Mother Carey's Chickens eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 276 pages of information about Mother Carey's Chickens.

Mother Carey's Chickens eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 276 pages of information about Mother Carey's Chickens.

Nancy, as has been intimated before, had a kind of tendency to reform things that appeared to her lacking in any way, and she had early seized upon the stolid Lallie Joy as a worthy object.

“There she comes!” said Nancy.  “She carries two quarts of milk in one hand and two pounds of butter in the other, exactly as if she was bending under the weight of a load of hay.  I’ll run down into the kitchen and capture her for a half hour at five cents.  She can peel the potatoes first, and while they’re boiling she can slice apples for sauce.”

“Have her chop the hash, do!” coaxed Julia for that was her special work.  “The knife is dull beyond words.”

“Why don’t you get Mr. Popham to sharpen it?  It’s a poor workman that complains of his tools; Columbus discovered America in an open boat,” quoted Nancy, with an irritating air of wisdom.

“That may be so,” Julia retorted, “but Columbus would never have discovered America with that chopping-knife, I’m sure of that.—­Is Lallie Joy about our age?”

“I don’t know.  She must have been at least forty when she was born, and that would make her fifty-five now.  What do you suppose would wake her up?  If I could only get her to stand straight, or hold her head up, or let her hair down, or close her mouth!  I believe I’ll stay in the kitchen and appeal to her better feelings a little this morning; I can seed the raisins for the bread pudding.”

Nancy sat in the Shaker rocker by the sink window with the yellow bowl in her lap.  Her cheeks were pink, her eyes were bright, her lips were red, her hair was goldy-brown, her fingers flew, and a high-necked gingham apron was as becoming to her as it is to all nice girls.  She was thoroughly awake, was Nancy, and there could not have been a greater contrast than that between her and the comatose Lallie Joy, who sat on a wooden chair with her feet on the side rounds.  She had taken off her Turkey red sunbonnet and hung it on the chair-back, where its color violently assaulted her flaming locks.  She sat wrong; she held the potato pan wrong, and the potatoes and the knife wrong.  There seemed to be no sort of connection between her mind and her body.  As she peeled potatoes and Nancy seeded raisins, the conversation was something like this.

“How did you chance to bring the butter to-day instead of to-morrow, Lallie Joy?”

“Had to dress me up to go to the store and get a new hat.”

“What colored trimming did you get?”

“Same as old.”

“Don’t they keep anything but magenta?”

“Yes, blue.”

“Why didn’t you try blue for a change?”

“Dunno; didn’t want any change, I guess.”

“Do you like magenta against your hair?”

“Never thought o’ my hair; jest thought o’ my hat.”

“Well, you see, Lallie Joy, you can’t change your hair, but you needn’t wear magenta hats nor red sunbonnets.  Your hair is handsome enough, if you’d only brush it right.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Mother Carey's Chickens from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.