The Morgesons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 381 pages of information about The Morgesons.

The Morgesons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 381 pages of information about The Morgesons.

After drinking a good many cups of tea, and praising it, their asceticism gave way to its social effect, and they began to gossip, ridiculing their neighbors, and occasionally launching innuendoes against their absent lords.  It is well known that when women meet together they do not discuss their rights, but take them, in revealing the little weaknesses and peculiarities of their husbands.  The worst wife-driver would be confounded at the air of easy superiority assumed on these occasions by the meekest and most unsuspicious of her sex.  Insinuations of So and So’s not being any better than she should be passed from mouth to mouth, with a glance at me; and I heard the proverb of “Little pitchers,” when mother rose suddenly from the table, and led the way to the parlor.

“Where is Veronica?” asked Temperance, who was piling the debris of the feast.  “She has been in mischief, I’ll warrant; find her, Cassandra.”

She was upstairs putting away her butterfly, in the leaves of her little Bible.  She came down with me, and Temperance coaxed her to eat her supper, by vowing that she should be sick abed, unless she liked her fritters and waffles.  I thought of my mice, while making a desultory meal standing, and went to look at them; they were gone.  Wondering if Temperance had thrown the creatures away, I remembered that I had been foolish enough to tell Veronica, and rushed back to her.  When she saw me, she raised a saucer to her face, pretending to drink from it.

“Verry, where are the mice?”

“Are they gone?”

“Tell me.”

“What will you do if I don’t?”

“I know,” and I flew upstairs, tore the poor butterfly from between the leaves of the Bible, crushed it in my hand, and brought it down to her.  She did not cry when she saw it, but choked a little, and turned away her head.

It was now dark, and hearing a bustle in the entry I looked out, and saw several staid men slowly rubbing their feet on the door-mat; the husbands had come to escort their wives home, and by nine o’clock they all went.  Veronica and I stayed by the door after they had gone.

“Look at Mrs. Dexter,” she said; “I put the mice in her workbag.”

I burst into a laugh, which she joined in presently.

“I am sorry about the butterfly, Verry.”  And I attempted to take her hand, but she pushed me away, and marched off whistling.

A few days after this, sitting near the window at twilight, intent upon a picture in a book of travels, of a Hindoo swinging from a high pole with hooks in his flesh, and trying to imagine how much it hurt him, my attention was arrested by a mention of my name in a conversation held between mother and Mr. Park, one of the neighbors.  He occasionally spent an evening at our house, passing it in polemical discussion, revising the prayers and exhortations which he made at conference meetings.  The good man was a little vain of having the formulas of his creed at his tongue’s

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The Morgesons from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.