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<h1> THE LITTLE GRAY LADY </h1>
<h2> By F. Hopkinson Smith <br/><br/> 1909 </h2>
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<h2> I </h2>
<p>Once in a while there come to me out of the long ago the fragments of a
story I have not thought of for years—one that has been hidden in
the dim lumber-room of my brain where I store my by-gone memories.</p>
<p>These fragments thrust themselves out of the past as do the cuffs of an
old-fashioned coat, the flutings of a flounce, or the lacings of a bodice
from out a quickly opened bureau drawer. Only when you follow the cuff
along the sleeve to the broad shoulder; smooth out the crushed frill that
swayed about her form, and trace the silken thread to the waist it
tightened, can you determine the fashion of the day in which they were
worn.</p>
<p>And with the rummaging of this lumber-room come the odors: dry smells from
musty old trunks packed with bundles of faded letters and worthless deeds
tied with red tape; musty smells from dust-covered chests, iron bound,
holding mouldy books, their backs loose; pungent smells from cracked
wardrobes stuffed with moth-eaten hunting-coats, riding-trousers, and high
boots with rusty spurs—cross-country riders these—roisterers
and gamesters—a sorry lot, no doubt.</p>
<p>Or perhaps it is an old bow-legged high-boy—its club-feet slippered
on easy rollers—the kind with deep drawers kept awake by rattling
brass handles, its outside veneer so highly polished that you are quite
sure it must have been brought up in some distinguished family. The scent
of old lavender and spiced rose leaves, and a stick or two of white orris
root, haunt this relic: my lady’s laces must be kept fresh, and so must my
lady’s long white mitts—they reach from her dainty knuckles quite to
her elbow. And so must her cobwebbed silk stockings and the filmy kerchief
she folds across her bosom:</p>
<p>It is this kind of a drawer that I am opening now—one belonging to
the Little Gray Lady.</p>
<p>As I look through its contents my eyes resting on the finger of a glove,
the end of a lace scarf, and the handle of an old fan, my mind goes back
to the last time she wore them. Then I begin turning everything upside
down, lifting the corner of this incident, prying under that no bit of
talk, recalling what he said and who told of it (I shall have the whole
drawer empty before I get through), and whose fault it was that the match
was broken off, and why she, of all women in the world, should have
remained single all those years. Why, too, she should have lost her
identity, so to speak, and become the Little Gray Lady.</p>
<p>And yet no sobriquet could better express her personality: She was little—a
dainty, elf-like littleness, with tiny feet and wee hands; she was gray—a
soft, silver gray—too gray for her forty years (and this fragment
begins when she was forty); and she was a lady in every beat of her warm
heart; in every pressure of her white hand; in her voice, speech—in
all her thoughts and movements.</p>
<p>She lived in the quaintest of old houses fronted by a brick path bordered
with fragrant box, which led up to an old-fashioned porch, its door
brightened by a brass knocker. This, together with the knobs, steps, and
slits of windows on each side of the door, was kept scrupulously clean by
old Margaret, who had lived with her for years.</p>
<p>But it is her personality and not her surroundings that lingers in my
memory. No one ever heard anything sweeter than her voice; in and nobody
ever looked into a lovelier face, even if there were little hollows in the
cheeks and shy, fanlike wrinkles lurking about the corners of her lambent
brown eyes. Nor did her gray hair mar her beauty. It was not old, dry, and
withered—a wispy gray. (That is not the way it happened.) It was a
new, all-of-a-sudden gray, and in less than a week—so Margaret once
told me—bleaching its brown gold to silver. But the gloss remained,
and so did the richness of the folds, and the wealth and weight of it.</p>
<p>Inside the green-painted door, with its white trim and brass knocker and
knobs, there was a narrow hall hung with old portraits, opening into a
room literally all fireplace. Here there were gouty sofas, and five or six
big easy-chairs ranged in a half-circle, with arms held out as if begging
somebody to sit in them; and here, too, was an embroidered worsted fire
screen that slid up and down a standard, to shield one’s face from the
blazing logs; and there were queer tables and old-gold curtains looped
back with brass rosettes—ears really—behind which the tresses
of the parted curtains were tucked; and there were more old portraits in
dingy frames, and samplers under glass, and a rug which some aunt had made
with her own hands from odds and ends; and a huge work-basket spilling
worsteds, and last, and by no manner of means least, a big chintz-covered
rocking-chair, the little lady’s very own—its thin ankles and splay
feet hidden by a modest frill. There were all these things and a lot more—and
yet I still maintain that the room was just one big fireplace. Not alone
because of its size (and it certainly was big: many a doubting curly head,
losing its faith in Santa Claus, has crawled behind the old fire-dogs, the
child’s fingers tight about the Little Gray Lady’s, and been told to look
up into the blue—a lesson never forgotten all their lives), but
because of the wonderful and never-to-be-told-of things which constantly
took place before its blazing embers.</p>
<p>For this fireplace was the Little Gray Lady’s altar. Here she dispensed
wisdom and cheer and love. Everybody in Pomford village had sat in one or
the other of the chairs grouped about it and had poured out their hearts
to her. All sorts of pourings: love affairs, for instance, that were
hopeless until she would take the girl’s hand in her own and smooth out
the tangle; to-say nothing of bickerings behind closed doors, with two
lives pulling apart until her dear arms brought them together.</p>
<p>But all this is only the outside of the old mahogany high-boy with its
meerschaum-pipe polish, spraddling legs, and rattling handles.</p>
<p>Now for the Little Gray Lady’s own particular drawer.</p>
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