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The Five Little Peppers and How They Grew
By Margaret Sidney
Chapter Seven:
The Cloud over the Little Brown House
"Endure hardness, as a good soldier of
Jesus Christ."
~ 2 Timothy 2:3 ~
hen Phronsie, with many crows of delight and
much chattering, had gotten fairly started the following morning on her much - anticipated
drive with the doctor, the whole family excepting Polly drawn up around the door
to see them off, Mrs. Pepper resolved to snatch the time and run down for an hour
or two to one of her customers who had long been waiting for a little "tailoring"
to be done for her boys.
"Now, Joel," she said, putting on her bonnet before the cracked looking
glass, "you stay along of Polly. Ben must go up to bed, the doctor said, and
Davie's going to the store for some molasses, so you and Polly must keep house."
"Yes'm," said Joel. "May I have somethin' to eat, ma?"
"Yes," said Mrs. Pepper. "But don't you eat the new bread. You may
have as much as you want of the old."
"Isn't there any molasses, mammy?" asked Joel as she bade Polly good-bye
and gave her numberless charges "to be careful of your eyes" and "not
to let a crack of light in through the curtain," as the old green paper shade
was called.
"No. If you're very hungry, you can eat bread," said Mrs. Pepper sensibly.
"Joel," said Polly after the mother had gone, "I do wish you could
read to me."
"Well, I can't," said Joel, glad he didn't know how. "I thought the
minister was comin'."
"Well, he was," said Polly, "but mammy said he had to go out of town
to a consequence."
"A what!" asked Joel, very much impressed.
"A con - " repeated Polly. "Well, it began with a con - and I am sure
- yes, very sure it was consequence."
"That must be splendid," said Joel, coming up to her chair and slowly drawing
a string he held in his hand back and forth, "to go to consequences, and everything!
When I'm a man, Polly Pepper, I'm going to be a minister, and have a nice time, and
go - just everywhere!"
"Oh, Joel!" exclaimed Polly, quite shocked. "You couldn't be one;
you aren't good enough."
"I don't care," said Joel, not at all dashed by her plainness. "I'll
be good, then - when I'm a big man. Don't you suppose, Polly," as a new idea
struck him, "that Mr. Henderson ever is naughty?"
"No," said Polly very decidedly. "Never, never, never!"
"Then I don't want to be one," said Joel, veering round with a sigh of
relief, "And besides, I'd rather have a pair of horses like Mr. Slocum's, and
then I could go everywheres, I guess!"
"And sell tin?" asked Polly. "Just like Mr. Slocum?"
'Yes,' said Joel. "This is the way I'd go - gee - whop! Gee - whoa!" And
Joel pranced with his imaginary steeds all around the room, making about as much
noise as any other four boys, as he brought
up occasionally against the four-poster or the high old bureau.
"Well!" said a voice close up by Polly's chair that made her skip with
apprehension, it was so like Miss Jerusha Henderson's. Joel was whooping away behind
the bedstead to his horses that had become seriously entangled, so he didn't hear
anything. But when Polly said bashfully, "I can't see anything, ma'am,"
he came up red and shining to the surface and stared with all his might.
"I came to see you, little girl," said Miss Jerusha severely, seating herself
stiffly by Polly's side.
"Thank you, ma'am," said Polly faintly.
"Who's this boy?" asked the lady, turning around squarely on Joel and eyeing
him from head to foot.
"He's my brother Joel," said Polly.
Joel still stared.
"Which brother?" pursued Miss Jerusha, like a census taker.
"He is next to me," said Polly, wishing her mother was home. "He's
nine, Joel is."
"He's big enough to do something to help his mother," said Miss Jerusha,
looking him through and through. "Don't you think you might do something, when
the others are sick and your poor mother is working so hard?" she continued
in a cold voice.
"I do do something," blurted out Joel sturdily. "Lots and lots!"
"You shouldn't say 'lots,'" reproved Miss Jerusha with a sharp look over
her spectacles. "'Tisn't proper for boys to talk so. What do you do all day
long?" she asked, turning back to Polly after a withering glance at Joel, who
still stared.
"I can't do anything, ma'am," replied Polly sadly. "I can't see to
do anything."
"Well, you might knit, I should think," said her visitor. "It's dreadful
for a girl as big as you are to sit all day idle. I had sore eyes once when I was
a little girl - how old are you?" she asked abruptly.
"Eleven last month," said Polly.
"Well, I wasn't only nine when I knit a stocking; and I had sore eyes, too;
you see I was a very little girl, and - "
"Was you ever little?" interrupted Joel in extreme incredulity, drawing
near and looking over the big square figure.
"Hey?" said Miss Jerusha, so Joel repeated his question before Polly could
stop him.
"Of course," answered Miss Jerusha, and then she added tartly, "Little
boys shouldn't speak unless they're spoken to. Now," and she turned back to
Polly again, "didn't you ever knit a stocking?"
"No, ma"m," said Polly, "not a whole one."
"Dear me!" exclaimed Miss Jerusha. "Did I ever!" And she raised
her black mitts in intense disdain. "A big girl like you never to knit a stocking!
To think your mother should bring you up so! And - "
"She didn't bring us up," screamed Joel in indignation, facing her with
blazing eyes.
"Joel," said Polly, "be still."
"And you're very impertinent too," said Miss Jerusha. "A good child
never is impertinent."
Polly sat quite still, and Miss Jerusha continued. "Now, I hope you will learn
to be industrious; and when I come again, I will see what you have done."
"You aren't ever coming again," said Joel defiantly. "No, never!"
"Joel!" implored Polly, and in her distress she pulled up her bandage as
she looked at him. "You know mammy'll be so sorry at you! Oh, ma'am, and"
- she turned to Miss Jerusha, who was now thoroughly aroused to the duty she saw
before her of doing these children good - "I don't know what is the reason,
ma'am; Joel never talks so. He's real good, and - "
"It only shows," said the lady, seeing her way quite clear for a little
exhortation, "that you've all had your own way from infancy, and that you don't
do what you might to make your mother's life a happy one."
"Oh, ma'am," cried Polly, and she burst into a flood of tears. "Please,
please don't say that!"
"And I say," screamed Joel, stamping his small foot, "if you make
Polly cry, you'll kill her! Don't, Polly, don't!" And the boy put both arms
around her neck and soothed and comforted her in every way he could think of. And
Miss Jerusha, seeing no way to make herself heard, disappeared feeling pity for children
who could turn away from good advice.
But still Polly cried on; all the pent - up feelings that had been so long controlled
had free vent now. She really couldn't stop! Joel, frightened to death, at last said,
"I'm going to wake up Ben. "
That brought Polly to, and she sobbed out, "Oh, no, Jo - ey, I'll stop. "
"I will," said Joel, seeing his advantage. "I'm going, Polly,"
and he started to the foot of the stairs.
"No, I'm done now, Joe," said Polly, wiping her eyes and choking back her
thoughts. "Oh, Joe! I must`scream! My eyes ache so!" and poor Polly fairly
writhed all over the chair.
"What'll I do!" said Joel, at his wit's end, running back. "Do you
want some water?"
"Oh, no," gasped Polly. "Doctor wouldn't let me. Oh! I wish mammy'd
come!"
"I'll go and look for her," suggested Joel, feeling as if he must do something,
and he'd rather be out at the gate than to see Polly suffer.
"That won't bring her," said Polly, trying to keep still. "I'll try
to wait."
"Here she is now!" cried Joel, peeping out of the window. "Oh! goody!"
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