Prudy was really getting better.
Mrs. Parlin said she should trust a physician more
next time. The doctor declared that all the severe
pain Prudy had suffered was really necessary.
“Believe me, my dear madam,”
said he, “when the poor child has complained
most, she has in fact been making most progress towards
health. When the sinews are ‘knitting together,’
as we call it, then the agony is greatest.”
This was very comforting to Mrs. Parlin,
who thought she would not be discouraged so easily
again; she would always believe that it is “darkest
just before day.”
There was really everything to hope
for Prudy. The doctor thought that by the end
of three months she would walk as well as ever.
He said she might make the effort now, every day,
to bear her weight on her feet. She tried this
experiment first with her father and mother on each
side to support her; but it was not many days before
she could stand firmly on her right foot, and bear
a little weight on her left one, which did not now,
as formerly, drag, or, as she had said, “more
than touch the floor.” By and by she began
to scramble about on the carpet on all fours, partly
creeping, partly pushing herself along.
It was surprising how much pleasure
Prudy took in going back to these ways of babyhood.
Faint blush roses began to bloom in
her cheeks as soon as she could take a little exercise
and go out of doors. Her father bought a little
carriage just suitable for the pony, and in this she
rode every morning, her mother or Percy driving; for
Mrs. Parlin thought it hardly safe to trust Susy with
such a precious encumbrance as this dear little sister.
She had been willing that Susy should
manage Wings in a sleigh, but in a carriage the case
was quite different; for, though in a sleigh there
might be even more danger of overturning, there was
not as much danger of getting hurt. Indeed, Susy’s
sleigh had tipped over once or twice in turning too
sharp a corner, and Susy had fallen out, but had instantly
jumped up again, laughing.
She would have driven in her new carriage
to Yarmouth and back again, or perhaps to Bath, if
she had been permitted. She was a reckless little
horsewoman, afraid of nothing, and for that very reason
could not be trusted alone.
But there was no difficulty in finding
companions. Percy pretended to study book-keeping,
but was always ready for a ride. Flossy was not
steady enough to be trusted with the reins, but Ruth
Turner was as careful a driver as need be; though
Susy laughed because she held the reins in both hands,
and looked so terrified.
She said it did no good to talk with
Ruth when she was driving; she never heard a word,
for she was always watching to see if a carriage was
coming, and talking to herself, to make sure she remembered
which was her right hand, so she could “turn
to the right, as the law directs.”
Prudy enjoyed the out-of-doors world
once more, and felt like a bird let out of a cage.
And so did Susy, for she thought she had had a dull
season of it, and fully agreed with Prudy, who spoke
of it as the “slow winter.”
But now it was the quick spring, the
live spring. The brooks began to gossip; the
birds poured out their hearts in song, and the dumb
trees expressed their joy in leaves.
“The bobolink, on the
mullein-stalk,
Would rattle away like a sweet
girl’s talk.”
The frogs took severe colds, but gave
concerts a little way out of the city every evening.
The little flowers peeped up from their beds, as Norah
said, “like babies asking to be took;”
and Susy took them; whenever she could find them,
you may be sure, and looked joyfully into their faces.
She could almost say,
“And ’tis my faith
that every flower
Enjoys the air
it breathes.”
She said, “I don’t suppose
they know much, but perhaps they know enough
to have a good time: who knows?”
Susy took long walks to Westbrook,
and farther, coming home tired out, but loaded with
precious flowers. There were plenty of friends
to give them to her from their early gardens:
broad-faced crocuses, jonquils, and lilies of the
valley, and by and by lilacs, with “purple spikes.”
She gathered snowdrops, “the
first pale blossoms of the unripened year,”
and May-flowers, pink and white, like sea-shells, or
like “cream-candy,” as Prudy said.
These soft little blossoms blushed so sweetly on the
same leaf with such old experienced leaves! Susy
said, “it made her think of little bits of children
who hadn’t any mother, and lived with their
grandparents.”
Dotty was almost crazy with delight
when she had a “new pair o’ boots, and
a pair o’ shaker,” and was allowed to toddle
about on the pavement in the sunshine. She had
a green twig or a switch to flourish, and could now
cry, “Hullelo!” to those waddling ducks,
and hear them reply, “Quack! quack!” without
having such a trembling fear that some stern Norah,
or firm mamma, would rush out bareheaded, and drag
her into the house, like a little culprit.
It was good times for Dotty Dimple,
and good times for the whole family. Spring had
come, and Prudy was getting well. There was a
great deal to thank God for!
It is an evening in the last of May.
A bit of a moon, called “the new moon,”
is peeping in at the window. It shines over Susy’s
right shoulder, she says. Susy is reading, Prudy
is walking slowly across the floor, and Dotty Dimple
is whispering to her kitty, telling her to go down
cellar, and catch the naughty rats while they are asleep.
When kitty winks, Dotty thinks it the same as if she
said,
“I hear you, little Miss Dotty: I’m
going.”
I think perhaps this is a good time
to bid the three little girls good-by, or, as dear
grandma Read would say, “Farewell!”