They were very peculiar, and no one knew this better than Mrs. Jones and

her daughter Melinda, sister and mother to the deceased Abigail and the

redoubtable Tim. Naturally bright and quick-witted, Melinda caught

readily at any new improvement, and the consequence was that the Jones

house bore unmistakable signs of having in it a grown-up daughter whose

new ideas of things kept the old ideas from rusting. After Melinda came

home from boarding-school the Joneses did not set the table in the

kitchen close to the hissing cook stove, but in the pleasant dining

room, where there gradually came to be crocheted tidies on the backs of

the rocking-chairs, and crayon sketches on the wall, and a pot of

geraniums in the window, with a canary bird singing in his cage near by.

At first, Mrs. Markham, who felt a greater interest in the Joneses than

in any other family--Mrs. Jones being the only woman in the circle of

her acquaintance to whom she would lend her copper boiler--looked a

little askance at these "new-fangled notions," wondering how "Miss Jones

expected to keep the flies out of her house if she had all the doors

a-flyin' three times a day," and fearing lest Melinda was getting

"stuck-up notions in her head, which would make her fit for nothing."

But when she found there were no more flies buzzing in Farmer Jones'

kitchen than in her own, and that Melinda worked as much as ever, and

was just as willing to lend a helping hand when there was need of haste

at the Markham house, her anxiety subsided, and the Joneses were welcome

to eat wherever they chose, or even to have to wait upon the table, when

there was company, the little black boy Pete, whom Tim had bought at a

slave auction in New Orleans, whither he had gone on a flatboat

expedition two or three years before. But she never thought of

introducing any of Melinda's notions into her own household. She "could

not fuss" to keep so many rooms clean. If in winter time she kept a fire

in the front room, where in one corner her own bed was curtained off,

and if in summer she always sat there when her work was done, it was all

that could be required of her, and was just as they used to do at her

father's, in Vermont, thirty years ago. Her kitchen was larger than Mrs.

Jones', which was rather uncomfortable on a hot day when there was

washing to be done; the odor of the soap-suds was a little sickening

then, she admitted, but in her kitchen it was different; she had had an

eye to comfort when they were building, and had seen that the kitchen

was the largest, airiest, lightest room in the house, with four windows,

two outside doors, and a fireplace, where, although they had a stove,

she dearly loved to cook just as her mother had done in Vermont, and

where hung an old-fashioned crane, with iron hooks suspended from it.

Here she washed, and ironed, and ate, and performed her ablutions in the

bright tin basin which stood in the sink near to the pail, with the

gourd swinging in the top, and wiped her face on the rolling towel and

combed her hair before the clock, which served the double purpose of

looking-glass and timepiece. When company came--and Mrs. Markham was not

inhospitable--the east room, where the bed stood, was opened; and if the

company, as was sometimes the case, chanced to be Richard's friends, she

used the west room across the hall, where the chocolate-colored paper

and Daisy's picture hung, and where, upon the high mantel, there was a

plaster image of little Samuel, and two plaster vases filled with

colored fruit. The carpet was a very pretty Brussels, but it did not

quite cover the floor on either side. It was a small pattern, and on

this account had been offered a shilling cheaper a yard, and so the

economical Mrs. Markham had bought it, intending to eke out the

deficiency with drugget of a corresponding shade; but the merchant did

not bring the drugget, and the carpet was put down, and time went on,

and the strips of painted board were still uncovered, save by the

straight row of haircloth chairs, which stood upon one side, and the

old-fashioned sofa, which had cost fifty dollars, and ought to last at

least as many years. There was a Boston rocker, and a center table, with

the family Bible on it, and a volume of Scott's Commentaries, and

frosted candlesticks on the mantel and two sperm candles in them, with

colored paper, pink and green, all fancifully notched and put around

them, and a bureau in the corner, which held the boys' Sunday shirts and

Mrs. Markham's black silk dress, with Daisy's clothes in the bottom

drawer, and the silver plate taken from her coffin. There was a

gilt-framed looking-glass on the wall, and blue paper curtains at the

windows, which were further ornamented with muslin drapery. This was the

great room--the parlor--where Daisy had died, and which, on that

account, was a kind of sacred place to those who held the memory of that

sweet, little prairie blossom as the dearest memory of their lives. Had

she lived, with her naturally refined tastes, and her nicety of

perceptions, there was no guessing what that farmhouse might have been,

for a young girl makes a deal of difference in any family. But she died,

and so the house, which when she died, was not quite finished, remained

much as it was--a large, square building, minus blinds, with a wide

hall in the center opening in front upon a broad piazza, and opening

back upon a stoop, the side entrance to the kitchen. There was a picket

fence in front; but the yard was bare of ornament, if we except the

lilac bushes under the parlor windows, the red peony in the corner, and

the clumps of violets and daisies, which grew in what was intended for

borders to the walk, from the front gate to the door. Sometimes the

summer showed here a growth of marigolds, with sweet peas and china

asters, for Andy was fond of flowers, and when he had leisure he did a

little floral gardening; but this year, owing to Richard's absence,

there had been more to do on the farm, consequently the ornamental had

been neglected, and the late autumn flowers which, in honor of Ethelyn's

arrival, were standing in vases on the center table and the mantel, were

contributed by Melinda Jones, who had been very busy in other portions

of the house working for the bride.




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