Prev | Current Page 117 | Next

Meade, L. T., 1854-1914

"The Children's Pilgrimage"


When you got to the top and looked for the door, you were confronted
with nothing but a low ceiling over your head, and a piece of rope
within reach of your hand. If you pulled the rope hard enough, up
would suddenly jump two or three boards, and then there was an
opening big enough for you to creep into the little kitchen.
Yes, it was the queerest entrance into the oddest little home. But
when once you got there how cozy it all was!
The proverbial saying, "eating off the floor," might have been
practiced on those white boards. The little range shone like a
looking glass, and cups and saucers were ranged on shelves above it.
In the middle of the floor stood a bright and thick crimson drugget.
The window, dormer though it was, was arranged quite prettily with
crimson curtains, while some pots of sweet-smelling herbs and flowers
stood on its ledge. There were two or three really good colored
prints on the white-washed walls and several illuminated texts of
Scripture. The little deal table, too, was covered with a crimson
cloth.
A canary bird hung in a cage in the window, and it is not too much
to say that this poor bird, born and bred in the East End, was
thoroughly happy in his snug home. A soft-furred gray cat purred
before the little range. The bedroom beyond was as clean and neat as
the kitchen, and the tiny room where Cecile, Maurice and Toby were to
sleep, though nearly empty at present, would, Mrs. Moseley assured
them, make a sleeping chamber by no means to be despised by and by.


Pages:
105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129