Here you sit, Horace, Prudy, Dotty,
and Flyaway, all waiting for a story. How shall
I begin? I cannot remember the events of my life
in right order, so I shall have to tell them as they
come into my mind. Let us see. To go back
to the long, long summer, when I was a child:
There once lived and moved a little
try-patience, called Margaret Parlin; no more nor
less a personage than myself, your affectionate auntie,
and very humble servant. I was as restless a baby
as ever sat on a papa’s knee and was trotted
to “Boston.” When I cried, my womanly
sister ’Ria, seven years old, thought I was very
silly; and my brother Ned, aged four, said, “Div
her a pill; I would!”
He thought pills would cure naughtiness.
If so, I ought to have swallowed some. Pity they
didn’t “div” me a whole box full
before I began to creep; for I crept straight into
mischief. Aunt Persis, a very proper woman, with
glittering black eyes, was more shocked by me than
words can tell. She said your grandma “spoiled
me by baby-talk; it was very wrong to let little ones
hear baby-talk. If she had had the care of me
she would have taught me grammar from the cradle.”
No doubt of it; but unfortunately I had to grow up
with my own father and mother, and ever so many other
folks, who were not half as wise as Aunt Persis.
They called me Marg’et, Maggie,
Marjie, Madge; and your grandpa’s pet name was
Totty-wax; only, if I joggled the floor when he shaved,
it was full-length “Mar-ga-ret.”
I was a sad little minx, so everybody
kindly informed me, and so I fully believed.
My motto in my little days seems to have been, “Speak
twice before you think once;” and you will
see what troubles it led me into. I never failed
to “speak twice,” but often forgot the
thinking altogether. Margaret means Daisy; but
if I was like any flower at all, I should say it was
“the lady in the bower.” You know
it, Prudy, how it peeps out from a tangle of little
tendrils? Just so I peeped out, and was dimly
seen, through a wild, flying head of hair. Your
grandma was ashamed of me, for if she cut off my hair
I was taken for a boy, and if she let it grow, there
was danger of my getting a squint in my eye.
Sometimes I ran into the house very much grieved,
and said,
“O, mamma, I wasn’t doin’
noffin, only sitting top o’ the gate, and a
man said, ’Who’s that funny little fellow?’ Please,
mamma, won’t you not cut my hair no more?”
I was only a wee bit of a Totty-wax
when she stopped cutting my yellow hair, and braided
it in two little tails behind. The other girls
had braids as well as I; but, alas! mine were not
straight like theirs; they quirled over at the end.
I hated that curly kink; if it didn’t go off
it would bring my gray hairs with sorrow to the grave.
But, children, I fear some of the
stories I told were crookeder than even my braids.
In the first place, I didn’t know any better.
I told lies, to hear how funny they would sound.
My imagination was large, and my common sense small.
I lived in a little world of my own, and had very
queer thoughts. Perhaps all children do; what
think, Fly? When I was lying in the cradle I
found my hands one day, and I shouldn’t wonder
if I thought they were two weeny babies come visiting;
what do you suppose? Of course I didn’t
know they belonged to me, but I stared at them, and
tried to talk. And from that time until I was
a great girl, as much as five years old, I was always
supposing things were “diffunt” from what
they really were. I thought our andirons were
made of gold, just like the stars, only the andirons
had enough gold in them to sprinkle the whole sky,
and leave a good slice to make a new sun. When
I saw a rainbow, I asked if it was “a side-yalk
for angels to yalk on?”
I thought the cat heard what I said
when I talked to her, and if I picked a flower I kissed
it, for “mebbe” the flower liked to be
kissed.
I had a great deal of fun “making
believe,” all to myself. I made believe
my mamma had said I might go somewhere, and off I would
go, thinking, as I crept along by the fence, bent
almost double for fear of being seen, “Prehaps
she’ll tie me to the bed-post for it.”
And she always did.
I was the youngest of the family then,
but I made believe I had once had a sister Marjie,
no bigger than my doll, and a naughty woman in a green
cloak came and carried her off in her pocket.
I told my little friend Ruphelle so much about this
other Marjie that she believed in her, and after a
while I believed in her myself. We used to sit
on the hay and talk about her, and wonder if the naughty
woman would ever bring her back. We thought it
would be nice to have her to play with.
This was not very wicked; it was only
a fairy story. But the mischief was, my dear
mother did not know where to draw the line between
fairy stories and lies. Once I ran away, and
Mrs. Gray told her she had seen me playing on the
meeting-house steps with Ann Smiley.
“No, mamma,” said I, catching
my breath, “‘twasn’t me Mis’
Gray saw; I know who ‘twas. There’s
a little girl in this town looks jus’ like me;
has hair jus’ the same; same kind o’ dress;
lives right under the meeting-house. Folks think
it’s me!”
Your grandma was distressed to have
me look her straight in the face and tell such a lie;
but the more she said, “Why, Margaret!”
the deeper I went into particulars.
“Name’s Jane Smif.
Eats acorns; sleeps in a big hole. Didn’t
you never hear about her, mamma?”
As I spoke, I could almost see Jane
Smif creeping slyly out of the big hole with mud on
her apron. She was as real to me as some of the
little girls I met on the street; not the little girls
I played with, but those who “came from over
the river.”
My dear mother did not know what to
do with a child that had such a habit of making up
stories; but my father said,
“Totty-wax doesn’t know any better.”
Mother sighed, and answered, “But Maria
always knew better.”
I knew there was “sumpin bad”
about me, but thought it was like the black on a negro’s
face, that wouldn’t wash off. The idea of
trying to stop lying never entered my head. When
mother took me out of the closet, and asked, “Would
I be a better girl?” I generally said, “Yes
um,” very promptly, and cried behind my
yellow hair; but that was only because I was touched
by the trembling of her voice, and vaguely wished,
for half a minute, that I hadn’t made her so
sorry; that was all.
But when I told that amazing story
about Jane Smif, in addition to running away, mother
whipped me for the first time in my life with a birch
switch.
“Margaret,” said she,
“if you ever tell another wrong story, I shall
whip you harder than this, you may depend upon it.”
I was frightened into awful silence
for a while, but soon forgot the threat. I was
careful to avoid the name of Jane Smif, but I very
soon went and told Ruphelle that my mamma had silk
dresses, spangled with stars; “kep’ ’em
locked into a trunk; did her mamma have stars
on her dresses?” Ruphelle looked as meek
as a lamb, but her brother Gust snapped his fingers,
and said,
“O, what a whopper!”
That is why I remember it, for Ruth
heard him, and asked what kind of a whopper I had
been telling now, and reported it to mother.
Mother rose very sorrowfully from
her chair, and bade me follow her into the attic.
I went with fear and trembling, for she had that dreadful
switch in her hand. Poor woman! She wished
she had not promised to use it again, for she began
to think it was all in vain. But she must not
break her word; so she struck me across the wrists
and ankles several times; not very hard, but hard enough
to make me hop about and cry.
When she had finished she turned to
go down stairs, but I said something so strange that
she stopped short with surprise.
“I can’t ’pend
upon it, mamma,” said I, looking out through
my hair, with the tears all dried off. “You
said you’d whip me harder, but you whipped me
softer. I can’t ’pend
upon it, mamma. You’ve telled a lie yourse’f.”
What could mother say? I have
often heard her describe the scene with a droll smile.
She gave me a few more tingles across the neck, to
satisfy my ideas of justice; but that was the last
time she used the switch for many a long day.
Not that I stopped telling marvellous stories; but
she thought she would wait till she saw some faint
sign in me that I knew the “diffunce”
between truth and falsehood.