<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033"></SPAN> CHAPTER XXXIII.<br/> The Hotel Concert</h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>UT on your white
organdy, by all means, Anne,” advised Diana decidedly.</p>
<p>They were together in the east gable chamber; outside it was only
twilight—a lovely yellowish-green twilight with a clear-blue cloudless
sky. A big round moon, slowly deepening from her pallid luster into burnished
silver, hung over the Haunted Wood; the air was full of sweet summer
sounds—sleepy birds twittering, freakish breezes, faraway voices and
laughter. But in Anne’s room the blind was drawn and the lamp lighted,
for an important toilet was being made.</p>
<p>The east gable was a very different place from what it had been on that night
four years before, when Anne had felt its bareness penetrate to the marrow of
her spirit with its inhospitable chill. Changes had crept in, Marilla conniving
at them resignedly, until it was as sweet and dainty a nest as a young girl
could desire.</p>
<p>The velvet carpet with the pink roses and the pink silk curtains of
Anne’s early visions had certainly never materialized; but her dreams had
kept pace with her growth, and it is not probable she lamented them. The floor
was covered with a pretty matting, and the curtains that softened the high
window and fluttered in the vagrant breezes were of pale-green art muslin. The
walls, hung not with gold and silver brocade tapestry, but with a dainty
apple-blossom paper, were adorned with a few good pictures given Anne by Mrs.
Allan. Miss Stacy’s photograph occupied the place of honor, and Anne made
a sentimental point of keeping fresh flowers on the bracket under it. Tonight a
spike of white lilies faintly perfumed the room like the dream of a fragrance.
There was no “mahogany furniture,” but there was a white-painted
bookcase filled with books, a cushioned wicker rocker, a toilet table befrilled
with white muslin, a quaint, gilt-framed mirror with chubby pink Cupids and
purple grapes painted over its arched top, that used to hang in the spare room,
and a low white bed.</p>
<p>Anne was dressing for a concert at the White Sands Hotel. The guests had got it
up in aid of the Charlottetown hospital, and had hunted out all the available
amateur talent in the surrounding districts to help it along. Bertha Sampson
and Pearl Clay of the White Sands Baptist choir had been asked to sing a duet;
Milton Clark of Newbridge was to give a violin solo; Winnie Adella Blair of
Carmody was to sing a Scotch ballad; and Laura Spencer of Spencervale and Anne
Shirley of Avonlea were to recite.</p>
<p>As Anne would have said at one time, it was “an epoch in her life,”
and she was deliciously athrill with the excitement of it. Matthew was in the
seventh heaven of gratified pride over the honor conferred on his Anne and
Marilla was not far behind, although she would have died rather than admit it,
and said she didn’t think it was very proper for a lot of young folks to
be gadding over to the hotel without any responsible person with them.</p>
<p>Anne and Diana were to drive over with Jane Andrews and her brother Billy in
their double-seated buggy; and several other Avonlea girls and boys were going
too. There was a party of visitors expected out from town, and after the
concert a supper was to be given to the performers.</p>
<p>“Do you really think the organdy will be best?” queried Anne
anxiously. “I don’t think it’s as pretty as my blue-flowered
muslin—and it certainly isn’t so fashionable.”</p>
<p>“But it suits you ever so much better,” said Diana.
“It’s so soft and frilly and clinging. The muslin is stiff, and
makes you look too dressed up. But the organdy seems as if it grew on
you.”</p>
<p>Anne sighed and yielded. Diana was beginning to have a reputation for notable
taste in dressing, and her advice on such subjects was much sought after. She
was looking very pretty herself on this particular night in a dress of the
lovely wild-rose pink, from which Anne was forever debarred; but she was not to
take any part in the concert, so her appearance was of minor importance. All
her pains were bestowed upon Anne, who, she vowed, must, for the credit of
Avonlea, be dressed and combed and adorned to the Queen’s taste.</p>
<p>“Pull out that frill a little more—so; here, let me tie your sash;
now for your slippers. I’m going to braid your hair in two thick braids,
and tie them halfway up with big white bows—no, don’t pull out a
single curl over your forehead—just have the soft part. There is no way
you do your hair suits you so well, Anne, and Mrs. Allan says you look like a
Madonna when you part it so. I shall fasten this little white house rose just
behind your ear. There was just one on my bush, and I saved it for you.”</p>
<p>“Shall I put my pearl beads on?” asked Anne. “Matthew brought
me a string from town last week, and I know he’d like to see them on
me.”</p>
<p>Diana pursed up her lips, put her black head on one side critically, and
finally pronounced in favor of the beads, which were thereupon tied around
Anne’s slim milk-white throat.</p>
<p>“There’s something so stylish about you, Anne,” said Diana,
with unenvious admiration. “You hold your head with such an air. I
suppose it’s your figure. I am just a dumpling. I’ve always been
afraid of it, and now I know it is so. Well, I suppose I shall just have to
resign myself to it.”</p>
<p>“But you have such dimples,” said Anne, smiling affectionately into
the pretty, vivacious face so near her own. “Lovely dimples, like little
dents in cream. I have given up all hope of dimples. My dimple-dream will never
come true; but so many of my dreams have that I mustn’t complain. Am I
all ready now?”</p>
<p>“All ready,” assured Diana, as Marilla appeared in the doorway, a
gaunt figure with grayer hair than of yore and no fewer angles, but with a much
softer face. “Come right in and look at our elocutionist, Marilla.
Doesn’t she look lovely?”</p>
<p>Marilla emitted a sound between a sniff and a grunt.</p>
<p>“She looks neat and proper. I like that way of fixing her hair. But I
expect she’ll ruin that dress driving over there in the dust and dew with
it, and it looks most too thin for these damp nights. Organdy’s the most
unserviceable stuff in the world anyhow, and I told Matthew so when he got it.
But there is no use in saying anything to Matthew nowadays. Time was when he
would take my advice, but now he just buys things for Anne regardless, and the
clerks at Carmody know they can palm anything off on him. Just let them tell
him a thing is pretty and fashionable, and Matthew plunks his money down for
it. Mind you keep your skirt clear of the wheel, Anne, and put your warm jacket
on.”</p>
<p>Then Marilla stalked downstairs, thinking proudly how sweet Anne looked, with
that</p>
<p class="poem">
“One moonbeam from the forehead to the crown”</p>
<p class="noindent">
and regretting that she could not go to the concert herself to hear her girl
recite.</p>
<p>“I wonder if it <i>is</i> too damp for my dress,” said Anne
anxiously.</p>
<p>“Not a bit of it,” said Diana, pulling up the window blind.
“It’s a perfect night, and there won’t be any dew. Look at
the moonlight.”</p>
<p>“I’m so glad my window looks east into the sun rising,” said
Anne, going over to Diana. “It’s so splendid to see the morning
coming up over those long hills and glowing through those sharp fir tops.
It’s new every morning, and I feel as if I washed my very soul in that
bath of earliest sunshine. Oh, Diana, I love this little room so dearly. I
don’t know how I’ll get along without it when I go to town next
month.”</p>
<p>“Don’t speak of your going away tonight,” begged Diana.
“I don’t want to think of it, it makes me so miserable, and I do
want to have a good time this evening. What are you going to recite, Anne? And
are you nervous?”</p>
<p>“Not a bit. I’ve recited so often in public I don’t mind at
all now. I’ve decided to give ‘The Maiden’s Vow.’
It’s so pathetic. Laura Spencer is going to give a comic recitation, but
I’d rather make people cry than laugh.”</p>
<p>“What will you recite if they encore you?”</p>
<p>“They won’t dream of encoring me,” scoffed Anne, who was not
without her own secret hopes that they would, and already visioned herself
telling Matthew all about it at the next morning’s breakfast table.
“There are Billy and Jane now—I hear the wheels. Come on.”</p>
<p>Billy Andrews insisted that Anne should ride on the front seat with him, so she
unwillingly climbed up. She would have much preferred to sit back with the
girls, where she could have laughed and chattered to her heart’s content.
There was not much of either laughter or chatter in Billy. He was a big, fat,
stolid youth of twenty, with a round, expressionless face, and a painful lack
of conversational gifts. But he admired Anne immensely, and was puffed up with
pride over the prospect of driving to White Sands with that slim, upright
figure beside him.</p>
<p>Anne, by dint of talking over her shoulder to the girls and occasionally
passing a sop of civility to Billy—who grinned and chuckled and never
could think of any reply until it was too late—contrived to enjoy the
drive in spite of all. It was a night for enjoyment. The road was full of
buggies, all bound for the hotel, and laughter, silver clear, echoed and
reechoed along it. When they reached the hotel it was a blaze of light from top
to bottom. They were met by the ladies of the concert committee, one of whom
took Anne off to the performers’ dressing room which was filled with the
members of a Charlottetown Symphony Club, among whom Anne felt suddenly shy and
frightened and countrified. Her dress, which, in the east gable, had seemed so
dainty and pretty, now seemed simple and plain—too simple and plain, she
thought, among all the silks and laces that glistened and rustled around her.
What were her pearl beads compared to the diamonds of the big, handsome lady
near her? And how poor her one wee white rose must look beside all the hothouse
flowers the others wore! Anne laid her hat and jacket away, and shrank
miserably into a corner. She wished herself back in the white room at Green
Gables.</p>
<p>It was still worse on the platform of the big concert hall of the hotel, where
she presently found herself. The electric lights dazzled her eyes, the perfume
and hum bewildered her. She wished she were sitting down in the audience with
Diana and Jane, who seemed to be having a splendid time away at the back. She
was wedged in between a stout lady in pink silk and a tall, scornful-looking
girl in a white-lace dress. The stout lady occasionally turned her head
squarely around and surveyed Anne through her eyeglasses until Anne, acutely
sensitive of being so scrutinized, felt that she must scream aloud; and the
white-lace girl kept talking audibly to her next neighbor about the
“country bumpkins” and “rustic belles” in the audience,
languidly anticipating “such fun” from the displays of local talent
on the program. Anne believed that she would hate that white-lace girl to the
end of life.</p>
<p>Unfortunately for Anne, a professional elocutionist was staying at the hotel
and had consented to recite. She was a lithe, dark-eyed woman in a wonderful
gown of shimmering gray stuff like woven moonbeams, with gems on her neck and
in her dark hair. She had a marvelously flexible voice and wonderful power of
expression; the audience went wild over her selection. Anne, forgetting all
about herself and her troubles for the time, listened with rapt and shining
eyes; but when the recitation ended she suddenly put her hands over her face.
She could never get up and recite after that—never. Had she ever thought
she could recite? Oh, if she were only back at Green Gables!</p>
<p>At this unpropitious moment her name was called. Somehow Anne—who did not
notice the rather guilty little start of surprise the white-lace girl gave, and
would not have understood the subtle compliment implied therein if she
had—got on her feet, and moved dizzily out to the front. She was so pale
that Diana and Jane, down in the audience, clasped each other’s hands in
nervous sympathy.</p>
<p>Anne was the victim of an overwhelming attack of stage fright. Often as she had
recited in public, she had never before faced such an audience as this, and the
sight of it paralyzed her energies completely. Everything was so strange, so
brilliant, so bewildering—the rows of ladies in evening dress, the
critical faces, the whole atmosphere of wealth and culture about her. Very
different this from the plain benches at the Debating Club, filled with the
homely, sympathetic faces of friends and neighbors. These people, she thought,
would be merciless critics. Perhaps, like the white-lace girl, they anticipated
amusement from her “rustic” efforts. She felt hopelessly,
helplessly ashamed and miserable. Her knees trembled, her heart fluttered, a
horrible faintness came over her; not a word could she utter, and the next
moment she would have fled from the platform despite the humiliation which, she
felt, must ever after be her portion if she did so.</p>
<p>But suddenly, as her dilated, frightened eyes gazed out over the audience, she
saw Gilbert Blythe away at the back of the room, bending forward with a smile
on his face—a smile which seemed to Anne at once triumphant and taunting.
In reality it was nothing of the kind. Gilbert was merely smiling with
appreciation of the whole affair in general and of the effect produced by
Anne’s slender white form and spiritual face against a background of
palms in particular. Josie Pye, whom he had driven over, sat beside him, and
her face certainly was both triumphant and taunting. But Anne did not see
Josie, and would not have cared if she had. She drew a long breath and flung
her head up proudly, courage and determination tingling over her like an
electric shock. She <i>would not</i> fail before Gilbert Blythe—he should
never be able to laugh at her, never, never! Her fright and nervousness
vanished; and she began her recitation, her clear, sweet voice reaching to the
farthest corner of the room without a tremor or a break. Self-possession was
fully restored to her, and in the reaction from that horrible moment of
powerlessness she recited as she had never done before. When she finished there
were bursts of honest applause. Anne, stepping back to her seat, blushing with
shyness and delight, found her hand vigorously clasped and shaken by the stout
lady in pink silk.</p>
<p>“My dear, you did splendidly,” she puffed. “I’ve been
crying like a baby, actually I have. There, they’re encoring
you—they’re bound to have you back!”</p>
<p>“Oh, I can’t go,” said Anne confusedly. “But
yet—I must, or Matthew will be disappointed. He said they would encore
me.”</p>
<p>“Then don’t disappoint Matthew,” said the pink lady,
laughing.</p>
<p>Smiling, blushing, limpid eyed, Anne tripped back and gave a quaint, funny
little selection that captivated her audience still further. The rest of the
evening was quite a little triumph for her.</p>
<p>When the concert was over, the stout, pink lady—who was the wife of an
American millionaire—took her under her wing, and introduced her to
everybody; and everybody was very nice to her. The professional elocutionist,
Mrs. Evans, came and chatted with her, telling her that she had a charming
voice and “interpreted” her selections beautifully. Even the
white-lace girl paid her a languid little compliment. They had supper in the
big, beautifully decorated dining room; Diana and Jane were invited to partake
of this, also, since they had come with Anne, but Billy was nowhere to be
found, having decamped in mortal fear of some such invitation. He was in
waiting for them, with the team, however, when it was all over, and the three
girls came merrily out into the calm, white moonshine radiance. Anne breathed
deeply, and looked into the clear sky beyond the dark boughs of the firs.</p>
<p>Oh, it was good to be out again in the purity and silence of the night! How
great and still and wonderful everything was, with the murmur of the sea
sounding through it and the darkling cliffs beyond like grim giants guarding
enchanted coasts.</p>
<p>“Hasn’t it been a perfectly splendid time?” sighed Jane, as
they drove away. “I just wish I was a rich American and could spend my
summer at a hotel and wear jewels and low-necked dresses and have ice cream and
chicken salad every blessed day. I’m sure it would be ever so much more
fun than teaching school. Anne, your recitation was simply great, although I
thought at first you were never going to begin. I think it was better than Mrs.
Evans’s.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, don’t say things like that, Jane,” said Anne
quickly, “because it sounds silly. It couldn’t be better than Mrs.
Evans’s, you know, for she is a professional, and I’m only a
schoolgirl, with a little knack of reciting. I’m quite satisfied if the
people just liked mine pretty well.”</p>
<p>“I’ve a compliment for you, Anne,” said Diana. “At
least I think it must be a compliment because of the tone he said it in. Part
of it was anyhow. There was an American sitting behind Jane and me—such a
romantic-looking man, with coal-black hair and eyes. Josie Pye says he is a
distinguished artist, and that her mother’s cousin in Boston is married
to a man that used to go to school with him. Well, we heard him
say—didn’t we, Jane?—‘Who is that girl on the platform
with the splendid Titian hair? She has a face I should like to paint.’
There now, Anne. But what does Titian hair mean?”</p>
<p>“Being interpreted it means plain red, I guess,” laughed Anne.
“Titian was a very famous artist who liked to paint red-haired
women.”</p>
<p>“<i>Did</i> you see all the diamonds those ladies wore?” sighed
Jane. “They were simply dazzling. Wouldn’t you just love to be
rich, girls?”</p>
<p>“We <i>are</i> rich,” said Anne staunchly. “Why, we have
sixteen years to our credit, and we’re happy as queens, and we’ve
all got imaginations, more or less. Look at that sea, girls—all silver
and shadow and vision of things not seen. We couldn’t enjoy its
loveliness any more if we had millions of dollars and ropes of diamonds. You
wouldn’t change into any of those women if you could. Would you want to
be that white-lace girl and wear a sour look all your life, as if you’d
been born turning up your nose at the world? Or the pink lady, kind and nice as
she is, so stout and short that you’d really no figure at all? Or even
Mrs. Evans, with that sad, sad look in her eyes? She must have been dreadfully
unhappy sometime to have such a look. You <i>know</i> you wouldn’t, Jane
Andrews!”</p>
<p>“I <i>don’t</i> know—exactly,” said Jane unconvinced.
“I think diamonds would comfort a person for a good deal.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t want to be anyone but myself, even if I go
uncomforted by diamonds all my life,” declared Anne. “I’m
quite content to be Anne of Green Gables, with my string of pearl beads. I know
Matthew gave me as much love with them as ever went with Madame the Pink
Lady’s jewels.”</p>
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