Rainbow Valley by Lucy Maud Montgomery (rooftoppers txt) đ
- Author: Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Performer: 0553269216
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âI popped it right back in again,â said Carl. âIt didnât hurt anybodyâa poor little frog! And I wish old Jane Drew WOULD give up our class. I hate her. Her own nephew had a dirty plug of tobacco in his pocket and offered us fellows a chew when Elder Clow was praying. I guess thatâs worse than a frog.â
âNo, âcause frogs are more unexpected-like. They make more of a sensation. âSides, he wasnât caught at it. And then that praying competition you had last week has made a fearful scandal. Everybody is talking about it.â
âWhy, the Blythes were in that as well as us,â cried Faith, indignantly. âIt was Nan Blythe who suggested it in the first place. And Walter took the prize.â
âWell, you get the credit of it any way. It wouldnât have been so bad if you hadnât had it in the graveyard.â
âI should think a graveyard was a very good place to pray in,â retorted Jerry.
âDeacon Hazard drove past when YOU were praying,â said Mary, âand he saw and heard you, with your hands folded over your stomach, and groaning after every sentence. He thought you were making fun of HIM.â
âSo I was,â declared unabashed Jerry. âOnly I didnât know he was going by, of course. That was just a mean accident. I wasnât praying in real earnestâI knew I had no chance of winning the prize. So I was just getting what fun I could out of it. Walter Blythe can pray bully. Why, he can pray as well as dad.â
âUna is the only one of US who really likes praying,â said Faith pensively.
âWell, if praying scandalizes people so much we mustnât do it any more,â sighed Una.
âShucks, you can pray all you want to, only not in the graveyardâand donât make a game of it. That was what made it so badâthat, and having a tea-party on the tombstones.â
âWe hadnât.â
âWell, a soap-bubble party then. You had SOMETHING. The over-harbour people swear you had a tea-party, but Iâm willing to take your word. And you used this tombstone as a table.â
âWell, Martha wouldnât let us blow bubbles in the house. She was awful cross that day,â explained Jerry. âAnd this old slab made such a jolly table.â
âWerenât they pretty?â cried Faith, her eyes sparkling over the remembrance. âThey reflected the trees and the hills and the harbour like little fairy worlds, and when we shook them loose they floated away down to Rainbow Valley.â
âAll but one and it went over and bust up on the Methodist spire,â said Carl.
âIâm glad we did it once, anyhow, before we found out it was wrong,â said Faith.
âIt wouldnât have been wrong to blow them on the lawn,â said Mary impatiently. âSeems like I canât knock any sense into your heads. Youâve been told often enough you shouldnât play in the graveyard. The Methodists are sensitive about it.â
âWe forget,â said Faith dolefully. âAnd the lawn is so smallâand so caterpillaryâand so full of shrubs and things. We canât be in Rainbow Valley all the timeâand where are we to go?â
âItâs the things you DO in the graveyard. It wouldnât matter if you just sat here and talked quiet, same as weâre doing now. Well, I donât know what is going to come of it all, but I DO know that Elder Warren is going to speak to your pa about it. Deacon Hazard is his cousin.â
âI wish they wouldnât bother father about us,â said Una.
âWell, people think he ought to bother himself about you a little more. I donâtâI understand him. Heâs a child in some ways himselfâthatâs what he is, and needs some one to look after him as bad as you do. Well, perhaps heâll have some one before long, if all tales is true.â
âWhat do you mean?â asked Faith.
âHavenât you got any ideaâhonest?â demanded Mary.
âNo, no. What DO you mean?â
âWell, you are a lot of innocents, upon my word. Why, EVERYbody is talking of it. Your pa goes to see Rosemary West. SHE is going to be your step-ma.â
âI donât believe it,â cried Una, flushing crimson.
âWell, I dunno. I just go by what folks say. I donât give it for a fact. But it would be a good thing. Rosemary Westâd make you toe the mark if she came here, Iâll bet a cent, for all sheâs so sweet and smiley on the face of her. Theyâre always that way till theyâve caught them. But you need some one to bring you up. Youâre disgracing your pa and I feel for him. Iâve always thought an awful lot of your pa ever since that night he talked to me so nice. Iâve never said a single swear word since, or told a lie. And Iâd like to see him happy and comfortable, with his buttons on and his meals decent, and you young ones licked into shape, and that old cat of a Martha put in HER proper place. The way she looked at the eggs I brought her to-night. âI hope theyâre fresh,â says she. I just wished they WAS rotten. But you just mind that she gives you all one for breakfast, including your pa. Make a fuss if she doesnât. That was what they was sent up forâbut I donât trust old Martha. Sheâs quite capable of feeding âem to her cat.â
Maryâs tongue being temporarily tired, a brief silence fell over the graveyard. The manse children did not feel like talking. They were digesting the new and not altogether palatable ideas Mary had suggested to them. Jerry and Carl were somewhat startled. But, after all, what did it matter? And it wasnât likely there was a word of truth in it. Faith, on the whole, was pleased. Only Una was seriously upset. She felt that she would like to get away and cry.
âWill there be any stars in my crown?â sang the Methodist choir, beginning to practise in the Methodist church.
âI want just three,â said Mary, whose theological knowledge had increased notably since her residence with Mrs. Elliott. âJust threeâsetting up on my head, like a corownet, a big one in the middle and a small one each side.â
âAre there different sizes in souls?â asked Carl.
âOf course. Why, little babies must have smaller ones than big men. Well, itâs getting dark and I must scoot home. Mrs. Elliott doesnât like me to be out after dark. Laws, when I lived with Mrs. Wiley the dark was just the same as the daylight to me. I didnât mind it no moreân a gray cat. Them days seem a hundred years ago. Now, you mind what Iâve said and try to behave yourselves, for you paâs sake. IâLL always back you up and defend youâyou can be dead sure of that. Mrs. Elliott says she never saw the like of me for sticking up for my friends. I was real sassy to Mrs. Alec Davis about you and Mrs. Elliott combed me down for it afterwards. The fair Cornelia has a tongue of her own and no mistake. But she was pleased underneath for all, âcause she hates old Kitty Alec and sheâs real fond of you. I can see through folks.â
Mary sailed off, excellently well pleased with herself, leaving a rather depressed little group behind her.
âMary Vance always says something that makes us feel bad when she comes up,â said Una resentfully.
âI wish weâd left her to starve in the old barn,â said Jerry vindictively.
âOh, thatâs wicked, Jerry,â rebuked Una.
âMay as well have the game as the name,â retorted unrepentant Jerry. âIf people say weâre so bad letâs BE bad.â
âBut not if it hurts father,â pleaded Faith.
Jerry squirmed uncomfortably. He adored his father. Through the unshaded study window they could see Mr. Meredith at his desk. He did not seem to be either reading or writing. His head was in his hands and there was something in his whole attitude that spoke of weariness and dejection. The children suddenly felt it.
âI dare say somebodyâs been worrying him about us to-day,â said Faith. âI wish we COULD get along without making people talk. OhâJem Blythe! How you scared me!â
Jem Blythe had slipped into the graveyard and sat down beside the girls. He had been prowling about Rainbow Valley and had succeeded in finding the first little star-white cluster of arbutus for his mother. The manse children were rather silent after his coming. Jem was beginning to grow away from them somewhat this spring. He was studying for the entrance examination of Queenâs Academy and stayed after school with the older pupils for extra lessons. Also, his evenings were so full of work that he seldom joined the others in Rainbow Valley now. He seemed to be drifting away into grown-up land.
âWhat is the matter with you all to-night?â he asked. âThereâs no fun in you.â
âNot much,â agreed Faith dolefully. âThere wouldnât be much fun in you either if YOU knew you were disgracing your father and making people talk about you.â
âWhoâs been talking about you now?â
âEverybodyâso Mary Vance says.â And Faith poured out her troubles to sympathetic Jem. âYou see,â she concluded dolefully, âweâve nobody to bring us up. And so we get into scrapes and people think weâre bad.â
âWhy donât you bring yourselves up?â suggested Jem. âIâll tell you what to do. Form a Good-Conduct Club and punish yourselves every time you do anything thatâs not right.â
âThatâs a good idea,â said Faith, struck by it. âBut,â she added doubtfully, âthings that donât seem a bit of harm to US seem simply dreadful to other people. How can we tell? We canât be bothering father all the timeâand he has to be away a lot, anyhow.â
âYou could mostly tell if you stopped to think a thing over before doing it and ask yourselves what the congregation would say about it,â said Jem. âThe trouble is you just rush into things and donât think them over at all. Mother says youâre all too impulsive, just as she used to be. The Good-Conduct Club would help you to think, if you were fair and honest about punishing yourselves when you broke the rules. Youâd have to punish in some way that really HURT, or it wouldnât do any good.â
âWhip each other?â
âNot exactly. Youâd have to think up different ways of punishment to suit the person. You wouldnât punish each otherâyouâd punish YOURSELVES. I read all about such a club in a story-book. You try it and see how it works.â
âLetâs,â said Faith; and when Jem was gone they agreed they would. âIf things arenât right weâve just got to make them right,â said Faith, resolutely.
âWeâve got to be fair and square, as Jem says,â said Jerry. âThis is a club to bring ourselves up, seeing thereâs nobody else to do it. Thereâs no use in having many rules. Letâs just have one and any of us that breaks it has got to be punished hard.â
âBut HOW.â
âWeâll think that up as we go along. Weâll hold a session of the club here in the graveyard every night and talk over what weâve done through the day, and if we think weâve done anything that isnât right or that would disgrace dad the one that does it, or is responsible for it, must be punished. Thatâs the rule. Weâll all decide on the kind of punishmentâit must be made to fit the crime, as Mr. Flagg says. And the one thatâs, guilty will be bound to carry it out and no shirking. Thereâs going to be fun in this,â concluded Jerry, with a relish.
âYou suggested the soap-bubble party,â said Faith.
âBut that was
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