St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, May, 1878, No. 7. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 164 pages of information about St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, May, 1878, No. 7..

St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, May, 1878, No. 7. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 164 pages of information about St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, May, 1878, No. 7..

They got home about eleven o’clock, and when they reached the house were dismayed to find two furniture wagons, in front of the gate, already partly filled!  Mrs. Peterkin was walking in and out of the open door, a large book in one hand, and a duster in the other, and she came to meet them in an agony of anxiety.  What should they do?  The furniture carts had appeared soon after the rest had left for Boston, and the men had insisted upon beginning to move the things.  In vain had she shown Elizabeth Eliza’s programme, in vain had she insisted they must take only the parlor furniture.  They had declared they must put the heavy pieces in the bottom of the cart, and the lighter furniture on top.  So she had seen them go into every room in the house, and select one piece of furniture after the other, without even looking at Elizabeth Eliza’s programme; she doubted if they could have read it, if they had looked at it.

Mr. Peterkin had ordered the carters to come, but he had no idea they would come so early, and supposed it would take them a long time to fill the carts.

But they had taken the dining-room sideboard first,—­a heavy piece of furniture,—­and all its contents were now on the dining-room tables.  Then, indeed, they selected the parlor book-case, but had set every book on the floor.  The men had told Mrs. Peterkin they would put the books in the bottom of the cart, very much in the order they were taken from the shelves.  But by this time Mrs. Peterkin was considering the carters as natural enemies, and dared not trust them; besides, the books ought all to be dusted.  So she was now holding one of the volumes of Agamemnon’s Encyclopedia, with difficulty in one hand, while she was dusting it with the other.  Elizabeth Eliza was in dismay.  At this moment, four men were bringing down a large chest of drawers from her father’s room and they called to her to stand out of the way.  The parlors were a scene of confusion.  In dusting the books, Mrs. Peterkin neglected to restore them to the careful rows in which they were left by the men, and they lay in hopeless masses in different parts of the room.  Elizabeth Eliza sunk in despair upon the end of a sofa.

“It would have been better to buy the red and blue carpet,” said Solomon John.

“Is not the carpet bought?” exclaimed Mrs. Peterkin.  And then they were obliged to confess they had been unable to decide upon one, and had come back to consult Mrs. Peterkin.

“What shall we do?” asked Mrs. Peterkin.

Elizabeth Eliza rose from the sofa and went to the door, saying, “I shall be back in a moment.”

Agamemnon slowly passed round the room, collecting the scattered volumes of his Encyclopedia.  Mr. Peterkin offered a helping hand to a man lifting a wardrobe.

Elizabeth Eliza soon returned.  “I did not like to go and ask her.  But I felt that I must in such an emergency.  I explained to her the whole matter and she thinks we should take the carpet at Makillan’s.”

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St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, May, 1878, No. 7. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.