Rilla of Ingleside by Lucy Maud Montgomery (13 ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Performer: 1594624275
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The aeroplane soared and dipped and circled, and soared again, until it became a mere speck far over the sunset hills.
ââWith the majesty of pinion Which the Theban eagles bear Sailing with supreme dominion Through the azure fields of air.ââ
quoted Anne Blythe dreamily.
âI wonder,â said Miss Oliver, âif humanity will be any happier because of aeroplanes. It seems to me that the sum of human happiness remains much the same from age to age, no matter how it may vary in distribution, and that all the âmany inventionsâ neither lessen nor increase it.â
âAfter all, the âkingdom of heaven is within you,ââ said Mr. Meredith, gazing after the vanishing speck which symbolized manâs latest victory in a world-old struggle. âIt does not depend on material achievements and triumphs.â
âNevertheless, an aeroplane is a fascinating thing,â said the doctor. âIt has always been one of humanityâs favourite dreamsâthe dream of flying. Dream after dream comes trueâor rather is made true by persevering effort. I should like to have a flight in an aeroplane myself.â
âShirley wrote me that he was dreadfully disappointed in his first flight,â said Rilla. âHe had expected to experience the sensation of soaring up from the earth like a birdâand instead he just had the feeling that he wasnât moving at all, but that the earth was dropping away under him. And the first time he went up alone he suddenly felt terribly homesick. He had never felt like that before; but all at once, he said, he felt as if he were adrift in spaceâand he had a wild desire to get back home to the old planet and the companionship of fellow creatures. He soon got over that feeling, but he says his first flight alone was a nightmare to him because of that dreadful sensation of ghastly loneliness.â
The aeroplane disappeared. The doctor threw back his head with a sigh.
âWhen I have watched one of those bird-men out of sight I come back to earth with an odd feeling of being merely a crawling insect. Anne,â he said, turning to his wife, âdo you remember the first time I took you for a buggy ride in Avonleaâthat night we went to the Carmody concert, the first fall you taught in Avonlea? I had out little black mare with the white star on her forehead, and a shining brand-new buggyâand I was the proudest fellow in the world, barring none. I suppose our grandson will be taking his sweetheart out quite casually for an evening âflyâ in his aeroplane.â
âAn aeroplane wonât be as nice as little Silverspot was,â said Anne. âA machine is simply a machineâbut Silverspot, why she was a personality, Gilbert. A drive behind her had something in it that not even a flight among sunset clouds could have. No, I donât envy my grandsonâs sweetheart, after all. Mr. Meredith is right. âThe kingdom of Heavenââ and of loveâand of happinessâdoesnât depend on externals.â
âBesides,â said the doctor gravely, âour said grandson will have to give most of his attention to the aeroplaneâhe wonât be able to let the reins lie on its back while he gazes into his ladyâs eyes. And I have an awful suspicion that you canât run an aeroplane with one arm. Noââthe doctor shook his headââI believe Iâd still prefer Silverspot after all.â
The Russian line broke again that summer and Susan said bitterly that she had expected it ever since Kerensky had gone and got married.
âFar be it from me to decry the holy state of matrimony, Mrs. Dr. dear, but I felt that when a man was running a revolution he had his hands full and should have postponed marriage until a more fitting season. The Russians are done for this time and there would be no sense in shutting our eyes to the fact. But have you seen Woodrow Wilsonâs reply to the Popeâs peace proposals? It is magnificent. I really could not have expressed the rights of the matter better myself. I feel that I can forgive Wilson everything for it. He knows the meaning of words and that you may tie to. Speaking of meanings, have you heard the latest story about Whiskers-on-the-moon, Mrs. Dr. dear? It seems he was over at the Lowbridge Road school the other day and took a notion to examine the fourth class in spelling. They have the summer term there yet, you know, with the spring and fall vacations, being rather backward people on that road. My niece, Ella Baker, goes to that school and she it was who told me the story. The teacher was not feeling well, having a dreadful headache, and she went out to get a little fresh air while Mr. Pryor was examining the class. The children got along all right with the spelling but when Whiskers began to question them about the meanings of the words they were all at sea, because they had not learned them. Ella and the other big scholars felt terrible over it. They love their teacher so, and it seems Mr. Pryorâs brother, Abel Pryor, who is trustee of that school, is against her and has been trying to turn the other trustees over to his way of thinking. And Ella and the rest were afraid that if the fourth class couldnât tell Whiskers the meanings of the words he would think the teacher was no good and tell Abel so, and Abel would have a fine handle. But little Sandy Logan saved the situation. He is a Home boy, but he is as smart as a steel trap, and he sized up Whiskers-on-the-moon right off. âWhat does âanatomyâ mean?â Whiskers demanded. âA pain in your stomach,â Sandy replied, quick as a flash and never batting an eyelid. Whiskers-on-the-moon is a very ignorant man, Mrs. Dr. dear; he didnât know the meaning of the words himself, and he said âVery goodâvery good.â The class caught right onâat least three or four of the brighter ones didâand they kept up the fun. Jean Blane said that âacousticâ meant âa religious squabble,â and Muriel Baker said that an âagnosticâ was âa man who had indigestion,â and Jim Carter said that âacerbityâ meant that âyou ate nothing but vegetable food,â and so on all down the list. Whiskers swallowed it all, and kept saying âVery goodâvery goodâ until Ella thought that die she would trying to keep a straight face. When the teacher came in, Whiskers complimented her on the splendid understanding the children had of their lesson and said he meant to tell the trustees what a jewel they had. It was âvery unusual,â he said, to find a fourth class who could answer up so prompt when it came to explaining what words meant. He went off beaming. But Ella told me this as a great secret, Mrs. Dr. dear, and we must keep it as such, for the sake of the Lowbridge Road teacher. It would likely be the ruin of her chances of keeping the school if Whiskers should ever find out how he had been bamboozled.â
Mary Vance came up to Ingleside that same afternoon to tell them that Miller Douglas, who had been wounded when the Canadians took Hill 70, had had to have his leg amputated. The Ingleside folk sympathized with Mary, whose zeal and patrotism had taken some time to kindle but now burned with a glow as steady and bright as any oneâs.
âSome folks have been twitting me about having a husband with only one leg. But,â said Mary, rising to a lofty height, âI would rather Miller with only one leg than any other man in the world with a dozenâ unless,â she added as an after-thought, âunless it was Lloyd George. Well, I must be going. I thought youâd be interested in hearing about Miller so I ran up from the store, but I must hustle home for I promised Luke MacAllister Iâd help him build his grain stack this evening. Itâs up to us girls to see that the harvest is got in, since the boys are so scarce. Iâve got overalls and I can tell you theyâre real becoming. Mrs. Alec Douglas says theyâre indecent and shouldnât be allowed, and even Mrs. Elliott kinder looks askance at them. But bless you, the world moves, and anyhow thereâs no fun for me like shocking Kitty Alec.â
âBy the way, father,â said Rilla, âIâm going to take Jack Flaggâs place in his fatherâs store for a month. I promised him today that I would, if you didnât object. Then he can help the farmers get the harvest in. I donât think Iâd be much use in a harvest myselfâthough lots of the girls areâbut I can set Jack free while I do his work. Jims isnât much bother in the daytime now, and Iâll always be home at night.â
âDo you think youâll like weighing out sugar and beans, and trafficking in butter and eggs?â said the doctor, twinkling.
âProbably not. That isnât the question. Itâs just one way of doing my bit.â So Rilla went behind Mr. Flaggâs counter for a month; and Susan went into Albert Crawfordâs oat-fields.
âI am as good as any of them yet,â she said proudly. âNot a man of them can beat me when it comes to building a stack. When I offered to help Albert looked doubtful. âI am afraid the work will be too hard for you,â he said. âTry me for a day and see,â said I. âI will do my darnedest.ââ
None of the Ingleside folks spoke for just a moment. Their silence meant that they thought Susanâs pluck in âworking outâ quite wonderful. But Susan mistook their meaning and her sunburned face grew red.
âThis habit of swearing seems to be growing on me, Mrs. Dr. dear,â she said apologetically. âTo think that I should be acquiring it at my age! It is such a dreadful example to the young girls. I am of the opinion it comes of reading the newspapers so much. They are so full of profanity and they do not spell it with stars either, as used to be done in my young days. This war is demoralizing everybody.â
Susan, standing on a load of grain, her grey hair whipping in the breeze and her skirt kilted up to her knees for safety and convenienceâno overalls for Susan, if you pleaseâneither a beautiful nor a romantic figure; but the spirit that animated her gaunt arms was the self-same one that captured Vimy Ridge and held the German legions back from Verdun.
It is not the least likely, however, that this consideration was the one which appealed most strongly to Mr. Pryor when he drove past one afternoon and saw Susan pitching sheaves gamely.
âSmart woman that,â he reflected. âWorth two of many a younger one yet. I might do worseâI might do worse. If Milgrave comes home alive Iâll lose Miranda and hired housekeepers cost more than a wife and are liable to leave a man in the lurch any time. Iâll think it over.â
A week later Mrs. Blythe, coming up from the village late in the afternoon, paused at the gate of Ingleside in an amazement which temporarily bereft her of the power of motion. An extraordinary sight met her eyes. Round the end of the kitchen burst Mr. Pryor, running as stout, pompous Mr. Pryor had not run in
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