<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.</h2>
<h3>THE DAY OF HAPPY LETTERS.</h3>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG alt="T" src="./images/c2.png" title="T" /></div> <p>he arrival of the morning boat with letters and newspapers from the East
was the great event of the day in Burnet. It was due at eleven o'clock;
and everybody, consciously or unconsciously, was on the lookout for it.
The gentlemen were at the office bright and early, and stood chatting with
each other, and fingering the keys of their little drawers till the rattle
of the shutter announced that the mail was distributed. Their wives and
daughters at home, meanwhile, were equally in a state of expectation, and
whatever they might be doing kept ears and eyes on the alert for the step
on the gravel and the click of the latch which betokened the arrival of
the family news-bringer.</p>
<p>Doctors cannot command their time like other people, and Dr. Carr was
often detained by his patients, and made late for the mail, so it was all
the pleasanter a surprise when on the great day of the cake-baking he came
in earlier than usual, with his hands quite full of letters and parcels.
All the girls made a rush for him at once; but he fended them off with an
elbow, while with teasing slowness he read the addresses on the envelopes.</p>
<p>"Miss Carr—Miss Carr—Miss Katherine Carr—Miss Carr again; four for you,
Katy. Dr. P. Carr,—a bill and a newspaper, I perceive; all that an old
country doctor with a daughter about to be married ought to expect, I
suppose. Miss Clover E. Carr,—one for the 'Confidante in white linen.'
Here, take it, Clovy. Miss Carr again. Katy, you have the lion's share.
Miss Joanna Carr,—in the unmistakable handwriting of Miss Inches. Miss
Katherine Carr, care Dr. Carr. That looks like a wedding present, Katy.
Miss Elsie Carr; Cecy's hand, I should say. Miss Carr once more,—from the
conquering hero, judging from the post-mark. Dr. Carr,—another
newspaper, and—hollo!—one more for Miss Carr. Well, children, I hope for
once you are satisfied with the amount of your correspondence. My arm
fairly aches with the weight of it. I hope the letters are not so heavy
inside as out."</p>
<p>"I am quite satisfied, Papa, thank you," said Katy, looking up with a
happy smile from Ned's letter, which she had torn open first of all. "Are
you going, dear?" She laid her packages down to help him on with his coat.
Katy never forgot her father.</p>
<p>"Yes, I am going. Time and rheumatism wait for no man. You can tell me
your news when I come back."</p>
<p>It is not fair to peep into love letters, so I will only say of Ned's that
it was very long, very entertaining,—Katy thought,—and contained the
pleasant information that the "Natchitoches" was to sail four days after
it was posted, and would reach New York a week sooner than any one had
dared to hope. The letter contained several other things as well, which
showed Katy how continually she had been in his thoughts,—a painting on
rice paper, a dried flower or two, a couple of little pen-and-ink sketches
of the harbor of Santa Lucia and the shipping, and a small cravat of an
odd convent lace folded very flat and smooth. Altogether it was a
delightful letter, and Katy read it, as it were, in leaps, her eyes
catching at the salient points, and leaving the details to be dwelt upon
when she should be alone.</p>
<p>This done, she thrust the letter into her pocket, and proceeded to examine
the others. The first was in Cousin Helen's clear, beautiful
handwriting:—</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR KATY,—If any one had told us ten years ago that in this
particular year of grace you would be getting ready to be
married, and I preparing to come to your wedding, I think we
should have listened with some incredulity, as to an agreeable
fairy tale which could not possibly come true. We didn't look
much like it, did we,—you in your big chair and I on my sofa?
Yet here we are! When your letter first reached me it seemed a
sort of impossible thing that I should accept your invitation;
but the more I thought about it the more I felt as if I must,
and now things seem to be working round to that end quite
marvellously. I have had a good winter, but the doctor wishes me
to try the experiment of the water cure again which benefited me
so much the summer of your accident. This brings me in your
direction; and I don't see why I might not come a little earlier
than I otherwise should, and have the great pleasure of seeing
you married, and making acquaintance with Lieutenant
Worthington. That is, if you are perfectly sure that to have at
so busy a time a guest who, like the Queen of Spain, has the
disadvantage of being without legs, will not be more care than
enjoyment. Think seriously over this point, and don't send for
me unless you are certain. Meanwhile, I am making ready. Alex
and Emma and little Helen—who is a pretty big Helen now—are to
be my escorts as far as Buffalo on their way to Niagara. After
that is all plain sailing, and Jane Carter and I can manage very
well for ourselves. It seems like a dream to think that I may
see you all so soon; but it is such a pleasant one that I would
not wake up on any account.</p>
<p> I have a little gift which I shall bring you myself, my Katy;
but I have a fancy also that you shall wear some trifling thing
on your wedding-day which comes from me, so for fear of being
forestalled I will say now, please don't buy any stockings for
the occasion, but wear the pair which go with this, for the sake
of your loving</p>
</div>
<p class="right"><span class='smcap'>Cousin Helen.</span></p>
<p>"These must be they," cried Elsie, pouncing on one of the little packages.
"May I cut the string, Katy?"</p>
<p>Permission was granted; and Elsie cut the string. It was indeed a pair of
beautiful white silk stockings embroidered in an open pattern, and far
finer than anything which Katy would have thought of choosing for herself.</p>
<p>"Don't they look exactly like Cousin Helen?" she said, fondling them. "Her
things always are choicer and prettier than anybody's else, somehow. I
can't think how she does it, when she never by any chance goes into a
shop. Who can this be from, I wonder?"</p>
<p>"This" was the second little package. It proved to contain a small volume
bound in white and gold, entitled, "Advice to Brides." On the fly-leaf
appeared this inscription:—</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>To Katherine Carr, on the occasion of her approaching bridal,
from her affectionate teacher,</p>
</div>
<p><span style="margin-left: 26em;">M</span><span class='smcap'>arianne Nipson.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 2em;">1 Timothy, ii. 11.</span></p>
<p>Clover at once ran to fetch her Testament that she might verify the
quotation, and announced with a shriek of laughter that it was: "Let the
women learn in silence with all subjection;" while Katy, much diverted,
read extracts casually selected from the work, such as: "A wife should
receive her husband's decree without cavil or question, remembering that
the husband is the head of the wife, and that in all matters of dispute
his opinion naturally and scripturally outweighs her own."</p>
<p>Or: "'A soft answer turneth away wrath.' If your husband comes home
fretted and impatient, do not answer him sharply, but soothe him with
gentle words and caresses. Strict attention to the minor details of
domestic management will often avail to secure peace."</p>
<p>And again: "Keep in mind the epitaph raised in honor of an exemplary wife
of the last century,—'She never banged the door.' Qualify yourself for a
similar testimonial."</p>
<p>"Tanta never does bang doors," remarked Amy, who had come in as this last
"elegant extract" was being read.</p>
<p>"No, that's true; she doesn't," said Clover. "Her prevailing vice is to
leave them open. I like that truth about a good dinner 'availing' to
secure peace, and the advice to 'caress' your bear when he is at his
crossest. Ned never does issue 'decrees,' though, I fancy; and on the
whole, Katy, I don't believe Mrs. Nipson's present is going to be any
particular comfort in your future trials. Do read something else to take
the taste out of our mouths. We will listen in 'all subjection.'"</p>
<p>Katy was already deep in a long epistle from Rose.</p>
<p>"This is too delicious," she said; "do listen." And she began again at the
beginning:—</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class='smcap'>My Sweetest of all old Sweets</span>,—Come to your wedding! Of course
I shall. It would never seem to me to have any legal sanction
whatever if I were not there to add my blessing. Only let me
know which day "early in June" it is to be, that I may make
ready. Deniston will fetch us on, and by a special piece of good
luck, a man in Chicago—whose name I shall always bless if only
I can remember what it is—has been instigated by our mutual
good angel to want him on business just about that time; so that
he would have to go West anyway, and would rather have me along
than not, and is perfectly resigned to his fate. I mean to come
three days before, and stay three days after the wedding, if I
may, and altogether it is going to be a lark of larks. Little
Rose can talk quite fluently now, and almost read; that is, she
knows six letters of her picture alphabet. She composes poems
also. The other day she suddenly announced,—</p>
<p> "Mamma, I have made up a sort of a im. May I say it to you?"</p>
<p> I naturally consented, and this was the</p>
</div>
<p class="center">IM.</p>
<div class="center">
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="IM poem">
<tr><td align='left'>Jump in the parlor,</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>Jump in the hall,</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>God made us all!</td></tr>
</table></div>
<div class="blockquot"><p>Now did you ever hear of anything quite so dear as that, for a
baby only three years and five months old? I tell you she is a
wonder. You will all adore her, Clover particularly. Oh, my dear
little C.! To think I am going to see her!</p>
<p> I met both Ellen Gray and Esther Dearborn the other day, and
where do you think it was? At Mary Silver's wedding! Yes, she is
actually married to the Rev. Charles Playfair Strothers, and
settled in a little parsonage somewhere in the Hoosac
Tunnel,—or near it,—and already immersed in "duties." I can't
think what arguments he used to screw her up to the rash act;
but there she is.</p>
<p> It wasn't exactly what one would call a cheerful wedding. All
the connection took it very seriously; and Mary's uncle, who
married her, preached quite a lengthy funeral discourse to the
young couple, and got them nicely ready for death, burial, and
the next world, before he would consent to unite them for this.
He was a solemn-looking old person, who had been a missionary,
and "had laid away three dear wives in foreign lands," as he
confided to me afterward over a plate of ice-cream. He seemed
to me to be "taking notice," as they say of babies, and it is
barely possible that he mistook me for a single woman, for his
attentions were rather pronounced till I introduced my husband
prominently into conversation; after that he seemed more
attracted by Ellen Gray.</p>
<p> Mary cried straight through the ceremony. In fact, I imagine she
cried straight through the engagement, for her eyes looked wept
out and had scarlet rims, and she was as white as her veil. In
fact, whiter, for that was made of beautiful <i>point de Venise</i>,
and was just a trifle yellowish. Everybody cried. Her mother and
sister sobbed aloud, so did several maiden aunts and a
grandmother or two and a few cousins. The church resounded with
guggles and gasps, like a great deal of bath-water running out
of an ill-constructed tub. Mr. Silver also wept, as a business
man may, in a series of sniffs interspersed with silk
handkerchief; you know the kind. Altogether it was a most
cheerless affair. I seemed to be the only person present who was
not in tears; but I really didn't see anything to cry about, so
far as I was concerned, though I felt very hard-hearted.</p>
<p> I had to go alone, for Deniston was in New York. I got to the
church rather early, and my new spring bonnet—which is a
superior one—seemed to impress the ushers, so they put me in a
very distinguished front pew all by myself. I bore my honors
meekly, and found them quite agreeable, in fact,—you know I
always did like to be made much of,—so you can imagine my
disgust when presently three of the stoutest ladies you ever saw
came sailing up the aisle, and prepared to invade <i>my</i> pew.</p>
<p> "Please move up, Madam," said the fattest of all, who wore a
wonderful yellow hat.</p>
<p> But I was not "raised" at Hillsover for nothing, and remembering
the success of our little ruse on the railroad train long ago, I
stepped out into the aisle, and with my sweetest smile made room
for them to pass.</p>
<p> "Perhaps I would better keep the seat next the door," I murmured
to the yellow lady, "in case an attack should come on."</p>
<p> "An attack!" she repeated in an accent of alarm. She whispered
to the others. All three eyed me suspiciously, while I stood
looking as pensive and suffering as I could. Then after
confabulating together for a little, they all swept into the
seat behind mine, and I heard them speculating in low tones as
to whether it was epilepsy or catalepsy or convulsions that I
was subject to. I presume they made signs to all the other
people who came in to steer clear of the lady with fits, for
nobody invaded my privacy, and I sat in lonely splendor with a
pew to myself, and was very comfortable indeed.</p>
<p> Mary's dress was white satin, with a great deal of point lace
and pearl passementerie, and she wore a pair of diamond
ear-rings which her father gave her, and a bouquet almost but
not quite as large, which was the gift of the bridegroom. He has
a nice face, and I think Silvery Mary will be happy with him,
much happier than with her rather dismal family, though his
salary is only fifteen hundred a year, and pearl passementerie,
I believe, quite unknown and useless in the Hoosac region. She
had loads of the most beautiful presents you ever saw. All the
Silvers are rolling in riches, you know. One little thing made
me laugh, for it was so like her. When the clergyman said,
"Mary, wilt thou take this man to be thy wedded husband?" I
distinctly saw her put her fingers over her mouth in the old,
frightened way. It was only for a second, and after that I
rather think Mr. Strothers held her hand tight for fear she
might do it again. She sent her love to you, Katy. What sort of
a gown are <i>you</i> going to have, by the way?</p>
<p> I have kept my best news to the last, which is that Deniston has
at last given way, and we are to move into town in October. We
have taken a little house in West Cedar Street. It is quite
small and very dingy and I presume inconvenient, but I already
love it to distraction, and feel as if I should sit up all night
for the first month to enjoy the sensation of being no longer
that horrid thing, a resident of the suburbs. I hunt the paper
shops and collect samples of odd and occult pattern, and compare
them with carpets, and am altogether in my element, only longing
for the time to come when I may put together my pots and pans
and betake me across the mill-dam. Meantime, Roslein is living
in a state of quarantine. She is not permitted to speak with any
other children, or even to look out of window at one, for fear
she may contract some sort of contagious disease, and spoil our
beautiful visit to Burnet. She sends you a kiss, and so do I;
and mother and Sylvia and Deniston and grandmamma, particularly,
desire their love.</p>
</div>
<p><span style="margin-left: 22em;">Your loving</span><br/>
<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 28em;">R</span><span class='smcap'>ose Red.</span><br/></p>
<p>"Oh," cried Clover, catching Katy round the waist, and waltzing wildly
about the room, "what a delicious letter! What fun we are going to have!
It seems too good to be true. Tum-ti-ti, tum-ti-ti. Keep step, Katy. I
forgive you for the first time for getting married. I never did before,
really and truly. Tum-ti-ti; I am so happy that I must dance!"</p>
<p>"There go my letters," said Katy, as with the last rapid twirl, Rose's
many-sheeted epistle and the "Advice to Brides" flew to right and left.
"There go two of your hair-pins, Clover. Oh, do stop; we shall all be in
pieces."</p>
<p>Clover brought her gyrations to a close by landing her unwilling partner
suddenly on the sofa. Then with a last squeeze and a rapid kiss she began
to pick up the scattered letters.</p>
<p>"Now read the rest," she commanded, "though anything else will sound flat
after Rose's."</p>
<p>"Hear this first," said Elsie, who had taken advantage of the pause to
open her own letter. "It is from Cecy, and she says she is coming to spend
a month with her mother on purpose to be here for Katy's wedding. She
sends heaps of love to you, Katy, and says she only hopes that Mr.
Worthington will prove as perfectly satisfactory in all respects as her
own dear Sylvester."</p>
<p>"My gracious, I should hope he would," put in Clover, who was still in the
wildest spirits. "What a dear old goose Cecy is! I never hankered in the
least for Sylvester Slack, did you, Katy?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not. It would be a most improper proceeding if I had," replied
Katy, with a laugh. "Whom do you think this letter is from, girls? Do
listen to it. It's written by that nice old Mr. Allen Beach, whom we met
in London. Don't you recollect my telling you about him?"</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class='smcap'>My dear Miss Carr</span>,—Our friends in Harley Street have told me a
piece of news concerning you which came to them lately in a
letter from Mrs. Ashe, and I hope you will permit me to offer
you my most sincere congratulations and good wishes. I recollect
meeting Lieutenant Worthington when he was here two years ago,
and liking him very much. One is always glad in a foreign land
to be able to show so good a specimen of one's young countrymen
as he affords,—not that England need be counted as a foreign
country by any American, and least of all by myself, who have
found it a true home for so many years.</p>
<p> As a little souvenir of our week of sight-seeing together, of
which I retain most agreeable remembrances, I have sent you by
my friends the Sawyers, who sail for America shortly, a copy of
Hare's "Walks in London," which a young <i>protégée</i> of mine has
for the past year been illustrating with photographs of the many
curious old buildings described. You took so much interest in
them while here that I hope you may like to see them again. Will
you please accept with it my most cordial wishes for your
future, and believe me</p>
</div>
<p><span style="margin-left: 20em;">Very faithfully your friend,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 28.5em;">A</span><span class='smcap'>llen Beach.</span><br/></p>
<p>"What a nice letter!" said Clover.</p>
<p>"Isn't it?" replied Katy, with shining eyes, "what a thing it is to be a
gentleman, and to know how to say and do things in the right way! I am so
surprised and pleased that Mr. Beach should remember me. I never supposed
he would, he sees so many people in London all the time, and it is quite a
long time since we were there, nearly two years. Was your letter from Miss
Inches, John?"</p>
<p>"Yes, and Mamma Marian sends you her love; and there's a present coming by
express for you,—some sort of a book with a hard name. I can scarcely
make it out, the Ru—ru—something of Omar Kay—y—Well, anyway it's a
book, and she hopes you will read Emerson's 'Essay on Friendship' over
before you are married, because it's a helpful utterance, and adjusts the
mind to mutual conditions."</p>
<p>"Worse than 1 Timothy, ii. 11," muttered Clover. "Well, Katy dear, what
next? What <i>are</i> you laughing at?"</p>
<p>"You will never guess, I am sure. This is a letter from Miss Jane! And she
has made me this pincushion!"</p>
<p>The pincushion was of a familiar type, two circles of pasteboard covered
with gray silk, neatly over-handed together, and stuck with a row of
closely fitting pins. Miss Jane's note ran as follows:—</p>
<p><span style="margin-left: 32em;">H</span><span class='smcap'>illsover, April 21.</span><br/></p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class='smcap'>Dear Katy</span>,—I hear from Mrs. Nipson that you are to be married
shortly, and I want to say that you have my best wishes for your
future. I think a man ought to be happy who has you for a wife.
I only hope the one you have chosen is worthy of you. Probably
he isn't, but perhaps you won't find it out. Life is a knotty
problem for most of us. May you solve it satisfactorily to
yourself and others! I have nothing to send but my good wishes
and a few pins. They are not an unlucky present, I believe, as
scissors are said to be.</p>
<p> Remember me to your sister, and believe me to be with true
regard,</p>
</div>
<p><span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yours,</span> <span class='smcap'>Jane A. Bangs.</span><br/></p>
<p>"Dear me, is that her name?" cried Clover. "I always supposed she was
baptized 'Miss Jane.' It never occurred to me that she had any other
title. What appropriate initials! How she used to J.A.B. with us!"</p>
<p>"Now, Clovy, that's not kind. It's a very nice note indeed, and I am
touched by it. It's a beautiful compliment to say that the man ought to be
happy who has got me, I think. I never supposed that Miss Jane could pay a
compliment."</p>
<p>"Or make a joke! That touch about the scissors is really jocose,—for Miss
Jane. Rose Red will shriek over the letter and that particularly rigid
pincushion. They are both of them so exactly like her. Dear me! only one
letter left. Who is that from, Katy? How fast one does eat up one's
pleasures!"</p>
<p>"But you had a letter yourself. Surely papa said so. What was that? You
haven't read it to us."</p>
<p>"No, for it contains a secret which you are not to hear just yet," replied
Clover. "Brides mustn't ask questions. Go on with yours."</p>
<p>"Mine is from Louisa Agnew,—quite a long one, too. It's an age since we
heard from her, you know."</p>
<p><span style="margin-left: 32em;">A</span><span class='smcap'>shburn, April 24.</span><br/></p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class='smcap'>Dear Katy</span>,—Your delightful letter and invitation came day
before yesterday, and thank you for both. There is nothing in
the world that would please me better than to come to your
wedding if it were possible, but it simply isn't. If you lived
in New Haven now, or even Boston,—but Burnet is so dreadfully
far off, it seems as inaccessible as Kamchatka to a person who,
like myself, has a house to keep and two babies to take care of.</p>
<p> Don't look so alarmed. The house is the same house you saw when
you were here, and so is one of the babies; the other is a new
acquisition just two years old, and as great a darling as Daisy
was at the same age. My mother has been really better in health
since he came, but just now she is at a sort of Rest Cure in
Kentucky; and I have my hands full with papa and the children,
as you can imagine, so I can't go off two days' journey to a
wedding,—not even to yours, my dearest old Katy. I shall think
about you all day long on <i>the</i> day, when I know which it is,
and try to imagine just how everything looks; and yet I don't
find that quite easy, for somehow I fancy that your wedding will
be a little different from the common run. You always were
different from other people to me, you know,—you and
Clover,—and I love you so much, and I always shall.</p>
<p> Papa has taken a kit-kat portrait of me in oils,—and a blue
dress,—which he thinks is like, and which I am going to send
you as soon as it comes home from the framers. I hope you will
like it a little for my sake. Dear Katy, I send so much love
with it.</p>
<p> I have only seen the Pages in the street since they came home
from Europe; but the last piece of news here is Lilly's
engagement to Comte Ernest de Conflans. He has something to do
with the French legation in Washington, I believe; and they
crossed in the same steamer. I saw him driving with her the
other day,—a little man, not handsome, and very dark. I do not
know when they are to be married. Your Cousin Clarence is in
Colorado.</p>
<p> With two kisses apiece and a great hug for you, Katy, I am
always</p>
</div>
<p><span style="margin-left: 22em;">Your affectionate friend,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 28em;">L</span><span class='smcap'>ouisa.</span><br/></p>
<p>"Dear me!" said the insatiable Clover, "is that the very last? I wish we
had another mail, and twelve more letters coming in at once. What a
blessed institution the post-office is!"</p>
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