<h3 align="center">Chapter XII</h3>
<p>The next spring Ellen went to school. When a child who has reigned
in undisputed sovereignty at home is thrust among other children at
school, one of two things happens: either she is scorned and rebelled
against, and her little crown of superiority rolled in the dust of
the common playground, or she extends the territories of her empire.
Ellen extended hers, though involuntarily, for there was no conscious
thirst for power in her.</p>
<p>On her first morning at school, she seated herself at her desk and
looked forth from the golden cloud of her curls, her eyes full of
innocent contemplation, her mouth corners gravely drooping. She knew
one little girl who sat not far from her. The little girl's name was
Floretta Vining. Floretta was built on the scale of a fairy, with
tiny, fine, waxen features, a little tossing mane of flaxen hair,
eyes a most lovely and perfect blue, with no more depth in them than
in the blue of china, and an expression of the sweetest and most
innocent inanity and irresponsibility. Nobody ever expected anything
of this little Floretta Vining. She was always a negative success.
She smiled around from the foot of her curving class, and never had
her lessons, but she never disobeyed the rules, except that of
punctuality.</p>
<p>Floretta was late at school. She came daintily up the aisle, two
cheap bangles on one wrist slipping over a slim hand, and tinkling.
Floretta's mother had a taste for the cheaply decorative. There was
an abundance of coarse lace on Floretta's frock, and she wore a
superfluous sash which was not too fresh. Floretta toed out
excessively, her slender little feet pointing out sharply, almost at
right angles with each other, and Ellen admired her for that. She
watched her coming, planting each foot as carefully and precisely as
a bird, her lace frills flouncing up and down, her bangles jingling,
and thought how very pretty she was.</p>
<p>Ellen felt herself very loving towards the teacher and Floretta
Vining. Floretta leaned forward as soon as she was seated and gazed
at her with astonishment, and that deepening of amiability and
general sweetness which one can imagine in the face of a doll after
persistent scrutiny. Ellen smiled decorously, for she was not sure
how much smiling was permissible in school. When she smiled guardedly
at Floretta, she was conscious of another face regarding her, twisted
slightly over a shabby little shoulder covered with an ignominious
blue stuff, spotted and faded. This little girl's wisp of brown braid
was tied with a shoe-string, and she looked poorer than any other
child in the school, but she had an honest light in her eyes, and
Ellen considered her to be rather more beautiful than Floretta.</p>
<p>She was Maria Atkins, Joseph Atkins's second child. Ellen sat with
her book before her, and the strange, new atmosphere of the
school-room stole over her senses. It was not altogether pleasant,
although it was considered that the ventilation was after the most
approved modern system. She perceived a strong odor of peppermints,
and Floretta Vining was waving ostentatiously a coarse little
pocket-handkerchief scented with New-mown Hay. There was also a
strong effusion of stale dinners and storm-beaten woollen garments,
but there was, after all, that savor of festivity which Ellen was apt
to discover in the new. She looked over her book with utter content.
In a line with her, on the boys' side, there appeared a covertly
peeping face under a thatch of light hair, and Ellen, influenced
insensibly by the boy's shyly worshipful eyes, looked and saw
Granville Joy. She remembered the Christmas top, and blushed very
pink without knowing why, and flirted all her curls towards the boys'
side.</p>
<p>Ellen, from having so little acquaintance with boys, had had no
very well-defined sentiments towards them, but now, on being set
apart with her feminine element, and separated so definitely by the
middle aisle of the school-room, she began to experience sensations
both of shyness and exclusiveness. She did not think the boys, in
their coarse clothes, with their cropped heads, half as pretty as the
girls.</p>
<p>The teacher coming down the aisle laid a caressing hand on Ellen's
curls, and the child looked up at her with that confidence which is
exquisite flattery.</p>
<p>After she had passed, Ellen heard a subtle whisper somewhere at
her back; it was half audible, but its meaning was entirely plain. It
signified utmost scorn and satirical contempt. It was fine-pointed
and far-reaching. A number looked around. It was as expressive as a
whole sentence, and, being as concentrated, was fairly explosive with
meaning.</p>
<p>“H'm, ain't you pretty? Ain't you dreadful pretty, little
dolly-pinky-rosy. H'm, teacher's partial. Ain't you pretty? Ain't you
stuck up? H'm.”</p>
<p>Ellen, not being used to the school vernacular, did not fairly
apprehend all this, and least of all that it was directed towards
herself. She cast a startled look around, then turned to her book.
She leaned back in her seat and held her book before her face with
both hands, and began to read, spelling out the words noiselessly.
All at once, she felt a fine prick on her head, and threw back one
hand and turned quickly. The little girl behind was engrossed in
study, and all Ellen could see was the parting in her thick black
hair, for her head was supported by her two hands, her elbows were
resting on her desk, and she was whispering the boundaries of the
State of Massachusetts.</p>
<p>Ellen turned back to her reading-book, and recommenced studying
with the painful faithfulness of the new student; then came again
that small, fine, exasperating prick, and she thrust her face around
quickly to see that same faithfully intent little girl.</p>
<p>Ellen rubbed her head doubtfully, and tried to fix her attention
again upon her book, but presently it came again; a prick so small
and fine that it strained consciousness; an infinitesimal point of
torture, and this time Ellen, turning with a swift flirt of her head,
caught the culprit. It was that faithful little girl, who held a
black-headed belt-pin in her hand; she had been carefully separating
one hair at a time from Ellen's golden curls, and tweaking it
out.</p>
<p>Ellen looked at her with a singular expression compounded of
bewilderment, of injury, of resentment, of alarm, and of a readiness
to accept it all as a somewhat peculiar advance towards
good-fellowship and a merry understanding. But the expression on that
dark, somewhat grimy little face, looking out at her from a jungle of
coarse, black locks, was fairly impish, almost malicious. There was
not merriment in it so much as jibing; instead of that soft regard
and worshipful admiration which Ellen was accustomed to find in new
eyes, there was resentful envy.</p>
<p>Then Ellen shrank, and bristled with defiance at the same time,
for she had the spirit of both the Brewsters and the Louds in her, in
spite of her delicacy of organization. She was a fine instrument,
capable of chords of tragedy as well as angelic strains. She saw that
the little girl who was treating her so was dressed very poorly, that
her dress was not only shabby, but actually dirty; that she, as well
as the other girl whom she noticed, had her braid tied with an old
shoe-string, and that a curious smell of leather pervaded her. Ellen
continued to regard the little girl, then suddenly she felt a hand on
her shoulder, and the teacher, Miss Rebecca Mitchell, was looking
down at her. “What is the trouble?” asked Miss Mitchell.
That look of half-wondering admiration to which Ellen was accustomed
was in the teacher's eyes, and Ellen again thought her beautiful.</p>
<p>One of the first, though a scarcely acknowledged principle of
beauty, is that of reflection of the fairness of the observer. Ellen
being as innocently self-seeking for love and admiration as any young
thing for its natural sustenance, was quick to recognize it, though
she did not understand that what she saw was herself in the teacher's
eyes, and not the teacher. She gazed up in that roseate face with the
wide mouth set in an inverted bow of smile, curtained, as it were,
with smoothly crinkled auburn hair clearly outlined against the
cheeks, at the palpitating curve of shiny black-silk bosom, adorned
with a festoon of heavy gold watch-chain, and thought that here was
love, and beauty, and richness, and elegance, and great wisdom,
calling for reverence but no fear. She answered not one word to the
teacher's question, but continued to gaze at her with that look of
wide-eyed and contemplative regard.</p>
<p>“What is the trouble, Ellen?” repeated Miss Mitchell.
“Why were you looking around so?” Ellen said nothing.
The little girl behind had her head bent over her book so low that
the sulky curves of her mouth did not show. The teacher turned to
her—“Abby Atkins,” said she, “what were you
doing?”</p>
<p>Abby Atkins did not raise her studious head. She did not seem to
hear.</p>
<p>“Abby Atkins,” said the teacher, sharply,
“answer me. What were you doing?” Then the little girl
answered, with a sulky note, half growl, half whimper, like some
helpless but indomitable little trapped animal,
“Nothin'.”</p>
<p>“Ellen,” said the teacher, and her voice changed
indescribably. “What was she doing?” Ellen did not
answer. She looked up in the teacher's face, then cast down her eyes
and sat there, her little hands folded in tightly clinched fists in
her lap, her mouth a pink line of resistance. “Ellen,”
repeated the teacher, and she tried to make her voice sharp, but in
spite of herself it was caressing. Her heart had gone out to the
child the moment she had seen her enter the school-room. She was as
helpless before her as before a lover. She was wild to catch her up
and caress her instead of pestering her with questions. “Ellen,
you must answer me,” she said, but Ellen sat still.</p>
<p>Half the scholars were on their feet, reaching and craning their
necks. The teacher turned on them, and there was no lack of sharpness
in her tone. “Sit down this moment, every one of you,”
she called. “Abby Atkins, if there is any more disturbance, I
shall know what is at the root of the matter. If I see you turning
around again, Ellen, I shall insist upon knowing why.” Then
the teacher placed a caressing hand upon Ellen's yellow head, and
passed down the aisle to her desk.</p>
<p>Ellen had no more trouble during the session. Abby Atkins was
commendably quiet and studious, and when called out to recitation
made the best one in her class. She was really brilliant in a
defiant, reluctant fashion. However, though she did not again disturb
Ellen's curls, she glowered at her with furtive but unrelaxed
hostility over her book. Especially a blue ribbon which confined
Ellen's curls in a beautiful bow fired her eyes of animosity. She
looked hard at it, then she pulled her black braid over her shoulder
and felt of the hard shoe-string knot, and frowned with an ugly frown
of envy and bitterest injury, and asked herself the world-wide and
world-old question as to the why of inequality, and, though it was
based on such trivialities as blue ribbons and shoe-strings, it was
none the less vital to her mind. She would have loved, have gloried,
to pull off that blue ribbon, put it on her own black braid, and tie
up those yellow curls with her own shoe-string with a vicious yank of
security. But all the time it was not so much because she wanted the
ribbon as because she did not wish to be slighted in the distribution
of things. Abby Atkins cared no more for personal ornament than a
wild cat, but she wanted her just allotment of the booty of the
world. So at recess she watched her chance. Ellen was surrounded by
an admiring circle of big girls, gushing with affection. “Oh,
you dear little thing,” they said. “Only look at her
beautiful curls. Give me a kiss, won't you, darling?” Little
reverent fingers twined Ellen's golden curls, red apples were thrust
forward for her to take bites, sticky morsels of candy were forced
secretly into her hands. Abby Atkins stood aloof. “You mean
little thing,” one of the big girls said suddenly, catching
hold of her thin shoulder and shaking her—“you mean
little thing, I saw you.”</p>
<p>“So did I,” said another big girl, “and I was a
good mind to tell on you.”</p>
<p>“Yes, you had better look out, and not plague that dear
little thing,” said the other.</p>
<p>“You ought to be ashamed of yourself,” chimed in still
another big girl. “Only look how pretty she is, the little
darling—the idea of your tormenting her. You deserve a good,
hard whipping, Abby Atkins.”</p>
<p>This big girl was herself a beauty and wore a fine and precise
blue-ribbon bow, and Abby Atkins looked at her with a scowl of
hatred.</p>
<p>“She's an ugly little thing,” said the big girls among
themselves as they went edging gently and imperceptibly away towards
a knot of big boys, and then Abby Atkins's chance had come. She
advanced with a spring upon Ellen Brewster, and she pulled that blue
ribbon off her head so cruelly and fiercely that she pulled out some
of the golden hairs with it and threw it on the ground, and stamped
on it. Then she seized Ellen by the shoulders and proceeded to shake
her for wearing a blue ribbon when she herself wore a shoe-string,
but she reckoned without Ellen. One would as soon have expected to
meet fight in a little child angel as in this Ellen Brewster, but she
did not come of her ancestors for nothing.</p>
<p>Although she was so daintily built that she looked smaller, she
was in reality larger than the other girl, and as she straightened
herself in her wrath she seemed a head taller and proportionately
broad. She tossed her yellow head, and her face took on an expression
of noble courage and indignation, but she never said a word. She
simply took Abby Atkins by the arms and lifted her off her feet and
seated her on the ground. Then she picked up her blue ribbon, and
walked off, and Abby scrambled to her feet and looked after her with
a vanquished but untamed air. Nobody had seen what happened except
Abby's younger sister Maria and Granville Joy. Granville pressed
stealthily close to Ellen as she marched away and whispered, his face
blazing, his voice full of confidence and congratulation, “Say,
if she'd been a boy, I'd licked her for you, and you wouldn't hev had
to tech her yourself;” and Maria walked up and eyes her
prostrate but defiantly glaring sister—“I ain't sorry one
mite, Abby Atkins,” she declared—“so
there.”</p>
<p>“You go 'long,” returned Abby, struggling to her feet,
and shaking her small skirts energetically.</p>
<p>“Your dress is jest as wet as if you'd set down in a puddle,
and you'll catch it when you get home,” Maria said,
pitilessly.</p>
<p>“I ain't afraid.”</p>
<p>“What made you touch her, anyhow; she hadn't done
nothin'?”</p>
<p>“If you want to wear shoe-strings when other folks wear
ribbons, you can,” said Abby Atkins. She walked away,
switching, with unabated dignity in the midst of defeat, the draggled
tail of her poor little dress. She had gone down like a cat; she was
not in the least hurt except in her sense of justice; that was jarred
to a still greater lack of equilibrium. She felt as if she had been
floored by Providence in conjunction with a blue bow, and her very
soul rose in futile rebellion. But, curiously enough, her personal
ire against Ellen vanished.</p>
<p>At the afternoon recess she gave Ellen the sound half of an old
red Baldwin apple which she had brought for luncheon, and watched her
bite into it, which Ellen did readily, for she was not a child to
cherish enmity, with an odd triumph. “The other half ain't fit
to eat, it's all wormy,” said Abby Atkins, flinging it away as
she spoke.</p>
<p>“Then you ought to have kept this,” Ellen cried out,
holding towards her the half, minus one little bite. But Abby Atkins
shook her head forcibly. “That was why I gave it to you,”
said she. “Say, didn't you never have to tie up your hair with
a shoe-string?” Ellen shook her head, looking at her
wonderingly. Then with a sudden impulse she tore off the blue ribbon
from her curls. “Say, you take it,” she said, “my
mother won't care. I'd just as lief wear the shoe-string,
honest.”</p>
<p>“I don't want your blue ribbon,” Abby returned,
stoutly; “a shoe-string is a good deal better to tie the hair
with. I don't want your blue ribbon; I don't want no blue ribbon
unless it's mine.”</p>
<p>“It would be yours if I give it to you,” Ellen
declared, with blue eyes of astonishment and consternation upon this
very strange little girl.</p>
<p>“No, it wouldn't,” maintained Abby Atkins.</p>
<p>But it ended in the two girls, with that wonderful and
inexplicable adjustment of childhood into one groove after harsh
grating on different levels, walking off together with arms around
each other's waist, and after school began Ellen often felt a soft,
cat-like pat on her head, and turned round with a loving glance at
Abby Atkins.</p>
<p>Ellen talked more about Abby Atkins than any other of the children
when she got home, and while her mother looked at it all easily, her
grandmother was doubtful. “There's others that I should rather
have Ellen thick with,” said she. “I 'ain't nothin'
against the Atkinses, but they can't have been as well brought up as
some, they have had so little to do with, and their mother's been
ailin' so long.”</p>
<p>“Ellen may as well begin as she can hold out, and be
intimate with them that will be intimate with her,” Eva said,
rather bitterly. Eva was married by this time, and living with Jim
and his mother. She wore in those days an expression of bitterly
defiant triumph and happiness, as of one who has wrested his sweet
from fate under the ban of the law, and is determined to get the
flavor of it though the skies fall. “I suppose I did wrong
marrying Jim,” she often told her sister, “but I can't
help it.”</p>
<p>“Maybe Jim will get work before long,” her sister
would say, consolingly.</p>
<p>“I have about given up,” Eva would reply. “I
guess Jim will have to roost on a flour-barrel at Munsey's store the
rest of his days; but as long as he belongs to me, it don't make so
much difference.”</p>
<p>Eva had taken up an agency for a cosmetic which was manufactured
by a woman in Rowe. She had one window of the north parlor in the
Tenny cottage, which had been given up to her when she married Jim,
filled with the little pink boxes containing the “Fairy
Cream,” and a great sign, but the trade languished. Both Eva
and Jim had tried in vain to obtain employment in factories in other
towns.</p>
<p>Lloyd's had not reopened, although it was April, and Andrew was
drawing on his savings. Fanny had surreptitiously answered an
advertisement purporting to give instructions to women as to the
earning of large sums of money at home, and was engaged with a stock
of glass and paints which she hurriedly swept out of sight when any
one's shadow passed the window, and later she found herself to be the
victim of a small swindling conspiracy, and lost the dollar which she
had invested. But Ellen knew nothing of all this. She lacked none of
her accustomed necessaries nor luxuries, and with her school a new
life full of keen, new savors or relish began for her. There were
also new affections in it.</p>
<p>Ellen was as yet too young, and too confident in love, to have new
affections plunge her into anything but a delightful sort of
anti-blossom tumult. There was no suspense, no doubt, no jealousy,
only utter acquiescence of single-heartedness, admiration, and trust.
She thought Abby Atkins and Floretta Vining lovely and dependable;
she parted from them at night without a pang, and looked forward
blissfully to the meeting next morning. She also had sentiments
equally peaceful and pronounced, though instinctively more secret,
towards Granville Joy. She used to glance over towards the boys' side
and meet his side-long eyes without so much a quickening of her
pulses as a quickening of her imagination.</p>
<p>“I know who your beau is,” Floretta Vining, who was in
advance of her years, said to her once, and Ellen looked at her with
half-stupid wonder.</p>
<p>“His first name begins with a G and his last with a
J,” Floretta tittered, and Ellen continued to look at her with
the faintest suspicion of a blush, because she had a feminine
instinct that a blush was in order, not because she knew of any
reason for it.</p>
<p>“He is,” said Floretta, with another exceedingly
foolish giggle. “My, you are as red as a beet.”</p>
<p>“I ain't old enough to have a beau,” Ellen said, her
soft cheeks becoming redder, and her baby face all in a tremor.</p>
<p>“Yes, you be,” Floretta said, with authority,
“because you are so pretty, and have got such pretty curls. Ben
Simonds said the other day you were the prettiest girl in
school.”</p>
<p>“Then do you think he is my beau, too?” asked Ellen,
innocently. But Floretta frowned, and tittered, and hesitated.</p>
<p>“He said except one,” she faltered out, finally.</p>
<p>“Well, who was that?” asked Ellen.</p>
<p>“How do I know?” pouted Floretta. “Mebbe it was
me, though I don't think I'm so very pretty.”</p>
<p>“Then Ben Simonds is your beau,” said Ellen,
reflectively.</p>
<p>“Yes, I guess he is,” admitted Floretta.</p>
<p>That night, amid much wonder and tender ridicule, Ellen told her
mother and Aunt Eva, and her father, that Ben Simonds was Floretta's
beau, and Granville Joy was hers. But Andrew laughed doubtfully.</p>
<p>“I don't want that little thing to get such ideas into her
head yet a while,” he told Fanny afterwards, but she only
laughed at him, seeing nothing but the childish play of the thing;
but he, being a man, saw deeper.</p>
<p>However, Ellen's fondest new love was not for any of her little
mates, but for her school-teacher. To her the child's heart went out
in worship. All through the spring she offered her
violets—violets gathered laboriously after school in the meadow
back of her grandmother's house. She used to skip from hillock to
hillock of marsh grass with wary steps, lest she might slip and wet
her feet in the meadow ooze and incur her mother's displeasure, for
Fanny, in spite of her worship of the child, could speak with no
uncertain voice. She pulled up handfuls of the flowers, gleaming blue
in the dark-green hollows. Later she carried roses from the choice
bush in the yard, and, later, pears from her grandmother's tree. She
used to watch for Miss Mitchell at her gate and run to meet her, and
seize her hand and walk at her side, blushing with delight. Miss
Mitchell lived not far from Ellen, in a tidy white house with a
handsome smoke-tree on one side of the front walk and a willow with
upside-down branches on the other. Miss Mitchell had been born and
brought up in this house, but she had been teaching school in a
distant town ever since Ellen's day, so they had never been
acquainted before she went to school. Miss Mitchell lived alone with
her mother, who was an old friend of Mrs. Zelotes. Ellen privately
thought her rather better-looking than her own grandmother, though
her admiration was based upon wholly sentimental reasons. Old Mrs.
Mitchell might have earned more money in a museum of freaks than her
daughter in a district school. She was a mountain of rotundity, a
conjunction of palpitating spheres, but the soul that dwelt in this
painfully ponderous body was as mellow with affection and kindliness
as a ripe pear, and the voice that proceeded from her ever-smiling
lips was a hoarse and dove-like coo of love. Ellen at first started a
little aghast at this gigantic fleshliness, this general slough and
slump of outline, this insistency of repellent curves, and then the
old woman spoke and thrust out a great, soft hand, and the heart of
the child overleaped her artistic sense and her reason, and she
thought old Mrs. Mitchell beautiful. Mrs. Mitchell never failed to
regale her with a superior sort of cooky, and often with a covert
peppermint, and that although the Mitchells were not well off. The
old place was mortgaged, and Miss Mitchell had hard work to pay the
interest. Ellen had the vaguest ideas about the mortgage, and was
half inclined to think it might be a disfiguring patch in the
plastering of the sitting-room, which hung down in an unsightly
fashion with a disclosure of hairy edges, and threatened danger to
the heads underneath.</p>
<p>Often of a Saturday afternoon Ellen went to visit Miss Mitchell
and her mother, and really preferred them to friends of her own age.
Miss Mitchell had a store of superannuated paper dolls which dated
from her own childhood. Their quaint costumes, and old-fashioned
coiffures, and simpers were of overwhelming interest to Ellen. Even
at that early age she had a perception of the advantages of an
atmosphere to art, and even to the affections. Without understanding
it, she loved those obsolete paper-dolls and those women of former
generations better because they gave her breathing-scope for her
imagination. She could love Abby Atkins and Floretta Vining at one
bite, as it were, and that was the end of it, but she could sit and
ponder and dream over Miss Mitchell and her mother, and see whole
vistas of them in receding mirrors of affection.</p>
<p>As for the teacher and her mother, they simply adored the
child—as indeed everybody did. She continued at her first
school for a year, which was one of the hardest financially ever
experienced in Rowe. Norman Lloyd during all that time did not reopen
his factory, and in the autumn two others shut down. The streets were
full of the discontented ranks of impotent labor, and all the public
buildings were props for the weary shoulders of the unemployed. On
pleasant days the sunny sides of the vacant factories, especially,
furnished settings for lines of scowling faces of misery.</p>
<p>This atmosphere affected Ellen more than any one realized, since
the personal bearing of it was kept from her. She did not know that
her father was drawing upon his precious savings for daily needs, she
did not know how her aunt Eva and her uncle Jim were getting into
greater difficulties every day, but she was too sensitive not to be
aware of disturbances which were not in direct contact with herself.
She never forgot what she had overheard that night Lloyd's had shut
down; it was always like a blot upon the face of her happy
consciousness of life. She often overheard, as then, those loud,
dissenting voices of her father and his friends in the sitting-room,
after she had gone to bed; and then, too, Abby Atkins, who was not
spared any knowledge of hardship, told her a good deal. “It's
awful the way them rich folks treat us,” said Abby Atkins.
“They own the shops and everything, and take all the money, and
let our folks do all the work. It's awful. But then,” continued
Abby Atkins, comfortingly, “your father has got money saved in
the bank, and he owns his house, so you can get along if he don't
have work. My father 'ain't got any, and he's got the old-fashioned
consumption, and he coughs, and it takes money for his medicine. Then
mother's sick a good deal too, and has to have medicine. We have to
have more medicine than most anything else, and we hardly ever have
any pie or cake, and it's all the fault of them rich folks.”
Abby Atkins wound up with a tragic climax and a fierce roll of her
black eyes.</p>
<p>That evening Ellen went in to see her grandmother, and was
presented with some cookies, which she did not eat.</p>
<p>“Why don't you eat them?” Mrs. Zelotes asked.</p>
<p>“Can I have them to do just what I want to with?”
asked Ellen.</p>
<p>“What on earth do you want to do with a cooky except eat
it?” Ellen blushed; she had a shamed-faced feeling before a
contemplated generosity.</p>
<p>“What do you want to do with them except eat them?”
her grandmother asked, severely.</p>
<p>“Abby Atkins don't have any cookies 'cause her father's out
of work,” said Ellen, abashedly.</p>
<p>“Did that Atkins girl ask you to bring her
cookies?”</p>
<p>“No, ma'am.”</p>
<p>“You can do jest what you are a mind to with 'em,”
Mrs. Zelotes said, abruptly.</p>
<p>Ellen never knew why her grandmother insisted upon her drinking a
little glass of very nice and very spicy cordial before she went
home, but the truth was, that Mrs. Zelotes thought the child so
angelic in this disposition to give up the cookies which she loved to
her little friend that she was straightway alarmed and thought her
too good to live.</p>
<p>The next day she told Fanny, and said to her, with her old face
stern with anxiety, that the child was lookin' real pindlin', and
Ellen had to take bitters for a month afterwards because she gave the
cookies to Abby Atkins.</p>
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