Part 28 (2/2)
Her aunt looked at her keenly, and for whatever reason abruptly left the subject. ”Your silk,” she said, ”will do very well for church, Lydia.”
”Oh, I say, now!” cried her husband, ”you're not going to make her go to church to-day!”
”Yes, I am! There will be more people there to-day than any other time this fall. She must go.”
”But she's tired to death,--quite tuckered, you know.”
”Oh, I'm rested, now,” said Lydia. ”I shouldn't like to miss going to church.”
”Your silk,” continued her aunt, ”will be quite the thing for church.”
She looked hard at the dress, as if it were not quite the thing for breakfast. Mrs. Erwin herself wore a morning-dress of becoming delicacy, and an airy French cap; she had a light fall of powder on her face.
”What kind of overthing have you got?” she asked.
”There's a sack goes with this,” said the girl, suggestively.
”That's nice! What is your bonnet?”
”I haven't any bonnet. But my best hat is nice. I could--”
”_No_ one goes to church in a hat! You can't do it. It's simply impossible.”
”Why, my dear,” said her husband, ”I saw some very pretty American girls in hats at church, last Sunday.”
”Yes, and everybody _knew_ they were Americans by their hats!” retorted Mrs. Erwin.
”_I_ knew they were Americans by their good looks,” said Mr. Erwin, ”and what you call their stylishness.”
”Oh, it's all well enough for you to talk. _You're_ an Englishman, and you could wear a hat, if you liked. It would be set down to character.
But in an American it would be set down to greenness. If you were an American, you would have to wear a bonnet.”
”I'm glad, then, I'm not an American,” said her husband; ”I don't think I should look well in a bonnet.”
”Oh, stuff, Henshaw! You know what I mean. And I'm not going to have English people thinking we're ignorant of the common decencies of life.
Lydia shall not go to church in a hat; she had better _never_ go. I will lend her one of my bonnets. Let me see, _which_ one.” She gazed at Lydia in critical abstraction. ”I wear rather young bonnets,” she mused aloud, ”and we're both rather dark. The only difficulty is I'm so much more delicate--” She brooded upon the question in a silence, from which she burst exulting. ”The very thing! I can fuss it up in no time. It won't take two minutes to get it ready. And you'll look just killing in it.”
She turned grave again. ”Henshaw,” she said, ”I _wish_ you would go to church this morning!”
”I would do almost anything for you, Josephine; but really, you know, you oughtn't to ask that. I was there last Sunday; I can't go every Sunday. It's bad enough in England; a man ought to have some relief on the Continent.”
”Well, well. I suppose I oughtn't to ask you,” sighed his wife, ”especially as you're going with us to-night.”
”I'll go to-night, with pleasure,” said Mr. Erwin. He rose when his wife and Lydia left the table, and opened the door for them with a certain courtesy he had; it struck even Lydia's uneducated sense as something peculiarly sweet and fine, and it did not overawe her own simplicity, but seemed of kind with it.
The bonnet, when put to proof, did not turn out to be all that it was vaunted. It looked a little odd, from the first; and Mrs. Erwin, when she was herself dressed, ended by taking it off, and putting on Lydia the hat previously condemned. ”You're divine in that,” she said. ”And after all, you are a traveler, and I can say that some of your things were spoiled coming over,--people always get things ruined in a sea voyage,--and they'll think it was your bonnet.”
”I kept my things very nicely, aunt Josephine,” said Lydia conscientiously. ”I don't believe anything was hurt.”
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