<h2><SPAN name="ROSYS_STAY-AT-HOME_PARTIES" id="ROSYS_STAY-AT-HOME_PARTIES"></SPAN>ROSY'S STAY-AT-HOME PARTIES.</h2>
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<p class="minus"><span class="hide">O</span><b>H!</b>
dear, oh! dear," sighed Rosy, "I'm the
most unhappy little girl in all the world."</p>
<p>She was kneeling in a chair, gazing through
the drawing-room window. In the street outside
was drawn up a carriage, into which Nurse was packing
all of Rosy's brothers and sisters. Clover was
there, a boy of twelve, looking rather disgusted with
his surroundings, and having his head nearly cut off
by his first upright collar. Violet, Rosy's twin sister,
was there, dressed in the sweetest new pale blue
camel's-hair, and taking great care to turn the skirt
of it up over her shoulders as she nestled into her
corner of the landau. (Rosy thought with a pang
of her own new dress, the double of Violet's, hanging
upstairs in the wardrobe, in a melancholy way!) Jonquil
was there, the chubby, golden-haired, big-eyed<span class="pagenum">[190]</span>
brother, aged three. And last of all was dear wee
Honeysuckle, like a bundle of lace and flannel in
Marie's arms; while old Nurse's spectacles could
hardly be seen through the mass of sash-ends and
fluted petticoats, and scarlet stockings, and velvet
breeches, and flying locks of hair completely filling the
roomy carriage. No one could doubt that the children
were going to a party, even if they had not announced
that fact to everybody within ear-shot by the chatter
of their busy little tongues!</p>
<p>At last all were settled, and the carriage rolled away.
"Good-by, Rosy," "Good-by, Rosy!" came up in a
shrill chorus; and, the last Rosy's tear-dimmed eyes
could see of them, hands and handkerchiefs were waving
a farewell to the sister left behind.</p>
<p>Then it was that Rosy's fortitude completely forsook
her, and she dropped sobbing into the chair. It
was a bitter disappointment, for the party was to be
given by their aunt in honor of these children, and, in
addition to Punch and Judy, magic, and a candy-bag,
they were promised a huge bran-pie, full of delightful
hidden presents. Rosy had suffered from a pretty
bad sore-throat the night before, and the doctor had
forbidden her going out. It is no use for grown<span class="pagenum">[191]</span>
people to say, dear children, these disappointments
of yours don't matter much, for they <i>do</i>. They seem
as high as mountains in your path, and I fully sympathize
with you all, and especially with little weeping
Rosy.</p>
<p>So thought her mamma, evidently, for she came
into the room just then, and picked the little bunch of
blue serge and cardinal ribbons up in
her arms, and sat down with it in a
low chair by the fire.</p>
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<p>"Boo-hoo!" said Rosy, breaking
out afresh when she felt mamma's
kisses on her hair and wet cheeks.
Mamma said very little, but by and
by the little girl began to feel comforted,
in spite of herself. You know how it is, dears!
First, you stop roaring and moan, then your eyes are
kissed dry, then you burrow your heads down and
sigh, then you lie quite still for a little while—and at
last, after blowing your noses in an heroic way, you are
ready to laugh again!</p>
<p>All this happened in Rosy's case, and for awhile she
sat talking, until her mamma was called away to attend
to some household matter. By that time Rosy<span class="pagenum">[192]</span>
was quite content to be tucked into a corner of the
comfortable sofa, covered with a down quilt, and left
to gaze into the depths of a woodfire, burning gently
(for it had passed the spitting, spluttering stage), upon
two great old-fashioned brass andirons with claw-feet
and queer round bald heads.</p>
<p>Around Rosy's couch was drawn a gay Japanese
screen; before the fire was spread a great black bear-skin
rug, and on either side of it stood a tall green
porcelain jar. Clover always said these vases were
like the ones in which Morgiana hid the Forty Thieves,
and the children had more than once stuffed baby
Honeysuckle into one of them to keep her out of mischief
during what Nurse called their "rampagin's to
split one's head."</p>
<p>Over her mamma's writing-table, low enough for
Rosy to look into the very heart of it, hung a picture
in a broad gold frame. The picture was of a chestnut
wood in Brittany, and standing in the shadow of a
drooping bough was a little girl of about ten, her own
age. One of the little peasant maiden's arms was
clasped around the neck of a big dog, harnessed to a
cart of vegetables. Under the other arm she held a
fat goose with a dangling neck. Overhead, the sky<span class="pagenum">[193]</span>
was blue and the leaves seemed to be rustling in a
summer wind. Around the feet of the tiny nut-brown
maiden, with her odd high cap, grew tall heather and
feathery ferns, with here and there a clump of flame-shaped
lilies. When snow was on the ground outside
Rosy always loved to gaze at this pretty scene, and to
fancy herself stepping over the frame to have a chat
about vegetables, and a ramble in the forest with Annette.</p>
<p>Rosy's eyes wandered from one object to another in
this pleasant room. Fluff, her mother's Skye terrier,
curled up on her feet and fell asleep. The clock upon
the mantel ticked softly, Fluff snored contentedly,
little particles of burning wood pattered into the bed
of glowing embers below. Even the familiar rumble
of the street cars along the thoroughfare at the end of
their block seemed more subdued than usual; and
Rosy lay, never stirring, until—she found herself, without
the least warning, slipping down through one of
her mother's great porcelain jars, into Japan! Fluff
woke up, and dashed to the rescue, with his fierce
little "Rah!" of a bark; but there was nothing to be
seen of Miss Rosy except the tip of a scarlet bow, with
which Nurse was wont to adorn the summit of her<span class="pagenum">[194]</span>
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young lady's head.
She felt the rustle
of the dried rose-leaves
at the bottom
of the jar falling
over her in a
fragrant shower, as
she fell through
space, pulling up,
decidedly out of
breath, in a very
queer locality.</p>
<p>It was a town
where the houses
looked as if they
had been built for
big dolls to live in.
Houses with sliding
walls, doors,
and galleries made
all of paper, that in
two minutes you
could take apart
and pack up as you<span class="pagenum">[195]</span>
do a box of Crandall's blocks. The streets were
honeycombed with quaint booths, and crowded with
human beings going in and out of them like bees.
The carriages were babies' perambulators, drawn by a
tandem team of brown-skinned men, wearing a single
garment each, and umbrella hats.</p>
<p>There were no horses to be seen, but the cows wore
blue cotton wrappers and shoes made of straw. Men,
women, and children, at first sight, seemed to be dressed
alike, all clattering around on high clogs, stooping
painfully; and the funny little bald-headed babies were
either carried pick-a-back by their mammas, or else
were tucked in the breast of their fathers' loose wrappers,
together with pipes, tobacco pouches, books,
and a variety of other useful articles.</p>
<p>Rosy looked about her in astonishment, till a girl
came up and saluted her with solemn politeness, inviting
her to a party, which was just about to begin.
"You had better have your hair dressed first," the
girl said, "and I will lend you a decent frock."</p>
<p>"Very well," said Rosy, thinking fondly of the blue
camel's-hair in the wardrobe at home; "of course,
this old every-day serge won't do for a party."</p>
<p>The girl took her to the shop of a female barber,<span class="pagenum">[196]</span>
who made Rosy kneel down before a mirror of polished
steel, and parted her hair in two or three long manes,
which were stiffened with bandoline, and tied with
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paper twine in a wonderful
bow-knot on top. A fine tortoise-shell
skewer was added,
and the barberess, stepping
back to survey her work,
caught sight of Rosy's eyebrows.</p>
<p>"Tut, tut," she said, angrily;
"what were her parents
thinking of to let them
grow like this?" And without
more ado Rosy's eyebrows
were shaved off, and her face
and neck were daubed with a
thick white paste. Her under
lip had a patch of red paint,
and her teeth were stained
with some horrid black mixture.
Then she went with the Japanese girl into a
paper house, where the party was to be held, and the
girl lent her a loose silk gown, tied round the waist by<span class="pagenum">[197]</span>
a wide sash of pink crêpe. On her feet were put foot
mittens of white cloth, with a separate place for the
big toe, and high lacquered clogs.</p>
<p>"How can I walk?" said Rosy, tottering around
when she was finally equipped in her narrow uncomfortable
garments.</p>
<p>"Sh-h! the company is arriving!" said her hostess;
and as there was no furniture, not even a chair, Rosy
wondered where the company would sit. The company
solved this difficulty by sitting on the floor; and
then trays were handed around, containing all sorts
of wonderful sweetmeats, flowers and fruits in lovely
colors, with conserved fruits, sugared beans, and candy
fish, animals, and birds. Each dainty was more tempting
than the one before, and Rosy found the loose
front of her Japanese gown the very thing for a "party-pocket,"
if any of you know what that means!</p>
<p>Next came games; "Lady-go-to-see," "Sick man-and-doctor,"
Alphabet-cards, and Proverbs; and then,
more sweetmeats. Pleasant as it was, a sudden stop
was put to the entertainment, by a commotion, everybody
seizing hold of another, all with frightened faces.
Without warning, an earthquake came and turned
the house upside down. Everybody fell out on the<span class="pagenum">[198]</span>
ground but Rosy, who flew up in the air, becoming
entangled in the tail of a huge man-kite, carried along
by the wind at a fearful rate of speed.</p>
<p>Rosy thought this much more exciting than any
coasting down hill she had ever tried; and she flew up,
up, until the tail of the kite gave a flop, tossing her
through a rift in the clouds. There she was, passing
again through the bottom of the porcelain-jar, and in
another moment she had landed in the very centre
of the bear-skin hearth-rug.</p>
<p>Rosy was just getting her breath, and wondering
how she came to have her hair hanging in the usual
tawny stream, when, to her great surprise, the bear-skin
began to move.</p>
<p>"Hold on tight there. We are off," it said, in a low
growling tone, though not unkindly. "Want to go to
a party, hey? Well, I'll see what we can do for you
in my part of the world."</p>
<p>"Really you take one so unpleasantly by surprise,"
exclaimed poor Rosy, as she felt herself again setting
forth on an airy journey. "It is so cold here, I wish
you had let me stop for my seal-skin jacket."</p>
<p>"Don't talk about seal-skins, child. We are going
where you will see enough of them. Ho! but it's<span class="pagenum">[199]</span>
grand there, up among the icebergs and the everlasting
snow-drifts, where the frozen lakes gleam like
red jewels in the light of the sun that never sets!
Merry sports you'll see between my brothers and
sisters!"</p>
<p>"But I should be dreadfully afraid of them," began
Rosy, trembling. "I have never met any bears outside
of cages;" but the words were frozen on her
tongue, and some tears coming into her eyes rolled in
little round icicles into her lap.</p>
<p>Now they came to a world of ice and snow. Even
the fir-trees were no longer seen. Clinging to the
rocks was a little rough moss, which served for reindeers'
food. All else was chill and glittering—the
sky arched with radiant pink that seemed to palpitate.
Far below them was a polar sea, locking in chill embrace
a lonely ship, her shrouds sheathed in ice, her
ribs cracked against the huge silvery bulk of an iceberg,
on whose jagged side she leaned despairingly—no
sign of life on board. Rosy shuddered and shut
her eyes, only opening them again when the bear-skin
set her down at the side of an odd little hut, built on
a barren point of land above the ice-bound water.</p>
<p>This hut was made of blocks of ice, the chinks filled<span class="pagenum">[200]</span>
in with moss, and snow-caked over all. On top was
a hole whence issued a faint curl of smoke, and out of
an opening, somewhere, crawled a funny Esquimaux
lady, apparently as broad as she was long. She welcomed
Rosy politely, and took her in to the fire, a
civility Rosy thought she could have done without.
The whole family was collected there, with some
guests invited in Rosy's honor, who had come in
sledges drawn by dogs over the snow. The dogs
also were within, and half a dozen children. It made
Rosy think of the worms in Clover's can the days
when her brother went a-fishing, so closely packed and
squirming were her new-found friends. The place
was full of smoke, and smelled of fish oil. The feast
consisted of frozen whale's blubber, handed around to
be gnawed by the company, and of salt fish dried without
cooking, with strips of reindeer meat. Rosy tried
to be very agreeable to everybody present, but when
they brought her the baby to kiss, she almost fainted!
It was the greasiest little thing, without a stitch of
clothes on! By-and-by, sleep overpowered the traveller,
and Mrs. Esquimaux laid a skin before the fire,
offering her, for a pillow, what <i>do</i> you think? that
self-same greasy baby!<span class="pagenum">[201]</span></p>
<p>As this ceremony is an especial compliment to a
stranger among the Esquimaux, no one can refuse it;
and Rosy, with much compunction, laid her head down
on the poor little thing, who took it all as cheerfully
as possible.</p>
<p>Scarcely had the weary traveller closed her eyes,
when she opened them again on the lounge in the drawing-room
at home!</p>
<p>There, looking down on her with a friendly smile,
was the little Breton maiden in the chestnut wood.</p>
<p>"Come to my party," Rosy heard her whisper; and,
charmed with such a pretty new playmate, she stretched
out her hands. The little French girl dropped the
goose from under her arm, and leaned out of her gold
frame to help Rosy, who, in two or three steps was
safely beside her, treading down the tall heather, and
stirring the butterflies from their haunts among the
flowers. How green, and cool, and sweet it was, under
the arching boughs. Far as the eye could reach, on
every side, were leaves rustling in the fragrant air; and
the trunks of the ancient trees were gray and hoar as
the beards of the old Druids who once haunted them.
Annette, for so the peasant maid was called, told Rosy
many strange and interesting tales about this forest as<span class="pagenum">[202]</span>
they walked on, followed by the faithful dog dragging
his cart of vegetables so carefully that he did not need
a word or look to guide him.</p>
<p>"Ours is one of the oldest inhabited parts of France,"
said the girl, proudly; "I can tell you stories about
every tree and rock and hill in the country-side, and I
will, if you like to hear them; but we must make
haste to reach the market now, before the sun rises high
enough to drink the dew from my vegetables. I was
up before day to pick them, and my father has promised
me that, if I sell all, I shall have a party in the glen.
Only think! Not to work in the field all the afternoon—and
to have as many chestnuts as we choose, a whole
loaf of brown bread, and perhaps—if the step-mother
is good humored—a slice of seed-cake!"</p>
<p>Rosy thought this a very poor sort of a party; but
she found Annette such good company that it seemed
no hardship to trudge along the hot and dusty road
beside her, when they emerged from the shelter of the
wood. The two girls laughed and made merry until
they reached the market town, and there the good dog
came to a halt, while Annette arranged her cress and
lettuces and beans and potatoes in tempting rows
upon the stall—standing beside them with such a<span class="pagenum">[203]</span>
patient smiling face, that many passers-by were induced
to buy of her. The fat goose went home
in the basket of a fat housekeeper, and left in his
place a pile of silver pieces. So, Annette and Rosy
soon turned back to trudge again the dusty high-road,
talking of the party they were to have in the glen that
afternoon.</p>
<p>Annette's home, which the two tired little travellers
reached at last, was a quaint cottage, the steep moss-grown
roof looking twice the height of its walls. Over
the door grew a twisted pear-tree, and all the ground
around it, excepting the garden patch in a sheltered
spot behind, was one waving mass of heather, strewn
with gray boulders of mossy rock. Rosy gave a little
cry of delight.</p>
<p>"Why, it is the <i>sweetest</i> place," she cried. "It is
like a bird's nest, Annette. How happy you must be
here."</p>
<p>Annette was about to answer, when out of the door
came a cross step-mother, who began scolding as soon
as she saw the girls, snatched the pouch of silver money
from Annette's side, ordered her to the right and left,
and then, tired as the poor child was, harnessed her
to the cart beside the dog, and made her draw a heavy<span class="pagenum">[204]</span>
pile of linen to the brook, where she was at once set to
work to help her step-mother in the family washing.
Rosy, half-starved by her long fast, was glad to share
Annette's meagre dinner of brown bread and a handful
of boiled chestnuts, eaten under a tree by the
brookside. Annette ventured to remind her step-mother
of the promised party, and, for answer, received
a smart box on the ear.</p>
<p>"Is it a princess I have got to do my work, perchance?"
said the cross old thing. "Thy father is far
enough off in the field, not here to spoil thee, by luck;
so do thou and that idle girl yonder set to work and
finish washing the linen. That's party enough for
trapesing girls, in <i>my</i> mind!"</p>
<p>So Rosy, too, was forced into service, and all through
the long afternoon she toiled with aching limbs.
When night came, she and Annette were glad to seek
a straw bed in a tiny roof-chamber and cry themselves
to sleep.</p>
<p>"Never mind," said Annette, patiently; "to-morrow,
perhaps, she may be kinder, and after we have
worked all the forenoon in the field, who knows but
we may have our party yet?"</p>
<p>Rosy remembered nothing more, except opening<span class="pagenum">[205]</span>
her eyes full upon the hearth in her mother's drawing-room,
where she was immediately addressed by one
of the old-fashioned brass andirons.</p>
<p>"I should just like to show you what a party was in
<i>my</i> time," it said, in a cracked, high-pitched voice.
"We, sister Peggy and I, belonged, as you know, to
your mother's grandmother—a good old Revolutionary
stock—and we lived in the old house up yonder in
Salem, Massachusetts, until your mother took it into
her fanciful head to fetch us here. I should like to
know what we have in common with that little fiddle-faddle
Dresden china clock and shepherdesses upon the
mantel-piece! However, I won't talk about my grievances,
for sister Peggy always says that it is in very
bad taste, and sister Peggy knows. We lived in the
room where your grandmother was born, my dear, and
her first cap was fitted upon sister Peggy's knob——"</p>
<p>"Will she never stop to take breath," Rosy wondered.
"I am dying to ask her a question. What's
your name?" she suddenly called out, so abruptly as
to make the old andiron jump, and let fall a broken
brand upon the hearth.</p>
<p>"Dear me, child, how you fluttered me!" it said,
reprovingly. "I am sister Polly, of course, as you<span class="pagenum">[206]</span>
would have heard in due time. Sister Peggy always
says that little girls should be seen and not heard, and
sister Peggy knows—Where was I—Oh! when your
grandmother grew old enough to invite her little friends
to share her hospitality, the boys and girls would
arrive at about three o'clock in the afternoon. The
girls wore plain print gowns, and muslin aprons edged
with tambour work. Instead of that insane mop of
hair you sport, with a bow in the middle, looking for
the world and all like your terrier, Fluff, they had
decent mob caps. Their hands were covered with
mittens, and each one earned a bag with a piece of
white seam (or plain stitching), or else a sampler frame.
How pretty it was to see them sitting down to their
work for awhile! Then the tea-table was spread, with
flowered china cups and plates, and shining silver,
muffins, crumpets, sliced ham, home-made preserves
and cream, and waffles strewn with cinnamon and
sugar——"</p>
<p>"You make my mouth water," said Rosy.</p>
<p>"All this took place by five o'clock," said sister
Polly, "and afterward the children had a good game
of 'blind-man's-buff,' or 'hunt-the-slipper'—and a
handful of nuts with a big red apple, to stuff in each<span class="pagenum">[207]</span>
of their pockets upon going home. I remember a
very little party your mamma had once, when she was
a child——"</p>
<p>"Do you? Tell me about it, please," said Rosy,
eagerly, for nothing was ever so enchanting to those
children as stories about their mamma in her youth.</p>
<p>"She was just getting over the measles, and had been
very much petted during her convalescence. Your
grandmother promised her, in reward for taking a
rather nasty dose of medicine, that she should have
her little cousins from next door, to drink tea on a
trunk. This was an especial treat to your mamma.
A large flat-topped trunk served as table for the little
girls and their dollies. On it were spread the china
doll tea-things, and when they did not suffice in size or
numbers, leaves from the grape-vine above the dining-room
porch, were also heaped with goodies. Those
children were satisfied with broken bits of peppermint
stick, ginger-nuts, wee biscuit, lemonade for tea, and
in the centre of the table a dish of horse-cakes."</p>
<p>"Oh, I know!" said Rosy, with much interest.
"Mamma has often told us about horse-cakes, and
the funny little old shop where she used to buy them
for a cent apiece. They had currants for eyes, and the<span class="pagenum">[208]</span>
children never knew whether to begin to eat at the
head first or the tail——"</p>
<p>"Exactly," said sister Polly. "Well, as I was saying,
four little girls in clean white birds'-eye pinafores
assembled around the trunk-party, your mamma at the
head, to pour out the lemonade tea. Each guest had
a dolly in her lap, and your mamma had twins on
hers. I think the difficulty began by her insisting
that the twins should have a double share of all the
good things, which the guests, with some warmth, disputed.
At any rate, it is a sad tale to tell you, but a
true one; a quarrel set in, and what should the hostess
do, but burst into tears, declare that her company were
mean horrid things, and then, dragging at the table-cloth,
whisk the entire contents of the tea-table upon
the floor!"</p>
<p>"Oh!" said Rosy, "did my mamma do that? I
don't believe a word of it! You are nothing but an
old tattle-tale, sister Polly, and I don't believe sister
Peggy is any better!"</p>
<p>Scarcely had Rosy uttered these disrespectful words,
when the enraged sister Polly and sister Peggy flew out
upon her from the fireplace. Seizing her in their
brassy claws, they shook the little girl fiercely, bumping<span class="pagenum">[209]</span>
her head first on one side, then on the other, between
their knobs.</p>
<p>Rosy screamed for help, and heard in return a
merry peal of laughter. She felt a warm shower of
kisses on her face; and, opening her eyes, saw Clover
and Violet, Jonquil and the baby, mamma and the
nurses, standing in a laughing circle around her
couch, while Fluff nearly barked his head off in the
general excitement.</p>
<p>"Rosy, you had the funniest nightmare!" said
Violet; "see here, what a lovely bracelet was in the
bran-pie for you, and we've all saved you some of our
bonbons."</p>
<p>"It was rather a bully Punch and Judy," remarked
Clover, patronizingly. "That is, for the little ones,
you know; <i>I've</i> seen such lots of 'em."</p>
<p>"Punch said, 'Doody, Doody, bing up de baby,'"
squeaked happy little Jonquil, capering about.</p>
<p>Baby Honeysuckle had gone to sleep, after her first
party.</p>
<p>Rosy jumped up, and kissed everybody around
twice.</p>
<p>"Dear knows I've had enough of parties," she declared
joyfully; but nobody knew what she meant!</p>
<hr class="chapter">
<p><span class="pagenum">[211]</span></p>
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