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<h2> CHAPTER XXI. DREAMERS OF DREAMS </h2>
<p>August went out and September came in. Harvest was ended; and though
summer was not yet gone, her face was turned westering. The asters
lettered her retreating footsteps in a purple script, and over the hills
and valleys hung a faint blue smoke, as if Nature were worshipping at her
woodland altar. The apples began to burn red on the bending boughs;
crickets sang day and night; squirrels chattered secrets of Polichinelle
in the spruces; the sunshine was as thick and yellow as molten gold;
school opened, and we small denizens of the hill farms lived happy days of
harmless work and necessary play, closing in nights of peaceful,
undisturbed slumber under a roof watched over by autumnal stars.</p>
<p>At least, our slumbers were peaceful and undisturbed until our orgy of
dreaming began.</p>
<p>“I would really like to know what especial kind of deviltry you young fry
are up to this time,” said Uncle Roger one evening, as he passed through
the orchard with his gun on his shoulder, bound for the swamp.</p>
<p>We were sitting in a circle before the Pulpit Stone, each writing
diligently in an exercise book, and eating the Rev. Mr. Scott’s plums,
which always reached their prime of juicy, golden-green flesh and bloomy
blue skin in September. The Rev. Mr. Scott was dead and gone, but those
plums certainly kept his memory green, as his forgotten sermons could
never have done.</p>
<p>“Oh,” said Felicity in a shocked tone, when Uncle Roger had passed by,
“Uncle Roger SWORE.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, he didn’t,” said the Story Girl quickly. “‘Deviltry’ isn’t
swearing at all. It only means extra bad mischief.”</p>
<p>“Well, it’s not a very nice word, anyhow,” said Felicity.</p>
<p>“No, it isn’t,” agreed the Story Girl with a regretful sigh. “It’s very
expressive, but it isn’t nice. That is the way with so many words. They’re
expressive, but they’re not nice, and so a girl can’t use them.”</p>
<p>The Story Girl sighed again. She loved expressive words, and treasured
them as some girls might have treasured jewels. To her, they were as
lustrous pearls, threaded on the crimson cord of a vivid fancy. When she
met with a new one she uttered it over and over to herself in solitude,
weighing it, caressing it, infusing it with the radiance of her voice,
making it her own in all its possibilities for ever.</p>
<p>“Well, anyhow, it isn’t a suitable word in this case,” insisted Felicity.
“We are not up to any dev—any extra bad mischief. Writing down one’s
dreams isn’t mischief at all.”</p>
<p>Certainly it wasn’t. Surely not even the straitest sect of the grown-ups
could call it so. If writing down your dreams, with agonizing care as to
composition and spelling—for who knew that the eyes of generations
unborn might not read the record?—were not a harmless amusement,
could anything be called so? I trow not.</p>
<p>We had been at it for a fortnight, and during that time we only lived to
have dreams and write them down. The Story Girl had originated the idea
one evening in the rustling, rain-wet ways of the spruce wood, where we
were picking gum after a day of showers. When we had picked enough, we sat
down on the moss-grown stones at the end of a long arcade, where it opened
out on the harvest-golden valley below us, our jaws exercising themselves
vigorously on the spoil of our climbings. We were never allowed to chew
gum in school or in company, but in wood and field, orchard and hayloft,
such rules were in abeyance.</p>
<p>“My Aunt Jane used to say it wasn’t polite to chew gum anywhere,” said
Peter rather ruefully.</p>
<p>“I don’t suppose your Aunt Jane knew all the rules of etiquette,” said
Felicity, designing to crush Peter with a big word, borrowed from the <i>Family
Guide</i>. But Peter was not to be so crushed. He had in him a certain
toughness of fibre, that would have been proof against a whole dictionary.</p>
<p>“She did, too,” he retorted. “My Aunt Jane was a real lady, even if she
was only a Craig. She knew all those rules and she kept them when there
was nobody round to see her, just the same as when any one was. And she
was smart. If father had had half her git-up-and-git I wouldn’t be a hired
boy to-day.”</p>
<p>“Have you any idea where your father is?” asked Dan.</p>
<p>“No,” said Peter indifferently. “The last we heard of him he was in the
Maine lumber woods. But that was three years ago. I don’t know where he is
now, and,” added Peter deliberately, taking his gum from his mouth to make
his statement more impressive, “I don’t care.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Peter, that sounds dreadful,” said Cecily. “Your own father!”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Peter defiantly, “if your own father had run away when you
was a baby, and left your mother to earn her living by washing and working
out, I guess you wouldn’t care much about him either.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps your father may come home some of these days with a huge
fortune,” suggested the Story Girl.</p>
<p>“Perhaps pigs may whistle, but they’ve poor mouths for it,” was all the
answer Peter deigned to this charming suggestion.</p>
<p>“There goes Mr. Campbell down the road,” said Dan. “That’s his new mare.
Isn’t she a dandy? She’s got a skin like black satin. He calls her Betty
Sherman.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think it’s very nice to call a horse after your own grandmother,”
said Felicity.</p>
<p>“Betty Sherman would have thought it a compliment,” said the Story Girl.</p>
<p>“Maybe she would. She couldn’t have been very nice herself, or she would
never have gone and asked a man to marry her,” said Felicity.</p>
<p>“Why not?”</p>
<p>“Goodness me, it was dreadful! Would YOU do such a thing yourself?”</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t know,” said the Story Girl, her eyes gleaming with impish
laughter. “If I wanted him DREADFULLY, and HE wouldn’t do the asking,
perhaps I would.”</p>
<p>“I’d rather die an old maid forty times over,” exclaimed Felicity.</p>
<p>“Nobody as pretty as you will ever be an old maid, Felicity,” said Peter,
who never put too fine an edge on his compliments.</p>
<p>Felicity tossed her golden tressed head and tried to look angry, but made
a dismal failure of it.</p>
<p>“It wouldn’t be ladylike to ask any one to marry you, you know,” argued
Cecily.</p>
<p>“I don’t suppose the <i>Family Guide</i> would think so,” agreed the Story
Girl lazily, with some sarcasm in her voice. The Story Girl never held the
<i>Family Guide</i> in such reverence as did Felicity and Cecily. They
pored over the “etiquette column” every week, and could have told you on
demand, just exactly what kind of gloves should be worn at a wedding, what
you should say when introducing or being introduced, and how you ought to
look when your best young man came to see you.</p>
<p>“They say Mrs. Richard Cook asked HER husband to marry her,” said Dan.</p>
<p>“Uncle Roger says she didn’t exactly ask him, but she helped the lame dog
over the stile so slick that Richard was engaged to her before he knew
what had happened to him,” said the Story Girl. “I know a story about Mrs.
Richard Cook’s grandmother. She was one of those women who are always
saying ‘I told you so—‘”</p>
<p>“Take notice, Felicity,” said Dan aside.</p>
<p>“—And she was very stubborn. Soon after she was married she and her
husband quarrelled about an apple tree they had planted in their orchard.
The label was lost. He said it was a Fameuse and she declared it was a
Yellow Transparent. They fought over it till the neighbours came out to
listen. Finally he got so angry that he told her to shut up. They didn’t
have any <i>Family Guide</i> in those days, so he didn’t know it wasn’t
polite to say shut up to your wife. I suppose she thought she would teach
him manners, for would you believe it? That woman did shut up, and never
spoke one single word to her husband for five years. And then, in five
years’ time, the tree bore apples, and they WERE Yellow Transparents. And
then she spoke at last. She said, ‘I told you so.’”</p>
<p>“And did she talk to him after that as usual?” asked Sara Ray.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, she was just the same as she used to be,” said the Story Girl
wearily. “But that doesn’t belong to the story. It stops when she spoke at
last. You’re never satisfied to leave a story where it should stop, Sara
Ray.”</p>
<p>“Well, I always like to know what happens afterwards,” said Sara Ray.</p>
<p>“Uncle Roger says he wouldn’t want a wife he could never quarrel with,”
remarked Dan. “He says it would be too tame a life for him.”</p>
<p>“I wonder if Uncle Roger will always stay a bachelor,” said Cecily.</p>
<p>“He seems real happy,” observed Peter.</p>
<p>“Ma says that it’s all right as long as he is a bachelor because he won’t
take any one,” said Felicity, “but if he wakes up some day and finds he is
an old bachelor because he can’t get any one it’ll have a very different
flavour.”</p>
<p>“If your Aunt Olivia was to up and get married what would your Uncle Roger
do for a housekeeper?” asked Peter.</p>
<p>“Oh, but Aunt Olivia will never be married now,” said Felicity. “Why,
she’ll be twenty-nine next January.”</p>
<p>“Well, o’ course, that’s pretty old,” admitted Peter, “but she might find
some one who wouldn’t mind that, seeing she’s so pretty.”</p>
<p>“It would be awful splendid and exciting to have a wedding in the family,
wouldn’t it?” said Cecily. “I’ve never seen any one married, and I’d just
love to. I’ve been to four funerals, but not to one single wedding.”</p>
<p>“I’ve never even got to a funeral,” said Sara Ray gloomily.</p>
<p>“There’s the wedding veil of the proud princess,” said Cecily, pointing to
a long drift of filmy vapour in the southwestern sky.</p>
<p>“And look at that sweet pink cloud below it,” added Felicity.</p>
<p>“Maybe that little pink cloud is a dream, getting all ready to float down
into somebody’s sleep,” suggested the Story Girl.</p>
<p>“I had a perfectly awful dream last night,” said Cecily, with a shudder of
remembrance. “I dreamed I was on a desert island inhabited by tigers and
natives with two heads.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” the Story Girl looked at Cecily half reproachfully. “Why couldn’t
you tell it better than that? If I had such a dream I could tell it so
that everybody else would feel as if they had dreamed it, too.”</p>
<p>“Well, I’m not you,” countered Cecily, “and I wouldn’t want to frighten
any one as I was frightened. It was an awful dream—but it was kind
of interesting, too.”</p>
<p>“I’ve had some real int’resting dreams,” said Peter, “but I can’t remember
them long. I wish I could.”</p>
<p>“Why don’t you write them down?” suggested the Story Girl. “Oh—” she
turned upon us a face illuminated with a sudden inspiration. “I’ve an
idea. Let us each get an exercise book and write down all our dreams, just
as we dream them. We’ll see who’ll have the most interesting collection.
And we’ll have them to read and laugh over when we’re old and gray.”</p>
<p>Instantly we all saw ourselves and each other by inner vision, old and
gray—all but the Story Girl. We could not picture her as old.
Always, as long as she lived, so it seemed to us, must she have sleek
brown curls, a voice like the sound of a harpstring in the wind, and eyes
that were stars of eternal youth.</p>
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