Two weeks before Christmas Friendship
was thrown into a state of holiday delight. Mrs.
Proudfit and her daughter, Miss Clementina, issued
invitations to a reception to be given on Christmas
Eve at Proudfit House, on Friendship Hill. The
Proudfits, who had rarely entertained since Miss Linda
went away, lived in Europe and New York and spent
little time in the village, but, for all that, they
remained citizens in absence, and Friendship always
wrote out invitations for them whenever it gave “companies.”
The invitations the postmaster duly forwarded to some
Manhattan bank, though I think the village had a secret
conviction that these were never received “sent
out wild to a bank in the City, so.” However,
now that old courtesies were to be so magnificently
returned, every one believed and felt a greater respect
for the whole financial world.
The invitations enclosed the card
of Mrs. Nita Ordway, and the name sounded for me a
note of other days when, before my coming to Friendship
Village, we two had, in the town, belonged to one happy
circle of friends.
“I thought at first mebbe the
card’d got shoved in the envelope by mistake,”
said Mis’ Holcomb-that-was-Mame-Bliss. “I
know once I got a Christmas book from a cousin o’
mine in the City, an’ a strange man’s
card fell out o’ the leaves. I sent the
card right straight back to her, an’ Cousin
Jane seemed rill cut up, so I made up my mind I’d
lay low about this card. But I hear everybody’s
got ’em. I s’pose it’s a sign
that it’s some Mis’ Ordway’s party
too only not enough hers to get her name
on the invite. Mebbe she chipped in on the expenses.
Give a third, like enough.”
However that was, Friendship looked
on the Christmas party as on some unexpected door
about to open in its path, and it woke in the morning
conscious of expectation before it could remember what
to expect. Proudfit House! A Christmas party!
It touched every one as might some giant Santa Claus,
for grown-ups, with a pack of heart’s-ease on
his back.
When Mrs. Ordway arrived in the village,
the excitement mounted. Mrs. Nita Ordway was
the first exquisitely beautiful woman of the great
world whom Friendship had ever seen “beautiful
like in the pictures of when noted folks was young,”
the village breathlessly summed her up. To be
sure, when she and her little daughter, Viola, rode
out in the Proudfits’ motor, nobody in the street
appeared to look at them. But Friendship knew
when they rode, and when they walked, and what they
wore, and when they returned.
It was a happiness to me to see Mrs.
Ordway again, and I sat often with her in the music
room at Proudfit House and listened to her glorious
voice in just the songs that I love. Sometimes
she would send for her little Viola, so that I might
sit with the child in my arms, for she was one of
those rare children who will let you love them.
“I like be made some ’tention
to,” Viola sometimes said shyly. She was
not afraid, and she would stay with me hour-long, as
if she loved to be loved. She was like a little
come-a-purpose spirit, to let one pretend.
A day or two after the invitations
had been received, I was in my guest room going over
my Christmas list. Just before Christmas I delight
in the look of a guest room, for then the bed is spread
with a brave array of pretty things, and when one
arranges and wraps them, the stitches of rose and
blue on flowered fabrics, the flutter of crisp ribbons,
and the breath of sachets make one glad.
I was lingering at my task when I heard some one below,
and I recognized her voice.
“Calliope!” I called gladly
from the stairs, and bade her come up to me.
Calliope is one of the women in whose
presence one can wrap one’s Christmas gifts.
She came into the room, bringing a breath of Winter,
and she laid aside her tan ulster and her round straw
hat, and straightway sat down on the rug by the open
fire.
“Well said!” she cried
contentedly, “a grate fire upstairs! It’s
one of the things that never seems real to me, like
a tower on a house. I’d as soon think o’
havin’ a grate fire up a tree an’ settin’
there, as in my chamber. Anyway, when it comes
Winter, upstairs in Friendship is just a place where
you go after something in the bureau draw’ an’
come down again as quick as you can. I s’pose
you got an invite to the party?”
“Yes,” I said, “and you will go,
Calliope?”
But instead of answering me:
“My land!” she said, “think
of it! A party like that, an’ not a low-necked
waist in town, nor a swallow-tail! An’ only
two weeks to do anything in, an’ only Liddy
Ember for dressmaker, an’ it takes her two weeks
to make a dress. I guess Mis’ Postmaster
Sykes has got her. They say she read her invite
in the post-office with one hand an’ snapped
up that tobacco-brown net in the post-office store
window with the other, an’ out an’ up
to Liddy’s an’ hired her before she was
up from the breakfast table. So she gets the
town new dress. Mis’ Sykes is terrible
quick-moved.”
“What will you wear, Calliope?” I asked.
“Me I never wear
anything but henriettas,” she said. “I
think the plainer-faced you are, the simpler you’d
ought to be dressed. I use’ to fix up terrible
ruffled, but when I see I was reg’lar plain-faced
I stuck to henriettas, mostly gray ”
“Calliope,” I said resolutely,
“you don’t mean you’re not going
to the Proudfit party?”
She clasped her hands and held them,
palms outward, over her mouth, and her eyes twinkled
above them.
“No, sir,” she said, “I
can’t go. You’ll laugh at me!”
she defended. “Don’t you tell!”
she warned. And finally she told me.
“Day before yesterday,”
she said, “I went into the City. An’
I come out on the trolley. An’ I donno
what possessed me, I ain’t done it
for months, but when we crossed the start
of the Plank Road, I got off an’ went up an’
visited the Old Ladies’ Home. You know I’ve
always thought,” she broke off, “ well,
you know I ain’t a rill lot to do with, an’
I always had an i-dee that mebbe sometime, when I
got older, I might ”
I nodded, and she went on.
“Well, I walked around among
’em up there canary birds an’
plants an’ footstools an’ the
whole thing fixed up so cheerful that it’s pitiful.
Red wall-paper an’ flowered curtains an’
such, all fair yellin’ at you, ‘We’re
cheerful cheerful cheerful!’
till I like to run. An’ it come over me,
bein’ so near Christmas an’ all, what would
they do on Christmas? So I asked a woman in a
navy-blue dress, seein’ she flipped around like
she was the flag o’ the place.
“‘The south corridor,’
she answers, them’s the highest payin” Calliope
threw in, “‘chipped in an’ got up
a tree, an’ there’s gifts for all,’
s’she. ’The west corridor’ them’s
the local city ones ’all has friends
to take ’em away for the day. The east corridor’ they’re
from farther away an’ middlin’ well-to-do ’all
has boxes comin’ to ’em from off.
But the north corridor,’ s’she, scowlin’
some, ‘is rather a trial to us.’
“An’ I was waitin’
for that. The north corridor is all charity old
ladies, paid for out o’ the fund; an’ the
president o’ the home has just died, an’
the secretary’s in the old country on a pleasure
trip, an’ the board’s in a row over the
policy o’ the home, an’ the navy-blue matron
dassent act, an’ altogether it looked like the
north corridor was goin’ to get a regular mid-week
Wednesday instead of a Christmas. An’ I
up an’ ast’ her to take me down to
see ’em.”
It was easy to see what Calliope had
done, I thought: she had promised to spend Christmas
Eve over there in the north corridor, reading aloud.
“They was nine of ’em,”
she went on, “nice old grandma ladies, with
hands that looked like they’d ought to ‘a’
been tyin’ little aprons an’ cuttin’
out cookies an’ squeezin’ somebody else’s
hand. There they set, with the wall-paper doin’
its cheerfulest, loud as an insult, one
of ‘em with lots o’ white hair, one of
’em singin’ a little, some of ’em
tryin’ to sew or knit some. My land!”
said Calliope, “when we think of ‘em sittin’
up an’ down the world with their arms
all empty an’ Christmas comin’
on ain’t it a wonder Well,
I stayed ‘round an’ talked to ’em,”
she went on, “while the navy-blue lady whisked
her starched skirts some. She seemed too busy
‘tendin’ to ’em to give ’em
much attention. An’ they looked rill pleased
when I talked to ’em about their patchwork an’
knittin’, an’ did they get the sun all
day, an’ didn’t the canary sort o’
shave somethin’ off’n the human ear-drum,
on his tiptop notes? An’ when I said that,
Grandma Holly her with lots o’ white
hair says:
“‘I donno but it does,’
she says, ’but I don’t mind; I’m
so thankful to see somethin’ around that’s
little an’ young.’
“That sort o’ landed in
my heart. It’s just what I’d been
thinkin’ about ’em.
“‘Little, young things,’
s’I, sort o’ careless, ‘make a lot
o’ racket, you know.’
“At that old Mis’ Burney
pipes up her that brought up her daughter’s
children an’ her son-in-law married again an’
turned her out:
“‘I use’ to think
so,’ she says quiet; ‘the noise o’
the children use’ to bother me terrible.
When they reely got to goin’ I use’ to
think I couldn’t stand it, my head hurt me so.
But now,’ s’she, ’I get to thinkin’
sometimes I wouldn’t mind a horse-fiddle if some
of ’em played it.’
“‘They’re lots o’
company, the little things,’ says old Mis’
Norris she’d kep’ mislayin’
her teeth an’ the navy-blue lady had took ’em
away from her that day for to teach her, so I couldn’t
hardly understand what she said. ‘Mine
was named Ellen an’ Nancy,’ I made out.
“‘Some o’ you remember
my Sam,’ Mis’ Ailing speaks
up then, an’ she begun windin’ up her
yarn an’ never noticed she was ravellin’
out her mitten, ’he was an alderman,’
she was goin’ on, but old Mis’ Winslow
cuts in on her:
“‘It don’t matter
what he was when he was man-grown,’ s’she.
’Man-grown can get along themselves. It’s
when they’re little bits o’ ones,’
she says.
“‘Little!’ says
Grandma Holly. ’Is it little you mean?
Well, my Amy’s two little feet use’ to
be swallowed up in my hand so,’ she
says, shuttin’ her hand over to show us.
“Well, so they went on.
I give you my word I stood there sort o’ grippin’
up on my elbows. I’d always known it was
so like you do know things are so.
But somehow when you come to feel they’re
so, that’s another thing. And I was feelin’
this in my throat ’bout as big as an orange.
I’d thought their hands looked like they’d
ought to be tyin’ up little aprons, but I never
thought o’ the hands bein’ rill lonesome
to do the tyin’, an’ thinkin’ about
it, too. An’ now I understood ’em
like I see ’em for the first time, rill face
to face. Somehow, we ain’t any too apt
to look at people that way,” said Calliope.
“You see how I mean it.
“Then comes the navy-blue woman
an’ says it’s time for their hot milk,
an’ they all looked up, kind o’ hopeful.
An’ I see that the navy-blue one had got ’em
trained into the i-dee that hot milk was an event.
She didn’t like to hev ’em talk much about
the past, she told me, when she see what we was speakin’
of, because it gener’lly made some of ’em
cry, an’ the i-dee was to keep the spirit of
the home bright an’ cheerful. ‘So
I see,’ s’I, dry. An’ there
was Christmas comin’ on, an’ nothin’
to break the general cheerfulness but hot milk.
“Well,” Calliope said, “I s’pose
you’ll think I’m terrible foolish, but
I couldn’t help what I done ”
“I don’t wonder at it,”
said I, warmly; “you promised to spend Christmas
Eve with them and read aloud to them, didn’t
you, Calliope?”
“No!” Calliope cried;
“I didn’t do that. I should think
they’d be sick to death o’ bein’
read aloud to. I should think they’d be
sick to death bein’ cheered up by their surroundin’s.
No I invited the whole nine of ‘em
to come over an’ spend Christmas Eve with me.”
“Calliope!” I cried, “but how ”
“I know it,” she exclaimed,
“I know it. But they’re all well an’
hardy. The charity corridor ain’t expected
in the infirmary much. An’ Jimmy Sturgis
is goin’ to bring ’em over free in the
closed ’bus I’ll fill it with
hot bricks an’ hot flat-irons an’ bed-quilts.
An’ my land! you’d ought to see ’em
when I ask’ ’em. I don’t s’pose
they’d had an invite out in years. The
navy-blue lady looked like I’d nipped a mountain
off’n her shoulders, too. An’ now,”
said Calliope, “what on top o’ this earth
will I do with ’em when I get ’em here?”
What indeed? I left my task and
sat by her on the rug before the fire, and we talked
it over. But all the while we talked, I could
see that she was keeping something back some
plan of which she was doubtful.
“I ain’t no money to spend,
you know,” she said, “an’ I won’t
let anybody else spend any for me, for this.
Folks has plans enough o’ their own without
mine. But I kep’ sayin’ to myself,
all the way home when my knees give down at the i-dee
of what I was goin’ to do: ’Calliope,
the Lord says, “Give.” An’
He meant you to give, same’s those that hev
got. He didn’t say, “Everybody give
but Calliope, an’ she ain’t got much,
so she’d ought to be let off.” He
said, “Give."’ An’ He didn’t
mention all nice things, same’s I’d like
to give, an’ most everybody does give ”
she nodded toward my bed, brave with its Christmas
array. “He didn’t mention givin’
things at all. An’ so,” said
Calliope, “I thought o’ somethin’
else.”
She sat with brooding eyes on the
fire, her hands clasped about her knees.
“The Lord Christ,” said
Calliope, “didn’t hev nothin’ of
His own. An’ yet He just give an’
give an’ give. An’ somehow I got the
i-dee,” she finished, glancing up at
me shyly, “that mebbe Christmas ain’t really
all in your stocking foot, after all. I ain’t
much to spend, and mebbe that sounds some like sour
grapes. But it seems like a good many beautiful
things is free to all, an’ that they’s
ways to do. Well, I’ve thought of a way ”
“Calliope,” I said, “tell
me what you have really planned for the old-lady party.
You have planned?”
“Well, yes,” she said,
“I hev. But mebbe you’ll think it
ain’t anything. First I thought o’
tea, an’ thin bread-an’-butter sandwiches it
seems some like a party when you get your bread thin.
An’ I’ve got apples in the house we could
roast, an’ corn to pop over the kitchen fire.
But then I come to a stop. For I ain’t
nothin’ else, an’ I’ve spent every
cent I can spend a’ready. But yet
I did want to show ’em somethin’ lovely an’
differ’nt from what they see, so’s it’d
seem as if somebody cared, an’ as if they’d
been in Christmas, too. An’ all of
a sudden it come to me, why not invite in a few little
children o’ somebody’s here in Friendship?
So’s them old grandma ladies ”
She shook her head and turned away.
“I expec’,” she
said, “you think I’m terrible foolish.
But wouldn’t that be givin’, don’t
you think? Would that be anything?”
I have planned, as will fall to us
all, many happy ways of keeping festival; but I think
that never, even in days when I myself was happiest,
have I so delighted in any event as in this of Calliope’s
proposing. And when at last she had gone, and
the dusk had fallen and I lighted candles and went
back to my pleasant task, some way the stitches of
pink and blue on flowered fabrics, the flutter of crisp
ribbons, and the breath of the sachets were not
greatly in my thoughts; and that which made me glad
was a certain shining in the room, but this was not
of candle-light, or firelight, or winter starlight.
With the days the plans for the Proudfit
party or rather the plans of the Proudfit
guests went merrily forward. It was,
they said, like “in the Oldmoxon days,”
when the house in which I was now living had been
the Friendship fairyland. Some take their parties
solemnly, some joyously, some feverishly; but Friendship
takes them vitally, as it takes a project or the breath
of being. Like the rest of the world, the village
sank Christmas in festivity. It could not see
Christmas for the Christmas plans.
Speculation was the delight of meetings,
and every one conspired in terms of toilettes.
“Likely,” said Mis’
Holcomb-that-was-Mame-Bliss, “Mis’ Banker
Mason’ll wear her black-an’-white foulard.
Them foulards are wonderful durable you
can’t muss ’em. She got hers when
Gramma Mason first hurt her back, so’s if anything
happened she’d be part mournin’, an’
if anything didn’t, she’d have a nice
dress to wear out places. Ain’t it real
convenient, white standin’ for both
companies an’ the tomb, so?”
And “Mis’ Photographer
Sturgis has the best of it, bein’ an invalid,
till a party comes up,” said Libbie Liberty.
“She gets plenty enough food sent in, an’
flowers, an’ such things, an’ she’s
got nails hung full o’ what I call sympathy
clo’es, to wear durin’ sympathy calls.
But when it comes to a real what you might say dress-up
dress, I guess she’ll hev to be took worse with
her side an’ stay in the house.”
Abigail Arnold contributed:
“Seems Mis’ Doctor Helman
had a whole wine silk dress put away with her dyin’
things. She always thought it sounded terrible
fine to hear about the dead havin’ dress-pattern
after dress-pattern laid away that hadn’t never
been made up. So she’d got together the
one, but now she an’ Elzabella are goin’
to work an’ make it up. I guess Mis’
Helman thinks her stomach is so much better ’t
mebbe she’ll be spared till after the holidays
when the sales begin.”
Even Liddy Ember had promised to go
and to take Ellen, and Ellen went up and down the
winter streets singing sane little songs about the
party, save on days when she “come herself again,”
and then she planned, as wildly as anybody, what she
meant to wear. And Liddy, whose dream had always
been to do “reg’lar city dress-makin’,
with helpers an’ plates an’ furnish the
findin’s at the shop,” and whose lot instead
had been to cut and fit “just the durable kind,”
was blithely at work night and day on Mis’ Postmaster
Sykes’s tobacco-brown net. We understood
that there were to be brown velvet butterflies stitched
down the skirt, and if her Lady Washington geranium
flowered in time, Mis’ Sykes was said
to lay bread and milk nightly about the roots to encourage
it, she was to wear the blossom in her
hair. ("She’ll be gettin’ herself talked
about, wearin’ a wreath o’ flowers on
her head, so,” said some.) But then, Mis’
Sykes was recognized to be “one that picks her
own steps.”
“Mis’ Sykes always dresses
for company accordin’ to the way she gets her
invite,” Calliope observed. “A telephone
invite, she goes in somethin’ she’d wear
home afternoons. Word o’ mouth at the front
door, she wears what she wears on Sundays. Written
invites, she rags out in her rill best dress,
for parties. But engraved,” Calliope
mounted to her climax, “a bran’ new dress
an’ a wreath in her hair is the least she’ll
stop at.”
But I think that, in the wish to do
honour to so distinguished an occasion, the temper
of Mis’ Sykes, and perhaps of Ellen Ember too,
was the secret temper of all the village.