Pollyanna Eleanor H. Porter (classic english novels txt) đ
- Author: Eleanor H. Porter
Book online «Pollyanna Eleanor H. Porter (classic english novels txt) đ». Author Eleanor H. Porter
Fitting Pollyanna with a new wardrobe proved to be more or less of an exciting experience for all concerned. Miss Polly came out of it with the feeling of limp relaxation that one might have at finding oneself at last on solid earth after a perilous walk across the very thin crust of a volcano. The various clerks who had waited upon the pair came out of it with very red faces, and enough amusing stories of Pollyanna to keep their friends in gales of laughter the rest of the week. Pollyanna herself came out of it with radiant smiles and a heart content; for, as she expressed it to one of the clerks: âWhen you havenât had anybody but missionary barrels and Ladiesâ Aiders to dress you, it is perfectly lovely to just walk right in and buy clothes that are brand-new, and that donât have to be tucked up or let down because they donât fit!â
The shopping expedition consumed the entire afternoon; then came supper and a delightful talk with Old Tom in the garden, and another with Nancy on the back porch, after the dishes were done, and while Aunt Polly paid a visit to a neighbor.
Old Tom told Pollyanna wonderful things of her mother, that made her very happy indeed; and Nancy told her all about the little farm six miles away at âThe Corners,â where lived her own dear mother, and her equally dear brother and sisters. She promised, too, that sometime, if Miss Polly were willing, Pollyanna should be taken to see them.
âAnd theyâve got lovely names, too. Youâll like their names,â sighed Nancy. âTheyâre âAlgernon,â and âFlorabelleâ and âEstelle.â Iâ âI just hate âNancyâ!â
âOh, Nancy, what a dreadful thing to say! Why?â
âBecause it isnât pretty like the others. You see, I was the first baby, and mother hadnât begun ter read so many stories with the pretty names in âem, then.â
âBut I love âNancy,â just because itâs you,â declared Pollyanna.
âHumph! Well, I guess you could love âClarissa Mabelleâ just as well,â retorted Nancy, âand it would be a heap happier for me. I think that nameâs just grand!â
Pollyanna laughed.
âWell, anyhow,â she chuckled, âyou can be glad it isnât âHephzibah.âââ
âHephzibah!â
âYes. Mrs. Whiteâs name is that. Her husband calls her âHep,â and she doesnât like it. She says when he calls out âHepâ âHep!â she feels just as if the next minute he was going to yell âHurrah!â And she doesnât like to be hurrahed at.â
Nancyâs gloomy face relaxed into a broad smile.
âWell, if you donât beat the Dutch! Say, do you know?â âI shanât never hear âNancyâ now that I donât think oâ that âHepâ âHep!â and giggle. My, I guess I am gladâ ââ She stopped short and turned amazed eyes on the little girl. âSay, Miss Pollyanna, do you meanâ âwas you playinâ that âere game thenâ âabout my beinâ glad I waânât named Hephzibahâ?â
Pollyanna frowned; then she laughed.
âWhy, Nancy, thatâs so! I was playing the gameâ âbut thatâs one of the times I just did it without thinking, I reckon. You see, you do, lots of times; you get so used to itâ âlooking for something to be glad about, you know. And most generally there is something about everything that you can be glad about, if you keep hunting long enough to find it.â
âWell, m-maybe,â granted Nancy, with open doubt.
At half-past eight Pollyanna went up to bed. The screens had not yet come, and the close little room was like an oven. With longing eyes Pollyanna looked at the two fast-closed windowsâ âbut she did not raise them. She undressed, folded her clothes neatly, said her prayers, blew out her candle and climbed into bed.
Just how long she lay in sleepless misery, tossing from side to side of the hot little cot, she did not know; but it seemed to her that it must have been hours before she finally slipped out of bed, felt her way across the room and opened her door.
Out in the main attic all was velvet blackness save where the moon flung a path of silver halfway across the floor from the east dormer window. With a resolute ignoring of that fearsome darkness to the right and to the left, Pollyanna drew a quick breath and pattered straight into that silvery path, and on to the window.
She had hoped, vaguely, that this window might have a screen, but it did not. Outside, however, there was a wide world of fairy-like beauty, and there was, too, she knew, fresh, sweet air that would feel so good to hot cheeks and hands!
As she stepped nearer and peered longingly out, she saw something else: she saw, only a little way below the window, the wide, flat tin roof of Miss Pollyâs sun parlor built over the porte-cochĂšre. The sight filled her with longing. If only, now, she were out there!
Fearfully she looked behind her. Back there, somewhere, were her hot little room and her still hotter bed; but between her and them lay a horrid desert of blackness across which one must feel oneâs way with outstretched, shrinking arms; while before her, out on the sun-parlor roof, were the moonlight and the cool, sweet night air.
If only her bed were out there! And folks did sleep out of doors. Joel Hartley at home, who was so sick with the consumption, had to sleep out of doors.
Suddenly Pollyanna remembered that she had seen near this attic window a row of long white bags hanging from nails. Nancy had said that they contained the winter clothing, put away for the summer. A little fearfully now, Pollyanna felt her way to these bags, selected a nice fat soft one (it contained Miss Pollyâs sealskin coat) for a bed; and a thinner one to be doubled up for a pillow, and still another (which was so thin it seemed almost empty) for a covering. Thus equipped, Pollyanna in high glee pattered to the moonlit window again, raised the sash, stuffed her burden through to the roof
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