<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3>TWO PICNICS.</h3>
<div class='unindent'><br/>IT was while Candace was still doing
battle with her shyness, sometimes
getting the better of it and then
again yielding and letting it get
the better of her, that Georgie and Gertrude
sent out invitations to another luncheon party
of girls. It was the third they had given
since coming to Newport. Mrs. Gray certainly
did a great deal for the pleasure of
her daughters, although Berenice Joy did
consider her so "strict."</div>
<p>Candace had her share in this entertainment,
as one of the three young ladies of the
house. The party was mainly composed of
the "Early Dippers," who were not as formidable
to her imagination as entire strangers would
have been. She and Georgie and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</SPAN></span>
Gertrude wore their white woollen dresses,
which were almost exactly alike, and "looked
like triplets," as Marian rather spitefully observed.
Marian herself was not asked to the
party, and was out of humor in consequence.
Her crossness did not extend to Candace, however.
She evinced this by coming in just as
Candace had finished dressing, with a long-stemmed
pink rose in her hand, which she
pinned on the shoulder of the white gown,
just under Candace's cheek.</p>
<p>"That looks sweet," remarked Marian. "I
am really quite pleased at your appearance;
you're every bit as pretty as Gertrude, and
heaps better looking than that old Georgie,
who wouldn't let me come to her party. Now,
take my advice: hold your head up, and don't
let any of the girls bully you. If Berry Joy
tries it, sit down hard on her."</p>
<p>"I don't know how to sit down hard,"
laughed Candace; but she kissed Marian for
the sweet rose, and went downstairs feeling
quite brave. Marian watched her over the
balusters; made a face at Berry Joy, who was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</SPAN></span>
just sailing into the drawing-room; shook her
dimpled fist at Georgie's back, visible through
the open door; and then went to sit with her
mother, who also was "not invited."</p>
<p>There is no prettier entertainment than a
lunch-party of girls. The flowers, the confections,
all the graceful little fripperies of
the feast, seem to suit with the bright young
faces, to whom daylight is a becoming and
not a dangerous test. Frederic had taken
great pains in ornamenting the table for his
young ladies. There was a nosegay for each
guest, and no two nosegays were alike. One
was made up of roses and daisies, another of
roses and heliotrope, another of roses and
violets; and each was tied with a satin ribbon
of corresponding color, which had the name
of the girl for whom it was intended, and the
date, painted in gold letters on the ends. In
the middle of the table stood a large square
pan of glass, in which floated a mass of waterlilies,
pink and white; and winding in and out
among the little dishes of crystallized fruits,
éclairs, apricots, and hot-house grapes, was a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</SPAN></span>
continuous curving wreath of pansies of every
color. It appeared to lie directly on the
white tablecloth; but the stems of the flowers
were really set in shallow semi-circles of tin,
not over half an inch high, which were filled
with wet sand.</p>
<p>For the more substantial part of the meal
appeared a succession of appetizing little
dishes, hot and perfectly served; and the
wind-up of the whole was, of course, unlimited
ice-cream and water-ices, those national delicacies
dear equally to the heart of every
American girl the country over, whether
she consumes her saucer-full in uppermost
Maine or southernmost Florida.</p>
<p>Luncheon over, the party went out to the
piazza, where coffee was served; and then
Berry Joy began to tell of a picnic at Southwick's
grove which she had attended the day
before. None of the other girls had, as it
happened, been present; so she had the field
of narrative to herself.</p>
<p>"It was perfectly splendid," she said.
"There were five coaches with four ladies<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span>
and a lot of men in each, and ever so many
other carriages. We made a sort of procession
down the Island. I went in Lawrence
Jones's coach, with Sue Tucker and Maude
and Mrs. Freddy. You should have seen
the country people rush out to look at us
when all the horns blew at once. I tell you
it was exciting."</p>
<p>"And what did you do after you got to
the grove?"</p>
<p>"Oh, we had the most wonderful spread
that ever was seen. You know, everybody
takes a dish and a bottle of wine to these
picnics; and there is always a great competition
as to who shall bring the best things.
I never saw such a luncheon in my life;
everything was perfectly delicious."</p>
<p>"But what did you <i>do?</i>"</p>
<p>"Do? Why, we didn't do anything but
that. There was no time for anything else.
It took ever so long to get lunch ready.
Some of the things had to be cooked after we
got there, you know, and the coffee and the
mayonnaise made. The servants lit fires and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</SPAN></span>
fussed about, and the rest of us sat round and
talked a little; but I was so ravenous that I
couldn't think of anything but lunch, and
I rather think the others were in the same
condition. Then, as soon as we had done, it
was time to start for home."</p>
<p>"What do you think that horrid Mr. Deane
said?" she continued, after a short pause.
"You know, he's always trying to be
satirical. Some one was saying something
about the grove's being such a nice place for
picnics, and Mr. Deane interrupted, in that
disagreeable dry way of his which some people
call funny: 'Well, yes, perhaps so; but in
my opinion the proper place for a picnic of
this kind is—a gorge!'"</p>
<p>There was a universal giggle.</p>
<p>"How did he dare?" observed Julia
Prime.</p>
<p>"Oh, he dares to say just what he likes.
He doesn't mind anybody. But I know
one thing, and that is that Gorham Allerton
didn't like it a bit. He looked absolutely
black, and I saw him talking to Mrs. Jackson<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</SPAN></span>
Tainter about it afterward; and I'll wager
something handsome that old Deane will find
himself left out of the next picnic. I'm sure,
if he does, it will only serve him right for
being so rude."</p>
<p>"I don't believe he'll mind it if he isn't
invited," remarked Gertrude. "He dined
with papa last night; and I heard him say
that it was the dullest affair he ever was at
in his life, and only fit for the 'companions
of Ulysses.'"</p>
<p>"What <i>did</i> he mean?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. Something about General
Grant, I suppose.—Candace, what <i>are</i> you
laughing at?"</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing," said Cannie, composing her
face as well as she could. A little old translation
of the Odyssey had been among the
books in the North Tolland library, and she
was more "up" in the "companions of Ulysses"
than the rest of the party.</p>
<p>"How different picnics now-a-days are
from those which we used to have in Newport
when I was a girl," remarked Mrs. Gray from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</SPAN></span>
the drawing-room window, where she had been
standing unperceived for a moment or two.</p>
<p>"Oh, Mrs. Gray, are you there?" and the
girls hastened to the window. Some of them
kissed her; and all, except perhaps Berry Joy,
looked glad to see her, for she was a general
favorite with her daughters' friends.</p>
<p>"Tell us about the picnics you used to
have when you were young," said Julia
Prime, balancing herself on the window-sill
and keeping fast hold of Mrs. Gray's hand.</p>
<p>"There is not much to tell, Julia. They
would seem tame affairs enough to you modern
young people, I suppose. We hadn't any
men with us as a general thing, except an
occasional brother or cousin, and we didn't
carry half as much to eat as seems to be considered
necessary now-a-days. Then we did
all the work ourselves instead of taking cooks
and footmen to do it for us; but for all that,
we thought them most delightful. For one
thing, we always went to some really interesting
place, such as the Glen, or the Dumpling
Rocks, or the Paradise Valleys."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Where are the Paradise Valleys?" inquired
Julia.</p>
<p>"Oh, I know what they are," said Maud
Hallett. "They are lovely places hidden
in behind Bishop Berkeley's Rock. I went
there once with Aunt Edith. She knows all
the nooks and corners of Newport better than
anybody else."</p>
<p>"Mamma, you must take us there some
day," said Georgie.</p>
<p>"Oh, do, and let me go with you," pleaded
Maud. "I should like so much to see them
again."</p>
<p>"Won't you take me too?" said Belle
Jeffrys.</p>
<p>"We should all like to go," remarked Julia,
slyly. "Oh, Mrs. Gray, dear, I have such a
lovely idea! Give us a picnic yourself, one
of the nice old-fashioned sort that you used
to have when you were young, in the Paradise
Valley; won't you, dear Mrs. Gray?
Oh, do!"</p>
<p>"You needn't coax so hard, Julia; I'm very
easy to persuade when I like to do a thing,"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</SPAN></span>
said Mrs. Gray, with a laugh. "I'll give you
a picnic with pleasure; only I must make one
stipulation, that it shall be exclusively a girl-party.
I don't think the young men of the
present day would enjoy the kind of thing I
mean, or know what to make of it."</p>
<p>"Girls!" cried Julia, "just listen to what
this dear angel says! She's going to take us
to Paradise Valley, all by ourselves, with no
men to bother and distract our attention.—Men
<i>are</i> out of place in Paradise anyway;
just think how Adam behaved! (this in a
parenthesis).—It is to be a real old-fashioned
"goloptious" picnic. Now, who would like to
go besides myself?"</p>
<p>"I, I, I," cried the girls, with gratifying
unanimity.</p>
<p>"Now, what day shall it be?" continued
Julia. "Let's make Mrs. Gray settle the time
at once, and then she can't back out."</p>
<p>"I don't want to back out," said Mrs. Gray.
"I enjoy the idea as much as you do."</p>
<p>So, after some comparing of engagements,
the next Thursday was fixed upon.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You had better make this the rendezvous,"
said the giver of the picnic. "I shall have
room for one girl in my wagonette besides my
four. You must all wear something stout,
which won't spoil with scrambling over rocks,
and you need not bring any luncheon-baskets.
I will see to all that. This is to be an old-fashioned
picnic, you know, and I shall provide
exactly the sort of things that we used
to take</p>
<div class='poem'>
'When I was young and charming, many years ago.'"<br/></div>
<p>"You are just as charming as you can be
now," declared Belle, enthusiastically.</p>
<p>"I do hope there won't be a fog," said
Julia Prime, as she walked up the Avenue
with the others.</p>
<p>"I sha'n't care if there is," replied Berry.
"I must say it sounds to me like a very
stupid plan,—no men, and nothing in particular
to eat. It's just like Mrs. Gray. Her
ideas are so queer, as mamma says."</p>
<p>"I wonder you go if you feel that way
about it," retorted Julia.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I dare say I sha'n't. I have a strong presentiment
that on that particular day I shall
have a headache."</p>
<p>And Berry did,—a "distracting" headache,
as she wrote Georgie over-night. She
was the only member of the Early Dip Club
who missed the picnic. Headaches are sad
but convenient things.</p>
<p>Eleven o'clock brought the girls to the
Grays' front door, all ready for their start, in
various village carts and victorias. There
was a little re-distribution: Georgie and Gertrude
fitted in with some of their cronies,
and Mrs. Gray took three girls besides Marian
and Candace in her wagonette. Frederic and
the coachman stowed many small baskets and
a heap of wraps into the different rumbles and
box seats, and they set forth under the bluest
of blue skies. It was a beautiful day, just
warm enough and not too warm; for a fragrant
wind was blowing softly in from the sea.</p>
<p>They had passed the first beach, which at
that hour was black with bathers and by-standers,
and had climbed the hill-slope which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</SPAN></span>
separates it from the second beach, when
Marian suddenly cried, "Mamma, here we
are close to Purgatory; can't we stop just a
minute and show it to Candace?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Gray looked at her watch.</p>
<p>"Your minute will be at least a quarter of
an hour, Marian," she said; "but I think there
is time enough. Would any of the rest of
you like to go?"</p>
<p>Girls always "want to go." There was a
general disembarkation; and Mrs. Gray led
the way through a gate and across a rough
field which stretched along the top of a line
of cliffs, steeper and bolder than those on the
Newport Point, and cut here and there into
sudden sharp fissures.</p>
<p>The scanty grass, yellow with August sun,
was broken everywhere by lumps and boulders
of that odd conglomerate which is known
by the name of "plum-pudding stone."
Golden-rod and the early blue aster were flowering
everywhere. A flock of sheep fled at
their approach, with a low rushing sound like
the wind in boughs.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/gs192.png" width-obs="359" height-obs="500" alt="Purgatory. The name of "Purgatory" seemed to her to suggest some terrible sort of place.—Page 188." title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Purgatory.</span> <br/>The name of "Purgatory" seemed to her to suggest some terrible sort of place.—Page 188.</span></div>
<p>Candace walked along with the rest, in a
little shiver of expectancy. The name of
"Purgatory" seemed to her to suggest some
terrible sort of place. Presently she saw the
girls ahead, as they reached a particular point,
diverge sharply to the right with little cries
and exclamations; and when she advanced,
she found herself on the edge of a chasm
deeper and darker than any of those which
they had passed. It cut the cliff from its
highest point to the sea-level; and the wall-like
sides receded toward their base, leaving
vaulted hollows beneath, into which the eye
could not penetrate. Only the ear caught
the sound of thunderous murmurs and strange
gurgles and hisses of spray echoing from unseen
recesses far underground; and it was
easy to imagine that these sounds came from
some imprisoned sea-creature, hemmed in by
the tide, with no chance of escape, and vexing
the air with its groans.</p>
<p>Candace shrank away from the brink with
a sensation of affright. "What an awful
place!" she said, drawing a long breath.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</SPAN></span>
"Do you suppose any one ever fell down
there?"</p>
<p>Every member of the party had some tradition
of the sort to relate; but none of the
stories seemed to rest on a very secure foundation.</p>
<p>"Anybody who did must be killed, I should
think. I don't wonder they named it Purgatory,"
said Marian.</p>
<p>There was a fascination of horror about the
spot. The girls lingered and leaned over the
brink and turned back, until Mrs. Gray had
to call them away; and they were all rather
silent as they walked across the field to their
carriages. But the impression was soon dispelled;
for as they drove down the incline
toward the second beach, they came upon an
unexpected scene of brilliant and animated life.</p>
<p>The tide and the wind together were bringing
ashore quantities of seaweed of the kind
used in manuring fields, and all the farmers
of the neighborhood had assembled to secure
this heaven-planted harvest. The long curves
of yellow sands which stretch from the Purgatory<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</SPAN></span>
rocks to Sacluest Point were alive
with people. Teams of mild mouse-colored
or white oxen stood harnessed to heavy
wagons, ready to drag the seaweed home.
Out in the plunging surf men were urging
horses seaward, or swimming them toward the
shore, with long rake-like implements in their
wake, which gathered and bore along masses
of the glittering brown and rosy kelp. The
splash and foam of the waves, the rearing
horses, the cries of the men and of the seagulls,
who seemed to resent this intrusion
upon their haunts, made a vivid and fascinating
picture, which seemed in keeping with
the beauty of sea and sky and the freshness
of the sun-warmed wind.</p>
<p>Then, passing the beach, the carriages drove
along a smooth country road for a short distance,
and turned into a narrow lane running
up hill, which presently brought them to a
small farm-house built on the very edge of
a ravine.</p>
<p>"Here we take to our feet," said Mrs.
Gray, jumping out of the wagonette.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The farmer and his wife, who seemed to
be old acquaintances, came out to speak to
her. The baskets were collected, and the
carriages sent back to town, with orders to
return to the same place at six o'clock.</p>
<p>"Oh, why six? why not stay and go home
by moonlight?" urged Julia.</p>
<p>"My dear child, if you were in the habit
of reading either the almanac or the heavens,
you would know that there will be no moon
to-night till after eleven o'clock," said her
chaperone. "These roads will be as black
as pitch by half-past seven. Now, girls, each
of you take your own shawl and one of
the baskets, and we will <i>descend</i> into Paradise.
It sounds paradoxical, but you shall
see."</p>
<p>She led the way down a steep narrow
pathway on the hill-side into the valley below.
The path was overhung with trees. It was
necessary to put the boughs aside here and
there; brambles reached from the thicket to
catch at the girls' skirts as they went by; but
when they had passed these trifling obstacles<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span>
they found themselves safely on the level
floor of a little valley below.</p>
<p>Such a choice little valley! It was enclosed
between the line of hill from which
they had just descended and another parallel
line, whose top was of solid granite and whose
base was walled by trees. This double barrier
kept off all cold winds, and let the sunshine
in from east to west to flood and foster
the valley growths. To the east the eye saw
only the winding of the leafy glade; the west
stood open to the sea, and gave a wide vista
of glittering ocean and yellow surf-fringed
beach.</p>
<p>The ground was carpeted with the softest
grass. Thickets of wild roses showed here
and there a late blossom, and other thickets
of alders glittered with coral-red berries.
Apple-trees loaded with small crimson apples
made spots of color on the hill-side. Wild-flowers
grew thickly in damp spots, and
mosses clustered among the stones. Birds
chirped and flew from every bush and tree.
All was shaded and peaceful and still. Newport,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span>
with its whirl and glitter, seemed immeasurably
far away. The Paradise Valley
might to all appearance have been hidden in
the heart of the Alleghanies, instead of being
within three miles of the gayest watering-place
in America!</p>
<p>Mrs. Gray, with accustomed feet, led the
way straight across the glade to where an
old cedar-tree stood commanding the oceanward
view, with a square block of stone at
its foot.</p>
<p>"This is where we used always to come,"
she said, in a dreamy voice.</p>
<p>"What a delicious place!" cried Julia; "to
think that I should have spent seven summers
in Newport and never have seen it
before! What shall we do with the baskets,
Mrs. Gray, dear?"</p>
<p>"Put them here in the shade, and when
you all feel hungry we will open them."</p>
<p>"Hungry! why, I am as hungry as a wolf
at this moment. I have a gift at being ravenous.
Girls, what do you say? Don't you
agree with me that no time is like the present<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
time for lunch? Hold up your hands if you
do."</p>
<p>"Very well," said Mrs. Gray, laughing, as
every hand flew up. "We will have lunch
at once, then; but I warn you that there is
a good deal to be done first. There," pointing
to a blackened spot against a rock, "is
where we always boiled our kettle. If some
of you will collect some dry sticks, we will
see if the present generation is capable of
making a fire. I meanwhile will fetch the
water."</p>
<p>She took a bright little copper kettle from
one of the baskets, and mounted the hill with
elastic footsteps, calling out, as she went,—</p>
<p>"Make haste, and be sure that the sticks
are dry."</p>
<p>"I'm not sure that I know a dry stick
when I see it," whispered Maud Hallett to
Julia; but instinct, as often happens, took the
place of experience on this occasion, and Mrs.
Gray found quite a respectable pile of fuel
awaiting her when she came back with her
kettle full of spring water.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Now I will show you how to swing a pot
over the fire," she said; and in three minutes
a rustic crane of boughs was constructed,
the kettle was hanging from it, and the
wood piled artistically underneath. A box of
matches appeared from Mrs. Gray's pocket,
which; as Marian said, was every bit as good
as the "Bag" of the Mother in the "Swiss
Family Robinson," and seemed to hold almost
as great a variety of useful things. Presently
a gay little fire was crackling and snapping
against the face of the rock, and adding its
smoke to the blackened stains left by those
other smokes of long ago. The girls stood
about, watching the blaze and listening for
the first hiss of the kettle; but Mrs. Gray informed
them that there was still work to be
done.</p>
<p>"I want some new potatoes to roast, for
one thing," she said. "Maud and Georgie,
you might run up to the farm and ask Mr.
Bacon to send me a few, say eighteen or
twenty large ones,—oh, and a couple of
dozen fresh eggs."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>While they were absent on this errand,
the other girls, under Mrs. Gray's direction,
unpacked the baskets and arranged their
contents on the rock beneath the cedar-tree.
Mrs. Gray had taken pains to provide, as
far as was possible, the same sort of food
which twenty-odd years before it had been
customary to take to picnics. Out of one
basket came a snow-white table-cloth and
napkins; out of another, a chafing-dish, a loaf
of home-made brown bread, and a couple of
pats of delicious Darlington butter. A third
basket revealed a large loaf of "Election
Cake," with a thick sugary frosting; a fourth
was full of crisp little jumbles, made after an
old family recipe and warranted to melt in
the mouth. There was a pile of thin, beautifully
cut sandwiches; plenty of light-buttered
rolls; and a cold fowl, ready carved into portions.
By the time that these provisions
were unpacked, Maud and Georgie were seen
descending the hill at a rapid walk, which,
at sight of the festive preparations below,
changed to what Julia Prime called "a hungry<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span>
gallop." By this time exercise and fresh
air had made everybody so desperately hungry
that it seemed impossible to wait another
moment; so, while Mrs. Gray heated the coffee
and dropped the large pink potatoes into
their bed of embers to roast, the younger members
of the party fell to work on the sandwiches,
just to take off the fine edge of their
appetites till something better was ready.</p>
<p>When the coffee was hot, Mrs. Gray seated
herself by the rock, lit the lamp under her
chafing-dish, dropped in a bit of butter, sprinkled
with pepper and salt, and proceeded to
"scramble" a great dish of eggs. Did any
of you ever eat hot scrambled eggs under a
tree when you were furiously hungry? If
not, you can form no idea of the pleasure
which the "Early Dippers" took in theirs.
But it was not the eggs only; it was everything:
never was a luncheon so delicious, the
girls protested. New potatoes roasted in the
ashes were a feast for the gods; and as for
the grandmother's cake with which the repast
wound up, it baffled analysis and description.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mrs. Gray had made this cake with her
own hands, "in order to carry out the historic
verities," as she said. It used to be
part of the religion of New England, especially
of Connecticut, she explained; and she told
them how once, when she was a girl, making
a visit to an old aunt in Wethersfield, she
had sat up nearly all night over a "raising"
of Election cake.</p>
<p>"But why did you do that?" asked the
girls.</p>
<p>"Well, you see, my aunt had a sudden
attack of rheumatism in her arm. She was
going to have the sewing-society meet at her
house; and such a thing as a sewing-society
without Election cake was not to be dreamed
of. So I offered to make it; and I was bound
that it should be good. The peculiarity of
this particular cake is that it must rise twice
before it is baked. You mix half the butter
and sugar, and so on, with the yeast; and
when that is light, you put in the other half.
Now, my first half refused to rise."</p>
<p>"What did you do?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, I sat beside it with one of Scott's
novels, and I waited. It was rather poky;
for my aunt and her servant had gone to bed,
and there were queer creaks and noises now
and then, as there always are in old houses.
Midnight struck, and one, and two, before the
first bubbles appeared on the surface of the
cake; and I had fallen asleep over my book
more than once, before I could be quite sure
that it was safe to stir in the remainder of the
spice and fruit, and go to bed. It was just
four o'clock when I finally put out my lamp;
and very sleepy I was next day, as you may
imagine: but the cake turned out a great
success, and I had many compliments about
it from the crack housekeepers in the neighborhood,
when they found that it was of my
making."</p>
<p>"Wasn't it a dreadful trouble to have to
make cake and things like that at home?"
asked Maud Hallett. "I think I would rather
have had it not quite so good, and got it from
the confectioner's, than to have all that fuss
and bother."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"My dear, there <i>were</i> no confectioners in
those days except in two or three of the largest
cities, and none even then who would be
thought worth speaking of in our time. It
was a case of home-made cake or none; and
though it was certainly a great deal of trouble,
the cake was better than any confectioner's
cake that I ever tasted. People took great
pride in it; and recipes were copied and
handed about and talked over with an interest
which would be impossible now-a-days,
when everything comes to hand ready made,
and you can order a loaf of sponge cake by
postal card, and have it appear in a few hours,
sent by express from central New York, as
some of us have been doing this summer."</p>
<p>The last crumb of the Grandmother's loaf
had now disappeared, and Mrs. Gray proposed
that the girls should go for a scramble on the
hills while she repacked the baskets. But
this division of labor was not permitted. The
girls insisted that they must be allowed to
stay and help, and that the scramble would
be no fun at all without their matron. Julia<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
seized the coffee-pot and chafing-dish, and ran
up the hill to rinse them at the spring; the
others collected forks and plates; and, many
hands making light work, in a very short
while all was in order, and Mrs. Gray in
readiness to head the walking party.</p>
<p>She guided them to the top of the granite
ridge which is visible from Newport, and
made them observe the peculiarity of the
rock lines, and the contrast between their
bareness and the fertility of the little intervening
glades, for which they serve as a natural
conservatory. Then they dipped down
into the thickets of the farther side, finding
all manner of ferns and wild-flowers and shy
growing things, and so to the sandy flats above
the third beach, with their outlook across the
river-like strait to Little Compton and up the
curving shore of Newport Island, set with old
farm-houses and solemn orchards of gnarled
apple-trees. From thence a short walk brought
them to the end of the ridge and to Bishop
Berkeley's seat, with its ponderous projecting
roof of rocks; and they all sat down to rest<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
just where he is said to have sat with his books
and pen, looking off toward far Bermuda, and
dreaming of the "star of empire." At that
time no ugly brick chimneys or artificial
water-basin existed to mar the foreground;
and nothing sweeter or more peaceful could
be imagined than the view from the rocky
shelf,—the breadth of ocean lit with clear
sun, the shining capes to right and left,
the yellow sand-dunes and winding creek
bordered with brown grasses and patches
of mallow or green rushes, and over all the
arch of blue summer sky. One or two carriages
rolled along the distant road as they
sat there; but otherwise; the stillness was
unbroken save by the twitter of birds in the
woods behind them, the chirp of sand-peeps
or the scream of gulls on the beach, and
the soft intermittent boom of the surf.</p>
<p>It had been a perfect afternoon, and a great
success, all the picnickers voted, as they
parted in the dusk on the gravel-walk in
front of Mrs. Gray's door. Yet, after all,
there was much to be said for Newport and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
civilization, and they were not sorry to come
back to them. It was all very well to play
at being old-fashioned for a day; but modern
times have their distinct charms and conveniences,
and if the girls, on sober second-thought,
preferred their own share of the
centuries to any other, no one need count
them blameworthy.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span></p>
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