Little Rosanna Horton was a very poor
little girl. When I tell you more about her,
you will think that was a very odd thing to say.
She lived in one of the most beautiful
homes in Louisville, a city full of beautiful homes.
And Rosanna’s was one of the loveliest.
It was a great, rambling house of red brick with wide
porches in the front and on either side. On the
right of the house was a wonderful garden. It
covered half a square, and was surrounded by a high
stone wall. No one could look in to see what
she was doing. That was rather nice, but of course
no one could look out either to see what they were
doing on the brick sidewalk, and that does not seem
so nice.
At the back of the garden, facing
on a clean bricked alley, was the garage, big enough
to hold four automobiles. The garage was covered
with vines. Otherwise, it would have been a queer
looking building, with its one door opening into the
garden, and on that side not another door or window
either upstairs or down. The upstairs part was
a really lovely little apartment for the chauffeur
to live in, but all the windows had been put on the
side or in front because old Mrs. Horton, Rosanna’s
grandmother, did not think that chauffeurs’ families
were ever the sort who ought to look down into
the garden where Rosanna played and where she herself
sat in state and had tea served of an afternoon.
At one side of the garden where the
roses were wildest and the flowers grew thickest was
a little cottage, built to fit Rosanna. Grown
people had to stoop to get in and their heads almost
scraped the ceilings. The furniture all fitted
Rosanna too, even to the tiny piano. This was
Rosanna’s playhouse. She kept her dolls
here, and there was a desk with all sorts of writing
paper that a maid sorted and put in order every morning
before Rosanna came out.
This doesn’t sound as though
Rosanna was such a poor little girl, does it?
But just you wait.
A good ways back of this playhouse
was another small building that looked like a little
stable. It was a stable a really truly
stable built to fit Rosanna’s tiny pony.
He had a little box stall, and at one side there was
space for the shiniest, prettiest cart.
Rosanna did not go to school.
There was a schoolroom in the house, but I will tell
you about that some other time. Rosanna disliked
it very much: a schoolroom with just one little
girl in it! You wouldn’t like it yourself,
would you?
Rosanna’s clothes were the prettiest
ever; much prettier then than they are now. And
such stacks of them! There was a whole dresser
full of ribbons and trinkets and jewelry besides.
(Poor little Rosanna!)
She danced like a fairy, and every
day she had a music lesson which was given her, like
a bad pill, by a severe lady in spectacles who ought
never to have tried to smile because it made her face
look cracked all over and you felt so much better
when the smile was over. Oh, poor, poor, poor
little Rosanna!
Do you begin to guess why?
You have not heard me say a word about
her dear loving mother and her big joky father, have
you? They were both dead! This is such a
pitiful thing to have come to any little girl that
I can scarcely bear to tell you. Both were dead,
and Rosanna lived with her grandmother, who was a
very proud and important lady indeed. There was
a young uncle who might have been good friends with
Rosanna and made things easier but she scarcely knew
him. He had been away to college and after that,
three years in the army. Once a week she wrote
to him, in France; but her grandmother corrected the
letters and usually made her write them over, so they
were not very long and certainly were not interesting.
Mrs. Horton was sure that her son’s
little daughter could never be worthy of her name
and family if she was allowed to “mix,”
as she put it, with other children. So Rosanna
was not allowed to have any other children
for friends, and Mrs. Horton was too blind with all
her foolish family pride to see that Rosanna was getting
queer and vain and overbearing. Every day they
took a drive together, usually through the parks or
out the river road. Mrs. Horton did not like to
drive down town. She did not like the people
who filled the streets. She said they were “frightfully
ordinary.” It was a shameful thing to be
ordinary in Mrs. Horton’s opinion. She
had not looked it up in the dictionary or she would
have chosen some other word because being ordinary
according to the dictionary is no crime at all.
It is not even a disgrace.
Rosanna’s books were always
about flowers and fairies, or animals that talked,
or music that romped up and down the bars spelling
little words. There were never any people in
them, and if any one sent her a book at Christmas
about some poor little girl who wore a pinafore and
helped her mother and lived in two rooms and was ever
so happy, that book had a way of getting itself
changed for some other book about bees or flowers
the very night before Christmas.
“She will know about those things
soon enough,” said Rosanna’s grandmother.
But every afternoon when they sat
in the rose arbor in the middle of the beautiful garden,
Rosanna would get tired reading and she would stare
up at the clouds and see how many faces she could
find.
One day she startled and of course
shocked her grandmother by saying in a low voice,
“Dean Harriman!”
“Where?” said Mrs. Horton, staring down
the walk.
“In that littlest cloud,”
said Rosanna, unconscious of startling her grandmother.
“It is very good of him, only his nose is even
funnier than it is really. Sort of knobby, you
know.”
“Please do not say ‘sort
of,’” said Mrs. Horton. “And
if you are looking at pictures in the clouds, I consider
it a waste of time, Rosanna!”
She struck a little bell, and the
house boy came hurrying across the lawn. Mrs.
Horton turned to him.
“Find Minnie,” she said,
“and tell her to send Miss Rosanna a volume of
Classical Pictures for Young Eyes.”
So Rosanna looked at Classical
Pictures, and for that afternoon at least kept
her young eyes away from the clouds. And never
again did she share her pictures with her grandmother.
Rosanna was not a spiritless child,
but every day and all day her life slipped on in its
dull groove and she did not know how to get out.
Poor little Rosanna! To the little
girl behind it, a six-foot brick wall looks as high
as the sky. And the garden, as I have told you
before, was a very, very big garden indeed.
Plenty large enough to be very lonesome in.
One morning Mrs. Horton was not ready
to drive at the appointed time. Rosanna was ready,
however, and was dancing around on the front porch
when the automobile rolled up. She ran toward
it but drew back at the sight of a strange chauffeur.
He touched his cap and said “Good morning!”
in a hearty, friendly way, very different to the stiff
manner of the man who had been driving them.
Rosanna went down to him.
“Where is Albert?” she asked.
“He does not work here now,” said the
man. “I have his place.”
“What is your name?” said Rosanna.
“John Culver,” said the new chauffeur.
“What is your name?”
Rosanna frowned a little. She
liked this new man with his crinkly, twinkly blue
eyes and white teeth. A deep scar creased his
jaw, but it did not spoil his friendly, keen face.
But chauffeurs usually did not ask her name.
There had been so many going and coming during the
war. She decided to walk away but could not resist
his friendly eyes.
“I am Miss Rosanna,” she said proudly.
“Oh!” said the man, and
Rosanna had a feeling that he was amused. So she
went on speaking. “I will get in the car,
if you please, and wait for my grandmother.”
He opened the door of the limousine
and before she could place her foot on the step, he
swung her lightly off her feet and into the car.
“There you are, kiddie!”
he said pleasantly, and Rosanna was too stunned to
say more than “Thank you!” as the door
opened and her grandmother appeared, the maid following,
laden with the small dog.
Mrs. Horton nodded to the new man
and gave an order as he closed the door.
“Our new man,” said Mrs.
Horton to Rosanna, then settled back in her corner
and took out a list which she commenced to check off
with a gold pencil. Rosanna, holding the dog,
looked out the windows.
There were children all along the
street: little girls playing dolls on front doorsteps
and other little girls walking in happy groups or
skipping rope. Boys on bicycles circled everywhere
and shouted to each other. They made a short
cut through one of the poor sections of the city.
Here it was the same: children everywhere, all
having the best sort of time. They were not so
well dressed, that was all the difference. They
had the same carefree look in their eyes. Rosanna
gazed out wistfully, longingly.
And now you surely guess why Rosanna,
with her beautiful home, her pony and her playhouse,
her lovely garden, and her room full of pretty things,
still was so very, very poor.
Rosanna did not have a single friend.