A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches.

A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches.

They were all old women; but Betsey Lane, who was sixty-nine, and looked much older, was the youngest.  Peggy Bond was far on in the seventies, and Mrs. Dow was at least ten years older.  She made a great secret of her years; and as she sometimes spoke of events prior to the Revolution with the assertion of having been an eye-witness, she naturally wore an air of vast antiquity.  Her tales were an inexpressible delight to Betsey Lane, who felt younger by twenty years because her friend and comrade was so unconscious of chronological limitations.

The bushel basket of cranberry beans was within easy reach, and each of the pickers had filled her lap from it again and again.  The shed chamber was not an unpleasant place in which to sit at work, with its traces of seed corn hanging from the brown cross-beams, its spare churns, and dusty loom, and rickety wool-wheels, and a few bits of old furniture.  In one far corner was a wide board of dismal use and suggestion, and close beside it an old cradle.  There was a battered chest of drawers where the keeper of the poor-house kept his garden-seeds, with the withered remains of three seed cucumbers ornamenting the top.  Nothing beautiful could be discovered, nothing interesting, but there was something usable and homely about the place.  It was the favorite and untroubled bower of the bean-pickers, to which they might retreat unmolested from the public apartments of this rustic institution.

Betsey Lane blew away the chaff from her handful of beans.  The spring breeze blew the chaff back again, and sifted it over her face and shoulders.  She rubbed it out of her eyes impatiently, and happened to notice old Peggy holding her own handful high, as if it were an oblation, and turning her queer, up-tilted head this way and that, to look at the beans sharply, as if she were first cousin to a hen.

“There, Miss Bond, ‘tis kind of botherin’ work for you, ain’t it?” Betsey inquired compassionately.

“I feel to enjoy it, anything that I can do my own way so,” responded Peggy.  “I like to do my part.  Ain’t that old Mis’ Fales comin’ up the road?  It sounds like her step.”

The others looked, but they were not far-sighted, and for a moment Peggy had the advantage.  Mrs. Fales was not a favorite.

“I hope she ain’t comin’ here to put up this spring.  I guess she won’t now, it’s gettin’ so late,” said Betsey Lane.  “She likes to go rovin’ soon as the roads is settled.”

“‘Tis Mis’ Fales!” said Peggy Bond, listening with solemn anxiety.  “There, do let’s pray her by!”

“I guess she’s headin’ for her cousin’s folks up Beech Hill way,” said Betsey presently.  “If she’d left her daughter’s this mornin’, she’d have got just about as far as this.  I kind o’ wish she had stepped in just to pass the time o’ day, long’s she wa’n’t going to make no stop.”

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A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.