Mary Minds Her Business
g to the post-office. Helen had a number of letters to ma
ook to see who it was, and after saying to Helen, "This is Bob McAllister-one of our neighbours. He
Helen,
th a graceful gesture, and next she touc
even her walk, underwent a change. But when I try to tell you what I mean I feel as tongue-tied as a boy who is searching for a word which doesn't exist. As nearly as I ca
and Helen's smile unconsciously lingered on him for a second or two until, apparently recollecting th
was going on by her side, but when Helen shot a glance over her shoulder and whispered with sa
ou should never turn arou
s waist. And speaking in the voice of one who has just ach
ought t
ad parts of it to her cousin. She was a mimic, and two of the letters she
herself and feeling ashamed of it the same moment. "I thin
elen. "They're al
nk that of all
she started humming. Unobserved Ma'm Maynard had entered to straighten
ry, "you don't think that al
s," said Ma'm, pursing her lips with mystery. "E
won't
fools ... and I think it is also good at times to
d-I tell you I often think the old-world view
not to
u live. And halways the same conclusion arrives: Man is the natural enemy of a woman, and the one b
had turned from the mirror and was staring
cherie, which yo
woman's nat
and it halways will. Everything that lives has its ow
at times that a tiger is out in the streets at night-such precautions are made if the girl she is out after d
ure' society? Why is marriage require'? Is it not because all the world knows well that a man
it isn't that way. You're simply turning thin
bien. Three husbands I've had.
ll say that woman is
ay, man might aspire to be as the gods; but halways at his helbow is a
f course I know some married people aren't happy. But it isn't always because they are married. Single people are unhappy, too. Aunt Patty has indigestion sometimes, and I suppose a lot of people do
would only shru
d. "When you have l
n window a cloc
the door she said, "I heard Aunt Patty say that Uncle Stanley was coming t