Part 18 (1/2)

”O, faugh!” said Elise Mokey, impatiently, to Bel's ”I could contrive.” ”I should like to see you, with girls like Matilda Meane.

You've got to _get_ your dozen or twenty, first, and make them agree.”

Miss Mokey had very likely never heard of Mrs. Gla.s.s, or of the ”catching your hare,” which is the impracticable hitch at the start of most delicious things that might otherwise be done.

”I think this world is a kind of single-threaded machine, after all.

There's always something either too tight or too loose the minute you double,” she said, changing her tension-screw as she spoke. ”No; we've just got to make it up with cracker-frolics, the best way we can; and that takes one more of somebody's nine dollars, every time.

There's some fun in it, after all, especially to see Matilda Meane come to the table. I do believe that girl would sell her soul if she could have a Parker House dinner every day. When it's a little worse, or a little better than usual, when the milk gives out, or we have a yesterday's lobster for tea,--I wish you could just see her.

She's so mad, or she's so eager. She _will_ have claw-meat; it _is_ claw-meat with her, sure enough; and if anybody else gets it first, or the dish goes round the other way and is all picked over,--she _looks_! Why, she looks as if she desired the prayers of the congregation, and n.o.body would pray!”

”What _are_ you two laughing at?” broke in Kate Sencerbox, leaning over from her table beyond. ”Bel Bree, where are your crimps?”

In the ardor of her work, or talk, or both, Bel's hair, as usual, had got pushed recklessly aside.

”O, I only have a little smile in my hair early in the morning,”

replies quick, cheery Bel. ”It never crimps decidedly, and it all gets straightened out prim enough as the day's work comes on. It's like the gra.s.s of the field, and a good many other things; in the morning it is fresh and springeth up; in the evening it _giveth_ up, and is down flat.”

”I guess you'll find it so,” said Elise Mokey, splenetically.

”Was _that_ what you were laughing at?” asked Kate. ”Seems to me you choose rather aggravating subjects.”

”Aggravations are as good as anything to laugh at, if you only know how,” Bel Bree said.

”They're always handy, at any rate,” said Elise.

”I thought 'aggravate' meant making worse than it is,” said quiet little Mary Pinfall.

”Just it, Molly!” answered Bel Bree, quick as a flash. ”Take a plague, make it out seven times as bad as it is, so that it's perfectly ridiculous and impossible, and then laugh at it. Next time you put your finger on it, as the Irishman said of the flea, it isn't there.”

”That's hommerpathy,” said Miss Proddle. ”Hommerpathy cures by aggravating.”

Miss Proddle was tiresome; she always said things that had been said before, or that needed no saying. Miss Proddle was another of those old girls who, like Miss Bree among the young ones, have outlived and lost their Christian names, with their vivacity. Never mind; it is the Christian name, and the Lord knows them by it, as He did Martha and Mary.

”_Reductio ad absurdum_,” put in Grace Toppings, who had been at a High School, and studied geometry.

”Grace Toppings!” called out Kate Sencerbox, shortly, ”you've st.i.tched that flounce together with a twist in it!”

Miss Tonker heard, and came round again.

”Gyurls!” she said, with elegantly severe authority, ”I _will_ not have this talking over the work. Miss Toppings, this whole skirt is an unmitigated muddle. Head-tucks half an inch too near the bottom!

No _room_ for your flounce. If you can't keep to your measures, you'd better not undertake piece-work. Take that last welt out, and put it in over the top. And make no more blunders, if you please, unless you want to be put to plain yard-st.i.tching.”

”Eight inches and a half is _some_ room for a flounce, I guess, if it ain't nine inches,” muttered the mathematical Grace, as she began the slow ripping of the lock-st.i.tched tucking, that would take half an hour out of the value of her day.

”That's a comfort, ain't it?” whispered mischievous, sharp, good-natured Kate. ”Look here; I'll help, if you won't talk any more Latin, or Hottentot.”

It was of no use to tell those girls not to talk over their work.

The more work they had in them, the more talk; it was a test, like a steam-gauge. Only the poor, pale, worn-out ones, like Emma Hollen, who coughed and breathed short, and could not spend strength even in listening, amidst the conflicting whirr of the feeds and wheels,--and the old, sobered-down, slow ones, like Miss Bree and Miss Proddle, b.u.t.ton-holing and gather-sewing for dear life, with their spectacles over their noses, and great bald places showing on the tops of their bent heads,--kept time with silent thoughts to the beat of their treadles and the clip of their needles against the thimble-ends.