Born this day in 1869: Anne Richmond Warner French (1869–1913), popular author of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Anne French, often writing under the name Anne Warner, was a prolific writer of both
novels and short stories. Her most popular works were the humorous Susan Clegg
stories. Although a native of Minnesota, French spent most of her career in
England. She expressed a fondness for her homeland, but criticized her
American peers for being too provincial. She preferred the company of English
women, whom she experienced as more “broad-minded in their views of life.” If
you want an idea of what she thought of American men as well, read the delightfully
witty Susan Clegg story below.
“The Marrying of Susan Clegg”
by Anne Warner
Susan Clegg and Mrs. Lathrop were next-door
neighbors and bosom friends. Their personalities were extremely congenial, and
the theoretical relation which the younger woman bore to the elder was a
further bond between them. Owing to the death of her mother some twenty years
before, Susan had fallen into the position of a helpless and timid young girl
whose only key to the problems of life in general had been the advice of her
older and wiser neighbor. As a matter of fact Mrs. Lathrop was barely twelve
years the senior, but she had married and as a consequence felt and was felt to
be immeasurably the more ancient of the two.
Susan had never married, for her father—a bedridden
paralytic—had occupied her time day and night for years. He was a great care
and as she did her duty by him with a thoroughness which was praiseworthy in
the extreme she naturally had very little leisure for society. Mrs. Lathrop had
more, because her family consisted of but one son, and she was not given to that
species of housekeeping which sweeps under the beds too often. It therefore
came about that the one and only recreation which the friends could enjoy
together to any great extent was visiting over the fence. Visiting over the
fence is an occupation in which any woman may indulge without fear of unkind
criticism. If she takes occasion to run in next door, she is of course leaving
the house which she ought to be keeping, but she can lean on the fence all day
without feeling derelict as to a single duty. Then, too, there is something
about the situation which produces a species of agreeable subconsciousness that
one is at once at home and abroad. It followed that Susan and Mrs. Lathrop each
wore a path from her kitchen door to the trysting-spot, and that all summer
long they met there early and late.
Mrs. Lathrop did the listening while she chewed
clover. Just beyond her woodpile red clover grew luxuriantly, and when she
started for the place of meeting it was her invariable custom to stop and pull
a number of blossoms so that she might eat the tender petals while devoting her
attention to the business in hand.
It must be confessed that the business in hand was
nearly always Miss Clegg's business, but since Mrs. Lathrop, in her position of
experienced adviser, was deeply interested in Susan's exposition of her own
affairs, that trifling circumstance appeared of little moment.
One of the main topics of conversation was Mr.
Clegg. As Mr. Clegg had not quitted his bed for over a score of years, it might
seem that his novelty as a subject of discussion would have been long since
exhausted. But not so. His daughter was the most devoted of daughters, and his
name was ever rife on her lips. What he required done for him and what he
required done to him were the main ends of her existence, and the demands of
his comfort, daily or annual, resulted in numerous phrases of a startling but
thoroughly intelligible order. Of such a sort was her usual Saturday morning
greeting to Mrs. Lathrop, "I 'm sorry to cut you off so quick, but this 's
father's day to be beat up and got into new pillow-slips," or her regular
early-June remark, "Well, I thank Heaven 't father 's had his hair picked
over 'n' 't he's got his new tick for this year!"
Mrs. Lathrop was always interested, always sympathetic,
and rarely ever startled; yet one July evening when Susan said suddenly,
"I 've finished my dress for father's funeral," she did betray a
slight shock.
"You ought to see it," the younger woman
continued, not noticing the other's start,—"it's jus' 's nice. I put it
away in camphor balls, 'n' Lord knows I don't look forward to the gettin' it
out to wear, f'r the whole carriage load 'll sneeze their heads off whenever I
move in that dress."
"Did you put newspaper—" Mrs. Lathrop
began, mastering her earlier emotions.
"In the sleeves? Yes, I did, 'n' I bought a
pair o' black gloves 'n' two handkerchiefs 'n' slipped 'em into the pockets.
Everythin' is all fixed, 'n' there 'll be nothin' to do when father dies but to
shake it out 'n' lay it on the bed in his room. I say 'in his room,' 'cause o'
course that day he 'll be havin' the guest-room. I was thinkin' of it all this
afternoon when I sat there by him hemmin' the braid on the skirt, 'n' I could
n't but think 't if I sit 'n' wait very much longer I sh'll suddenly find
myself pretty far advanced in years afore I know it. This world's made f'r the
young 's well's the old, 'n' you c'n believe me or not jus' 's you please, Mrs.
Lathrop, but I 've always meant to get married 's soon 's father was off my hands.
I was countin' up to-day, though, 'n' if he lives to be a hunderd, I 'll be
nigh onto seventy 'n' no man ain't goin' to marry me at seventy. Not 'nless he
was eighty, 'n' Lord knows I ain't intendin' to bury father jus' to begin on
some one else, 'n' that's all it 'd be."
Mrs. Lathrop chewed her clover.
"I set there thinkin' f'r a good hour, 'n'
when I was puttin' away the dress, I kep' on thinkin', 'n' the end was 't now
that dress 's done I ain't got nothin' in especial to sew on 'n' so I may jus'
's well begin on my weddin' things. There's no time like the present, 'n' 'f I
married this summer he 'd have to pay f'r half of next winter's coal. 'N' so my
mind's made up, 'n' you c'n talk yourself blind, 'f you feel so inclined, Mrs.
Lathrop, but you can't change hide or hair o' my way o' thinkin'. I 've made up
my mind to get married, 'n' I 'm goin' to set right about it. Where there's a
will there 's a way, 'n' I ain't goin' to leave a stone unturned. I went down
town with the kerosene-can jus' afore tea, 'n' I bought me a new false front,
'n' I met Mrs. Brown's son, 'n' I told him 't I wanted him to come up to-morrow
'n' take a look at father."
"Was you thinkin' o' marryin' Mrs. Br—"
Mrs. Lathrop gasped, taking her clover from her lips.
"Marryin' Mrs. Brown's son! Well, 'f your mind
don't run queer ways! Whatever sh'd put such an idea into your head? I hope you
'll excuse my sayin' so, Mrs. Lathrop, but I don't believe anybody but you
would ever 'a' asked such a question, when you know 's well 's everybody else
does 't he's runnin' his legs off after Amelia Fitch. Any man who wants a
little chit o' eighteen wouldn't suit my taste much, 'n' anyhow I never thought
of him; I only asked him to come in in a friendly way 'n' tell me how long he
thinks 't father may live. I don't see my way to makin' any sort o' plans with
father so dreffle indefinite, 'n' a man who was fool enough to marry me, tied
up like I am now, would n't have s'fficient brains to be worth lookin' over.
Mrs. Brown's son 's learnin' docterin', 'n' he's been at it long enough so 's
to be able to see through anythin' 's simple 's father, I sh'd think. 'T any
rate, 'f he don't know nothin' yet, Heaven help Amelia Fitch 'n' me, f'r he'll
take us both in."
"Who was you thinkin' o'—" Mrs. Lathrop
asked, resuming her former occupation.
"The minister," replied Miss Clegg.
"I did n't stop to consider very much, but it struck me 's polite to begin
with him. I c'd marry him without waitin' for father, too, 'cause a minister
could n't in reason find fault over another man's bein' always to home. O'
course he would n't be still like father is, but I ain't never been one to look
gift-horses in the mouth, 'n' I d'n' know 's I 'd ought to expect another man jus'
like father in one life. Mother often said father's advantages was great, for
you always knew where he was, 'n' 'f you drew down the shade you c'd tell him
it was rainin' 'n' he could n't never contradick."
Mrs. Lathrop nodded acquiescently but made no
comment.
Miss Clegg withdrew somewhat from her confidentially
inclined attitude.
"I won't be out in the mornin'," she
said. "I sh'll want to dust father 'n' turn him out o' the window afore
Mrs. Brown's son comes. After he's gone I'll wave my dish-towel, 'n' then you
come out 'n' I 'll tell you what he says."
They separated for the night, and Susan went to
sleep with her own version of love's young dream.
Mrs. Brown's son arrived quite promptly the next
morning. He drove up in Mr. Brown's buggy, and Amelia Fitch held the horse
while he went inside to inspect Mr. Clegg. The visit did not consume more than
ten minutes, and then he hurried out to the gate and was off.
The buggy was hardly out of sight up the road when
Miss Clegg emerged from her kitchen door, her face bearing an imprint of deep
and thorough disgust.
"Well, Mrs. Lathrop, I don't think much o' that
young man," she announced in a tone of unmitigated disapproval;
"'peared to me like he was in a hurry to get done with father 's quick 's
he could just so 's to be back beside Amelia Fitch. I 'd venture a guess that
'f you was to ask him this minute he 's forgot every word I said to him
already. I asked him to set some sort of a figger on father, 'n' he would n't
so much 's set down himself. Stood on one leg 'n' backed towards the door every
other word, 'n' me, father's only child, standin' there at his mercy. Said 't
last 's he might die to-morrow 'n' might live twenty years. I tell you my
patience pretty near went at that. I don't call such a answer no answer a tall.
I 've often thought both them things myself, 'n' me no doctor. Particularly
about the twenty years. Father's lived seventy-five years—I must say 't to my
order o' thinkin' he's pretty well set a-goin', 'n' that the life he leads
ain't drainin' his vitality near 's much 's it's drainin' mine."
Miss Clegg stopped and shook her head impatiently.
"I d'n' know when I 've felt as put out 's
this. 'N' me with so much faith in doctors too. It's a pretty sad thing, Mrs.
Lathrop, when all the comfort you c'n get out of a man is the thinkin' 't
perhaps God in his mercy has made him a fool. I had a good mind to tell that
very thing to Mrs. Brown's son, but I thought maybe he'd learn better later.
Anyway I 'm goin' right ahead with my marriage. It'll have to be the minister
now, 'n' I can't see what I 've ever done 't I sh'd have two men around the
house 't once like they 'll be, but that's all in the hands o' Fate, 'n' so I
jus' took the first step 'n' told Billy when he brought the milk to tell his
father 't if he 'd come up here to-night I 'd give him a quarter for the
Mission fund. I know the quarter 'll bring him, 'n' I can't help kind o' hopin'
't to-morrow 'll find the whole thing settled 'n' off my mind."
The next morning Mrs. Lathrop laid in an unusually
large supply of fodder and was very early at the fence. Her son—a placid little
innocent of nine-and-twenty years—was still in bed and asleep. Susan was up and
washing her breakfast dishes, but the instant that she spied her friend she
abruptly abandoned her task and hastened to the rendezvous.
"Are you goin' t'—" Mrs. Lathrop called
eagerly.
"No, I ain't," was the incisive reply.
Then they both adjusted their elbows comfortably on
the top rail of the fence, and Miss Clegg began, her voice a trifle higher
pitched than usual.
"Mrs. Lathrop, it's a awful thing for a
Christian woman to feel forced to say, 'n' Lord knows I would n't say it to no
one but you, but it's true 'n' beyond a question so, 'n' therefore I may 's
well be frank 'n' open 'n' remark 't our minister ain't no good a tall.—'N I
d'n' know but I'll tell any one 's asks me the same thing, f'r it certainly
ain't nothin' f'r me to weep over, 'n' the blood be on his head from now
on."
Miss Clegg paused briefly, and her eyes became
particularly wide open. Mrs. Lathrop was all attention.
"Mrs. Lathrop, you ain't lived next to me 'n'
known me in 'n' out 'n' hind 'n' front all these years not to know 't I 'm
pretty sharp. I ain't been cheated mor' 'n twice 'n my life, 'n' one o' them
times was n't my fault, for it was printed on the band 't it would wash. Such
bein' the case, 'n' takin' the minister into consideration, I do consider 't no
man would 'a' supposed 't he could get the better o' me. It's a sad thing to
have to own to, 'n' if I was anybody else in kingdom come I 'd never own to it
till I got there; but my way is to live open 'n' aboveboard, 'n' so to my shame
be 't told 't the minister—with all 't he's got eight children 'n' I ain't even
married—is certainly as sharp as me. Last night when I see him comin' up the
walk I never 'd 'a' believed 's he c'd get away again so easy, but it just goes
to show what a world o' deceit this is, 'n' seein' 's I have father to clean
from his windows aroun' to-day, I 'll ask you to excuse me 'f I don't draw the
subjeck out none, but jus' remark flat 'n' plain 't there ain't no chance o' my
ever marryin' the minister. You may consider that a pretty strong statement,
Mrs. Lathrop, 'n' I don't say myself but 't with any other man there might be a
hereafter, but it was me 'n' not anybody else as see his face last night, 'n'
seein' his face 'n' bein' a woman o' more brains 'n falls to the lot of
yourself 'n' the majority, I may just as well say once for all that, 's far 's
the minister's concerned, I sh'll never be married to him."
"What did he—" began Mrs. Lathrop.
"All 't was necessary 'n' more too. He did n't
give me hardly time to state 't I was single afore he come out strong 't we 'd
both better stay so. I spoke right out to his face then, 'n' told him 't my
shingles was new last year 'n' it was a open question whether his 'd ever be,
but he piped up f'r all the world like some o' the talkin' was his to do, 'n'
said 't he had a cistern 'n' I 'd only got a sunk hogshead under the spout. I
did n't see no way to denyin' that, but I went right on 'n' asked him 'f he could
in his conscience deny 't them eight children stood in vital need of a good
mother, 'n' he spoke up 's quick 's scat 'n' said 't no child stood in absolute
vital need of a mother after it was born. 'N' then he branched out 'n' give me
to understand 't he had a wife till them eight children all got themselves
launched 'n' 't it was n't his fault her dyin' o' Rachel Rebecca. When he said
'dyin',' I broke in 'n' said 't it was Bible-true 's there was 's good fish in
the sea 's ever was caught out of it, 'n' he was impolite enough to interrupt
'n' tell me to my face 'Yes, but when a man had been caught once he was n't
easy caught again.' I will own 't I was more 'n put out 't that, for o' course
when I said fish I meant his wife 'n' me, but when he pretended to think 't I
meant him I begin to doubt 's it was worth while to tackle him further. One man
can lead a horse to water, but a thousand can't get him to stick his nose in 'f
he don't want to, 'n' I thank my stars 't I ain't got nothin' 'n me as craves to
marry a man 's appears dead-set ag'in' the idea. I asked him 'f he did n't
think 's comin' into property was always a agreeable feelin', 'n' he said,
'Yes, but not when with riches come a secret thorn in the flesh,' 'n' at that I
clean give up, 'n' I hope it was n't to my discredit, for no one on the face of
the earth could 'a' felt 't there 'd be any good in keepin' on. But it was no
use, 'n' you know 's well as I do 't I never was give to wastin' my breath, so
I out 'n' told him 't I was n't giv' to wastin' my time either, 'n' then I
stood up 'n' he did too. 'N' then I got even with him, 'n' I c'n assure you 't
I enjoyed it, f'r I out 'n' told him 't I 'd changed my mind about the quarter.
So he had all that long walk for nothin', 'n' I can't in conscience deny 't I
was more 'n rejoiced, for Lord knows I did n't consider 't he'd acted very
obligin'."
Mrs. Lathrop ceased to chew and looked deeply
sympathetic.
There was a brief silence, and then she asked,
"Was you thinkin' o' tryin' any—"
Miss Clegg stared at her in amazement.
"Mrs. Lathrop! Do you think I'd give up now,
'n' let the minister see 't my marryin' depended on his say-so? Well, I guess
not! I'm more dead-set 'n' ever, 'n' I vow 'n' declare 't I'll never draw
breath till after I've stood up right in the face o' the minister 'n' the whole
congregation 'n' had 'n' held some man, no matter who nor when nor where.
Marryin' was goin' to have been a pleasure, now it's a business. I'm goin' to
get a horse 'n' buggy this afternoon 'n' drive out to Farmer Sperrit's. I've
thought it all over, 'n' I c'n tell father 't I'll be choppin' wood; then 'f he
says afterwards 't he called 'n' called, I c'n say 't I was makin' so much
noise 't I did n't hear him."
"You'll have to hire—" suggested Mrs.
Lathrop.
"I know, but it won't cost but fifty cents,
'n' I saved a quarter on the minister, you know. I'd like to ask you to drive
out with me, Mrs. Lathrop, but if Mr. Sperrit's got it in him to talk like the
minister did, I'm free to confess 't, I'd rather be alone to listen. 'N'
really, Mrs. Lathrop, I must go in now. I've got bread a-risin' 'n' dishes to
do, 'n', as I told you before, this is father's day to be all but scraped 'n'
varnished."
Mrs. Lathrop withdrew her support from the fence,
and Miss Clegg did likewise. Each returned up her own path to her own domicile,
and it was long after that day's tea-time before the cord of friendship got
knotted up again.
"Did you go to the farm?" Mrs. Lathrop
asked. "I was to the Sewin' So—"
"Yes, I went," said Miss Clegg, her air
decidedly weary; "oh, yes, I went. I had a nice ride too, 'n' I do believe
I saw the whole farm, from the pigs to the punkins."
There was a pause, and Mrs. Lathrop filled it to
the brim with expectancy until she could wait no longer.
"Are you—" she finally asked.
"No," said her friend, sharply, "I
ain't. He wasn't a bit spry to hop at the chance, 'n' Lord knows there wa'n't
no great urgin' on my part. I asked him why he ain't never married, 'n' he
laughed like it was a funny subjeck, 'n' said 's long 's he never did it 't
that was the least o' his troubles. I didn't call that a very encouragin'
beginnin', but my mind was made up not to let it be my fault 'f the horse was a
dead waste o' fifty cents, 'n' so I said to him 't if he'd marry any woman with
a little money he could easy buy the little Jones farm right next him, 'n' then
't 'd be 's clear 's day that it 'd be his own fault if he didn't soon stretch
right from the brook to the road. He laughed some more 't that, 'n' said 't I
didn't seem to be aware 't he owned a mortgage on the Jones farm 'n' got all 't
it raised now 'n' would get the whole thing in less 'n two years."
Mrs. Lathrop stopped chewing.
"They was sayin' in the Sewin' Society 's he's
goin' to marry Eliza Gr—" she said mildly.
Miss Clegg almost screamed.
"Eliza Gringer, as keeps house for him?"
Her friend nodded.
Miss Clegg drew in a sudden breath.
"Well! 'f I'd knowed that, I'd never 'a' paid
fifty cents for that horse 'n' buggy! Eliza Gringer! why, she's older 'n' I am,—she
was to 'Cat' when I was only to 'M.' 'N' he's goin' to marry her! Oh, well, I
d'n' know 's it makes any difference to me. In my opinion a man as 'd be fool
enough to be willin' to marry a woman 's ain't got nothin' but herself to give
him, 's likelier to be happier bein' her fool 'n he ever would be bein'
mine."
There was a pause.
"Your father's just the—" Mrs. Lathrop
said at last.
"Same? Oh yes, he's just the same. Seems 't I
can't remember when he wasn't just the same."
Then there was another pause.
"I ain't discouraged," Susan announced
suddenly, almost aggressively,—"I ain't discouraged 'n' I won't give up.
I'm goin' to see Mr. Weskin, the lawyer, to-morrow. They say—'n' I never see
nothin' to lead me to doubt 'em—'t he's stingy 'n' mean for all he's forever
makin' so merry at other folks' expense; but I believe 't there's good in
everythin' 'f you're willin' to hunt for it 'n' Lord knows 't if this game
keeps up much longer I 'll get so used to huntin' 't huntin' the good in Lawyer
Weskin 'll jus' be child's play to me."
"I was thinkin'—" began Mrs. Lathrop.
"It ain't no use if you are," said her
neighbor; "the mosquitoes is gettin' too thick. We 'd better in."
And so they parted for the night.
The following evening was hot and breathless, the
approach of Fourth of July appearing to hang heavily over all. Susan brought a
palm-leaf fan with her to the fence and fanned vigorously.
"It ain't goin' to be the lawyer,
either," she informed the expectant Mrs. Lathrop, "'n' I hav' n't no
tears to shed over that. I went there the first thing after dinner, 'n' he give
me a solid chair 'n' whirled aroun' in one 't twisted, 'n' I did n't fancy such
manners under such circumstances a tall. I'd say suthin' real serious 'n' he'd
brace himself ag'in his desk 'n' take a spin 's if I did n't count for
sixpence. I could n't seem to bring him around to the seriousness of the thing
nohow. 'N' I come right out square 'n' open in the very beginnin' too, for Lord
knows I 'm dead sick o' beatin' around the bush o' men's natural shyness. He whirled
himself clean around two times 'n' then said 's long 's I was so frank with him
't it 'd be nothin' but a joy for him to be equally frank with me 'n' jus' say
's he'd rather not. I told him he 'd ought to remember 's he 'd have a lot o'
business when father died 'f he kept my good will, but he was lookin' over 'n'
under himself to see how near to unscrewed he was 'n' if it was safe to keep on
turnin' the same way any longer, 'n' upon my honor, Mrs. Lathrop, I was nigh to
mad afore he got ready to remark 's father 'd left him a legacy on condition 't
he did n't charge nothin' for probatin'."
Mrs. Lathrop chewed her clover.
"So I come away, 'n' I declare my patience is
nigh to gin out. This gettin' married is harder 'n' house-paintin' in fly-time.
I d'n' know when I 've felt so tired. Here's three nights 't I 've had to make
my ideas all over new to suit a different husband each night. It made my very
bones ache to think o' pilin' them eight children 'n' the minister on top o'
father, 'n' then the next night it was a good jump out to that farm, f'r I
never was one to know any species o' fellow-feelin' with pigs 'n' milkin'. 'N'
last night!—well, you know I never liked Mr. Weskin anyhow. But I d'n' know who
I can get now. There's Mrs. Healy's husband, o' course; but when a woman looks
happier in her coffin 'n she ever looked out of it it's more'n a hint to them's
stays behind to fight shy o' her husband. They say he used to throw dishes at
her, 'n' I never could stand that—I'm too careful o' my china to risk any such
goin's on."
Mrs. Lathrop started to speak, but got no further.
"There's a new clerk in the drug-store,—I see
him through the window when I was comin' home to-day. He looked to be a nice
kind o' man, but I can't help feelin' 't it 'd be kind o' awkward to go up to
him 'n' have to begin by askin' him what my name 'd be 'f I married him. Maybe
there's them 's could do such a thing, but I 've never had nothin' about me 's
'd lead me to throw myself at the head o' any man, 'n' it's too late in the day
f'r me to start in now."
Mrs. Lathrop again attempted to get in a word and
was again unsuccessful.
"I don't believe 't there's another free man
in the town. I've thought 'n' thought 'n' I can't think o' one." She
stopped and sighed.
"There's Jathrop!" said Mrs. Lathrop,
with sudden and complete success. Jathrop was her son, so baptized through a
fearful slip of the tongue at a critical moment. He was meant to have been
John.
Miss Clegg gave such a start that she dropped her
fan over the fence.
"Well, Heaven forgive me!" she cried,—"'n'
me 't never thought of him once, 'n' him so handy right on the other side of
the fence! Did I ever!"
"He ain't thir—" said Mrs. Lathrop,
picking up the fan.
"I don't care. What's twelve years or so when
it's the woman 's 'as got the property? Well, Mrs. Lathrop, I certainly am obliged
to you for mentionin' him, for I don't believe he ever would 'a' occurred to me
in kingdom come. 'N' here I've been worryin' my head off ever since supper-time
'n' all for suthin' 's close 's Jathrop Lathrop. But I had good cause to worry,
'n' now 't it's over I don't mind mentionin' the reason 'n' tellin' you frank
'n' plain 't I'd begun on my things. I cut out a pink nightgown last night, a
real fussy one, 'n' I felt sick all over 't the thought 't perhaps I'd wasted
all that cloth. There wasn't nothin' foolish about cuttin' out the nightgown,
for I'd made up my mind 't if it looked too awful fancy on 't I'd just put it
away for the oldest girl when she gets married, but o' course 'f I can't get a
husband stands to reason there'll be no oldest girl, 'n' all that ten cent
gingham 't Shores is sellin' off't five 'd be a dead waste o' good stuff."
Mrs. Lathrop chewed her clover.
"Do you suppose there'll be any trouble with
Jathrop? Do you suppose it'll matter any to him which side o' the fence he
lives on?"
Mrs. Lathrop shook her head slowly.
"I sh'd think he ought to be only too pleased
to marry me 'f I want him to, all the days 't I tended him when he was a baby!
My, but he was a cute little fellow! Everybody was lookin' for him to grow up a
real credit to you then. Well, 's far 's that goes, it's a ill wind 't blows no
good, 'n' no one c'n deny 't he's been easy for you to manage, 'n' what's sauce
f'r the goose is sauce f'r the gander, so I sh'll look to be equally
lucky."
Mrs. Lathrop looked proud and pleased.
"Why can't you ask him to-night 'n' let me
know the first thing in the mornin'? That'll save me havin' to come 'way aroun'
by the gate, you know."
Mrs. Lathrop assented to the obvious good sense of
this proposition with one emphatic nod of her head.
"'N' I'll come out jus' 's quick 's I can in
the mornin' 'n' hear what he said; I'll come 's soon 's ever I can get father
'n' the dishes washed up. I hope to Heaven father'll sleep more this night 'n
he did last. He was awful restless last night. He kept callin' f'r things till
finally I had to take a pillow and go down on the dinin'-room lounge to keep
from bein' woke up any more."
"Do you think he's—"
"No, I don't think he's worse; not 'nless
wakin' up 'n' askin' f'r things jus' to be aggravatin' is worse. If it is, then
he is too. But, lor, there ain't no manner o' use in talkin' o' father! A
watched pot never boils! Jathrop's more to the point right now."
Upon this hint Mrs. Lathrop de-fenced herself, so
to speak, and the friendly chat ended for that time.
The morning after, Miss Clegg was slow to appear at
the summons of her neighbor. When she did approach the spot where the other
stood waiting, her whole face and figure bore a weary and fretful air.
"Father jus' about kept me up this whole
blessed night," she began as soon as she was within easy hearing. "I
d'n' know what I want to get married f'r, when I'm bound to be man-free in
twenty-five years 'f I c'n jus' make out to live that long."
Mrs. Lathrop chewed and listened.
"If there was anythin' in the house 't father
didn't ask f'r 'n' 't I didn't get him last night, it must 'a' been the
cook-stove in the kitchen. I come nigh to losin' a toe in the rat-trap the
third time I was down cellar, 'n' I clum that ladder to the garret so many
times 't I do believe I dusted all overhead with my hair afore mornin'. My ears
is full o' cobwebs too, 'n' you know 's well 's I do 't I never was one to
fancy cobwebs about me. They say 't every cloud has a silver linin', but I
can't see no silver linin' to a night like last night. When the rooster crowed
f'r the first time this mornin', I had it in my heart to march right out there
'n' hack off his head. If it 'd 'a' been Saturday, I'd 'a' done 't too, 'n'
relished him good at Sunday dinner!"
Miss Clegg paused and compressed her lips firmly
for a few seconds; then she gave herself a little shake and descended to the
main question of the day.
"Well, what did Jathrop say?"
Mrs. Lathrop looked very uncomfortable indeed, and
in lieu of an answer swallowed her clover.
"You asked him, didn't you?"
"Yes, I—"
"Well, what 'd he say?"
"He ain't very—"
"My soul 'n' body! What reason did he
give?"
"He's afraid your father's livin' on a annu—"
"Well, he ain't." Susan's tone was more
than a little displeased. "Whatever else father may 'a' done, he never
played no annuity tricks. He 's livin' on his own property, 'n' I'll take it
very kindly o' you, Mrs. Lathrop, to make that piece o' news clear to your son.
My father's got bank-stock, 'n' he owns them two cottages across the bridge,
'n' the blacksmith-shop belongs to him too. There! I declare I never thought o'
the blacksmith,—his wife died last winter."
"Jathrop asked me what I th—"
"Well, what 'd you tell him?"
"I said 't if your father was some older—"
Miss Clegg's eyebrows moved understandingly.
"How long is it since you've seen
father?" she asked without waiting for the other to end her sentence.
"Not since your mother died, I guess; I was—"
"I wish you c'd come over 'n' take a look at
him now 'n' tell me your opinion. Why can't you?"
Mrs. Lathrop reflected.
"I don't see why I can't. I'll go in 'n' take
off—"
"All right, 'n' when you've got it off, come
right over 'n' you'll find me in the kitchen waitin' for you."
Mrs. Lathrop returned to her own house to shed her
apron and wash her hands, and then sallied over to view Mr. Clegg. The two
friends mounted the stair together, and entered the old man's room.
It was a scrupulously clean and bright and orderly
room, and the invalid in the big white bed bore evidence to the care and
attention so dutifully lavished on him. He was a very wizened little old man,
and his features had been crossed and recrossed by the finger of Time until
their original characteristics were nearly obliterated. The expression upon his
face resembled nothing so much as a sketch which has been done over so many
times that its first design is altogether lost, and if there was any answer to
the riddle, it was not the mental perception of Mrs. Lathrop that was about to
seize upon it.
Instead, that kindly visitor stood lost in a
species of helpless contemplation, until at last a motion of Susan's, directed
towards the ordering of an unsightly fold in the wide smoothness of the
counterpane, led to her bending herself to do a similar kindness upon her side
of the bed. The action resulted in a slight change in her expression which
Susan's watchfulness at once perceived.
"Was it a needle?" she asked quickly.
"Sometimes I stick 'em in while I'm sewin'. You see, his havin' been
paralyzed so many years has got me where I'm awful careless about leavin'
needles in his bed."
"No," said Mrs. Lathrop; "it wasn't
a—"
"Come on downstairs again," said the
hostess; "we c'n talk there."
They went down into the kitchen, and there Mrs. Lathrop
seated herself and coughed solemnly.
"What is it, anyhow?" the younger woman
demanded.
Mrs. Lathrop coughed again.
"Susan, did I feel a feather—"
"Yes," said Susan, in great surprise;
"he likes one."
"I sh'd think it was too hot this—"
"He don't never complain o' the heat, 'n' he
hates the chill o' rainy days."
Mrs. Lathrop coughed again.
Miss Clegg's interest bordered on impatience.
"Now, Susan, I ain't sayin' as it's noways
true, but I have heard as there's them 's can't die on—"
"On feathers?" cried the daughter.
"Yes; they say they hold the life right in 'n'—"
Miss Clegg's eyes opened widely.
"But I couldn't take it away from him,
anyhow," she said, with a species of determined resignation in her voice.
"I'd have to wait 'till he wanted it took."
Mrs. Lathrop was silent. Then she rose to go. Susan
rose too. They went out the kitchen door together, and down the steps. There
they paused to part.
"Do you believe 't it 'd be any use me
thinkin' o' Jathrop any more?" the maiden asked the matron.
"I believe I'd try the blacksmith if I was
you; he looks mighty nice Sundays."
Miss Clegg sighed heavily and turned to re-enter
the house.
Mrs. Lathrop went "round by the gate" and
became again an inmate of her own kitchen. There the thought occurred to her that
it was an excellent morning to clean the high-shelf over the sink. For years
past whenever she had had occasion to put anything up there, showers of dust
and rolls of lint had come tumbling down upon her head. Under such
circumstances it was but natural that a determination to some day clean the
shelf should have slowly but surely been developed. Accordingly she climbed up
on the edge of the sink and undertook the initiatory proceedings. The lowest
stratum of dirt was found to rest upon a newspaper containing an account of one
day of Guiteau's trial. Upon the discovery of the paper Mrs. Lathrop suddenly
abandoned her original plan, got down from the sink, ensconced herself in her
kitchen rocker, and plunged into bliss forthwith.
An hour passed pleasantly and placidly by. Bees
buzzed outside the window, the kettle sizzled sweetly on the stove, the
newspaper rustled less and less, Mrs. Lathrop's head sank sideways, and the
calm of perfect peace reigned in her immediate vicinity.
This state of things endured not long.
Its gentle Paradise was suddenly broken in upon and
rent apart by a succession of the most piercing shrieks that ever originated in
the throat of a human being. Mrs. Lathrop came to herself with a violent start,
sprang to her feet, ran to the door, and then stood still, completely dazed and
at first unable to discern from which direction the ear-splitting screams
proceeded. Then, in a second, her senses returned to her, and she ran as fast
as she could to the fence. As she approached the boundary, she saw Susan
standing in one of her upstairs windows and yelling at the top of her voice.
Mrs. Lathrop paused for no conventionalities of civilization. She hoisted
herself over the fence in a fashion worthy a man or a monkey, ran across the
Clegg yard, entered the kitchen door, stumbled breathlessly up the dark back
stairs, and gasped, grabbing Susan hard by the elbow,—
"What is it, for pity's—"
Susan was all colors and shaking as if with the
ague.
"You never told me 's it 'd work so
quick," she cried out.
"What would—"
"The feathers!"
"Whose feathers?"
"Father's feathers."
"Lord have mercy, Susan, you don't mean—"
"Yes, I do."
"He ain't never—"
"Yes, he is."
Mrs. Lathrop stood stricken.
Susan wiped her eyes with her apron and choked.
After a while the older woman spoke feebly.
"What did hap—"
Miss Clegg cut the question off in its prime.
"I don't know as I c'n ever tell you; it's too
awful even to think of."
"But you—"
"I know, 'n' I'm goin' to. But I tell you once
for all, Mrs. Lathrop, 't this'll be a lesson to me forever after 's to takin'
the say-so o' other folks unto myself. 'N' I didn't really consider 't I was
doin' so this time, f'r if I had, Lord knows I'd 'a' landed three beds atop o'
him afore I'd 'a' ever—" She stopped and shook convulsively.
"Go on," said Mrs. Lathrop, her curiosity
getting the better of her sympathy, and her impatience ranking both.
Susan ceased sobbing, and essayed explanation.
"You see, after you was gone, he said 't he was
pretty hot these last nights, 'n' 't that was maybe what kept him so awfully
awake. I asked him if—if—maybe the feather-bed 'n'—well, Mrs. Lathrop, to put
the whole in a nut-shell, we settled to move him, 'n' I moved him. I know I
didn't hurt him one bit, for I'm 's handy with—at least, I was's handy with him
's I am with a broom. 'N' I laid him on the lounge, 'n' dumped that bed out
into the back hall. I thought I 'd sun it 'n' put it away this afternoon, f'r you
know 's I'm never no hand to leave nothin' lyin' aroun'. Well, I come back 'n'
got out some fresh sheets, 'n' jus' 's I was—"
The speaker halted, and there was a dramatic pause.
"Where is—" Mrs. Lathrop asked at last.
"Back in the feathers. My heaven alive! When I
see what I'd done, I was that upset 't I just run 's quick 's ever I could, 'n'
got the bed, 'n' dumped it right atop of him!"
There was another dramatic silence, finally broken
by Mrs. Lathrop's saying slowly and gravely,—
"Susan, 'f I was you I wouldn't never say—"
"I ain't goin' to. I made up my mind to never
tell a livin' soul the very first thing. To think o' me doin' it! To think o'
all these years 't I've tended father night 'n' day, 'n' then to accidentally
go 'n' do a thing like that! I declare, it fairly makes me sick all over!"
"Well, Susan, you know what a good daughter
you've—"
"I know, 'n' I 've been thinkin' of it. But
somehow nothin' don't seem to comfort me none. Perhaps you'd better make me
some tea, 'n' while I'm drinkin' it, Jathrop c'n go down town 'n'—"
"Yes," said Mrs. Lathrop, "'n' I'll
go right 'n'—"
"That's right," said the bereaved,
"'n' hurry."
It was a week later—a calm and lovely evening—and
the two friends stood by the fence. The orphan girl was talking, while Mrs.
Lathrop chewed her clover.
"It don't seem like only a week!—seems more
like a month or even a year. Well, they say sometimes, folks live a long ways
ahead in a very short time, 'n' I must say 't, as far 's my observation 's
extended, comin' into property always leads to experience, so I couldn't in
reason complain 't not bein' no exception. This 's been the liveliest week o'
my life, 'n' I'm free to confess 't I haven't cried anywhere near 's much 's I
looked to. My feelin's have been pretty agreeable, take it all in all, 'n' I'd
be a born fool 'f I didn't take solid comfort sleepin' nights, 'n' I never was
a fool—never was 'n' never will be. The havin' somebody to sleep in the house
's been hard, 'n' Mrs. Macy's fallin' through the cellar-flap giv' me a bad
turn, but she's doin' nicely, 'n' the minister makes up f'r anythin'. I do wish
't you'd seen him that afternoon, Mrs. Lathrop; he did look so most awful
sheepish, 'n' his clean collar give him dead away afore he ever opened his
mouth. He set out by sayin' 't the consolations of religion was mine f'r the
askin', but I didn't take the hint, 'n' so he had to jus' come out flat 'n' say
't he'd been thinkin' it over 'n' he'd changed his mind. I held my head good
'n' high 't that, I c'n assure you, 'n' it was a pretty sorry look he give me
when I said 't I'd been thinkin' it over too, 'n' I'd changed my mind too. He
could 'a' talked to me till doomsday about his bein' a consolation, I'd know it
was nothin' 't changed him but me comin' into them government bonds. No man
alive could help wantin' me after them bonds was found, 'n' I had the great
pleasure o' learnin' that fact out o' Lawyer Weskin himself. All his species o'
fun-makin' 't nobody but hisself ever sees any fun in, jus' died right out when
we unlocked father's old desk 'n' come on that bundle o' papers. He give one
look 'n' then all his gay spinniness oozed right out o' him, 'n' he told me 's
serious 's a judge 't a woman 's rich 's I be needed a good lawyer to look out
f'r her 'n' her property right straight along. Well, I was 's quick to reply 's
he was to speak. 'N' I was to the point too. I jus' up 'n' said, Yes, I thought
so myself, 'n' jus' 's soon 's I got things to rights I was goin' to the city
'n' get me one."
Miss Clegg paused to frown reminiscently; Mrs.
Lathrop's eyes never quitted the other's face.
"There was Mr. Sperrit too. Come with a big
basket o' fresh vegetables 't he said he thought 'd maybe tempt my appetite. I
d'n' know 's I ever enjoyed rappin' no one over the knuckles more 'n I did him.
I jus' stopped to take in plenty o' breath 'n' then I let myself out, 'n' I
says to him flat 'n' plain, I says, 'Thank you kindly, but I guess no woman in
these parts 's better able to tempt her own appetite 'n' I be now, 'n' you'll
be doin' me the only kindness 't it's in you to do me now if you'll jus' take
your garden stuff 'n' give it to some one 's is poor 'n' needin'.' He looked so
crestfallen 't I made up my mind 't it was then or never to settle my whole
score with him, so I up 'n' looked him right in the eye 'n' I says to him, I
says, 'Mr. Sperrit, you didn't seem to jus' realize what it meant to me that
day 't I took that horse 'n' buggy 'n' drove 'way out to your farm to see you;
you didn't seem to think what it meant to me to take that trip: but I c'n tell
you 't it costs suthin' for a woman to do a thing like that; it cost me a good
deal—it cost me fifty cents.' He went away then, 'n' he can marry Eliza Gringer
if he likes, 'n' I'll wish 'em both joy 'n' consider myself the luckiest o' the
three."
Mrs. Lathrop chewed her clover.
"'N' then there's Jathrop!" continued the
speaker, suddenly transfixing her friend with a piercing glance,—"there's
even Jathrop! under my feet night 'n' day. I declare to you 't upon my honor I
ain't turned around four times out o' five this week without almost fallin'
over Jathrop wantin' me to give him a chance to explain his feelin's, I don't
wish to hurt your feelin's, Mrs. Lathrop, 'n' it's natural 't, seein' you can't
help yourself, you look upon him 's better 'n' nothin', but still I will remark
't Jathrop's the last straw on top o' my hump, 'n' this mornin' when I throwed
out the dish-water 'n' hit him by accident jus' comin' in, my patience clean
gin out. I didn't feel no manner o' sympathy over his soapy wetness, 'n' I
spoke my mind right then 'n' there. 'Jathrop Lathrop,' I says to him, all
forgettin' how big he'd got 'n' only rememberin' what a bother he's always
been, 'Jathrop Lathrop, you let that soakin' be a lesson to you 'n' march right
straight home this instant, 'n' 'f you want to think of me, think 't if I hear
any more about your feelin's the feelin' you'll have best cause to talk about
'll be the feelin' o' gettin' spanked.'"
Mrs. Lathrop sighed slightly.
Miss Clegg echoed the sigh.
"There never was a truer sayin' 'n' the one 't
things goes by contraries," she continued presently. "Here I've been
figgerin' on bein' so happy married, 'n' instid o' that I find myself missin'
father every few minutes. There was lots o' good about father, particular when
he was asleep. I'd got so used to his stayin' where I put him 't I don't know
's I c'd ever get used to a man 's could get about. 'F I wanted to talk, father
was always there to listen, 'n' 'f he wanted to talk I c'd always go
downstairs. He didn't never have but one button to keep sewed on 'n' no
stockings to darn a tall. 'N' all the time there was all them nice gover'ment
bonds savin' up for me in his desk! No, I sha'n't consider no more as to
gettin' married. While it looked discouragin' I hung on 'n' never give up hope,
but I sh'd be showin' very little o' my natural share o' brains 'f I didn't
know 's plain 's the moon above 't 'f I get to be eighty 'n' the fancy takes me
I c'n easy get a husband any day with those bonds. While I couldn't seem to lay
hands on no man I was wild to have one—now 't I know I c'n have any man 't I
fancy, I don't want no man a tall. It'll always be a pleasure to look back on
my love-makin', 'n' I wouldn't be no woman 'f down in the bottom of my heart I
wasn't some pleased over havin' 's good 's had four offers inside o' the same
week. But I might o' married, Mrs. Lathrop, 'n' Heaven might o' seen fit to
give me such a son 's he give you, 'n' 'f I hadn't no other reason for
remainin' single that alone 'd be s'fficient. After all, the Lord said 'It is
not good for man to be alone,' but He left a woman free to use her common sense
'n' I sh'll use mine right now. I've folded up the pink nightgown, 'n' I'm
thinkin' very seriously o' givin' it to Amelia Fitch, 'n' I'll speak out frank
'n' open 'n' tell her 'n' everybody else 't I don't envy no woman—not now 'n'
not never."
Mrs. Lathrop chewed her clover.
—from Susan Clegg and Her Friend
Mrs. Lathrop, by Anne Warner, Little, Brown, and Company (Boston, 1904)
No comments:
Post a Comment