“Oh, how kind you are, Mrs. Bird! You load me with benefits, and how can I ever repay you?”
“You do not have to repay them to me necessarily, my child; you can pass them over, as you will be constantly doing, to all these groups of children, day after day. I am a sort of stupid, rich old lady who serves as a source of supply. My chief brilliancy lies in devising original methods of getting rid of my surplus in all sorts of odd and delightful ways, left untried, for the most part, by other people. I ‘ve been buying up splendid old trees in the outskirts of certain New England country towns,—trees that were in danger of being cut down for wood. Twenty-five to forty dollars buys a glorious tree, and it is safe for ever and ever to give shade to the tired traveler and beauty to the landscape. Each of my boys has his pet odd scheme for helping the world to ‘go right.’ Donald, for instance, puts stamps on the unstamped letters displayed in the Cambridge post-office, and sends them spinning on their way. He never receives the thanks of the careless writers, but he takes pleasure in making things straight. Paul writes me from Phillips Academy that this year he is sending the nine Ruggles children (a poor family of our acquaintance) to some sort of entertainment once every month. Hugh has just met a lovely girl who has induced him to help her maintain a boarding establishment for sick and deserted cats and dogs; and there we are!”
“But I ‘m a young, strong girl, and I fear I ‘m not so worthy an object of charity as a tree, an unstamped letter, an infant Ruggles, or a deserted cat! Still, I know the dresses will be lovely, and I had quite forgotten that I must be clothed in purple and fine linen for five months to come. It would have been one of my first thoughts last year, I am afraid; but lately this black dress has shut everything else from my sight.”
“It was my thought that you should give up your black dress just for these occasions, dear, and wear something more cheerful for the children’s sake. The dresses are very simple, for I ‘ve heard you say you can never tell a story when you are ‘dressed up,’ but they will please you, I know. They will be brought home this evening, and you must slip them all on, and show yourself to us in each.”
They would have pleased anybody, even a princess, Polly thought, as she stood before her bed that evening patting the four pretty new waists, and smoothing with childlike delight the folds of the four pretty skirts. It was such an odd sensation to have four dresses at a time!
They were of simple and inexpensive materials, as was appropriate; but Mrs. Bird’s exquisite taste and feeling for what would suit Polly’s personality made them more attractive than if they had been rich or expensive.
There was a white China silk, with belt and shoulder-knots of black velvet; a white Japanese crepe, with purple lilacs strewed over its surface, and frills of violet ribbon for ornament; a Christmas dress of soft, white camel’s hair, with bands of white-fox fur round the slightly pointed neck and elbow-sleeves; and, last of all, a Quaker gown of silver-gray nun’s cloth, with a surplice and full undersleeves of white crêpe-lisse.
“I ‘m going to be vain, Mrs. Bird!” cried Polly, with compunction in her voice. “I ‘ve never had a real beautiful, undyed, un-made-over dress in my whole life, and I shall never have strength of character to own four at once without being vain!”
This speech was uttered through the crack of the library door, outside of which Polly stood, gathering courage to walk in and be criticised.
“Think of your aspiring nose, Sapphira!” came from a voice within.
“Oh, are you there too, Edgar?”
“Of course I am, and so is Tom Mills. The news that you are going to ‘try on’ is all over the neighborhood! If you have cruelly fixed the age limit so that we can’t possibly get in to the performances, we are going to attend all the dress rehearsals. Oh, ye little fishes! what a seraphic Sapphira! I wish Tony were here!”
She was pretty, there was no doubt about it, as she turned around like a revolving wax figure in a show-window, and assumed absurd fashion-plate attitudes; and pretty chiefly because of the sparkle, intelligence, sunny temper, and vitality that made her so magnetic.
Nobody could decide which was the loveliest dress, even when she had appeared in each one twice. In the lilac and white crepe, with a bunch of dark Parma violets thrust in her corsage, Uncle Jack called her a poem. Edgar asserted openly that in the Christmas toilet he should like to have her modeled in wax and put in a glass case on his table; but Mrs. Bird and Tom Mills voted for the Quaker gray, in which she made herself inexpressibly demure by braiding her hair in two discreet braids down her back.
“The dress rehearsal is over. Good-night all!” she said, as she took her candle. “I will say ‘handsome is as handsome does’ fifty times before I go to sleep, and perhaps—I only say perhaps—I may be used to my beautiful clothes in a week or two, so that I shall be my usual modest self again.”
“Good-night, Polly,” said the boys; “we will see you to-morrow.”
“‘Pauline,’ if you please, not ‘Polly.’ I ceased to be Polly this morning when the circulars were posted. I am now Miss Pauline Oliver, story-teller by profession.”
Chapter XVIII.
The Children’s Hour: Reported in a Letter by an Eye-Witness
It was the last Monday in March, and I had come in from my country home to see if I could find my old school friend, Margaret Crosby, who is now Mrs. Donald Bird, and who is spending a few years in California.
The directory gave me her address, and I soon found myself on the corner of two beautiful streets and before a very large and elegant house. This did not surprise me, as I knew her husband to be a very wealthy man. There seemed to be various entrances, for the house stood with its side to the main street; but when I had at last selected a bell to ring, I became convinced that I had not, after all, gone to the front door. It was too late to retreat, however, and very soon the door was opened by a pretty maid-servant in a white cap and apron.
“You need n’t have rung, ‘m; they goes right in without ringing to-day,” she said pleasantly.
“Can I see Mrs. Bird?” I asked.
“Well, ‘m,” she said hesitatingly, “she ‘s in Paradise.”
“Lovely Margaret Crosby dead! How sudden it must have been,” I thought, growing pale with the shock of the surprise; but the pretty maid, noticing that something had ruffled my equanimity, went on hastily:—
“Excuse me, ‘m. I forgot you might be a stranger, but the nurses and mothers always comes to this door, and we ‘re all a bit flustered on account of its bein’ Miss Pauline’s last ‘afternoon,’ and the mothers call the music-room ‘Paradise,’ ‘m, and Mr. John and the rest of us have took it up without thinkin’ very much how it might sound to strangers.”
“Oh, I see,” I said mechanically, though I did n’t see in the least; but although the complicated explanation threw very little light on general topics, it did have the saving grace of assuring me that Margaret Bird was living.
“Could you call her out for a few minutes?” I asked. “I am an old friend, and shall be disappointed not to see her.”
“I ‘m sorry, ‘m, but I could n’t possibly call her out; it would be as much as my place