When Pearl got Tom safely started
for the party a great weight seemed to have rolled
from her little shoulders. Tom was going to spend
the night-what was left of it-with
Arthur in the granary, and so avoid the danger of
disturbing his parents by his late home-coming.
Pearl was too excited to sleep, so
she brought out from her bird-cage the little note-book
that Mrs. Francis had given her, and endeavoured to
fill some of its pages with her observations.
Mrs. Francis had told her to write
what she felt and what she saw.
She had written:
August 8th.-I picked the
fethers from 2 ducks to-day. I call them cusmoodles.
I got that name in a book. The cusmoodles were
just full of cheety-wow-wows. That’s a
pretty name, too, I think. I got that out of
my own head. The cheety-wow-wows are wanderers
to-night, I guess. They lost their feather-bed.
Arthur’s got a girl. Her
name is Thursa. He tells me about her, and showed
me her picter. She is beautiful beyond compare,
and awful savin’ on her clothes. At first
I thought she had a die-away-ducky look, but I guess
it’s because she was sorry Arthur was comin’
away.
August 9th.-Mrs. Motherwell
is gittin’ kinder, I think. When I was
gittin’ the tub for Arthur yesterday, and gittin’
water het, she said, “What are you doin’,
Pearl?” I says, “gittin’ Arthur a
bath.” She says, “Dear me, it’s
a pity about him.” I says, “Yes’m,
but he’ll feel better now.” She says,
“Duz he want anyone to wash his back?”-I
says, “I don’t know, but I’ll ask
him,” and I did, too; but he says, “No,
thanks awfully.”
August 10th.-The English
Church minister called one day to see Arthur.
He read some of the Bible to us and then he gave us
a dandy prayer. He didn’t make it-it
was a bot one.
There’s wild parsley down on
the crik. Mrs. M. sed’t wuz poison, but
I wanted to be sure, so I et it, and it isn’t.
There’s wild sage all over, purple an lovely.
I pickt a big lot ov it, to taik home-we
mite have a turkey this winter.
August 11th.-I hope tom’s
happy; it’s offel to be in love. I hope
I’ll never be.
My hands are pretty sore pullin’
weeds, but I like it; I pertend it’s bad habits
I’m rootin’ out.
Arthur’s offel good: he
duz all the work he can for me, and he sings
for me and tells me about his uncle the Bishop.
His uncle’s got servants and leggin’s
and lots of things. Arthur’s been kind of
sick lately.
I made verses one day, there not very
nice, but there true-I saw it:
The little lams are beautiful,
There côtés
are soft and nice,
The little calves have ringworm,
And the 2-year
olds have lice!
Now I’m going’ to make
more; it seems to bad to lève it like that.
It must be very nasty,
But to worrie,
what’s the use;
Better be cam and cheerfull,
And appli tobaka
jooce.
Sometimes I feal like gittin’
lonesum but I jist keep puttin’ it of. I
say to myself I won’t git lonesum till I git
this cow milked, and then I say o shaw I might as
well do another, and then I say I won’t git
lonesum till I git the pails washed and the flore
scrubbed, and I keep settin’ it of and settin’
it of till I forgit I was goin’ to be.
One day I wuz jist gittin’ reddy
to cry. I could feel tears startin’ in
my hart, and my throte all hot and lumpy, thinkin’
of ma and Danny an’ all of them, and I noticed
the teakettle just in time-it neaded skourin’.
You bet I put a shine on it, and, of course, I couldn’t
dab tears on it and muss it up, so I had to wait.
Mrs. M. duzn’t talk to me. She has a morgage
or a cancer I think botherin’ her. Ma knowed
a woman once, and everybuddy thot she was terrible
cross cos she wouldn’t talk at all hardly and
when she died, they found she’d a tumult in her
insides, and then you bet they felt good and sorry,
when we’re cross at home ma says it’s
not the strap we need, but a good dose of kastor oil
or Seany and we git it too.
I gess I got Bugsey’s and Patsey’s
bed paid fer now. Now I’ll do Teddy’s
and Jimmy’s. This ain’t a blot it’s
the liniment Mrs. McGuire gave me. I have it
on me hands.
I’m gittin on to be therteen
soo is pretty old I gess. I’ll soon
turn the corner now and be lookin’ 20 square
in the face-I’ll never be homesick
then. I ain’t lonesome now either-it’s
just sleep that’s in my eyes smuggin them up.
Jim Russell is offel good to go to
town he doesn’t seem to mind it a bit.
Once I said I wisht I’d told Camilla to remind
Jimmy to spit on his warts every day-he’s
offell careless, and Jim said he’d tell Camilla,
and he often asks me if I want to tell Camilla anything,
and it’s away out of his rode to go round to
Mrs. Francis house too. I like Jim you bet.