Pollyanna Grows Up - Eleanor H. Porter (read an ebook week .TXT) š
- Author: Eleanor H. Porter
Book online Ā«Pollyanna Grows Up - Eleanor H. Porter (read an ebook week .TXT) šĀ». Author Eleanor H. Porter
And Mrs. Carew, who would not have believed such a thing possible, heard herself murmuring a faint āyes,ā which, she knew, bound her to the giving of a Christmas-tree party on New Yearās Eve to a dozen children from Murphyās Alley and a young salesgirl whose name she did not know.
Perhaps in Mrs. Carewās memory was still lingering a young girlās āSometimes I wonder there donāt some of āem think of helpinā the girls before they go wrong.ā Perhaps in her ears was still ringing Pollyannaās story of that same girl who had found a crowd in a big city the loneliest place in the world, yet who had refused to go with the handsome man that had ānoticed too much.ā Perhaps in Mrs. Carewās heart was the undefined hope that somewhere in it all lay the peace she had so longed for. Perhaps it was a little of all three combined with utter helplessness in the face of Pollyannaās amazing twisting of her irritated sarcasm into the wide-sweeping hospitality of a willing hostess. Whatever it was, the thing was done; and at once Mrs. Carew found herself caught into a veritable whirl of plans and plottings, the center of which was always Pollyanna and the party.
To her sister, Mrs. Carew wrote distractedly of the whole affair, closing with:
āWhat Iām going to do I donāt know; but I suppose I shall have to keep right on doing as I am doing. There is no other way. Of course, if Pollyanna once begins to preachā ābut she hasnāt yet; so I canāt, with a clear conscience, send her back to you.ā
Della, reading this letter at the Sanatorium, laughed aloud at the conclusion.
āāāHasnāt preached yet,ā indeed!ā she chuckled to herself. āBless her dear heart! And yet you, Ruth Carew, own up to giving two Christmas-tree parties within a week, and, as I happen to know, your home, which used to be shrouded in deathlike gloom, is aflame with scarlet and green from top to toe. But she hasnāt preached yetā āoh, no, she hasnāt preached yet!ā
The party was a great success. Even Mrs. Carew admitted that. Jamie, in his wheel chair, Jerry with his startling, but expressive vocabulary, and the girl (whose name proved to be Sadie Dean), vied with each other in amusing the more diffident guests. Sadie Dean, much to the othersā surpriseā āand perhaps to her ownā ādisclosed an intimate knowledge of the most fascinating games; and these games, with Jamieās stories and Jerryās good-natured banter, kept everyone in gales of laughter until supper and the generous distribution of presents from the laden tree sent the happy guests home with tired sighs of content.
If Jamie (who with Jerry was the last to leave) looked about him a bit wistfully, no one apparently noticed it. Yet Mrs. Carew, when she bade him good night, said low in his ear, half impatiently, half embarrassedly:
āWell, Jamie, have you changed your mindā āabout coming?ā
The boy hesitated. A faint color stole into his cheeks. He turned and looked into her eyes wistfully, searchingly. Then very slowly he shook his head.
āIf it could always beā ālike tonight, Iā ācould,ā he sighed. āBut it wouldnāt. Thereād be tomorrow, and next week, and next month, and next year cominā; and Iād know before next week that I hadnāt oughter come.ā
If Mrs. Carew had thought that the New Yearās Eve party was to end the matter of Pollyannaās efforts in behalf of Sadie Dean, she was soon undeceived; for the very next morning Pollyanna began to talk of her.
āAnd Iām so glad I found her again,ā she prattled contentedly. āEven if I havenāt been able to find the real Jamie for you, Iāve found somebody else for you to loveā āand of course youāll love to love her, ācause itās just another way of loving Jamie.ā
Mrs. Carew drew in her breath and gave a little gasp of exasperation. This unfailing faith in her goodness of heart, and unhesitating belief in her desire to āhelp everybodyā was most disconcerting, and sometimes most annoying. At the same time it was a most difficult thing to disclaimā āunder the circumstances, especially with Pollyannaās happy, confident eyes full on her face.
āBut, Pollyanna,ā she objected impotently, at last, feeling very much as if she were struggling against invisible silken cords, āIā āyouā āthis girl really isnāt Jamie, at all, you know.ā
āI know she isnāt,ā sympathized Pollyanna quickly. āAnd of course Iām just as sorry she isnāt Jamie as can be. But sheās somebodyās Jamieā āthat is, I mean she hasnāt got anybody down here to love her andā āand notice, you know; and so whenever you remember Jamie I should think you couldnāt be glad enough there was somebody you could help, just as youād want folks to help Jamie, wherever he is.ā
Mrs. Carew shivered and gave a little moan.
āBut I want my Jamie,ā she grieved.
Pollyanna nodded with understanding eyes.
āI knowā āthe āchildās presence.ā Mr. Pendleton told me about itā āonly youāve got the āwomanās hand.āāā
āāāWomanās handā?ā
āYesā āto make a home, you know. He said that it took a womanās hand or a childās presence to make a home. That was when he wanted me, and I found him Jimmy, and he adopted him instead.ā
āJimmy?ā Mrs. Carew looked up with the startled something in her eyes that always came into them at the mention of any variant of that name.
āYes; Jimmy Bean.ā
āOhā āBean,ā said Mrs. Carew, relaxing.
āYes. He was from an Orphanās Home, and he ran away. I found him. He said he wanted another kind of a home with a mother in it instead of a Matron.
Comments (0)