When Mrs. Francis decided to play
the Lady Bountiful to the Watson family, she not only
ministered to their physical necessity but she conscientiously
set about to do them good, if they would be done good
to. Mrs. Francis’s heart was kind, when
you could get to it; but it was so deeply crusted
over with theories and reflections and abstract truths
that not very many people knew that she had one.
When little Danny’s arms were
thrown around her neck, and he called her his dear
sweet, pink lady, her pseudo-intellectuality broke
down before a power which had lain dormant. She
had always talked a great deal of the joys of motherhood,
and the rapturous delights of mother-love. Not
many of the mothers knew as much of the proper care
of an infant during the period of dentition as she.
She had read papers at mothers’ meetings, and
was as full of health talks as a school physiology.
But it was the touch of Danny’s
soft cheek and clinging arms that brought to her the
rapture that is so sweet it hurts, and she realised
that she had missed the sweetest thing in life.
A tiny flame of real love began to glimmer in her
heart and feebly shed its beams among the debris of
cold theories and second-hand sensations that had filled
it hitherto.
She worried Danny with her attentions,
although he tried hard to put up with them. She
was the lady of his dreams, for Pearl’s imagination
had clothed her with all the virtues and graces.
Hers was a strangely inconsistent
character, spiritually minded, but selfish; loving
humanity when it is spelled with a capital, but knowing
nothing of the individual. The flower of holiness
in her heart was like the haughty orchid that blooms
in the hothouse, untouched by wind or cold, beautiful
to behold but comforting no one with its beauty.
Pearl Watson was like the rugged little
anemone, the wind flower that lifts its head from
the cheerless prairie. No kind hand softens the
heat or the cold, nor tempers the wind, and yet the
very winds that blow upon it and the hot sun that
beats upon it bring to it a grace, a hardiness, a
fragrance of good cheer, that gladdens the hearts of
all who pass that way.
Mrs. Francis found herself strongly
attracted to Pearl. Pearl, the housekeeper, the
homemaker, a child with a woman’s responsibility,
appealed to Mrs. Francis. She thought about Pearl
very often.
Noticing one day that Pearl was thin
and pale, she decided at once that she needed a health
talk. Pearl sat like a graven image while Mrs.
Francis conscientiously tried to stir up in her the
seeds of right living.
“Oh, ma!” Pearl said to
her mother that night, when the children had gone
to bed and they were sewing by the fire. “Oh,
ma! she told me more to-day about me insides than
I would care to remember. Mind ye, ma, there’s
a sthring down yer back no bigger’n a knittin’
needle, and if ye ever broke it ye’d snuff out
before ye knowed what ye was doin’, and there’s
a tin pan in yer ear that if ye got a dinge in it,
it wouldn’t be worth a dhirty postage stamp
for hearin’ wid, and ye mustn’t skip ma,
for it will disturb yer Latin parts, and ye mustn’t
eat seeds, or ye’ll get the thing that pa had-what
is it called ma?”
Her mother told her.
“Yes, appendicitis, that’s
what she said. I never knowed there were so many
places inside a person to go wrong, did ye, ma?
I just thought we had liver and lights and a few things
like that.”
“Don’t worry, alannah,”
her mother said soothingly, as she cut out the other
leg of Jimmy’s pants. “The Lord made
us right I guess, and he won’t let anything
happen to us.”
But Pearl was not yet satisfied.
“But, oh ma,” she said, as she hastily
worked a buttonhole. “You don’t know
about the diseases that are goin’ ’round.
Mind ye, there’s tuberoses in the cows even,
and them that sly about it, and there’s diseases
in the milk as big as a chew o’ gum and us not
seein’ them. Every drop of it we use should
be scalded well, and oh, ma, I wonder anyone of us
is alive for we’re not half clean! The
poison pours out of the skin night and day, carbolic
acid she said, and every last wan o’ us should
have a sponge bath at night-that’s
just to slop yerself all up and down with a rag, and
an oliver in the mornin’. Ma, what’s
an oliver, d’ye think?”
“Ask Camilla,” Mrs. Watson
said, somewhat alarmed at these hygienic problems.
“Camilla is grand at explaining Mrs. Francis’s
quare ways.”
Pearl’s brown eyes were full of worry.
“It’s hard to git time
to be healthy, ma,” she said; “we should
keep the kittle bilin’ all the time, she says,
to keep the humanity in the air-Oh, I wish
she hadn’t a told me, I never thought atin’
hurt anyone, but she says lots of things that taste
good is black pisón. Isn’t it quare,
ma, the Lord put such poor works in us and us not there
at the time to raise a hand.”
They sewed in silence for a few minutes.
Then Pearl said: “Let us
go to bed now, ma, me eyes are shuttin’.
I’ll go back to-morrow and ask Camilla about
the ‘oliver.’”