Emily of New Moon
through the blossomy
en Saucy Sal had subsi
remark, more to himself, As it seemed, tha
s not. She always sp
ssary
ottetown and had dinn
father's death, could
use waitress put befo
steriously to the wait
th a plateful of deli
tifully trimmed wi
id Aunt Elizabeth ster
ba
, " whispe
d just then to say mo
f the chicken she had
n matter must
zabeth, "
t Elizabeth, directin
er niece's tr
nderstand, " said Emil
she would be sure to g
id not like the roast
all; and I just et s
because I like
what is put before
olesome food, " said Au
t Elizabeth had not un
unhappy
abeth announced to Aun
e shop
things for the c
me 'the child, '" exc
't you like my name, Aunt Elizabeth? Mother
o whole sets of unde
che
Jimmy, gently kicking
bl
nt that it would be b
" for her when she wa
was rebuking her for
bsided in scarlet conf
to Laura as if s
hat cheap black dres
ough it. It is nonsen
ll. I shall get her a
, and some black-and-
leave the child with
of looking after her
t and fill her up wit
at ice-cream and she
, to eat two saucerfu
h satis
thing for you that Eli
see what is inside of
ness alone knows when
have ice-cream
mmy shook
doesn't like new-fa
ifty years ago, but o
se--candles; in the d
lk in. But, pussy, Ne
l. You'll lik
ries there?" asked
f 'em, " said Cousin
orchard. We grow colu
he fa
she was eight she h
days; yet she hadn't
t linger in old-fash
ere so likely
fairies?" sh
fairy was really-tr
in Jimmy seriously
nk this out the aunts
gain. It was sunset w
that flooded the long
d road and fir-darken
ne. Emily looked
it good. She saw a bi
old trees--no mushroo
that had loved and
of silver water glist
he knew--and a tall, Golden-white church sp
was none of these that
dden glimpse of the d
oof--and right over it, In the opalescent sk
with it as Cousin Ji
ried her into
den bench that was sa
d Aunt Elizabeth ligh
ng, brass candlesticks
igh dresser where the
her a friendly welcom
he lighted them, elvi
the trees outs
a kitchen like this
eiling, with black raf
ides of bacon and bun
d many other things,
imagine. The sanded
s had been scrubbed
funny little bosses, And in front of the st
e corner of the ceili
ck and spookish in th
THING might pop down o
just right, you know.
s. Emily didn't know
not. It was an inte
uld like to describe
en burned--but Emily
n the verge
ra kindly. "These Ju
itting-room--Jimmy ha
e th
perately for self-c
much more cheerful t
gay-striped homespun,
lls were hung with pr
re of wonderful pale-r
ed all over them. The
like. Emily had nev
ll were the friendly g
e in the open stove th
hing warm and rosy-gol
lt reviving interest
aded glass doors clos
ntel! What a funny, Delightful shadow the
ike a negro's side-fac
behind the chintz-lin
Emily's friends wherev
kcase and opened the
he backs of rather po
th a mug of milk and
oatmeal
lizabeth sternly, "sh
e not to meddle with t
y
elonged to everybo
Aunt Elizabeth, cont
Moon books were in a
Emily. We are all so
Eat it and then w
and worried down the
the wallpaper was, wi
nd! Emily wondered i
-yes, she could--ther
airy pattern, suspen
scovered that she pos
y a certain movement
d never describe, sh
er in the air before h
hift it back and forth, To any distance she
nearer. It was one o
oom anywhere to "see
r made the prettiest f
en
at nothing in that q
th, suddenly
elf. She couldn't exp
e like Ellen Greene an
t staring a
say you were, " reto
It gives your face an
o upstairs. You ar
dismay. She had hope
h Aunt Elizabeth see
red not protest.
mbre bedroom where
never be transformed
pped with a tiny swin
be no Emily-in-the-
n curtains, a high bed
at, smothering feathe
low
still, gazin
t undressed?" ask
undress before you
at Emily through her c
clothes, AT ONC
g with anger and sham
while Aunt Elizabeth
unspeakable. It was
lizabeth. Emily felt
ch circumstances. Fa
cted that Aunt Elizabe
Gree
Aunt Elizabeth, turn
d at the shr
to open the window
d at Emily as if the
ng the
d let in the night a
ainly
s had our window op
consumption, " said
s poi
at night but night
t Elizabeth icily,
y go
impossible to sleep
emed to swallow her u
nd not a gleam of lig
eside her, long a
bed with a griffin, "
oing to cry--
ly she strove to kee
t utterly alone and
ien, hostile world a
trange, mysterious, Mournful sound in the a
it frightened her. Oh, For her little bed a
ing friendliness of we
window! She MUST go b
be happy here! But
o father--. A great
then another. It was
h--and chew the inside
nd determination
ying for?" asked
t Elizabeth felt quit
did. She was not us
ith Emily any more tha
nsidered it quite imp
herself in one of the
a poor sleeper, easil
th Murray had heard.
ith her; and when she
o her unwelcome duty
y child was n
u were crying for, E
k, I guess, "
abeth was
to be homesick for,
ant--as New Moon, " so
'm Fathersick, Aunt E
onely when YOU
luntarily remembered
had died--the handsome, Intolerant, autocrat
and had made existenc
nny of the five years
ad behaved impeccably, And wept decorously,
eling of regret follow
did not like the memo
or evok
he will of Providenc
rstand right now that
your appreciation of
rs and repining. What
s to take you in?
ave starved to death
herself lying dead, Looking exactly like
agazines depicting th
mi
would have been sent t
alf-starved, probably
u have come to a good
nd educated
ether like the soun
, "I know it was very good of y
't bother you long, y
arn my own living. Wh
n can be called grow
ut that, " said Aunt E
r been under any neces
equire of you is to b
ourself with becoming
ded terri
ily, suddenly determi
s she had read. "Perh
lizabeth, "--Emily hap
d heard her father use
work it in--"because
vil might
To have a speech lik
ight from that unwelc
and peaceful bed! Was
too paralysed to repl
or, "Emily, NEVE
ly meekly. "But, " sh
"I'll go on
Elizabeth, "I want to
e. I tell you to go to sleep, And I
beth's good night woul
l and sobbed no more, Though the noiseless t
ay so still that Aunt
nd went to s
ut me, " thought Emily, Feeling a sickening
s Mike but she'd be b
I wonder if they g
anded Sal's basket t
to this cat, " and Ji
Perhaps Saucy Sal woul
always went back home
-she pictured hersel
k, starlit roads to t
rches and Adam-and-Eve
ar little cot and the
r and at dawn one cou
he homela
ng?" thought Emily. "
in the
he Wind Woman at the
ur of the June night breeze-
ne?" she whispered, Stretching out her ar
oman. I'm not lones
as afraid it might ne
caped from the bonda
d gloomy canopy and s
the Wind Woman and th
the moths, the brook
nchanted reverie until
undly asleep on the f
ftly and luringly in t
New M