January
First.
Aunt Jemima gave me this diary for
a Christmas present. It’s just the sort
of gift a person named Jemima would be likely to make.
I can’t imagine why Aunt Jemima
thought I should like a diary. Probably she didn’t
think about it at all. I suppose it happened to
be the first thing she saw when she started out to
do her Christmas duty by me, and so she bought it.
I’m sure I’m the last girl in the world
to keep a diary. I’m not a bit sentimental
and I never have time for soul outpourings. It’s
jollier to be out skating or snowshoeing or just tramping
around. And besides, nothing ever happens to me
worth writing in a diary.
Still, since Aunt Jemima gave it to
me, I’m going to get the good out of it.
I don’t believe in wasting even a diary.
Father ... it would be easier to write “Dad,”
but Dad sounds disrespectful in a diary ... says I
have a streak of old Grandmother Marshall’s economical
nature in me. So I’m going to write in
this book whenever I have anything that might, by
any stretch of imagination, be supposed worth while.
Jen and Alice and Sue would have plenty
to write about, I dare say. They certainly seem
to have jolly times ... and as for the men ... but
there! People say men are interesting. They
may be. But I shall never get well enough acquainted
with any of them to find out.
Mother says it is high time I gave
up my tomboy ways and came “out” too,
because I am eighteen. I coaxed off this winter.
It wasn’t very hard, because no mother with
three older unmarried girls on her hands would be
very anxious to bring out a fourth. The girls
took my part and advised Mother to let me be a child
as long as possible. Mother yielded for this
time, but said I must be brought out next winter or
people would talk. Oh, I hate the thought of it!
People might talk about my not being brought out,
but they will talk far more about the blunders I shall
make.
The doleful fact is, I’m too
wretchedly shy and awkward to live. It fills
my soul with terror to think of donning long dresses
and putting my hair up and going into society.
I can’t talk and men frighten me to death.
I fall over things as it is, and what will it be with
long dresses? As far back as I can remember it
has been my one aim and object in life to escape company.
Oh, if only one need never grow up! If I could
only go back four years and stay there!
Mother laments over it muchly.
She says she doesn’t know what she has done
to have such a shy, unpresentable daughter. I
know. She married Grandmother Marshall’s
son, and Grandmother Marshall was as shy as she was
economical. Mother triumphed over heredity with
Jen and Sue and Alice, but it came off best with me.
The other girls are noted for their grace and tact.
But I’m the black sheep and always will be.
It wouldn’t worry me so much if they’d
leave me alone and stop nagging me. “Oh,
for a lodge in some vast wilderness,” where there
were no men, no parties, no dinners ... just quantities
of dogs and horses and skating ponds and woods!
I need never put on long dresses then, but just be
a jolly little girl forever.
However, I’ve got one beautiful
year before me yet, and I mean to make the most of
it.
January
Tenth.
It is rather good to have a diary
to pour out your woes in when you feel awfully bad
and have no one to sympathize with you. I’ve
been used to shutting them all up in my soul and then
they sometimes fermented and made trouble.
We had a lot of people here to dinner
tonight, and that made me miserable to begin with.
I had to dress up in a stiff white dress with a
sash, and Jen tied two big white fly-away bows
on my hair that kept rasping my neck and tickling
my ears in a most exasperating way. Then an old
lady whom I detest tried to make me talk before everybody,
and all I could do was to turn as red as a beet and
stammer: “Yes, ma’am,” “no,
ma’am.” It made Mother furious, because
it is so old-fashioned to say “ma’am.”
Our old nurse taught me to say it when I was small,
and though it has been pretty well governessed out
of me since then, it’s sure to pop up when I
get confused and nervous.
Sue ... may it be accounted unto her
for righteousness ... contrived that I should go out
to dinner with old Mr. Grant, because she knew he
goes to dinners for the sake of eating and never talks
or wants anybody else to. But when we were crossing
the hall I stepped on Mrs. Burnett’s train and
something tore. Mrs. Burnett gave me a furious
look and glowered all through dinner. The meal
was completely spoiled for me and I could find no
comfort, even in the Nesselrode pudding, which is
my favourite dessert.
It was just when the pudding came
on that I got the most unkindest cut of all.
Mrs. Allardyce remarked that Sidney Elliot was coming
home to Stillwater.
Everybody exclaimed and questioned
and seemed delighted. I saw Mother give one quick,
involuntary look at Jen, and then gaze steadfastly
at Mr. Grant to atone for it. Jen is twenty-six,
and Stillwater is next door to our place!
As for me, I was so vexed that I might
as well have been eating chips for all the good that
Nesselrode pudding was to me. If Sidney Elliot
were coming home everything would be spoiled.
There would be no more ramblings in the Stillwater
woods, no more delightful skating on the Stillwater
lake. Stillwater has been the only place in the
world where I could find the full joy of solitude,
and now this, too, was to be taken from me. We
had no woods, no lake. I hated Sidney Elliot.
It is ten years since Sidney Elliot
closed Stillwater and went abroad. He has stayed
abroad ever since and nobody has missed him, I’m
sure. I remember him dimly as a tall dark man
who used to lounge about alone in his garden and was
always reading books. Sometimes he came into our
garden and teased us children. He is said to be
a cynic and to detest society. If this latter
item be a fact I almost feel a grim pity for him.
He may detest it, but he will be dragged into it.
Rich bachelors are few and far between in Riverton,
and the mammas will hunt him down.
I feel like crying. If Sidney
Elliot comes home I shall be debarred from Stillwater.
I have roamed its demesnes for ten beautiful years,
and I’m sure I love them a hundredfold better
than he does, or can. It is flagrantly unfair.
Oh, I hate him!
January
Twentieth.
No, I don’t. I believe
I like him. Yet it’s almost unbelievable.
I’ve always thought men so detestable.
I’m tingling all over with the
surprise and pleasure of a little unexpected adventure.
For the first time I have something really worth writing
in a diary ... and I’m glad I have a diary to
write it in. Blessings on Aunt Jemima! May
her shadow never grow less.
This evening I started out for a last
long lingering ramble in my beloved Stillwater woods.
The last, I thought, because I knew Sidney Elliot
was expected home next week, and after that I’d
have to be cooped up on our lawn. I dressed myself
comfortably for climbing fences and skimming over
snowy wastes. That is, I put on the shortest
old tweed skirt I have and a red jacket with sleeves
three years behind the fashion, but jolly pockets
to put your hands in, and a still redder tam.
Thus accoutred, I sallied forth.
It was such a lovely evening that
I couldn’t help enjoying myself in spite of
my sorrows. The sun was low and creamy, and the
snow was so white and the shadows so slender and blue.
All through the lovely Stillwater woods was a fine
frosty stillness. It was splendid to skim down
those long wonderful avenues of crusted snow, with
the mossy grey boles on either hand, and overhead
the lacing, leafless boughs, I just drank in the air
and the beauty until my very soul was thrilling, and
I went on and on and on until I was most delightfully
lost. That is, I didn’t know just where
I was, but the woods weren’t so big but that
I’d be sure to come out safely somewhere; and,
oh, it was so glorious to be there all alone and never
a creature to worry me.
At last I turned into a long aisle
that seemed to lead right out into the very heart
of a deep-red overflowing winter sunset. At its
end I found a fence, and I climbed up on that fence
and sat there, so comfortably, with my back against
a big beech and my feet dangling.
Then I saw him!
I knew it was Sidney Elliot in a moment.
He was just as tall and just as black-eyed; he was
still given to lounging evidently, for he was leaning
against the fence a panel away from me and looking
at me with an amused smile. After my first mad
impulse to rush away and bury myself in the wilderness
that smile put me at ease. If he had looked grave
or polite I would have been as miserably shy as I’ve
always been in a man’s presence. But it
was the smile of a grandfather for a child, and I
just grinned cheerfully back at him.
He ploughed along through the thick
drift that was soft and spongy by the fence and came
close up to me.
“You must be little Cornelia,”
he said with another aged smile. “Or rather,
you were little Cornelia. I suppose you
are big Cornelia now and want to be treated like a
young lady?”
“Indeed, I don’t,”
I protested. “I’m not grown up and
I don’t want to be. You are Mr. Elliot,
I suppose. Nobody expected you till next week.
What made you come so soon?”
“A whim of mine,” he said.
“I’m full of whims and crotchets.
Old bachelors always are. But why did you ask
that question in a tone which seemed to imply that
you resented my coming so soon, Miss Cornelia?”
“Oh, don’t tack the Miss
on,” I implored. “Call me Cornelia
... or better still, Nic, as Dad does. I do
resent your coming so soon. I resent your coming
at all. And, oh, it is such a satisfaction to
tell you so.”
He smiled with his eyes ... a deep,
black, velvety smile. But he shook his head sorrowfully.
“I must be getting very old,”
he said. “It’s a sign of age when
a person finds himself unwelcome and superfluous.”
“Your age has nothing to do
with it,” I retorted. “It is because
Stillwater is the only place I have to run wild in
... and running wild is all I’m fit for.
It’s so lovely and roomy I can lose myself in
it. I shall die or go mad if I’m cooped
up on our little pocket handkerchief of a lawn.”
“But why should you be?” he inquired gravely.
I reflected ... and was surprised.
“After all, I don’t know
... now ... why I should be,” I admitted.
“I thought you wouldn’t want me prowling
about your domains. Besides, I was afraid I’d
meet you ... and I don’t like meeting men.
I hate to have them around ... I’m so shy
and awkward.”
“Do you find me very dreadful?” he asked.
I reflected again ... and was again surprised.
“No, I don’t. I don’t
mind you a bit ... any more than if you were Dad.”
“Then you mustn’t consider
yourself an exile from Stillwater. The woods
are yours to roam in at will, and if you want to roam
them alone you may, and if you’d like a companion
once in a while command me. Let’s be good
friends, little lass. Shake hands on it.”
I slipped down from the fence and
shook hands with him. I did like him very much
... he was so nice and unaffected and brotherly ...
just as if I’d known him all my life. We
walked down the long white avenue, where everything
was growing dusky, and I had told him all my troubles
before we got to the end of it. He was so sympathetic
and agreed with me that it was a pity people had to
grow up. He promised to come over tomorrow and
look at Don’s leg. Don is one of my dogs,
and he has got a bad leg. I’ve been doctoring
it myself, but it doesn’t get any better.
Sidney thinks he can cure it. He says I must call
him Sidney if I want him to call me Nic.
When we got to the lake, there it
lay all gleaming and smooth as glass ... the most
tempting thing.
“What a glorious possible slide,”
he said. “Let us have it, little lass.”
He took my hand and we ran down the
slope and went skimming over the ice. It was
glorious. The house came in sight as we reached
the other side. It was big and dark and silent.
“So the old place is still standing,”
said Sidney, looking up at it. In the dusk I
thought his face had a tender, reverent look instead
of the rather mocking expression it had worn all along.
“Haven’t you been there yet?” I
asked quickly.
“No. I’m stopping
at the hotel over in Croyden. The house will need
some fixing up before it’s fit to live in.
I just came down tonight to look at it and took a
short cut through the woods. I’m glad I
did. It was worth while to see you come tramping
down that long white avenue when you thought yourself
alone with the silence. I thought I had never
seen a child so full of the pure joy of existence.
Hold fast to that, little lass, as long as you can.
You’ll never find anything to take its place
after it goes. You jolly little child!”
“I’m eighteen,”
I said suddenly. I don’t know what made
me say it.
He laughed and pulled his coat collar
up around his ears.
“Never,” he mocked.
“You’re about twelve ... stay twelve, and
always wear red caps and jackets, you vivid thing:
Good night.”
He was off across the lake, and I
came home. Yes, I do like him, even if he is
a man.
February
Twentieth.
I’ve found out what diaries
are for ... to work off blue moods in, moods that
come on without any reason whatever and therefore can’t
be confided to any fellow creature. You scribble
away for a while ... and then it’s all gone
... and your soul feels clear as crystal once more.
I always go to Sidney now in a blue
mood that has a real cause. He can cheer me up
in five minutes. But in such a one as this, which
is quite unaccountable, there’s nothing for
it but a diary.
Sidney has been living at Stillwater
for a month. It seems as if he must have lived
there always.
He came to our place the next day
after I met him in the woods. Everybody made
a fuss over him, but he shook them off with an ease
I envied and whisked me out to see Don’s leg.
He has fixed it up so that it is as good as new now,
and the dogs like him almost better than they like
me.
We have had splendid times since then.
We are just the jolliest chums and we tramp about
everywhere together and go skating and snowshoeing
and riding. We read a lot of books together too,
and Sidney always explains everything I don’t
understand. I’m not a bit shy and I can
always find plenty to say to him. He isn’t
at all like any other man I know.
Everybody likes him, but the women
seem to be a little afraid of him. They say he
is so terribly cynical and satirical. He goes
into society a good bit, although he says it bores
him. He says he only goes because it would bore
him worse to stay home alone.
There’s only one thing about
Sidney that I hardly like. I think he rather
overdoes it in the matter of treating me as if I were
a little girl. Of course, I don’t want
him to look upon me as grown up. But there is
a medium in all things, and he really needn’t
talk as if he thought I was a child of ten and had
no earthly interest in anything but sports and dogs.
These are the best things ... I suppose
... but I understand lots of other things too, only
I can’t convince Sidney that I do. I know
he is laughing at me when I try to show him I’m
not so childish as he thinks me. He’s indulgent
and whimsical, just as he would be with a little girl
who was making believe to be grown up. Perhaps
next winter, when I put on long dresses and come out,
he’ll stop regarding me as a child. But
next winter is so horribly far off.
The day we were fussing with Don’s
leg I told Sidney that Mother said I’d have
to be grown up next winter and how I hated it, and
I made him promise that when the time came he would
use all his influence to beg me off for another year.
He said he would, because it was a shame to worry
children about society. But somehow I’ve
concluded not to bother making a fuss. I have
to come out some time, and I might as well take the
plunge and get it over.
Mrs. Burnett was here this evening
fixing up some arrangements for a charity bazaar she
and Jen are interested in, and she talked most of
the time about Sidney ... for Jen’s benefit,
I suppose, although Jen and Sid don’t get on
at all. They fight every time they meet, so I
don’t see why Mrs. Burnett should think things.
“I wonder what he’ll do
when Mrs. Rennie comes to the Glasgows’ next
month,” said Mrs. Burnett.
“Why should he do anything?” asked Jen.
“Oh, well, you know there was
something between them ... an understanding if not
an engagement ... before she married Rennie. They
met abroad ... my sister told me all about it ... and
Mr. Elliot was quite infatuated with her. She
was a very handsome and fascinating girl. Then
she threw him over and married old Jacob Rennie ...
for his millions, of course, for he certainly had
nothing else to recommend him. Amy says Mr. Elliot
was never the same man again. But Jacob died
obligingly two years ago and Mrs. Rennie is free now;
so I dare say they’ll make it up. No doubt
that is why she is coming to Riverton. Well,
it would be a very suitable match.”
I’m so glad I never liked Mrs. Burnett.
I wonder if it is true that Sidney
did care for that horrid woman ... of course she is
horrid! Didn’t she marry an old man for
his money?... and cares for her still. It is
no business of mine, of course, and it doesn’t
matter to me at all. But I rather hope he doesn’t
... because it would spoil everything if he got married.
He wouldn’t have time to be chums with me then.
I don’t know why I feel so dull
tonight. Writing in this diary doesn’t
seem to have helped me as much as I thought it would,
either. I dare say it’s the weather.
It must be the weather. It is a wet, windy night
and the rain is thudding against the window. I
hate rainy nights.
I wonder if Mrs. Rennie is really
as handsome as Mrs. Burnett says. I wonder how
old she is. I wonder if she ever cared for Sidney
... no, she didn’t. No woman who cared
for Sidney could ever have thrown him over for an
old moneybag. I wonder if I shall like her.
No, I won’t. I’m sure I shan’t
like her.
My head is aching and I’m going to bed.
March
Tenth.
Mrs. Rennie was here to dinner tonight.
My head was aching again, and Mother said I needn’t
go down to dinner if I’d rather not; but a dozen
headaches could not have kept me back, or a dozen men
either, even supposing I’d have to talk to them
all. I wanted to see Mrs. Rennie. Nothing
has been talked of in Riverton for the last fortnight
but Mrs. Rennie. I’ve heard of her beauty
and charm and costumes until I’m sick of the
subject. Today I spoke to Sidney about her.
Before I thought I said right out, “Mrs. Rennie
is to dine with us tonight.”
“Yes?” he said in a quiet voice.
“I’m dying to see her,”
I went on recklessly. “I’ve heard
so much about her. They say she’s so beautiful
and fascinating. Is she? You ought to
know.”
Sidney swung the sled around and put
it in position for another coast.
“Yes, I know her,” he
admitted tranquilly. “She is a very handsome
woman, and I suppose most people would consider her
fascinating. Come, Nic, get on the sled.
We have just time for one more coast, and then you
must go in.”
“You were once a good friend
... a very good friend ... of Mrs. Rennie’s,
weren’t you, Sid?” I said.
A little mocking gleam crept into
his eyes, and I instantly realized that he was looking
upon me as a rather impertinent child.
“You’ve been listening
to gossip, Nic,” he said. “It’s
a bad habit, child. Don’t let it grow on
you. Come.”
I went, feeling crushed and furious and ashamed.
I knew her at once when I went down
to the drawing-room. There were three other strange
women there, but I knew she was the only one who could
be Mrs. Rennie. I felt such a horrible queer sinking
feeling at my heart when I saw her. Oh, she was
beautiful ... I had never seen anyone so beautiful.
And Sidney was standing beside her, talking to her,
with a smile on his face, but none in his eyes ...
I noticed that at a glance.
She was so tall and slender and willowy.
Her dress was wonderful, and her bare throat and shoulders
were like pearls. Her hair was pale, pale gold,
and her eyes long-lashed and sweet, and her mouth like
a scarlet blossom against her creamy face. I
thought of how I must look beside her ... an awkward
little girl in a short skirt with my hair in a braid
and too many hands and feet, and I would have given
anything then to be tall and grown-up and graceful.
I watched her all the evening and
the queer feeling in me somewhere grew worse and worse.
I couldn’t eat anything. Sidney took Mrs.
Rennie in; they sat opposite to me and talked all
the time.
I was so glad when the dinner was
over and everybody gone. The first thing I did
when I escaped to my room was to go to the glass and
look myself over just as critically and carefully
as if I were somebody else. I saw a great rope
of dark brown hair ... a brown skin with red cheeks
... a big red mouth ... a pair of grey eyes. That
was all. And when I thought of that shimmering
witch woman with her white skin and shining hair I
wanted to put out the light and cry in the dark.
Only I’ve never cried since I was a child and
broke my last doll, and I’ve got so out of the
habit that I don’t know how to go about it.
April
Fifth.
Aunt Jemima would not think I was
getting the good out of my diary. A whole month
and not a word! But there was nothing to write,
and I’ve felt too miserable to write if there
had been. I don’t know what is the matter
with me. I’m just cross and horrid to everyone,
even to poor Sidney.
Mrs. Rennie has been queening it in
Riverton society for the past month. People rave
over her and I admire her horribly, although I don’t
like her. Mrs. Burnett says that a match between
her and Sidney Elliot is a foregone conclusion.
It’s plain to be seen that Mrs.
Rennie loves Sidney. Even I can see that, and
I don’t know much about such things. But
it puzzles me to know how Sidney regards her.
I have never thought he showed any sign of really
caring for her. But then, he isn’t the kind
that would.
“Nic, I wonder if you will ever
grow up,” he said to me today, laughing, when
he caught me racing over the lawn with the dogs.
“I’m grown up now,”
I said crossly. “Why, I’m eighteen
and a half and I’m two inches taller than any
of the other girls.”
Sidney laughed, as if he were heartily
amused at something.
“You’re a blessed baby,”
he said, “and the dearest, truest, jolliest
little chum ever a fellow had. I don’t know
what I’d do without you, Nic. You keep
me sane and wholesome. I’m a tenfold better
man for knowing you, little girl.”
I was rather pleased. It was
nice to think I was some good to Sidney.
“Are you going to the Trents’ dinner tonight?”
I asked.
“Yes,” he said briefly.
“Mrs. Rennie will be there,” I said.
Sidney nodded.
“Do you think her so very handsome,
Sidney?” I said. I had never mentioned
Mrs. Rennie to him since the day we were coasting,
and I didn’t mean to now. The question
just asked itself.
“Yes, very; but not as handsome
as you will be ten years from now, Nic,” said
Sidney lightly.
“Do you think I’m handsome, Sidney?”
I cried.
“You will be when you’re
grown up,” he answered, looking at me critically.
“Will you be going to Mrs. Greaves’
reception after the dinner?” I asked.
“Yes, I suppose so,” said
Sidney absently. I could see he wasn’t
thinking of me at all. I wondered if he were thinking
of Mrs. Rennie.
April
Sixth.
Oh, something so wonderful has happened.
I can hardly believe it. There are moments when
I quake with the fear that it is all a dream.
I wonder if I can really be the same Cornelia Marshall
I was yesterday. No, I’m not the
same ... and the difference is so blessed.
Oh, I’m so happy! My heart
bubbles over with happiness and song. It’s
so wonderful and lovely to be a woman and know it and
know that other people know it.
You dear diary, you were made for
this moment ... I shall write all about it in
you and so fulfil your destiny. And then I shall
put you away and never write anything more in you,
because I shall not need you ... I shall have
Sidney.
Last night I was all alone in the
house ... and I was so lonely and miserable.
I put my chin on my hands and I thought ... and thought
... and thought. I imagined Sidney at the Greaves’,
talking to Mrs. Rennie with that velvety smile in
his eyes. I could see her, graceful and white,
in her trailing, clinging gown, with diamonds about
her smooth neck and in her hair. I suddenly wondered
what I would look like in evening dress with my hair
up. I wondered if Sidney would like me in it.
All at once I got up and rushed to
Sue’s room. I lighted the gas, rummaged,
and went to work. I piled my hair on top of my
head, pinned it there, and thrust a long silver dagger
through it to hold a couple of pale white roses she
had left on her table. Then I put on her last
winter’s party dress. It was such a pretty
pale yellow thing, with touches of black lace, and
it didn’t matter about its being a little old-fashioned,
since it fitted me like a glove. Finally I stepped
back and looked at myself.
I saw a woman in that glass ... a
tall, straight creature with crimson cheeks and glowing
eyes ... and the thought in my mind was so insistent
that it said itself aloud: “Oh, I wish Sidney
could see me now!”
At that very moment the maid knocked
at the door to tell me that Mr. Elliot was downstairs
asking for me. I did not hesitate a second.
With my heart beating wildly I trailed downstairs
to Sidney.
He was standing by the fireplace when
I went in, and looked very tired. When he heard
me he turned his head and our eyes met.
All at once a terrible thing happened
... at least, I thought it a terrible thing then.
I knew why I had wanted Sidney to realize that
I was no longer a child. It was because I loved
him! I knew it the moment I saw that strange,
new expression leap into his eyes.
“Cornelia,” he said in
a stunned sort of voice. “Why ... Nic
... why, little girl ... you’re a woman!
How blind I’ve been! And now I’ve
lost my little chum.”
“Oh, no, no,” I said wildly.
I was so miserable and confused I didn’t know
what I said. “Never, Sidney. I’d
rather be a little girl and have you for a friend
... I’ll always be a little girl! It’s
all this hateful dress. I’ll go and take
it off ... I’ll....”
And then I just put my hands up to
my burning face and the tears that would never come
before came in a flood.
All at once I felt Sidney’s
arms about me and felt my head drawn to his shoulder.
“Don’t cry, dearest,”
I heard him say softly. “You can never be
a little girl to me again ... my eyes are opened ...
but I didn’t want you to be. I want you
to be my big girl ... mine, all mine, forever.”
What happened after that isn’t
to be written in a diary. I won’t even
write down the things he said about how I looked, because
it would seem so terribly vain, but I can’t
help thinking of them, for I am so happy.