Part 13 (1/2)
”Children must be born simple, as they were then. There's nothing my girls would like better, even at their age, than to help at just such a party. It is a dream of theirs. Why shouldn't somebody do it, just to show how good it is?”
”You can lead a horse to water, you know, Frank, but you can't make him drink. And the colts are forty times worse. I believe you might get some of the mothers together for an ancient tea-drink, just in the name of old a.s.sociation; but the _babies_ would all turn up their new-fas.h.i.+oned little noses.”
”O, dear!” sighed Frau Van Winkle. ”I wish I knew people!”
”By the time you do, you'll know the reason why, and be like all the rest.”
Hazel Ripwinkley went to Mrs. Hilman's school, with her cousin Helena. That was because the school was a thoroughly good one; the best her mother could learn of; not because it was kept in parlors in Dorset Street, and there were girls there who came from palaces west of the Common, in the grand avenues and the ABC streets; nor did Hazel wear her best gray and black velvet suit for every day, though the rich colored poplins with their over-skirts and sashes, and the gay ribbons for hair and neck made the long green baize covered tables look like gardenplots with beds of bloom, and quite extinguished with their brilliancy the quiet, one skirted brown merino that she brushed and folded every night, and put on with fresh linen cuffs and collar every morning.
”It is an idiosyncrasy of Aunt Frances,” Helena explained, with the grandest phrase she could pick out of her ”Synonymes,” to cow down those who ”wondered.”
Privately, Helena held long lamentations with Hazel, going to and fro, about the party that she could not have.
”I'm actually ashamed to go to school. There isn't a girl there, who can pretend to have anything, that hasn't had some kind of a company this winter. I've been to them all, and I feel real mean,--sneaky.
What's 'next year?' Mamma puts me off with that. Poh? Next year they'll all begin again. You can't skip birthdays.”
”I'll tell you what!” said Hazel, suddenly, inspired by much the same idea that had occurred to Mrs. Ripwinkley; ”I mean to ask my mother to let _me_ have a party!”
”You! Down in Aspen Street! Don't, for pity's sake, Hazel!”
”I don't believe but what it could be done over again!” said Hazel, irrelevantly, intent upon her own thought.
”It couldn't be done _once_! For gracious grandmother's sake, don't think of it!” cried the little world-woman of thirteen.
”It's gracious grandmother's sake that made me think of it,” said Hazel, laughing. ”The way she used to do.”
”Why don't you ask them to help you hunt up old Noah, and all get back into the ark, pigeons and all?”
”Well, I guess they had pretty nice times there, any how; and if another big rain comes, perhaps they'll have to!”
Hazel did not intend her full meaning; but there is many a faint, small prophecy hid under a clover-leaf.
Hazel did not let go things; her little witch-wand, once pointed, held its divining angle with the might of magic until somebody broke ground.
”It's awful!” Helena declared to her mother and sisters, with tears of consternation. ”And she wants me to go round with her and carry 'compliments!' It'll never be got over,--never! I wish I could go away to boarding-school!”
For Mrs. Ripwinkley had made up her unsophisticated mind to try this thing; to put this grain of a pure, potent salt, right into the seethe and glitter of little Boston, and find out what it would decompose or precipitate. For was not she a mother, testing the world's chalice for her children? What did she care for the hiss and the bubble, if they came?
She was wider awake than Mrs. Ledwith knew; perhaps they who come down from the mountain heights of long seclusion can measure the world's paces and changes better than they who have been hurried in the midst of them, on and on, or round and round.
Worst of all, old Uncle t.i.tus took it up.
It was funny,--or it would have been funny, reader, if anybody but you and I and Rachel Froke knew exactly how,--to watch Uncle t.i.tus as he kept his quiet eye on all these things,--the things that he had set going,--and read their revelations; sheltered, disguised, under a character that the world had chosen to put upon him, like Haroun Alraschid in the merchant's cloak.
They took their tea with him,--the two families,--every Sunday night. Agatha Ledwith ”filled him in” a pair of slippers that very first Christmas; he sat there in the corner with his old leather ones on, when they came, and left them, for the most part, to their own mutual entertainment, until the tea was ready. It was a sort of family exchange; all the plans and topics came up, particularly on the Ledwith side, for Mrs. Ripwinkley was a good listener, and Laura a good talker; and the fun,--that you and I and Rachel Froke could guess,--yes, and a good deal of unsuspected earnest, also,--was all there behind the old gentleman's ”Christian Age,” as over brief mentions of sermons, or words about books, or little brevities of family inquiries and household news, broke small floods of excitement like water over pebbles, as Laura and her daughters discussed and argued volubly the matching and the flouncing of a silk, or the new flowering and higher pitching of a bonnet,--since ”they are wearing everything all on the top, you know, and mine looks terribly meek;” or else descanted diffusely on the unaccountableness of the somebodies not having called, or the bother and forwardness of the some-other-bodies who had, and the eighty-three visits that were left on the list to be paid, and ”never being able to take a day to sit down for anything.”
”What is it all for?” Mrs. Ripwinkley would ask, over again, the same old burden of the world's weariness falling upon her from her sister's life, and making her feel as if it were her business to clear it away somehow.
”Why, to live!” Mrs. Ledwith would reply. ”You've got it all to do, you see.”