To
Mr. Daddy-Long-Legs Smith
215
Fergussen hall
24th September
Dear Kind-Trustee-Who-Sends-Orphans-to-College,
Here I am! I travelled yesterday
for four hours in a train. It’s a funny
sensation, isn’t it? I never rode in one
before.
College is the biggest, most bewildering
place-I get lost whenever I leave my room.
I will write you a description later when I’m
feeling less muddled; also I will tell you about my
lessons. Classes don’t begin until Monday
morning, and this is Saturday night. But I wanted
to write a letter first just to get acquainted.
It seems queer to be writing letters
to somebody you don’t know. It seems queer
for me to be writing letters at all-I’ve
never written more than three or four in my life,
so please overlook it if these are not a model kind.
Before leaving yesterday morning,
Mrs. Lippett and I had a very serious talk.
She told me how to behave all the rest of my life,
and especially how to behave towards the kind gentleman
who is doing so much for me. I must take care
to be Very Respectful.
But how can one be very respectful
to a person who wishes to be called John Smith?
Why couldn’t you have picked out a name with
a little personality? I might as well write
letters to Dear Hitching-Post or Dear Clothes-Prop.
I have been thinking about you a great
deal this summer; having somebody take an interest
in me after all these years makes me feel as though
I had found a sort of family. It seems as though
I belonged to somebody now, and it’s a very
comfortable sensation. I must say, however,
that when I think about you, my imagination has very
little to work upon. There are just three things
that I know:
I. You are tall.
II. You are rich.
III. You hate girls.
I suppose I might call you Dear Mr.
Girl-Hater. Only that’s rather insulting
to me. Or Dear Mr. Rich-Man, but that’s
insulting to you, as though money were the only important
thing about you. Besides, being rich is such
a very external quality. Maybe you won’t
stay rich all your life; lots of very clever men get
smashed up in Wall Street. But at least you
will stay tall all your life! So I’ve decided
to call you Dear Daddy-Long-Legs. I hope you
won’t mind. It’s just a private pet
name we won’t tell Mrs. Lippett.
The ten o’clock bell is going
to ring in two minutes. Our day is divided into
sections by bells. We eat and sleep and study
by bells. It’s very enlivening; I feel
like a fire horse all of the time. There it
goes! Lights out. Good night.
Observe with what precision I obey
rules-due to my training in the John Grier
Home.
Yours most respectfully,
Jerusha Abbott
To Mr. Daddy-Long-Legs Smith
1st
October
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I love college and I love you for
sending me-I’m very, very happy, and
so excited every moment of the time that I can scarcely
sleep. You can’t imagine how different
it is from the John Grier Home. I never dreamed
there was such a place in the world. I’m
feeling sorry for everybody who isn’t a girl
and who can’t come here; I am sure the college
you attended when you were a boy couldn’t have
been so nice.
My room is up in a tower that used
to be the contagious ward before they built the new
infirmary. There are three other girls on the
same floor of the tower-a Senior who wears
spectacles and is always asking us please to be a
little more quiet, and two Freshmen named Sallie McBride
and Julia Rutledge Pendleton. Sallie has red
hair and a turn-up nose and is quite friendly; Julia
comes from one of the first families in New York and
hasn’t noticed me yet. They room together
and the Senior and I have singles. Usually Freshmen
can’t get singles; they are very scarce, but
I got one without even asking. I suppose the
registrar didn’t think it would be right to ask
a properly brought-up girl to room with a foundling.
You see there are advantages!
My room is on the north-west corner
with two windows and a view. After you’ve
lived in a ward for eighteen years with twenty room-mates,
it is restful to be alone. This is the first
chance I’ve ever had to get acquainted with
Jerusha Abbott. I think I’m going to like
her.
Do you think you are?
Tuesday
They are organizing the Freshman basket-ball
team and there’s just a chance that I shall
get in it. I’m little of course, but terribly
quick and wiry and tough. While the others are
hopping about in the air, I can dodge under their
feet and grab the ball. It’s loads of fun
practising-out in the athletic field in
the afternoon with the trees all red and yellow and
the air full of the smell of burning leaves, and everybody
laughing and shouting. These are the happiest
girls I ever saw-and I am the happiest
of all!
I meant to write a long letter and
tell you all the things I’m learning (Mrs. Lippett
said you wanted to know), but 7th hour has just rung,
and in ten minutes I’m due at the athletic field
in gymnasium clothes. Don’t you hope I’ll
get in the team?
Yours
always,
Jerusha
Abbott
PS. (9 o’clock.)
Sallie McBride just poked her head
in at my door. This is what she said:
‘I’m so homesick that
I simply can’t stand it. Do you feel that
way?’
I smiled a little and said no; I thought
I could pull through. At least homesickness
is one disease that I’ve escaped! I never
heard of anybody being asylum-sick, did you?
10th October
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Did you ever hear of Michael Angelo?
He was a famous artist who lived in
Italy in the Middle Ages. Everybody in English
Literature seemed to know about him, and the whole
class laughed because I thought he was an archangel.
He sounds like an archangel, doesn’t he?
The trouble with college is that you are expected
to know such a lot of things you’ve never learned.
It’s very embarrassing at times. But
now, when the girls talk about things that I never
heard of, I just keep still and look them up in the
encyclopedia.
I made an awful mistake the first
day. Somebody mentioned Maurice Maeterlinck,
and I asked if she was a Freshman. That joke
has gone all over college. But anyway, I’m
just as bright in class as any of the others-and
brighter than some of them!
Do you care to know how I’ve
furnished my room? It’s a symphony in
brown and yellow. The wall was tinted buff, and
I’ve bought yellow denim curtains and cushions
and a mahogany desk (second hand for three dollars)
and a rattan chair and a brown rug with an ink spot
in the middle. I stand the chair over the spot.
The windows are up high; you can’t
look out from an ordinary seat. But I unscrewed
the looking-glass from the back of the bureau, upholstered
the top and moved it up against the window. It’s
just the right height for a window seat. You
pull out the drawers like steps and walk up.
Very comfortable!
Sallie McBride helped me choose the
things at the Senior auction. She has lived
in a house all her life and knows about furnishing.
You can’t imagine what fun it is to shop and
pay with a real five-dollar bill and get some change-when
you’ve never had more than a few cents in your
life. I assure you, Daddy dear, I do appreciate
that allowance.
Sallie is the most entertaining person
in the world-and Julia Rutledge Pendleton
the least so. It’s queer what a mixture
the registrar can make in the matter of room-mates.
Sallie thinks everything is funny-even
flunking-and Julia is bored at everything.
She never makes the slightest effort to be amiable.
She believes that if you are a Pendleton, that fact
alone admits you to heaven without any further examination.
Julia and I were born to be enemies.
And now I suppose you’ve been
waiting very impatiently to hear what I am learning?
I. Latin: Second Punic war.
Hannibal and his forces pitched camp at Lake Trasimenus
last night. They prepared an ambuscade for the
Romans, and a battle took place at the fourth watch
this morning. Romans in retreat.
II. French: 24 pages of
the Three Musketeers and third conjugation, irregular
verbs.
III. Geometry: Finished cylinders; now
doing cones.
IV. English: Studying
exposition. My style improves daily in clearness
and brevity.
V. Physiology: Reached the digestive
system. Bile and the pancreas next time.
Yours, on the way to being educated,
Jerusha
Abbott
PS. I hope you never touch
alcohol, Daddy? It does dreadful things to your
liver.
Wednesday
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I’ve changed my name.
I’m still ‘Jerusha’
in the catalogue, but I’m ‘Judy’
everywhere else. It’s really too bad, isn’t
it, to have to give yourself the only pet name you
ever had? I didn’t quite make up the Judy
though. That’s what Freddy Perkins used
to call me before he could talk plainly.
I wish Mrs. Lippett would use a little
more ingenuity about choosing babies’ names.
She gets the last names out of the telephone book-you’ll
find Abbott on the first page-and she picks
the Christian names up anywhere; she got Jerusha from
a tombstone. I’ve always hated it; but
I rather like Judy. It’s such a silly name.
It belongs to the kind of girl I’m not-a
sweet little blue-eyed thing, petted and spoiled by
all the family, who romps her way through life without
any cares. Wouldn’t it be nice to be like
that? Whatever faults I may have, no one can
ever accuse me of having been spoiled by my family!
But it’s great fun to pretend I’ve been.
In the future please always address me as Judy.
Do you want to know something?
I have three pairs of kid gloves. I’ve
had kid mittens before from the Christmas tree, but
never real kid gloves with five fingers. I take
them out and try them on every little while.
It’s all I can do not to wear them to classes.
(Dinner bell. Goodbye.)
Friday
What do you think, Daddy? The
English instructor said that my last paper shows an
unusual amount of originality. She did, truly.
Those were her words. It doesn’t seem
possible, does it, considering the eighteen years
of training that I’ve had? The aim of the
John Grier Home (as you doubtless know and heartily
approve of) is to turn the ninety-seven orphans into
ninety-seven twins.
The unusual artistic ability which
I exhibit was developed at an early age through drawing
chalk pictures of Mrs. Lippett on the woodshed door.
I hope that I don’t hurt your
feelings when I criticize the home of my youth?
But you have the upper hand, you know, for if I become
too impertinent, you can always stop payment of your
cheques. That isn’t a very polite thing
to say-but you can’t expect me to
have any manners; a foundling asylum isn’t a
young ladies’ finishing school.
You know, Daddy, it isn’t the
work that is going to be hard in college. It’s
the play. Half the time I don’t know what
the girls are talking about; their jokes seem to relate
to a past that every one but me has shared.
I’m a foreigner in the world and I don’t
understand the language. It’s a miserable
feeling. I’ve had it all my life.
At the high school the girls would stand in groups
and just look at me. I was queer and different
and everybody knew it. I could feel ’John
Grier Home’ written on my face. And then
a few charitable ones would make a point of coming
up and saying something polite. I hated
every one of them-the
charitable ones most of all.
Nobody here knows that I was brought
up in an asylum. I told Sallie McBride that
my mother and father were dead, and that a kind old
gentleman was sending me to college which is entirely
true so far as it goes. I don’t want you
to think I am a coward, but I do want to be like the
other girls, and that Dreadful Home looming over my
childhood is the one great big difference. If
I can turn my back on that and shut out the remembrance,
I think, I might be just as desirable as any other
girl. I don’t believe there’s any
real, underneath difference, do you?
Anyway, Sallie McBride likes me!
Yours ever,
Judy Abbott
(Nee Jerusha.)
Saturday
morning
I’ve just been reading this
letter over and it sounds pretty un-cheerful.
But can’t you guess that I have a special topic
due Monday morning and a review in geometry and a
very sneezy cold?
Sunday
I forgot to post this yesterday, so
I will add an indignant postscript. We had a
bishop this morning, and what do you
think he said?
’The most beneficent promise
made us in the Bible is this, “The poor ye have
always with you.” They were put here in
order to keep us charitable.’
The poor, please observe, being a
sort of useful domestic animal. If I hadn’t
grown into such a perfect lady, I should have gone
up after service and told him what I thought.
25th
October
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I’m in the basket-ball team
and you ought to see the bruise on my left shoulder.
It’s blue and mahogany with little streaks of
orange. Julia Pendleton tried for the team,
but she didn’t get in. Hooray!
You see what a mean disposition I have.
College gets nicer and nicer.
I like the girls and the teachers and the classes
and the campus and the things to eat. We have
ice-cream twice a week and we never have corn-meal
mush.
You only wanted to hear from me once
a month, didn’t you? And I’ve been
peppering you with letters every few days! But
I’ve been so excited about all these new adventures
that I must talk to somebody; and you’re
the only one I know. Please excuse my exuberance;
I’ll settle pretty soon. If my letters
bore you, you can always toss them into the wastebasket.
I promise not to write another till the middle of
November.
Yours most loquaciously,
Judy Abbott
15th
November
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Listen to what I’ve learned to-day.
The area of the convex surface of
the frustum of a regular pyramid is half the product
of the sum of the perimeters of its bases by the altitude
of either of its trapezoids.
It doesn’t sound true, but it is-I
can prove it!
You’ve never heard about my
clothes, have you, Daddy? Six dresses, all new
and beautiful and bought for me-not handed
down from somebody bigger. Perhaps you don’t
realize what a climax that marks in the career of
an orphan? You gave them to me, and I am very,
very, very much obliged. It’s a fine
thing to be educated-but nothing compared
to the dizzying experience of owning six new dresses.
Miss Pritchard, who is on the visiting committee,
picked them out-not Mrs. Lippett, thank
goodness. I have an evening dress, pink mull
over silk (I’m perfectly beautiful in that),
and a blue church dress, and a dinner dress of red
veiling with Oriental trimming (makes me look like
a Gipsy), and another of rose-coloured challis, and
a grey street suit, and an every-day dress for classes.
That wouldn’t be an awfully big wardrobe for
Julia Rutledge Pendleton, perhaps, but for Jerusha
Abbott-Oh, my!
I suppose you’re thinking now
what a frivolous, shallow little beast she is, and
what a waste of money to educate a girl?
But, Daddy, if you’d been dressed
in checked ginghams all your life, you’d appreciate
how I feel. And when I started to the high school,
I entered upon another period even worse than the
checked ginghams.
The poor box.
You can’t know how I dreaded
appearing in school in those miserable poor-box dresses.
I was perfectly sure to be put down in class next
to the girl who first owned my dress, and she would
whisper and giggle and point it out to the others.
The bitterness of wearing your enemies’ cast-off
clothes eats into your soul. If I wore silk stockings
for the rest of my life, I don’t believe I could
obliterate the scar.
Latestwar bulletin!
News from the
Scene of Action.
At the fourth watch on Thursday the
13th of November, Hannibal routed the advance guard
of the Romans and led the Carthaginian forces over
the mountains into the plains of Casilinum. A
cohort of light armed Numidians engaged the infantry
of Quintus Fabius Maximus. Two battles and light
skirmishing. Romans repulsed with heavy losses.
I have the
honour of being,
Your special correspondent
from the front,
J.
Abbott
PS. I know I’m not
to expect any letters in return, and I’ve been
warned not to bother you with questions, but tell me,
Daddy, just this once-are you awfully old
or just a little old? And are you perfectly
bald or just a little bald? It is very difficult
thinking about you in the abstract like a theorem
in geometry.
Given a tall rich man who hates girls,
but is very generous to one quite impertinent girl,
what does he look like?
R.S.V.P.
19th
December
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
You never answered my question and it was very important.
Areyou bald?
I have it planned exactly what you
look like-very satisfactorily-until
I reach the top of your head, and then I am stuck.
I can’t decide whether you have white hair or
black hair or sort of sprinkly grey hair or maybe
none at all.
Here is your portrait:
But the problem is, shall I add some hair?
Would you like to know what colour
your eyes are? They’re grey, and your
eyebrows stick out like a porch roof (beetling, they’re
called in novels), and your mouth is a straight line
with a tendency to turn down at the corners.
Oh, you see, I know! You’re a snappy old
thing with a temper.
(Chapel bell.)
9.45
p.m.
I have a new unbreakable rule:
never, never to study at night no matter how many
written reviews are coming in the morning. Instead,
I read just plain books-I have to, you
know, because there are eighteen blank years behind
me. You wouldn’t believe, Daddy, what an
abyss of ignorance my mind is; I am just realizing
the depths myself. The things that most girls
with a properly assorted family and a home and friends
and a library know by absorption, I have never heard
of. For example:
I never read Mother Goose or David
Copperfield or Ivanhoe or Cinderella or Blue Beard
or Robinson Crusoe or Jane Eyre or Alice in Wonderland
or a word of Rudyard Kipling. I didn’t
know that Henry the Eighth was married more than once
or that Shelley was a poet. I didn’t know
that people used to be monkeys and that the Garden
of Eden was a beautiful myth. I didn’t
know that R. L. S. stood for Robert Louis Stevenson
or that George Eliot was a lady. I had never
seen a picture of the ’Mona Lisa’ and
(it’s true but you won’t believe it) I
had never heard of Sherlock Holmes.
Now, I know all of these things and
a lot of others besides, but you can see how much
I need to catch up. And oh, but it’s fun!
I look forward all day to evening, and then I put
an ‘engaged’ on the door and get into
my nice red bath robe and furry slippers and pile all
the cushions behind me on the couch, and light the
brass student lamp at my elbow, and read and read
and read one book isn’t enough. I have
four going at once. Just now, they’re
Tennyson’s poems and Vanity Fair and Kipling’s
Plain Tales and-don’t laugh-Little
Women. I find that I am the only girl in college
who wasn’t brought up on Little Women.
I haven’t told anybody though (that would
stamp me as queer). I just quietly went and bought
it with $1.12 of my last month’s allowance; and
the next time somebody mentions pickled limes, I’ll
know what she is talking about!
(Ten o’clock bell. This is a very interrupted
letter.)
Saturday
Sir,
I have the honour to report fresh
explorations in the field of geometry. On Friday
last we abandoned our former works in parallelopipeds
and proceeded to truncated prisms. We are finding
the road rough and very uphill.
Sunday
The Christmas holidays begin next
week and the trunks are up. The corridors are
so filled up that you can hardly get through, and
everybody is so bubbling over with excitement that
studying is getting left out. I’m going
to have a beautiful time in vacation; there’s
another Freshman who lives in Texas staying behind,
and we are planning to take long walks and if there’s
any ice-learn to skate. Then there
is still the whole library to be read-and
three empty weeks to do it in!
Goodbye, Daddy, I hope that you are
feeling as happy as am.
Yours
ever,
Judy
PS. Don’t forget
to answer my question. If you don’t want
the trouble of writing, have your secretary telegraph.
He can just say:
Mr. Smith
is quite bald,
or
Mr. Smith
is not bald,
or
Mr. Smith
has white hair.
And you can deduct the twenty-five
cents out of my allowance.
Goodbye till January-and a merry Christmas!
Towards
the end of
the Christmas
vacation.
Exact date
unknown
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Is it snowing where you are?
All the world that I see from my tower is draped
in white and the flakes are coming down as big as pop-corns.
It’s late afternoon-the sun is just
setting (a cold yellow colour) behind some colder
violet hills, and I am up in my window seat using
the last light to write to you.
Your five gold pieces were a surprise!
I’m not used to receiving Christmas presents.
You have already given me such lots of things-everything
I have, you know-that I don’t quite
feel that I deserve extras. But I like them
just the same. Do you want to know what I bought
with my money?
I. A silver watch in a leather case
to wear on my wrist and get me to recitations in time.
II. Matthew Arnold’s poems.
III. A hot water bottle.
IV. A steamer rug. (My tower is cold.)
V. Five hundred sheets of yellow manuscript
paper. (I’m going to commence being an author
pretty soon.)
VI. A dictionary of synonyms. (To enlarge the
author’s vocabulary.)
VII. (I don’t much like to
confess this last item, but I will.) A pair of silk
stockings.
And now, Daddy, never say I don’t tell all!
It was a very low motive, if you must
know it, that prompted the silk stockings. Julia
Pendleton comes into my room to do geometry, and she
sits cross-legged on the couch and wears silk stockings
every night. But just wait-as soon
as she gets back from vacation I shall go in and sit
on her couch in my silk stockings. You see, Daddy,
the miserable creature that I am but at least I’m
honest; and you knew already, from my asylum record,
that I wasn’t perfect, didn’t you?
To recapitulate (that’s the
way the English instructor begins every other sentence),
I am very much obliged for my seven presents.
I’m pretending to myself that they came in
a box from my family in California. The watch
is from father, the rug from mother, the hot water
bottle from grandmother who is always worrying for
fear I shall catch cold in this climate-and
the yellow paper from my little brother Harry.
My sister Isabel gave me the silk stockings, and Aunt
Susan the Matthew Arnold poems; Uncle Harry (little
Harry is named after him) gave me the dictionary.
He wanted to send chocolates, but I insisted on synonyms.
You don’t object, do you, to
playing the part of a composite family?
And now, shall I tell you about my
vacation, or are you only interested in my education
as such? I hope you appreciate the delicate shade
of meaning in ‘as such’. It is the
latest addition to my vocabulary.
The girl from Texas is named Leonora
Fenton. (Almost as funny as Jerusha, isn’t
it?) I like her, but not so much as Sallie McBride;
I shall never like any one so much as Sallie-except
you. I must always like you the best of all,
because you’re my whole family rolled into one.
Leonora and I and two Sophomores have walked ’cross
country every pleasant day and explored the whole
neighbourhood, dressed in short skirts and knit jackets
and caps, and carrying shiny sticks to whack things
with. Once we walked into town-four
miles-and stopped at a restaurant where
the college girls go for dinner. Broiled lobster
(35 cents), and for dessert, buckwheat cakes and maple
syrup (15 cents). Nourishing and cheap.
It was such a lark! Especially
for me, because it was so awfully different from the
asylum-I feel like an escaped convict every
time I leave the campus. Before I thought, I
started to tell the others what an experience I was
having. The cat was almost out of the bag when
I grabbed it by its tail and pulled it back.
It’s awfully hard for me not to tell everything
I know. I’m a very confiding soul by nature;
if I didn’t have you to tell things to, I’d
burst.
We had a molasses candy pull last
Friday evening, given by the house matron of Fergussen
to the left-behinds in the other halls. There
were twenty-two of us altogether, Freshmen and Sophomores
and juniors and Seniors all united in amicable accord.
The kitchen is huge, with copper pots and kettles
hanging in rows on the stone wall-the littlest
casserole among them about the size of a wash boiler.
Four hundred girls live in Fergussen. The chef,
in a white cap and apron, fetched out twenty-two other
white caps and aprons-I can’t imagine
where he got so many-and we all turned
ourselves into cooks.
It was great fun, though I have seen
better candy. When it was finally finished,
and ourselves and the kitchen and the door-knobs all
thoroughly sticky, we organized a procession and still
in our caps and aprons, each carrying a big fork or
spoon or frying pan, we marched through the empty
corridors to the officers’ parlour, where half-a-dozen
professors and instructors were passing a tranquil
evening. We serenaded them with college songs
and offered refreshments. They accepted politely
but dubiously. We left them sucking chunks of
molasses candy, sticky and speechless.
So you see, Daddy, my education progresses!
Don’t you really think that
I ought to be an artist instead of an author?
Vacation will be over in two days
and I shall be glad to see the girls again.
My tower is just a trifle lonely; when nine people
occupy a house that was built for four hundred, they
do rattle around a bit.
Eleven pages-poor Daddy,
you must be tired! I meant this to be just a
short little thank-you note-but when I get
started I seem to have a ready pen.
Goodbye, and thank you for thinking
of me-I should be perfectly happy except
for one little threatening cloud on the horizon.
Examinations come in February.
Yours
with love,
Judy
PS. Maybe it isn’t
proper to send love? If it isn’t, please
excuse. But I must love somebody and there’s
only you and Mrs. Lippett to choose between, so you
see-you’ll have to put up with
it, Daddy dear, because I can’t love her.
On
the Eve
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
You should see the way this college
is studying! We’ve forgotten we ever had
a vacation. Fifty-seven irregular verbs have
I introduced to my brain in the past four days-I’m
only hoping they’ll stay till after examinations.
Some of the girls sell their text-books
when they’re through with them, but I intend
to keep mine. Then after I’ve graduated
I shall have my whole education in a row in the bookcase,
and when I need to use any detail, I can turn to it
without the slightest hesitation. So much easier
and more accurate than trying to keep it in your head.
Julia Pendleton dropped in this evening
to pay a social call, and stayed a solid hour.
She got started on the subject of family, and I couldn’t
switch her off. She wanted to know what my mother’s
maiden name was-did you ever hear such
an impertinent question to ask of a person from a
foundling asylum? I didn’t have the courage
to say I didn’t know, so I just miserably plumped
on the first name I could think of, and that was Montgomery.
Then she wanted to know whether I belonged to the
Massachusetts Montgomerys or the Virginia Montgomerys.
Her mother was a Rutherford.
The family came over in the ark, and were connected
by marriage with Henry the VIII. On her father’s
side they date back further than Adam. On the
topmost branches of her family tree there’s
a superior breed of monkeys with very fine silky hair
and extra long tails.
I meant to write you a nice, cheerful,
entertaining letter tonight, but I’m too sleepy-and
scared. The Freshman’s lot is not a happy
one.
Yours, about to be examined,
Judy Abbott
Sunday
Dearest Daddy-Long-Legs,
I have some awful, awful, awful news
to tell you, but I won’t begin with it; I’ll
try to get you in a good humour first.
Jerusha Abbott has commenced to be
an author. A poem entitled, ’From my Tower’,
appears in the February Monthly-on the first
page, which is a very great honour for a Freshman.
My English instructor stopped me on the way out from
chapel last night, and said it was a charming piece
of work except for the sixth line, which had too many
feet. I will send you a copy in case you care
to read it.
Let me see if I can’t think
of something else pleasant- Oh, yes!
I’m learning to skate, and can glide about
quite respectably all by myself. Also I’ve
learned how to slide down a rope from the roof of the
gymnasium, and I can vault a bar three feet and six
inches high-I hope shortly to pull up to
four feet.
We had a very inspiring sermon this
morning preached by the Bishop of Alabama. His
text was: ‘Judge not that ye be not judged.’
It was about the necessity of overlooking mistakes
in others, and not discouraging people by harsh judgments.
I wish you might have heard it.
This is the sunniest, most blinding
winter afternoon, with icicles dripping from the fir
trees and all the world bending under a weight of
snow-except me, and I’m bending under
a weight of sorrow.
Now for the news-courage, Judy!-you
must tell.
Are you surely in a good humour?
I failed in mathematics and Latin prose. I
am tutoring in them, and will take another examination
next month. I’m sorry if you’re
disappointed, but otherwise I don’t care a bit
because I’ve learned such a lot of things not
mentioned in the catalogue. I’ve read
seventeen novels and bushels of poetry-really
necessary novels like Vanity Fair and Richard Feverel
and Alice in Wonderland. Also Emerson’s
Essays and Lockhart’s Life of Scott and the
first volume of Gibbon’s Roman Empire and half
of Benvenuto Cellini’s Life-wasn’t
he entertaining? He used to saunter out and casually
kill a man before breakfast.
So you see, Daddy, I’m much
more intelligent than if I’d just stuck to Latin.
Will you forgive me this once if I promise never to
fail again?
Yours in
sackcloth,
Judy
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
This is an extra letter in the middle
of the month because I’m rather lonely tonight.
It’s awfully stormy. All the lights are
out on the campus, but I drank black coffee and I
can’t go to sleep.
I had a supper party this evening
consisting of Sallie and Julia and Leonora Fenton-and
sardines and toasted muffins and salad and fudge and
coffee. Julia said she’d had a good time,
but Sallie stayed to help wash the dishes.
I might, very usefully, put some time
on Latin tonight but, there’s no doubt about
it, I’m a very languid Latin scholar. We’ve
finished Livy and De Senectute and are now engaged
with De Amicitia (pronounced Damn Icitia).
Should you mind, just for a little
while, pretending you are my grandmother? Sallie
has one and Julia and Leonora each two, and they were
all comparing them tonight. I can’t think
of anything I’d rather have; it’s such
a respectable relationship. So, if you really
don’t object-When I went into town
yesterday, I saw the sweetest cap of Cluny lace trimmed
with lavender ribbon. I am going to make you
a present of it on your eighty-third birthday.
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
That’s the clock in the chapel
tower striking twelve. I believe I am sleepy
after all.
Good night,
Granny.
I love you dearly.
Judy
The
Ides of March
Dear D.-L.-L.,
I am studying Latin prose composition.
I have been studying it. I shall be studying
it. I shall be about to have been studying it.
My re-examination comes the 7th hour next Tuesday,
and I am going to pass or bust. So you may expect
to hear from me next, whole and happy and free from
conditions, or in fragments.
I will write a respectable letter
when it’s over. Tonight I have a pressing
engagement with the Ablative Absolute.
Yours-in
evident haste
J. A.
26th
March
Mr. D.-L.-L. Smith,
Sir: You never answer any
questions; you never show the slightest interest in
anything I do. You are probably the horridest
one of all those horrid Trustees, and the reason you
are educating me is, not because you care a bit about
me, but from a sense of Duty.
I don’t know a single thing
about you. I don’t even know your name.
It is very uninspiring writing to a Thing. I
haven’t a doubt but that you throw my letters
into the waste-basket without reading them. Hereafter
I shall write only about work.
My re-examinations in Latin and geometry
came last week. I passed them both and am now
free from conditions.
Yours truly,
Jerusha Abbott
2nd
April
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I am a beast.
Please forget about that dreadful
letter I sent you last week-I was feeling
terribly lonely and miserable and sore-throaty the
night I wrote. I didn’t know it, but I
was just sickening for tonsillitis and grippe and
lots of things mixed. I’m in the infirmary
now, and have been here for six days; this is the
first time they would let me sit up and have a pen
and paper. The head nurse is very bossy.
But I’ve been thinking about it all the time
and I shan’t get well until you forgive me.
Here is a picture of the way I look,
with a bandage tied around my head in rabbit’s
ears.
Doesn’t that arouse your sympathy?
I am having sublingual gland swelling. And
I’ve been studying physiology all the year without
ever hearing of sublingual glands. How futile
a thing is education!
I can’t write any more; I get
rather shaky when I sit up too long. Please forgive
me for being impertinent and ungrateful. I was
badly brought up.
Yours with love,
Judy Abbott
Theinfirmary
4th
April
Dearest Daddy-Long-Legs,
Yesterday evening just towards dark,
when I was sitting up in bed looking out at the rain
and feeling awfully bored with life in a great institution,
the nurse appeared with a long white box addressed
to me, and filled with the loveliest pink rosebuds.
And much nicer still, it contained a card with a
very polite message written in a funny little uphill
back hand (but one which shows a great deal of character).
Thank you, Daddy, a thousand times. Your flowers
make the first real, true present I ever received
in my life. If you want to know what a baby I
am I lay down and cried because I was so happy.
Now that I am sure you read my letters,
I’ll make them much more interesting, so they’ll
be worth keeping in a safe with red tape around them-only
please take out that dreadful one and burn it up.
I’d hate to think that you ever read it over.
Thank you for making a very sick,
cross, miserable Freshman cheerful. Probably
you have lots of loving family and friends, and you
don’t know what it feels like to be alone.
But I do.
Goodbye-I’ll promise
never to be horrid again, because now I know you’re
a real person; also I’ll promise never to bother
you with any more questions.
Do you still hate girls?
Yours
for ever,
Judy
8th
hour, Monday
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I hope you aren’t the Trustee
who sat on the toad? It went off-I
was told-with quite a pop, so probably
he was a fatter Trustee.
Do you remember the little dugout
places with gratings over them by the laundry windows
in the John Grier Home? Every spring when the
hoptoad season opened we used to form a collection
of toads and keep them in those window holes; and
occasionally they would spill over into the laundry,
causing a very pleasurable commotion on wash days.
We were severely punished for our activities in this
direction, but in spite of all discouragement the
toads would collect.
And one day-well, I won’t
bore you with particulars-but somehow, one
of the fattest, biggest, JUCIEST toads got into one
of those big leather arm chairs in the Trustees’
room, and that afternoon at the Trustees’ meeting-But
I dare say you were there and recall the rest?
Looking back dispassionately after
a period of time, I will say that punishment was merited,
and-if I remember rightly-adequate.
I don’t know why I am in such
a reminiscent mood except that spring and the reappearance
of toads always awakens the old acquisitive instinct.
The only thing that keeps me from starting a collection
is the fact that no rule exists against it.
After
chapel, Thursday
What do you think is my favourite
book? Just now, I mean; I change every three
days. Wuthering Heights. Emily Bronte was
quite young when she wrote it, and had never been
outside of Haworth churchyard. She had never
known any men in her life; how could she imagine
a man like Heathcliffe?
I couldn’t do it, and I’m
quite young and never outside the John Grier Asylum-I’ve
had every chance in the world. Sometimes a dreadful
fear comes over me that I’m not a genius.
Will you be awfully disappointed, Daddy, if I don’t
turn out to be a great author? In the spring
when everything is so beautiful and green and budding,
I feel like turning my back on lessons, and running
away to play with the weather. There are such
lots of adventures out in the fields! It’s
much more entertaining to live books than to write
them.
Ow ! ! ! ! ! !
That was a shriek which brought Sallie
and Julia and (for a disgusted moment) the Senior
from across the hall. It was caused by a centipede
like this: only worse. Just as I had finished
the last sentence and was thinking what to say next-plump!-it
fell off the ceiling and landed at my side.
I tipped two cups off the tea table in trying to get
away. Sallie whacked it with the back of my hair
brush-which I shall never be able to use
again-and killed the front end, but the
rear fifty feet ran under the bureau and escaped.
This dormitory, owing to its age and
ivy-covered walls, is full of centipedes. They
are dreadful creatures. I’d rather find
a tiger under the bed.
Friday,
9.30 p.m.
Such a lot of troubles! I didn’t
hear the rising bell this morning, then I broke my
shoestring while I was hurrying to dress and dropped
my collar button down my neck. I was late for
breakfast and also for first-hour recitation.
I forgot to take any blotting paper and my fountain
pen leaked. In trigonometry the Professor and
I had a disagreement touching a little matter of logarithms.
On looking it up, I find that she was right.
We had mutton stew and pie-plant for lunch-hate
’em both; they taste like the asylum. The
post brought me nothing but bills (though I must say
that I never do get anything else; my family are not
the kind that write). In English class this
afternoon we had an unexpected written lesson.
This was it:
I
asked no other thing,
No
other was denied.
I
offered Being for it;
The
mighty merchant smiled.
Brazil?
He twirled a button
Without
a glance my way:
But,
madam, is there nothing else
That
we can show today?
That is a poem. I don’t
know who wrote it or what it means. It was simply
printed out on the blackboard when we arrived and we
were ordered to comment upon it. When I read
the first verse I thought I had an idea-The
Mighty Merchant was a divinity who distributes blessings
in return for virtuous deeds-but when I
got to the second verse and found him twirling a button,
it seemed a blasphemous supposition, and I hastily
changed my mind. The rest of the class was in
the same predicament; and there we sat for three-quarters
of an hour with blank paper and equally blank minds.
Getting an education is an awfully wearing process!
But this didn’t end the day. There’s
worse to come.
It rained so we couldn’t play
golf, but had to go to gymnasium instead. The
girl next to me banged my elbow with an Indian club.
I got home to find that the box with my new blue
spring dress had come, and the skirt was so tight
that I couldn’t sit down. Friday is sweeping
day, and the maid had mixed all the papers on my desk.
We had tombstone for dessert (milk and gelatin flavoured
with vanilla). We were kept in chapel twenty
minutes later than usual to listen to a speech about
womanly women. And then-just as I
was settling down with a sigh of well-earned relief
to The Portrait of a Lady, a girl named Ackerly, a
dough-faced, deadly, unintermittently stupid girl,
who sits next to me in Latin because her name begins
with A (I wish Mrs. Lippett had named me Zabriski),
came to ask if Monday’s lesson commenced at paragraph
69 or 70, and stayed one hour. She
has just gone.
Did you ever hear of such a discouraging
series of events? It isn’t the big troubles
in life that require character. Anybody can rise
to a crisis and face a crushing tragedy with courage,
but to meet the petty hazards of the day with a laugh-I
really think that requires spirit.
It’s the kind of character that
I am going to develop. I am going to pretend
that all life is just a game which I must play as skilfully
and fairly as I can. If I lose, I am going to
shrug my shoulders and laugh-also if I
win.
Anyway, I am going to be a sport.
You will never hear me complain again, Daddy dear,
because Julia wears silk stockings and centipedes
drop off the wall.
Yours
ever,
Judy
Answer soon.
27th
May
Daddy-Long-Legs, Esq.
Dear sir: I am in
receipt of a letter from Mrs. Lippett. She hopes
that I am doing well in deportment and studies.
Since I probably have no place to go this summer,
she will let me come back to the asylum and work for
my board until college opens.
I hate the John Grier home.
I’d rather die than go back.
Yours most truthfully,
Jerusha
Abbott
Cher Daddy-Jambes-Longes,
Vous étés un brick!
Je suis très heureuse
about the farm, parceque je n’ai jamais
been on a farm dans ma vie and I’d
hate to retourner chez John Grier, et wash
dishes tout l’ete. There would be danger
of quelque chose affreuse happening,
parceque j’ai perdue ma humilité d’autre
fois et j’ai peur that I would just break
out quelque jour et smash every
cup and saucer dans la maison.
Pardon brièveté et
paper. Je ne peux pas send
des mes nouvelles parceque je
suis dans French class et j’ai peur
que Monsieur lé Professeur is going
to call on me tout de suite.
He did!
Au revoir,
je vous aime
beaucoup.
Judy
30th
May
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Did you ever see this campus? (That
is merely a rhetorical question. Don’t
let it annoy you.) It is a heavenly spot in May.
All the shrubs are in blossom and the trees are the
loveliest young green-even the old pines
look fresh and new. The grass is dotted with
yellow dandelions and hundreds of girls in blue and
white and pink dresses. Everybody is joyous and
carefree, for vacation’s coming, and with that
to look forward to, examinations don’t count.
Isn’t that a happy frame of
mind to be in? And oh, Daddy! I’m
the happiest of all! Because I’m not in
the asylum any more; and I’m not anybody’s
nursemaid or typewriter or bookkeeper (I should have
been, you know, except for you).
I’m sorry now for all my past badnesses.
I’m sorry I was ever impertinent to Mrs. Lippett.
I’m sorry I ever slapped Freddie Perkins.
I’m sorry I ever filled the sugar bowl with
salt.
I’m sorry I ever made faces behind the Trustees’
backs.
I’m going to be good and sweet
and kind to everybody because I’m so happy.
And this summer I’m going to write and write
and write and begin to be a great author. Isn’t
that an exalted stand to take? Oh, I’m
developing a beautiful character! It droops a
bit under cold and frost, but it does grow fast when
the sun shines.
That’s the way with everybody.
I don’t agree with the theory that adversity
and sorrow and disappointment develop moral strength.
The happy people are the ones who are bubbling over
with kindliness. I have no faith in misanthropes.
(Fine word! Just learned it.) You are not a
misanthrope are you, Daddy?
I started to tell you about the campus.
I wish you’d come for a little visit and let
me walk you about and say:
’That is the library.
This is the gas plant, Daddy dear. The Gothic
building on your left is the gymnasium, and the Tudor
Romanesque beside it is the new infirmary.’
Oh, I’m fine at showing people
about. I’ve done it all my life at the
asylum, and I’ve been doing it all day here.
I have honestly.
And a Man, too!
That’s a great experience.
I never talked to a man before (except occasional
Trustees, and they don’t count). Pardon,
Daddy, I don’t mean to hurt your feelings when
I abuse Trustees. I don’t consider that
you really belong among them. You just tumbled
on to the Board by chance. The Trustee, as such,
is fat and pompous and benevolent. He pats one
on the head and wears a gold watch chain.
That looks like a June bug, but is
meant to be a portrait of any Trustee except you.
However-to resume:
I have been walking and talking and
having tea with a man. And with a very superior
man-with Mr. Jervis Pendleton of the House
of Julia; her uncle, in short (in long, perhaps I
ought to say; he’s as tall as you.) Being in
town on business, he decided to run out to the college
and call on his niece. He’s her father’s
youngest brother, but she doesn’t know him very
intimately. It seems he glanced at her when she
was a baby, decided he didn’t like her, and
has never noticed her since.
Anyway, there he was, sitting in the
reception room very proper with his hat and stick
and gloves beside him; and Julia and Sallie with seventh-hour
recitations that they couldn’t cut. So
Julia dashed into my room and begged me to walk him
about the campus and then deliver him to her when
the seventh hour was over. I said I would, obligingly
but unenthusiastically, because I don’t care
much for Pendletons.
But he turned out to be a sweet lamb.
He’s a real human being-not a Pendleton
at all. We had a beautiful time; I’ve longed
for an uncle ever since. Do you mind pretending
you’re my uncle? I believe they’re
superior to grandmothers.
Mr. Pendleton reminded me a little
of you, Daddy, as you were twenty years ago.
You see I know you intimately, even if we haven’t
ever met!
He’s tall and thinnish with
a dark face all over lines, and the funniest underneath
smile that never quite comes through but just wrinkles
up the corners of his mouth. And he has a way
of making you feel right off as though you’d
known him a long time. He’s very companionable.
We walked all over the campus from
the quadrangle to the athletic grounds; then he said
he felt weak and must have some tea. He proposed
that we go to College Inn-it’s just
off the campus by the pine walk. I said we ought
to go back for Julia and Sallie, but he said he didn’t
like to have his nieces drink too much tea; it made
them nervous. So we just ran away and had tea
and muffins and marmalade and ice-cream and cake at
a nice little table out on the balcony. The inn
was quite conveniently empty, this being the end of
the month and allowances low.
We had the jolliest time! But
he had to run for his train the minute he got back
and he barely saw Julia at all. She was furious
with me for taking him off; it seems he’s an
unusually rich and desirable uncle. It relieved
my mind to find he was rich, for the tea and things
cost sixty cents apiece.
This morning (it’s Monday now)
three boxes of chocolates came by express for Julia
and Sallie and me. What do you think of that?
To be getting candy from a man!
I begin to feel like a girl instead of a foundling.
I wish you’d come and have tea some day and
let me see if I like you.
But wouldn’t it be dreadful if I didn’t?
However, I know I should.
Bien! I make you my compliments.
‘Jamais
je ne t’oublierai.’
Judy
PS. I looked in the glass
this morning and found a perfectly new dimple that
I’d never seen before. It’s very
curious. Where do you suppose it came from?
9th
June
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Happy day! I’ve just finished my last
examination Physiology. And now:
Three months on a farm!
I don’t know what kind of a
thing a farm is. I’ve never been on one
in my life. I’ve never even looked at
one (except from the car window), but I know I’m
going to love it, and I’m going to love being
free.
I am not used even yet to being outside
the John Grier Home. Whenever I think of it
excited little thrills chase up and down my back.
I feel as though I must run faster and faster and
keep looking over my shoulder to make sure that Mrs.
Lippett isn’t after me with her arm stretched
out to grab me back.
I don’t have to mind any one this summer, do
I?
Your nominal authority doesn’t
annoy me in the least; you are too far away to do
any harm. Mrs. Lippett is dead for ever, so far
as I am concerned, and the Semples aren’t expected
to overlook my moral welfare, are they? No,
I am sure not. I am entirely grown up.
Hooray!
I leave you now to pack a trunk, and
three boxes of teakettles and dishes and sofa cushions
and books.
Yours
ever,
Judy
PS. Here is my physiology
exam. Do you think you could have passed?
Lockwillow farm,
Saturday
night
Dearest Daddy-Long-Legs,
I’ve only just come and I’m
not unpacked, but I can’t wait to tell you how
much I like farms. This is a heavenly, heavenly,
heavenly spot! The house is square like
this: And old. A hundred years or
so. It has a veranda on the side which I can’t
draw and a sweet porch in front. The picture
really doesn’t do it justice-those
things that look like feather dusters are maple trees,
and the prickly ones that border the drive are murmuring
pines and hemlocks. It stands on the top of
a hill and looks way off over miles of green meadows
to another line of hills.
That is the way Connecticut goes,
in a series of Marcelle waves; and Lock Willow Farm
is just on the crest of one wave. The barns used
to be across the road where they obstructed the view,
but a kind flash of lightning came from heaven and
burnt them down.
The people are Mr. and Mrs. Semple
and a hired girl and two hired men. The hired
people eat in the kitchen, and the Semples and Judy
in the dining-room. We had ham and eggs and biscuits
and honey and jelly-cake and pie and pickles and cheese
and tea for supper-and a great deal of
conversation. I have never been so entertaining
in my life; everything I say appears to be funny.
I suppose it is, because I’ve never been in
the country before, and my questions are backed by
an all-inclusive ignorance.
The room marked with a cross is not
where the murder was committed, but the one that I
occupy. It’s big and square and empty,
with adorable old-fashioned furniture and windows
that have to be propped up on sticks and green shades
trimmed with gold that fall down if you touch them.
And a big square mahogany table-I’m
going to spend the summer with my elbows spread out
on it, writing a novel.
Oh, Daddy, I’m so excited!
I can’t wait till daylight to explore.
It’s 8.30 now, and I am about to blow out my
candle and try to go to sleep. We rise at five.
Did you ever know such fun? I can’t believe
this is really Judy. You and the Good Lord give
me more than I deserve. I must be a very, very,
very good person to pay. I’m going
to be. You’ll see.
Good
night,
Judy
PS. You should hear the
frogs sing and the little pigs squeal and you should
see the new moon! I saw it over my right shoulder.
Lockwillow,
12th
July
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
How did your secretary come to know
about Lock Willow? (That isn’t a rhetorical
question. I am awfully curious to know.) For
listen to this: Mr. Jervis Pendleton used to
own this farm, but now he has given it to Mrs. Semple
who was his old nurse. Did you ever hear of such
a funny coincidence? She still calls him ‘Master
Jervie’ and talks about what a sweet little
boy he used to be. She has one of his baby curls
put away in a box, and it is red-or at least
reddish!
Since she discovered that I know him,
I have risen very much in her opinion. Knowing
a member of the Pendleton family is the best introduction
one can have at Lock Willow. And the cream of
the whole family is Master Jervis-I am
pleased to say that Julia belongs to an inferior branch.
The farm gets more and more entertaining.
I rode on a hay wagon yesterday. We have three
big pigs and nine little piglets, and you should see
them eat. They are pigs! We’ve oceans
of little baby chickens and ducks and turkeys and
guinea fowls. You must be mad to live in a city
when you might live on a farm.
It is my daily business to hunt the
eggs. I fell off a beam in the barn loft yesterday,
while I was trying to crawl over to a nest that the
black hen has stolen. And when I came in with
a scratched knee, Mrs. Semple bound it up with witch-hazel,
murmuring all the time, ’Dear! Dear!
It seems only yesterday that Master Jervie fell off
that very same beam and scratched this very same knee.’
The scenery around here is perfectly
beautiful. There’s a valley and a river
and a lot of wooded hills, and way in the distance
a tall blue mountain that simply melts in your mouth.
We churn twice a week; and we keep
the cream in the spring house which is made of stone
with the brook running underneath. Some of the
farmers around here have a separator, but we don’t
care for these new-fashioned ideas. It may be
a little harder to separate the cream in pans, but
it’s sufficiently better to pay. We have
six calves; and I’ve chosen the names for all
of them.
1. Sylvia, because she was born in the woods.
2. Lesbia, after the Lesbia in Catullus.
3. Sallie.
4. Julia-a spotted, nondescript animal.
5. Judy, after me.
6. Daddy-Long-Legs. You
don’t mind, do you, Daddy? He’s pure
Jersey and has a sweet disposition. He looks
like this-you can see how appropriate the
name is.
I haven’t had time yet to begin
my immortal novel; the farm keeps me too busy.
Yours
always,
Judy
PS. I’ve learned to make doughnuts.
PS. If you are thinking of raising chickens,
let me recommend Buff
Orpingtons. They haven’t any pin feathers.
PS. I wish I could send
you a pat of the nice, fresh butter I churned yesterday.
I’m a fine dairy-maid!
PS. This is a picture of
Miss Jerusha Abbott, the future great author, driving
home the cows.
Sunday
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Isn’t it funny? I started
to write to you yesterday afternoon, but as far as
I got was the heading, ‘Dear Daddy-Long-Legs’,
and then I remembered I’d promised to pick some
blackberries for supper, so I went off and left the
sheet lying on the table, and when I came back today,
what do you think I found sitting in the middle of
the page? A real true Daddy-Long-Legs!
I picked him up very gently by one
leg, and dropped him out of the window. I wouldn’t
hurt one of them for the world. They always remind
me of you.
We hitched up the spring wagon this
morning and drove to the Centre to church. It’s
a sweet little white frame church with a spire and
three Doric columns in front (or maybe Ionic-I
always get them mixed).
A nice sleepy sermon with everybody
drowsily waving palm-leaf fans, and the only sound,
aside from the minister, the buzzing of locusts in
the trees outside. I didn’t wake up till
I found myself on my feet singing the hymn, and then
I was awfully sorry I hadn’t listened to the
sermon; I should like to know more of the psychology
of a man who would pick out such a hymn. This
was it:
Come, leave your sports and earthly
toys
And join me in celestial joys.
Or else, dear friend, a long farewell.
I leave you now to sink to hell.
I find that it isn’t safe to
discuss religion with the Semples. Their God
(whom they have inherited intact from their remote
Puritan ancestors) is a narrow, irrational, unjust,
mean, revengeful, bigoted Person. Thank heaven
I don’t inherit God from anybody! I am
free to make mine up as I wish Him. He’s
kind and sympathetic and imaginative and forgiving
and understanding-and He has a sense of
humour.
I like the Semples immensely; their
practice is so superior to their theory. They
are better than their own God. I told them so-and
they are horribly troubled. They think I am
blasphemous-and I think they are!
We’ve dropped theology from our conversation.
This is Sunday afternoon.
Amasai (hired man) in a purple tie
and some bright yellow buckskin gloves, very red and
shaved, has just driven off with Carrie (hired girl)
in a big hat trimmed with red roses and a blue muslin
dress and her hair curled as tight as it will curl.
Amasai spent all the morning washing the buggy; and
Carrie stayed home from church ostensibly to cook
the dinner, but really to iron the muslin dress.
In two minutes more when this letter
is finished I am going to settle down to a book which
I found in the attic. It’s entitled, On
the Trail, and sprawled across the front page in a
funny little-boy hand:
Jervis
Pendleton
if
this book should ever roam,
Box
its ears and send it home.
He spent the summer here once after
he had been ill, when he was about eleven years old;
and he left On the Trail behind. It looks well
read-the marks of his grimy little hands
are frequent! Also in a corner of the attic
there is a water wheel and a windmill and some bows
and arrows. Mrs. Semple talks so constantly about
him that I begin to believe he really lives-not
a grown man with a silk hat and walking stick, but
a nice, dirty, tousle-headed boy who clatters up the
stairs with an awful racket, and leaves the screen
doors open, and is always asking for cookies. (And
getting them, too, if I know Mrs. Semple!) He seems
to have been an adventurous little soul-and
brave and truthful. I’m sorry to think
he is a Pendleton; he was meant for something better.
We’re going to begin threshing
oats tomorrow; a steam engine is coming and three
extra men.
It grieves me to tell you that Buttercup
(the spotted cow with one horn, Mother of Lesbia)
has done a disgraceful thing. She got into the
orchard Friday evening and ate apples under the trees,
and ate and ate until they went to her head.
For two days she has been perfectly dead drunk!
That is the truth I am telling. Did you ever
hear anything so scandalous?
Sir,
I remain,
Your affectionate orphan,
Judy
Abbott
PS. Indians in the first
chapter and highwaymen in the second. I hold
my breath. What can the third contain?
’Red Hawk leapt twenty feet in the air and bit
the dust.’ That is the subject of the frontispiece.
Aren’t Judy and Jervie having fun?
15th
September
Dear Daddy,
I was weighed yesterday on the flour
scales in the general store at the Comers. I’ve
gained nine pounds! Let me recommend Lock Willow
as a health resort.
Yours
ever,
Judy
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Behold me-a Sophomore!
I came up last Friday, sorry to leave Lock Willow,
but glad to see the campus again. It is a pleasant
sensation to come back to something familiar.
I am beginning to feel at home in college, and in
command of the situation; I am beginning, in fact,
to feel at home in the world-as though
I really belonged to it and had not just crept in
on sufferance.
I don’t suppose you understand
in the least what I am trying to say. A person
important enough to be a Trustee can’t appreciate
the feelings of a person unimportant enough to be
a foundling.
And now, Daddy, listen to this. Whom do you think I am
rooming with? Sallie McBride and Julia Rutledge Pendleton. Its the
truth. We have a study and three little bedrooms-voila!
Sallie and I decided last spring that
we should like to room together, and Julia made up
her mind to stay with Sallie-why, I can’t
imagine, for they are not a bit alike; but the Pendletons
are naturally conservative and inimical (fine word!)
to change. Anyway, here we are. Think of
Jerusha Abbott, late of the John Grier Home for Orphans,
rooming with a Pendleton. This is a democratic
country.
Sallie is running for class president,
and unless all signs fail, she is going to be elected.
Such an atmosphere of intrigue you should see what
politicians we are! Oh, I tell you, Daddy, when
we women get our rights, you men will have to look
alive in order to keep yours. Election comes
next Saturday, and we’re going to have a torchlight
procession in the evening, no matter who wins.
I am beginning chemistry, a most unusual
study. I’ve never seen anything like it
before. Molecules and Atoms are the material
employed, but I’ll be in a position to discuss
them more definitely next month.
I am also taking argumentation and logic.
Also history of the whole world.
Also plays of William Shakespeare.
Also French.
If this keeps up many years longer, I shall become
quite intelligent.
I should rather have elected economics
than French, but I didn’t dare, because I was
afraid that unless I re-elected French, the Professor
would not let me pass-as it was, I just
managed to squeeze through the June examination.
But I will say that my high-school preparation was
not very adequate.
There’s one girl in the class
who chatters away in French as fast as she does in
English. She went abroad with her parents when
she was a child, and spent three years in a convent
school. You can imagine how bright she is compared
with the rest of us-irregular verbs are
mere playthings. I wish my parents had chucked
me into a French convent when I was little instead
of a foundling asylum. Oh no, I don’t
either! Because then maybe I should never have
known you. I’d rather know you than French.
Goodbye, Daddy. I must call
on Harriet Martin now, and, having discussed the chemical
situation, casually drop a few thoughts on the subject
of our next president.
Yours in politics,
J. Abbott
17th
October
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Supposing the swimming tank in the
gymnasium were filled full of lemon jelly, could a
person trying to swim manage to keep on top or would
he sink?
We were having lemon jelly for dessert
when the question came up. We discussed it heatedly
for half an hour and it’s still unsettled.
Sallie thinks that she could swim in it, but I am perfectly
sure that the best swimmer in the world would sink.
Wouldn’t it be funny to be drowned in lemon
jelly?
Two other problems are engaging the
attention of our table.
1st. What shape are the rooms
in an octagon house? Some of the girls insist
that they’re square; but I think they’d
have to be shaped like a piece of pie. Don’t
you?
2nd. Suppose there were a great
big hollow sphere made of looking-glass and you were
sitting inside. Where would it stop reflecting
your face and begin reflecting your back? The
more one thinks about this problem, the more puzzling
it becomes. You can see with what deep philosophical
reflection we engage our leisure!
Did I ever tell you about the election?
It happened three weeks ago, but so fast do we live,
that three weeks is ancient history. Sallie
was elected, and we had a torchlight parade with transparencies
saying, ‘McBride for Ever,’ and a band
consisting of fourteen pieces (three mouth organs
and eleven combs).
We’re very important persons
now in ‘258.’ Julia and I come in
for a great deal of reflected glory. It’s
quite a social strain to be living in the same house
with a president.
Bonne nuit, cher Daddy.
Acceptez mez
compliments,
Très respectueux,
je suis,
Vôtre Judy
12th
November
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
We beat the Freshmen at basket ball
yesterday. Of course we’re pleased-but
oh, if we could only beat the juniors! I’d
be willing to be black and blue all over and stay
in bed a week in a witch-hazel compress.
Sallie has invited me to spend the
Christmas vacation with her. She lives in Worcester,
Massachusetts. Wasn’t it nice of her?
I shall love to go. I’ve never been in
a private family in my life, except at Lock Willow,
and the Semples were grown-up and old and don’t
count. But the McBrides have a houseful of children
(anyway two or three) and a mother and father and
grandmother, and an Angora cat. It’s a
perfectly complete family! Packing your trunk
and going away is more fun than staying behind.
I am terribly excited at the prospect.
Seventh hour-I must run
to rehearsal. I’m to be in the Thanksgiving
theatricals. A prince in a tower with a velvet
tunic and yellow curls. Isn’t that a lark?
Yours,
J.
A.
Saturday
Do you want to know what I look like?
Here’s a photograph of all three that Leonora
Fenton took.
The light one who is laughing is Sallie,
and the tall one with her nose in the air is Julia,
and the little one with the hair blowing across her
face is Judy-she is really more beautiful
than that, but the sun was in her eyes.
‘StoneGate’,
Worcester,
Mass.,
31st December
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I meant to write to you before and
thank you for your Christmas cheque, but life in the
McBride household is very absorbing, and I don’t
seem able to find two consecutive minutes to spend
at a desk.
I bought a new gown-one
that I didn’t need, but just wanted. My
Christmas present this year is from Daddy-Long-Legs;
my family just sent love.
I’ve been having the most beautiful
vacation visiting Sallie. She lives in a big
old-fashioned brick house with white trimmings set
back from the street-exactly the kind of
house that I used to look at so curiously when I was
in the John Grier Home, and wonder what it could be
like inside. I never expected to see with my
own eyes-but here I am! Everything
is so comfortable and restful and homelike; I walk
from room to room and drink in the furnishings.
It is the most perfect house for children
to be brought up in; with shadowy nooks for hide and
seek, and open fire places for pop-corn, and an attic
to romp in on rainy days and slippery banisters with
a comfortable flat knob at the bottom, and a great
big sunny kitchen, and a nice, fat, sunny cook who
has lived in the family thirteen years and always
saves out a piece of dough for the children to bake.
Just the sight of such a house makes you want to
be a child all over again.
And as for families! I never
dreamed they could be so nice. Sallie has a
father and mother and grandmother, and the sweetest
three-year-old baby sister all over curls, and a medium-sized
brother who always forgets to wipe his feet, and a
big, good-looking brother named Jimmie, who is a junior
at Princeton.
We have the jolliest times at the
table-everybody laughs and jokes and talks
at once, and we don’t have to say grace beforehand.
It’s a relief not having to thank Somebody
for every mouthful you eat. (I dare say I’m
blasphemous; but you’d be, too, if you’d
offered as much obligatory thanks as I have.)
Such a lot of things we’ve done-I
can’t begin to tell you about them. Mr.
McBride owns a factory and Christmas eve he had a tree
for the employees’ children. It was in
the long packing-room which was decorated with evergreens
and holly. Jimmie McBride was dressed as Santa
Claus and Sallie and I helped him distribute the presents.
Dear me, Daddy, but it was a funny
sensation! I felt as benevolent as a Trustee
of the John Grier home. I kissed one sweet, sticky
little boy-but I don’t think I patted
any of them on the head!
And two days after Christmas, they
gave a dance at their own house for me.
It was the first really true ball
I ever attended-college doesn’t count
where we dance with girls. I had a new white
evening gown (your Christmas present-many
thanks) and long white gloves and white satin slippers.
The only drawback to my perfect, utter, absolute happiness
was the fact that Mrs. Lippett couldn’t see me
leading the cotillion with Jimmie McBride. Tell
her about it, please, the next time you visit the
J. G. H.
Yours ever,
Judy Abbott
PS. Would you be terribly
displeased, Daddy, if I didn’t turn out to be
a Great Author after all, but just a Plain Girl?
6.30,
Saturday
Dear Daddy,
We started to walk to town today,
but mercy! how it poured. I like winter to be
winter with snow instead of rain.
Julia’s desirable uncle called
again this afternoon-and brought a five-pound
box of chocolates. There are advantages, you
see, about rooming with Julia.
Our innocent prattle appeared to amuse
him and he waited for a later train in order to take
tea in the study. We had an awful lot of trouble
getting permission. It’s hard enough entertaining
fathers and grandfathers, but uncles are a step worse;
and as for brothers and cousins, they are next to
impossible. Julia had to swear that he was her
uncle before a notary public and then have the county
clerk’s certificate attached. (Don’t
I know a lot of law?) And even then I doubt if we
could have had our tea if the Dean had chanced to see
how youngish and good-looking Uncle Jervis is.
Anyway, we had it, with brown bread
Swiss cheese sandwiches. He helped make them
and then ate four. I told him that I had spent
last summer at Lock Willow, and we had a beautiful
gossipy time about the Semples, and the horses and
cows and chickens. All the horses that he used
to know are dead, except Grover, who was a baby colt
at the time of his last visit-and poor
Grove now is so old he can just limp about the pasture.
He asked if they still kept doughnuts
in a yellow crock with a blue plate over it on the
bottom shelf of the pantry-and they do!
He wanted to know if there was still a woodchuck’s
hole under the pile of rocks in the night pasture-and
there is! Amasai caught a big, fat, grey one
there this summer, the twenty-fifth great-grandson
of the one Master Jervis caught when he was a little
boy.
I called him ‘Master Jervie’
to his face, but he didn’t appear to be insulted.
Julia says she has never seen him so amiable; he’s
usually pretty unapproachable. But Julia hasn’t
a bit of tact; and men, I find, require a great deal.
They purr if you rub them the right way and spit
if you don’t. (That isn’t a very elegant
metaphor. I mean it figuratively.)
We’re reading Marie Bashkirtseff’s
journal. Isn’t it amazing? Listen
to this: ’Last night I was seized by a
fit of despair that found utterance in moans, and
that finally drove me to throw the dining-room clock
into the sea.’
It makes me almost hope I’m
not a genius; they must be very wearing to have about-and
awfully destructive to the furniture.
Mercy! how it keeps Pouring.
We shall have to swim to chapel tonight.
Yours
ever,
Judy
20th
Jan.
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Did you ever have a sweet baby girl
who was stolen from the cradle in infancy?
Maybe I am she! If we were in
a novel, that would be the denouement, wouldn’t
it?
It’s really awfully queer not
to know what one is-sort of exciting and
romantic. There are such a lot of possibilities.
Maybe I’m not American; lots of people aren’t.
I may be straight descended from the ancient Romans,
or I may be a Viking’s daughter, or I may be
the child of a Russian exile and belong by rights
in a Siberian prison, or maybe I’m a Gipsy-I
think perhaps I am. I have a very wandering
spirit, though I haven’t as yet had much chance
to develop it.
Do you know about that one scandalous
blot in my career the time I ran away from the asylum
because they punished me for stealing cookies?
It’s down in the books free for any Trustee to
read. But really, Daddy, what could you expect?
When you put a hungry little nine-year girl in the
pantry scouring knives, with the cookie jar at her
elbow, and go off and leave her alone; and then suddenly
pop in again, wouldn’t you expect to find her
a bit crumby? And then when you jerk her by
the elbow and box her ears, and make her leave the
table when the pudding comes, and tell all the other
children that it’s because she’s a thief,
wouldn’t you expect her to run away?
I only ran four miles. They
caught me and brought me back; and every day for a
week I was tied, like a naughty puppy, to a stake in
the back yard while the other children were out at
recess.
Oh, dear! There’s the
chapel bell, and after chapel I have a committee meeting.
I’m sorry because I meant to write you a very
entertaining letter this time.
Auf
wiedersehen
Cher Daddy,
Pax tibi!
Judy
PS. There’s one thing
I’m perfectly sure of I’m not a Chinaman.
4th
February
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Jimmie McBride has sent me a Princeton
banner as big as one end of the room; I am very grateful
to him for remembering me, but I don’t know
what on earth to do with it. Sallie and Julia
won’t let me hang it up; our room this year
is furnished in red, and you can imagine what an effect
we’d have if I added orange and black.
But it’s such nice, warm, thick felt, I hate
to waste it. Would it be very improper to have
it made into a bath robe? My old one shrank when
it was washed.
I’ve entirely omitted of late
telling you what I am learning, but though you might
not imagine it from my letters, my time is exclusively
occupied with study. It’s a very bewildering
matter to get educated in five branches at once.
‘The test of true scholarship,’
says Chemistry Professor, ’is a painstaking
passion for detail.’
‘Be careful not to keep your
eyes glued to detail,’ says History Professor.
‘Stand far enough away to get a perspective
of the whole.’
You can see with what nicety we have
to trim our sails between chemistry and history.
I like the historical method best. If I say
that William the Conqueror came over in 1492, and Columbus
discovered America in 1100 or 1066 or whenever it
was, that’s a mere detail that the Professor
overlooks. It gives a feeling of security and
restfulness to the history recitation, that is entirely
lacking in chemistry.
Sixth-hour bell-I must
go to the laboratory and look into a little matter
of acids and salts and alkalis. I’ve burned
a hole as big as a plate in the front of my chemistry
apron, with hydrochloric acid. If the theory
worked, I ought to be able to neutralize that hole
with good strong ammonia, oughtn’t I?
Examinations next week, but who’s afraid?
Yours
ever,
Judy
5th
March
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
There is a March wind blowing, and
the sky is filled with heavy, black moving clouds.
The crows in the pine trees are making such a clamour!
It’s an intoxicating, exhilarating, calling
noise. You want to close your books and be off
over the hills to race with the wind.
We had a paper chase last Saturday
over five miles of squashy ’cross country.
The fox (composed of three girls and a bushel or so
of confetti) started half an hour before the twenty-seven
hunters. I was one of the twenty-seven; eight
dropped by the wayside; we ended nineteen. The
trail led over a hill, through a cornfield, and into
a swamp where we had to leap lightly from hummock
to hummock. of course half of us went in ankle deep.
We kept losing the trail, and we wasted twenty-five
minutes over that swamp. Then up a hill through
some woods and in at a barn window! The barn
doors were all locked and the window was up high and
pretty small. I don’t call that fair, do
you?
But we didn’t go through; we
circumnavigated the barn and picked up the trail where
it issued by way of a low shed roof on to the top of
a fence. The fox thought he had us there, but
we fooled him. Then straight away over two miles
of rolling meadow, and awfully hard to follow, for
the confetti was getting sparse. The rule is
that it must be at the most six feet apart, but they
were the longest six feet I ever saw. Finally,
after two hours of steady trotting, we tracked Monsieur
Fox into the kitchen of Crystal Spring (that’s
a farm where the girls go in bob sleighs and hay wagons
for chicken and waffle suppers) and we found the three
foxes placidly eating milk and honey and biscuits.
They hadn’t thought we would get that far; they
were expecting us to stick in the barn window.
Both sides insist that they won.
I think we did, don’t you? Because we
caught them before they got back to the campus.
Anyway, all nineteen of us settled like locusts over
the furniture and clamoured for honey. There
wasn’t enough to go round, but Mrs. Crystal Spring
(that’s our pet name for her; she’s by
rights a Johnson) brought up a jar of strawberry jam
and a can of maple syrup-just made last
week-and three loaves of brown bread.
We didn’t get back to college
till half-past six-half an hour late for
dinner-and we went straight in without dressing,
and with perfectly unimpaired appetites! Then
we all cut evening chapel, the state of our boots
being enough of an excuse.
I never told you about examinations.
I passed everything with the utmost ease-I
know the secret now, and am never going to fail again.
I shan’t be able to graduate with honours though,
because of that beastly Latin prose and geometry Freshman
year. But I don’t care. Wot’s
the hodds so long as you’re ’appy? (That’s
a quotation. I’ve been reading the English
classics.)
Speaking of classics, have you ever
read Hamlet? If you haven’t, do it right
off. It’s perfectly corking.
I’ve been hearing about Shakespeare all my
life, but I had no idea he really wrote so well; I
always suspected him of going largely on his reputation.
I have a beautiful play that I invented
a long time ago when I first learned to read.
I put myself to sleep every night by pretending I’m
the person (the most important person) in the book
I’m reading at the moment.
At present I’m Ophelia-and
such a sensible Ophelia! I keep Hamlet amused
all the time, and pet him and scold him and make him
wrap up his throat when he has a cold. I’ve
entirely cured him of being melancholy. The
King and Queen are both dead-an accident
at sea; no funeral necessary-so Hamlet
and I are ruling in Denmark without any bother.
We have the kingdom working beautifully. He
takes care of the governing, and I look after the
charities. I have just founded some first-class
orphan asylums. If you or any of the other Trustees
would like to visit them, I shall be pleased to show
you through. I think you might find a great
many helpful suggestions.
I remain, sir,
Yours most graciously,
Ophelia,
Queen of Denmark.
24th
March,
may be the
25th
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I don’t believe I can be going
to Heaven-I am getting such a lot of good
things here; it wouldn’t be fair to get them
hereafter too. Listen to what has happened.
Jerusha Abbott has won the short-story
contest (a twenty-five dollar prize) that the Monthly
holds every year. And she’s a Sophomore!
The contestants are mostly Seniors. When I
saw my name posted, I couldn’t quite believe
it was true. Maybe I am going to be an author
after all. I wish Mrs. Lippett hadn’t given
me such a silly name-it sounds like an
author-ess, doesn’t it?
Also I have been chosen for the spring
dramatics-As You Like It out of doors.
I am going to be Celia, own cousin to Rosalind.
And lastly: Julia and Sallie
and I are going to New York next Friday to do some
spring shopping and stay all night and go to the theatre
the next day with ‘Master Jervie.’
He invited us. Julia is going to stay at home
with her family, but Sallie and I are going to stop
at the Martha Washington Hotel. Did you ever
hear of anything so exciting? I’ve never
been in a hotel in my life, nor in a theatre; except
once when the Catholic Church had a festival and invited
the orphans, but that wasn’t a real play and
it doesn’t count.
And what do you think we’re
going to see? Hamlet. Think of that!
We studied it for four weeks in Shakespeare class
and I know it by heart.
I am so excited over all these prospects
that I can scarcely sleep.
Goodbye, Daddy.
This is a very entertaining world.
Yours
ever,
Judy
PS. I’ve just looked at the calendar.
It’s the 28th.
Another postscript.
I saw a street car conductor today with one brown
eye and one blue.
Wouldn’t he make a nice villain for a detective
story?
7th
April
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Mercy! Isn’t New York
big? Worcester is nothing to it. Do you
mean to tell me that you actually live in all that
confusion? I don’t believe that I shall
recover for months from the bewildering effect of
two days of it. I can’t begin to tell you
all the amazing things I’ve seen; I suppose
you know, though, since you live there yourself.
But aren’t the streets entertaining?
And the people? And the shops? I never
saw such lovely things as there are in the windows.
It makes you want to devote your life to wearing
clothes.
Sallie and Julia and I went shopping
together Saturday morning. Julia went into the
very most gorgeous place I ever saw, white and gold
walls and blue carpets and blue silk curtains and
gilt chairs. A perfectly beautiful lady with
yellow hair and a long black silk trailing gown came
to meet us with a welcoming smile. I thought
we were paying a social call, and started to shake
hands, but it seems we were only buying hats-at
least Julia was. She sat down in front of a mirror
and tried on a dozen, each lovelier than the last,
and bought the two loveliest of all.
I can’t imagine any joy in life
greater than sitting down in front of a mirror and
buying any hat you choose without having first to consider
the price! There’s no doubt about it, Daddy;
New York would rapidly undermine this fine stoical
character which the John Grier Home so patiently built
up.
And after we’d finished our
shopping, we met Master Jervie at Sherry’s.
I suppose you’ve been in Sherry’s?
Picture that, then picture the dining-room of the
John Grier Home with its oilcloth-covered tables,
and white crockery that you can’t break,
and wooden-handled knives and forks; and fancy the
way I felt!
I ate my fish with the wrong fork,
but the waiter very kindly gave me another so that
nobody noticed.
And after luncheon we went to the
theatre-it was dazzling, marvellous, unbelievable-I
dream about it every night.
Isn’t Shakespeare wonderful?
Hamlet is so much better on the stage than when we
analyze it in class;
I appreciated it before, but now, clear me!
I think, if you don’t mind,
that I’d rather be an actress than a writer.
Wouldn’t you like me to leave college and go
into a dramatic school? And then I’ll
send you a box for all my performances, and smile
at you across the footlights. Only wear a red
rose in your buttonhole, please, so I’ll surely
smile at the right man. It would be an awfully
embarrassing mistake if I picked out the wrong one.
We came back Saturday night and had
our dinner in the train, at little tables with pink
lamps and negro waiters. I never heard of meals
being served in trains before, and I inadvertently
said so.
‘Where on earth were you brought up?’
said Julia to me.
‘In a village,’ said I meekly, to Julia.
‘But didn’t you ever travel?’ said
she to me.
’Not till I came to college,
and then it was only a hundred and sixty miles and
we didn’t eat,’ said I to her.
She’s getting quite interested
in me, because I say such funny things. I try
hard not to, but they do pop out when I’m surprised-and
I’m surprised most of the time. It’s
a dizzying experience, Daddy, to pass eighteen years
in the John Grier Home, and then suddenly to be plunged
into the world.
But I’m getting acclimated.
I don’t make such awful mistakes as I did;
and I don’t feel uncomfortable any more with
the other girls. I used to squirm whenever people
looked at me. I felt as though they saw right
through my sham new clothes to the checked ginghams
underneath. But I’m not letting the ginghams
bother me any more. Sufficient unto yesterday
is the evil thereof.
I forgot to tell you about our flowers.
Master Jervie gave us each a big bunch of violets
and lilies-of-the-valley. Wasn’t that sweet
of him? I never used to care much for men-judging
by Trustees-but I’m changing my mind.
Eleven pages-this is a
letter! Have courage. I’m going to
stop.
Yours always,
Judy
10th
April
Dear Mr. Rich-Man,
Here’s your cheque for fifty
dollars. Thank you very much, but I do not feel
that I can keep it. My allowance is sufficient
to afford all of the hats that I need. I am
sorry that I wrote all that silly stuff about the
millinery shop; it’s just that I had never seen
anything like it before.
However, I wasn’t begging!
And I would rather not accept any more charity than
I have to.
Sincerely yours,
Jerusha Abbott
11th
April
Dearest Daddy,
Will you please forgive me for the
letter I wrote you yesterday? After I posted
it I was sorry, and tried to get it back, but that
beastly mail clerk wouldn’t give it back to
me.
It’s the middle of the night
now; I’ve been awake for hours thinking what
a Worm I am-what a Thousand-legged Worm-and
that’s the worst I can say! I’ve
closed the door very softly into the study so as not
to wake Julia and Sallie, and am sitting up in bed
writing to you on paper torn out of my history note-book.
I just wanted to tell you that I am
sorry I was so impolite about your cheque. I
know you meant it kindly, and I think you’re
an old dear to take so much trouble for such a silly
thing as a hat. I ought to have returned it
very much more graciously.
But in any case, I had to return it.
It’s different with me than with other girls.
They can take things naturally from people.
They have fathers and brothers and aunts and uncles;
but I can’t be on any such relations with any
one. I like to pretend that you belong to me,
just to play with the idea, but of course I know you
don’t. I’m alone, really-with
my back to the wall fighting the world-and
I get sort of gaspy when I think about it. I
put it out of my mind, and keep on pretending; but
don’t you see, Daddy? I can’t accept
any more money than I have to, because some day I
shall be wanting to pay it back, and even as great
an author as I intend to be won’t be able to
face a perfectly tremendous debt.
I’d love pretty hats and things,
but I mustn’t mortgage the future to pay for
them.
You’ll forgive me, won’t
you, for being so rude? I have an awful habit
of writing impulsively when I first think things, and
then posting the letter beyond recall. But if
I sometimes seem thoughtless and ungrateful, I never
mean it. In my heart I thank you always for the
life and freedom and independence that you have given
me. My childhood was just a long, sullen stretch
of revolt, and now I am so happy every moment of the
day that I can’t believe it’s true.
I feel like a made-up heroine in a story-book.
It’s a quarter past two.
I’m going to tiptoe out to post this off now.
You’ll receive it in the next mail after the
other; so you won’t have a very long time to
think bad of me.
Good night,
Daddy,
I love you always,
Judy
4th
May
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Field Day last Saturday. It
was a very spectacular occasion. First we had
a parade of all the classes, with everybody dressed
in white linen, the Seniors carrying blue and gold
Japanese umbrellas, and the juniors white and yellow
banners. Our class had crimson balloons-very
fetching, especially as they were always getting loose
and floating off-and the Freshmen wore
green tissue-paper hats with long streamers.
Also we had a band in blue uniforms hired from town.
Also about a dozen funny people, like clowns in a
circus, to keep the spectators entertained between
events.
Julia was dressed as a fat country
man with a linen duster and whiskers and baggy umbrella.
Patsy Moriarty (Patrici really. Did you ever
hear such a name? Mrs. Lippett couldn’t
have done better) who is tall and thin was Julia’s
wife in a absurd green bonnet over one ear. Waves
of laughter followed them the whole length of the
course. Julia played the part extremely well.
I never dreamed that a Pendleton could display so
much comedy spirit-begging Master Jervie’
pardon; I don’t consider him a true Pendleton
though, any more than I consider you a true Trustee.
Sallie and I weren’t in the
parade because we were entered for the events.
And what do you think? We both won! At
least in something. We tried for the running
broad jump and lost; but Sallie won the pole-vaulting
(seven feet three inches) and I won the fifty-yard
sprint (eight seconds).
I was pretty panting at the end, but
it was great fun, with the whole class waving balloons
and cheering and yelling:
What’s
the matter with Judy Abbott?
She’s
all right.
Who’s
all right?
Judy
Ab-bott!
That, Daddy, is true fame. Then
trotting back to the dressing tent and being rubbed
down with alcohol and having a lemon to suck.
You see we’re very professional. It’s
a fine thing to win an event for your class, because
the class that wins the most gets the athletic cup
for the year. The Seniors won it this year,
with seven events to their credit. The athletic
association gave a dinner in the gymnasium to all
of the winners. We had fried soft-shell crabs,
and chocolate ice-cream moulded in the shape of basket
balls.
I sat up half of last night reading
Jane Eyre. Are you old enough, Daddy, to remember
sixty years ago? And, if so, did people talk
that way?
The haughty Lady Blanche says to the
footman, ’Stop your chattering, knave, and do
my bidding.’ Mr. Rochester talks about
the metal welkin when he means the sky; and as for
the mad woman who laughs like a hyena and sets fire
to bed curtains and tears up wedding veils and bites-it’s
melodrama of the purest, but just the same, you read
and read and read. I can’t see how any
girl could have written such a book, especially any
girl who was brought up in a churchyard. There’s
something about those Brontes that fascinates
me. Their books, their lives, their spirit.
Where did they get it? When I was reading about
little Jane’s troubles in the charity school,
I got so angry that I had to go out and take a walk.
I understood exactly how she felt. Having known
Mrs. Lippett, I could see Mr. Brocklehurst.
Don’t be outraged, Daddy.
I am not intimating that the John Grier Home was
like the Lowood Institute. We had plenty to eat
and plenty to wear, sufficient water to wash in, and
a furnace in the cellar. But there was one deadly
likeness. Our lives were absolutely monotonous
and uneventful. Nothing nice ever happened, except
ice-cream on Sundays, and even that was regular.
In all the eighteen years I was there I only had
one adventure-when the woodshed burned.
We had to get up in the night and dress so as to
be ready in case the house should catch. But
it didn’t catch and we went back to bed.
Everybody likes a few surprises; it’s
a perfectly natural human craving. But I never
had one until Mrs. Lippett called me to the office
to tell me that Mr. John Smith was going to send me
to college. And then she broke the news so gradually
that it just barely shocked me.
You know, Daddy, I think that the
most necessary quality for any person to have is imagination.
It makes people able to put themselves in other people’s
places. It makes them kind and sympathetic and
understanding. It ought to be cultivated in children.
But the John Grier Home instantly stamped out the
slightest flicker that appeared. Duty was the
one quality that was encouraged. I don’t
think children ought to know the meaning of the word;
it’s odious, detestable. They ought to
do everything from love.
Wait until you see the orphan asylum
that I am going to be the head of! It’s
my favourite play at night before I go to sleep.
I plan it out to the littlest detail-the
meals and clothes and study and amusements and punishments;
for even my superior orphans are sometimes bad.
But anyway, they are going to be happy.
I think that every one, no matter how many troubles
he may have when he grows up, ought to have a happy
childhood to look back upon. And if I ever have
any children of my own, no matter how unhappy I may
be, I am not going to let them have any cares until
they grow up.
(There goes the chapel bell-I’ll
finish this letter sometime).
Thursday
When I came in from laboratory this afternoon, I found a
squirrel sitting on the tea table helping himself to almonds. These are
the kind of callers we entertain now that warm weather has come and the windows
stay open-
Saturday
morning
Perhaps you think, last night being
Friday, with no classes today, that I passed a nice
quiet, readable evening with the set of Stevenson that
I bought with my prize money? But if so, you’ve
never attended a girls’ college, Daddy dear.
Six friends dropped in to make fudge, and one of
them dropped the fudge-while it was still
liquid-right in the middle of our best
rug. We shall never be able to clean up the mess.
I haven’t mentioned any lessons
of late; but we are still having them every day.
It’s sort of a relief though, to get away from
them and discuss life in the large-rather
one-sided discussions that you and I hold, but that’s
your own fault. You are welcome to answer back
any time you choose.
I’ve been writing this letter
off and on for three days, and I fear by now vous
étés bien bored!
Goodbye, nice Mr.
Man,
Judy
Mr. Daddy-Long-Legs Smith,
Sir: Having completed the
study of argumentation and the science of dividing
a thesis into heads, I have decided to adopt the following
form for letter-writing. It contains all necessary
facts, but no unnecessary verbiage.
I. We had written examinations this week in:
A. Chemistry.
B. History.
II. A new dormitory is being built.
A. Its material
is:
(a)
red brick.
(b)
grey stone.
B. Its capacity
will be:
(a)
one dean, five instructors.
(b)
two hundred girls.
(c)
one housekeeper, three cooks, twenty waitresses,
twenty
chambermaids.
III. We had junket for dessert tonight.
IV. I am writing a special topic upon the Sources
of Shakespeare’s
Plays.
V. Lou McMahon slipped and fell this afternoon at
basket ball, and she:
A. Dislocated
her shoulder.
B. Bruised
her knee.
VI. I have a new hat trimmed with:
A. Blue
velvet ribbon.
B. Two blue
quills.
C. Three
red pompoms.
VII. It is half past nine.
VIII. Good night.
Judy
2nd
June
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
You will never guess the nice thing that has happened.
The McBrides have asked me to spend
the summer at their camp in the Adirondacks!
They belong to a sort of club on a lovely little lake
in the middle of the woods. The different members
have houses made of logs dotted about among the trees,
and they go canoeing on the lake, and take long walks
through trails to other camps, and have dances once
a week in the club house-Jimmie McBride
is going to have a college friend visiting him part
of the summer, so you see we shall have plenty of
men to dance with.
Wasn’t it sweet of Mrs. McBride
to ask me? It appears that she liked me when
I was there for Christmas.
Please excuse this being short.
It isn’t a real letter; it’s just to
let you know that I’m disposed of for the summer.
Yours,
In a very contented frame
of mind,
Judy
5th
June
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Your secretary man has just written
to me saying that Mr. Smith prefers that I should
not accept Mrs. McBride’s invitation, but should
return to Lock Willow the same as last summer.
Why, why, why, Daddy?
You don’t understand about it.
Mrs. McBride does want me, really and truly.
I’m not the least bit of trouble in the house.
I’m a help. They don’t take up many
servants, and Sallie an I can do lots of useful things.
It’s a fine chance for me to learn housekeeping.
Every woman ought to understand it, and I only know
asylum-keeping.
There aren’t any girls our age
at the camp, and Mrs. McBride wants me for a companion
for Sallie. We are planning to do a lot of reading
together. We are going to read all of the books
for next year’s English and sociology.
The Professor said it would be a great help if we
would get our reading finished in the summer; and it’s
so much easier to remember it if we read together
and talk it over.
Just to live in the same house with
Sallie’s mother is an education. She’s
the most interesting, entertaining, companionable,
charming woman in the world; she knows everything.
Think how many summers I’ve spent with Mrs.
Lippett and how I’ll appreciate the contrast.
You needn’t be afraid that I’ll be crowding
them, for their house is made of rubber. When
they have a lot of company, they just sprinkle tents
about in the woods and turn the boys outside.
It’s going to be such a nice, healthy summer
exercising out of doors every minute. Jimmie
McBride is going to teach me how to ride horseback
and paddle a canoe, and how to shoot and-oh,
lots of things I ought to know. It’s the
kind of nice, jolly, care-free time that I’ve
never had; and I think every girl deserves it once
in her life. Of course I’ll do exactly
as you say, but please, please let me go, Daddy.
I’ve never wanted anything so much.
This isn’t Jerusha Abbott, the
future great author, writing to you. It’s
just Judy-a girl.
9th
June
Mr. John Smith,
Sir: Yours of the 7th inst.
at hand. In compliance with the instructions
received through your secretary, I leave on Friday
next to spend the summer at Lock Willow Farm.
I hope always to remain,
(Miss) Jerusha Abbott
Lockwillow farm,
3rd
August
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
It has been nearly two months since
I wrote, which wasn’t nice of me, I know, but
I haven’t loved you much this summer-you
see I’m being frank!
You can’t imagine how disappointed
I was at having to give up the McBrides’ camp.
Of course I know that you’re my guardian, and
that I have to regard your wishes in all matters,
but I couldn’t see any reason. It
was so distinctly the best thing that could have happened
to me. If I had been Daddy, and you had been
Judy, I should have said, ’Bless yo my
child, run along and have a good time; see lots of
new people and learn lots of new things; live out
of doors, and get strong and well and rested for a
year of hard work.’
But not at all! Just a curt
line from your secretary ordering me to Lock Willow.
It’s the impersonality of your
commands that hurts my feelings. It seems as
though, if you felt the tiniest little bit for me the
way I feel for you, you’d sometimes send me
a message that you’d written with your own hand,
instead of those beastly typewritten secretary’s
notes. If there were the slightest hint that
you cared, I’d do anything on earth to please
you.
I know that I was to write nice, long,
detailed letters without ever expecting any answer.
You’re living up to your side of the bargain-I’m
being educated-and I suppose you’re
thinking I’m not living up to mine!
But, Daddy, it is a hard bargain.
It is, really. I’m so awfully lonely.
You are the only person I have to care for, and you
are so shadowy. You’re just an imaginary
man that I’ve made up-and probably
the real you isn’t a bit like my imaginary
you. But you did once, when I was ill in
the infirmary, send me a message, and now, when I am
feeling awfully forgotten, I get out your card and
read it over.
I don’t think I am telling you
at all what I started to say, which was this:
Although my feelings are still hurt,
for it is very humiliating to be picked up and moved
about by an arbitrary, peremptory, unreasonable, omnipotent,
invisible Providence, still, when a man has been as
kind and generous and thoughtful as you have heretofore
been towards me, I suppose he has a right to be an
arbitrary, peremptory, unreasonable, invisible Providence
if he chooses, and so-I’ll forgive
you and be cheerful again. But I still don’t
enjoy getting Sallie’s letters about the good
times they are having in camp!
However-we will draw a veil over that and
begin again.
I’ve been writing and writing
this summer; four short stories finished and sent
to four different magazines. So you see I’m
trying to be an author. I have a workroom fixed
in a corner of the attic where Master Jervie used
to have his rainy-day playroom. It’s in
a cool, breezy corner with two dormer windows, and
shaded by a maple tree with a family of red squirrels
living in a hole.
I’ll write a nicer letter in
a few days and tell you all the farm news.
We need rain.
Yours
as ever,
Judy
10th
August
Mr. Daddy-Long-Legs,
Sir: I address you from
the second crotch in the willow tree by the pool in
the pasture. There’s a frog croaking underneath,
a locust singing overhead and two little ‘devil
downheads’ darting up and down the trunk.
I’ve been here for an hour; it’s a very
comfortable crotch, especially after being upholstered
with two sofa cushions. I came up with a pen
and tablet hoping to write an immortal short story,
but I’ve been having a dreadful time with my
heroine-I can’t make her behave
as I want her to behave; so I’ve abandoned her
for the moment, and am writing to you. (Not much
relief though, for I can’t make you behave as
I want you to, either.)
If you are in that dreadful New York,
I wish I could send you some of this lovely, breezy,
sunshiny outlook. The country is Heaven after
a week of rain.
Speaking of Heaven-do you
remember Mr. Kellogg that I told you about last summer?-the
minister of the little white church at the Corners.
Well, the poor old soul is dead-last winter
of pneumonia. I went half a dozen times to hear
him preach and got very well acquainted with his theology.
He believed to the end exactly the same things he
started with. It seems to me that a man who
can think straight along for forty-seven years without
changing a single idea ought to be kept in a cabinet
as a curiosity. I hope he is enjoying his harp
and golden crown; he was so perfectly sure of finding
them! There’s a new young man, very consequential,
in his place. The congregation is pretty dubious,
especially the faction led by Deacon Cummings.
It looks as though there was going to be an awful
split in the church. We don’t care for
innovations in religion in this neighbourhood.
During our week of rain I sat up in
the attic and had an orgy of reading-Stevenson,
mostly. He himself is more entertaining than
any of the characters in his books; I dare say he
made himself into the kind of hero that would look
well in print. Don’t you think it was
perfect of him to spend all the ten thousand dollars
his father left, for a yacht, and go sailing off to
the South Seas? He lived up to his adventurous
creed. If my father had left me ten thousand
dollars, I’d do it, too. The thought of
Vailima makes me wild. I want to see the tropics.
I want to see the whole world. I am going to
be a great author, or artist, or actress, or playwright-or
whatever sort of a great person I turn out to be.
I have a terrible wanderthirst; the very sight of
a map makes me want to put on my hat and take an umbrella
and start. ’I shall see before I die the
palms and temples of the South.’
Thursday
evening at twilight,
sitting on the doorstep.
Very hard to get any news into this
letter! Judy is becoming so philosophical of
late, that she wishes to discourse largely of the
world in general, instead of descending to the trivial
details of daily life. But if you must
have news, here it is:
Our nine young pigs waded across the
brook and ran away last Tuesday, and only eight came
back. We don’t want to accuse anyone unjustly,
but we suspect that Widow Dowd has one more than she
ought to have.
Mr. Weaver has painted his barn and
his two silos a bright pumpkin yellow-a
very ugly colour, but he says it will wear.
The Brewers have company this week;
Mrs. Brewer’s sister and two nieces from Ohio.
One of our Rhode Island Reds only
brought off three chicks out of fifteen eggs.
We can’t imagine what was the trouble.
Rhode island Reds, in my opinion, are a very inferior
breed. I prefer Buff Orpingtons.
The new clerk in the post office at
Bonnyrigg Four Corners drank every drop of Jamaica
ginger they had in stock-seven dollars’
worth-before he was discovered.
Old Ira Hatch has rheumatism and can’t
work any more; he never saved his money when he was
earning good wages, so now he has to live on the town.
There’s to be an ice-cream social
at the schoolhouse next Saturday evening. Come
and bring your families.
I have a new hat that I bought for
twenty-five cents at the post office. This is
my latest portrait, on my way to rake the hay.
It’s getting too dark to see;
anyway, the news is all used up.
Good
night,
Judy
Friday
Good morning! Here is some news!
What do you think? You’d never, never,
never guess who’s coming to Lock Willow.
A letter to Mrs. Semple from Mr. Pendleton.
He’s motoring through the Berkshires, and is
tired and wants to rest on a nice quiet farm-if
he climbs out at her doorstep some night will she
have a room ready for him? Maybe he’ll
stay one week, or maybe two, or maybe three; he’ll
see how restful it is when he gets here.
Such a flutter as we are in!
The whole house is being cleaned and all the curtains
washed. I am driving to the Corners this morning
to get some new oilcloth for the entry, and two cans
of brown floor paint for the hall and back stairs.
Mrs. Dowd is engaged to come tomorrow to wash the
windows (in the exigency of the moment, we waive our
suspicions in regard to the piglet). You might
think, from this account of our activities, that the
house was not already immaculate; but I assure you
it was! Whatever Mrs. Semple’s limitations,
she is a housekeeper.
But isn’t it just like a man,
Daddy? He doesn’t give the remotest hint
as to whether he will land on the doorstep today, or
two weeks from today. We shall live in a perpetual
breathlessness until he comes-and if he
doesn’t hurry, the cleaning may all have to be
done over again.
There’s Amasai waiting below
with the buckboard and Grover. I drive alone-but
if you could see old Grove, you wouldn’t be worried
as to my safety.
With my hand on my heart-farewell.
Judy
PS. Isn’t that a
nice ending? I got it out of Stevenson’s
letters.
Saturday
Good morning again! I didn’t
get this enveloped yesterday before the postman
came, so I’ll add some more. We have one
mail a day at twelve o’clock. Rural delivery
is a blessing to the farmers! Our postman not
only delivers letters, but he runs errands for us in
town, at five cents an errand. Yesterday he
brought me some shoe-strings and a jar of cold cream
(I sunburned all the skin off my nose before I got
my new hat) and a blue Windsor tie and a bottle of
blacking all for ten cents. That was an unusual
bargain, owing to the largeness of my order.
Also he tells us what is happening
in the Great World. Several people on the route
take daily papers, and he reads them as he jogs along,
and repeats the news to the ones who don’t subscribe.
So in case a war breaks out between the United States
and Japan, or the president is assassinated, or Mr.
Rockefeller leaves a million dollars to the John Grier
Home, you needn’t bother to write; I’ll
hear it anyway.
No sign yet of Master Jervie.
But you should see how clean our house is-and
with what anxiety we wipe our feet before we step in!
I hope he’ll come soon; I am
longing for someone to talk to. Mrs. Semple,
to tell you the truth, gets rather monotonous.
She never lets ideas interrupt the easy flow of her
conversation. It’s a funny thing about
the people here. Their world is just this single
hilltop. They are not a bit universal, if you
know what I mean. It’s exactly the same
as at the John Grier Home. Our ideas there were
bounded by the four sides of the iron fence, only
I didn’t mind it so much because I was younger,
and was so awfully busy. By the time I’d
got all my beds made and my babies’ faces washed
and had gone to school and come home and had washed
their faces again and darned their stockings and mended
Freddie Perkins’s trousers (he tore them every
day of his life) and learned my lessons in between-I
was ready to go to bed, and I didn’t notice
any lack of social intercourse. But after two
years in a conversational college, I do miss it; and
I shall be glad to see somebody who speaks my language.
I really believe I’ve finished,
Daddy. Nothing else occurs to me at the moment-I’ll
try to write a longer letter next time.
Yours always,
Judy
PS. The lettuce hasn’t
done at all well this year. It was so dry early
in the season.
25th
August
Well, Daddy, Master Jervie’s
here. And such a nice time as we’re having!
At least I am, and I think he is, too-he
has been here ten days and he doesn’t show any
signs of going. The way Mrs. Semple pampers
that man is scandalous. If she indulged him as
much when he was a baby, I don’t know how he
ever turned out so well.
He and I eat at a little table set
on the side porch, or sometimes under the trees, or-when
it rains or is cold-in the best parlour.
He just picks out the spot he wants to eat in and
Carrie trots after him with the table. Then
if it has been an awful nuisance, and she has had
to carry the dishes very far, she finds a dollar under
the sugar bowl.
He is an awfully companionable sort
of man, though you would never believe it to see him
casually; he looks at first glance like a true Pendleton,
but he isn’t in the least. He is just as
simple and unaffected and sweet as he can be-that
seems a funny way to describe a man, but it’s
true. He’s extremely nice with the farmers
around here; he meets them in a sort of man-to-man
fashion that disarms them immediately. They
were very suspicious at first. They didn’t
care for his clothes! And I will say that his
clothes are rather amazing. He wears knickerbockers
and pleated jackets and white flannels and riding
clothes with puffed trousers. Whenever he comes
down in anything new, Mrs. Semple, beaming with pride,
walks around and views him from every angle, and urges
him to be careful where he sits down; she is so afraid
he will pick up some dust. It bores him dreadfully.
He’s always saying to her:
’Run along, Lizzie, and tend
to your work. You can’t boss me any longer.
I’ve grown up.’
It’s awfully funny to think
of that great big, long-legged man (he’s nearly
as long-legged as you, Daddy) ever sitting in Mrs.
Semple’s lap and having his face washed.
Particularly funny when you see her lap! She
has two laps now, and three chins. But he says
that once she was thin and wiry and spry and could
run faster than he.
Such a lot of adventures we’re
having! We’ve explored the country for
miles, and I’ve learned to fish with funny little
flies made of feathers. Also to shoot with a
rifle and a revolver. Also to ride horseback-there’s
an astonishing amount of life in old Grove. We
fed him on oats for three days, and he shied at a
calf and almost ran away with me.
Wednesday
We climbed Sky Hill Monday afternoon.
That’s a mountain near here; not an awfully
high mountain, perhaps-no snow on the summit-but
at least you are pretty breathless when you reach
the top. The lower slopes are covered with woods,
but the top is just piled rocks and open moor.
We stayed up for the sunset and built a fire and
cooked our supper. Master Jervie did the cooking;
he said he knew how better than me and he did, too,
because he’s used to camping. Then we came
down by moonlight, and, when we reached the wood trail
where it was dark, by the light of an electric bulb
that he had in his pocket. It was such fun!
He laughed and joked all the way and talked about
interesting things. He’s read all the
books I’ve ever read, and a lot of others besides.
It’s astonishing how many different things he
knows.
We went for a long tramp this morning
and got caught in a storm. Our clothes were
drenched before we reached home but our spirits not
even damp. You should have seen Mrs. Semple’s
face when we dripped into her kitchen.
’Oh, Master Jervie-Miss
Judy! You are soaked through. Dear!
Dear! What shall I do? That nice new coat
is perfectly ruined.’
She was awfully funny; you would have
thought that we were ten years old, and she a distracted
mother. I was afraid for a while that we weren’t
going to get any jam for tea.
Saturday
I started this letter ages ago, but
I haven’t had a second to finish it.
Isn’t this a nice thought from Stevenson?
The world is so full of
a number of things,
I am sure we should all be as happy as
kings.
It’s true, you know. The
world is full of happiness, and plenty to go round,
if you are only willing to take the kind that comes
your way. The whole secret is in being pliable.
In the country, especially, there are such a lot
of entertaining things. I can walk over everybody’s
land, and look at everybody’s view, and dabble
in everybody’s brook; and enjoy it just as much
as though I owned the land-and with no
taxes to pay!
It’s Sunday night now, about
eleven o’clock, and I am supposed to be getting
some beauty sleep, but I had black coffee for dinner,
so-no beauty sleep for me!
This morning, said Mrs. Semple to
Mr. Pendleton, with a very determined accent:
’We have to leave here at a
quarter past ten in order to get to church by eleven.’
‘Very well, Lizzie,’ said
Master Jervie, ’you have the buggy ready, and
if I’m not dressed, just go on without waiting.’
‘We’ll wait,’ said she.
‘As you please,’ said
he, ’only don’t keep the horses standing
too long.’
Then while she was dressing, he told
Carrie to pack up a lunch, and he told me to scramble
into my walking clothes; and we slipped out the back
way and went fishing.
It discommoded the household dreadfully,
because Lock Willow of a Sunday dines at two.
But he ordered dinner at seven-he orders
meals whenever he chooses; you would think the place
were a restaurant-and that kept Carrie
and Amasai from going driving. But he said it
was all the better because it wasn’t proper
for them to go driving without a chaperon; and anyway,
he wanted the horses himself to take me driving.
Did you ever hear anything so funny?
And poor Mrs. Semple believes that
people who go fishing on Sundays go afterwards to
a sizzling hot hell! She is awfully troubled
to think that she didn’t train him better when
he was small and helpless and she had the chance.
Besides-she wished to show him off in church.
Anyway, we had our fishing (he caught
four little ones) and we cooked them on a camp-fire
for lunch. They kept falling off our spiked sticks
into the fire, so they tasted a little ashy, but we
ate them. We got home at four and went driving
at five and had dinner at seven, and at ten I was
sent to bed and here I am, writing to you.
I am getting a little sleepy, though.
Good
night.
Here is a picture of the one fish I caught.
Ship Ahoy, Cap’n Long-Legs!
Avast! Belay! Yo, ho,
ho, and a bottle of rum. Guess what I’m
reading? Our conversation these past two days
has been nautical and piratical. Isn’t
Treasure Island fun? Did you ever read it, or
wasn’t it written when you were a boy?
Stevenson only got thirty pounds for the serial rights-I
don’t believe it pays to be a great author.
Maybe I’ll be a school-teacher.
Excuse me for filling my letters so
full of Stevenson; my mind is very much engaged with
him at present. He comprises Lock Willow’s
library.
I’ve been writing this letter
for two weeks, and I think it’s about long enough.
Never say, Daddy, that I don’t give details.
I wish you were here, too; we’d all have such
a jolly time together. I like my different friends
to know each other. I wanted to ask Mr. Pendleton
if he knew you in New York-I should think
he might; you must move in about the same exalted
social circles, and you are both interested in reforms
and things-but I couldn’t, for I don’t
know your real name.
It’s the silliest thing I ever
heard of, not to know your name. Mrs. Lippett
warned me that you were eccentric. I should think
so!
Affectionately,
Judy
PS. On reading this over,
I find that it isn’t all Stevenson. There
are one or two glancing references to Master Jervie.
10th
September
Dear Daddy,
He has gone, and we are missing him!
When you get accustomed to people or places or ways
of living, and then have them snatched away, it does
leave an awfully empty, gnawing sort of sensation.
I’m finding Mrs. Semple’s conversation
pretty unseasoned food.
College opens in two weeks and I shall
be glad to begin work again. I have worked quite
a lot this summer though-six short stories
and seven poems. Those I sent to the magazines
all came back with the most courteous promptitude.
But I don’t mind. It’s good practice.
Master Jervie read them-he brought in
the post, so I couldn’t help his knowing-and
he said they were dreadful. They showed
that I didn’t have the slightest idea of what
I was talking about. (Master Jervie doesn’t
let politeness interfere with truth.) But the last
one I did-just a little sketch laid in
college-he said wasn’t bad; and he
had it typewritten, and I sent it to a magazine.
They’ve had it two weeks; maybe they’re
thinking it over.
You should see the sky! There’s
the queerest orange-coloured light over everything.
We’re going to have a storm.
It commenced just that moment with
tremendously big drops and all the shutters banging.
I had to run to close the windows, while Carrie flew
to the attic with an armful of milk pans to put under
the places where the roof leaks and then, just as
I was resuming my pen, I remembered that I’d
left a cushion and rug and hat and Matthew Arnold’s
poems under a tree in the orchard, so I dashed out
to get them, all quite soaked. The red cover
of the poems had run into the inside; Dover Beach
in the future will be washed by pink waves.
A storm is awfully disturbing in the
country. You are always having to think of so
many things that are out of doors and getting spoiled.
Thursday
Daddy! Daddy! What do
you think? The postman has just come with two
letters.
1st. My story is accepted. $50.
Alors! I’m an author.
2nd. A letter from the college
secretary. I’m to have a scholarship for
two years that will cover board and tuition.
It was founded for ‘marked proficiency in English
with general excellency in other lines.’
And I’ve won it! I applied for it before
I left, but I didn’t have an idea I’d
get it, on account of my Freshman bad work in maths
and Latin. But it seems I’ve made it up.
I am awfully glad, Daddy, because now I won’t
be such a burden to you. The monthly allowance
will be all I’ll need, and maybe I can earn
that with writing or tutoring or something.
I’m longing to go back and begin work.
Yours ever,
Jerusha
Abbott,
Author
of When the Sophomores Won
the Game. For
sale at all news
stands, price ten cents.
26th
September
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Back at college again and an upper
classman. Our study is better than ever this
year-faces the South with two huge windows
and oh! so furnished. Julia, with an unlimited
allowance, arrived two days early and was attacked
with a fever for settling.
We have new wall paper and oriental
rugs and mahogany chairs-not painted mahogany
which made us sufficiently happy last year, but real.
It’s very gorgeous, but I don’t feel as
though I belonged in it; I’m nervous all the
time for fear I’ll get an ink spot in the wrong
place.
And, Daddy, I found your letter waiting
for me-pardon-I mean your secretary’s.
Will you kindly convey to me a comprehensible
reason why I should not accept that scholarship?
I don’t understand your objection in the least.
But anyway, it won’t do the slightest good for
you to object, for I’ve already accepted it
and I am not going to change! That sounds a
little impertinent, but I don’t mean it so.
I suppose you feel that when you set
out to educate me, you’d like to finish the
work, and put a neat period, in the shape of a diploma,
at the end.
But look at it just a second from
my point of view. I shall owe my education to
you just as much as though I let you pay for the whole
of it, but I won’t be quite so much indebted.
I know that you don’t want me to return the
money, but nevertheless, I am going to want to do it,
if I possibly can; and winning this scholarship makes
it so much easier. I was expecting to spend
the rest of my life in paying my debts, but now I
shall only have to spend one-half of the rest of it.
I hope you understand my position
and won’t be cross. The allowance I shall
still most gratefully accept. It requires an
allowance to live up to Julia and her furniture!
I wish that she had been reared to simpler tastes,
or else that she were not my room-mate.
This isn’t much of a letter;
I meant to have written a lot-but I’ve
been hemming four window curtains and three portieres
(I’m glad you can’t see the length of
the stitches), and polishing a brass desk set with
tooth powder (very uphill work), and sawing off picture
wire with manicure scissors, and unpacking four boxes
of books, and putting away two trunkfuls of clothes
(it doesn’t seem believable that Jerusha Abbott
owns two trunks full of clothes, but she does!) and
welcoming back fifty dear friends in between.
Opening day is a joyous occasion!
Good night, Daddy dear, and don’t
be annoyed because your chick is wanting to scratch
for herself. She’s growing up into an awfully
energetic little hen-with a very determined
cluck and lots of beautiful feathers (all due to you).
Affectionately,
Judy
30th
September
Dear Daddy,
Are you still harping on that scholarship?
I never knew a man so obstinate, and stubborn and
unreasonable, and tenacious, and bull-doggish, and
unable-to-see-other-people’s-point-of-view, as
you.
You prefer that I should not be accepting
favours from strangers.
Strangers!-And what are you, pray?
Is there anyone in the world that
I know less? I shouldn’t recognize you
if I met you in the street. Now, you see, if
you had been a sane, sensible person and had written
nice, cheering fatherly letters to your little Judy,
and had come occasionally and patted her on the head,
and had said you were glad she was such a good girl-Then,
perhaps, she wouldn’t have flouted you in your
old age, but would have obeyed your slightest wish
like the dutiful daughter she was meant to be.
Strangers indeed! You live in a glass house,
Mr. Smith.
And besides, this isn’t a favour;
it’s like a prize-I earned it by
hard work. If nobody had been good enough in
English, the committee wouldn’t have awarded
the scholarship; some years they don’t.
Also- But what’s the use of arguing
with a man? You belong, Mr. Smith, to a sex
devoid of a sense of logic. To bring a man into
line, there are just two methods: one must either
coax or be disagreeable. I scorn to coax men
for what I wish. Therefore, I must be disagreeable.
I refuse, sir, to give up the scholarship;
and if you make any more fuss, I won’t accept
the monthly allowance either, but will wear myself
into a nervous wreck tutoring stupid Freshmen.
That is my ultimatum!
And listen-I have a further
thought. Since you are so afraid that by taking
this scholarship I am depriving someone else of an
education, I know a way out. You can apply the
money that you would have spent for me towards educating
some other little girl from the John Grier Home.
Don’t you think that’s a nice idea?
Only, Daddy, educate the new girl as much as
you choose, but please don’t like her any
better than me.
I trust that your secretary won’t
be hurt because I pay so little attention to the suggestions
offered in his letter, but I can’t help it if
he is. He’s a spoiled child, Daddy.
I’ve meekly given in to his whims heretofore,
but this time I intend to be firm.
Yours,
With a mind,
Completely
and Irrevocably and
World-without-End
Made-up,
Jerusha
Abbott
9th
November
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I started down town today to buy a
bottle of shoe blacking and some collars and the material
for a new blouse and a jar of violet cream and a cake
of Castile soap-all very necessary; I couldn’t
be happy another day without them-and when
I tried to pay the car fare, I found that I had left
my purse in the pocket of my other coat. So I
had to get out and take the next car, and was late
for gymnasium.
It’s a dreadful thing to have no memory and
two coats!
Julia Pendleton has invited me to
visit her for the Christmas holidays. How does
that strike you, Mr. Smith? Fancy Jerusha Abbott,
of the John Grier Home, sitting at the tables of the
rich. I don’t know why Julia wants me-she
seems to be getting quite attached to me of late.
I should, to tell the truth, very much prefer going
to Sallie’s, but Julia asked me first, so if
I go anywhere it must be to New York instead of to
Worcester. I’m rather awed at the prospect
of meeting Pendletons en Masse, and also
I’d have to get a lot of new clothes-so,
Daddy dear, if you write that you would prefer having
me remain quietly at college, I will bow to your wishes
with my usual sweet docility.
I’m engaged at odd moments with
the Life and Letters of Thomas Huxley-it
makes nice, light reading to pick up between times.
Do you know what an archaeopteryx is? It’s
a bird. And a stereognathus? I’m
not sure myself, but I think it’s a missing link,
like a bird with teeth or a lizard with wings.
No, it isn’t either; I’ve just looked
in the book. It’s a mesozoic mammal.
I’ve elected economics this
year-very illuminating subject. When
I finish that I’m going to take Charity and
Reform; then, Mr. Trustee, I’ll know just how
an orphan asylum ought to be run. Don’t
you think I’d make an admirable voter if I had
my rights? I was twenty-one last week.
This is an awfully wasteful country to throw away
such an honest, educated, conscientious, intelligent
citizen as I would be.
Yours always,
Judy
7th
December
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Thank you for permission to visit
Julia-I take it that silence means consent.
Such a social whirl as we’ve
been having! The Founder’s dance came
last week-this was the first year that any
of us could attend; only upper classmen being allowed.
I invited Jimmie McBride, and Sallie
invited his room-mate at Princeton, who visited them
last summer at their camp-an awfully nice
man with red hair-and Julia invited a man
from New York, not very exciting, but socially irreproachable.
He is connected with the De la Mater Chichesters.
Perhaps that means something to you? It doesn’t
illuminate me to any extent.
However-our guests came
Friday afternoon in time for tea in the senior corridor,
and then dashed down to the hotel for dinner.
The hotel was so full that they slept in rows on
the billiard tables, they say. Jimmie McBride
says that the next time he is bidden to a social event
in this college, he is going to bring one of their
Adirondack tents and pitch it on the campus.
At seven-thirty they came back for
the President’s reception and dance. Our
functions commence early! We had the men’s
cards all made out ahead of time, and after every
dance, we’d leave them in groups, under the
letter that stood for their names, so that they could
be readily found by their next partners. Jimmie
McBride, for example, would stand patiently under
‘M’ until he was claimed. (At least, he
ought to have stood patiently, but he kept wandering
off and getting mixed with ‘R’s’
and ‘S’s’ and all sorts of letters.)
I found him a very difficult guest; he was sulky because
he had only three dances with me. He said he
was bashful about dancing with girls he didn’t
know!
The next morning we had a glee club
concert-and who do you think wrote the
funny new song composed for the occasion? It’s
the truth. She did. Oh, I tell you, Daddy,
your little foundling is getting to be quite a prominent
person!
Anyway, our gay two days were great
fun, and I think the men enjoyed it. Some of
them were awfully perturbed at first at the prospect
of facing one thousand girls; but they got acclimated
very quickly. Our two Princeton men had a beautiful
time-at least they politely said they had,
and they’ve invited us to their dance next spring.
We’ve accepted, so please don’t object,
Daddy dear.
Julia and Sallie and I all had new
dresses. Do you want to hear about them?
Julia’s was cream satin and gold embroidery
and she wore purple orchids. It was a dream
and came from Paris, and cost a million dollars.
Sallie’s was pale blue trimmed
with Persian embroidery, and went beautifully with
red hair. It didn’t cost quite a million,
but was just as effective as Julia’s.
Mine was pale pink crepe de chine
trimmed with ecru lace and rose satin. And I
carried crimson roses which J. McB. sent (Sallie having
told him what colour to get). And we all had satin
slippers and silk stockings and chiffon scarfs to
match.
You must be deeply impressed by these millinery details.
One can’t help thinking, Daddy,
what a colourless life a man is forced to lead, when
one reflects that chiffon and Venetian point and hand
embroidery and Irish crochet are to him mere empty
words. Whereas a woman-whether she
is interested in babies or microbes or husbands or
poetry or servants or parallelograms or gardens or
Plato or bridge-is fundamentally and always
interested in clothes.
It’s the one touch of nature
that makes the whole world kin. (That isn’t
original. I got it out of one of Shakespeare’s
plays).
However, to resume. Do you want
me to tell you a secret that I’ve lately discovered?
And will you promise not to think me vain? Then
listen:
I’m pretty.
I am, really. I’d be an
awful idiot not to know it with three looking-glasses
in the room.
A
Friend
PS. This is one of those
wicked anonymous letters you read about in novels.
20th
December
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I’ve just a moment, because
I must attend two classes, pack a trunk and a suit-case,
and catch the four-o’clock train-but
I couldn’t go without sending a word to let
you know how much I appreciate my Christmas box.
I love the furs and the necklace and
the Liberty scarf and the gloves and handkerchiefs
and books and purse-and most of all I love
you! But Daddy, you have no business to spoil
me this way. I’m only human-and
a girl at that. How can I keep my mind sternly
fixed on a studious career, when you deflect me with
such worldly frivolities?
I have strong suspicions now as to
which one of the John Grier Trustees used to give
the Christmas tree and the Sunday ice-cream.
He was nameless, but by his works I know him!
You deserve to be happy for all the good things you
do.
Goodbye, and a very merry Christmas.
Yours
always,
Judy
PS. I am sending a slight
token, too. Do you think you would like her
if you knew her?
11th
January
I meant to write to you from the city,
Daddy, but New York is an engrossing place.
I had an interesting-and
illuminating-time, but I’m glad I
don’t belong to such a family! I should
truly rather have the John Grier Home for a background.
Whatever the drawbacks of my bringing up, there was
at least no pretence about it. I know now what
people mean when they say they are weighed down by
Things. The material atmosphere of that house
was crushing; I didn’t draw a deep breath until
I was on an express train coming back. All the
furniture was carved and upholstered and gorgeous;
the people I met were beautifully dressed and low-voiced
and well-bred, but it’s the truth, Daddy, I never
heard one word of real talk from the time we arrived
until we left. I don’t think an idea ever
entered the front door.
Mrs. Pendleton never thinks of anything
but jewels and dressmakers and social engagements.
She did seem a different kind of mother from Mrs.
McBride! If I ever marry and have a family, I’m
going to make them as exactly like the McBrides as
I can. Not for all the money in the world would
I ever let any children of mine develop into Pendletons.
Maybe it isn’t polite to criticize people you’ve
been visiting? If it isn’t, please excuse.
This is very confidential, between you and me.
I only saw Master Jervie once when
he called at tea time, and then I didn’t have
a chance to speak to him alone. It was really
disappointing after our nice time last summer.
I don’t think he cares much for his relatives-and
I am sure they don’t care much for him!
Julia’s mother says he’s unbalanced.
He’s a Socialist-except, thank Heaven,
he doesn’t let his hair grow and wear red ties.
She can’t imagine where he picked up his queer
ideas; the family have been Church of England for
generations. He throws away his money on every
sort of crazy reform, instead of spending it on such
sensible things as yachts and automobiles and polo
ponies. He does buy candy with it though!
He sent Julia and me each a box for Christmas.
You know, I think I’ll be a
Socialist, too. You wouldn’t mind, would
you, Daddy? They’re quite different from
Anarchists; they don’t believe in blowing people
up. Probably I am one by rights; I belong to
the proletariat. I haven’t determined yet
just which kind I am going to be. I will look
into the subject over Sunday, and declare my principles
in my next.
I’ve seen loads of theatres
and hotels and beautiful houses. My mind is
a confused jumble of onyx and gilding and mosaic floors
and palms. I’m still pretty breathless
but I am glad to get back to college and my books-I
believe that I really am a student; this atmosphere
of academic calm I find more bracing than New York.
College is a very satisfying sort of life; the books
and study and regular classes keep you alive mentally,
and then when your mind gets tired, you have the gymnasium
and outdoor athletics, and always plenty of congenial
friends who are thinking about the same things you
are. We spend a whole evening in nothing but
talk-talk-talk-and
go to bed with a very uplifted feeling, as though
we had settled permanently some pressing world problems.
And filling in every crevice, there is always such
a lot of nonsense-just silly jokes about
the little things that come up but very satisfying.
We do appreciate our own witticisms!
It isn’t the great big pleasures
that count the most; it’s making a great deal
out of the little ones-I’ve discovered
the true secret of happiness, Daddy, and that is to
live in the now. Not to be for ever regretting
the past, or anticipating the future; but to get the
most that you can out of this very instant.
It’s like farming. You can have extensive
farming and intensive farming; well, I am going to
have intensive living after this. I’m
going to enjoy every second, and I’m going to
know I’m enjoying it while I’m enjoying
it. Most people don’t live; they just
race. They are trying to reach some goal far
away on the horizon, and in the heat of the going
they get so breathless and panting that they lose
all sight of the beautiful, tranquil country they
are passing through; and then the first thing they
know, they are old and worn out, and it doesn’t
make any difference whether they’ve reached
the goal or not. I’ve decided to sit down
by the way and pile up a lot of little happinesses,
even if I never become a Great Author. Did you
ever know such a philosopheress as I am developing
into?
Yours
ever,
Judy
PS. It’s raining
cats and dogs tonight. Two puppies and a kitten
have just landed on the window-sill.
Dear Comrade,
Hooray! I’m a Fabian.
That’s a Socialist who’s
willing to wait. We don’t want the social
revolution to come tomorrow morning; it would be too
upsetting. We want it to come very gradually
in the distant future, when we shall all be prepared
and able to sustain the shock.
In the meantime, we must be getting
ready, by instituting industrial, educational and
orphan asylum reforms.
Yours, with fraternal
love,
Judy
Monday, 3rd hour
11th
February
Dear D.-L.-L.,
Don’t be insulted because this
is so short. It isn’t a letter; it’s
just a line to say that I’m going to write
a letter pretty soon when examinations are over.
It is not only necessary that I pass, but pass well.
I have a scholarship to live up to.
Yours, studying
hard,
J.
A.
5th
March
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
President Cuyler made a speech this
evening about the modern generation being flippant
and superficial. He says that we are losing the
old ideals of earnest endeavour and true scholarship;
and particularly is this falling-off noticeable in
our disrespectful attitude towards organized authority.
We no longer pay a seemly deference to our superiors.
I came away from chapel very sober.
Am I too familiar, Daddy? Ought
I to treat you with more dignity and aloofness?-Yes,
I’m sure I ought. I’ll begin again.
My Dear Mr. Smith,
You will be pleased to hear that I
passed successfully my mid-year examinations, and
am now commencing work in the new semester. I
am leaving chemistry-having completed the
course in qualitative analysis-and am entering
upon the study of biology. I approach this subject
with some hesitation, as I understand that we dissect
angleworms and frogs.
An extremely interesting and valuable
lecture was given in the chapel last week upon Roman
Remains in Southern France. I have never listened
to a more illuminating exposition of the subject.
We are reading Wordsworth’s
Tintern Abbey in connection with our course in English
Literature. What an exquisite work it is, and
how adequately it embodies his conceptions of Pantheism!
The Romantic movement of the early part of the last
century, exemplified in the works of such poets as
Shelley, Byron, Keats, and Wordsworth, appeals to
me very much more than the Classical period that preceded
it. Speaking of poetry, have you ever read that
charming little thing of Tennyson’s called Locksley
Hall?
I am attending gymnasium very regularly
of late. A proctor system has been devised,
and failure to comply with the rules causes a great
deal of inconvenience. The gymnasium is equipped
with a very beautiful swimming tank of cement and
marble, the gift of a former graduate. My room-mate,
Miss McBride, has given me her bathing-suit (it shrank
so that she can no longer wear it) and I am about
to begin swimming lessons.
We had delicious pink ice-cream for
dessert last night. Only vegetable dyes are
used in colouring the food. The college is very
much opposed, both from aesthetic and hygienic motives,
to the use of aniline dyes.
The weather of late has been ideal-bright
sunshine and clouds interspersed with a few welcome
snow-storms. I and my companions have enjoyed
our walks to and from classes-particularly
from.
Trusting, my dear Mr. Smith, that
this will find you in your usual good health,
I remain,
Most cordially yours,
Jerusha Abbott
24th
April
Dear Daddy,
Spring has come again! You should
see how lovely the campus is. I think you might
come and look at it for yourself. Master Jervie
dropped in again last Friday-but he chose
a most unpropitious time, for Sallie and Julia and
I were just running to catch a train. And where
do you think we were going? To Princeton, to
attend a dance and a ball game, if you please!
I didn’t ask you if I might go, because I had
a feeling that your secretary would say no. But
it was entirely regular; we had leave-of-absence from
college, and Mrs. McBride chaperoned us. We
had a charming time-but I shall have to
omit details; they are too many and complicated.
Saturday
Up before dawn! The night watchman
called us-six of us-and we made
coffee in a chafing dish (you never saw so many grounds!)
and walked two miles to the top of One Tree Hill to
see the sun rise. We had to scramble up the
last slope! The sun almost beat us! And
perhaps you think we didn’t bring back appetites
to breakfast!
Dear me, Daddy, I seem to have a very
ejaculatory style today; this page is peppered with
exclamations.
I meant to have written a lot about
the budding trees and the new cinder path in the athletic
field, and the awful lesson we have in biology for
tomorrow, and the new canoes on the lake, and Catherine
Prentiss who has pneumonia, and Prexy’s Angora
kitten that strayed from home and has been boarding
in Fergussen Hall for two weeks until a chambermaid
reported it, and about my three new dresses-white
and pink and blue polka dots with a hat to match-but
I am too sleepy. I am always making this an
excuse, am I not? But a girls’ college
is a busy place and we do get tired by the end of
the day! Particularly when the day begins at
dawn.
Affectionately,
Judy
15th
May
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Is it good manners when you get into
a car just to stare straight ahead and not see anybody
else?
A very beautiful lady in a very beautiful
velvet dress got into the car today, and without the
slightest expression sat for fifteen minutes and looked
at a sign advertising suspenders. It doesn’t
seem polite to ignore everybody else as though you
were the only important person present. Anyway,
you miss a lot. While she was absorbing that
silly sign, I was studying a whole car full of interesting
human beings.
The accompanying illustration is hereby
reproduced for the first time. It looks like
a spider on the end of a string, but it isn’t
at all; it’s a picture of me learning to swim
in the tank in the gymnasium.
The instructor hooks a rope into a
ring in the back of my belt, and runs it through a
pulley in the ceiling. It would be a beautiful
system if one had perfect confidence in the probity
of one’s instructor. I’m always
afraid, though, that she will let the rope get slack,
so I keep one anxious eye on her and swim with the
other, and with this divided interest I do not make
the progress that I otherwise might.
Very miscellaneous weather we’re
having of late. It was raining when I commenced
and now the sun is shining. Sallie and I are
going out to play tennis-thereby gaining
exemption from Gym.
A
week later
I should have finished this letter
long ago, but I didn’t. You don’t
mind, do you, Daddy, if I’m not very regular?
I really do love to write to you; it gives me such
a respectable feeling of having some family.
Would you like me to tell you something? You
are not the only man to whom I write letters.
There are two others! I have been receiving
beautiful long letters this winter from Master Jervie
(with typewritten envelopes so Julia won’t recognize
the writing). Did you ever hear anything so shocking?
And every week or so a very scrawly epistle, usually
on yellow tablet paper, arrives from Princeton.
All of which I answer with business-like promptness.
So you see-I am not so different from
other girls-I get letters, too.
Did I tell you that I have been elected
a member of the Senior Dramatic Club? Very recherche
organization. Only seventy-five members out of
one thousand. Do you think as a consistent Socialist
that I ought to belong?
What do you suppose is at present
engaging my attention in sociology? I am writing
(figurez vous!) a paper on the Care of Dependent
Children. The Professor shuffled up his subjects
and dealt them out promiscuously, and that fell to
me. C’est drôle ca n’est
pas?
There goes the gong for dinner.
I’ll post this as I pass the box.
Affectionately,
J.
4th
June
Dear Daddy,
Very busy time-commencement
in ten days, examinations tomorrow; lots of studying,
lots of packing, and the outdoor world so lovely that
it hurts you to stay inside.
But never mind, vacation’s coming.
Julia is going abroad this summer-it makes
the fourth time. No doubt about it, Daddy, goods
are not distributed evenly. Sallie, as usual,
goes to the Adirondacks. And what do you think
I am going to do? You may have three guesses.
Lock Willow? Wrong. The Adirondacks with
Sallie? Wrong. (I’ll never attempt that
again; I was discouraged last year.) Can’t you
guess anything else? You’re not very inventive.
I’ll tell you, Daddy, if you’ll promise
not to make a lot of objections. I warn your
secretary in advance that my mind is made up.
I am going to spend the summer at
the seaside with a Mrs. Charles Paterson and tutor
her daughter who is to enter college in the autumn.
I met her through the McBrides, and she is a very charming
woman. I am to give lessons in English and Latin
to the younger daughter, too, but I shall have a little
time to myself, and I shall be earning fifty dollars
a month! Doesn’t that impress you as a
perfectly exorbitant amount? She offered it;
I should have blushed to ask for more than twenty-five.
I finish at Magnolia (that’s
where she lives) the first of September, and shall
probably spend the remaining three weeks at Lock Willow-I
should like to see the Semples again and all the friendly
animals.
How does my programme strike you,
Daddy? I am getting quite independent, you see.
You have put me on my feet and I think I can almost
walk alone by now.
Princeton commencement and our examinations
exactly coincide-which is an awful blow.
Sallie and I did so want to get away in time for it,
but of course that is utterly impossible.
Goodbye, Daddy. Have a nice
summer and come back in the autumn rested and ready
for another year of work. (That’s what you ought
to be writing to me!) I haven’t any idea what
you do in the summer, or how you amuse yourself.
I can’t visualize your surroundings. Do
you play golf or hunt or ride horseback or just sit
in the sun and meditate?
Anyway, whatever it is, have a good
time and don’t forget Judy.
10th
June
Dear Daddy,
This is the hardest letter I ever
wrote, but I have decided what I must do, and there
isn’t going to be any turning back. It
is very sweet and generous and dear of you to wish
to send me to Europe this summer-for the
moment I was intoxicated by the idea; but sober second
thoughts said no. It would be rather illogical
of me to refuse to take your money for college, and
then use it instead just for amusement! You
mustn’t get me used to too many luxuries.
One doesn’t miss what one has never had; but
it’s awfully hard going without things after
one has commenced thinking they are his-hers
(English language needs another pronoun) by natural
right. Living with Sallie and Julia is an awful
strain on my stoical philosophy. They have both
had things from the time they were babies; they accept
happiness as a matter of course. The World, they
think, owes them everything they want. Maybe
the World does-in any case, it seems to
acknowledge the debt and pay up. But as for
me, it owes me nothing, and distinctly told me so in
the beginning. I have no right to borrow on credit,
for there will come a time when the World will repudiate
my claim.
I seem to be floundering in a sea
of metaphor-but I hope you grasp my meaning?
Anyway, I have a very strong feeling that the only
honest thing for me to do is to teach this summer
and begin to support myself.
Magnolia,
Four
days later
I’d got just that much written,
when-what do you think happened? The
maid arrived with Master Jervie’s card.
He is going abroad too this summer; not with Julia
and her family, but entirely by himself I told him
that you had invited me to go with a lady who is chaperoning
a party of girls. He knows about you, Daddy.
That is, he knows that my father and mother are dead,
and that a kind gentleman is sending me to college;
I simply didn’t have the courage to tell him
about the John Grier Home and all the rest.
He thinks that you are my guardian and a perfectly
legitimate old family friend. I have never told
him that I didn’t know you-that would
seem too queer!
Anyway, he insisted on my going to
Europe. He said that it was a necessary part
of my education and that I mustn’t think of refusing.
Also, that he would be in Paris at the same time, and
that we would run away from the chaperon occasionally
and have dinner together at nice, funny, foreign restaurants.
Well, Daddy, it did appeal to me!
I almost weakened; if he hadn’t been so dictatorial,
maybe I should have entirely weakened. I can
be enticed step by step, but I won’t be
forced. He said I was a silly, foolish, irrational,
quixotic, idiotic, stubborn child (those are a few
of his abusive adjectives; the rest escape me), and
that I didn’t know what was good for me; I ought
to let older people judge. We almost quarrelled-I
am not sure but that we entirely did!
In any case, I packed my trunk fast
and came up here. I thought I’d better
see my bridges in flames behind me before I finished
writing to you. They are entirely reduced to
ashes now. Here I am at Cliff Top (the name
of Mrs. Paterson’s cottage) with my trunk unpacked
and Florence (the little one) already struggling with
first declension nouns. And it bids fair to
be a struggle! She is a most uncommonly spoiled
child; I shall have to teach her first how to study-she
has never in her life concentrated on anything more
difficult than ice-cream soda water.
We use a quiet corner of the cliffs
for a schoolroom-Mrs. Paterson wishes me
to keep them out of doors-and I will say
that I find it difficult to concentrate with the blue
sea before me and ships a-sailing by! And when
I think I might be on one, sailing off to foreign
lands-but I won’t let myself
think of anything but Latin Grammar.
The prepositions a or ab, absque,
coram, cum, de e or ex, prae,
pro, sine, tenus, in, subter,
sub and super govern the ablative.
So you see, Daddy, I am already plunged
into work with my eyes persistently set against temptation.
Don’t be cross with me, please, and don’t
think that I do not appreciate your kindness, for I
do-always-always. The only
way I can ever repay you is by turning out a Very
Useful Citizen (Are women citizens? I don’t
suppose they are.) Anyway, a Very Useful Person.
And when you look at me you can say, ‘I gave
that Very Useful Person to the world.’
That sounds well, doesn’t it,
Daddy? But I don’t wish to mislead you.
The feeling often comes over me that I am not at all
remarkable; it is fun to plan a career, but in all
probability I shan’t turn out a bit different
from any other ordinary person. I may end by
marrying an undertaker and being an inspiration to
him in his work.
Yours ever,
Judy
19th
August
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
My window looks out on the loveliest
landscape-ocean-scape, rather-nothing
but water and rocks.
The summer goes. I spend the
morning with Latin and English and algebra and my
two stupid girls. I don’t know how Marion
is ever going to get into college, or stay in after
she gets there. And as for Florence, she is
hopeless-but oh! such a little beauty.
I don’t suppose it matters in the least whether
they are stupid or not so long as they are pretty?
One can’t help thinking, though, how their
conversation will bore their husbands, unless they
are fortunate enough to obtain stupid husbands.
I suppose that’s quite possible; the world
seems to be filled with stupid men; I’ve met
a number this summer.
In the afternoon we take a walk on
the cliffs, or swim, if the tide is right. I
can swim in salt water with the utmost ease you see
my education is already being put to use!
A letter comes from Mr. Jervis Pendleton
in Paris, rather a short concise letter; I’m
not quite forgiven yet for refusing to follow his
advice. However, if he gets back in time, he
will see me for a few days at Lock Willow before college
opens, and if I am very nice and sweet and docile,
I shall (I am led to infer) be received into favour
again.
Also a letter from Sallie. She
wants me to come to their camp for two weeks in September.
Must I ask your permission, or haven’t I yet
arrived at the place where I can do as I please?
Yes, I am sure I have-I’m a Senior,
you know. Having worked all summer, I feel like
taking a little healthful recreation; I want to see
the Adirondacks; I want to see Sallie; I want to see
Sallie’s brother-he’s going
to teach me to canoe-and (we come to my
chief motive, which is mean) I want Master Jervie
to arrive at Lock Willow and find me not there.
I must show him that he can’t
dictate to me. No one can dictate to me but
you, Daddy-and you can’t always!
I’m off for the woods.
Judy
CampMCBRIDE,
6th
September
Dear Daddy,
Your letter didn’t come in time
(I am pleased to say). If you wish your instructions
to be obeyed, you must have your secretary transmit
them in less than two weeks. As you observe,
I am here, and have been for five days.
The woods are fine, and so is the
camp, and so is the weather, and so are the McBrides,
and so is the whole world. I’m very happy!
There’s Jimmie calling for me
to come canoeing. Goodbye-sorry to
have disobeyed, but why are you so persistent about
not wanting me to play a little? When I’ve
worked all the summer I deserve two weeks. You
are awfully dog-in-the-mangerish.
However-I love you still,
Daddy, in spite of all your faults.
Judy
3rd
October
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Back at college and a Senior-also
editor of the Monthly. It doesn’t seem
possible, does it, that so sophisticated a person,
just four years ago, was an inmate of the John Grier
Home? We do arrive fast in America!
What do you think of this? A
note from Master Jervie directed to Lock Willow and
forwarded here. He’s sorry, but he finds
that he can’t get up there this autumn; he has
accepted an invitation to go yachting with some friends.
Hopes I’ve had a nice summer and am enjoying
the country.
And he knew all the time that I was
with the McBrides, for Julia told him so! You
men ought to leave intrigue to women; you haven’t
a light enough touch.
Julia has a trunkful of the most ravishing
new clothes-an evening gown of rainbow
Liberty crepe that would be fitting raiment for the
angels in Paradise. And I thought that my own
clothes this year were unprecedentedly (is there such
a word?) beautiful. I copied Mrs. Paterson’s
wardrobe with the aid of a cheap dressmaker, and though
the gowns didn’t turn out quite twins of the
originals, I was entirely happy until Julia unpacked.
But now-I live to see Paris!
Dear Daddy, aren’t you glad
you’re not a girl? I suppose you think
that the fuss we make over clothes is too absolutely
silly? It is. No doubt about it.
But it’s entirely your fault.
Did you ever hear about the learned
Herr Professor who regarded unnecessary adornment
with contempt and favoured sensible, utilitarian clothes
for women? His wife, who was an obliging creature,
adopted ‘dress reform.’ And what
do you think he did? He eloped with a chorus
girl.
Yours ever,
Judy
PS. The chamber-maid in
our corridor wears blue checked gingham aprons.
I am going to get her some brown ones instead, and
sink the blue ones in the bottom of the lake.
I have a reminiscent chill every time I look at them.
17th
November
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Such a blight has fallen over my literary
career. I don’t know whether to tell you
or not, but I would like some sympathy-silent
sympathy, please; don’t re-open the wound by
referring to it in your next letter.
I’ve been writing a book, all
last winter in the evenings, and all the summer when
I wasn’t teaching Latin to my two stupid children.
I just finished it before college opened and sent
it to a publisher. He kept it two months, and
I was certain he was going to take it; but yesterday
morning an express parcel came (thirty cents due) and
there it was back again with a letter from the publisher,
a very nice, fatherly letter-but frank!
He said he saw from the address that I was still at
college, and if I would accept some advice, he would
suggest that I put all of my energy into my lessons
and wait until I graduated before beginning to write.
He enclosed his reader’s opinion. Here
it is:
’Plot highly improbable.
Characterization exaggerated. Conversation
unnatural. A good deal of humour but not always
in the best of taste. Tell her to keep on trying,
and in time she may produce a real book.’
Not on the whole flattering, is it,
Daddy? And I thought I was making a notable
addition to American literature. I did truly.
I was planning to surprise you by writing a great
novel before I graduated. I collected the material
for it while I was at Julia’s last Christmas.
But I dare say the editor is right. Probably
two weeks was not enough in which to observe the manners
and customs of a great city.
I took it walking with me yesterday
afternoon, and when I came to the gas house, I went
in and asked the engineer if I might borrow his furnace.
He politely opened the door, and with my own hands
I chucked it in. I felt as though I had cremated
my only child!
I went to bed last night utterly dejected;
I thought I was never going to amount to anything,
and that you had thrown away your money for nothing.
But what do you think? I woke up this morning
with a beautiful new plot in my head, and I’ve
been going about all day planning my characters, just
as happy as I could be. No one can ever accuse
me of being a pessimist! If I had a husband and
twelve children swallowed by an earthquake one day,
I’d bob up smilingly the next morning and commence
to look for another set.
Affectionately,
Judy
14th
December
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I dreamed the funniest dream last
night. I thought I went into a book store and
the clerk brought me a new book named The Life and
Letters of Judy Abbott. I could see it perfectly
plainly-red cloth binding with a picture
of the John Grier Home on the cover, and my portrait
for a frontispiece with, ‘Very truly yours,
Judy Abbott,’ written below. But just
as I was turning to the end to read the inscription
on my tombstone, I woke up. It was very annoying!
I almost found out whom I’m going to marry
and when I’m going to die.
Don’t you think it would be
interesting if you really could read the story of
your life-written perfectly truthfully by
an omniscient author? And suppose you could
only read it on this condition: that you would
never forget it, but would have to go through life
knowing ahead of time exactly how everything you did
would turn out, and foreseeing to the exact hour the
time when you would die. How many people do
you suppose would have the courage to read it then?
or how many could suppress their curiosity sufficiently
to escape from reading it, even at the price of having
to live without hope and without surprises?
Life is monotonous enough at best;
you have to eat and sleep about so often. But
imagine how deadly monotonous it would be if nothing
unexpected could happen between meals. Mercy!
Daddy, there’s a blot, but I’m on the
third page and I can’t begin a new sheet.
I’m going on with biology again
this year-very interesting subject; we’re
studying the alimentary system at present. You
should see how sweet a cross-section of the duodenum
of a cat is under the microscope.
Also we’ve arrived at philosophy-interesting
but evanescent. I prefer biology where you can
pin the subject under discussion to a board.
There’s another! And another! This
pen is weeping copiously. Please excuse its
tears.
Do you believe in free will?
I do-unreservedly. I don’t
agree at all with the philosophers who think that
every action is the absolutely inevitable and automatic
resultant of an aggregation of remote causes.
That’s the most immoral doctrine I ever heard-nobody
would be to blame for anything. If a man believed
in fatalism, he would naturally just sit down and
say, ‘The Lord’s will be done,’ and
continue to sit until he fell over dead.
I believe absolutely in my own free
will and my own power to accomplish-and
that is the belief that moves mountains. You
watch me become a great author! I have four
chapters of my new book finished and five more drafted.
This is a very abstruse letter-does
your head ache, Daddy? I think we’ll stop
now and make some fudge. I’m sorry I can’t
send you a piece; it will be unusually good, for we’re
going to make it with real cream and three butter
balls.
Yours affectionately,
Judy
PS. We’re having
fancy dancing in gymnasium class. You can see
by the accompanying picture how much we look like
a real ballet. The one at the end accomplishing
a graceful pirouette is me-I mean I.
26th
December
My Dear, Dear, Daddy,
Haven’t you any sense?
Don’t you know that you mustn’t give
one girl seventeen Christmas presents? I’m
a Socialist, please remember; do you wish to turn
me into a Plutocrat?
Think how embarrassing it would be
if we should ever quarrel! I should have to
engage a moving-van to return your gifts.
I am sorry that the necktie I sent
was so wobbly; I knit it with my own hands (as you
doubtless discovered from internal evidence).
You will have to wear it on cold days and keep your
coat buttoned up tight.
Thank you, Daddy, a thousand times.
I think you’re the sweetest man that ever lived-and
the foolishest!
Judy
Here’s a four-leaf clover from
Camp McBride to bring you good luck for the New Year.
9th
January
Do you wish to do something, Daddy,
that will ensure your eternal salvation? There
is a family here who are in awfully desperate straits.
A mother and father and four visible children-the
two older boys have disappeared into the world to
make their fortune and have not sent any of it back.
The father worked in a glass factory and got consumption-it’s
awfully unhealthy work-and now has been
sent away to a hospital. That took all their
savings, and the support of the family falls upon
the oldest daughter, who is twenty-four. She dressmakes
for $1.50 a day (when she can get it) and embroiders
centrepieces in the evening. The mother isn’t
very strong and is extremely ineffectual and pious.
She sits with her hands folded, a picture of patient
resignation, while the daughter kills herself with
overwork and responsibility and worry; she doesn’t
see how they are going to get through the rest of
the winter-and I don’t either.
One hundred dollars would buy some coal and some
shoes for three children so that they could go to
school, and give a little margin so that she needn’t
worry herself to death when a few days pass and she
doesn’t get work.
You are the richest man I know.
Don’t you suppose you could spare one hundred
dollars? That girl deserves help a lot more than
I ever did. I wouldn’t ask it except for
the girl; I don’t care much what happens to
the mother-she is such a jelly-fish.
The way people are for ever rolling
their eyes to heaven and saying, ‘Perhaps it’s
all for the best,’ when they are perfectly dead
sure it’s not, makes me enraged. Humility
or resignation or whatever you choose to call it,
is simply impotent inertia. I’m for a more
militant religion!
We are getting the most dreadful lessons
in philosophy-all of Schopenhauer for tomorrow.
The professor doesn’t seem to realize that
we are taking any other subject. He’s a
queer old duck; he goes about with his head in the
clouds and blinks dazedly when occasionally he strikes
solid earth. He tries to lighten his lectures
with an occasional witticism-and we do
our best to smile, but I assure you his jokes are
no laughing matter. He spends his entire time
between classes in trying to figure out whether matter
really exists or whether he only thinks it exists.
I’m sure my sewing girl hasn’t
any doubt but that it exists!
Where do you think my new novel is?
In the waste-basket. I can see myself that it’s
no good on earth, and when a loving author realizes
that, what would be the judgment of a critical
public?
Later
I address you, Daddy, from a bed of
pain. For two days I’ve been laid up with
swollen tonsils; I can just swallow hot milk, and that
is all. ’What were your parents thinking
of not to have those tonsils out when you were a baby?’
the doctor wished to know. I’m sure I haven’t
an idea, but I doubt if they were thinking much about
me.
Yours,
J.
A.
Next
morning
I just read this over before sealing
it. I don’t know why I cast such
a misty atmosphere over life. I hasten to assure
you that I am young and happy and exuberant; and I
trust you are the same. Youth has nothing to
do with birthdays, only with ALIVEDNESS of spirit,
so even if your hair is grey, Daddy, you can still
be a boy.
Affectionately,
Judy
12th
Jan.
Dear Mr. Philanthropist,
Your cheque for my family came yesterday.
Thank you so much! I cut gymnasium and took
it down to them right after luncheon, and you should
have seen the girl’s face! She was so surprised
and happy and relieved that she looked almost young;
and she’s only twenty-four. Isn’t
it pitiful?
Anyway, she feels now as though all
the good things were coming together. She has
steady work ahead for two months-someone’s
getting married, and there’s a trousseau to
make.
‘Thank the good Lord!’
cried the mother, when she grasped the fact that that
small piece of paper was one hundred dollars.
‘It wasn’t the good Lord
at all,’ said I, ‘it was Daddy-Long-Legs.’
(Mr. Smith, I called you.)
‘But it was the good Lord who
put it in his mind,’ said she.
‘Not at all! I put it in his mind myself,’
said I.
But anyway, Daddy, I trust the good
Lord will reward you suitably. You deserve ten
thousand years out of purgatory.
Yours most gratefully,
Judy Abbott
15th
Feb.
May it please Your Most Excellent Majesty:
This morning I did eat my breakfast
upon a cold turkey pie and a goose, and I did send
for a cup of tee (a china drink) of which I had never
drank before.
Don’t be nervous, Daddy-I
haven’t lost my mind; I’m merely quoting
Sam’l Pepys. We’re reading him in
connection with English History, original sources.
Sallie and Julia and I converse now in the language
of 1660. Listen to this:
’I went to Charing Cross to
see Major Harrison hanged, drawn and quartered:
he looking as cheerful as any man could do in that
condition.’ And this: ’Dined
with my lady who is in handsome mourning for her brother
who died yesterday of spotted fever.’
Seems a little early to commence entertaining,
doesn’t it? A friend of Pepys devised
a very cunning manner whereby the king might pay his
debts out of the sale to poor people of old decayed
provisions. What do you, a reformer, think of
that? I don’t believe we’re so bad
today as the newspapers make out.
Samuel was as excited about his clothes
as any girl; he spent five times as much on dress
as his wife-that appears to have been the
Golden Age of husbands. Isn’t this a touching
entry? You see he really was honest. ’Today
came home my fine Camlett cloak with gold buttons,
which cost me much money, and I pray God to make me
able to pay for it.’
Excuse me for being so full of Pepys;
I’m writing a special topic on him.
What do you think, Daddy? The
Self-Government Association has abolished the ten
o’clock rule. We can keep our lights all
night if we choose, the only requirement being that
we do not disturb others-we are not supposed
to entertain on a large scale. The result is
a beautiful commentary on human nature. Now
that we may stay up as long as we choose, we no longer
choose. Our heads begin to nod at nine o’clock,
and by nine-thirty the pen drops from our nerveless
grasp. It’s nine-thirty now. Good
night.
Sunday
Just back from church-preacher
from Georgia. We must take care, he says, not
to develop our intellects at the expense of our emotional
natures-but methought it was a poor, dry
sermon (Pepys again). It doesn’t matter
what part of the United States or Canada they come
from, or what denomination they are, we always get
the same sermon. Why on earth don’t they
go to men’s colleges and urge the students not
to allow their manly natures to be crushed out by
too much mental application?
It’s a beautiful day-frozen
and icy and clear. As soon as dinner is over,
Sallie and Julia and Marty Keene and Eleanor Pratt
(friends of mine, but you don’t know them) and
I are going to put on short skirts and walk ’cross
country to Crystal Spring Farm and have a fried chicken
and waffle supper, and then have Mr. Crystal Spring
drive us home in his buckboard. We are supposed
to be inside the campus at seven, but we are going
to stretch a point tonight and make it eight.
Farewell, kind Sir.
I have the honour of subscribing
myself,
Your most loyall, dutifull, faithfull and
obedient servant,
J. Abbott
March
Fifth
Dear Mr. Trustee,
Tomorrow is the first Wednesday in
the month-a weary day for the John Grier
Home. How relieved they’ll be when five
o’clock comes and you pat them on the head and
take yourselves off! Did you (individually)
ever pat me on the head, Daddy? I don’t
believe so-my memory seems to be concerned
only with fat Trustees.
Give the Home my love, please-my
truly love. I have quite a feeling of tenderness
for it as I look back through a haze of four years.
When I first came to college I felt quite resentful
because I’d been robbed of the normal kind of
childhood that the other girls had had; but now, I
don’t feel that way in the least. I regard
it as a very unusual adventure. It gives me
a sort of vantage point from which to stand aside
and look at life. Emerging full grown, I get
a perspective on the world, that other people who
have been brought up in the thick of things entirely
lack.
I know lots of girls (Julia, for instance)
who never know that they are happy. They are
so accustomed to the feeling that their senses are
deadened to it; but as for me-I am perfectly
sure every moment of my life that I am happy.
And I’m going to keep on being, no matter what
unpleasant things turn up. I’m going to
regard them (even toothaches) as interesting experiences,
and be glad to know what they feel like. ‘Whatever
sky’s above me, I’ve a heart for any fate.’
However, Daddy, don’t take this
new affection for the J.G.H. too literally.
If I have five children, like Rousseau, I shan’t
leave them on the steps of a foundling asylum in order
to insure their being brought up simply.
Give my kindest regards to Mrs. Lippett
(that, I think, is truthful; love would be a little
strong) and don’t forget to tell her what a
beautiful nature I’ve developed.
Affectionately,
Judy
Lockwillow,
4th
April
Dear Daddy,
Do you observe the postmark?
Sallie and I are embellishing Lock Willow with our
presence during the Easter Vacation. We decided
that the best thing we could do with our ten days
was to come where it is quiet. Our nerves had
got to the point where they wouldn’t stand another
meal in Fergussen. Dining in a room with four
hundred girls is an ordeal when you are tired.
There is so much noise that you can’t hear the
girls across the table speak unless they make their
hands into a megaphone and shout. That is the
truth.
We are tramping over the hills and
reading and writing, and having a nice, restful time.
We climbed to the top of ‘Sky Hill’ this
morning where Master Jervie and I once cooked supper-it
doesn’t seem possible that it was nearly two
years ago. I could still see the place where
the smoke of our fire blackened the rock. It
is funny how certain places get connected with certain
people, and you never go back without thinking of
them. I was quite lonely without him-for
two minutes.
What do you think is my latest activity,
Daddy? You will begin to believe that I am incorrigible-I
am writing a book. I started it three weeks
ago and am eating it up in chunks. I’ve
caught the secret. Master Jervie and that editor
man were right; you are most convincing when you write
about the things you know. And this time it is
about something that I do know-exhaustively.
Guess where it’s laid? In the John Grier
Home! And it’s good, Daddy, I actually
believe it is-just about the tiny little
things that happened every day. I’m a realist
now. I’ve abandoned romanticism; I shall
go back to it later though, when my own adventurous
future begins.
This new book is going to get itself
finished-and published! You see if
it doesn’t. If you just want a thing hard
enough and keep on trying, you do get it in the end.
I’ve been trying for four years to get a letter
from you-and I haven’t given up hope
yet.
Goodbye, Daddy dear,
(I like to call you Daddy dear; it’s so alliterative.)
Affectionately,
Judy
PS. I forgot to tell you
the farm news, but it’s very distressing.
Skip this postscript if you don’t want your sensibilities
all wrought up.
Poor old Grove is dead. He got
so that he couldn’t chew and they had to shoot
him.
Nine chickens were killed by a weasel
or a skunk or a rat last week.
One of the cows is sick, and we had
to have the veterinary surgeon out from Bonnyrigg
Four Corners. Amasai stayed up all night to give
her linseed oil and whisky. But we have an awful
suspicion that the poor sick cow got nothing but linseed
oil.
Sentimental Tommy (the tortoise-shell
cat) has disappeared; we are afraid he has been caught
in a trap.
There are lots of troubles in the world!
17th
May
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
This is going to be extremely short
because my shoulder aches at the sight of a pen.
Lecture notes all day, immortal novel all evening,
make too much writing.
Commencement three weeks from next
Wednesday. I think you might come and make my
acquaintance-I shall hate you if you don’t!
Julia’s inviting Master Jervie, he being her
family, and Sallie’s inviting Jimmie McB., he
being her family, but who is there for me to invite?
Just you and Lippett, and I don’t want her.
Please come.
Yours, with love and writer’s cramp.
Judy
Lockwillow,
19th
June
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
I’m educated! My diploma
is in the bottom bureau drawer with my two best dresses.
Commencement was as usual, with a few showers at vital
moments. Thank you for your rosebuds. They
were lovely. Master Jervie and Master Jimmie
both gave me roses, too, but I left theirs in the
bath tub and carried yours in the class procession.
Here I am at Lock Willow for the summer-for
ever maybe. The board is cheap; the surroundings
quiet and conducive to a literary life. What
more does a struggling author wish? I am mad
about my book. I think of it every waking moment,
and dream of it at night. All I want is peace
and quiet and lots of time to work (interspersed with
nourishing meals).
Master Jervie is coming up for a week
or so in August, and Jimmie McBride is going to drop
in sometime through the summer. He’s connected
with a bond house now, and goes about the country selling
bonds to banks. He’s going to combine the
‘Farmers’ National’ at the Corners
and me on the same trip.
You see that Lock Willow isn’t
entirely lacking in society. I’d be expecting
to have you come motoring through-only I
know now that that is hopeless. When you wouldn’t
come to my commencement, I tore you from my heart
and buried you for ever.
Judy Abbott,
A.B.
24th
July
Dearest Daddy-Long-Legs,
Isn’t it fun to work-or
don’t you ever do it? It’s especially
fun when your kind of work is the thing you’d
rather do more than anything else in the world.
I’ve been writing as fast as my pen would go
every day this summer, and my only quarrel with life
is that the days aren’t long enough to write
all the beautiful and valuable and entertaining thoughts
I’m thinking.
I’ve finished the second draft
of my book and am going to begin the third tomorrow
morning at half-past seven. It’s the sweetest
book you ever saw-it is, truly. I
think of nothing else. I can barely wait in
the morning to dress and eat before beginning; then
I write and write and write till suddenly I’m
so tired that I’m limp all over. Then I
go out with Colin (the new sheep dog) and romp through
the fields and get a fresh supply of ideas for the
next day. It’s the most beautiful book
you ever saw-Oh, pardon-I said
that before.
You don’t think me conceited, do you, Daddy
dear?
I’m not, really, only just now
I’m in the enthusiastic stage. Maybe later
on I’ll get cold and critical and sniffy.
No, I’m sure I won’t! This time
I’ve written a real book. Just wait till
you see it.
I’ll try for a minute to talk
about something else. I never told you, did
I, that Amasai and Carrie got married last May?
They are still working here, but so far as I can
see it has spoiled them both. She used to laugh
when he tramped in mud or dropped ashes on the floor,
but now-you should hear her scold!
And she doesn’t curl her hair any longer.
Amasai, who used to be so obliging about beating rugs
and carrying wood, grumbles if you suggest such a
thing. Also his neckties are quite dingy-black
and brown, where they used to be scarlet and purple.
I’ve determined never to marry. It’s
a deteriorating process, evidently.
There isn’t much of any farm
news. The animals are all in the best of health.
The pigs are unusually fat, the cows seem contented
and the hens are laying well. Are you interested
in poultry? If so, let me recommend that invaluable
little work, 200 Eggs per Hen per Year. I am
thinking of starting an incubator next spring and raising
broilers. You see I’m settled at Lock Willow
permanently. I have decided to stay until I’ve
written 114 novels like Anthony Trollope’s mother.
Then I shall have completed my life work and can
retire and travel.
Mr. James McBride spent last Sunday
with us. Fried chicken and ice-cream for dinner,
both of which he appeared to appreciate. I was
awfully glad to see him; he brought a momentary reminder
that the world at large exists. Poor Jimmie
is having a hard time peddling his bonds. The
‘Farmers’ National’ at the Corners
wouldn’t have anything to do with them in spite
of the fact that they pay six per cent. interest
and sometimes seven. I think he’ll end
up by going home to Worcester and taking a job in
his father’s factory. He’s too open
and confiding and kind-hearted ever to make a successful
financier. But to be the manager of a flourishing
overall factory is a very desirable position, don’t
you think? Just now he turns up his nose at overalls,
but he’ll come to them.
I hope you appreciate the fact that
this is a long letter from a person with writer’s
cramp. But I still love you, Daddy dear, and
I’m very happy. With beautiful scenery
all about, and lots to eat and a comfortable four-post
bed and a ream of blank paper and a pint of ink-what
more does one want in the world?
Yours as
always,
Judy
PS. The postman arrives
with some more news. We are to expect Master
Jervie on Friday next to spend a week. That’s
a very pleasant prospect-only I am afraid
my poor book will suffer. Master Jervie is very
demanding.
27th
August
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Where are you, I wonder?
I never know what part of the world
you are in, but I hope you’re not in New York
during this awful weather. I hope you’re
on a mountain peak (but not in Switzerland; somewhere
nearer) looking at the snow and thinking about me.
Please be thinking about me. I’m quite
lonely and I want to be thought about. Oh, Daddy,
I wish I knew you! Then when we were unhappy
we could cheer each other up.
I don’t think I can stand much
more of Lock Willow. I’m thinking of moving.
Sallie is going to do settlement work in Boston next
winter. Don’t you think it would be nice
for me to go with her, then we could have a studio
together? I would write while she settled
and we could be together in the evenings. Evenings
are very long when there’s no one but the Semples
and Carrie and Amasai to talk to. I know in
advance that you won’t like my studio idea.
I can read your secretary’s letter now:
’Miss Jerusha Abbott.
Dear
madam,
’Mr. Smith prefers that you remain at Lock Willow.
’Yours
truly,
Elmer
H. Griggs.’
I hate your secretary. I am
certain that a man named Elmer H. Griggs must be horrid.
But truly, Daddy, I think I shall have to go to Boston.
I can’t stay here. If something doesn’t
happen soon, I shall throw myself into the silo pit
out of sheer desperation.
Mercy! but it’s hot. All
the grass is burnt up and the brooks are dry and the
roads are dusty. It hasn’t rained for weeks
and weeks.
This letter sounds as though I had
hydrophobia, but I haven’t. I just want
some family.
Goodbye, my dearest Daddy.
I wish I
knew you.
Judy
Lockwillow,
19th September
Dear Daddy,
Something has happened and I need advice.
I need it from you, and from
nobody else in the world. Wouldn’t it be possible for me to see you?
It’s so much easier to talk than to write; and I’m afraid your
secretary might open the letter.
Judy
PS. I’m very unhappy.
Lockwillow,
3rd
October
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,
Your note written in your own hand-and
a pretty wobbly hand!-came this morning.
I am so sorry that you have been ill; I wouldn’t
have bothered you with my affairs if I had known.
Yes, I will tell you the trouble, but it’s
sort of complicated to write, and very private.
Please don’t keep this letter, but burn it.
Before I begin-here’s
a cheque for one thousand dollars. It seems
funny, doesn’t it, for me to be sending a cheque
to you? Where do you think I got it?
I’ve sold my story, Daddy.
It’s going to be published serially in seven
parts, and then in a book! You might think I’d
be wild with joy, but I’m not. I’m
entirely apathetic. Of course I’m glad
to begin paying you-I owe you over two
thousand more. It’s coming in instalments.
Now don’t be horrid, please, about taking it,
because it makes me happy to return it. I owe
you a great deal more than the mere money, and the
rest I will continue to pay all my life in gratitude
and affection.
And now, Daddy, about the other thing;
please give me your most worldly advice, whether you
think I’ll like it or not.
You know that I’ve always had
a very special feeling towards you; you sort of represented
my whole family; but you won’t mind, will you,
if I tell you that I have a very much more special
feeling for another man? You can probably guess
without much trouble who he is. I suspect that
my letters have been very full of Master Jervie for
a very long time.
I wish I could make you understand
what he is like and how entirely companionable we
are. We think the same about everything-I
am afraid I have a tendency to make over my ideas
to match his! But he is almost always right;
he ought to be, you know, for he has fourteen years’
start of me. In other ways, though, he’s
just an overgrown boy, and he does need looking after-he
hasn’t any sense about wearing rubbers when
it rains. He and I always think the same things
are funny, and that is such a lot; it’s dreadful
when two people’s senses of humour are antagonistic.
I don’t believe there’s any bridging that
gulf!
And he is-Oh, well!
He is just himself, and I miss him, and miss him,
and miss him. The whole world seems empty and
aching. I hate the moonlight because it’s
beautiful and he isn’t here to see it with me.
But maybe you’ve loved somebody, too, and you
know? If you have, I don’t need to explain;
if you haven’t, I can’t explain.
Anyway, that’s the way I feel-and
I’ve refused to marry him.
I didn’t tell him why; I was
just dumb and miserable. I couldn’t think
of anything to say. And now he has gone away
imagining that I want to marry Jimmie McBride-I
don’t in the least, I wouldn’t think of
marrying Jimmie; he isn’t grown up enough.
But Master Jervie and I got into a dreadful muddle
of misunderstanding and we both hurt each other’s
feelings. The reason I sent him away was not
because I didn’t care for him, but because I
cared for him so much. I was afraid he would
regret it in the future-and I couldn’t
stand that! It didn’t seem right for a
person of my lack of antecedents to marry into any
such family as his. I never told him about the
orphan asylum, and I hated to explain that I didn’t
know who I was. I may be dreadful, you
know. And his family are proud-and
I’m proud, too!
Also, I felt sort of bound to you.
After having been educated to be a writer, I must
at least try to be one; it would scarcely be fair to
accept your education and then go off and not use it.
But now that I am going to be able to pay back the
money, I feel that I have partially discharged that
debt-besides, I suppose I could keep on
being a writer even if I did marry. The two
professions are not necessarily exclusive.
I’ve been thinking very hard
about it. Of course he is a Socialist, and he
has unconventional ideas; maybe he wouldn’t mind
marrying into the proletariat so much as some men
might. Perhaps when two people are exactly in
accord, and always happy when together and lonely when
apart, they ought not to let anything in the world
stand between them. Of course I want to
believe that! But I’d like to get your
unemotional opinion. You probably belong to
a Family also, and will look at it from a worldly
point of view and not just a sympathetic, human point
of view-so you see how brave I am to lay
it before you.
Suppose I go to him and explain that
the trouble isn’t Jimmie, but is the John Grier
Home-would that be a dreadful thing for
me to do? It would take a great deal of courage.
I’d almost rather be miserable for the rest
of my life.
This happened nearly two months ago;
I haven’t heard a word from him since he was
here. I was just getting sort of acclimated to
the feeling of a broken heart, when a letter came
from Julia that stirred me all up again. She
said-very casually-that ‘Uncle
Jervis’ had been caught out all night in a storm
when he was hunting in Canada, and had been ill ever
since with pneumonia. And I never knew it.
I was feeling hurt because he had just disappeared
into blankness without a word. I think he’s
pretty unhappy, and I know I am!
What seems to you the right thing for me to do?
Judy
6th
October
Dearest Daddy-Long-Legs,
Yes, certainly I’ll come-at
half-past four next Wednesday afternoon. Of course
I can find the way. I’ve been in New York
three times and am not quite a baby. I can’t
believe that I am really going to see you-I’ve
been just thinking you so long that it hardly
seems as though you are a tangible flesh-and-blood
person.
You are awfully good, Daddy, to bother
yourself with me, when you’re not strong.
Take care and don’t catch cold. These
fall rains are very damp.
Affectionately,
Judy
PS. I’ve just had
an awful thought. Have you a butler? I’m
afraid of butlers, and if one opens the door I shall
faint upon the step. What can I say to him?
You didn’t tell me your name. Shall I
ask for Mr. Smith?
Thursday
Morning
My Very Dearest Master-Jervie-Daddy-Long-Legs
Pendleton-Smith,
Did you sleep last night? I
didn’t. Not a single wink. I was too
amazed and excited and bewildered and happy.
I don’t believe I ever shall sleep again-or
eat either. But I hope you slept; you must, you
know, because then you will get well faster and can
come to me.
Dear Man, I can’t bear to think
how ill you’ve been-and all the time
I never knew it. When the doctor came down yesterday
to put me in the cab, he told me that for three days
they gave you up. Oh, dearest, if that had happened,
the light would have gone out of the world for me.
I suppose that some day in the far future-one
of us must leave the other; but at least we shall
have had our happiness and there will be memories
to live with.
I meant to cheer you up-and
instead I have to cheer myself. For in spite
of being happier than I ever dreamed I could be, I’m
also soberer. The fear that something may happen
rests like a shadow on my heart. Always before
I could be frivolous and care-free and unconcerned,
because I had nothing precious to lose. But now-I
shall have a Great Big Worry all the rest of my life.
Whenever you are away from me I shall be thinking
of all the automobiles that can run over you, or the
sign-boards that can fall on your head, or the dreadful,
squirmy germs that you may be swallowing. My
peace of mind is gone for ever-but anyway,
I never cared much for just plain peace.
Please get well-fast-fast-fast.
I want to have you close by where I can touch you
and make sure you are tangible. Such a little
half hour we had together! I’m afraid
maybe I dreamed it. If I were only a member
of your family (a very distant fourth cousin) then
I could come and visit you every day, and read aloud
and plump up your pillow and smooth out those two
little wrinkles in your forehead and make the corners
of your mouth turn up in a nice cheerful smile.
But you are cheerful again, aren’t you?
You were yesterday before I left. The doctor
said I must be a good nurse, that you looked ten years
younger. I hope that being in love doesn’t
make every one ten years younger. Will you still
care for me, darling, if I turn out to be only eleven?
Yesterday was the most wonderful day
that could ever happen. If I live to be ninety-nine
I shall never forget the tiniest detail. The
girl that left Lock Willow at dawn was a very different
person from the one who came back at night.
Mrs. Semple called me at half-past four. I started
wide awake in the darkness and the first thought that
popped into my head was, ‘I am going to see
Daddy-Long-Legs!’ I ate breakfast in the kitchen
by candle-light, and then drove the five miles to the
station through the most glorious October colouring.
The sun came up on the way, and the swamp maples
and dogwood glowed crimson and orange and the stone
walls and cornfields sparkled with hoar frost; the
air was keen and clear and full of promise.
I knew something was going to happen. All the
way in the train the rails kept singing, ’You’re
going to see Daddy-Long-Legs.’ It made
me feel secure. I had such faith in Daddy’s
ability to set things right. And I knew that
somewhere another man-dearer than Daddy-was
wanting to see me, and somehow I had a feeling that
before the journey ended I should meet him, too.
And you see!
When I came to the house on Madison
Avenue it looked so big and brown and forbidding that
I didn’t dare go in, so I walked around the block
to get up my courage. But I needn’t have
been a bit afraid; your butler is such a nice, fatherly
old man that he made me feel at home at once.
‘Is this Miss Abbott?’ he said to me,
and I said, ‘Yes,’ so I didn’t have
to ask for Mr. Smith after all. He told me to
wait in the drawing-room. It was a very sombre,
magnificent, man’s sort of room. I sat
down on the edge of a big upholstered chair and kept
saying to myself:
‘I’m going to see Daddy-Long-Legs!
I’m going to see Daddy-Long-Legs!’
Then presently the man came back and
asked me please to step up to the library. I
was so excited that really and truly my feet would
hardly take me up. Outside the door he turned
and whispered, ’He’s been very ill, Miss.
This is the first day he’s been allowed to sit
up. You’ll not stay long enough to excite
him?’ I knew from the way he said it that he
loved you-an I think he’s an old dear!
Then he knocked and said, ‘Miss
Abbott,’ and I went in and the door closed behind
me.
It was so dim coming in from the brightly
lighted hall that for a moment I could scarcely make
out anything; then I saw a big easy chair before the
fire and a shining tea table with a smaller chair beside
it. And I realized that a man was sitting in
the big chair propped up by pillows with a rug over
his knees. Before I could stop him he rose-rather
shakily-and steadied himself by the back
of the chair and just looked at me without a word.
And then-and then-I saw it was
you! But even with that I didn’t understand.
I thought Daddy had had you come there to meet me
or a surprise.
Then you laughed and held out your
hand and said, ’Dear little Judy, couldn’t
you guess that I was Daddy-Long-Legs?’
In an instant it flashed over me.
Oh, but I have been stupid! A hundred little
things might have told me, if I had had any wits.
I wouldn’t make a very good detective, would
I, Daddy? Jervie? What must I call you?
Just plain Jervie sounds disrespectful, and I can’t
be disrespectful to you!
It was a very sweet half hour before
your doctor came and sent me away. I was so dazed
when I got to the station that I almost took a train
for St Louis. And you were pretty dazed, too.
You forgot to give me any tea. But we’re
both very, very happy, aren’t we? I drove
back to Lock Willow in the dark but oh, how the stars
were shining! And this morning I’ve been
out with Colin visiting all the places that you and
I went to together, and remembering what you said
and how you looked. The woods today are burnished
bronze and the air is full of frost. It’s
climbing weather. I wish you were here to
climb the hills with me. I am missing you dreadfully,
Jervie dear, but it’s a happy kind of missing;
we’ll be together soon. We belong to each
other now really and truly, no make-believe.
Doesn’t it seem queer for me to belong to someone
at last? It seems very, very sweet.
And I shall never let you be sorry for a single instant.
Yours, for ever
and ever,
Judy
PS. This is the first love-letter
I ever wrote. Isn’t it funny that I know
how?