<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"></SPAN> CHAPTER XV.<br/> A Tempest in the School Teapot</h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HAT a splendid
day!” said Anne, drawing a long breath. “Isn’t it good just
to be alive on a day like this? I pity the people who aren’t born yet for
missing it. They may have good days, of course, but they can never have this
one. And it’s splendider still to have such a lovely way to go to school
by, isn’t it?”</p>
<p>“It’s a lot nicer than going round by the road; that is so dusty
and hot,” said Diana practically, peeping into her dinner basket and
mentally calculating if the three juicy, toothsome, raspberry tarts reposing
there were divided among ten girls how many bites each girl would have.</p>
<p>The little girls of Avonlea school always pooled their lunches, and to eat
three raspberry tarts all alone or even to share them only with one’s
best chum would have forever and ever branded as “awful mean” the
girl who did it. And yet, when the tarts were divided among ten girls you just
got enough to tantalize you.</p>
<p>The way Anne and Diana went to school <i>was</i> a pretty one. Anne thought
those walks to and from school with Diana couldn’t be improved upon even
by imagination. Going around by the main road would have been so unromantic;
but to go by Lover’s Lane and Willowmere and Violet Vale and the Birch
Path was romantic, if ever anything was.</p>
<p>Lover’s Lane opened out below the orchard at Green Gables and stretched
far up into the woods to the end of the Cuthbert farm. It was the way by which
the cows were taken to the back pasture and the wood hauled home in winter.
Anne had named it Lover’s Lane before she had been a month at Green
Gables.</p>
<p>“Not that lovers ever really walk there,” she explained to Marilla,
“but Diana and I are reading a perfectly magnificent book and
there’s a Lover’s Lane in it. So we want to have one, too. And
it’s a very pretty name, don’t you think? So romantic! We
can’t imagine the lovers into it, you know. I like that lane because you
can think out loud there without people calling you crazy.”</p>
<p>Anne, starting out alone in the morning, went down Lover’s Lane as far as
the brook. Here Diana met her, and the two little girls went on up the lane
under the leafy arch of maples—“maples are such sociable
trees,” said Anne; “they’re always rustling and whispering to
you”—until they came to a rustic bridge. Then they left the lane
and walked through Mr. Barry’s back field and past Willowmere. Beyond
Willowmere came Violet Vale—a little green dimple in the shadow of Mr.
Andrew Bell’s big woods. “Of course there are no violets there
now,” Anne told Marilla, “but Diana says there are millions of them
in spring. Oh, Marilla, can’t you just imagine you see them? It actually
takes away my breath. I named it Violet Vale. Diana says she never saw the beat
of me for hitting on fancy names for places. It’s nice to be clever at
something, isn’t it? But Diana named the Birch Path. She wanted to, so I
let her; but I’m sure I could have found something more poetical than
plain Birch Path. Anybody can think of a name like that. But the Birch Path is
one of the prettiest places in the world, Marilla.”</p>
<p>It was. Other people besides Anne thought so when they stumbled on it. It was a
little narrow, twisting path, winding down over a long hill straight through
Mr. Bell’s woods, where the light came down sifted through so many
emerald screens that it was as flawless as the heart of a diamond. It was
fringed in all its length with slim young birches, white stemmed and lissom
boughed; ferns and starflowers and wild lilies-of-the-valley and scarlet tufts
of pigeonberries grew thickly along it; and always there was a delightful
spiciness in the air and music of bird calls and the murmur and laugh of wood
winds in the trees overhead. Now and then you might see a rabbit skipping
across the road if you were quiet—which, with Anne and Diana, happened
about once in a blue moon. Down in the valley the path came out to the main
road and then it was just up the spruce hill to the school.</p>
<p>The Avonlea school was a whitewashed building, low in the eaves and wide in the
windows, furnished inside with comfortable substantial old-fashioned desks that
opened and shut, and were carved all over their lids with the initials and
hieroglyphics of three generations of school children. The schoolhouse was set
back from the road and behind it was a dusky fir wood and a brook where all the
children put their bottles of milk in the morning to keep cool and sweet until
dinner hour.</p>
<p>Marilla had seen Anne start off to school on the first day of September with
many secret misgivings. Anne was such an odd girl. How would she get on with
the other children? And how on earth would she ever manage to hold her tongue
during school hours?</p>
<p>Things went better than Marilla feared, however. Anne came home that evening in
high spirits.</p>
<p>“I think I’m going to like school here,” she announced.
“I don’t think much of the master, through. He’s all the time
curling his mustache and making eyes at Prissy Andrews. Prissy is grown up, you
know. She’s sixteen and she’s studying for the entrance examination
into Queen’s Academy at Charlottetown next year. Tillie Boulter says the
master is <i>dead gone</i> on her. She’s got a beautiful complexion and
curly brown hair and she does it up so elegantly. She sits in the long seat at
the back and he sits there, too, most of the time—to explain her lessons,
he says. But Ruby Gillis says she saw him writing something on her slate and
when Prissy read it she blushed as red as a beet and giggled; and Ruby Gillis
says she doesn’t believe it had anything to do with the lesson.”</p>
<p>“Anne Shirley, don’t let me hear you talking about your teacher in
that way again,” said Marilla sharply. “You don’t go to
school to criticize the master. I guess he can teach <i>you</i> something, and
it’s your business to learn. And I want you to understand right off that
you are not to come home telling tales about him. That is something I
won’t encourage. I hope you were a good girl.”</p>
<p>“Indeed I was,” said Anne comfortably. “It wasn’t so
hard as you might imagine, either. I sit with Diana. Our seat is right by the
window and we can look down to the Lake of Shining Waters. There are a lot of
nice girls in school and we had scrumptious fun playing at dinnertime.
It’s so nice to have a lot of little girls to play with. But of course I
like Diana best and always will. I <i>adore</i> Diana. I’m dreadfully far
behind the others. They’re all in the fifth book and I’m only in
the fourth. I feel that it’s kind of a disgrace. But there’s not
one of them has such an imagination as I have and I soon found that out. We had
reading and geography and Canadian history and dictation today. Mr. Phillips
said my spelling was disgraceful and he held up my slate so that everybody
could see it, all marked over. I felt so mortified, Marilla; he might have been
politer to a stranger, I think. Ruby Gillis gave me an apple and Sophia Sloane
lent me a lovely pink card with ‘May I see you home?’ on it.
I’m to give it back to her tomorrow. And Tillie Boulter let me wear her
bead ring all the afternoon. Can I have some of those pearl beads off the old
pincushion in the garret to make myself a ring? And oh, Marilla, Jane Andrews
told me that Minnie MacPherson told her that she heard Prissy Andrews tell Sara
Gillis that I had a very pretty nose. Marilla, that is the first compliment I
have ever had in my life and you can’t imagine what a strange feeling it
gave me. Marilla, have I really a pretty nose? I know you’ll tell me the
truth.”</p>
<p>“Your nose is well enough,” said Marilla shortly. Secretly she
thought Anne’s nose was a remarkable pretty one; but she had no intention
of telling her so.</p>
<p>That was three weeks ago and all had gone smoothly so far. And now, this crisp
September morning, Anne and Diana were tripping blithely down the Birch Path,
two of the happiest little girls in Avonlea.</p>
<p>“I guess Gilbert Blythe will be in school today,” said Diana.
“He’s been visiting his cousins over in New Brunswick all summer
and he only came home Saturday night. He’s <i>aw’fly</i> handsome,
Anne. And he teases the girls something terrible. He just torments our lives
out.”</p>
<p>Diana’s voice indicated that she rather liked having her life tormented
out than not.</p>
<p>“Gilbert Blythe?” said Anne. “Isn’t his name
that’s written up on the porch wall with Julia Bell’s and a big
‘Take Notice’ over them?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Diana, tossing her head, “but I’m sure he
doesn’t like Julia Bell so very much. I’ve heard him say he studied
the multiplication table by her freckles.”</p>
<p>“Oh, don’t speak about freckles to me,” implored Anne.
“It isn’t delicate when I’ve got so many. But I do think that
writing take-notices up on the wall about the boys and girls is the silliest
ever. I should just like to see anybody dare to write my name up with a
boy’s. Not, of course,” she hastened to add, “that anybody
would.”</p>
<p>Anne sighed. She didn’t want her name written up. But it was a little
humiliating to know that there was no danger of it.</p>
<p>“Nonsense,” said Diana, whose black eyes and glossy tresses had
played such havoc with the hearts of Avonlea schoolboys that her name figured
on the porch walls in half a dozen take-notices. “It’s only meant
as a joke. And don’t you be too sure your name won’t ever be
written up. Charlie Sloane is <i>dead gone</i> on you. He told his
mother—his <i>mother</i>, mind you—that you were the smartest girl
in school. That’s better than being good looking.”</p>
<p>“No, it isn’t,” said Anne, feminine to the core.
“I’d rather be pretty than clever. And I hate Charlie Sloane, I
can’t bear a boy with goggle eyes. If anyone wrote my name up with his
I’d never <i>get</i> over it, Diana Barry. But it <i>is</i> nice to keep
head of your class.”</p>
<p>“You’ll have Gilbert in your class after this,” said Diana,
“and he’s used to being head of his class, I can tell you.
He’s only in the fourth book although he’s nearly fourteen. Four
years ago his father was sick and had to go out to Alberta for his health and
Gilbert went with him. They were there three years and Gil didn’t go to
school hardly any until they came back. You won’t find it so easy to keep
head after this, Anne.”</p>
<p>“I’m glad,” said Anne quickly. “I couldn’t really
feel proud of keeping head of little boys and girls of just nine or ten. I got
up yesterday spelling ‘ebullition.’ Josie Pye was head and, mind
you, she peeped in her book. Mr. Phillips didn’t see her—he was
looking at Prissy Andrews—but I did. I just swept her a look of freezing
scorn and she got as red as a beet and spelled it wrong after all.”</p>
<p>“Those Pye girls are cheats all round,” said Diana indignantly, as
they climbed the fence of the main road. “Gertie Pye actually went and
put her milk bottle in my place in the brook yesterday. Did you ever? I
don’t speak to her now.”</p>
<p>When Mr. Phillips was in the back of the room hearing Prissy Andrews’s
Latin, Diana whispered to Anne, “That’s Gilbert Blythe sitting
right across the aisle from you, Anne. Just look at him and see if you
don’t think he’s handsome.”</p>
<p>Anne looked accordingly. She had a good chance to do so, for the said Gilbert
Blythe was absorbed in stealthily pinning the long yellow braid of Ruby Gillis,
who sat in front of him, to the back of her seat. He was a tall boy, with curly
brown hair, roguish hazel eyes, and a mouth twisted into a teasing smile.
Presently Ruby Gillis started up to take a sum to the master; she fell back
into her seat with a little shriek, believing that her hair was pulled out by
the roots. Everybody looked at her and Mr. Phillips glared so sternly that Ruby
began to cry. Gilbert had whisked the pin out of sight and was studying his
history with the soberest face in the world; but when the commotion subsided he
looked at Anne and winked with inexpressible drollery.</p>
<p>“I think your Gilbert Blythe <i>is</i> handsome,” confided Anne to
Diana, “but I think he’s very bold. It isn’t good manners to
wink at a strange girl.”</p>
<p>But it was not until the afternoon that things really began to happen.</p>
<p>Mr. Phillips was back in the corner explaining a problem in algebra to Prissy
Andrews and the rest of the scholars were doing pretty much as they pleased
eating green apples, whispering, drawing pictures on their slates, and driving
crickets harnessed to strings, up and down aisle. Gilbert Blythe was trying to
make Anne Shirley look at him and failing utterly, because Anne was at that
moment totally oblivious not only to the very existence of Gilbert Blythe, but
of every other scholar in Avonlea school itself. With her chin propped on her
hands and her eyes fixed on the blue glimpse of the Lake of Shining Waters that
the west window afforded, she was far away in a gorgeous dreamland hearing and
seeing nothing save her own wonderful visions.</p>
<p>Gilbert Blythe wasn’t used to putting himself out to make a girl look at
him and meeting with failure. She <i>should</i> look at him, that red-haired
Shirley girl with the little pointed chin and the big eyes that weren’t
like the eyes of any other girl in Avonlea school.</p>
<p>Gilbert reached across the aisle, picked up the end of Anne’s long red
braid, held it out at arm’s length and said in a piercing whisper:</p>
<p>“Carrots! Carrots!”</p>
<p>Then Anne looked at him with a vengeance!</p>
<p>She did more than look. She sprang to her feet, her bright fancies fallen into
cureless ruin. She flashed one indignant glance at Gilbert from eyes whose
angry sparkle was swiftly quenched in equally angry tears.</p>
<p>“You mean, hateful boy!” she exclaimed passionately. “How
dare you!”</p>
<p>And then—thwack! Anne had brought her slate down on Gilbert’s head
and cracked it—slate not head—clear across.</p>
<p>Avonlea school always enjoyed a scene. This was an especially enjoyable one.
Everybody said “Oh” in horrified delight. Diana gasped. Ruby
Gillis, who was inclined to be hysterical, began to cry. Tommy Sloane let his
team of crickets escape him altogether while he stared open-mouthed at the
tableau.</p>
<p>Mr. Phillips stalked down the aisle and laid his hand heavily on Anne’s
shoulder.</p>
<p>“Anne Shirley, what does this mean?” he said angrily. Anne returned
no answer. It was asking too much of flesh and blood to expect her to tell
before the whole school that she had been called “carrots.” Gilbert
it was who spoke up stoutly.</p>
<p>“It was my fault Mr. Phillips. I teased her.”</p>
<p>Mr. Phillips paid no heed to Gilbert.</p>
<p>“I am sorry to see a pupil of mine displaying such a temper and such a
vindictive spirit,” he said in a solemn tone, as if the mere fact of
being a pupil of his ought to root out all evil passions from the hearts of
small imperfect mortals. “Anne, go and stand on the platform in front of
the blackboard for the rest of the afternoon.”</p>
<p>Anne would have infinitely preferred a whipping to this punishment under which
her sensitive spirit quivered as from a whiplash. With a white, set face she
obeyed. Mr. Phillips took a chalk crayon and wrote on the blackboard above her
head.</p>
<p>“Ann Shirley has a very bad temper. Ann Shirley must learn to control her
temper,” and then read it out loud so that even the primer class, who
couldn’t read writing, should understand it.</p>
<p>Anne stood there the rest of the afternoon with that legend above her. She did
not cry or hang her head. Anger was still too hot in her heart for that and it
sustained her amid all her agony of humiliation. With resentful eyes and
passion-red cheeks she confronted alike Diana’s sympathetic gaze and
Charlie Sloane’s indignant nods and Josie Pye’s malicious smiles.
As for Gilbert Blythe, she would not even look at him. She would <i>never</i>
look at him again! She would never speak to him!!</p>
<p>When school was dismissed Anne marched out with her red head held high. Gilbert
Blythe tried to intercept her at the porch door.</p>
<p>“I’m awfully sorry I made fun of your hair, Anne,” he
whispered contritely. “Honest I am. Don’t be mad for keeps,
now.”</p>
<p>Anne swept by disdainfully, without look or sign of hearing. “Oh how
could you, Anne?” breathed Diana as they went down the road half
reproachfully, half admiringly. Diana felt that <i>she</i> could never have
resisted Gilbert’s plea.</p>
<p>“I shall never forgive Gilbert Blythe,” said Anne firmly.
“And Mr. Phillips spelled my name without an e, too. The iron has entered
into my soul, Diana.”</p>
<p>Diana hadn’t the least idea what Anne meant but she understood it was
something terrible.</p>
<p>“You mustn’t mind Gilbert making fun of your hair,” she said
soothingly. “Why, he makes fun of all the girls. He laughs at mine
because it’s so black. He’s called me a crow a dozen times; and I
never heard him apologize for anything before, either.”</p>
<p>“There’s a great deal of difference between being called a crow and
being called carrots,” said Anne with dignity. “Gilbert Blythe has
hurt my feelings <i>excruciatingly</i>, Diana.”</p>
<p>It is possible the matter might have blown over without more excruciation if
nothing else had happened. But when things begin to happen they are apt to keep
on.</p>
<p>Avonlea scholars often spent noon hour picking gum in Mr. Bell’s spruce
grove over the hill and across his big pasture field. From there they could
keep an eye on Eben Wright’s house, where the master boarded. When they
saw Mr. Phillips emerging therefrom they ran for the schoolhouse; but the
distance being about three times longer than Mr. Wright’s lane they were
very apt to arrive there, breathless and gasping, some three minutes too late.</p>
<p>On the following day Mr. Phillips was seized with one of his spasmodic fits of
reform and announced before going home to dinner, that he should expect to find
all the scholars in their seats when he returned. Anyone who came in late would
be punished.</p>
<p>All the boys and some of the girls went to Mr. Bell’s spruce grove as
usual, fully intending to stay only long enough to “pick a chew.”
But spruce groves are seductive and yellow nuts of gum beguiling; they picked
and loitered and strayed; and as usual the first thing that recalled them to a
sense of the flight of time was Jimmy Glover shouting from the top of a
patriarchal old spruce “Master’s coming.”</p>
<p>The girls who were on the ground, started first and managed to reach the
schoolhouse in time but without a second to spare. The boys, who had to wriggle
hastily down from the trees, were later; and Anne, who had not been picking gum
at all but was wandering happily in the far end of the grove, waist deep among
the bracken, singing softly to herself, with a wreath of rice lilies on her
hair as if she were some wild divinity of the shadowy places, was latest of
all. Anne could run like a deer, however; run she did with the impish result
that she overtook the boys at the door and was swept into the schoolhouse among
them just as Mr. Phillips was in the act of hanging up his hat.</p>
<p>Mr. Phillips’s brief reforming energy was over; he didn’t want the
bother of punishing a dozen pupils; but it was necessary to do something to
save his word, so he looked about for a scapegoat and found it in Anne, who had
dropped into her seat, gasping for breath, with a forgotten lily wreath hanging
askew over one ear and giving her a particularly rakish and disheveled
appearance.</p>
<p>“Anne Shirley, since you seem to be so fond of the boys’ company we
shall indulge your taste for it this afternoon,” he said sarcastically.
“Take those flowers out of your hair and sit with Gilbert Blythe.”</p>
<p>The other boys snickered. Diana, turning pale with pity, plucked the wreath
from Anne’s hair and squeezed her hand. Anne stared at the master as if
turned to stone.</p>
<p>“Did you hear what I said, Anne?” queried Mr. Phillips sternly.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said Anne slowly “but I didn’t suppose you
really meant it.”</p>
<p>“I assure you I did”—still with the sarcastic inflection
which all the children, and Anne especially, hated. It flicked on the raw.
“Obey me at once.”</p>
<p>For a moment Anne looked as if she meant to disobey. Then, realizing that there
was no help for it, she rose haughtily, stepped across the aisle, sat down
beside Gilbert Blythe, and buried her face in her arms on the desk. Ruby
Gillis, who got a glimpse of it as it went down, told the others going home
from school that she’d “acksually never seen anything like
it—it was so white, with awful little red spots in it.”</p>
<p>To Anne, this was as the end of all things. It was bad enough to be singled out
for punishment from among a dozen equally guilty ones; it was worse still to be
sent to sit with a boy, but that that boy should be Gilbert Blythe was heaping
insult on injury to a degree utterly unbearable. Anne felt that she could not
bear it and it would be of no use to try. Her whole being seethed with shame
and anger and humiliation.</p>
<p>At first the other scholars looked and whispered and giggled and nudged. But as
Anne never lifted her head and as Gilbert worked fractions as if his whole soul
was absorbed in them and them only, they soon returned to their own tasks and
Anne was forgotten. When Mr. Phillips called the history class out Anne should
have gone, but Anne did not move, and Mr. Phillips, who had been writing some
verses “To Priscilla” before he called the class, was thinking
about an obstinate rhyme still and never missed her. Once, when nobody was
looking, Gilbert took from his desk a little pink candy heart with a gold motto
on it, “You are sweet,” and slipped it under the curve of
Anne’s arm. Whereupon Anne arose, took the pink heart gingerly between
the tips of her fingers, dropped it on the floor, ground it to powder beneath
her heel, and resumed her position without deigning to bestow a glance on
Gilbert.</p>
<p>When school went out Anne marched to her desk, ostentatiously took out
everything therein, books and writing tablet, pen and ink, testament and
arithmetic, and piled them neatly on her cracked slate.</p>
<p>“What are you taking all those things home for, Anne?” Diana wanted
to know, as soon as they were out on the road. She had not dared to ask the
question before.</p>
<p>“I am not coming back to school any more,” said Anne. Diana gasped
and stared at Anne to see if she meant it.</p>
<p>“Will Marilla let you stay home?” she asked.</p>
<p>“She’ll have to,” said Anne. “I’ll <i>never</i>
go to school to that man again.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Anne!” Diana looked as if she were ready to cry. “I do
think you’re mean. What shall I do? Mr. Phillips will make me sit with
that horrid Gertie Pye—I know he will because she is sitting alone. Do
come back, Anne.”</p>
<p>“I’d do almost anything in the world for you, Diana,” said
Anne sadly. “I’d let myself be torn limb from limb if it would do
you any good. But I can’t do this, so please don’t ask it. You
harrow up my very soul.”</p>
<p>“Just think of all the fun you will miss,” mourned Diana. “We
are going to build the loveliest new house down by the brook; and we’ll
be playing ball next week and you’ve never played ball, Anne. It’s
tremendously exciting. And we’re going to learn a new song—Jane
Andrews is practicing it up now; and Alice Andrews is going to bring a new
Pansy book next week and we’re all going to read it out loud, chapter
about, down by the brook. And you know you are so fond of reading out loud,
Anne.”</p>
<p>Nothing moved Anne in the least. Her mind was made up. She would not go to
school to Mr. Phillips again; she told Marilla so when she got home.</p>
<p>“Nonsense,” said Marilla.</p>
<p>“It isn’t nonsense at all,” said Anne, gazing at Marilla with
solemn, reproachful eyes. “Don’t you understand, Marilla?
I’ve been insulted.”</p>
<p>“Insulted fiddlesticks! You’ll go to school tomorrow as
usual.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no.” Anne shook her head gently. “I’m not going
back, Marilla. I’ll learn my lessons at home and I’ll be as good as
I can be and hold my tongue all the time if it’s possible at all. But I
will not go back to school, I assure you.”</p>
<p>Marilla saw something remarkably like unyielding stubbornness looking out of
Anne’s small face. She understood that she would have trouble in
overcoming it; but she re-solved wisely to say nothing more just then.
“I’ll run down and see Rachel about it this evening,” she
thought. “There’s no use reasoning with Anne now. She’s too
worked up and I’ve an idea she can be awful stubborn if she takes the
notion. Far as I can make out from her story, Mr. Phillips has been carrying
matters with a rather high hand. But it would never do to say so to her.
I’ll just talk it over with Rachel. She’s sent ten children to
school and she ought to know something about it. She’ll have heard the
whole story, too, by this time.”</p>
<p>Marilla found Mrs. Lynde knitting quilts as industriously and cheerfully as
usual.</p>
<p>“I suppose you know what I’ve come about,” she said, a little
shamefacedly.</p>
<p>Mrs. Rachel nodded.</p>
<p>“About Anne’s fuss in school, I reckon,” she said.
“Tillie Boulter was in on her way home from school and told me about
it.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know what to do with her,” said Marilla. “She
declares she won’t go back to school. I never saw a child so worked up.
I’ve been expecting trouble ever since she started to school. I knew
things were going too smooth to last. She’s so high strung. What would
you advise, Rachel?”</p>
<p>“Well, since you’ve asked my advice, Marilla,” said Mrs.
Lynde amiably—Mrs. Lynde dearly loved to be asked for
advice—“I’d just humor her a little at first, that’s
what I’d do. It’s my belief that Mr. Phillips was in the wrong. Of
course, it doesn’t do to say so to the children, you know. And of course
he did right to punish her yesterday for giving way to temper. But today it was
different. The others who were late should have been punished as well as Anne,
that’s what. And I don’t believe in making the girls sit with the
boys for punishment. It isn’t modest. Tillie Boulter was real indignant.
She took Anne’s part right through and said all the scholars did too.
Anne seems real popular among them, somehow. I never thought she’d take
with them so well.”</p>
<p>“Then you really think I’d better let her stay home,” said
Marilla in amazement.</p>
<p>“Yes. That is I wouldn’t say school to her again until she said it
herself. Depend upon it, Marilla, she’ll cool off in a week or so and be
ready enough to go back of her own accord, that’s what, while, if you
were to make her go back right off, dear knows what freak or tantrum
she’d take next and make more trouble than ever. The less fuss made the
better, in my opinion. She won’t miss much by not going to school, as far
as <i>that</i> goes. Mr. Phillips isn’t any good at all as a teacher. The
order he keeps is scandalous, that’s what, and he neglects the young fry
and puts all his time on those big scholars he’s getting ready for
Queen’s. He’d never have got the school for another year if his
uncle hadn’t been a trustee—<i>the</i> trustee, for he just leads
the other two around by the nose, that’s what. I declare, I don’t
know what education in this Island is coming to.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Rachel shook her head, as much as to say if she were only at the head of
the educational system of the Province things would be much better managed.</p>
<p>Marilla took Mrs. Rachel’s advice and not another word was said to Anne
about going back to school. She learned her lessons at home, did her chores,
and played with Diana in the chilly purple autumn twilights; but when she met
Gilbert Blythe on the road or encountered him in Sunday school she passed him
by with an icy contempt that was no whit thawed by his evident desire to
appease her. Even Diana’s efforts as a peacemaker were of no avail. Anne
had evidently made up her mind to hate Gilbert Blythe to the end of life.</p>
<p>As much as she hated Gilbert, however, did she love Diana, with all the love of
her passionate little heart, equally intense in its likes and dislikes. One
evening Marilla, coming in from the orchard with a basket of apples, found Anne
sitting along by the east window in the twilight, crying bitterly.</p>
<p>“Whatever’s the matter now, Anne?” she asked.</p>
<p>“It’s about Diana,” sobbed Anne luxuriously. “I love
Diana so, Marilla. I cannot ever live without her. But I know very well when we
grow up that Diana will get married and go away and leave me. And oh, what
shall I do? I hate her husband—I just hate him furiously. I’ve been
imagining it all out—the wedding and everything—Diana dressed in
snowy garments, with a veil, and looking as beautiful and regal as a queen; and
me the bridesmaid, with a lovely dress too, and puffed sleeves, but with a
breaking heart hid beneath my smiling face. And then bidding Diana
goodbye-e-e—” Here Anne broke down entirely and wept with
increasing bitterness.</p>
<p>Marilla turned quickly away to hide her twitching face; but it was no use; she
collapsed on the nearest chair and burst into such a hearty and unusual peal of
laughter that Matthew, crossing the yard outside, halted in amazement. When had
he heard Marilla laugh like that before?</p>
<p>“Well, Anne Shirley,” said Marilla as soon as she could speak,
“if you must borrow trouble, for pity’s sake borrow it handier
home. I should think you had an imagination, sure enough.”</p>
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