<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"></SPAN> CHAPTER XI.<br/> Anne’s Impressions of Sunday-School</h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ELL, how do you like
them?” said Marilla.</p>
<p>Anne was standing in the gable room, looking solemnly at three new dresses
spread out on the bed. One was of snuffy colored gingham which Marilla had been
tempted to buy from a peddler the preceding summer because it looked so
serviceable; one was of black-and-white checkered sateen which she had picked
up at a bargain counter in the winter; and one was a stiff print of an ugly
blue shade which she had purchased that week at a Carmody store.</p>
<p>She had made them up herself, and they were all made alike—plain skirts
fulled tightly to plain waists, with sleeves as plain as waist and skirt and
tight as sleeves could be.</p>
<p>“I’ll imagine that I like them,” said Anne soberly.</p>
<p>“I don’t want you to imagine it,” said Marilla, offended.
“Oh, I can see you don’t like the dresses! What is the matter with
them? Aren’t they neat and clean and new?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Then why don’t you like them?”</p>
<p>“They’re—they’re not—pretty,” said Anne
reluctantly.</p>
<p>“Pretty!” Marilla sniffed. “I didn’t trouble my head
about getting pretty dresses for you. I don’t believe in pampering
vanity, Anne, I’ll tell you that right off. Those dresses are good,
sensible, serviceable dresses, without any frills or furbelows about them, and
they’re all you’ll get this summer. The brown gingham and the blue
print will do you for school when you begin to go. The sateen is for church and
Sunday school. I’ll expect you to keep them neat and clean and not to
tear them. I should think you’d be grateful to get most anything after
those skimpy wincey things you’ve been wearing.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I <i>am</i> grateful,” protested Anne. “But I’d be
ever so much gratefuller if—if you’d made just one of them with
puffed sleeves. Puffed sleeves are so fashionable now. It would give me such a
thrill, Marilla, just to wear a dress with puffed sleeves.”</p>
<p>“Well, you’ll have to do without your thrill. I hadn’t any
material to waste on puffed sleeves. I think they are ridiculous-looking things
anyhow. I prefer the plain, sensible ones.”</p>
<p>“But I’d rather look ridiculous when everybody else does than plain
and sensible all by myself,” persisted Anne mournfully.</p>
<p>“Trust you for that! Well, hang those dresses carefully up in your
closet, and then sit down and learn the Sunday school lesson. I got a quarterly
from Mr. Bell for you and you’ll go to Sunday school tomorrow,”
said Marilla, disappearing downstairs in high dudgeon.</p>
<p>Anne clasped her hands and looked at the dresses.</p>
<p>“I did hope there would be a white one with puffed sleeves,” she
whispered disconsolately. “I prayed for one, but I didn’t much
expect it on that account. I didn’t suppose God would have time to bother
about a little orphan girl’s dress. I knew I’d just have to depend
on Marilla for it. Well, fortunately I can imagine that one of them is of
snow-white muslin with lovely lace frills and three-puffed sleeves.”</p>
<p>The next morning warnings of a sick headache prevented Marilla from going to
Sunday-school with Anne.</p>
<p>“You’ll have to go down and call for Mrs. Lynde, Anne,” she
said. “She’ll see that you get into the right class. Now, mind you
behave yourself properly. Stay to preaching afterwards and ask Mrs. Lynde to
show you our pew. Here’s a cent for collection. Don’t stare at
people and don’t fidget. I shall expect you to tell me the text when you
come home.”</p>
<p>Anne started off irreproachable, arrayed in the stiff black-and-white sateen,
which, while decent as regards length and certainly not open to the charge of
skimpiness, contrived to emphasize every corner and angle of her thin figure.
Her hat was a little, flat, glossy, new sailor, the extreme plainness of which
had likewise much disappointed Anne, who had permitted herself secret visions
of ribbon and flowers. The latter, however, were supplied before Anne reached
the main road, for being confronted halfway down the lane with a golden frenzy
of wind-stirred buttercups and a glory of wild roses, Anne promptly and
liberally garlanded her hat with a heavy wreath of them. Whatever other people
might have thought of the result it satisfied Anne, and she tripped gaily down
the road, holding her ruddy head with its decoration of pink and yellow very
proudly.</p>
<p>When she had reached Mrs. Lynde’s house she found that lady gone. Nothing
daunted, Anne proceeded onward to the church alone. In the porch she found a
crowd of little girls, all more or less gaily attired in whites and blues and
pinks, and all staring with curious eyes at this stranger in their midst, with
her extraordinary head adornment. Avonlea little girls had already heard queer
stories about Anne. Mrs. Lynde said she had an awful temper; Jerry Buote, the
hired boy at Green Gables, said she talked all the time to herself or to the
trees and flowers like a crazy girl. They looked at her and whispered to each
other behind their quarterlies. Nobody made any friendly advances, then or
later on when the opening exercises were over and Anne found herself in Miss
Rogerson’s class.</p>
<p>Miss Rogerson was a middle-aged lady who had taught a Sunday-school class for
twenty years. Her method of teaching was to ask the printed questions from the
quarterly and look sternly over its edge at the particular little girl she
thought ought to answer the question. She looked very often at Anne, and Anne,
thanks to Marilla’s drilling, answered promptly; but it may be questioned
if she understood very much about either question or answer.</p>
<p>She did not think she liked Miss Rogerson, and she felt very miserable; every
other little girl in the class had puffed sleeves. Anne felt that life was
really not worth living without puffed sleeves.</p>
<p>“Well, how did you like Sunday school?” Marilla wanted to know when
Anne came home. Her wreath having faded, Anne had discarded it in the lane, so
Marilla was spared the knowledge of that for a time.</p>
<p>“I didn’t like it a bit. It was horrid.”</p>
<p>“Anne Shirley!” said Marilla rebukingly.</p>
<p>Anne sat down on the rocker with a long sigh, kissed one of Bonny’s
leaves, and waved her hand to a blossoming fuchsia.</p>
<p>“They might have been lonesome while I was away,” she explained.
“And now about the Sunday school. I behaved well, just as you told me.
Mrs. Lynde was gone, but I went right on myself. I went into the church, with a
lot of other little girls, and I sat in the corner of a pew by the window while
the opening exercises went on. Mr. Bell made an awfully long prayer. I would
have been dreadfully tired before he got through if I hadn’t been sitting
by that window. But it looked right out on the Lake of Shining Waters, so I
just gazed at that and imagined all sorts of splendid things.”</p>
<p>“You shouldn’t have done anything of the sort. You should have
listened to Mr. Bell.”</p>
<p>“But he wasn’t talking to me,” protested Anne. “He was
talking to God and he didn’t seem to be very much inter-ested in it,
either. I think he thought God was too far off though. There was a long row of
white birches hanging over the lake and the sunshine fell down through them,
‘way, ‘way down, deep into the water. Oh, Marilla, it was like a
beautiful dream! It gave me a thrill and I just said, ‘Thank you for it,
God,’ two or three times.”</p>
<p>“Not out loud, I hope,” said Marilla anxiously.</p>
<p>“Oh, no, just under my breath. Well, Mr. Bell did get through at last and
they told me to go into the classroom with Miss Rogerson’s class. There
were nine other girls in it. They all had puffed sleeves. I tried to imagine
mine were puffed, too, but I couldn’t. Why couldn’t I? It was as
easy as could be to imagine they were puffed when I was alone in the east
gable, but it was awfully hard there among the others who had really truly
puffs.”</p>
<p>“You shouldn’t have been thinking about your sleeves in Sunday
school. You should have been attending to the lesson. I hope you knew
it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes; and I answered a lot of questions. Miss Rogerson asked ever so
many. I don’t think it was fair for her to do all the asking. There were
lots I wanted to ask her, but I didn’t like to because I didn’t
think she was a kindred spirit. Then all the other little girls recited a
paraphrase. She asked me if I knew any. I told her I didn’t, but I could
recite, ‘The Dog at His Master’s Grave’ if she liked.
That’s in the Third Royal Reader. It isn’t a really truly religious
piece of poetry, but it’s so sad and melancholy that it might as well be.
She said it wouldn’t do and she told me to learn the nineteenth
paraphrase for next Sunday. I read it over in church afterwards and it’s
splendid. There are two lines in particular that just thrill me.</p>
<p class="poem">
“‘Quick as the slaughtered squadrons fell<br/>
In Midian’s evil day.’</p>
<p class="noindent">
“I don’t know what ‘squadrons’ means nor
‘Midian,’ either, but it sounds <i>so</i> tragical. I can hardly
wait until next Sunday to recite it. I’ll practice it all the week. After
Sunday school I asked Miss Rogerson—because Mrs. Lynde was too far
away—to show me your pew. I sat just as still as I could and the text was
Revelations, third chapter, second and third verses. It was a very long text.
If I was a minister I’d pick the short, snappy ones. The sermon was
awfully long, too. I suppose the minister had to match it to the text. I
didn’t think he was a bit interesting. The trouble with him seems to be
that he hasn’t enough imagination. I didn’t listen to him very
much. I just let my thoughts run and I thought of the most surprising
things.”</p>
<p>Marilla felt helplessly that all this should be sternly reproved, but she was
hampered by the undeniable fact that some of the things Anne had said,
especially about the minister’s sermons and Mr. Bell’s prayers,
were what she herself had really thought deep down in her heart for years, but
had never given expression to. It almost seemed to her that those secret,
unuttered, critical thoughts had suddenly taken visible and accusing shape and
form in the person of this outspoken morsel of neglected humanity.</p>
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