Miss Ashton's New Pupil Part 20
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"Nellie lifted onto the sofa! Dressed in my old blue wrapper!
Looks white and funny."
"Nellie sends her love and thanks to all her kind, kind friends."
"Nellie teasing to see Marion Parke."
"Nellie p.r.o.nounced out of danger."
"Nellie removed to Mrs. Gaston's, where she will stay until she is strong enough to resume her studies. Sends love and thanks."
The next day there were rumors around the school that Marion Parke, who had been missed by this time, and accounted for, was taken sick with diphtheria, and was much worse than Nellie had ever been.
Now, of course, the panic began anew; and as many of the girls had written home and obtained leave to return, more than that, commands to do so, as the sick girl's case was contagious, Miss Ashton found all her trouble renewed.
She had been besieged with letters from anxious parents, charging her not to trifle with their children's lives, but by all means to send them home at once if there was the least real danger; so now she had no hesitation in letting those go who wished, indeed it was a relief to her to have the number of her school smaller, and the anxiety lessened; but now it was only a scare. Marion did have a sore throat, but it was one which comes often with an ordinary cold, and Dr. Dawson laughed at it, gave her some slight medicines, and scolded Miss Ashton for having separated her so long from the girls.
The girls gave her a wide berth, but for this Miss Ashton had prepared her, and Marion was more amused than hurt by it.
Before a week had pa.s.sed, the four room-mates were together in their old rooms, and Marion was made a heroine. All she had done for Nellie was exaggerated, with that generous exaggeration of which girls are so capable.
After all, this diphtheritic episode had only been injurious to the school inasmuch as it had broken into the regular routine, and thrown hindrances into the completion of work which was expected to be done before the coming on of the long holiday vacation.
That Christmas and New Year's came so soon after Thanksgiving was something for the teachers to deplore; but as they were in no way responsible for it, and as indeed Christmas was a religious holiday, well in keeping with the _animus_ of the inst.i.tution, they met it heartily, the more so than usual this year, as they hoped, the vacation over, to resume the regular course, both in study and discipline, without any further interruption.
CHAPTER XXVI.
CHRISTMAS COMING.
The Demosthenic Club had received two severe setbacks since its organization. One when Kate Underwood's tableaux fell under Miss Ashton's displeasure on account of the carelessness it had shown in injuring, for fun's sake, the feelings of a schoolmate; the other when members of the club had been guilty of a flagrant breach of the rules, by the stolen sleigh-ride with the Atherton boys.
"In spite of it all," Kate Underwood said, "we will just change its name, and go on as if nothing had happened. We are to be now the 'Never Say Die Club.' Vote on it, girls."
The new name was adopted by acclamation, and several other votes were carried at the same time, all in favor of law and order, showing how truly these girls had meant to keep the promises they had made in their extremity to Miss Ashton, to be law-abiding members of the school.
They held their secret meetings as often and as secretly as their const.i.tution demanded; they discussed all questions that the interests of the times suggested. If they had a spread, it was before study hours, and with unlocked doors. On the whole, Jenny Barton, Kate Underwood, and Mamie Smythe took the lessons they had received into good, honest hearts, and grew, by the many resisted temptations which were born of the secrecy of their club, into better, n.o.bler characters.
Miss Ashton, watching them with vigilant eyes, marked the improvement, and showed her value of it by greater confidence in its leading members.
There was an important meeting to be held a week before the breaking up for the Christmas vacation. It was to be in Lilly White's room, where, indeed, most of their meetings were held, for Lilly had a room by herself, richly furnished, this being the only inducement her parents could offer her, that made her consent to the fearful ordeal of a few years at school,--to be dull and to be wealthy! Who would desire it for any child?
"You understand," said President Jenny Barton, after the meeting was called to order, "that this is to be no common affair. It's to be, well! it's to be a sort of atonement for--well, for those other affairs; and, girls, if we do anything about it, let's do it up handsome. What do you say?"
"Do it jist illigant, or let it alone," said Mamie Smythe.
"Jist illigant!" repeated one member of the club after another, until the president said,--
"Motioned, and carried. Now for our plan. Keep it a profound secret!"
Such a busy place as the academy became now, probably had its counterpart in every girls' boarding-school all over the length and breadth of our land.
Where there is good discipline and good scholars.h.i.+p, neither the rules nor the lessons are allowed to be slighted; but as December days shorten, and December cold strengthens, even the most indolent pupil finds herself under a certain stress of occupation which she cannot resist.
s.h.i.+rking can find no place in the recitation-room. Moments that have been idled away now become precious, each one laden with its weight of some loving remembrance to be made for the dear ones at home.
Such treasures of delicate silks, laces, plushes, velvets, ribbons, embroideries, card-boards, ta.s.sels, cords, gilt in every shape and capable of every use; such pretty gift-books, booklets, cards, afghans, sofa-pillows, head-rests; such wonders of ingenuity in working up places for thermometers, putting them in dust-pans, tying them onto bread-rollers, slipping them behind wonderful cl.u.s.ters of sweet painted flowers; such pen-wipers, such blotters, work-baskets, paper-baskets, bureau coverings, bureau mats! napery of all varieties; and, after all, this enumeration is but the beginning of what in Montrose Academy was hidden in drawers, stowed away in most impossible and impracticable places, yet always ready to the hand for a spare moment. Two hundred girls,--for by this time most of the diphtheritic runaways had returned,--and all, without an exception, were Christmas busy! Christmas crazy! What a changed place it made of the school!
Benedictions on the hallowed holiday! If we put aside its religious bearing, think of it only as a time when heart goes out to heart, even the most selfish of us all will remember to show our love in a visible token of affection.
If, with all this, we can make our offerings hallowed by a tenderer love and a deeper affection for Him in whose honor the whole world keeps the festival, then, indeed, the day becomes to us the most blessed and beautiful of our lives!
Marion Parke saw it as it was kept here in an entirely new way. At her Western home, her father had made it a day of religious observance.
Marion had always been leader in tr.i.m.m.i.n.g their church with the pretty greens which their mild winter spared to them, and on Christmas Sunday they sang Christmas hymns, and listened to a Christmas sermon. On Christmas Eve they had a Christmas-tree, and hung it with such useful gifts as their necessities demanded and a small purse could provide.
It was a happy, precious day, simply and heartily kept; but here she was lost in wonder, as she was called from room to room to see the rare and beautiful gifts which, it seemed to her, abounded everywhere.
Money to purchase such things for herself to give away she had not, but she watched her room-mates, as they deftly prepared their gifts for their Rock Cove homes, with delight.
How busy and happy they were! Sometimes Marion's longing to send something, if only a little remembrance, home brought the tears into her eyes.
Gladys was the first to see this and to guess its cause. At once she began to purchase new silks, tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs of all kinds, booklets, cards, increasing her store, until even her cousins, accustomed as they were to her fitful extravagances, wondered at her.
When her drawers, never too orderly, began to a.s.sume a chaotic appearance, she said fretfully one morning to Marion Parke, who was looking and laughing at the chaos,--
"I should think, instead of laughing at me, it would be a great deal better natured in you to help me put them into some kind of order.
Your drawer isn't half full. Look here! open it, and let me tuck some of these duds in."
Marion opened hers, pushed the few things it contained carefully into a corner, and said,--
"You are very welcome to all the room you want. Remember, I am only here on sufferance; it is really all yours."
"Nonsense! help me, can't you? I shall pitch them in any way, and you are so tidy!"
Help her Marion did, and when the jumbled but valuable contents of the drawer were all transferred, Gladys shut it up with a gleeful laugh.
"Oh, how splendid it is," she said, "to have the drawer clean and clear again! Never one of those duds is going back, and you can use them or throw them away; put them in a rag-bag if you want to; I've nothing more to do with them."
Then Sue and Dorothy understood what the extravagance meant, but Marion did not; she only stood still, staring at Gladys, wondering what she could have said or done to vex her kind-hearted room-mate.
And it was not until hours afterward, when she was alone with Dorothy, and Dorothy told her they were gifts to her, that she knew how rich in Christmas treasures she had suddenly become.
And here it is pleasant to tell, that this was only one of Gladys's thoughtful kindnesses. Little bundles of similar gifts were constantly going from her to the doors of the girls whose small means made Christmas presents luxuries in which they could not indulge. Even Gladys's liberal father wondered often over the amount of money which she wished for these holidays; but he trusted her, and in truth felt proud and glad that this only child had a n.o.ble, generous nature, which could, and did, think of others more than of herself; for in the account which she always sent him of the expenditure of these moneys, while there were many "give aways," there were few dollars spent on herself.
One day, in the regular mail-bag, there came this note to Miss Ashton:--
We, the undersigned, grateful for the undeserved kindnesses with which you have made our repentant days so happy, request the pleasure of your company in the parlor, Tuesday evening, December 22.
JENNY BARTON, SOPHY KANE, KATE UNDERWOOD, MAMIE SMYTHE, LUCY SNOW, LILLY WHITE, MARTHA DODD,
Miss Ashton's New Pupil Part 20
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