[Polly Oliver’s Problem by Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin]@TWC D-Link bookPolly Oliver’s Problem CHAPTER XV 3/12
"God seems to give me everything but what I want most," she thought; "but since He gives me so much, I must not question any more: I must not choose; I must believe that He wants me to be happy, after all, and I must begin and try to be good again." She did try to be good.
She came down to breakfast the next morning, announcing to Mrs.Bird, with her grateful morning kiss, that she meant to "live up to" her room.
"But it's going to be difficult," she confessed.
"I shall not dare to have a naughty thought in it; it seems as if it would be written somewhere on the whiteness!" "You can come and be naughty in my bachelor den, Polly," said Mr.Bird, smiling.
"Mrs.Bird does n't waste any girlish frills and poetic decorations and mystical friezes on her poor brother-in-law! He is done up in muddy browns, as befits his age and sex." Polly insisted on beginning her work the very next afternoon; but she had strength only for three appointments a week, and Mrs.Bird looked doubtfully after her as she walked away from the house with a languid gait utterly unlike her old buoyant step. Edgar often came in the evenings, as did Tom and Blanche Mills, and Milly Foster; but though Polly was cheerful and composed, she seldom broke into her old flights of nonsense. On other nights, when they were alone, she prepared for her hours of story-telling, and in this she was wonderfully helped by Mr.Bird's suggestions and advice; for he was a student of literature in many languages, and delighted in bringing his treasures before so teachable a pupil. "She has a sort of genius that astonishes me," said he one morning, as he chatted with Mrs.Bird over the breakfast-table. Polly had excused herself, and stood at the farther library window, gazing up the street vaguely and absently, as if she saw something beyond the hills and the bay.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|