A Great Emergency and Other Tales Part 24
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Though her day-dream about Darling and the sh.o.r.e palace was constantly disappointed, this did not hinder her from indulging new hopes and fancies in another place to which she went with Podmore; a place which was filled with wonders of a different kind from the treasures of the palace on the sh.o.r.e.
It was called the Bazaar. It would be a very long business to say what was in it. But amongst other things there were foreign cage-birds, musical-boxes, and camp-stools, and baskets, and polished pebbles, and paper patterns, and a little ladies' and children's millinery, and a good deal of mock jewellery, and some very bad soaps and scents, and some very good children's toys.
It was Madam Liberality's G.o.dmother who first took her to the bazaar.
A t.i.tled lady of her acquaintance had heard that wire flower-baskets of a certain shape could be bought in the bazaar cheaper (by two-pence-halfpenny each) than in London; and after writing to her friend to ascertain the truth of the statement, she wrote again to authorize her to purchase three on her behalf. So Madam Liberality's G.o.dmother ordered out the blue carriage and pair, and drove with her little cousin to the bazaar.
And as they came out, followed by a bearded man, bowing very low, and carrying the wire baskets, Madam Liberality's G.o.dmother stopped near the toy-stall to b.u.t.ton her glove. And when she had b.u.t.toned it (which took a long time, because her hands were stout, and Podmore generally did it with a hook), she said to Madam Liberality, "Now, child, I want to tell you that if you are very good whilst you are with me, and Podmore gives me a good report of you, I will bring you here before you go home, and buy you a present."
Madam Liberality's heart danced with delight. She wished her G.o.dmother would stand by the toy-stall for an hour, that she might see what she most hoped the present would be. But the footman tucked them into the carriage, and the bearded man bowed himself back into the bazaar, and they drove home. Then Madam Liberality's G.o.dmother directed the butler to dispatch the wire baskets to her ladys.h.i.+p, which he did by coach.
And her ladys.h.i.+p's butler paid the carriage, and tipped the man who brought the parcel from the coach-office, and charged these items in his account. And her ladys.h.i.+p wrote a long letter of thanks to Madam Liberality's G.o.dmother for her kindness in saving her unnecessary expense.
The old lady did not go to the bazaar again for some time, but Madam Liberality went there with Podmore. She looked at the toys and wondered which of them might one day be her very own. The white china tea-service with the green rim, big enough to make real tea in, was too good to be hoped for, but there were tin tea-sets where the lids would come off, and wooden ones where they were stuck on; and there were all manner of toys that would be invaluable for all kinds of nursery games and fancies.
They helped a "fancy" of Madam Liberality even then. She used to stand by the toy-stall, and fancy that she was as rich as her G.o.dmother, and was going to give Christmas-boxes to her brothers and sister, and her amus.e.m.e.nt was to choose, though she could not buy them.
Out of this came a deep mortification. She had been playing at this fancy one afternoon, and having rather confused herself by changing her mind about the toys, she went through her final list in an undertone, to get it clearly into her head. The shopman was serving a lady, and Madam Liberality thought he could not hear her as she murmured, "The china tea-set, the box of beasts, the doll's furniture for Darling," etc., etc. But the shopman's hearing was very acute, and he darted forward, crying, "The china tea-set, did you say, miss?"
The blood rushed up to poor Madam Liberality's face till it seemed to choke her, and the lady, whom the shopman had been serving, said kindly, "I think the little girl said the box of beasts."
Madam Liberality hoped it was a dream, but having pinched herself, she found that it was not.
Her mother had often said to her, "When you can't think what to say, tell the truth." It was not a very easy rule, but Madam Liberality went by it.
"I don't want anything, thank you," said she; "at least, I mean I have no money to buy anything with: I was only counting the things I should like to get if I had."
And then, as the floor of the bazaar would _not_ open and swallow her up, she ran away, with her red face and her empty pocket, to shelter herself with Podmore at the mock-jewellery stall, and she did not go to the bazaar any more.
Once again disappointment was in store for Madam Liberality. The end of her visit came, and her G.o.dmother's promise seemed to be forgotten.
But the-night before her departure, the old lady came into her room and said,
"I couldn't take you with me to-day, child, but I didn't forget my promise. Podmore says you've been very good, and so I've brought you a present. A very _useful_ one, I hope," added the old lady, in a tone as if she were congratulating herself upon her good sense. "And tell Catherine--that's your mother, child--with my love, always to have you dressed for the evening. I like to see children come in to dessert, when they have good manners--which I must say you have; besides, it keeps the nurses up to their work."
And then she drew out from its paper a little frock of pink _mousseline-de-laine_, very prettily tacked together by the young woman at the millinery-stall, and very cheap for its gay appearance.
Down came all Madam Liberality's visions in connection with the toy-stall: but she consoled herself that night with picturing Darling's delight when she gave her (as she meant to give her) the pink dress.
She had another source of comfort and antic.i.p.ation--_the scallop-sh.e.l.ls_.
But this requires to be explained. The greatest prize which Madam Liberality had gained from her wanderings by the seash.o.r.e was a complete scallop-sh.e.l.l. When washed the double sh.e.l.l was as clean and as pretty as any china m.u.f.fin-dish with a round top; and now her ambition was to get four more, and thus to have a service for doll's feasts which should far surpa.s.s the oyster-sh.e.l.ls. She was talking about this to Podmore one day when they were picking cowries together, and Podmore cried, "Why, this little girl would get you them, miss, I'll be bound!"
She was a bare-footed little girl, who sold pebbles and seaweed, and salt water for sponging with, and she had undertaken to get the scallop-sh.e.l.ls, and had run off to pick seaweed out of a newly landed net before Madam Liberality could say "Thank you."
She heard no more of the sh.e.l.ls, however, until the day before she went away, when the butler met her as she came indoors, and told her that the little girl was waiting. And it was not till Madam Liberality saw the scallop-sh.e.l.ls lying clean and pink in a cotton handkerchief that she remembered that she had no money to pay for them.
Here was another occasion for painful truthtelling! But to make humiliating confession before the butler seemed almost beyond even Madam Liberality's moral courage. He went back to his pantry, however, and she pulled off her pretty pink neckerchief and said,
"I am _very_ sorry, little girl, but I've got no money of my own; but if you would like this instead--" And the little girl seemed quite pleased with her bargain, and ran hastily off, as if afraid that the young lady would change her mind.
And this was how Madam Liberality got her scallop-sh.e.l.ls.
It may seem strange that Madam Liberality should ever have been accused of meanness, and yet her eldest brother did once shake his head at her and say, "You're the most meanest and the _generoustest_ person I ever knew!" And Madam Liberality wept over the accusation, although her brother was then too young to form either his words or his opinions correctly.
But it was the touch of truth in it which made Madam Liberality cry.
To the end of their lives Tom and she were alike and yet different in this matter. Madam Liberality saved, and pinched, and planned, and then gave away, and Tom gave away without the pinching and saving.
This sounds much handsomer, and it was poor Tom's misfortune that he always believed it to be so; though he gave away what did not belong to him, and fell back for the supply of his own pretty numerous wants upon other people, not forgetting Madam Liberality.
Painful experience convinced Madam Liberality in the end that his way was a wrong one, but she had her doubts many times in her life whether there were not something unhandsome in her own decided talent for economy. Not that economy was always pleasant to her. When people are very poor for their position in life, they can only keep out of debt by stinting on many occasions when stinting is very painful to a liberal spirit. And it requires a sterner virtue than good-nature to hold fast the truth that it is n.o.bler to be shabby and honest than to do things handsomely in debt.
But long before Tom had a bill even for bull's-eyes and Gibraltar Rock, Madam Liberality was pinching and plotting, and saving bits of coloured paper and ends of ribbon, with a thriftiness which seemed to justify Tom's view of her character.
The object of these savings was twofold: birthday presents and Christmas-boxes. They were the chief cares and triumphs of Madam Liberality's childhood. It was with the next birthday or the approaching Christmas in view that she saved her pence instead of spending them, but she so seldom had any money that she chiefly relied on her own ingenuity. Year by year it became more difficult to make anything which would "do for a boy;" but it was easy to please Darling, and "Mother's" unabated appreciation of pincus.h.i.+ons, and of needle-books made out of old cards, was most satisfactory.
To break the mystery in which it always pleased Madam Liberality to shroud her small preparations, was to give her dire offence. As a rule, the others respected this caprice, and would even feign a little more surprise than they felt, upon occasion. But if during her preparations she had given umbrage to one of the boys, her retreat was soon invaded with cries of--"Ah! I see you, making birthday presents out of nothing and a quarter of a yard of ribbon!" Or--"There you are!
At it again, with two old visiting cards and a ha'porth of flannel!"
And only Darling's tenderest kisses could appease Madam Liberality's wrath and dry her tears.
She had never made a grander project for Christmas, or had greater difficulty in carrying it out, than in the winter which followed her visit to the seaside. It was in the house of her cousin that she had first heard of Christmas-trees, and to surprise the others with a Christmas-tree she was quite resolved. But as the time drew near, poor Madam Liberality was almost in despair about her presents, and this was doubly provoking, because a nice little fir-tree had been promised her. There was no blinking the fact that "Mother" had been provided with pincus.h.i.+ons to repletion. And most of these made the needles rusty, from being stuffed with damp pig-meal, when the pigs and the pincus.h.i.+ons were both being fattened for Christmas.
Madam Liberality sat with her little pale face on her hand and her slate before her, making her calculations. She wondered what emery-powder cost. Supposing it to be very cheap, and that she could get a quarter of a pound for "next to nothing," how useful a present might be made for "Mother" in the shape of an emery pincus.h.i.+on, to counteract the evil effects of the pig-meal ones! It would be a novelty even to Darling, especially if hers were made by glueing a tiny bag of emery into the mouth of a "boiled fowl cowry." Madam Liberality had seen such a pincus.h.i.+on in Podmore's work-basket. She had a sh.e.l.l of the kind, and the village carpenter would always let her put a stick into his glue-pot if she went to the shop.
But then, if emery were only a penny a pound, Madam Liberality had not a farthing to buy a quarter of a pound with. As she thought of this her brow contracted, partly with vexation, and partly because of a jumping pain in a big tooth, which, either from much illness or many medicines, or both, was now but the wreck of what a tooth should be.
But as the toothache grew worse, a new hope dawned upon Madam Liberality. Perhaps one of her troubles would mend the other!
Being very tender-hearted over children's sufferings, it was her mother's custom to bribe rather than coerce when teeth had to be taken out. The fixed scale of reward was sixpence for a tooth without fangs, and a s.h.i.+lling for one with them. If pain were any evidence, this tooth certainly had fangs. But one does not have a tooth taken out if one can avoid it, and Madam Liberality bore bad nights and painful days till they could be endured no longer; and then, because she knew it distressed her mother to be present, she went alone to the doctor's house to ask him to take out her tooth.
The doctor was a very kind old man, and he did his best, so we will not say anything about his antique instruments, or the number of times he tied a pocket-handkerchief round an awful-looking claw, and put both into Madam Liberality's mouth without effect.
At last he said he had got the tooth out, and he wrapped it in paper, and gave it to Madam Liberality, who, having thought that it was her head he had extracted from its socket, was relieved to get away.
As she ran home she began to plan how to lay out her s.h.i.+lling for the best, and when she was nearly there she opened the bit of paper to look at her enemy, and it had no fangs!
"I'm _sure_ it was more than a sixpenny one," she sobbed; "I believe he has left them in."
It involved more than the loss of half the funds she had reckoned upon. Perhaps this dreadful pain would go on even on Christmas Day.
Her first thought was to carry her tears to her mother; her second that, if she only could be brave enough to have the fangs taken out, she might spare mother all distress about it till it was over, when she would certainly like her sufferings to be known and sympathized with. She knew well that courage does not come with waiting, and making a desperate rally of stout-heartedness, she ran back to the doctor.
He had gone out, but his a.s.sistant was in. He looked at Madam Liberality's mouth, and said that the fangs were certainly left in and would be much better out.
"Would it hurt _very_ much?" asked Madam Liberality, trembling.
The a.s.sistant blinked the question of "hurting."
"I think I could do it," said he, "if you could sit still. Not if you were jumping about."
"I will sit still," said Madam Liberality.
"The boy shall hold your head," said the a.s.sistant.
A Great Emergency and Other Tales Part 24
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A Great Emergency and Other Tales Part 24 summary
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