< Page:Samantha on Children's Rights.djvu
This page needs to be proofread.

lace to trim underclothes for her two sister-in-laws."

"Isn't it bad for her eyes, Fidelia!" sez I, lookin' at the worn, red eyelids of Elinor.

"Yes," sez Fidelia, "it wuz very hard on her; but she wanted to do it, for she thought they would prize 'em higher; and then," sez Fidelia, "she has made two dozen doilies for Louis' mother out of that same thread."

"How long did it take you to do it!" sez I dryly.

"Oh," sez she, "I had them for work all summer; I begun 'em the 1st of June, so I could be sure to get them done for Christmas. I think that I could have done them in two months if I had worked all the time."

And I sez to myself, all these long golden summer hours, sweet with bird-song, fragrant with flowers and beauty, she had sot over her one-hundred-and-twenty thread patiently weavin' cobwebs, hopin' mebby to ketch Happiness in it; but 'tennyrate doin' this slow work, stitch by stitch, and lettin' all the beauty and glory of summer and life go by. For I begun to see plainer than ever why Louis Arnold wuz a defaulter in the bank of love.

"Afterwards in her room," sez Fidelia, "I want you to see the slippers she has embroidered for Louis—I never see the beat of it; they are so fine you can't tell where the stitches are put; each one took her three weeks of stiddy work; they are a design of pink roses on a sky-blue ground."

Sez I, "She could have bought a pair for five dollars that would have done jest as well, and I would have loved to have seen some of the pink roses on her cheeks, and some of the bright sky-blue in her eyes. They used to look like bits of the sky peeping out of rosy clouds."

    This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.