If Anne had tumbled off the roof on the side up which she had
ascended Diana would probably have fallen heir to the pearl bead ring then
and there. Fortunately she fell on the other side, where the roof
extended down over the porch so nearly to the ground that a fall therefrom
was a much less serious thing. Nevertheless, when Diana and the
other girls had rushed frantically around the house--except Ruby Gillis,
who remained as if rooted to the ground and went into hysterics--they
found Anne lying all white and limp among the wreck and ruin of the
Virginia creeper.
"Anne, are you killed?" shrieked Diana, throwing
herself on her knees beside her friend. "Oh, Anne, dear Anne, speak just one
word to me and tell me if you're killed."
To the immense relief of all
the girls, and especially of Josie Pye, who, in spite of lack of imagination,
had been seized with horrible visions of a future branded as the girl who was
the cause of Anne Shirley's early and tragic death, Anne sat dizzily up and
answered uncertainly:
"No, Diana, I am not killed, but I think I am
rendered unconscious."
"Where?" sobbed Carrie Sloane. "Oh, where, Anne?"
Before Anne could answer Mrs. Barry appeared on the scene. At sight of her
Anne tried to scramble to her feet, but sank back again with a sharp little
cry of pain.
"What's the matter? Where have you hurt yourself?"
demanded Mrs. Barry.
"My ankle," gasped Anne. "Oh, Diana, please find
your father and ask him to take me home. I know I can never walk there. And
I'm sure I couldn't hop so far on one foot when Jane couldn't even hop around
the garden."
Marilla was out in the orchard picking a panful of summer
apples when she saw Mr. Barry coming over the log bridge and up the slope,
with Mrs. Barry beside him and a whole procession of little girls trailing
after him. In his arms he carried Anne, whose head lay limply against
his shoulder.
At that moment Marilla had a revelation. In the sudden
stab of fear that pierced her very heart she realized what Anne had come to
mean to her. She would have admitted that she liked Anne--nay, that she was
very fond of Anne. But now she knew as she hurried wildly down the slope that
Anne was dearer to her than anything else on earth.
"Mr. Barry, what
has happened to her?" she gasped, more white and shaken than the
self-contained, sensible Marilla had been for many years.
Anne herself
answered, lifting her head.
"Don't be very frightened, Marilla. I was
walking the ridgepole and I fell off. I expect I have sprained my ankle. But,
Marilla, I might have broken my neck. Let us look on the bright side of
things."
"I might have known you'd go and do something of the sort when I
let you go to that party," said Marilla, sharp and shrewish in her very
relief. "Bring her in here, Mr. Barry, and lay her on the sofa. Mercy me,
the child has gone and fainted!"
It was quite true. Overcome by the
pain of her injury, Anne had one more of her wishes granted to her. She had
fainted dead away.
Matthew, hastily summoned from the harvest field, was
straightway dispatched for the doctor, who in due time came, to discover that
the injury was more serious than they had supposed. Anne's ankle was
broken.
That night, when Marilla went up to the east gable, where a
white-faced girl was lying, a plaintive voice greeted her from the
bed.
"Aren't you very sorry for me, Marilla?"
"It was your own
fault," said Marilla, twitching down the blind and lighting a
lamp.
"And that is just why you should be sorry for me," said Anne,
"because the thought that it is all my own fault is what makes it so hard. If
I could blame it on anybody I would feel so much better. But what
would you have done, Marilla, if you had been dared to walk a
ridgepole?"
"I'd have stayed on good firm ground and let them dare away.
Such absurdity!" said Marilla.
Anne sighed.
"But you have such
strength of mind, Marilla. I haven't. I just felt that I couldn't bear Josie
Pye's scorn. She would have crowed over me all my life. And I think I have
been punished so much that you needn't be very cross with me, Marilla. It's
not a bit nice to faint, after all. And the doctor hurt me dreadfully when he
was setting my ankle. I won't be able to go around for six or seven weeks and
I'll miss the new lady teacher. She won't be new any more by the time I'm
able to go to school. And Gil--everybody will get ahead of me in class. Oh, I
am an afflicted mortal. But I'll try to bear it all bravely if only you won't
be cross with me, Marilla."
"There, there, I'm not cross," said
Marilla. "You're an unlucky child, there's no doubt about that; but as you
say, you'll have the suffering of it. Here now, try and eat some
supper."
"Isn't it fortunate I've got such an imagination?" said Anne.
"It will help me through splendidly, I expect. What do people who haven't
any imagination do when they break their bones, do you suppose,
Marilla?"
Anne had good reason to bless her imagination many a time and
oft during the tedious seven weeks that followed. But she was not solely
dependent on it. She had many visitors and not a day passed without one or
more of the schoolgirls dropping in to bring her flowers and books and tell
her all the happenings in the juvenile world of Avonlea.
"Everybody
has been so good and kind, Marilla," sighed Anne happily, on the day when she
could first limp across the floor. "It isn't very pleasant to be laid up; but
there is a bright side to it, Marilla. You find out how many friends you
have. Why, even Superintendent Bell came to see me, and he's really a very
fine man. Not a kindred spirit, of course; but still I like him and I'm
awfully sorry I ever criticized his prayers. I believe now he really does
mean them, only he has got into the habit of saying them as if he didn't. He
could get over that if he'd take a little trouble. I gave him a good broad
hint. I told him how hard I tried to make my own little private prayers
interesting. He told me all about the time he broke his ankle when he was a
boy. It does seem so strange to think of Superintendent Bell ever being a
boy. Even my imagination has its limits, for I can't imagine THAT. When I try
to imagine him as a boy I see him with gray whiskers and spectacles,
just as he looks in Sunday school, only small. Now, it's so easy to
imagine Mrs. Allan as a little girl. Mrs. Allan has been to see me
fourteen times. Isn't that something to be proud of, Marilla? When a
minister's wife has so many claims on her time! She is such a cheerful person
to have visit you, too. She never tells you it's your own fault and
she hopes you'll be a better girl on account of it. Mrs. Lynde always
told me that when she came to see me; and she said it in a kind of way
that made me feel she might hope I'd be a better girl but didn't
really believe I would. Even Josie Pye came to see me. I received her
as politely as I could, because I think she was sorry she dared me to
walk a ridgepole. If I had been killed she would had to carry a dark
burden of remorse all her life. Diana has been a faithful friend. She's
been over every day to cheer my lonely pillow. But oh, I shall be so
glad when I can go to school for I've heard such exciting things about
the new teacher. The girls all think she is perfectly sweet. Diana says
she has the loveliest fair curly hair and such fascinating eyes. She
dresses beautifully, and her sleeve puffs are bigger than anybody else's
in Avonlea. Every other Friday afternoon she has recitations and
everybody has to say a piece or take part in a dialogue. Oh, it's just
glorious to think of it. Josie Pye says she hates it but that is just because
Josie has so little imagination. Diana and Ruby Gillis and Jane Andrews
are preparing a dialogue, called 'A Morning Visit,' for next Friday. And
the Friday afternoons they don't have recitations Miss Stacy takes
them all to the woods for a 'field' day and they study ferns and
flowers and birds. And they have physical culture exercises every morning
and evening. Mrs. Lynde says she never heard of such goings on and it
all comes of having a lady teacher. But I think it must be splendid and
I believe I shall find that Miss Stacy is a kindred spirit."
"There's
one thing plain to be seen, Anne," said Marilla, "and that is that your fall
off the Barry roof hasn't injured your tongue at
all."
CHAPTER XXIV. Miss Stacy and Her Pupils Get Up a
Concert
It was October again when Anne was ready to go back to
school--a glorious October, all red and gold, with mellow mornings when
the valleys were filled with delicate mists as if the spirit of autumn
had poured them in for the sun to drain--amethyst, pearl, silver, rose,
and smoke-blue. The dews were so heavy that the fields glistened like
cloth of silver and there were such heaps of rustling leaves in the hollows
of many-stemmed woods to run crisply through. The Birch Path was a
canopy of yellow and the ferns were sear and brown all along it. There was
a tang in the very air that inspired the hearts of small maidens
tripping, unlike snails, swiftly and willingly to school; and it WAS jolly
to be back again at the little brown desk beside Diana, with Ruby
Gillis nodding across the aisle and Carrie Sloane sending up notes and
Julia Bell passing a "chew" of gum down from the back seat. Anne drew a
long breath of happiness as she sharpened her pencil and arranged her
picture cards in her desk. Life was certainly very interesting.
In the
new teacher she found another true and helpful friend. Miss Stacy was a
bright, sympathetic young woman with the happy gift of winning and holding
the affections of her pupils and bringing out the best that was in them
mentally and morally. Anne expanded like a flower under this wholesome
influence and carried home to the admiring Matthew and the critical Marilla
glowing accounts of schoolwork and aims.
"I love Miss Stacy with my whole
heart, Marilla. She is so ladylike and she has such a sweet voice. When she
pronounces my name I feel INSTINCTIVELY that she's spelling it with an E. We
had recitations this afternoon. I just wish you could have been there to hear
me recite 'Mary, Queen of Scots.' I just put my whole soul into it. Ruby
Gillis told me coming home that the way I said the line, 'Now for my
father's arm,' she said, 'my woman's heart farewell,' just made her blood
run cold."
"Well now, you might recite it for me some of these days,
out in the barn," suggested Matthew.
"Of course I will," said Anne
meditatively, "but I won't be able to do it so well, I know. It won't be so
exciting as it is when you have a whole schoolful before you hanging
breathlessly on your words. I know I won't be able to make your blood run
cold."
"Mrs. Lynde says it made HER blood run cold to see the boys
climbing to the very tops of those big trees on Bell's hill after crows'
nests last Friday," said Marilla. "I wonder at Miss Stacy for encouraging
it."
"But we wanted a crow's nest for nature study," explained Anne.
"That was on our field afternoon. Field afternoons are splendid,
Marilla. And Miss Stacy explains everything so beautifully. We have to
write compositions on our field afternoons and I write the best
ones."
"It's very vain of you to say so then. You'd better let your
teacher say it."
"But she DID say it, Marilla. And indeed I'm not vain
about it. How can I be, when I'm such a dunce at geometry? Although I'm
really beginning to see through it a little, too. Miss Stacy makes it so
clear. Still, I'll never be good at it and I assure you it is a humbling
reflection. But I love writing compositions. Mostly Miss Stacy lets us
choose our own subjects; but next week we are to write a composition on
some remarkable person. It's hard to choose among so many remarkable
people who have lived. Mustn't it be splendid to be remarkable and
have compositions written about you after you're dead? Oh, I would
dearly love to be remarkable. I think when I grow up I'll be a trained
nurse and go with the Red Crosses to the field of battle as a messenger
of mercy. That is, if I don't go out as a foreign missionary. That
would be very romantic, but one would have to be very good to be a
missionary, and that would be a stumbling block. We have physical culture
exercises every day, too. They make you graceful and promote
digestion."
"Promote fiddlesticks!" said Marilla, who honestly thought it
was all nonsense.
But all the field afternoons and recitation Fridays
and physical culture contortions paled before a project which Miss Stacy
brought forward in November. This was that the scholars of Avonlea school
should get up a concert and hold it in the hall on Christmas Night, for the
laudable purpose of helping to pay for a schoolhouse flag. The pupils one
and all taking graciously to this plan, the preparations for a
program were begun at once. And of all the excited performers-elect none was
so excited as Anne Shirley, who threw herself into the undertaking
heart and soul, hampered as she was by Marilla's disapproval. Marilla
thought it all rank foolishness.
"It's just filling your heads up with
nonsense and taking time that ought to be put on your lessons," she grumbled.
"I don't approve of children's getting up concerts and racing about to
practices. It makes them vain and forward and fond of gadding."
"But
think of the worthy object," pleaded Anne. "A flag will cultivate a spirit of
patriotism, Marilla."
"Fudge! There's precious little patriotism in the
thoughts of any of you. All you want is a good time."
"Well, when you
can combine patriotism and fun, isn't it all right? Of course it's real nice
to be getting up a concert. We're going to have six choruses and Diana is to
sing a solo. I'm in two dialogues--'The Society for the Suppression of
Gossip' and 'The Fairy Queen.' The boys are going to have a dialogue too. And
I'm to have two recitations, Marilla. I just tremble when I think of it, but
it's a nice thrilly kind of tremble. And we're to have a tableau at the
last--'Faith, Hope and Charity.' Diana and Ruby and I are to be in it, all
draped in white with flowing hair. I'm to be Hope, with my hands
clasped--so--and my eyes uplifted. I'm going to practice my recitations in
the garret. Don't be alarmed if you hear me groaning. I have to groan
heartrendingly in one of them, and it's really hard to get up a good artistic
groan, Marilla. Josie Pye is sulky because she didn't get the part she wanted
in the dialogue. She wanted to be the fairy queen. That would have
been ridiculous, for who ever heard of a fairy queen as fat as Josie?
Fairy queens must be slender. Jane Andrews is to be the queen and I am to
be one of her maids of honor. Josie says she thinks a red-haired fairy
is just as ridiculous as a fat one, but I do not let myself mind what
Josie says. I'm to have a wreath of white roses on my hair and Ruby
Gillis is going to lend me her slippers because I haven't any of my own.
It's necessary for fairies to have slippers, you know. You couldn't
imagine a fairy wearing boots, could you? Especially with copper toes? We
are going to decorate the hall with creeping spruce and fir mottoes
with pink tissue-paper roses in them. And we are all to march in two by
two after the audience is seated, while Emma White plays a march on
the organ. Oh, Marilla, I know you are not so enthusiastic about it as I
am, but don't you hope your little Anne will distinguish
herself?"
"All I hope is that you'll behave yourself. I'll be heartily
glad when all this fuss is over and you'll be able to settle down. You are
simply good for nothing just now with your head stuffed full of dialogues
and groans and tableaus. As for your tongue, it's a marvel it's not
clean worn out."
Anne sighed and betook herself to the back yard, over
which a young new moon was shining through the leafless poplar boughs from an
apple-green western sky, and where Matthew was splitting wood. Anne perched
herself on a block and talked the concert over with him, sure of an
appreciative and sympathetic listener in this instance at least.
"Well
now, I reckon it's going to be a pretty good concert. And I expect you'll do
your part fine," he said, smiling down into her eager, vivacious little face.
Anne smiled back at him. Those two were the best of friends and Matthew
thanked his stars many a time and oft that he had nothing to do with bringing
her up. That was Marilla's exclusive duty; if it had been his he would have
been worried over frequent conflicts between inclination and said duty. As it
was, he was free to, "spoil Anne"--Marilla's phrasing--as much as he liked.
But it was not such a bad arrangement after all; a little "appreciation"
sometimes does quite as much good as all the conscientious "bringing up" in
the world.
CHAPTER XXV. Matthew Insists on Puffed
Sleeves
Matthew was having a bad ten minutes of it. He had come into
the kitchen, in the twilight of a cold, gray December evening, and had
sat down in the woodbox corner to take off his heavy boots, unconscious
of the fact that Anne and a bevy of her schoolmates were having a
practice of "The Fairy Queen" in the sitting room. Presently they came
trooping through the hall and out into the kitchen, laughing and
chattering gaily. They did not see Matthew, who shrank bashfully back into
the shadows beyond the woodbox with a boot in one hand and a bootjack in
the other, and he watched them shyly for the aforesaid ten minutes as
they put on caps and jackets and talked about the dialogue and the
concert. Anne stood among them, bright eyed and animated as they; but
Matthew suddenly became conscious that there was something about her
different from her mates. And what worried Matthew was that the
difference impressed him as being something that should not exist. Anne had
a brighter face, and bigger, starrier eyes, and more delicate
features than the other; even shy, unobservant Matthew had learned to take
note of these things; but the difference that disturbed him did not
consist in any of these respects. Then in what did it consist?
Matthew
was haunted by this question long after the girls had gone, arm in arm, down
the long, hard-frozen lane and Anne had betaken herself to her books. He
could not refer it to Marilla, who, he felt, would be quite sure to sniff
scornfully and remark that the only difference she saw between Anne and the
other girls was that they sometimes kept their tongues quiet while Anne never
did. This, Matthew felt, would be no great help.
He had recourse to
his pipe that evening to help him study it out, much to Marilla's disgust.
After two hours of smoking and hard reflection Matthew arrived at a solution
of his problem. Anne was not dressed like the other girls!
The more
Matthew thought about the matter the more he was convinced that Anne never
had been dressed like the other girls--never since she had come to Green
Gables. Marilla kept her clothed in plain, dark dresses, all made after the
same unvarying pattern. If Matthew knew there was such a thing as fashion in
dress it was as much as he did; but he was quite sure that Anne's sleeves did
not look at all like the sleeves the other girls wore. He recalled the
cluster of little girls he had seen around her that evening--all gay in
waists of red and blue and pink and white--and he wondered why Marilla always
kept her so plainly and soberly gowned.
Of course, it must be all
right. Marilla knew best and Marilla was bringing her up. Probably some wise,
inscrutable motive was to be served thereby. But surely it would do no harm
to let the child have one pretty dress--something like Diana Barry always
wore. Matthew decided that he would give her one; that surely could not be
objected to as an unwarranted putting in of his oar. Christmas was only a
fortnight off. A nice new dress would be the very thing for a present.
Matthew, with a sigh of satisfaction, put away his pipe and went to bed,
while Marilla opened all the doors and aired the house.
The very next
evening Matthew betook himself to Carmody to buy the dress, determined to get
the worst over and have done with it. It would be, he felt assured, no
trifling ordeal. There were some things Matthew could buy and prove himself
no mean bargainer; but he knew he would be at the mercy of shopkeepers when
it came to buying a girl's dress.
After much cogitation Matthew resolved
to go to Samuel Lawson's store instead of William Blair's. To be sure, the
Cuthberts always had gone to William Blair's; it was almost as much a matter
of conscience with them as to attend the Presbyterian church and vote
Conservative. But William Blair's two daughters frequently waited on
customers there and Matthew held them in absolute dread. He could contrive to
deal with them when he knew exactly what he wanted and could point it out;
but in such a matter as this, requiring explanation and consultation, Matthew
felt that he must be sure of a man behind the counter. So he would go to
Lawson's, where Samuel or his son would wait on him.
Alas! Matthew did
not know that Samuel, in the recent expansion of his business, had set up a
lady clerk also; she was a niece of his wife's and a very dashing young
person indeed, with a huge, drooping pompadour, big, rolling brown eyes, and
a most extensive and bewildering smile. She was dressed with exceeding
smartness and wore several bangle bracelets that glittered and rattled and
tinkled with every movement of her hands. Matthew was covered with confusion
at finding her there at all; and those bangles completely wrecked his wits at
one fell swoop.
"What can I do for you this evening, Mr. Cuthbert?" Miss
Lucilla Harris inquired, briskly and ingratiatingly, tapping the counter with
both hands.
"Have you any--any--any--well now, say any garden rakes?"
stammered Matthew.
Miss Harris looked somewhat surprised, as well she
might, to hear a man inquiring for garden rakes in the middle of
December.
"I believe we have one or two left over," she said, "but
they're upstairs in the lumber room. I'll go and see." During her
absence Matthew collected his scattered senses for another
effort.
When Miss Harris returned with the rake and cheerfully
inquired: "Anything else tonight, Mr. Cuthbert?" Matthew took his courage
in both hands and replied: "Well now, since you suggest it, I might
as well--take--that is--look at--buy some--some hayseed."
Miss Harris
had heard Matthew Cuthbert called odd. She now concluded that he was entirely
crazy.
"We only keep hayseed in the spring," she explained loftily.
"We've none on hand just now."
"Oh, certainly--certainly--just as you
say," stammered unhappy Matthew, seizing the rake and making for the door. At
the threshold he recollected that he had not paid for it and he turned
miserably back. While Miss Harris was counting out his change he rallied his
powers for a final desperate attempt.
"Well now--if it isn't too much
trouble--I might as well--that is--I'd like to look at--at--some
sugar."
"White or brown?" queried Miss Harris patiently.
"Oh--well
now--brown," said Matthew feebly.
"There's a barrel of it over there,"
said Miss Harris, shaking her bangles at it. "It's the only kind we
have."
"I'll--I'll take twenty pounds of it," said Matthew, with beads
of perspiration standing on his forehead.
Matthew had driven halfway
home before he was his own man again. It had been a gruesome experience, but
it served him right, he thought, for committing the heresy of going to a
strange store. When he reached home he hid the rake in the tool house, but
the sugar he carried in to Marilla.
"Brown sugar!" exclaimed Marilla.
"Whatever possessed you to get so much? You know I never use it except for
the hired man's porridge or black fruit cake. Jerry's gone and I've made my
cake long ago. It's not good sugar, either--it's coarse and dark--William
Blair doesn't usually keep sugar like that."
"I--I thought it might
come in handy sometime," said Matthew, making good his escape.
When
Matthew came to think the matter over he decided that a woman was required to
cope with the situation. Marilla was out of the question. Matthew felt sure
she would throw cold water on his project at once. Remained only Mrs. Lynde;
for of no other woman in Avonlea would Matthew have dared to ask advice. To
Mrs. Lynde he went accordingly, and that good lady promptly took the matter
out of the harassed man's hands.
"Pick out a dress for you to give Anne?
To be sure I will. I'm going to Carmody tomorrow and I'll attend to it. Have
you something particular in mind? No? Well, I'll just go by my own judgment
then. I believe a nice rich brown would just suit Anne, and William Blair has
some new gloria in that's real pretty. Perhaps you'd like me to make it up
for her, too, seeing that if Marilla was to make it Anne would probably get
wind of it before the time and spoil the surprise? Well, I'll do it. No, it
isn't a mite of trouble. I like sewing. I'll make it to fit my niece,
Jenny Gillis, for she and Anne are as like as two peas as far as figure
goes."
"Well now, I'm much obliged," said Matthew, "and--and--I
dunno--but I'd like--I think they make the sleeves different nowadays to what
they used to be. If it wouldn't be asking too much I--I'd like them made in
the new way."
"Puffs? Of course. You needn't worry a speck more about
it, Matthew. I'll make it up in the very latest fashion," said Mrs. Lynde. To
herself she added when Matthew had gone:
"It'll be a real satisfaction
to see that poor child wearing something decent for once. The way Marilla
dresses her is positively ridiculous, that's what, and I've ached to tell her
so plainly a dozen times. I've held my tongue though, for I can see Marilla
doesn't want advice and she thinks she knows more about bringing children up
than I do for all she's an old maid. But that's always the way. Folks that
has brought up children know that there's no hard and fast method in the
world that'll suit every child. But them as never have think it's all as
plain and easy as Rule of Three--just set your three terms down so fashion,
and the sum'll work out correct. But flesh and blood don't come under
the head of arithmetic and that's where Marilla Cuthbert makes her
mistake. I suppose she's trying to cultivate a spirit of humility in Anne
by dressing her as she does; but it's more likely to cultivate envy
and discontent. I'm sure the child must feel the difference between
her clothes and the other girls'. But to think of Matthew taking notice
of it! That man is waking up after being asleep for over sixty
years."
Marilla knew all the following fortnight that Matthew had
something on his mind, but what it was she could not guess, until Christmas
Eve, when Mrs. Lynde brought up the new dress. Marilla behaved pretty well on
the whole, although it is very likely she distrusted Mrs. Lynde's
diplomatic explanation that she had made the dress because Matthew was afraid
Anne would find out about it too soon if Marilla made it.
"So this is
what Matthew has been looking so mysterious over and grinning about to
himself for two weeks, is it?" she said a little stiffly but tolerantly. "I
knew he was up to some foolishness. Well, I must say I don't think Anne
needed any more dresses. I made her three good, warm, serviceable ones this
fall, and anything more is sheer extravagance. There's enough material in
those sleeves alone to make a waist, I declare there is. You'll just pamper
Anne's vanity, Matthew, and she's as vain as a peacock now. Well, I hope
she'll be satisfied at last, for I know she's been hankering after those
silly sleeves ever since they came in, although she never said a word after
the first. The puffs have been getting bigger and more ridiculous right
along; they're as big as balloons now. Next year anybody who wears them will
have to go through a door sideways."
Christmas morning broke on a
beautiful white world. It had been a very mild December and people had looked
forward to a green Christmas; but just enough snow fell softly in the night
to transfigure Avonlea. Anne peeped out from her frosted gable window with
delighted eyes. The firs in the Haunted Wood were all feathery and wonderful;
the birches and wild cherry trees were outlined in pearl; the plowed fields
were stretches of snowy dimples; and there was a crisp tang in the air
that was glorious. Anne ran downstairs singing until her voice
reechoed through Green Gables.
"Merry Christmas, Marilla! Merry
Christmas, Matthew! Isn't it a lovely Christmas? I'm so glad it's white. Any
other kind of Christmas doesn't seem real, does it? I don't like green
Christmases. They're not green--they're just nasty faded browns and grays.
What makes people call them green? Why--why--Matthew, is that for me? Oh,
Matthew!"
Matthew had sheepishly unfolded the dress from its paper
swathings and held it out with a deprecatory glance at Marilla, who feigned
to be contemptuously filling the teapot, but nevertheless watched the
scene out of the corner of her eye with a rather interested air.
Anne
took the dress and looked at it in reverent silence. Oh, how pretty it was--a
lovely soft brown gloria with all the gloss of silk; a skirt with dainty
frills and shirrings; a waist elaborately pintucked in the most fashionable
way, with a little ruffle of filmy lace at the neck. But the sleeves--they
were the crowning glory! Long elbow cuffs, and above them two beautiful puffs
divided by rows of shirring and bows of brown-silk ribbon.
"That's a
Christmas present for you, Anne," said Matthew shyly. "Why--why--Anne, don't
you like it? Well now--well now."
For Anne's eyes had suddenly filled
with tears.
"Like it! Oh, Matthew!" Anne laid the dress over a chair and
clasped her hands. "Matthew, it's perfectly exquisite. Oh, I can never thank
you enough. Look at those sleeves! Oh, it seems to me this must be a
happy dream."
"Well, well, let us have breakfast," interrupted
Marilla. "I must say, Anne, I don't think you needed the dress; but since
Matthew has got it for you, see that you take good care of it. There's a hair
ribbon Mrs. Lynde left for you. It's brown, to match the dress. Come now, sit
in."
"I don't see how I'm going to eat breakfast," said Anne
rapturously. "Breakfast seems so commonplace at such an exciting moment. I'd
rather feast my eyes on that dress. I'm so glad that puffed sleeves are
still fashionable. It did seem to me that I'd never get over it if they
went out before I had a dress with them. I'd never have felt quite
satisfied, you see. It was lovely of Mrs. Lynde to give me the ribbon too. I
feel that I ought to be a very good girl indeed. It's at times like this
I'm sorry I'm not a model little girl; and I always resolve that I will be
in future. But somehow it's hard to carry out your resolutions
when irresistible temptations come. Still, I really will make an extra
effort after this."
When the commonplace breakfast was over Diana
appeared, crossing the white log bridge in the hollow, a gay little figure in
her crimson ulster. Anne flew down the slope to meet her.
"Merry
Christmas, Diana! And oh, it's a wonderful Christmas. I've something splendid
to show you. Matthew has given me the loveliest dress, with SUCH sleeves. I
couldn't even imagine any nicer."
"I've got something more for you," said
Diana breathlessly. "Here--this box. Aunt Josephine sent us out a big box
with ever so many things in it--and this is for you. I'd have brought it over
last night, but it didn't come until after dark, and I never feel very
comfortable coming through the Haunted Wood in the dark now."
Anne
opened the box and peeped in. First a card with "For the Anne-girl and Merry
Christmas," written on it; and then, a pair of the daintiest little kid
slippers, with beaded toes and satin bows and
glistening buckles.
"Oh," said Anne, "Diana, this is too much. I must
be dreaming."
"I call it providential," said Diana. "You won't have to
borrow Ruby's slippers now, and that's a blessing, for they're two sizes too
big for you, and it would be awful to hear a fairy shuffling. Josie Pye
would be delighted. Mind you, Rob Wright went home with Gertie Pye from
the practice night before last. Did you ever hear anything equal to
that?"
All the Avonlea scholars were in a fever of excitement that day,
for the hall had to be decorated and a last grand rehearsal held.
The
concert came off in the evening and was a pronounced success. The little hall
was crowded; all the performers did excellently well, but Anne was the bright
particular star of the occasion, as even envy, in the shape of Josie Pye,
dared not deny.
"Oh, hasn't it been a brilliant evening?" sighed Anne,
when it was all over and she and Diana were walking home together under a
dark, starry sky.
"Everything went off very well," said Diana
practically. "I guess we must have made as much as ten dollars. Mind you, Mr.
Allan is going to send an account of it to the Charlottetown
papers."
"Oh, Diana, will we really see our names in print? It makes me
thrill to think of it. Your solo was perfectly elegant, Diana. I felt prouder
than you did when it was encored. I just said to myself, 'It is my dear
bosom friend who is so honored.'"
"Well, your recitations just brought
down the house, Anne. That sad one was simply splendid."
"Oh, I was so
nervous, Diana. When Mr. Allan called out my name I really cannot tell how I
ever got up on that platform. I felt as if a million eyes were looking at me
and through me, and for one dreadful moment I was sure I couldn't begin at
all. Then I thought of my lovely puffed sleeves and took courage. I knew that
I must live up to those sleeves, Diana. So I started in, and my voice seemed
to be coming from ever so far away. I just felt like a parrot. It's
providential that I practiced those recitations so often up in the garret, or
I'd never have been able to get through. Did I groan all right?"
"Yes,
indeed, you groaned lovely," assured Diana.
"I saw old Mrs. Sloane wiping
away tears when I sat down. It was splendid to think I had touched somebody's
heart. It's so romantic to take part in a concert, isn't it? Oh, it's been a
very memorable occasion indeed."
"Wasn't the boys' dialogue fine?"
said Diana. "Gilbert Blythe was just splendid. Anne, I do think it's awful
mean the way you treat Gil. Wait till I tell you. When you ran off the
platform after the fairy dialogue one of your roses fell out of your hair. I
saw Gil pick it up and put it in his breast pocket. There now. You're so
romantic that I'm sure you ought to be pleased at that."
"It's nothing
to me what that person does," said Anne loftily. "I simply never waste a
thought on him, Diana."
That night Marilla and Matthew, who had been out
to a concert for the first time in twenty years, sat for a while by the
kitchen fire after Anne had gone to bed.
"Well now, I guess our Anne
did as well as any of them," said Matthew proudly.
"Yes, she did,"
admitted Marilla. "She's a bright child, Matthew. And she looked real nice
too. I've been kind of opposed to this concert scheme, but I suppose there's
no real harm in it after all. Anyhow, I was proud of Anne tonight, although
I'm not going to tell her so."
"Well now, I was proud of her and I did
tell her so 'fore she went upstairs," said Matthew. "We must see what we can
do for her some of these days, Marilla. I guess she'll need something more
than Avonlea school by and by."
"There's time enough to think of
that," said Marilla. "She's only thirteen in March. Though tonight it struck
me she was growing quite a big girl. Mrs. Lynde made that dress a mite too
long, and it makes Anne look so tall. She's quick to learn and I guess the
best thing we can do for her will be to send her to Queen's after a spell.
But nothing need be said about that for a year or two yet."
"Well now,
it'll do no harm to be thinking it over off and on," said Matthew. "Things
like that are all the better for lots of
thinking over."
CHAPTER XXVI. The Story Club Is
Formed
Junior Avonlea found it hard to settle down to humdrum
existence again. To Anne in particular things seemed fearfully flat, stale,
and unprofitable after the goblet of excitement she had been sipping
for weeks. Could she go back to the former quiet pleasures of those
faraway days before the concert? At first, as she told Diana, she did not
really think she could.
"I'm positively certain, Diana, that life can
never be quite the same again as it was in those olden days," she said
mournfully, as if referring to a period of at least fifty years back.
"Perhaps after a while I'll get used to it, but I'm afraid concerts spoil
people for everyday life. I suppose that is why Marilla disapproves of
them. Marilla is such a sensible woman. It must be a great deal better to
be sensible; but still, I don't believe I'd really want to be a
sensible person, because they are so unromantic. Mrs. Lynde says there is
no danger of my ever being one, but you can never tell. I feel just
now that I may grow up to be sensible yet. But perhaps that is only
because I'm tired. I simply couldn't sleep last night for ever so long. I
just lay awake and imagined the concert over and over again. That's
one splendid thing about such affairs--it's so lovely to look back to
them."
Eventually, however, Avonlea school slipped back into its old
groove and took up its old interests. To be sure, the concert left traces.
Ruby Gillis and Emma White, who had quarreled over a point of precedence
in their platform seats, no longer sat at the same desk, and a
promising friendship of three years was broken up. Josie Pye and Julia Bell
did not "speak" for three months, because Josie Pye had told Bessie
Wright that Julia Bell's bow when she got up to recite made her think of
a chicken jerking its head, and Bessie told Julia. None of the
Sloanes would have any dealings with the Bells, because the Bells had
declared that the Sloanes had too much to do in the program, and the Sloanes
had retorted that the Bells were not capable of doing the little they had
to do properly. Finally, Charlie Sloane fought Moody Spurgeon
MacPherson, because Moody Spurgeon had said that Anne Shirley put on airs
about her recitations, and Moody Spurgeon was "licked"; consequently
Moody Spurgeon's sister, Ella May, would not "speak" to Anne Shirley all
the rest of the winter. With the exception of these trifling frictions,
work in Miss Stacy's little kingdom went on with regularity and
smoothness.
The winter weeks slipped by. It was an unusually mild winter,
with so little snow that Anne and Diana could go to school nearly every day
by way of the Birch Path. On Anne's birthday they were tripping
lightly down it, keeping eyes and ears alert amid all their chatter, for
Miss Stacy had told them that they must soon write a composition on
"A Winter's Walk in the Woods," and it behooved them to be
observant.
"Just think, Diana, I'm thirteen years old today," remarked
Anne in an awed voice. "I can scarcely realize that I'm in my teens. When I
woke this morning it seemed to me that everything must be different.
You've been thirteen for a month, so I suppose it doesn't seem such a
novelty to you as it does to me. It makes life seem so much more
interesting. In two more years I'll be really grown up. It's a great comfort
to think that I'll be able to use big words then without being laughed
at."
"Ruby Gillis says she means to have a beau as soon as she's
fifteen," said Diana.
"Ruby Gillis thinks of nothing but beaus," said
Anne disdainfully. "She's actually delighted when anyone writes her name up
in a take-notice for all she pretends to be so mad. But I'm afraid that is
an uncharitable speech. Mrs. Allan says we should never make
uncharitable speeches; but they do slip out so often before you think, don't
they? I simply can't talk about Josie Pye without making an uncharitable
speech, so I never mention her at all. You may have noticed that. I'm trying
to be as much like Mrs. Allan as I possibly can, for I think she's
perfect. Mr. Allan thinks so too. Mrs. Lynde says he just worships the ground
she treads on and she doesn't really think it right for a minister to set
his affections so much on a mortal being. But then, Diana, even ministers are
human and have their besetting sins just like everybody else. I had such an
interesting talk with Mrs. Allan about besetting sins last Sunday afternoon.
There are just a few things it's proper to talk about on Sundays and that is
one of them. My besetting sin is imagining too much and forgetting my duties.
I'm striving very hard to overcome it and now that I'm really thirteen
perhaps I'll get on better."
"In four more years we'll be able to put
our hair up," said Diana. "Alice Bell is only sixteen and she is wearing hers
up, but I think that's ridiculous. I shall wait until I'm
seventeen."
"If I had Alice Bell's crooked nose," said Anne decidedly,
"I wouldn't--but there! I won't say what I was going to because it
was extremely uncharitable. Besides, I was comparing it with my own nose
and that's vanity. I'm afraid I think too much about my nose ever since
I heard that compliment about it long ago. It really is a great comfort
to me. Oh, Diana, look, there's a rabbit. That's something to remember
for our woods composition. I really think the woods are just as lovely
in winter as in summer. They're so white and still, as if they were
asleep and dreaming pretty dreams."
"I won't mind writing that
composition when its time comes," sighed Diana. "I can manage to write about
the woods, but the one we're to hand in Monday is terrible. The idea of Miss
Stacy telling us to write a story out of our own heads!"
"Why, it's as
easy as wink," said Anne.
"It's easy for you because you have an
imagination," retorted Diana, "but what would you do if you had been born
without one? I suppose you have your composition all done?"
Anne
nodded, trying hard not to look virtuously complacent and
failing miserably.
"I wrote it last Monday evening. It's called 'The
Jealous Rival; or In Death Not Divided.' I read it to Marilla and she said it
was stuff and nonsense. Then I read it to Matthew and he said it was fine.
That is the kind of critic I like. It's a sad, sweet story. I just cried
like a child while I was writing it. It's about two beautiful maidens
called Cordelia Montmorency and Geraldine Seymour who lived in the same
village and were devotedly attached to each other. Cordelia was a regal
brunette with a coronet of midnight hair and duskly flashing eyes. Geraldine
was a queenly blonde with hair like spun gold and velvety purple
eyes."
"I never saw anybody with purple eyes," said Diana
dubiously.
"Neither did I. I just imagined them. I wanted something out
of the common. Geraldine had an alabaster brow too. I've found out what
an alabaster brow is. That is one of the advantages of being thirteen.
You know so much more than you did when you were only twelve."
"Well,
what became of Cordelia and Geraldine?" asked Diana, who was beginning to
feel rather interested in their fate.
"They grew in beauty side by side
until they were sixteen. Then Bertram DeVere came to their native village and
fell in love with the fair Geraldine. He saved her life when her horse ran
away with her in a carriage, and she fainted in his arms and he carried her
home three miles; because, you understand, the carriage was all smashed up. I
found it rather hard to imagine the proposal because I had no experience
to go by. I asked Ruby Gillis if she knew anything about how men
proposed because I thought she'd likely be an authority on the subject,
having so many sisters married. Ruby told me she was hid in the hall pantry
when Malcolm Andres proposed to her sister Susan. She said Malcolm told
Susan that his dad had given him the farm in his own name and then said,
'What do you say, darling pet, if we get hitched this fall?' And Susan
said, 'Yes--no--I don't know--let me see'--and there they were, engaged
as quick as that. But I didn't think that sort of a proposal was a
very romantic one, so in the end I had to imagine it out as well as I
could. I made it very flowery and poetical and Bertram went on his
knees, although Ruby Gillis says it isn't done nowadays. Geraldine
accepted him in a speech a page long. I can tell you I took a lot of
trouble with that speech. I rewrote it five times and I look upon it as
my masterpiece. Bertram gave her a diamond ring and a ruby necklace and
told her they would go to Europe for a wedding tour, for he was immensely
wealthy. But then, alas, shadows began to darken over their path. Cordelia
was secretly in love with Bertram herself and when Geraldine told her about
the engagement she was simply furious, especially when she saw the necklace
and the diamond ring. All her affection for Geraldine turned to bitter hate
and she vowed that she should never marry Bertram. But she pretended to be
Geraldine's friend the same as ever. One evening they were standing on the
bridge over a rushing turbulent stream and Cordelia, thinking they were
alone, pushed Geraldine over the brink with a wild, mocking, 'Ha, ha, ha.'
But Bertram saw it all and he at once plunged into the current, exclaiming,
'I will save thee, my peerless Geraldine.' But alas, he had forgotten
he couldn't swim, and they were both drowned, clasped in each other's
arms. Their bodies were washed ashore soon afterwards. They were buried in
the one grave and their funeral was most imposing, Diana. It's so
much more romantic to end a story up with a funeral than a wedding. As
for Cordelia, she went insane with remorse and was shut up in a
lunatic asylum. I thought that was a poetical retribution for her crime." |
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