eyes with tears. It was for her one of the jeweled
- hours of life that gleam out radiantly forever in memory.
-
- "Just to think of it -- mother was younger than I am now when I was born,"
- she whispered.
-
- When Anne went downstairs the lady of the house met her in the hall.
- She held out a dusty little packet tied with faded blue ribbon.
-
- "Here's a bundle of old letters I found in that closet upstairs
- when I came here," she said. "I dunno what they are -- I never
- bothered to look in 'em, but the address on the top one is
- `Miss Bertha Willis,' and that was your ma's maiden name.
- You can take 'em if you'd keer to have 'em."
-
- "Oh, thank you -- thank you," cried Anne, clasping the packet rapturously.
-
- "That was all that was in the house," said her hostess. "The furniture
- was all sold to pay the doctor bills, and Mrs. Thomas got your ma's
- clothes and little things. I reckon they didn't last long among that
- drove of Thomas youngsters. They was destructive young animals,
- as I mind 'em."
-
- "I haven't one thing that belonged to my mother," said Anne,
- chokily. "I -- I can never thank you enough for these letters."
-
- "You're quite welcome. Laws, but your eyes is like your ma's.
- She could just about talk with hers. Your father was sorter
- homely but awful nice. I mind hearing folks say when they was
- married that there never was two people more in love with each
- other -- Pore creatures, they didn't live much longer; but they
- was awful happy while they was alive, and I s'pose that counts
- for a good deal."
-
- Anne longed to get home to read her precious letters; but she
- made one little pilgrimage first. She went alone to the green
- corner of the "old" Bolingbroke cemetery where her father and
- mother were buried, and left on their grave the white flowers
- she carried. Then she hastened back to Mount Holly, shut herself
- up in her room, and read the letters. Some were written by her
- father, some by her mother. There were not many -- only a dozen
- in all -- for Walter and Bertha Shirley had not been often
- separated during their courtship. The letters were yellow
- and faded and dim, blurred with the touch of passing years.
- No profound words of wisdom were traced on the stained and
- wrinkled pages, but only lines of love and trust. The sweetness
- of forgotten things clung to them -- the far-off, fond imaginings
- of those long-dead lovers. Bertha Shirley had possessed the gift
- of writing letters which embodied the charming personality of
- the writer in words and thoughts that retained their beauty and
- fragrance after the lapse of time. The letters were tender,
- intimate, sacred. To Anne, the sweetest of all was the one
- written after her birth to the father on a brief absence.
- It was full of a proud young mother's accounts of "baby" --
- her cleverness, her brightness, her thousand sweetnesses.
-
- "I love her best when she is asleep and better still when she is awake,"
- Bertha Shirley had written in the postscript. Probably it was the last
- sentence she had ever penned. The end was very near for her.
-
- "This has been the most beautiful day of my life," Anne said to Phil
- that night. "I've FOUND my father and mother. Those letters have
- made them REAL to me. I'm not an orphan any longer. I feel as if
- I had opened a book and found roses of yesterday, sweet and beloved,
- between its leaves."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXII
-
- Spring and Anne Return to Green Gables
-
-
- The firelight shadows were dancing over the kitchen walls at
- Green Gables, for the spring evening was chilly; through the open
- east window drifted in the subtly sweet voices of the night.
- Marilla was sitting by the fire -- at least, in body. In spirit
- she was roaming olden ways, with feet grown young. Of late
- Marilla had thus spent many an hour, when she thought she should
- have been knitting for the twins.
-
- "I suppose I'm growing old," she said.
-
- Yet Marilla had changed but little in the past nine years, save
- to grow something thinner, and even more angular; there was a
- little more gray in the hair that was still twisted up in the
- same hard knot, with two hairpins -- WERE they the same hairpins?
- -- still stuck through it. But her expression was very different;
- the something about the mouth which had hinted at a sense of humor
- had developed wonderfully; her eyes were gentler and milder, her
- smile more frequent and tender.
-
- Marilla was thinking of her whole past life, her cramped but not
- unhappy childhood, the jealously hidden dreams and the blighted
- hopes of her girlhood, the long, gray, narrow, monotonous years
- of dull middle life that followed. And the coming of Anne --
- the vivid, imaginative, impetuous child with her heart of love,
- and her world of fancy, bringing with her color and warmth and
- radiance, until the wilderness of existence had blossomed like
- the rose. Marilla felt that out of her sixty years she had
- lived only the nine that had followed the advent of Anne.
- And Anne would be home tomorrow night.
-
- The kitchen door opened. Marilla looked up expecting to see Mrs.
- Lynde. Anne stood before her, tall and starry-eyed, with her
- hands full of Mayflowers and violets.
-
- "Anne Shirley!" exclaimed Marilla. For once in her life she was
- surprised out of her reserve; she caught her girl in her arms and
- crushed her and her flowers against her heart, kissing the bright
- hair and sweet face warmly. "I never looked for you till
- tomorrow night. How did you get from Carmody?"
-
- "Walked, dearest of Marillas. Haven't I done it a score of times
- in the Queen's days? The mailman is to bring my trunk tomorrow;
- I just got homesick all at once, and came a day earlier. And oh!
- I've had such a lovely walk in the May twilight; I stopped by the
- barrens and picked these Mayflowers; I came through Violet-Vale;
- it's just a big bowlful of violets now -- the dear, sky-tinted
- things. Smell them, Marilla -- drink them in."
-
- Marilla sniffed obligingly, but she was more interested in Anne
- than in drinking violets.
-
- "Sit down, child. You must be real tired. I'm going to get you
- some supper."
-
- "There's a darling moonrise behind the hills tonight, Marilla,
- and oh, how the frogs sang me home from Carmody! I do love the
- music of the frogs. It seems bound up with all my happiest
- recollections of old spring evenings. And it always reminds me
- of the night I came here first. Do you remember it, Marilla?"
-
- "Well, yes," said Marilla with emphasis. "I'm not likely to
- forget it ever."
-
- "They used to sing so madly in the marsh and brook that year.
- I would listen to them at my window in the dusk, and wonder how
- they could seem so glad and so sad at the same time. Oh, but
- it's good to be home again! Redmond was splendid and Bolingbroke
- delightful -- but Green Gables is HOME."
-
- "Gilbert isn't coming home this summer, I hear," said Marilla.
-
- "No." Something in Anne's tone made Marilla glance at her
- sharply, but Anne was apparently absorbed in arranging her
- violets in a bowl. "See, aren't they sweet?" she went on
- hurriedly. "The year is a book, isn't it, Marilla? Spring's
- pages are written in Mayflowers and violets, summer's in roses,
- autumn's in red maple leaves, and winter in holly and evergreen."
-
- "Did Gilbert do well in his examinations?" persisted Marilla.
-
- "Excellently well. He led his class. But where are the twins
- and Mrs. Lynde?"
-
- "Rachel and Dora are over at Mr. Harrison's. Davy is down at
- Boulters'. I think I hear him coming now."
-
- Davy burst in, saw Anne, stopped, and then hurled himself upon
- her with a joyful yell.
-
- "Oh, Anne, ain't I glad to see you! Say, Anne, I've grown two inches
- since last fall. Mrs. Lynde measured me with her tape today, and say,
- Anne, see my front tooth. It's gone. Mrs. Lynde tied one end of a
- string to it and the other end to the door, and then shut the door.
- I sold it to Milty for two cents. Milty's collecting teeth."
-
- "What in the world does he want teeth for?" asked Marilla.
-
- "To make a necklace for playing Indian Chief," explained Davy,
- climbing upon Anne's lap. "He's got fifteen already, and
- everybody's else's promised, so there's no use in the rest of us
- starting to collect, too. I tell you the Boulters are great
- business people."
-
- "Were you a good boy at Mrs. Boulter's?" asked Marilla severely.
-
- "Yes; but say, Marilla, I'm tired of being good."
-
- "You'd get tired of being bad much sooner, Davy-boy," said Anne.
-
- "Well, it'd be fun while it lasted, wouldn't it?" persisted Davy.
- "I could be sorry for it afterwards, couldn't I?"
-
- "Being sorry wouldn't do away with the consequences of being bad,
- Davy. Don't you remember the Sunday last summer when you ran
- away from Sunday School? You told me then that being bad wasn't
- worth while. What were you and Milty doing today?"
-
- "Oh, we fished and chased the cat, and hunted for eggs, and
- yelled at the echo. There's a great echo in the bush behind the
- Boulter barn. Say, what is echo, Anne; I want to know."
-
- "Echo is a beautiful nymph, Davy, living far away in the woods,
- and laughing at the world from among the hills."
-
- "What does she look like?"
-
- "Her hair and eyes are dark, but her neck and arms are white as snow.
- No mortal can ever see how fair she is. She is fleeter than a deer,
- and that mocking voice of hers is all we can know of her. You can
- hear her calling at night; you can hear her laughing under the stars.
- But you can never see her. She flies afar if you follow her, and
- laughs at you always just over the next hill."
-
- "Is that true, Anne? Or is it a whopper?" demanded Davy staring.
-
- "Davy," said Anne despairingly, "haven't you sense enough to
- distinguish between a fairytale and a falsehood?"
-
- "Then what is it that sasses back from the Boulter bush? I want
- to know," insisted Davy.
-
- "When you are a little older, Davy, I'll explain it all to you."
-
- The mention of age evidently gave a new turn to Davy's thoughts
- for after a few moments of reflection, he whispered solemnly:
-
- "Anne, I'm going to be married."
-
- "When?" asked Anne with equal solemnity.
-
- "Oh, not until I'm grown-up, of course."
-
- "Well, that's a relief, Davy. Who is the lady?"
-
- "Stella Fletcher; she's in my class at school. And say, Anne,
- she's the prettiest girl you ever saw. If I die before I grow up
- you'll keep an eye on her, won't you?"
-
- "Davy Keith, do stop talking such nonsense," said Marilla severely.
-
- " 'Tisn't nonsense," protested Davy in an injured tone. "She's
- my promised wife, and if I was to die she'd be my promised widow,
- wouldn't she? And she hasn't got a soul to look after her except
- her old grandmother."
-
- "Come and have your supper, Anne," said Marilla, "and don't
- encourage that child in his absurd talk."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXIII
-
- Paul Cannot Find the Rock People
-
-
- Life was very pleasant in Avonlea that summer, although Anne,
- amid all her vacation joys, was haunted by a sense of "something
- gone which should be there." She would not admit, even in her
- inmost reflections, that this was caused by Gilbert's absence.
- But when she had to walk home alone from prayer meetings and
- A.V.I.S. pow-wows, while Diana and Fred, and many other gay couples,
- loitered along the dusky, starlit country roads, there was a queer,
- lonely ache in her heart which she could not explain away. Gilbert
- did not even write to her, as she thought he might have done.
- She knew he wrote to Diana occasionally, but she would not inquire
- about him; and Diana, supposing that Anne heard from him, volunteered
- no information. Gilbert's mother, who was a gay, frank, light-hearted
- lady, but not overburdened with tact, had a very embarrassing habit of
- asking Anne, always in a painfully distinct voice and always in the
- presence of a crowd, if she had heard from Gilbert lately. Poor Anne
- could only blush horribly and murmur, "not very lately," which was
- taken by all, Mrs. Blythe included, to be merely a maidenly evasion.
-
- Apart from this, Anne enjoyed her summer. Priscilla came for a
- merry visit in June; and, when she had gone, Mr. and Mrs. Irving,
- Paul and Charlotta the Fourth came "home" for July and August.
-
- Echo Lodge was the scene of gaieties once more, and the echoes
- over the river were kept busy mimicking the laughter that rang in
- the old garden behind the spruces.
-
- "Miss Lavendar" had not changed, except to grow even sweeter and
- prettier. Paul adored her, and the companionship between them
- was beautiful to see.
-
- "But I don't call her `mother' just by itself," he explained to
- Anne. "You see, THAT name belongs just to my own little mother,
- and I can't give it to any one else. You know, teacher. But I
- call her `Mother Lavendar' and I love her next best to father.
- I -- I even love her a LITTLE better than you, teacher."
-
- "Which is just as it ought to be," answered Anne.
-
- Paul was thirteen now and very tall for his years. His face and
- eyes were as beautiful as ever, and his fancy was still like a prism,
- separating everything that fell upon it into rainbows. He and Anne
- had delightful rambles to wood and field and shore. Never were there
- two more thoroughly "kindred spirits."
-
- Charlotta the Fourth had blossomed out into young ladyhood. She
- wore her hair now in an enormous pompador and had discarded the
- blue ribbon bows of auld lang syne, but her face was as freckled,
- her nose as snubbed, and her mouth and smiles as wide as ever.
-
- "You don't think I talk with a Yankee accent, do you, Miss
- Shirley, ma'am?" she demanded anxiously.
-
- "I don't notice it, Charlotta."
-
- "I'm real glad of that. They said I did at home, but I thought
- likely they just wanted to aggravate me. I don't want no Yankee
- accent. Not that I've a word to say against the Yankees, Miss
- Shirley, ma'am. They're real civilized. But give me old P.E.
- Island every time."
-
- Paul spent his first fortnight with his grandmother Irving in
- Avonlea. Anne was there to meet him when he came, and found him
- wild with eagerness to get to the shore -- Nora and the Golden
- Lady and the Twin Sailors would be there. He could hardly wait
- to eat his supper. Could he not see Nora's elfin face peering
- around the point, watching for him wistfully? But it was a very
- sober Paul who came back from the shore in the twilight.
-
- "Didn't you find your Rock People?" asked Anne.
-
- Paul shook his chestnut curls sorrowfully.
-
- "The Twin Sailors and the Golden Lady never came at all," he said.
- "Nora was there -- but Nora is not the same, teacher. She is changed."
-
- "Oh, Paul, it is you who are changed," said Anne. "You have
- grown too old for the Rock People. They like only children for
- playfellows. I am afraid the Twin Sailors will never again come
- to you in the pearly, enchanted boat with the sail of moonshine;
- and the Golden Lady will play no more for you on her golden harp.
- Even Nora will not meet you much longer. You must pay the penalty
- of growing-up, Paul. You must leave fairyland behind you."
-
- "You two talk as much foolishness as ever you did," said old
- Mrs. Irving, half-indulgently, half-reprovingly.
-
- "Oh, no, we don't," said Anne, shaking her head gravely. "We are
- getting very, very wise, and it is such a pity. We are never
- half so interesting when we have learned that language is given
- us to enable us to conceal our thoughts."
-
- "But it isn't -- it is given us to exchange our thoughts," said
- Mrs. Irving seriously. She had never heard of Tallyrand and did
- not understand epigrams.
-
- Anne spent a fortnight of halcyon days at Echo Lodge in the
- golden prime of August. While there she incidentally contrived
- to hurry Ludovic Speed in his leisurely courting of Theodora Dix,
- as related duly in another chronicle of her history.[1] Arnold
- Sherman, an elderly friend of the Irvings, was there at the same
- time, and added not a little to the general pleasantness of life.
-
- ([1] Chronicles of Avonlea.)
-
- "What a nice play-time this has been," said Anne. "I feel like a
- giant refreshed. And it's only a fortnight more till I go back
- to Kingsport, and Redmond and Patty's Place. Patty's Place
- is the dearest spot, Miss Lavendar. I feel as if I had two homes
- -- one at Green Gables and one at Patty's Place. But where has the
- summer gone? It doesn't seem a day since I came home that spring
- evening with the Mayflowers. When I was little I couldn't see from
- one end of the summer to the other. It stretched before me like
- an unending season. Now, `'tis a handbreadth, 'tis a tale.'"
-
- "Anne, are you and Gilbert Blythe as good friends as you used to be?"
- asked Miss Lavendar quietly.
-
- "I am just as much Gilbert's friend as ever I was, Miss Lavendar."
-
- Miss Lavendar shook her head.
-
- "I see something's gone wrong, Anne. I'm going to be impertinent
- and ask what. Have you quarrelled?"
-
- "No; it's only that Gilbert wants more than friendship and I can't
- give him more."
-
- "Are you sure of that, Anne?"
-
- "Perfectly sure."
-
- "I'm very, very sorry."
-
- "I wonder why everybody seems to think I ought to marry Gilbert Blythe,"
- said Anne petulantly.
-
- "Because you were made and meant for each other, Anne -- that is why.
- You needn't toss that young head of yours. It's a fact."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXIV
-
- Enter Jonas
-
-
- "PROSPECT POINT,
- "August 20th.
-
- "Dear Anne -- spelled -- with -- an -- E," wrote Phil, "I must
- prop my eyelids open long enough to write you. I've neglected
- you shamefully this summer, honey, but all my other correspondents
- have been neglected, too. I have a huge pile of letters to answer,
- so I must gird up the loins of my mind and hoe in. Excuse my
- mixed metaphors. I'm fearfully sleepy. Last night Cousin Emily
- and I were calling at a neighbor's. There were several other
- callers there, and as soon as those unfortunate creatures left,
- our hostess and her three daughters picked them all to pieces.
- I knew they would begin on Cousin Emily and me as soon as the door
- shut behind us. When we came home Mrs. Lilly informed us that the
- aforesaid neighbor's hired boy was supposed to be down with scarlet
- fever. You can always trust Mrs. Lilly to tell you cheerful things
- like that. I have a horror of scarlet fever. I couldn't sleep when
- I went to bed for thinking of it. I tossed and tumbled about,
- dreaming fearful dreams when I did snooze for a minute; and at
- three I wakened up with a high fever, a sore throat, and a
- raging headache. I knew I had scarlet fever; I got up in a
- panic and hunted up Cousin Emily's 'doctor book' to read up
- the symptoms. Anne, I had them all. So I went back to bed,
- and knowing the worst, slept like a top the rest of the night.
- Though why a top should sleep sounder than anything else I
- never could understand. But this morning I was quite well,
- so it couldn't have been the fever. I suppose if I did catch
- it last night it couldn't have developed so soon. I can remember
- that in daytime, but at three o'clock at night I never can be logical.
-
- "I suppose you wonder what I'm doing at Prospect Point. Well, I
- always like to spend a month of summer at the shore, and father
- insists that I come to his second-cousin Emily's `select
- boardinghouse' at Prospect Point. So a fortnight ago I came as
- usual. And as usual old `Uncle Mark Miller' brought me from the
- station with his ancient buggy and what he calls his `generous
- purpose' horse. He is a nice old man and gave me a handful of
- pink peppermints. Peppermints always seem to me such a religious
- sort of candy -- I suppose because when I was a little girl
- Grandmother Gordon always gave them to me in church. Once I
- asked, referring to the smell of peppermints, `Is that the odor
- of sanctity?' I didn't like to eat Uncle Mark's peppermints
- because he just fished them loose out of his pocket, and had to
- pick some rusty nails and other things from among them before he
- gave them to me. But I wouldn't hurt his dear old feelings for
- anything, so I carefully sowed them along the road at intervals.
- When the last one was gone, Uncle Mark said, a little rebukingly,
- `Ye shouldn't a'et all them candies to onct, Miss Phil. You'll
- likely have the stummick-ache.'
-
- "Cousin Emily has only five boarders besides myself -- four old
- ladies and one young man. My right-hand neighbor is Mrs. Lilly.
- She is one of those people who seem to take a gruesome pleasure
- in detailing all their many aches and pains and sicknesses.
- You cannot mention any ailment but she says, shaking her head, `Ah,
- I know too well what that is' -- and then you get all the details.
- Jonas declares he once spoke of locomotor ataxia in hearing and
- she said she knew too well what that was. She suffered from it
- for ten years and was finally cured by a traveling doctor.
-
- "Who is Jonas? Just wait, Anne Shirley. You'll hear all about
- Jonas in the proper time and place. He is not to be mixed up
- with estimable old ladies.
-
- "My left-hand neighbor at the table is Mrs. Phinney. She always
- speaks with a wailing, dolorous voice -- you are nervously expecting
- her to burst into tears every moment. She gives you the impression
- that life to her is indeed a vale of tears, and that a smile, never
- to speak of a laugh, is a frivolity truly reprehensible. She has a
- worse opinion of me than Aunt Jamesina, and she doesn't love me hard
- to atone for it, as Aunty J. does, either.
-
- "Miss Maria Grimsby sits cati-corner from me. The first day I
- came I remarked to Miss Maria that it looked a little like rain
- -- and Miss Maria laughed. I said the road from the station was
- very pretty -- and Miss Maria laughed. I said there seemed to be
- a few mosquitoes left yet -- and Miss Maria laughed. I said that
- Prospect Point was as beautiful as ever -- and Miss Maria laughed.
- If I were to say to Miss Maria, `My father has hanged himself,
- my mother has taken poison, my brother is in the penitentiary,
- and I am in the last stages of consumption,' Miss Maria would laugh.
- She can't help it -- she was born so; but is very sad and awful.
-
- "The fifth old lady is Mrs. Grant. She is a sweet old thing;
- but she never says anything but good of anybody and so she is a
- very uninteresting conversationalist.
-
- "And now for Jonas, Anne.
-
- "That first day I came I saw a young man sitting opposite me at
- the table, smiling at me as if he had known me from my cradle.
- I knew, for Uncle Mark had told me, that his name was Jonas Blake,
- that he was a Theological Student from St. Columbia, and that he had
- taken charge of the Point Prospect Mission Church for the summer.
-
- "He is a very ugly young man -- really, the ugliest young man
- I've ever seen. He has a big, loose-jointed figure with absurdly
- long legs. His hair is tow-color and lank, his eyes are green,
- and his mouth is big, and his ears -- but I never think about his
- ears if I can help it.
-
- "He has a lovely voice -- if you shut your eyes he is adorable --
- and he certainly has a beautiful soul and disposition.
-
- "We were good chums right way. Of course he is a graduate of
- Redmond, and that is a link between us. We fished and boated
- together; and we walked on the sands by moonlight. He didn't
- look so homely by moonlight and oh, he was nice. Niceness fairly
- exhaled from him. The old ladies -- except Mrs. Grant -- don't
- approve of Jonas, because he laughs and jokes -- and because he
- evidently likes the society of frivolous me better than theirs.
-
- "Somehow, Anne, I don't want him to think me frivolous. This is
- ridiculous. Why should I care what a tow-haired person called
- Jonas, whom I never saw before thinks of me?
-
- "Last Sunday Jonas preached in the village church. I went,
- of course, but I couldn't realize that Jonas was going to preach.
- The fact that he was a minister -- or going to be one -- persisted
- in seeming a huge joke to me.
-
- "Well, Jonas preached. And, by the time he had preached ten
- minutes, I felt so small and insignificant that I thought I must
- be invisible to the naked eye. Jonas never said a word about
- women and he never looked at me. But I realized then and there
- what a pitiful, frivilous, small-souled little butterfly I was,
- and how horribly different I must be from Jonas' ideal woman.
- SHE would be grand and strong and noble. He was so earnest
- and tender and true. He was everything a minister ought to be.
- I wondered how I could ever have thought him ugly -- but he
- really is! -- with those inspired eyes and that intellectual
- brow which the roughly-falling hair hid on week days.
-
- "It was a splendid sermon and I could have listened to it forever,
- and it made me feel utterly wretched. Oh, I wish I was like YOU, Anne.
-
- "He caught up with me on the road home, and grinned as cheerfully
- as usual. But his grin could never deceive me again. I had seen
- the REAL Jonas. I wondered if he could ever see the REAL PHIL --
- whom NOBODY, not even you, Anne, has ever seen yet.
-
- "`Jonas,' I said -- I forgot to call him Mr. Blake. Wasn't it dreadful?
- But there are times when things like that don't matter -- `Jonas, you
- were born to be a minister. You COULDN'T be anything else.'
-
- "`No, I couldn't,' he said soberly. `I tried to be something
- else for a long time -- I didn't want to be a minister. But I
- came to see at last that it was the work given me to do -- and
- God helping me, I shall try to do it.'
-
- "His voice was low and reverent. I thought that he would do his
- work and do it well and nobly; and happy the woman fitted by
- nature and training to help him do it. SHE would be no feather,
- blown about by every fickle wind of fancy. SHE would always know
- what hat to put on. Probably she would have only one. Ministers
- never have much money. But she wouldn't mind having one hat or
- none at all, because she would have Jonas.
-
- "Anne Shirley, don't you dare to say or hint or think that I've
- fallen in love with Mr. Blake. Could I care for a lank, poor,
- ugly theologue -- named Jonas? As Uncle Mark says, `It's impossible,
- and what's more it's improbable.'
-
- Good night,
- PHIL."
-
- "P.S. It is impossible -- but I am horribly afraid it's true.
- I'm happy and wretched and scared. HE can NEVER care for me,
- I know. Do you think I could ever develop into a passable
- minister's wife, Anne? And WOULD they expect me to lead
- in prayer? P G."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXV
-
- Enter Prince Charming
-
-
- "I'm contrasting the claims of indoors and out," said Anne, looking
- from the window of Patty's Place to the distant pines of the park.
-
- "I've an afternoon to spend in sweet doing nothing, Aunt Jimsie.
- Shall I spend it here where there is a cosy fire, a plateful of
- delicious russets, three purring and harmonious cats, and two
- impeccable china dogs with green noses? Or shall I go to the park,
- where there is the lure of gray woods and of gray water lapping
- on the harbor rocks?"
-
- "If I was as young as you, I'd decide in favor of the park," said
- Aunt Jamesina, tickling Joseph's yellow ear with a knitting needle.
-
- "I thought that you claimed to be as young as any of us, Aunty,"
- teased Anne.
-
- "Yes, in my soul. But I'll admit my legs aren't as young as yours.
- You go and get some fresh air, Anne. You look pale lately."
-
- "I think I'll go to the park," said Anne restlessly. "I don't
- feel like tame domestic joys today. I want to feel alone and
- free and wild. The park will be empty, for every one will be at
- the football match."
-
- "Why didn't you go to it?"
-
- "`Nobody axed me, sir, she said' -- at least, nobody but that
- horrid little Dan Ranger. I wouldn't go anywhere with him;
- but rather than hurt his poor little tender feelings I said I
- wasn't going to the game at all. I don't mind. I'm not in
- the mood for football today somehow."
-
- "You go and get some fresh air," repeated Aunt Jamesina, "but take
- your umbrella, for I believe it's going to rain. I've rheumatism
- in my leg."
-
- "Only old people should have rheumatism, Aunty."
-
- "Anybody is liable to rheumatism in her legs, Anne. It's only
- old people who should have rheumatism in their souls, though.
- Thank goodness, I never have. When you get rheumatism in your
- soul you might as well go and pick out your coffin."
-
- It was November -- the month of crimson sunsets, parting birds,
- deep, sad hymns of the sea, passionate wind-songs in the pines.
- Anne roamed through the pineland alleys in the park and, as she
- said, let that great sweeping wind blow the fogs out of her soul.
- Anne was not wont to be troubled with soul fog. But, somehow, since
- her return to Redmond for this third year, life had not mirrored
- her spirit back to her with its old, perfect, sparkling clearness.
-
- Outwardly, existence at Patty's Place was the same pleasant
- round of work and study and recreation that it had always been.
- On Friday evenings the big, fire-lighted livingroom was crowded by
- callers and echoed to endless jest and laughter, while Aunt Jamesina
- smiled beamingly on them all. The "Jonas" of Phil's letter came often,
- running up from St. Columbia on the early train and departing on the late.
- He was a general favorite at Patty's Place, though Aunt Jamesina shook her
- head and opined that divinity students were not what they used to be.
-
- "He's VERY nice, my dear," she told Phil, "but ministers ought to be
- graver and more dignified."
-
- "Can't a man laugh and laugh and be a Christian still?" demanded Phil.
-
- "Oh, MEN -- yes. But I was speaking of MINISTERS, my dear,"
- said Aunt Jamesina rebukingly." And you shouldn't flirt so with
- Mr. Blake -- you really shouldn't."
-
- "I'm not flirting with him," protested Phil.
-
- Nobody believed her, except Anne. The others thought she was amusing
- herself as usual, and told her roundly that she was behaving very badly.
-
- "Mr. Blake isn't of the Alec-and-Alonzo type, Phil," said Stella severely.
- "He takes things seriously. You may break his heart."
-
- "Do you really think I could?" asked Phil. "I'd love to think so."
-
- "Philippa Gordon! I never thought you were utterly unfeeling.
- The idea of you saying you'd love to break a man's heart!"
-
- "I didn't say so, honey. Quote me correctly. I said I'd like to think
- I COULD break it. I would like to know I had the POWER to do it."
-
- "I don't understand you, Phil. You are leading that man on deliberately
- -- and you know you don't mean anything by it."
-
- "I mean to make him ask me to marry him if I can," said Phil calmly.
-
- "I give you up," said Stella hopelessly.
-
- Gilbert came occasionally on Friday evenings. He seemed
- always in good spirits, and held his own in the jests and
- repartee that flew about. He neither sought nor avoided Anne.
- When circumstances brought them in contact he talked to her
- pleasantly and courteously, as to any newly-made acquaintance.
- The old camaraderie was gone entirely. Anne felt it keenly;
- but she told herself she was very glad and thankful that Gilbert
- had got so completely over his disappointment in regard to her.
- She had really been afraid, that April evening in the orchard,
- that she had hurt him terribly and that the wound would be
- long in healing. Now she saw that she need not have worried.
- Men have died and the worms have eaten them but not for love.
- Gilbert evidently was in no danger of immediate dissolution.
- He was enjoying life, and he was full of ambition and zest.
- For him there was to be no wasting in despair because a woman
- was fair and cold. Anne, as she listened to the ceaseless badinage
- that went on between him and Phil, wondered if she had only imagined
- that look in his eyes when she had told him she could never care for him.
-
- There were not lacking those who would gladly have stepped into
- Gilbert's vacant place. But Anne snubbed them without fear and
- without reproach. If the real Prince Charming was never to come
- she would have none of a substitute. So she sternly told herself
- that gray day in the windy park.
-
- Suddenly the rain of Aunt Jamesina's prophecy came with a swish
- and rush. Anne put up her umbrella and hurried down the slope.
- As she turned out on the harbor road a savage gust of wind tore
- along it. Instantly her umbrella turned wrong side out. Anne
- clutched at it in despair. And then -- there came a voice
- close to her.
-
- "Pardon me -- may I offer you the shelter of my umbrella?"
-
- Anne looked up. Tall and handsome and distinguished-looking
- -- dark, melancholy, inscrutable eyes -- melting, musical,
- sympathetic voice -- yes, the very hero of her dreams stood
- before her in the flesh. He could not have more closely
- resembled her ideal if he had been made to order.
-
- "Thank you," she said confusedly.
-
- "We'd better hurry over to that little pavillion on the point,"
- suggested the unknown. "We can wait there until this shower
- is over. It is not likely to rain so heavily very long."
-
- The words were very commonplace, but oh, the tone! And the smile
- which accompanied them! Anne felt her heart beating strangely.
-
- Together they scurried to the pavilion and sat breathlessly down
- under its friendly roof. Anne laughingly held up her false umbrella.
-
- "It is when my umbrella turns inside out that I am convinced of
- the total depravity of inanimate things," she said gaily.
-
- The raindrops sparkled on her shining hair; its loosened rings
- curled around her neck and forehead. Her cheeks were flushed,
- her eyes big and starry. Her companion looked down at her
- admiringly. She felt herself blushing under his gaze.
- Who could he be? Why, there was a bit of the Redmond white and
- scarlet pinned to his coat lapel. Yet she had thought she knew,
- by sight at least, all the Redmond students except the Freshmen.
- And this courtly youth surely was no Freshman.
-
- "We are schoolmates, I see," he said, smiling at Anne's colors.
- "That ought to be sufficient introduction. My name is Royal Gardner.
- And you are the Miss Shirley who read the Tennyson paper at the
- Philomathic the other evening, aren't you?"
-
- "Yes; but I cannot place you at all," said Anne, frankly.
- "Please, where DO you belong?"
-
- "I feel as if I didn't belong anywhere yet. I put in my Freshman
- and Sophomore years at Redmond two years ago. I've been in
- Europe ever since. Now I've come back to finish my Arts course."
-
- "This is my Junior year, too," said Anne.
-
- "So we are classmates as well as collegemates. I am reconciled
- to the loss of the years that the locust has eaten," said her
- companion, with a world of meaning in those wonderful eyes of his.
-
- The rain came steadily down for the best part of an hour. But
- the time seemed really very short. When the clouds parted and a
- burst of pale November sunshine fell athwart the harbor and the
- pines Anne and her companion walked home together. By the time
- they had reached the gate of Patty's Place he had asked
- permission to call, and had received it. Anne went in with
- cheeks of flame and her heart beating to her fingertips. Rusty,
- who climbed into her lap and tried to kiss her, found a very
- absent welcome. Anne, with her soul full of romantic thrills,
- had no attention to spare just then for a crop-eared pussy cat.
-
- That evening a parcel was left at Patty's Place for Miss Shirley.
- It was a box containing a dozen magnificent roses. Phil pounced
- impertinently on the card that fell from it, read the name and
- the poetical quotation written on the back.
-
- "Royal Gardner!" she exclaimed. "Why, Anne, I didn't know you
- were acquainted with Roy Gardner!"
-
- "I met him in the park this afternoon in the rain," explained Anne
- hurriedly. "My umbrella turned inside out and he came to my rescue
- with his."
-
- "Oh!" Phil peered curiously at Anne." And is that exceedingly
- commonplace incident any reason why he should send us longstemmed
- roses by the dozen, with a very sentimental rhyme? Or why we
- should blush divinest rosy-red when we look at his card? Anne,
- thy face betrayeth thee."
-
- "Don't talk nonsense, Phil. Do you know Mr. Gardner?"
-
- "I've met his two sisters, and I know of him. So does everybody
- worthwhile in Kingsport. The Gardners are among the richest,
- bluest, of Bluenoses. Roy is adorably handsome and clever.
- Two years ago his mother's health failed and he had to leave
- college and go abroad with her -- his father is dead. He must
- have been greatly disappointed to have to give up his class, but
- they say he was perfectly sweet about it. Fee -- fi -- fo -- fum,
- Anne. I smell romance. Almost do I envy you, but not quite.
- After all, Roy Gardner isn't Jonas."
-
- "You goose!" said Anne loftily. But she lay long awake that night,
- nor did she wish for sleep. Her waking fancies were more alluring
- than any vision of dreamland. Had the real Prince come at last?
- Recalling those glorious dark eyes which had gazed so deeply into
- her own, Anne was very strongly inclined to think he had.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXVI
-
- Enter Christine
-
-
- The girls at Patty's Place were dressing for the reception which
- the Juniors were giving for the Seniors in February. Anne surveyed
- herself in the mirror of the blue room with girlish satisfaction.
- She had a particularly pretty gown on. Originally it had been
- only a simple little slip of cream silk with a chiffon overdress.
- But Phil had insisted on taking it home with her in the Christmas
- holidays and embroidering tiny rosebuds all over the chiffon.
- Phil's fingers were deft, and the result was a dress which was
- the envy of every Redmond girl. Even Allie Boone, whose frocks
- came from Paris, was wont to look with longing eyes on that rosebud
- concoction as Anne trailed up the main staircase at Redmond in it.
-
- Anne was trying the effect of a white orchid in her hair.
- Roy Gardner had sent her white orchids for the reception,
- and she knew no other Redmond girl would have them that night
- -- when Phil came in with admiring gaze.
-
- "Anne, this is certainly your night for looking handsome.
- Nine nights out of ten I can easily outshine you. The tenth
- you blossom out suddenly into something that eclipses me altogether.
- How do you manage it?"
-
- "It's the dress, dear. Fine feathers."
-
- "`Tisn't. The last evening you flamed out into beauty you
- wore your old blue flannel shirtwaist that Mrs. Lynde made you.
- If Roy hadn't already lost head and heart about you he certainly
- would tonight. But I don't like orchids on you, Anne. No; it
- isn't jealousy. Orchids don't seem to BELONG to you. They're
- too exotic -- too tropical -- too insolent. Don't put them in
- your hair, anyway."
-
- "Well, I won't. I admit I'm not fond of orchids myself. I don't
- think they're related to me. Roy doesn't often send them -- he
- knows I like flowers I can live with. Orchids are only things
- you can visit with."
-
- "Jonas sent me some dear pink rosebuds for the evening -- but --
- he isn't coming himself. He said he had to lead a prayer-meeting
- in the slums! I don't believe he wanted to come. Anne, I'm
- horribly afraid Jonas doesn't really care anything about me. And
- I'm trying to decide whether I'll pine away and die, or go on and
- get my B.A. and be sensible and useful."
-
- "You couldn't possibly be sensible and useful, Phil, so you'd
- better pine away and die," said Anne cruelly.
-
- "Heartless Anne!"
-
- "Silly Phil! You know quite well that Jonas loves you."
-
- "But -- he won't TELL me so. And I can't MAKE him. He LOOKS it,
- I'll admit. But speak-to-me-only-with-thine-eyes isn't a really
- reliable reason for embroidering doilies and hemstitching
- tablecloths. I don't want to begin such work until I'm really
- engaged. It would be tempting Fate."
-
- "Mr. Blake is afraid to ask you to marry him, Phil. He is poor
- and can't offer you a home such as you've always had. You know
- that is the only reason he hasn't spoken long ago."
-
- "I suppose so," agreed Phil dolefully. "Well" -- brightening up
- -- "if he WON'T ask me to marry him I'll ask him, that's all.
- So it's bound to come right. I won't worry. By the way,
- Gilbert Blythe is going about constantly with Christine Stuart.
- Did you know?"
-
- Anne was trying to fasten a little gold chain about her throat.
- She suddenly found the clasp difficult to manage. WHAT was the
- matter with it -- or with her fingers?
-
- "No," she said carelessly." Who is Christine Stuart?"
-
- "Ronald Stuart's sister. She's in Kingsport this winter studying
- music. I haven't seen her, but they say she's very pretty and
- that Gilbert is quite crazy over her. How angry I was when you
- refused Gilbert, Anne. But Roy Gardner was foreordained for you.
- I can see that now. You were right, after all."
-
- Anne did not blush, as she usually did when the girls assumed
- that her eventual marriage to Roy Gardner was a settled thing.
- All at once she felt rather dull. Phil's chatter seemed trivial
- and the reception a bore. She boxed poor Rusty's ears.
-
- "Get off that cushion instantly, you cat, you! Why don't you
- stay down where you belong?"
-
- Anne picked up her orchids and went downstairs, where Aunt Jamesina
- was presiding over a row of coats hung before the fire to warm.
- Roy Gardner was waiting for Anne and teasing the Sarah-cat while
- he waited. The Sarah-cat did not approve of him. She always
- turned her back on him. But everybody else at Patty's Place liked
- him very much. Aunt Jamesina, carried away by his unfailing and
- deferential courtesy, and the pleading tones of his delightful voice,
- declared he was the nicest young man she ever knew, and that Anne
- was a very fortunate girl. Such remarks made Anne restive. Roy's
- wooing had certainly been as romantic as girlish heart could desire,
- but -- she wished Aunt Jamesina and the girls would not take things
- so for granted. When Roy murmured a poetical compliment as he helped
- her on with her coat, she did not blush and thrill as usual; and he
- found her rather silent in their brief walk to Redmond. He thought
- she looked a little pale when she came out of the coeds' dressing room;
- but as they entered the reception room her color and sparkle suddenly
- returned to her. She turned to Roy with her gayest expression.
- He smiled back at her with what Phil called "his deep, black,
- velvety smile." Yet she really did not see Roy at all. She was
- acutely conscious that Gilbert was standing under the palms just
- across the room talking to a girl who must be Christine Stuart.
-
- She was very handsome, in the stately style destined to become
- rather massive in middle life. A tall girl, with large dark-blue
- eyes, ivory outlines, and a gloss of darkness on her smooth hair.
-
- "She looks just as I've always wanted to look," thought Anne
- miserably. "Rose-leaf complexion -- starry violet eyes -- raven
- hair -- yes, she has them all. It's a wonder her name isn't
- Cordelia Fitzgerald into the bargain! But I don't believe her
- figure is as good as mine, and her nose certainly isn't."
-
- Anne felt a little comforted by this conclusion.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXVII
-
- Mutual Confidences
-
-
- March came in that winter like the meekest and mildest of lambs,
- bringing days that were crisp and golden and tingling, each
- followed by a frosty pink twilight which gradually lost itself in
- an elfland of moonshine.
-
- Over the girls at Patty's Place was falling the shadow of April
- examinations. They were studying hard; even Phil had settled down
- to text and notebooks with a doggedness not to be expected of her.
-
- "I'm going to take the Johnson Scholarship in Mathematics," she
- announced calmly. "I could take the one in Greek easily, but I'd
- rather take the mathematical one because I want to prove to Jonas
- that I'm really enormously clever."
-
- "Jonas likes you better for your big brown eyes and your crooked
- smile than for all the brains you carry under your curls," said Anne.
-
- "When I was a girl it wasn't considered lady-like to know anything
- about Mathematics," said Aunt Jamesina. "But times have changed.
- I don't know that it's all for the better. Can you cook, Phil?"
-
- "No, I never cooked anything in my life except a gingerbread and
- it was a failure -- flat in the middle and hilly round the edges.
- You know the kind. But, Aunty, when I begin in good earnest to
- learn to cook don't you think the brains that enable me to win a
- mathematical scholarship will also enable me to learn cooking
- just as well?"
-
- "Maybe," said Aunt Jamesina cautiously. "I am not decrying the
- higher education of women. My daughter is an M.A. She can cook,
- too. But I taught her to cook BEFORE I let a college professor
- teach her Mathematics."
-
- In mid-March came a letter from Miss Patty Spofford, saying that
- she and Miss Maria had decided to remain abroad for another year.
-
- "So you may have Patty's Place next winter, too," she wrote.
- "Maria and I are going to run over Egypt. I want to see the
- Sphinx once before I die."
-
- "Fancy those two dames `running over Egypt'! I wonder if they'll
- look up at the Sphinx and knit," laughed Priscilla.
-
- "I'm so glad we can keep Patty's Place for another year," said
- Stella. "I was afraid they'd come back. And then our jolly
- little nest here would be broken up -- and we poor callow
- nestlings thrown out on the cruel world of boardinghouses again."
-
- "I'm off for a tramp in the park," announced Phil, tossing her
- book aside. "I think when I am eighty I'll be glad I went for a
- walk in the park tonight."
-
- "What do you mean?" asked Anne.
-
- "Come with me and I'll tell you, honey."
-
- They captured in their ramble all the mysteries and magics of a
- March evening. Very still and mild it was, wrapped in a great,
- white, brooding silence -- a silence which was yet threaded
- through with many little silvery sounds which you could hear if
- you hearkened as much with your soul as your ears. The girls
- wandered down a long pineland aisle that seemed to lead right out
- into the heart of a deep-red, overflowing winter sunset.
-
- "I'd go home and write a poem this blessed minute if I only knew how,"
- declared Phil, pausing in an open space where a rosy light was staining
- the green tips of the pines. "It's all so wonderful here -- this great,
- white stillness, and those dark trees that always seem to be thinking."
-
- "`The woods were God's first temples,'" quoted Anne softly.
- "One can't help feeling reverent and adoring in such a place.
- I always feel so near Him when I walk among the pines."
-
- "Anne, I'm the happiest girl in the world," confessed Phil suddenly.
-
- "So Mr. Blake has asked you to marry him at last?" said Anne calmly.
-
- "Yes. And I sneezed three times while he was asking me.
- Wasn't that horrid? But I said `yes' almost before he finished
- -- I was so afraid he might change his mind and stop. I'm besottedly
- happy. I couldn't really believe before that Jonas would ever care
- for frivolous me."
-
- "Phil, you're not really frivolous," said Anne gravely. "'Way
- down underneath that frivolous exterior of yours you've got a
- dear, loyal, womanly little soul. Why do you hide it so?"
-
- "I can't help it, Queen Anne. You are right -- I'm not frivolous
- at heart. But there's a sort of frivolous skin over my soul and
- I can't take it off. As Mrs. Poyser says, I'd have to be hatched
- over again and hatched different before I could change it. But
- Jonas knows the real me and loves me, frivolity and all. And I
- love him. I never was so surprised in my life as I was when I
- found out I loved him. I'd never thought it possible to fall in
- love with an ugly man. Fancy me coming down to one solitary
- beau. And one named Jonas! But I mean to call him Jo. That's
- such a nice, crisp little name. I couldn't nickname Alonzo."
-
- "What about Alec and Alonzo?"
-
- "Oh, I told them at Christmas that I never could marry either of
- them. It seems so funny now to remember that I ever thought it
- possible that I might. They felt so badly I just cried over both
- of them -- howled. But I knew there was only one man in the
- world I could ever marry. I had made up my own mind for once and
- it was real easy, too. It's very delightful to feel so sure, and
- know it's your own sureness and not somebody else's."
-
- "Do you suppose you'll be able to keep it up?"
-
- "Making up my mind, you mean? I don't know, but Jo has given me
- a splendid rule. He says, when I'm perplexed, just to do what I
- would wish I had done when I shall be eighty. Anyhow, Jo can
- make up his mind quickly enough, and it would be uncomfortable
- to have too much mind in the same house."
-
- "What will your father and mother say?"
-
- "Father won't say much. He thinks everything I do right.
- But mother WILL talk. Oh, her tongue will be as Byrney as
- her nose. But in the end it will be all right."
-
- "You'll have to give up a good many things you've always had,
- when you marry Mr. Blake, Phil."
-
- "But I'll have HIM. I won't miss the other things. We're to be
- married a year from next June. Jo graduates from St. Columbia
- this spring, you know. Then he's going to take a little mission
- church down on Patterson Street in the slums. Fancy me in the
- slums! But I'd go there or to Greenland's icy mountains with him."
-
- "And this is the girl who would NEVER marry a man who wasn't rich,"
- commented Anne to a young pine tree.
-
- "Oh, don't cast up the follies of my youth to me. I shall be
- poor as gaily as I've been rich. You'll see. I'm going to learn
- how to cook and make over dresses. I've learned how to market
- since I've lived at Patty's Place; and once I taught a Sunday
- School class for a whole summer. Aunt Jamesina says I'll ruin
- Jo's career if I marry him. But I won't. I know I haven't much
- sense or sobriety, but I've got what is ever so much better --
- the knack of making people like me. There is a man in
- Bolingbroke who lisps and always testifies in prayer-meeting.
- He says, 'If you can't thine like an electric thtar thine like
- a candlethtick.' I'll be Jo's little candlestick."
-
- "Phil, you're incorrigible. Well, I love you so much that
- I can't make nice, light, congratulatory little speeches.
- But I'm heart-glad of your happiness."
-
- "I know. Those big gray eyes of yours are brimming over with
- real friendship, Anne. Some day I'll look the same way at you.
- You're going to marry Roy, aren't you, Anne?"
-
- "My dear Philippa, did you ever hear of the famous Betty Baxter,
- who `refused a man before he'd axed her'? I am not going to
- emulate that celebrated lady by either refusing or accepting any
- one before he `axes' me."
-
- "All Redmond knows that Roy is crazy about you," said Phil candidly."
- And you DO love him, don't you, Anne?"
-
- "I -- I suppose so," said Anne reluctantly. She felt that she ought
- to be blushing while making such a confession; but she was not;
- on the other hand, she always blushed hotly when any one said
- anything about Gilbert Blythe or Christine Stuart in her hearing.
- Gilbert Blythe and Christine Stuart were nothing to her --
- absolutely nothing. But Anne had given up trying to analyze
- the reason of her blushes. As for Roy, of course she was in
- love with him -- madly so. How could she help it? Was he not
- her ideal? Who could resist those glorious dark eyes, and that
- pleading voice? Were not half the Redmond girls wildly envious?
- And what a charming sonnet he had sent her, with a box of violets,
- on her birthday! Anne knew every word of it by heart. It was very
- good stuff of its kind, too. Not exactly up to the level of Keats or
- Shakespeare -- even Anne was not so deeply in love as to think that.
- But it was very tolerable magazine verse. And it was addressed to HER --
- not to Laura or Beatrice or the Maid of Athens, but to her, Anne Shirley.
- To be told in rhythmical cadences that her eyes were stars of the morning
- -- that her cheek had the flush it stole from the sunrise -- that her
- lips were redder than the roses of Paradise, was thrillingly romantic.
- Gilbert would never have dreamed of writing a sonnet to her eyebrows.
- But then, Gilbert could see a joke. She had once told Roy a funny story
- -- and he had not seen the point of it. She recalled the chummy laugh
- she and Gilbert had had together over it, and wondered uneasily if life
- with a man who had no sense of humor might not be somewhat uninteresting
- in the long run. But who could expect a melancholy, inscrutable hero to
- see the humorous side of things? It would be flatly unreasonable.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXVIII
-
- A June Evening
-
-
- "I wonder what it would be like to live in a world where it was
- always June," said Anne, as she came through the spice and bloom
- of the twilit orchard to the front door steps, where Marilla and
- Mrs. Rachel were sitting, talking over Mrs. Samson Coates' funeral,
- which they had attended that day. Dora sat between them, diligently
- studying her lessons; but Davy was sitting tailor-fashion on the grass,
- looking as gloomy and depressed as his single dimple would let him.
-
- "You'd get tired of it," said Marilla, with a sigh.
-
- "I daresay; but just now I feel that it would take me a long
- time to get tired of it, if it were all as charming as today.
- Everything loves June. Davy-boy, why this melancholy November
- face in blossom-time?"
-
- "I'm just sick and tired of living," said the youthful pessimist.
-
- "At ten years? Dear me, how sad!"
-
- "I'm not making fun," said Davy with dignity. "I'm dis -- dis --
- discouraged" -- bringing out the big word with a valiant effort.
-
- "Why and wherefore?" asked Anne, sitting down beside him.
-
- "'Cause the new teacher that come when Mr. Holmes got sick give
- me ten sums to do for Monday. It'll take me all day tomorrow to
- do them. It isn't fair to have to work Saturdays. Milty Boulter
- said he wouldn't do them, but Marilla says I've got to. I don't
- like Miss Carson a bit."
-
- "Don't talk like that about your teacher, Davy Keith," said
- Mrs. Rachel severely. "Miss Carson is a very fine girl.
- There is no nonsense about her."
-
- "That doesn't sound very attractive," laughed Anne. "I like
- people to have a little nonsense about them. But I'm inclined
- to have a better opinion of Miss Carson than you have. I saw her
- in prayer-meeting last night, and she has a pair of eyes that
- can't always look sensible. Now, Davy-boy, take heart of grace.
- `Tomorrow will bring another day' and I'll help you with the sums
- as far as in me lies. Don't waste this lovely hour `twixt light
- and dark worrying over arithmetic."
-
- "Well, I won't," said Davy, brightening up. "If you help me
- with the sums I'll have 'em done in time to go fishing with Milty.
- I wish old Aunt Atossa's funeral was tomorrow instead of today.
- I wanted to go to it 'cause Milty said his mother said Aunt Atossa
- would be sure to rise up in her coffin and say sarcastic things to
- the folks that come to see her buried. But Marilla said she didn't."
-
- "Poor Atossa laid in her coffin peaceful enough," said Mrs. Lynde
- solemnly. "I never saw her look so pleasant before, that's what.
- Well, there weren't many tears shed over her, poor old soul.
- The Elisha Wrights are thankful to be rid of her, and I can't
- say I blame them a mite."
-
- "It seems to me a most dreadful thing to go out of the world and not
- leave one person behind you who is sorry you are gone," said Anne, shuddering.
-
- "Nobody except her parents ever loved poor Atossa, that's certain, not even
- her husband," averred Mrs. Lynde. "She was his fourth wife. He'd sort of got
- into the habit of marrying. He only lived a few years after he married her.
- The doctor said he died of dyspepsia, but I shall always maintain that he died
- of Atossa's tongue, that's what. Poor soul, she always knew everything about
- her neighbors, but she never was very well acquainted with herself. Well,
- she's gone anyhow; and I suppose the next excitement will be Diana's wedding."
-
- "It seems funny and horrible to think of Diana's being married,"
- sighed Anne, hugging her knees and looking through the gap in the
- Haunted Wood to the light that was shining in Diana's room.
-
- "I don't see what's horrible about it, when she's doing so well,"
- said Mrs. Lynde emphatically. "Fred Wright has a fine farm and
- he is a model young man."
-
- "He certainly isn't the wild, dashing, wicked, young man Diana
- once wanted to marry," smiled Anne. "Fred is extremely good."
-
- "That's just what he ought to be. Would you want Diana to marry
- a wicked man? Or marry one yourself?"
-
- "Oh, no. I wouldn't want to marry anybody who was wicked,
- but I think I'd like it if he COULD be wicked and WOULDN'T.
- Now, Fred is HOPELESSLY good."
-
- "You'll have more sense some day, I hope," said Marilla.
-
- Marilla spoke rather bitterly. She was grievously disappointed.
- She knew Anne had refused Gilbert Blythe. Avonlea gossip buzzed
- over the fact, which had leaked out, nobody knew how. Perhaps
- Charlie Sloane had guessed and told his guesses for truth.
- Perhaps Diana had betrayed it to Fred and Fred had been indiscreet.
- At all events it was known; Mrs. Blythe no longer asked Anne,
- in public or private, if she had heard lately from Gilbert, but
- passed her by with a frosty bow. Anne, who had always liked Gilbert's
- merry, young-hearted mother, was grieved in secret over this.
- Marilla said nothing; but Mrs. Lynde gave Anne many exasperated
- digs about it, until fresh gossip reached that worthy lady,
- through the medium of Moody Spurgeon MacPherson's mother,
- that Anne had another "beau" at college, who was rich and
- handsome and good all in one. After that Mrs. Rachel held
- her tongue, though she still wished in her inmost heart that
- Anne had accepted Gilbert. Riches were all very well;
- but even Mrs. Rachel, practical soul though she was, did not
- consider them the one essential. If Anne "liked" the Handsome
- Unknown better than Gilbert there was nothing more to be said;
- but Mrs. Rachel was dreadfully afraid that Anne was going to
- make the mistake of marrying for money. Marilla knew Anne too
- well to fear this; but she felt that something in the universal
- scheme of things had gone sadly awry.
-
- "What is to be, will be," said Mrs. Rachel gloomily, "and what isn't
- to be happens sometimes. I can't help believing it's going to happen
- in Anne's case, if Providence doesn't interfere, that's what."
- Mrs. Rachel sighed. She was afraid Providence wouldn't interfere;
- and she didn't dare to.
-
- Anne had wandered down to the Dryad's Bubble and was curled up
- among the ferns at the root of the big white birch where she and
- Gilbert had so often sat in summers gone by. He had gone into
- the newspaper office again when college closed, and Avonlea
- seemed very dull without him. He never wrote to her, and Anne
- missed the letters that never came. To be sure, Roy wrote twice
- a week; his letters were exquisite compositions which would have
- read beautifully in a memoir or biography. Anne felt herself
- more deeply in love with him than ever when she read them; but
- her heart never gave the queer, quick, painful bound at sight of
- his letters which it had given one day when Mrs. Hiram Sloane
- had handed her out an envelope addressed in Gilbert's black,
- upright handwriting. Anne had hurried home to the east gable and
- opened it eagerly -- to find a typewritten copy of some college
- society report -- "only that and nothing more." Anne flung the
- harmless screed across her room and sat down to write an
- especially nice epistle to Roy.
-
- Diana was to be married in five more days. The gray house at
- Orchard Slope was in a turmoil of baking and brewing and boiling
- and stewing, for there was to be a big, old-timey wedding. Anne,
- of course, was to be bridesmaid, as had been arranged when they
- were twelve years old, and Gilbert was coming from Kingsport to
- be best man. Anne was enjoying the excitement of the various
- preparations, but under it all she carried a little heartache.
- She was, in a sense, losing her dear old chum; Diana's new home
- would be two miles from Green Gables, and the old constant
- companionship could never be theirs again. Anne looked up at
- Diana's light and thought how it had beaconed to her for many years;
- but soon it would shine through the summer twilights no more.
- Two big, painful tears welled up in her gray eyes.
-
- "Oh," she thought, "how horrible it is that people have to grow
- up -- and marry -- and CHANGE!"
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXIX
-
- Diana's Wedding
-
-
- "After all, the only real roses are the pink ones," said Anne, as
- she tied white ribbon around Diana's bouquet in the westwardlooking
- gable at Orchard Slope. "They are the flowers of love and faith."
-
- Diana was standing nervously in the middle of the room, arrayed
- in her bridal white, her black curls frosted over with the film
- of her wedding veil. Anne had draped that veil, in accordance
- with the sentimental compact of years before.
-
- "It's all pretty much as I used to imagine it long ago, when I
- wept over your inevitable marriage and our consequent parting,"
- she laughed. "You are the bride of my dreams, Diana, with
- the `lovely misty veil'; and I am YOUR bridesmaid. But, alas!
- I haven't the puffed sleeves -- though these short lace ones are
- even prettier. Neither is my heart wholly breaking nor do I
- exactly hate Fred."
-
- "We are not really parting, Anne," protested Diana. "I'm not
- going far away. We'll love each other just as much as ever.
- We've always kept that `oath' of friendship we swore long ago,
- haven't we?"
-
- "Yes. We've kept it faithfully. We've had a beautiful
- friendship, Diana. We've never marred it by one quarrel or
- coolness or unkind word; and I hope it will always be so.
- But things can't be quite the same after this. You'll have
- other interests. I'll just be on the outside. But `such is
- life' as Mrs. Rachel says. Mrs. Rachel has given you one of
- her beloved knitted quilts of the `tobacco stripe' pattern,
- and she says when I am married she'll give me one, too."
-
- "The mean thing about your getting married is that I won't be
- able to be your bridesmaid," lamented Diana.
-
- "I'm to be Phil's bridesmaid next June, when she marries
- Mr. Blake, and then I must stop, for you know the proverb
- `three times a bridesmaid, never a bride,' " said Anne,
- peeping through the window over the pink and snow of the
- blossoming orchard beneath. "Here comes the minister, Diana."
-
- "Oh, Anne," gasped Diana, suddenly turning very pale and
- beginning to tremble. "Oh, Anne -- I'm so nervous -- I can't
- go through with it -- Anne, I know I'm going to faint."
-
- "If you do I'll drag you down to the rainwater hogshed and drop
- you in," said Anne unsympathetically. "Cheer up, dearest.
- Getting married can't be so very terrible when so many
- people survive the ceremony. See how cool and composed
- I am, and take courage."
-
- "Wait till your turn comes, Miss Anne. Oh, Anne, I hear father
- coming upstairs. Give me my bouquet. Is my veil right? Am I
- very pale?"
-
- "You look just lovely. Di, darling, kiss me good-bye for the
- last time. Diana Barry will never kiss me again."
-
- "Diana Wright will, though. There, mother's calling. Come."
-
- Following the simple, old-fashioned way in vogue then, Anne went
- down to the parlor on Gilbert's arm. They met at the top of the
- stairs for the first time since they had left Kingsport, for
- Gilbert had arrived only that day. Gilbert shook hands courteously.
- He was looking very well, though, as Anne instantly noted, rather thin.
- He was not pale; there was a flush on his cheek that had burned into it
- as Anne came along the hall towards him, in her soft, white dress with
- lilies-of-the-valley in the shining masses of her hair. As they entered
- the crowded parlor together a little murmur of admiration ran around the
- room. "What a fine-looking pair they are," whispered the impressible
- Mrs. Rachel to Marilla.
-
- Fred ambled in alone, with a very red face, and then Diana swept
- in on her father's arm. She did not faint, and nothing untoward
- occurred to interrupt the ceremony. Feasting and merry-making
- followed; then, as the evening waned, Fred and Diana drove away
- through the moonlight to their new home, and Gilbert walked with
- Anne to Green Gables.
-
- Something of their old comradeship had returned during the
- informal mirth of the evening. Oh, it was nice to be walking
- over that well-known road with Gilbert again!
-
- The night was so very still that one should have been able to hear
- the whisper of roses in blossom -- the laughter of daisies -- the
- piping of grasses -- many sweet sounds, all tangled up together.
- The beauty of moonlight on familiar fields irradiated the world.
-
- "Can't we take a ramble up Lovers' Lane before you go in?" asked
- Gilbert as they crossed the bridge over the Lake of Shining Waters,
- in which the moon lay like a great, drowned blossom of gold.
-
- Anne assented readily. Lovers' Lane was a veritable path in a
- fairyland that night -- a shimmering, mysterious place, full of
- wizardry in the white-woven enchantment of moonlight. There had
- been a time when such a walk with Gilbert through Lovers' Lane
- would have been far too dangerous. But Roy and Christine had
- made it very safe now. Anne found herself thinking a good deal
- about Christine as she chatted lightly to Gilbert. She had met
- her several times before leaving Kingsport, and had been charmingly
- sweet to her. Christine had also been charmingly sweet. Indeed,
- they were a most cordial pair. But for all that, their acquaintance
- had not ripened into friendship. Evidently Christine was not a
- kindred spirit.
-
- "Are you going to be in Avonlea all summer?" asked Gilbert.
-
- "No. I'm going down east to Valley Road next week. Esther
- Haythorne wants me to teach for her through July and August.
- They have a summer term in that school, and Esther isn't feeling well.
- So I'm going to substitute for her. In one way I don't mind.
- Do you know, I'm beginning to feel a little bit like a stranger
- in Avonlea now? It makes me sorry -- but it's true. It's quite
- appalling to see the number of children who have shot up into big
- boys and girls -- really young men and women -- these past two years.
- Half of my pupils are grown up. It makes me feel awfully old to see
- them in the places you and I and our mates used to fill."
-
- Anne laughed and sighed. She felt very old and mature and wise
- -- which showed how young she was. She told herself that she
- longed greatly to go back to those dear merry days when life was
- seen through a rosy mist of hope and illusion, and possessed an
- indefinable something that had passed away forever. Where was it
- now -- the glory and the dream?
-
- "`So wags the world away,' " quoted Gilbert practically, and a
- trifle absently. Anne wondered if he were thinking of Christine.
- Oh, Avonlea was going to be so lonely now -- with Diana gone!
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXX
-
- Mrs. Skinner's Romance
-
-
- Anne stepped off the train at Valley Road station and looked
- about to see if any one had come to meet her. She was to board
- with a certain Miss Janet Sweet, but she saw no one who answered
- in the least to her preconception of that lady, as formed from
- Esther's letter. The only person in sight was an elderly woman,
- sitting in a wagon with mail bags piled around her. Two hundred
- would have been a charitable guess at her weight; her face was
- as round and red as a harvest-moon and almost as featureless.
- She wore a tight, black, cashmere dress, made in the fashion of
- ten years ago, a little dusty black straw hat trimmed with bows
- of yellow ribbon, and faded black lace mits.
-
- "Here, you," she called, waving her whip at Anne. "Are you the
- new Valley Road schoolma'am?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Well, I thought so. Valley Road is noted for its good-looking
- schoolma'ams, just as Millersville is noted for its humly ones.
- Janet Sweet asked me this morning if I could bring you out. I
- said, `Sartin I kin, if she don't mind being scrunched up some.
- This rig of mine's kinder small for the mail bags and I'm some
- heftier than Thomas!' Just wait, miss, till I shift these bags a
- bit and I'll tuck you in somehow. It's only two miles to Janet's.
- Her next-door neighbor's hired boy is coming for your trunk tonight.
- My name is Skinner -- Amelia Skinner."
-
- Anne was eventually tucked in, exchanging amused smiles with herself
- during the process.
-
- "Jog along, black mare," commanded Mrs. Skinner, gathering up the
- reins in her pudgy hands. "This is my first trip on the mail rowte.
- Thomas wanted to hoe his turnips today so he asked me to come.
- So I jest sot down and took a standing-up snack and started.
- I sorter like it. O' course it's rather tejus. Part of the
- time I sits and thinks and the rest I jest sits. Jog along,
- black mare. I want to git home airly. Thomas is terrible
- lonesome when I'm away. You see, we haven't been married very long."
-
- "Oh!" said Anne politely.
-
- "Just a month. Thomas courted me for quite a spell, though. It
- was real romantic." Anne tried to picture Mrs. Skinner on
- speaking terms with romance and failed.
-
- "Oh?" she said again.
-
- "Yes. Y'see, there was another man after me. Jog along, black mare.
- I'd been a widder so long folks had given up expecting me to marry again.
- But when my darter -- she's a schoolma'am like you -- went out West to
- teach I felt real lonesome and wasn't nowise sot against the idea.
- Bime-by Thomas began to come up and so did the other feller --
- William Obadiah Seaman, his name was. For a long time I couldn't
- make up my mind which of them to take, and they kep' coming and coming,
- and I kep' worrying. Y'see, W.O. was rich -- he had a fine place and
- carried considerable style. He was by far the best match. Jog along,
- black mare."
-
- "Why didn't you marry him?" asked Anne.
-
- "Well, y'see, he didn't love me," answered Mrs. Skinner, solemnly.
-
- Anne opened her eyes widely and looked at Mrs. Skinner. But there was
- not a glint of humor on that lady's face. Evidently Mrs. Skinner saw
- nothing amusing in her own case.
-
- "He'd been a widder-man for three yers, and his sister kept house for him.
- Then she got married and he just wanted some one to look after his house.
- It was worth looking after, too, mind you that. It's a handsome house.
- Jog along, black mare. As for Thomas, he was poor, and if his house
- didn't leak in dry weather it was about all that could be said for it,
- though it looks kind of pictureaskew. But, y'see, I loved Thomas, and
- I didn't care one red cent for W.O. So I argued it out with myself.
- `Sarah Crowe,' say I -- my first was a Crowe -- `you can marry
- your rich man if you like but you won't be happy. Folks can't
- get along together in this world without a little bit of love.
- You'd just better tie up to Thomas, for he loves you and you love
- him and nothing else ain't going to do you.' Jog along, black mare.
- So I told Thomas I'd take him. All the time I was getting ready
- I never dared drive past W.O.'s place for fear the sight of that
- fine house of his would put me in the swithers again. But now I
- never think of it at all, and I'm just that comfortable and happy
- with Thomas. Jog along, black mare."
-
- "How did William Obadiah take it?" queried Anne.
-
- "Oh, he rumpussed a bit. But he's going to see a skinny old maid
- in Millersville now, and I guess she'll take him fast enough.
- She'll make him a better wife than his first did. W.O. never
- wanted to marry her. He just asked her to marry him 'cause his
- father wanted him to, never dreaming but that she'd say `no.'
- But mind you, she said 'yes.' There was a predicament for you.
- Jog along, black mare. She was a great housekeeper, but most
- awful mean. She wore the same bonnet for eighteen years. Then she
- got a new one and W.O. met her on the road and didn't know her.
- Jog along, black mare. I feel that I'd a narrer escape. I might
- have married him and been most awful miserable, like my poor
- cousin, Jane Ann. Jane Ann married a rich man she didn't care
- anything about, and she hasn't the life of a dog. She come to
- see me last week and says, says she, `Sarah Skinner, I envy you.
- I'd rather live in a little hut on the side of the road with a
- man I was fond of than in my big house with the one I've got.'
- Jane Ann's man ain't such a bad sort, nuther, though he's so
- contrary that he wears his fur coat when the thermometer's
- at ninety. The only way to git him to do anything is to coax
- him to do the opposite. But there ain't any love to smooth
- things down and it's a poor way of living. Jog along, black mare.
- There's Janet's place in the hollow -- `Wayside,' she calls it.
- Quite pictureaskew, ain't it? I guess you'll be glad to git
- out of this, with all them mail bags jamming round you."
-
- "Yes, but I have enjoyed my drive with you very much," said
- Anne sincerely.
-
- "Git away now!" said Mrs. Skinner, highly flattered. "Wait till
- I tell Thomas that. He always feels dretful tickled when I git
- a compliment. Jog along, black mare. Well, here we are. I hope
- you'll git on well in the school, miss. There's a short cut to
- it through the ma'sh back of Janet's. If you take that way be
- awful keerful. If you once got stuck in that black mud you'd be
- sucked right down and never seen or heard tell of again till the
- day of judgment, like Adam Palmer's cow. Jog along, black mare."
-
-
-
- Chapter XXXI
-
- Anne to Philippa
-
-
- "Anne Shirley to Philippa Gordon, greeting.
-
- "Well-beloved, it's high time I was writing you. Here am I,
- installed once more as a country `schoolma'am' at Valley Road,
- boarding at `Wayside,' the home of Miss Janet Sweet. Janet is a
- dear soul and very nicelooking; tall, but not over-tall; stoutish,
- yet with a certain restraint of outline suggestive of a thrifty
- soul who is not going to be overlavish even in the matter of
- avoirdupois. She has a knot of soft, crimpy, brown hair with
- a thread of gray in it, a sunny face with rosy cheeks, and big,
- kind eyes as blue as forget-me-nots. Moreover, she is one of those
- delightful, old-fashioned cooks who don't care a bit if they ruin
- your digestion as long as they can give you feasts of fat things.
-
- "I like her; and she likes me -- principally, it seems, because
- she had a sister named Anne who died young.
-
- "`I'm real glad to see you,' she said briskly, when I landed in her yard.
- `My, you don't look a mite like I expected. I was sure you'd be dark --
- my sister Anne was dark. And here you're redheaded!'
-
- "For a few minutes I thought I wasn't going to like Janet as much
- as I had expected at first sight. Then I reminded myself that I
- really must be more sensible than to be prejudiced against any
- one simply because she called my hair red. Probably the word
- `auburn' was not in Janet's vocabulary at all.
-
- "`Wayside' is a dear sort of little spot. The house is small
- and white, set down in a delightful little hollow that drops
- away from the road. Between road and house is an orchard and
- flower-garden all mixed up together. The front door walk is
- bordered with quahog clam-shells -- `cow-hawks,' Janet calls them;
- there is Virginia Creeper over the porch and moss on the roof.
- My room is a neat little spot `off the parlor' -- just big
- enough for the bed and me. Over the head of my bed there is a
- picture of Robby Burns standing at Highland Mary's grave,
- shadowed by an enormous weeping willow tree. Robby's face is
- so lugubrious that it is no wonder I have bad dreams. Why, the
- first night I was here I dreamed I COULDN'T LAUGH.
-
- "The parlor is tiny and neat. Its one window is so shaded by a
- huge willow that the room has a grotto-like effect of emerald gloom.
- There are wonderful tidies on the chairs, and gay mats on the floor,
- and books and cards carefully arranged on a round table, and vases
- of dried grass on the mantel-piece. Between the vases is a cheerful
- decoration of preserved coffin plates -- five in all, pertaining
- respectively to Janet's father and mother, a brother, her sister Anne,
- and a hired man who died here once! If I go suddenly insane some of
- these days `know all men by these presents' that those coffin-plates
- have caused it.
-
- "But it's all delightful and I said so. Janet loved me for it,
- just as she detested poor Esther because Esther had said so much
- shade was unhygienic and had objected to sleeping on a feather bed.
- Now, I glory in feather-beds, and the more unhygienic and feathery
- they are the more I glory. Janet says it is such a comfort to see
- me eat; she had been so afraid I would be like Miss Haythorne, who
- wouldn't eat anything but fruit and hot water for breakfast and tried
- to make Janet give up frying things. Esther is really a dear girl,
- but she is rather given to fads. The trouble is that she hasn't
- enough imagination and HAS a tendency to indigestion.
-
- "Janet told me I could have the use of the parlor when any young
- men called! I don't think there are many to call. I haven't
- seen a young man in Valley Road yet, except the next-door
- hired boy -- Sam Toliver, a very tall, lank, tow-haired youth.
- He came over one evening recently and sat for an hour on the
- garden fence, near the front porch where Janet and I were doing
- fancy-work. The only remarks he volunteered in all that time
- were, `Hev a peppermint, miss! Dew now-fine thing for carARRH,
- peppermints,' and, `Powerful lot o' jump-grasses round here
- ternight. Yep.'
-
- "But there is a love affair going on here. It seems to be my
- fortune to be mixed up, more or less actively, with elderly love
- affairs. Mr. and Mrs. Irving always say that I brought about
- their marriage. Mrs. Stephen Clark of Carmody persists in being
- most grateful to me for a suggestion which somebody else would
- probably have made if I hadn't. I do really think, though, that
- Ludovic Speed would never have got any further along than placid
- courtship if I had not helped him and Theodora Dix out.
-
- "In the present affair I am only a passive spectator. I've tried
- once to help things along and made an awful mess of it. So I
- shall not meddle again. I'll tell you all about it when we meet."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXXII
-
- Tea with Mrs. Douglas
-
-
- On the first Thursday night of Anne's sojourn in Valley Road
- Janet asked her to go to prayer-meeting. Janet blossomed out
- like a rose to attend that prayer-meeting. She wore a pale-blue,
- pansy-sprinkled muslin dress with more ruffles than one would ever
- have supposed economical Janet could be guilty of, and a white
- leghorn hat with pink roses and three ostrich feathers on it.
- Anne felt quite amazed. Later on, she found out Janet's motive
- in so arraying herself -- a motive as old as Eden.
-
- Valley Road prayer-meetings seemed to be essentially feminine.
- There were thirty-two women present, two half-grown boys, and one
- solitary man, beside the minister. Anne found herself studying
- this man. He was not handsome or young or graceful; he had
- remarkably long legs -- so long that he had to keep them coiled
- up under his chair to dispose of them -- and he was stoopshouldered.
- His hands were big, his hair wanted barbering, and his moustache
- was unkempt. But Anne thought she liked his face; it was kind and
- honest and tender; there was something else in it, too -- just what,
- Anne found it hard to define. She finally concluded that this man had
- suffered and been strong, and it had been made manifest in his face.
- There was a sort of patient, humorous endurance in his expression
- which indicated that he would go to the stake if need be, but would
- keep on looking pleasant until he really had to begin squirming.
-
- When prayer-meeting was over this man came up to Janet and said,
-
- "May I see you home, Janet?"
-
- Janet took his arm -- "as primly and shyly as if she were no more
- than sixteen, having her first escort home," Anne told the girls
- at Patty's Place later on.
-
- "Miss Shirley, permit me to introduce Mr. Douglas," she said stiffly.
-
- Mr. Douglas nodded and said, "I was looking at you in prayer-meeting,
- miss, and thinking what a nice little girl you were."
-
- Such a speech from ninety-nine people out of a hundred would have
- annoyed Anne bitterly; but the way in which Mr. Douglas said it made
- her feel that she had received a very real and pleasing compliment.
- She smiled appreciatively at him and dropped obligingly behind on
- the moonlit road.
-
- So Janet had a beau! Anne was delighted. Janet would make a paragon
- of a wife -- cheery, economical, tolerant, and a very queen of cooks.
- It would be a flagrant waste on Nature's part to keep her a permanent
- old maid.
-
- "John Douglas asked me to take you up to see his mother," said
- Janet the next day. "She's bed-rid a lot of the time and never
- goes out of the house. But she's powerful fond of company and
- always wants to see my boarders. Can you go up this evening?"
-
- Anne assented; but later in the day Mr. Douglas called on his
- mother's behalf to invite them up to tea on Saturday evening.
-
- "Oh, why didn't you put on your pretty pansy dress?" asked Anne,
- when they left home. It was a hot day, and poor Janet, between
- her excitement and her heavy black cashmere dress, looked as if
- she were being broiled alive.
-
- "Old Mrs. Douglas would think it terrible frivolous and unsuitable,
- I'm afraid. John likes that dress, though," she added wistfully.
-
- The old Douglas homestead was half a mile from "Wayside" cresting
- a windy hill. The house itself was large and comfortable, old
- enough to be dignified, and girdled with maple groves and orchards.
- There were big, trim barns behind it, and everything bespoke prosperity.
- Whatever the patient endurance in Mr. Douglas' face had meant it hadn't,
- so Anne reflected, meant debts and duns.
-
- John Douglas met them at the door and took them into the
- sitting-room, where his mother was enthroned in an armchair.
-
- Anne had expected old Mrs. Douglas to be tall and thin, because
- Mr. Douglas was. Instead, she was a tiny scrap of a woman, with
- soft pink cheeks, mild blue eyes, and a mouth like a baby's.
- Dressed in a beautiful, fashionably-made black silk dress,
- with a fluffy white shawl over her shoulders, and her snowy
- hair surmounted by a dainty lace cap, she might have posed
- as a grandmother doll.
-
- "How do you do, Janet dear?" she said sweetly. "I am so glad to
- see you again, dear." She put up her pretty old face to be kissed.
- "And this is our new teacher. I'm delighted to meet you. My son
- has been singing your praises until I'm half jealous, and I'm sure
- Janet ought to be wholly so."
-
- Poor Janet blushed, Anne said something polite and conventional,
- and then everybody sat down and made talk. It was hard work,
- even for Anne, for nobody seemed at ease except old Mrs. Douglas,
- who certainly did not find any difficulty in talking. She made
- Janet sit by her and stroked her hand occasionally. Janet sat
- and smiled, looking horribly uncomfortable in her hideous dress,
- and John Douglas sat without smiling.
-
- At the tea table Mrs. Douglas gracefully asked Janet to pour
- the tea. Janet turned redder than ever but did it. Anne wrote
- a description of that meal to Stella.
-
- "We had cold tongue and chicken and strawberry preserves, lemon
- pie and tarts and chocolate cake and raisin cookies and pound cake
- and fruit cake -- and a few other things, including more pie
- -- caramel pie, I think it was. After I had eaten twice as much
- as was good for me, Mrs. Douglas sighed and said she feared she
- had nothing to tempt my appetite.
-
- "`I'm afraid dear Janet's cooking has spoiled you for any other,'
- she said sweetly. `Of course nobody in Valley Road aspires to
- rival HER. WON'T you have another piece of pie, Miss Shirley?
- You haven't eaten ANYTHING.'
-
- "Stella, I had eaten a helping of tongue and one of chicken,
- three biscuits, a generous allowance of preserves, a piece of
- pie, a tart, and a square of chocolate cake!"
-
- After tea Mrs. Douglas smiled benevolently and told John to
- take "dear Janet" out into the garden and get her some roses.
- "Miss Shirley will keep me company while you are out --
- won't you?" she said plaintively. She settled down in her
- armchair with a sigh.
-
- "I am a very frail old woman, Miss Shirley. For over twenty
- years I've been a great sufferer. For twenty long, weary years
- I've been dying by inches."
-
- "How painful!" said Anne, trying to be sympathetic and succeeding
- only in feeling idiotic.
-
- "There have been scores of nights when they've thought I could
- never live to see the dawn," went on Mrs. Douglas solemnly.
- "Nobody knows what I've gone through -- nobody can know but
- myself. Well, it can't last very much longer now. My weary
- pilgrimage will soon be over, Miss Shirley. It is a great
- comfort to me that John will have such a good wife to look after
- him when his mother is gone -- a great comfort, Miss Shirley."
-
- "Janet is a lovely woman," said Anne warmly.
-
- "Lovely! A beautiful character," assented Mrs. Douglas. "And a
- perfect housekeeper -- something I never was. My health would
- not permit it, Miss Shirley. I am indeed thankful that John has
- made such a wise choice. I hope and believe that he will be happy.
- He is my only son, Miss Shirley, and his happiness lies very near
- my heart."
-
- "Of course," said Anne stupidly. For the first time in her life
- she was stupid. Yet she could not imagine why. She seemed to
- have absolutely nothing to say to this sweet, smiling, angelic
- old lady who was patting her hand so kindly.
-
- "Come and see me soon again, dear Janet," said Mrs. Douglas
- lovingly, when they left. "You don't come half often enough.
- But then I suppose John will be bringing you here to stay all the
- time one of these days." Anne, happening to glance at John
- Douglas, as his mother spoke, gave a positive start of dismay.
- He looked as a tortured man might look when his tormentors gave
- the rack the last turn of possible endurance. She felt sure he
- must be ill and hurried poor blushing Janet away.
-
- "Isn't old Mrs. Douglas a sweet woman?" asked Janet, as they
- went down the road.
-
- "M -- m," answered Anne absently. She was wondering why John
- Douglas had looked so.
-
- "She's been a terrible sufferer," said Janet feelingly.
- "She takes terrible spells. It keeps John all worried up.
- He's scared to leave home for fear his mother will take a
- spell and nobody there but the hired girl."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXXIII
-
- "He Just Kept Coming and Coming"
-
-
- Three days later Anne came home from school and found Janet crying.
- Tears and Janet seemed so incongruous that Anne was honestly alarmed.
-
- "Oh, what is the matter?" she cried anxiously.
-
- "I'm -- I'm forty today," sobbed Janet.
-
- "Well, you were nearly that yesterday and it didn't hurt,"
- comforted Anne, trying not to smile.
-
- "But -- but," went on Janet with a big gulp, "John Douglas won't
- ask me to marry him."
-
- "Oh, but he will," said Anne lamely. "You must give him time, Janet
-
- "Time!" said Janet with indescribable scorn. "He has had twenty years.
- How much time does he want?"
-
- "Do you mean that John Douglas has been coming to see you for
- twenty years?"
-
- "He has. And he has never so much as mentioned marriage to me.
- And I don't believe he ever will now. I've never said a word to
- a mortal about it, but it seems to me I've just got to talk it
- out with some one at last or go crazy. John Douglas begun to go
- with me twenty years ago, before mother died. Well, he kept
- coming and coming, and after a spell I begun making quilts and
- things; but he never said anything about getting married, only
- just kept coming and coming. There wasn't anything I could do.
- Mother died when we'd been going together for eight years.
- I thought he maybe would speak out then, seeing as I was left
- alone in the world. He was real kind and feeling, and did
- everything he could for me, but he never said marry. And that's
- the way it has been going on ever since. People blame ME for it.
- They say I won't marry him because his mother is so sickly and I
- don't want the bother of waiting on her. Why, I'd LOVE to wait on
- John's mother! But I let them think so. I'd rather they'd blame
- me than pity me! It's so dreadful humiliating that John won't
- ask me. And WHY won't he? Seems to me if I only knew his reason
- I wouldn't mind it so much."
-
- "Perhaps his mother doesn't want him to marry anybody," suggested Anne.
-
- "Oh, she does. She's told me time and again that she'd love to see
- John settled before her time comes. She's always giving him hints --
- you heard her yourself the other day. I thought I'd ha' gone through
- the floor."
-
- "It's beyond me," said Anne helplessly. She thought of Ludovic Speed.
- But the cases were not parallel. John Douglas was not a man of
- Ludovic's type.
-
- "You should show more spirit, Janet," she went on resolutely.
- "Why didn't you send him about his business long ago?"
-
- "I couldn't," said poor Janet pathetically. "You see, Anne, I've
- always been awful fond of John. He might just as well keep coming
- as not, for there was never anybody else I'd want, so it didn't matter."
-
- "But it might have made him speak out like a man," urged Anne.
-
- Janet shook her head.
-
- "No, I guess not. I was afraid to try, anyway, for fear he'd
- think I meant it and just go. I suppose I'm a poor-spirited
- creature, but that is how I feel. And I can't help it."
-
- "Oh, you COULD help it, Janet. It isn't too late yet. Take a
- firm stand. Let that man know you are not going to endure his
- shillyshallying any longer. I'LL back you up."
-
- "I dunno," said Janet hopelessly. "I dunno if I could ever get up
- enough spunk. Things have drifted so long. But I'll think it over."
-
- Anne felt that she was disappointed in John Douglas. She had
- liked him so well, and she had not thought him the sort of man who
- would play fast and loose with a woman's feelings for twenty years.
- He certainly should be taught a lesson, and Anne felt vindictively
- that she would enjoy seeing the process. Therefore she was delighted
- when Janet told her, as they were going to prayer-meeting the next night,
- that she meant to show some "sperrit."
-
- "I'll let John Douglas see I'm not going to be trodden on any longer."
-
- "You are perfectly right," said Anne emphatically.
-
- When prayer-meeting was over John Douglas came up with his usual request.
- Janet looked frightened but resolute.
-
- "No, thank you," she said icily. "I know the road home pretty well alone.
- I ought to, seeing I've been traveling it for forty years. So you needn't
- trouble yourself, MR. Douglas."
-
- Anne was looking at John Douglas; and, in that brilliant moonlight,
- she saw the last twist of the rack again. Without a word he turned
- and strode down the road.
-
- "Stop! Stop!" Anne called wildly after him, not caring in the least
- for the other dumbfounded onlookers. "Mr. Douglas, stop! Come back."
-
- John Douglas stopped but he did not come back. Anne flew down
- the road, caught his arm and fairly dragged him back to Janet.
-
- "You must come back," she said imploringly. "It's all a mistake,
- Mr. Douglas -- all my fault. I made Janet do it. She didn't
- want to -- but it's all right now, isn't it, Janet?"
-
- Without a word Janet took his arm and walked away. Anne followed
- them meekly home and slipped in by the back door.
-
- "Well, you are a nice person to back me up," said Janet sarcastically.
-
- "I couldn't help it, Janet," said Anne repentantly. "I just felt
- as if I had stood by and seen murder done. I HAD to run after him."
-
- "Oh, I'm just as glad you did. When I saw John Douglas making
- off down that road I just felt as if every little bit of joy and
- happiness that was left in my life was going with him. It was an
- awful feeling."
-
- "Did he ask you why you did it?" asked Anne.
-
- "No, he never said a word about it," replied Janet dully.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXXIV
-
- John Douglas Speaks at Last
-
-
- Anne was not without a feeble hope that something might come of
- it after all. But nothing did. John Douglas came and took Janet
- driving, and walked home from prayer-meeting with her, as he had
- been doing for twenty years, and as he seemed likely to do for
- twenty years more. The summer waned. Anne taught her school and
- wrote letters and studied a little. Her walks to and from school
- were pleasant. She always went by way of the swamp; it was a
- lovely place -- a boggy soil, green with the greenest of mossy
- hillocks; a silvery brook meandered through it and spruces stood
- erectly, their boughs a-trail with gray-green mosses, their roots
- overgrown with all sorts of woodland lovelinesses.
-
- Nevertheless, Anne found life in Valley Road a little monotonous.
- To be sure, there was one diverting incident.
-
- She had not seen the lank, tow-headed Samuel of the peppermints
- since the evening of his call, save for chance meetings on the road.
- But one warm August night he appeared, and solemnly seated himself
- on the rustic bench by the porch. He wore his usual working
- habiliments, consisting of varipatched trousers, a blue jean shirt,
- out at the elbows, and a ragged straw hat. He was chewing a straw
- and he kept on chewing it while he looked solemnly at Anne. Anne
- laid her book aside with a sigh and took up her doily. Conversation
- with Sam was really out of the question.
-
- After a long silence Sam suddenly spoke.
-
- "I'm leaving over there," he said abruptly, waving his straw in
- the direction of the neighboring house.
-
- "Oh, are you?" said Anne politely.
-
- "Yep."
-
- "And where are you going now?"
-
- "Wall, I've been thinking some of gitting a place of my own.
- There's one that'd suit me over at Millersville. But ef I rents
- it I'll want a woman."
-
- "I suppose so," said Anne vaguely.
-
- "Yep."
-
- There was another long silence. Finally Sam removed his straw
- again and said,
-
- "Will yeh hev me?"
-
- "Wh -- a -- t!" gasped Anne.
-
- "Will yeh hev me?"
-
- "Do you mean -- MARRY you?" queried poor Anne feebly.
-
- "Yep."
-
- "Why, I'm hardly acquainted with you," cried Anne indignantly.
-
- "But yeh'd git acquainted with me after we was married," said Sam.
-
- Anne gathered up her poor dignity.
-
- "Certainly I won't marry you," she said haughtily.
-
- "Wall, yeh might do worse," expostulated Sam. "I'm a good worker
- and I've got some money in the bank."
-
- "Don't speak of this to me again. Whatever put such an idea into
- your head?" said Anne, her sense of humor getting the better of
- her wrath. It was such an absurd situation.
-
- "Yeh're a likely-looking girl and hev a right-smart way o' stepping,"
- said Sam. "I don't want no lazy woman. Think it over. I won't change
- my mind yit awhile. Wall, I must be gitting. Gotter milk the cows."
-
- Anne's illusions concerning proposals had suffered so much of
- late years that there were few of them left. So she could laugh
- wholeheartedly over this one, not feeling any secret sting. She
- mimicked poor Sam to Janet that night, and both of them laughed
- immoderately over his plunge into sentiment.
-
- One afternoon, when Anne's sojourn in Valley Road was drawing to a
- close, Alec Ward came driving down to "Wayside" in hot haste for Janet.
-
- "They want you at the Douglas place quick," he said. "I really
- believe old Mrs. Douglas is going to die at last, after pretending
- to do it for twenty years."
-
- Janet ran to get her hat. Anne asked if Mrs. Douglas was worse than usual.
-
- "She's not half as bad," said Alec solemnly, "and that's what
- makes me think it's serious. Other times she'd be screaming and
- throwing herself all over the place. This time she's lying still
- and mum. When Mrs. Douglas is mum she is pretty sick, you bet."
-
- "You don't like old Mrs. Douglas?" said Anne curiously.
-
- "I like cats as IS cats. I don't like cats as is women," was Alec's
- cryptic reply.
-
- Janet came home in the twilight.
-
- "Mrs. Douglas is dead," she said wearily. "She died soon after
- I got there. She just spoke to me once -- `I suppose you'll
- marry John now?' she said. It cut me to the heart, Anne.
- To think John's own mother thought I wouldn't marry him
- because of her! I couldn't say a word either -- there were
- other women there. I was thankful John had gone out."
-
- Janet began to cry drearily. But Anne brewed her a hot drink of
- ginger tea to her comforting. To be sure, Anne discovered later
- on that she had used white pepper instead of ginger; but Janet
- never knew the difference.
-
- The evening after the funeral Janet and Anne were sitting on the
- front porch steps at sunset. The wind had fallen asleep in the
- pinelands and lurid sheets of heat-lightning flickered across the
- northern skies. Janet wore her ugly black dress and looked her
- very worst, her eyes and nose red from crying. They talked
- little, for Janet seemed faintly to resent Anne's efforts to
- cheer her up. She plainly preferred to be miserable.
-
- Suddenly the gate-latch clicked and John Douglas strode into the
- garden. He walked towards them straight over the geranium bed.
- Janet stood up. So did Anne. Anne was a tall girl and wore a
- white dress; but John Douglas did not see her.
-
- "Janet," he said, "will you marry me?"
-
- The words burst out as if they had been wanting to be said
- for twenty years and MUST be uttered now, before anything else.
-
- Janet's face was so red from crying that it couldn't turn any redder,
- so it turned a most unbecoming purple.
-
- "Why didn't you ask me before?" she said slowly.
-
- "I couldn't. She made me promise not to -- mother made me
- promise not to. Nineteen years ago she took a terrible spell.
- We thought she couldn't live through it. She implored me to
- promise not to ask you to marry me while she was alive. I didn't
- want to promise such a thing, even though we all thought she
- couldn't live very long -- the doctor only gave her six months.
- But she begged it on her knees, sick and suffering. I had to promise."
-
- "What had your mother against me?" cried Janet.
-
- "Nothing -- nothing. She just didn't want another woman
- -- ANY woman -- there while she was living. She said if I
- didn't promise she'd die right there and I'd have killed her.
- So I promised. And she's held me to that promise ever since,
- though I've gone on my knees to her in my turn to beg her
- to let me ff."
-
- "Why didn't you tell me this?" asked Janet chokingly.
- "If I'd only KNOWN! Why didn't you just tell me?"
-
- "She made me promise I wouldn't tell a soul," said John hoarsely.
- "She swore me to it on the Bible; Janet, I'd never have done it
- if I'd dreamed it was to be for so long. Janet, you'll never
- know what I've suffered these nineteen years. I know I've made
- you suffer, too, but you'll marry me for all, won't you, Janet?
- Oh, Janet, won't you? I've come as soon as I could to ask you."
-
- At this moment the stupefied Anne came to her senses and realized
- that she had no business to be there. She slipped away and did not
- see Janet until the next morning, when the latter told her the rest
- of the story.
-
- "That cruel, relentless, deceitful old woman!" cried Anne.
-
- "Hush -- she's dead," said Janet solemnly. "If she wasn't -- but she IS.
- So we mustn't speak evil of her. But I'm happy at last, Anne. And I
- wouldn't have minded waiting so long a bit if I'd only known why."
-
- "When are you to be married?"
-
- "Next month. Of course it will be very quiet. I suppose people
- will talk terrible. They'll say I made enough haste to snap John
- up as soon as his poor mother was out of the way. John wanted to
- let them know the truth but I said, `No, John; after all she was
- your mother, and we'll keep the secret between us, and not cast
- any shadow on her memory. I don't mind what people say, now that
- I know the truth myself. It don't matter a mite. Let it all be
- buried with the dead' says I to him. So I coaxed him round to
- agree with me."
-
- "You're much more forgiving than I could ever be," Anne said,
- rather crossly.
-
- "You'll feel differently about a good many things when you get to
- be my age," said Janet tolerantly. "That's one of the things we
- learn as we grow older -- how to forgive. It comes easier at
- forty than it did at twenty."
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXXV
-
- The Last Redmond Year Opens
-
-
- "Here we are, all back again, nicely sunburned and rejoicing as a
- strong man to run a race," said Phil, sitting down on a suitcase
- with a sigh of pleasure. "Isn't it jolly to see this dear old
- Patty's Place again -- and Aunty -- and the cats? Rusty has lost
- another piece of ear, hasn't he?"
-
- "Rusty would be the nicest cat in the world if he had no ears at all,"
- declared Anne loyally from her trunk, while Rusty writhed about her lap
- in a frenzy of welcome.
-
- "Aren't you glad to see us back, Aunty?" demanded Phil.
-
- "Yes. But I wish you'd tidy things up," said Aunt Jamesina plaintively,
- looking at the wilderness of trunks and suitcases by which the four
- laughing, chattering girls were surrounded. "You can talk just as well
- later on. Work first and then play used to be my motto when I was a girl."
-
- "Oh, we've just reversed that in this generation, Aunty.
- OUR motto is play your play and then dig in. You can do your
- work so much better if you've had a good bout of play first."
-
- "If you are going to marry a minister," said Aunt Jamesina,
- picking up Joseph and her knitting and resigning herself to the
- inevitable with the charming grace that made her the queen of
- housemothers, "you will have to give up such expressions as `dig in.'"
-
- "Why?" moaned Phil. "Oh, why must a minister's wife be supposed
- to utter only prunes and prisms? I shan't. Everybody on
- Patterson Street uses slang -- that is to say, metaphorical
- language -- and if I didn't they would think me insufferably
- proud and stuck up."
-
- "Have you broken the news to your family?" asked Priscilla,
- feeding the Sarah-cat bits from her lunchbasket.
-
- Phil nodded.
-
- "How did they take it?"
-
- "Oh, mother rampaged. But I stood rockfirm -- even I, Philippa Gordon,
- who never before could hold fast to anything. Father was calmer.
- Father's own daddy was a minister, so you see he has a soft spot
- in his heart for the cloth. I had Jo up to Mount Holly, after mother
- grew calm, and they both loved him. But mother gave him some frightful
- hints in every conversation regarding what she had hoped for me. Oh,
- my vacation pathway hasn't been exactly strewn with roses, girls dear.
- But -- I've won out and I've got Jo. Nothing else matters."
-
- "To you," said Aunt Jamesina darkly.
-
- "Nor to Jo, either," retorted Phil. "You keep on pitying him.
- Why, pray? I think he's to be envied. He's getting brains,
- beauty, and a heart of gold in ME."
-
- "It's well we know how to take your speeches," said Aunt Jamesina
- patiently. "I hope you don't talk like that before strangers.
- What would they think?"
-
- "Oh, I don't want to know what they think. I don't want to
- see myself as others see me. I'm sure it would be horribly
- uncomfortable most of the time. I don't believe Burns was
- really sincere in that prayer, either."
-
- "Oh, I daresay we all pray for some things that we really don't
- want, if we were only honest enough to look into our hearts,"
- owned Aunt Jamesina candidly. "I've a notion that such prayers
- don't rise very far. _I_ used to pray that I might be enabled to
- forgive a certain person, but I know now I really didn't want to
- forgive her. When I finally got that I DID want to I forgave her
- without having to pray about it."
-
- "I can't picture you as being unforgiving for long," said Stella.
-
- "Oh, I used to be. But holding spite doesn't seem worth while
- when you get along in years."
-
- "That reminds me," said Anne, and told the tale of John and Janet.
-
- "And now tell us about that romantic scene you hinted so darkly
- at in one of your letters," demanded Phil.
-
- Anne acted out Samuel's proposal with great spirit. The girls
- shrieked with laughter and Aunt Jamesina smiled.
-
- "It isn't in good taste to make fun of your beaux," she said
- severely; "but," she added calmly, "I always did it myself."
-
- "Tell us about your beaux, Aunty, "en treated Phil. "You must
- have had any number of them."
-
- "They're not in the past tense," retorted Aunt Jamesina.
- "I've got them yet. There are three old widowers at home
- who have been casting sheep's eyes at me for some time.
- You children needn't think you own all the romance in the world."
-
- "Widowers and sheep's eyes don't sound very romantic, Aunty."
-
- "Well, no; but young folks aren't always romantic either.
- Some of my beaux certainly weren't. I used to laugh at them
- scandalous, poor boys. There was Jim Elwood -- he was always in
- a sort of day-dream -- never seemed to sense what was going on.
- He didn't wake up to the fact that I'd said `no' till a year
- after I'd said it. When he did get married his wife fell out of
- the sleigh one night when they were driving home from church and
- he never missed her. Then there was Dan Winston. He knew too much.
- He knew everything in this world and most of what is in the next.
- He could give you an answer to any question, even if you asked him
- when the Judgment Day was to be. Milton Edwards was real nice and
- I liked him but I didn't marry him. For one thing, he took a week
- to get a joke through his head, and for another he never asked me.
- Horatio Reeve was the most interesting beau I ever had. But when he
- told a story he dressed it up so that you couldn't see it for frills.
- I never could decide whether he was lying or just letting his
- imagination run loose."
-
- "And what about the others, Aunty?"
-
- "Go away and unpack," said Aunt Jamesina, waving Joseph at them by
- mistake for a needle. "The others were too nice to make fun of.
- I shall respect their memory. There's a box of flowers in
- your room, Anne. They came about an hour ago."
-
- After the first week the girls of Patty's Place settled down to a
- steady grind of study; for this was their last year at Redmond
- and graduation honors must be fought for persistently. Anne
- devoted herself to English, Priscilla pored over classics, and
- Philippa pounded away at Mathematics. Sometimes they grew tired,
- sometimes they felt discouraged, sometimes nothing seemed worth
- the struggle for it. In one such mood Stella wandered up to the
- blue room one rainy November evening. Anne sat on the floor in a
- little circle of light cast by the lamp beside her, amid a
- surrounding snow of crumpled manuscript.
-
- "What in the world are you doing?"
-
- "Just looking over some old Story Club yarns. I wanted something
- to cheer AND inebriate. I'd studied until the world seemed azure.
- So I came up here and dug these out of my trunk. They are so drenched
- in tears and tragedy that they are excruciatingly funny."
-
- "I'm blue and discouraged myself," said Stella, throwing herself
- on the couch. "Nothing seems worthwhile. My very thoughts are
- old. I've thought them all before. What is the use of living
- after all, Anne?"
-
- "Honey, it's just brain fag that makes us feel that way, and the weather.
- A pouring rainy night like this, coming after a hard day's grind, would
- squelch any one but a Mark Tapley. You know it IS worthwhile to live."
-
- "Oh, I suppose so. But I can't prove it to myself just now."
-
- "Just think of all the great and noble souls who have lived and
- worked in the world," said Anne dreamily. "Isn't it worthwhile
- to come after them and inherit what they won and taught? Isn't
- it worthwhile to think we can share their inspiration? And then,
- all the great souls that will come in the future? Isn't it
- worthwhile to work a little and prepare the way for them --
- make just one step in their path easier?"
-
- "Oh, my mind agrees with you, Anne. But my soul remains doleful
- and uninspired. I'm always grubby and dingy on rainy nights."
-
- "Some nights I like the rain -- I like to lie in bed and hear it
- pattering on the roof and drifting through the pines."
-
- "I like it when it stays on the roof," said Stella. "It doesn't
- always. I spent a gruesome night in an old country farmhouse
- last summer. The roof leaked and the rain came pattering down on
- my bed. There was no poetry in THAT. I had to get up in the
- `mirk midnight' and chivy round to pull the bedstead out of the
- drip -- and it was one of those solid, old-fashioned beds that
- weigh a ton -- more or less. And then that drip-drop, drip-drop
- kept up all night until my nerves just went to pieces. You've no
- idea what an eerie noise a great drop of rain falling with a
- mushy thud on a bare floor makes in the night. It sounds like
- ghostly footsteps and all that sort of thing. What are you
- laughing over, Anne?"
-
- "These stories. As Phil would say they are killing -- in more senses
- than one, for everybody died in them. What dazzlingly lovely heroines
- we had -- and how we dressed them! Silks -- satins -- velvets -- jewels
- -- laces -- they never wore anything else. Here is one of Jane Andrews'
- stories depicting her heroine as sleeping in a beautiful white satin
- nightdress trimmed with seed pearls."
-
- "Go on," said Stella. "I begin to feel that life is worth living
- as long as there's a laugh in it."
-
- "Here's one I wrote. My heroine is disporting herself at a ball
- `glittering from head to foot with large diamonds of the first
- water.' But what booted beauty or rich attire? `The paths of
- glory lead but to the grave.' They must either be murdered or die
- of a broken heart. There was no escape for them."
-
- "Let me read some of your stories."
-
- "Well, here's my masterpiece. Note its cheerful title -- `My Graves.'
- I shed quarts of tears while writing it, and the other girls shed gallons
- while I read it. Jane Andrews' mother scolded her frightfully because
- she had so many handkerchiefs in the wash that week. It's a harrowing
- tale of the wanderings of a Methodist minister's wife. I made her a
- Methodist because it was necessary that she should wander. She buried
- a child every place she lived in. There were nine of them and their
- graves were severed far apart, ranging from Newfoundland to Vancouver.
- I described the children, pictured their several death beds, and
- detailed their tombstones and epitaphs. I had intended to bury the
- whole nine but when I had disposed of eight my invention of horrors
- gave out and I permitted the ninth to live as a hopeless cripple."
-
- While Stella read My Graves, punctuating its tragic paragraphs
- with chuckles, and Rusty slept the sleep of a just cat who has
- been out all night curled up on a Jane Andrews tale of a beautiful
- maiden of fifteen who went to nurse in a leper colony -- of course
- dying of the loathsome disease finally -- Anne glanced over the other
- manuscripts and recalled the old days at Avonlea school when the members
- of the Story Club, sitting under the spruce trees or down among the
- ferns by the brook, had written them. What fun they had had!
- How the sunshine and mirth of those olden summers returned as she read.
- Not all the glory that was Greece or the grandeur that was Rome could
- weave such wizardry as those funny, tearful tales of the Story Club.
- Among the manuscripts Anne found one written on sheets of wrapping paper.
- A wave of laughter filled her gray eyes as she recalled the time and
- place of its genesis. It was the sketch she had written the day she
- fell through the roof of the Cobb duckhouse on the Tory Road.
-
- Anne glanced over it, then fell to reading it intently. It was a
- little dialogue between asters and sweet-peas, wild canaries in the
- lilac bush, and the guardian spirit of the garden. After she had
- read it, she sat, staring into space; and when Stella had gone she
- smoothed out the crumpled manuscript.
-
- "I believe I will," she said resolutely.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXXVI
-
- The Gardners'Call
-
-
- "Here is a letter with an Indian stamp for you, Aunt Jimsie,"
- said Phil. "Here are three for Stella, and two for Pris, and a
- glorious fat one for me from Jo. There's nothing for you, Anne,
- except a circular."
-
- Nobody noticed Anne's flush as she took the thin letter Phil tossed
- her carelessly. But a few minutes later Phil looked up to see a
- transfigured Anne.
-
- "Honey, what good thing has happened?"
-
- "The Youth's Friend has accepted a little sketch I sent them a
- fortnight ago," said Anne, trying hard to speak as if she were
- accustomed to having sketches accepted every mail, but not
- quite succeeding.
-
- "Anne Shirley! How glorious! What was it? When is it to be
- published? Did they pay you for it?"
-
- "Yes; they've sent a check for ten dollars, and the editor writes
- that he would like to see more of my work. Dear man, he shall.
- It was an old sketch I found in my box. I re-wrote it and sent
- it in -- but I never really thought it could be accepted because
- it had no plot," said Anne, recalling the bitter experience of
- Averil's Atonement.
-
- "What are you going to do with that ten dollars, Anne? Let's all
- go up town and get drunk," suggested Phil.
-
- "I AM going to squander it in a wild soulless revel of some sort,"
- declared Anne gaily. "At all events it isn't tainted money --
- like the check I got for that horrible Reliable Baking Powder story.
- I spent IT usefully for clothes and hated them every time I put them on."
-
- "Think of having a real live author at Patty's Place," said Priscilla.
-
- "It's a great responsibility," said Aunt Jamesina solemnly.
-
- "Indeed it is," agreed Pris with equal solemnity. "Authors are
- kittle cattle. You never know when or how they will break out.
- Anne may make copy of us."
-
- "I meant that the ability to write for the Press was a great
- responsibility," said Aunt Jamesina severely. "and I hope Anne
- realizes, it. My daughter used to write stories before she went
- to the foreign field, but now she has turned her attention to
- higher things. She used to say her motto was `Never write a line
- you would be ashamed to read at your own funeral.' You'd better
- take that for yours, Anne, if you are going to embark in literature.
- Though, to be sure," added Aunt Jamesina perplexedly, "Elizabeth
- always used to laugh when she said it. She always laughed so much
- that I don't know how she ever came to decide on being a missionary.
- I'm thankful she did -- I prayed that she might -- but -- I wish
- she hadn't."
-
- Then Aunt Jamesina wondered why those giddy girls all laughed.
-
- Anne's eyes shone all that day; literary ambitions sprouted and
- budded in her brain; their exhilaration accompanied her to Jennie
- Cooper's walking party, and not even the sight of Gilbert and
- Christine, walking just ahead of her and Roy, could quite subdue
- the sparkle of her starry hopes. Nevertheless, she was not so
- rapt from things of earth as to be unable to notice that
- Christine's walk was decidedly ungraceful.
-
- "But I suppose Gilbert looks only at her face. So like a man,"
- thought Anne scornfully.
-
- "Shall you be home Saturday afternoon?" asked Roy.
-
- "Yes."
-
- "My mother and sisters are coming to call on you," said Roy quietly.
-
- Something went over Anne which might be described as a thrill, but
- it was hardly a pleasant one. She had never met any of Roy's family;
- she realized the significance of his statement; and it had, somehow,
- an irrevocableness about it that chilled her.
-
- "I shall be glad to see them," she said flatly; and then wondered
- if she really would be glad. She ought to be, of course. But
- would it not be something of an ordeal? Gossip had filtered to
- Anne regarding the light in which the Gardners viewed the
- "infatuation" of son and brother. Roy must have brought pressure
- to bear in the matter of this call. Anne knew she would be
- weighed in the balance. From the fact that they had consented to
- call she understood that, willingly or unwillingly, they regarded
- her as a possible member of their clan.
-
- "I shall just be myself. I shall not TRY to make a good impression,"
- thought Anne loftily. But she was wondering what dress she would
- better wear Saturday afternoon, and if the new style of high
- hair-dressing would suit her better than the old; and the walking
- party was rather spoiled for her. By night she had decided that she
- would wear her brown chiffon on Saturday, but would do her hair low.
-
- Friday afternoon none of the girls had classes at Redmond.
- Stella took the opportunity to write a paper for the Philomathic
- Society, and was sitting at the table in the corner of the
- living-room with an untidy litter of notes and manuscript on the
- floor around her. Stella always vowed she never could write
- anything unless she threw each sheet down as she completed it.
- Anne, in her flannel blouse and serge skirt, with her hair rather
- blown from her windy walk home, was sitting squarely in the
- middle of the floor, teasing the Sarah-cat with a wishbone.
- Joseph and Rusty were both curled up in her lap. A warm plummy
- odor filled the whole house, for Priscilla was cooking in the
- kitchen. Presently she came in, enshrouded in a huge work-apron,
- with a smudge of flour on her nose, to show Aunt Jamesina the
- chocolate cake she had just iced.
-
- At this auspicious moment the knocker sounded. Nobody paid any
- attention to it save Phil, who sprang up and opened it, expecting
- a boy with the hat she had bought that morning. On the doorstep
- stood Mrs. Gardner and her daughters.
-
- Anne scrambled to her feet somehow, emptying two indignant cats
- out of her lap as she did so, and mechanically shifting her
- wishbone from her right hand to her left. Priscilla, who would
- have had to cross the room to reach the kitchen door, lost her
- head, wildly plunged the chocolate cake under a cushion on the
- inglenook sofa, and dashed upstairs. Stella began feverishly
- gathering up her manuscript. Only Aunt Jamesina and Phil
- remained normal. Thanks to them, everybody was soon sitting at
- ease, even Anne. Priscilla came down, apronless and smudgeless,
- Stella reduced her corner to decency, and Phil saved the
- situation by a stream of ready small talk.
-
- Mrs. Gardner was tall and thin and handsome, exquisitely
- gowned, cordial with a cordiality that seemed a trifle forced.
- Aline Gardner was a younger edition of her mother, lacking the
- cordiality. She endeavored to be nice, but succeeded only in
- being haughty and patronizing. Dorothy Gardner was slim and
- jolly and rather tomboyish. Anne knew she was Roy's favorite
- sister and warmed to her. She would have looked very much like
- Roy if she had had dreamy dark eyes instead of roguish hazel
- ones. Thanks to her and Phil, the call really went off very
- well, except for a slight sense of strain in the atmosphere
- and two rather untoward incidents. Rusty and Joseph, left to
- themselves, began a game of chase, and sprang madly into
- Mrs. Gardner's silken lap and out of it in their wild career.
- Mrs. Gardner lifted her lorgnette and gazed after their flying
- forms as if she had never seen cats before, and Anne, choking
- back slightly nervous laughter, apologized as best she could.
-
- "You are fond of cats?" said Mrs. Gardner, with a slight
- intonation of tolerant wonder.
-
- Anne, despite her affection for Rusty, was not especially fond of
- cats, but Mrs. Gardner's tone annoyed her. Inconsequently she
- remembered that Mrs. John Blythe was so fond of cats that she
- kept as many as her husband would allow.
-
- "They ARE adorable animals, aren't they?" she said wickedly.
-
- "I have never liked cats," said Mrs. Gardner remotely.
-
- "I love them," said Dorothy. "They are so nice and selfish.
- Dogs are TOO good and unselfish. They make me feel uncomfortable.
- But cats are gloriously human."
-
- "You have two delightful old china dogs there. May I look at
- them closely?" said Aline, crossing the room towards the fireplace
- and thereby becoming the unconscious cause of the other accident.
- Picking up Magog, she sat down on the cushion under which was
- secreted Priscilla's chocolate cake. Priscilla and Anne exchanged
- agonized glances but could do nothing. The stately Aline continued to
- sit on the cushion and discuss china dogs until the time of departure.
-
- Dorothy lingered behind a moment to squeeze Anne's hand and
- whisper impulsively.
-
- "I KNOW you and I are going to be chums. Oh, Roy has told me all
- about you. I'm the only one of the family he tells things to,
- poor boy -- nobody COULD confide in mamma and Aline, you know.
- What glorious times you girls must have here! Won't you let me
- come often and have a share in them?"
-
- "Come as often as you like," Anne responded heartily, thankful
- that one of Roy's sisters was likable. She would never like
- Aline, so much was certain; and Aline would never like her,
- though Mrs. Gardner might be won. Altogether, Anne sighed with
- relief when the ordeal was over.
-
- "`Of all sad words of tongue or pen
- The saddest are it might have been,'"
-
- quoted Priscilla tragically, lifting the cushion. "This cake is
- now what you might call a flat failure. And the cushion is
- likewise ruined. Never tell me that Friday isn't unlucky."
-
- "People who send word they are coming on Saturday shouldn't come
- on Friday," said Aunt Jamesina.
-
- "I fancy it was Roy's mistake," said Phil. "That boy isn't really
- responsible for what he says when he talks to Anne. Where IS Anne?"
-
- Anne had gone upstairs. She felt oddly like crying. But she
- made herself laugh instead. Rusty and Joseph had been TOO awful!
- And Dorothy WAS a dear.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXXVII
-
- Full-fledged B.A.'s
-
-
- "I wish I were dead, or that it were tomorrow night," groaned Phil.
-
- "If you live long enough both wishes will come true," said Anne calmly.
-
- "It's easy for you to be serene. You're at home in Philosophy.
- I'm not -- and when I think of that horrible paper tomorrow I quail.
- If I should fail in it what would Jo say?"
-
- "You won't fail. How did you get on in Greek today?"
-
- "I don't know. Perhaps it was a good paper and perhaps it was
- bad enough to make Homer turn over in his grave. I've studied
- and mulled over notebooks until I'm incapable of forming an
- opinion of anything. How thankful little Phil will be when all
- this examinating is over."
-
- "Examinating? I never heard such a word."
-
- "Well, haven't I as good a right to make a word as any one else?"
- demanded Phil.
-
- "Words aren't made -- they grow," said Anne.
-
- "Never mind -- I begin faintly to discern clear water ahead where
- no examination breakers loom. Girls, do you -- can you realize
- that our Redmond Life is almost over?"
-
- "I can't," said Anne, sorrowfully. "It seems just yesterday
- that Pris and I were alone in that crowd of Freshmen at Redmond.
- And now we are Seniors in our final examinations."
-
- "`Potent, wise, and reverend Seniors,'" quoted Phil. "Do you
- suppose we really are any wiser than when we came to Redmond?"
-
- "You don't act as if you were by times," said Aunt Jamesina severely.
-
- "Oh, Aunt Jimsie, haven't we been pretty good girls, take us by
- and large, these three winters you've mothered us?" pleaded Phil.
-
- "You've been four of the dearest, sweetest, goodest girls that
- ever went together through college," averred Aunt Jamesina, who
- never spoiled a compliment by misplaced economy.
-
- "But I mistrust you haven't any too much sense yet. It's not to
- be expected, of course. Experience teaches sense. You can't
- learn it in a college course. You've been to college four years
- and I never was, but I know heaps more than you do, young ladies."
-
- "`There are lots of things that never go by rule,
- There's a powerful pile o' knowledge
- That you never get at college,
- There are heaps of things you never learn at school,'"
-
- quoted Stella.
-
- "Have you learned anything at Redmond except dead languages and
- geometry and such trash?" queried Aunt Jamesina.
-
- "Oh, yes. I think we have, Aunty," protested Anne.
-
- "We've learned the truth of what Professor Woodleigh told us
- last Philomathic," said Phil. "He said, `Humor is the spiciest
- condiment in the feast of existence. Laugh at your mistakes
- but learn from them, joke over your troubles but gather strength
- from them, make a jest of your difficulties but overcome them.'
- Isn't that worth learning, Aunt Jimsie?"
-
- "Yes, it is, dearie. When you've learned to laugh at the things
- that should be laughed at, and not to laugh at those that shouldn't,
- you've got wisdom and understanding."
-
- "What have you got out of your Redmond course, Anne?" murmured
- Priscilla aside.
-
- "I think," said Anne slowly, "that I really have learned to look
- upon each little hindrance as a jest and each great one as the
- foreshadowing of victory. Summing up, I think that is what
- Redmond has given me."
-
- "I shall have to fall back on another Professor Woodleigh
- quotation to express what it has done for me," said Priscilla.
- "You remember that he said in his address, `There is so much
- in the world for us all if we only have the eyes to see it, and
- the heart to love it, and the hand to gather it to ourselves --
- so much in men and women, so much in art and literature, so much
- everywhere in which to delight, and for which to be thankful.'
- I think Redmond has taught me that in some measure, Anne."
-
- "Judging from what you all, say" remarked Aunt Jamesina,
- "the sum and substance is that you can learn -- if you've got
- natural gumption enough -- in four years at college what it
- would take about twenty years of living to teach you. Well,
- that justifies higher education in my opinion. It's a matter
- I was always dubious about before."
-
- "But what about people who haven't natural gumption, Aunt Jimsie?"
-
- "People who haven't natural gumption never learn," retorted
- Aunt Jamesina, "neither in college nor life. If they live to
- be a hundred they really don't know anything more than when they
- were born. It's their misfortune not their fault, poor souls.
- But those of us who have some gumption should duly thank the
- Lord for it."
-
- "Will you please define what gumption is, Aunt Jimsie?" asked Phil.
-
- "No, I won't, young woman. Any one who has gumption knows what
- it is, and any one who hasn't can never know what it is. So there
- is no need of defining it."
-
- The busy days flew by and examinations were over. Anne took
- High Honors in English. Priscilla took Honors in Classics, and
- Phil in Mathematics. Stella obtained a good all-round showing.
- Then came Convocation.
-
- "This is what I would once have called an epoch in my life,"
- said Anne, as she took Roy's violets out of their box and gazed
- at them thoughtfully. She meant to carry them, of course, but
- her eyes wandered to another box on her table. It was filled
- with lilies-of-the-valley, as fresh and fragrant as those which
- bloomed in the Green Gables yard when June came to Avonlea.
- Gilbert Blythe's card lay beside it.
-
- Anne wondered why Gilbert should have sent her flowers for Convocation.
- She had seen very little of him during the past winter. He had come to
- Patty's Place only one Friday evening since the Christmas holidays,
- and they rarely met elsewhere. She knew he was studying very hard,
- aiming at High Honors and the Cooper Prize, and he took little part
- in the social doings of Redmond. Anne's own winter had been quite
- gay socially. She had seen a good deal of the Gardners; she and
- Dorothy were very intimate; college circles expected the announcement
- of her engagement to Roy any day. Anne expected it herself. Yet
- just before she left Patty's Place for Convocation she flung Roy's
- violets aside and put Gilbert's lilies-of-the-valley in their place.
- She could not have told why she did it. Somehow, old Avonlea days
- and dreams and friendships seemed very close to her in this attainment
- of her long-cherished ambitions. She and Gilbert had once picturedout
- merrily the day on which they should be capped and gowned graduates in
- Arts. The wonderful day had come and Roy's violets had no place in it.
- Only her old friend's flowers seemed to belong to this fruition of
- old-blossoming hopes which he had once shared.
-
- For years this day had beckoned and allured to her; but when it
- came the one single, keen, abiding memory it left with her was
- not that of the breathless moment when the stately president of
- Redmond gave her cap and diploma and hailed her B.A.; it was not
- of the flash in Gilbert's eyes when he saw her lilies, nor the
- puzzled pained glance Roy gave her as he passed her on the platform.
- It was not of Aline Gardner's condescending congratulations, or
- Dorothy's ardent, impulsive good wishes. It was of one strange,
- unaccountable pang that spoiled this long-expected day for her
- and left in it a certain faint but enduring flavor of bitterness.
-
- The Arts graduates gave a graduation dance that night. When Anne
- dressed for it she tossed aside the pearl beads she usually wore
- and took from her trunk the small box that had come to Green Gables
- on Christmas day. In it was a thread-like gold chain with a tiny
- pink enamel heart as a pendant. On the accompanying card was written,
- "With all good wishes from your old chum, Gilbert." Anne, laughing
- over the memory the enamel heart conjured up the fatal day when
- Gilbert had called her "Carrots" and vainly tried to make his peace
- with a pink candy heart, had written him a nice little note of thanks.
- But she had never worn the trinket. Tonight she fastened it about her
- white throat with a dreamy smile.
-
- She and Phil walked to Redmond together. Anne walked in silence;
- Phil chattered of many things. Suddenly she said,
-
- "I heard today that Gilbert Blythe's engagement to Christine
- Stuart was to be announced as soon as Convocation was over.
- Did you hear anything of it?"
-
- "No," said Anne.
-
- "I think it's true," said Phil lightly.
-
- Anne did not speak. In the darkness she felt her face burning.
- She slipped her hand inside her collar and caught at the gold
- chain. One energetic twist and it gave way. Anne thrust the
- broken trinket into her pocket. Her hands were trembling and
- her eyes were smarting.
-
- But she was the gayest of all the gay revellers that night, and
- told Gilbert unregretfully that her card was full when he came to
- ask her for a dance. Afterwards, when she sat with the girls
- before the dying embers at Patty's Place, removing the spring
- chilliness from their satin skins, none chatted more blithely
- than she of the day's events.
-
- "Moody Spurgeon MacPherson called here tonight after you left,"
- said Aunt Jamesina, who had sat up to keep the fire on. "He didn't
- know about the graduation dance. That boy ought to sleep with a
- rubber band around his head to train his ears not to stick out.
- I had a beau once who did that and it improved him immensely.
- It was I who suggested it to him and he took my advice, but he
- never forgave me for it."
-
- "Moody Spurgeon is a very serious young man," yawned Priscilla.
- "He is concerned with graver matters than his ears. He is going
- to be a minister, you know."
-
- "Well, I suppose the Lord doesn't regard the ears of a man,"
- said Aunt Jamesina gravely, dropping all further criticism of
- Moody Spurgeon. Aunt Jamesina had a proper respect for the
- cloth even in the case of an unfledged parson.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXXVIII
-
- False Dawn
-
-
- "Just imagine -- this night week I'll be in Avonlea -- delightful thought!"
- said Anne, bending over the box in which she was packing Mrs. Rachel Lynde's
- quilts. "But just imagine -- this night week I'll be gone forever from
- Patty's Place -- horrible thought!"
-
- "I wonder if the ghost of all our laughter will echo through the maiden
- dreams of Miss Patty and Miss Maria," speculated Phil.
-
- Miss Patty and Miss Maria were coming home, after having trotted over
- most of the habitable globe.
-
- "We'll be back the second week in May" wrote Miss Patty. "I expect
- Patty's Place will seem rather small after the Hall of the Kings at
- Karnak, but I never did like big places to live in. And I'll be glad
- enough to be home again. When you start traveling late in life you're
- apt to do too much of it because you know you haven't much time left,
- and it's a thing that grows on you. I'm afraid Maria will never be
- contented again."
-
- "I shall leave here my fancies and dreams to bless the next comer,"
- said Anne, looking around the blue room wistfully -- her pretty blue
- room where she had spent three such happy years. She had knelt at
- its window to pray and had bent from it to watch the sunset behind
- the pines. She had heard the autumn raindrops beating against it
- and had welcomed the spring robins at its sill. She wondered if
- old dreams could haunt rooms -- if, when one left forever the room
- where she had joyed and suffered and laughed and wept, something
- of her, intangible and invisible, yet nonetheless real, did not
- remain behind like a voiceful memory.
-
- "I think," said Phil, "that a room where one dreams and grieves
- and rejoices and lives becomes inseparably connected with those
- processes and acquires a personality of its own. I am sure if I
- came into this room fifty years from now it would say 'Anne, Anne'
- to me. What nice times we've had here, honey! What chats and
- jokes and good chummy jamborees! Oh, dear me! I'm to marry Jo
- in June and I know I will be rapturously happy. But just now
- I feel as if I wanted this lovely Redmond life to go on forever."
-
- "I'm unreasonable enough just now to wish that, too," admitted Anne.
- "No matter what deeper joys may come to us later on we'll never again
- have just the same delightful, irresponsible existence we've had here.
- It's over forever, Phil."
-
- "What are you going to do with Rusty?" asked Phil, as that
- privileged pussy padded into the room.
-
- "I am going to take him home with me and Joseph and the Sarah-cat,"
- announced Aunt Jamesina, following Rusty. "It would be a shame
- to separate those cats now that they have learned to live together.
- It's a hard lesson for cats and humans to learn."
-
- "I'm sorry to part with Rusty," said Anne regretfully, "but it
- would be no use to take him to Green Gables. Marilla detests
- cats, and Davy would tease his life out. Besides, I don't
- suppose I'll be home very long. I've been offered the
- principalship of the Summerside High School."
-
- "Are you going to accept it?" asked Phil.
-
- "I -- I haven't decided yet," answered Anne, with a confused flush.
-
- Phil nodded understandingly. Naturally Anne's plans could not be
- settled until Roy had spoken. He would soon -- there was no doubt
- of that. And there was no doubt that Anne would say "yes" when he
- said "Will you please?" Anne herself regarded the state of affairs
- with a seldom-ruffled complacency. She was deeply in love with Roy.
- True, it was not just what she had imagined love to be. But was
- anything in life, Anne asked herself wearily, like one's imagination
- of it? It was the old diamond disillusion of childhood repeated --
- the same disappointment she had felt when she had first seen the
- chill sparkle instead of the purple splendor she had anticipated.
- "That's not my idea of a diamond," she had said. But Roy was a
- dear fellow and they would be very happy together, even if some
- indefinable zest was missing out of life. When Roy came down that
- evening and asked Anne to walk in the park every one at Patty's
- Place knew what he had come to say; and every one knew, or thought
- they knew, what Anne's answer would be.
-
- "Anne is a very fortunate girl," said Aunt Jamesina.
-
- "I suppose so," said Stella, shrugging her shoulders. "Roy is a
- nice fellow and all that. But there's really nothing in him."
-
- "That sounds very like a jealous remark, Stella Maynard," said
- Aunt Jamesina rebukingly.
-
- "It does -- but I am not jealous," said Stella calmly. "I love
- Anne and I like Roy. Everybody says she is making a brilliant
- match, and even Mrs. Gardner thinks her charming now. It all
- sounds as if it were made in heaven, but I have my doubts.
- Make the most of that, Aunt Jamesina."
-
- Roy asked Anne to marry him in the little pavilion on the harbor
- shore where they had talked on the rainy day of their first meeting.
- Anne thought it very romantic that he should have chosen that spot.
- And his proposal was as beautifully worded as if he had copied it,
- as one of Ruby Gillis' lovers had done, out of a Deportment of
- Courtship and Marriage. The whole effect was quite flawless.
- And it was also sincere. There was no doubt that Roy meant
- what he said. There was no false note to jar the symphony.
- Anne felt that she ought to be thrilling from head to foot.
- But she wasn't; she was horribly cool. When Roy paused
- for his answer she opened her lips to say her fateful yes.
- And then -- she found herself trembling as if she were reeling
- back from a precipice. To her came one of those moments when we
- realize, as by a blinding flash of illumination, more than all
- our previous years have taught us. She pulled her hand from Roy's.
-
- "Oh, I can't marry you -- I can't -- I can't," she cried, wildly.
-
- Roy turned pale -- and also looked rather foolish. He had --
- small blame to him -- felt very sure.
-
- "What do you mean?" he stammered.
-
- "I mean that I can't marry you," repeated Anne desperately.
- "I thought I could -- but I can't."
-
- "Why can't you?" Roy asked more calmly.
-
- "Because -- I don't care enough for you."
-
- A crimson streak came into Roy's face.
-
- "So you've just been amusing yourself these two years?" he said slowly.
-
- "No, no, I haven't," gasped poor Anne. Oh, how could she explain?
- She COULDN'T explain. There are some things that cannot be explained.
- "I did think I cared -- truly I did -- but I know now I don't."
-
- "You have ruined my life," said Roy bitterly.
-
- "Forgive me," pleaded Anne miserably, with hot cheeks and
- stinging eyes.
-
- Roy turned away and stood for a few minutes looking out seaward.
- When he came back to Anne, he was very pale again.
-
- "You can give me no hope?" he said.
-
- Anne shook her head mutely.
-
- "Then -- good-bye," said Roy. "I can't understand it -- I
- can't believe you are not the woman I've believed you to be.
- But reproaches are idle between us. You are the only woman
- I can ever love. I thank you for your friendship, at least.
- Good-bye, Anne."
-
- "Good-bye," faltered Anne. When Roy had gone she sat for a long
- time in the pavilion, watching a white mist creeping subtly and
- remorselessly landward up the harbor. It was her hour of humiliation
- and self-contempt and shame. Their waves went over her. And yet,
- underneath it all, was a queer sense of recovered freedom.
-
- She slipped into Patty's Place in the dusk and escaped to her room.
- But Phil was there on the window seat.
-
- "Wait," said Anne, flushing to anticipate the scene. "Wait til
- you hear what I have to say. Phil, Roy asked me to marry him-and
- I refused."
-
- "You -- you REFUSED him?" said Phil blankly.
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Anne Shirley, are you in your senses?"
-
- "I think so," said Anne wearily. "Oh, Phil, don't scold me.
- You don't understand."
-
- "I certainly don't understand. You've encouraged Roy Gardner in
- every way for two years -- and now you tell me you've refused him.
- Then you've just been flirting scandalously with him. Anne, I
- couldn't have believed it of YOU."
-
- "I WASN'T flirting with him -- I honestly thought I cared up to the
- last minute -- and then -- well, I just knew I NEVER could marry him."
-
- "I suppose," said Phil cruelly, "that you intended to marry him
- for his money, and then your better self rose up and prevented you."
-
- "I DIDN'T. I never thought about his money. Oh, I can't explain
- it to you any more than I could to him."
-
- "Well, I certainly think you have treated Roy shamefully," said Phil
- in exasperation. "He's handsome and clever and rich and good.
- What more do you want?"
-
- "I want some one who BELONGS in my life. He doesn't. I was
- swept off my feet at first by his good looks and knack of paying
- romantic compliments; and later on I thought I MUST be in love
- because he was my dark-eyed ideal."
-
- "I am bad enough for not knowing my own mind, but you are worse,"
- said Phil.
-
- "_I_ DO know my own mind," protested Anne. "The trouble is, my mind
- changes and then I have to get acquainted with it all over again."
-
- "Well, I suppose there is no use in saying anything to you."
-
- "There is no need, Phil. I'm in the dust. This has spoiled
- everything backwards. I can never think of Redmond days without
- recalling the humiliation of this evening. Roy despises me --
- and you despise me -- and I despise myself."
-
- "You poor darling," said Phil, melting. "Just come here and let
- me comfort you. I've no right to scold you. I'd have married
- Alec or Alonzo if I hadn't met Jo. Oh, Anne, things are so
- mixed-up in real life. They aren't clear-cut and trimmed off,
- as they are in novels."
-
- "I hope that NO one will ever again ask me to marry him as long as
- I live," sobbed poor Anne, devoutly believing that she meant it.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXXIX
-
- Deals with Weddings
-
-
- Anne felt that life partook of the nature of an anticlimax during
- the first few weeks after her return to Green Gables. She missed
- the merry comradeship of Patty's Place. She had dreamed some
- brilliant dreams during the past winter and now they lay in the
- dust around her. In her present mood of self-disgust, she could
- not immediately begin dreaming again. And she discovered that,
- while solitude with dreams is glorious, solitude without them
- has few charms.
-
- She had not seen Roy again after their painful parting in the
- park pavilion; but Dorothy came to see her before she left Kingsport.
-
- "I'm awfully sorry you won't marry Roy," she said. "I did want you
- for a sister. But you are quite right. He would bore you to death.
- I love him, and he is a dear sweet boy, but really he isn't a bit
- interesting. He looks as if he ought to be, but he isn't."
-
- "This won't spoil OUR friendship, will it, Dorothy?" Anne had
- asked wistfully.
-
- "No, indeed. You're too good to lose. If I can't have you for a
- sister I mean to keep you as a chum anyway. And don't fret over
- Roy. He is feeling terribly just now -- I have to listen to his
- outpourings every day -- but he'll get over it. He always does."
-
- "Oh -- ALWAYS?" said Anne with a slight change of voice.
- "So he has `got over it' before?"
-
- "Dear me, yes," said Dorothy frankly. "Twice before. And he
- raved to me just the same both times. Not that the others
- actually refused him -- they simply announced their engagements
- to some one else. Of course, when he met you he vowed to me that
- he had never really loved before -- that the previous affairs had
- been merely boyish fancies. But I don't think you need worry."
-
- Anne decided not to worry. Her feelings were a mixture of relief
- and resentment. Roy had certainly told her she was the only one
- he had ever loved. No doubt he believed it. But it was a comfort
- to feel that she had not, in all likelihood, ruined his life.
- There were other goddesses, and Roy, according to Dorothy, must
- needs be worshipping at some shrine. Nevertheless, life was
- stripped of several more illusions, and Anne began to think
- drearily that it seemed rather bare.
-
- She came down from the porch gable on the evening of her return
- with a sorrowful face.
-
- "What has happened to the old Snow Queen, Marilla?"
-
- "Oh, I knew you'd feel bad over that," said Marilla. "I felt bad myself.
- That tree was there ever since I was a young girl. It blew down in the
- big gale we had in March. It was rotten at the core."
-
- "I'll miss it so," grieved Anne. "The porch gable doesn't seem
- the same room without it. I'll never look from its window again
- without a sense of loss. And oh, I never came home to Green Gables
- before that Diana wasn't here to welcome me."
-
- "Diana has something else to think of just now," said Mrs. Lynde
- significantly.
-
- "Well, tell me all the Avonlea news," said Anne, sitting down on
- the porch steps, where the evening sunshine fell over her hair
- in a fine golden rain.
-
- "There isn't much news except what we've wrote you," said Mrs. Lynde.
- "I suppose you haven't heard that Simon Fletcher broke his leg last week.
- It's a great thing for his family. They're getting a hundred things done
- that they've always wanted to do but couldn't as long as he was about,
- the old crank."
-
- "He came of an aggravating family," remarked Marilla.
-
- "Aggravating? Well, rather! His mother used to get up in
- prayer-meeting and tell all her children's shortcomings and ask
- prayers for them. `Course it made them mad, and worse than ever."
-
- "You haven't told Anne the news about Jane," suggested Marilla.
-
- "Oh, Jane," sniffed Mrs. Lynde. "Well," she conceded grudgingly,
- "Jane Andrews is home from the West -- came last week -- and she's
- going to be married to a Winnipeg millionaire. You may be sure
- Mrs. Harmon lost no time in telling it far and wide."
-
- "Dear old Jane -- I'm so glad," said Anne heartily. "She deserves
- the good things of life."
-
- "Oh, I ain't saying anything against Jane. She's a nice enough girl.
- But she isn't in the millionaire class, and you'll find there's not
- much to recommend that man but his money, that's what. Mrs. Harmon
- says he's an Englishman who has made money in mines but _I_ believe
- he'll turn out to be a Yankee. He certainly must have money, for
- he has just showered Jane with jewelry. Her engagement ring is a
- diamond cluster so big that it looks like a plaster on Jane's fat paw."
-
- Mrs. Lynde could not keep some bitterness out of her tone.
- Here was Jane Andrews, that plain little plodder, engaged
- to a millionaire, while Anne, it seemed, was not yet bespoken
- by any one, rich or poor. And Mrs. Harmon Andrews did brag
- insufferably.
-
- "What has Gilbert Blythe been doing to at college?" asked Marilla.
- "I saw him when he came home last week, and he is so pale and thin
- I hardly knew him."
-
- "He studied very hard last winter," said Anne. "You know he
- took High Honors in Classics and the Cooper Prize. It hasn't
- been taken for five years! So I think he's rather run down.
- We're all a little tired."
-
- "Anyhow, you're a B.A. and Jane Andrews isn't and never will be,"
- said Mrs. Lynde, with gloomy satisfaction.
-
- A few evenings later Anne went down to see Jane, but the latter
- was away in Charlottetown -- "getting sewing done," Mrs. Harmon
- informed Anne proudly. "Of course an Avonlea dressmaker wouldn't
- do for Jane under the circumstances."
-
- "I've heard something very nice about Jane," said Anne.
-
- "Yes, Jane has done pretty well, even if she isn't a B.A.," said
- Mrs. Harmon, with a slight toss of her head. "Mr. Inglis is worth
- millions, and they're going to Europe on their wedding tour.
- When they come back they'll live in a perfect mansion of marble
- in Winnipeg. Jane has only one trouble -- she can cook so well
- and her husband won't let her cook. He is so rich he hires
- his cooking done. They're going to keep a cook and two other
- maids and a coachman and a man-of-all-work. But what about YOU,
- Anne? I don't hear anything of your being married, after all
- your college-going."
-
- "Oh," laughed Anne, "I am going to be an old maid. I really
- can't find any one to suit me." It was rather wicked of her.
- She deliberately meant to remind Mrs. Andrews that if she became
- an old maid it was not because she had not had at least one
- chance of marriage. But Mrs. Harmon took swift revenge.
-
- "Well, the over-particular girls generally get left, I notice.
- And what's this I hear about Gilbert Blythe being engaged to a
- Miss Stuart? Charlie Sloane tells me she is perfectly beautiful.
- Is it true?"
-
- "I don't know if it is true that he is engaged to Miss Stuart,"
- replied Anne, with Spartan composure, "but it is certainly true
- that she is very lovely."
-
- "I once thought you and Gilbert would have made a match of it,"
- said Mrs. Harmon. "If you don't take care, Anne, all of your
- beaux will slip through your fingers."
-
- Anne decided not to continue her duel with Mrs. Harmon.
- You could not fence with an antagonist who met rapier thrust
- with blow of battle axe.
-
- "Since Jane is away," she said, rising haughtily, "I don't think
- I can stay longer this morning. I'll come down when she comes home."
-
- "Do," said Mrs. Harmon effusively. "Jane isn't a bit proud.
- She just means to associate with her old friends the same as ever.
- She'll be real glad to see you."
-
- Jane's millionaire arrived the last of May and carried her off in
- a blaze of splendor. Mrs. Lynde was spitefully gratified to
- find that Mr. Inglis was every day of forty, and short and thin
- and grayish. Mrs. Lynde did not spare him in her enumeration of
- his shortcomings, you may be sure.
-
- "It will take all his gold to gild a pill like him, that's what,"
- said Mrs. Rachel solemnly.
-
- "He looks kind and good-hearted," said Anne loyally, "and I'm
- sure he thinks the world of Jane."
-
- "Humph!" said Mrs. Rachel.
-
- Phil Gordon was married the next week and Anne went over to
- Bolingbroke to be her bridesmaid. Phil made a dainty fairy of
- a bride, and the Rev. Jo was so radiant in his happiness that
- nobody thought him plain.
-
- "We're going for a lovers' saunter through the land of Evangeline,"
- said Phil, "and then we'll settle down on Patterson Street.
- Mother thinks it is terrible -- she thinks Jo might at least
- take a church in a decent place. But the wilderness of the
- Patterson slums will blossom like the rose for me if Jo is there.
- Oh, Anne, I'm so happy my heart aches with it."
-
- Anne was always glad in the happiness of her friends; but it
- is sometimes a little lonely to be surrounded everywhere by a
- happiness that is not your own. And it was just the same when
- she went back to Avonlea. This time it was Diana who was bathed
- in the wonderful glory that comes to a woman when her first-born
- is laid beside her. Anne looked at the white young mother with a
- certain awe that had never entered into her feelings for Diana
- before. Could this pale woman with the rapture in her eyes be
- the little black-curled, rosy-cheeked Diana she had played with
- in vanished schooldays? It gave her a queer desolate feeling
- that she herself somehow belonged only in those past years and
- had no business in the present at all.
-
- "Isn't he perfectly beautiful?" said Diana proudly.
-
- The little fat fellow was absurdly like Fred -- just as round,
- just as red. Anne really could not say conscientiously that she
- thought him beautiful, but she vowed sincerely that he was sweet
- and kissable and altogether delightful.
-
- "Before he came I wanted a girl, so that I could call her ANNE,"
- said Diana. "But now that little Fred is here I wouldn't exchange
- him for a million girls. He just COULDN'T have been anything but
- his own precious self."
-
- "`Every little baby is the sweetest and the best,' " quoted
- Mrs. Allan gaily. "If little Anne HAD come you'd have felt
- just the same about her."
-
- Mrs. Allan was visiting in Avonlea, for the first time since
- leaving it. She was as gay and sweet and sympathetic as ever.
- Her old girl friends had welcomed her back rapturously.
- The reigning minister's wife was an estimable lady, but she
- was not exactly a kindred spirit.
-
- "I can hardly wait till he gets old enough to talk," sighed Diana.
- "I just long to hear him say `mother.' And oh, I'm determined that
- his first memory of me shall be a nice one. The first memory I
- have of my mother is of her slapping me for something I had done.
- I am sure I deserved it, and mother was always a good mother and I
- love her dearly. But I do wish my first memory of her was nicer."
-
- "I have just one memory of my mother and it is the sweetest of
- all my memories," said Mrs. Allan. "I was five years old, and I
- had been allowed to go to school one day with my two older sisters.
- When school came out my sisters went home in different groups, each
- supposing I was with the other. Instead I had run off with a little
- girl I had played with at recess. We went to her home, which was
- near the school, and began making mud pies. We were having a
- glorious time when my older sister arrived, breathless and angry.
-
- "`You naughty girl" she cried, snatching my reluctant hand and
- dragging me along with her. `Come home this minute. Oh, you're
- going to catch it! Mother is awful cross. She is going to give
- you a good whipping.'
-
- "I had never been whipped. Dread and terror filled my poor
- little heart. I have never been so miserable in my life as I was
- on that walk home. I had not meant to be naughty. Phemy Cameron
- had asked me to go home with her and I had not known it was wrong
- to go. And now I was to be whipped for it. When we got home my
- sister dragged me into the kitchen where mother was sitting by
- the fire in the twilight. My poor wee legs were trembling so
- that I could hardly stand. And mother -- mother just took me up
- in her arms, without one word of rebuke or harshness, kissed me
- and held me close to her heart. `I was so frightened you were
- lost, darling,' she said tenderly. I could see the love shining
- in her eyes as she looked down on me. She never scolded or
- reproached me for what I had done -- only told me I must never go
- away again without asking permission. She died very soon
- afterwards. That is the only memory I have of her. Isn't it a
- beautiful one?"
-
- Anne felt lonelier than ever as she walked home, going by way of
- the Birch Path and Willowmere. She had not walked that way for
- many moons. It was a darkly-purple bloomy night. The air was
- heavy with blossom fragrance -- almost too heavy. The cloyed
- senses recoiled from it as from an overfull cup. The birches of
- the path had grown from the fairy saplings of old to big trees.
- Everything had changed. Anne felt that she would be glad when
- the summer was over and she was away at work again. Perhaps life
- would not seem so empty then.
-
- "`I've tried the world -- it wears no more
- The coloring of romance it wore,'"
-
- sighed Anne -- and was straightway much comforted by the romance
- in the idea of the world being denuded of romance!
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XL
-
- A Book of Revelation
-
-
- The Irvings came back to Echo Lodge for the summer, and Anne spent
- a happy three weeks there in July. Miss Lavendar had not changed;
- Charlotta the Fourth was a very grown-up young lady now, but still
- adored Anne sincerely.
-
- "When all's said and done, Miss Shirley, ma'am, I haven't seen
- any one in Boston that's equal to you," she said frankly.
-
- Paul was almost grown up, too. He was sixteen, his chestnut
- curls had given place to close-cropped brown locks, and he was
- more interested in football than fairies. But the bond between
- him and his old teacher still held. Kindred spirits alone do not
- change with changing years.
-
- It was a wet, bleak, cruel evening in July when Anne came back to
- Green Gables. One of the fierce summer storms which sometimes
- sweep over the gulf was ravaging the sea. As Anne came in the
- first raindrops dashed against the panes.
-
- "Was that Paul who brought you home?" asked Marilla. "Why didn't
- you make him stay all night. It's going to be a wild evening."
-
- "He'll reach Echo Lodge before the rain gets very heavy, I think.
- Anyway, he wanted to go back tonight. Well, I've had a splendid
- visit, but I'm glad to see you dear folks again. `East, west,
- hame's best.' Davy, have you been growing again lately?"
-
- "I've growed a whole inch since you left," said Davy proudly.
- "I'm as tall as Milty Boulter now. Ain't I glad. He'll have to
- stop crowing about being bigger. Say, Anne, did you know that
- Gilbert Blythe is dying?" Anne stood quite silent and motionless,
- looking at Davy. Her face had gone so white that Marilla thought
- she was going to faint.
-
- "Davy, hold your tongue," said Mrs. Rachel angrily. "Anne,
- don't look like that -- DON'T LOOK LIKE THAT! We didn't mean
- to tell you so suddenly."
-
- "Is -- it -- true?" asked Anne in a voice that was not hers.
-
- "Gilbert is very ill," said Mrs. Lynde gravely. "He took down
- with typhoid fever just after you left for Echo Lodge. Did you
- never hear of it?"
-
- "No," said that unknown voice.
-
- "It was a very bad case from the start. The doctor said he'd
- been terribly run down. They've a trained nurse and everything's
- been done. DON'T look like that, Anne. While there's life
- there's hope."
-
- "Mr. Harrison was here this evening and he said they had no hope of him,"
- reiterated Davy.
-
- Marilla, looking old and worn and tired, got up and marched Davy grimly
- out of the kitchen.
-
- "Oh, DON'T look so, dear," said Mrs. Rachel, putting her kind old arms
- about the pallid girl. "I haven't given up hope, indeed I haven't.
- He's got the Blythe constitution in his favor, that's what."
-
- Anne gently put Mrs. Lynde's arms away from her, walked blindly
- across the kitchen, through the hall, up the stairs to her old room.
- At its window she knelt down, staring out unseeingly. It was very dark.
- The rain was beating down over the shivering fields. The Haunted Woods
- was full of the groans of mighty trees wrung in the tempest, and the
- air throbbed with the thunderous crash of billows on the distant shore.
- And Gilbert was dying!
-
- There is a book of Revelation in every one's life, as there is in the Bible.
- Anne read hers that bitter night, as she kept her agonized vigil through
- the hours of storm and darkness. She loved Gilbert -- had always loved him!
- She knew that now. She knew that she could no more cast him out of her life
- without agony than she could have cut off her right hand and cast it from her.
- And the knowledge had come too late -- too late even for the bitter solace
- of being with him at the last. If she had not been so blind -- so foolish
- -- she would have had the right to go to him now. But he would never know
- that she loved him -- he would go away from this life thinking that she
- did not care. Oh, the black years of emptiness stretching before her!
- She could not live through them -- she could not! She cowered down by
- her window and wished, for the first time in her gay young life, that
- she could die, too. If Gilbert went away from her, without one word or
- sign or message, she could not live. Nothing was of any value without him.
- She belonged to him and he to her. In her hour of supreme agony she had
- no doubt of that. He did not love Christine Stuart -- never had loved
- Christine Stuart. Oh, what a fool she had been not to realize what the
- bond was that had held her to Gilbert -- to think that the flattered
- fancy she had felt for Roy Gardner had been love. And now she must pay
- for her folly as for a crime.
-
- Mrs. Lynde and Marilla crept to her door before they went to bed,
- shook their heads doubtfully at each other over the silence,
- and went away. The storm raged all night, but when the dawn came
- it was spent. Anne saw a fairy fringe of light on the skirts of
- darkness. Soon the eastern hilltops had a fire-shot ruby rim.
- The clouds rolled themselves away into great, soft, white masses
- on the horizon; the sky gleamed blue and silvery. A hush fell
- over the world.
-
- Anne rose from her knees and crept downstairs. The freshness of
- the rain-wind blew against her white face as she went out into
- the yard, and cooled her dry, burning eyes. A merry rollicking
- whistle was lilting up the lane. A moment later Pacifique Buote
- came in sight.
-
- Anne's physical strength suddenly failed her. If she had not
- clutched at a low willow bough she would have fallen. Pacifique
- was George Fletcher's hired man, and George Fletcher lived
- next door to the Blythes. Mrs. Fletcher was Gilbert's aunt.
- Pacifique would know if -- if -- Pacifique would know what there
- was to be known.
-
- Pacifique strode sturdily on along the red lane, whistling. He
- did not see Anne. She made three futile attempts to call him.
- He was almost past before she succeeded in making her quivering
- lips call, "Pacifique!"
-
- Pacifique turned with a grin and a cheerful good morning.
-
- "Pacifique," said Anne faintly, "did you come from George
- Fletcher's this morning?"
-
- "Sure," said Pacifique amiably. "I got de word las' night dat my
- fader, he was seeck. It was so stormy dat I couldn't go den, so I
- start vair early dis mornin'. I'm goin' troo de woods for short cut."
-
- "Did you hear how Gilbert Blythe was this morning?" Anne's
- desperation drove her to the question. Even the worst would be
- more endurable than this hideous suspense.
-
- "He's better," said Pacifique. "He got de turn las' night.
- De doctor say he'll be all right now dis soon while. Had close
- shave, dough! Dat boy, he jus' keel himself at college.
- Well, I mus' hurry. De old man, he'll be in hurry to see me."
-
- Pacifique resumed his walk and his whistle. Anne gazed after him
- with eyes where joy was driving out the strained anguish of the night.
- He was a very lank, very ragged, very homely youth. But in her sight
- he was as beautiful as those who bring good tidings on the mountains.
- Never, as long as she lived, would Anne see Pacifique's brown, round,
- black-eyed face without a warm remembrance of the moment when he had
- given to her the oil of joy for mourning.
-
- Long after Pacifique's gay whistle had faded into the phantom of
- music and then into silence far up under the maples of Lover's
- Lane Anne stood under the willows, tasting the poignant sweetness
- of life when some great dread has been removed from it. The
- morning was a cup filled with mist and glamor. In the corner
- near her was a rich surprise of new-blown, crystal-dewed roses.
- The trills and trickles of song from the birds in the big tree
- above her seemed in perfect accord with her mood. A sentence
- from a very old, very true, very wonderful Book came to her lips,
-
- "Weeping may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning."
-
-
-
-
- XLI
-
- Love Takes Up the Glass of Time
-
-
- "I've come up to ask you to go for one of our old-time rambles
- through September woods and `over hills where spices grow,' this
- afternoon," said Gilbert, coming suddenly around the porch corner.
- "Suppose we visit Hester Gray's garden."
-
- Anne, sitting on the stone step with her lap full of a pale,
- filmy, green stuff, looked up rather blankly.
-
- "Oh, I wish I could," she said slowly, "but I really can't,
- Gilbert. I'm going to Alice Penhallow's wedding this evening,
- you know. I've got to do something to this dress, and by
- the time it's finished I'll have to get ready. I'm so sorry.
- I'd love to go."
-
- "Well, can you go tomorrow afternoon, then?" asked Gilbert,
- apparently not much disappointed.
-
- "Yes, I think so."
-
- "In that case I shall hie me home at once to do something I
- should otherwise have to do tomorrow. So Alice Penhallow is
- to be married tonight. Three weddings for you in one summer,
- Anne -- Phil's, Alice's, and Jane's. I'll never forgive Jane
- for not inviting me to her wedding."
-
- "You really can't blame her when you think of the tremendous
- Andrews connection who had to be invited. The house could hardly
- hold them all. I was only bidden by grace of being Jane's old
- chum -- at least on Jane's part. I think Mrs. Harmon's motive
- for inviting me was to let me see Jane's surpassing gorgeousness."
-
- "Is it true that she wore so many diamonds that you couldn't tell
- where the diamonds left off and Jane began?"
-
- Anne laughed.
-
- "She certainly wore a good many. What with all the diamonds and
- white satin and tulle and lace and roses and orange blossoms,
- prim little Jane was almost lost to sight. But she was VERY
- happy, and so was Mr. Inglis -- and so was Mrs. Harmon."
-
- "Is that the dress you're going to wear tonight?" asked Gilbert,
- looking down at the fluffs and frills.
-
- "Yes. Isn't it pretty? And I shall wear starflowers in my hair.
- The Haunted Wood is full of them this summer."
-
- Gilbert had a sudden vision of Anne, arrayed in a frilly green gown,
- with the virginal curves of arms and throat slipping out of it,
- and white stars shining against the coils of her ruddy hair.
- The vision made him catch his breath. But he turned lightly away.
-
- "Well, I'll be up tomorrow. Hope you'll have a nice time tonight."
-
- Anne looked after him as he strode away, and sighed. Gilbert was
- friendly -- very friendly -- far too friendly. He had come quite
- often to Green Gables after his recovery, and something of their
- old comradeship had returned. But Anne no longer found it satisfying.
- The rose of love made the blossom of friendship pale and scentless
- by contrast. And Anne had again begun to doubt if Gilbert now felt
- anything for her but friendship. In the common light of common
- day her radiant certainty of that rapt morning had faded. She was
- haunted by a miserable fear that her mistake could never be rectified.
- It was quite likely that it was Christine whom Gilbert loved after all.
- Perhaps he was even engaged to her. Anne tried to put all unsettling
- hopes out of her heart, and reconcile herself to a future where work
- and ambition must take the place of love. She could do good, if not
- noble, work as a teacher; and the success her little sketches were
- beginning to meet with in certain editorial sanctums augured well
- for her budding literary dreams. But -- but -- Anne picked up her
- green dress and sighed again.
-
- When Gilbert came the next afternoon he found Anne waiting for him,
- fresh as the dawn and fair as a star, after all the gaiety of the
- preceding night. She wore a green dress -- not the one she had
- worn to the wedding, but an old one which Gilbert had told her
- at a Redmond reception he liked especially. It was just the shade
- of green that brought out the rich tints of her hair, and the starry
- gray of her eyes and the iris-like delicacy of her skin. Gilbert,
- glancing at her sideways as they walked along a shadowy woodpath,
- thought she had never looked so lovely. Anne, glancing sideways
- at Gilbert, now and then, thought how much older he looked since
- his illness. It was as if he had put boyhood behind him forever.
-
- The day was beautiful and the way was beautiful. Anne was almost
- sorry when they reached Hester Gray's garden, and sat down on the
- old bench. But it was beautiful there, too -- as beautiful as it
- had been on the faraway day of the Golden Picnic, when Diana and
- Jane and Priscilla and she had found it. Then it had been lovely
- with narcissus and violets; now golden rod had kindled its fairy
- torches in the corners and asters dotted it bluely. The call of
- the brook came up through the woods from the valley of birches
- with all its old allurement; the mellow air was full of the purr
- of the sea; beyond were fields rimmed by fences bleached silvery
- gray in the suns of many summers, and long hills scarfed with the
- shadows of autumnal clouds; with the blowing of the west wind old
- dreams returned.
-
- "I think," said Anne softly, "that `the land where dreams come true'
- is in the blue haze yonder, over that little valley."
-
- "Have you any unfulfilled dreams, Anne?" asked Gilbert.
-
- Something in his tone -- something she had not heard since that
- miserable evening in the orchard at Patty's Place -- made Anne's
- heart beat wildly. But she made answer lightly.
-
- "Of course. Everybody has. It wouldn't do for us to have all
- our dreams fulfilled. We would be as good as dead if we had
- nothing left to dream about. What a delicious aroma that
- low-descending sun is extracting from the asters and ferns.
- I wish we could see perfumes as well as smell them. I'm sure
- they would be very beautiful."
-
- Gilbert was not to be thus sidetracked.
-
- "I have a dream," he said slowly. "I persist in dreaming it,
- although it has often seemed to me that it could never come true.
- I dream of a home with a hearth-fire in it, a cat and dog, the
- footsteps of friends -- and YOU!"
-
- Anne wanted to speak but she could find no words. Happiness was
- breaking over her like a wave. It almost frightened her.
-
- "I asked you a question over two years ago, Anne. If I ask it
- again today will you give me a different answer?"
-
- Still Anne could not speak. But she lifted her eyes, shining
- with all the love-rapture of countless generations, and looked
- into his for a moment. He wanted no other answer.
-
- They lingered in the old garden until twilight, sweet as dusk in
- Eden must have been, crept over it. There was so much to talk
- over and recall -- things said and done and heard and thought and
- felt and misunderstood.
-
- "I thought you loved Christine Stuart," Anne told him, as
- reproachfully as if she had not given him every reason to
- suppose that she loved Roy Gardner.
-
- Gilbert laughed boyishly.
-
- "Christine was engaged to somebody in her home town. I knew it
- and she knew I knew it. When her brother graduated he told me
- his sister was coming to Kingsport the next winter to take music,
- and asked me if I would look after her a bit, as she knew no one
- and would be very lonely. So I did. And then I liked Christine
- for her own sake. She is one of the nicest girls I've ever
- known. I knew college gossip credited us with being in love with
- each other. I didn't care. Nothing mattered much to me for a
- time there, after you told me you could never love me, Anne.
- There was nobody else -- there never could be anybody else for me
- but you. I've loved you ever since that day you broke your slate
- over my head in school."
-
- "I don't see how you could keep on loving me when I was such a
- little fool," said Anne.
-
- "Well, I tried to stop," said Gilbert frankly, "not because I
- thought you what you call yourself, but because I felt sure there
- was no chance for me after Gardner came on the scene. But I
- couldn't -- and I can't tell you, either, what it's meant to me
- these two years to believe you were going to marry him, and be
- told every week by some busybody that your engagement was on the
- point of being announced. I believed it until one blessed day
- when I was sitting up after the fever. I got a letter from Phil
- Gordon -- Phil Blake, rather -- in which she told me there was
- really nothing between you and Roy, and advised me to `try again.'
- Well, the doctor was amazed at my rapid recovery after that."
-
- Anne laughed -- then shivered.
-
- "I can never forget the night I thought you were dying, Gilbert.
- Oh, I knew -- I KNEW then -- and I thought it was too late."
-
- "But it wasn't, sweetheart. Oh, Anne, this makes up for
- everything, doesn't it? Let's resolve to keep this day sacred to
- perfect beauty all our lives for the gift it has given us."
-
- "It's the birthday of our happiness," said Anne softly.
- "I've always loved this old garden of Hester Gray's,
- and now it will be dearer than ever."
-
- "But I'll have to ask you to wait a long time, Anne,"
- said Gilbert sadly. "It will be three years before
- I'll finish my medical course. And even then there
- will be no diamond sunbursts and marble halls."
-
- Anne laughed.
-
- "I don't want sunbursts and marble halls. I just want YOU.
- You see I'm quite as shameless as Phil about it. Sunbursts and
- marble halls may be all very well, but there is more `scope for
- imagination' without them. And as for the waiting, that doesn't
- matter. We'll just be happy, waiting and working for each other
- -- and dreaming. Oh, dreams will be very sweet now."
-
- Gilbert drew her close to him and kissed her. Then they walked
- home together in the dusk, crowned king and queen in the bridal
- realm of love, along winding paths fringed with the sweetest
- flowers that ever bloomed, and over haunted meadows where winds
- of hope and memory blew.
-
-
- End of Project Gutenberg Etext of Anne of the Island.
-
-
-