The Camp Fire Girls at School eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 236 pages of information about The Camp Fire Girls at School.

The Camp Fire Girls at School eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 236 pages of information about The Camp Fire Girls at School.

The world seemed a pretty good place of habitation after all to Migwan that day when she went home from school, in spite of the fact that she had no dress to wear to the party.  The situation began to appear faintly humorous to her.  Here was all the interest centered on what Gladys was going to wear, when all the time the real, vital question was what she was going to wear!  What a commotion there would be if the other Winnebagos knew the truth!  Her thoughts began to beat themselves, into rhythm as she walked home through the crunching snow: 

  “Broke, broke, broke,
  And such clothes in the windows I see! 
  And I would that my purse could answer
  The demands that are made on she!

  “O well for the millionaire’s wife,
  Who can pay eighty bones for a shawl,
  And well for the African maids,
  Who don’t need any clothes at all!

  “And the pennies, they all go
  To the grocer, and so do the dimes,
  But, O, for the little crepe meteor dress
  I saw down in Oppenheim’s!

  “Broke, broke, broke,
  And such styles in the windows I see! 
  What would I not give for the rest of the month
  For the salary of John D!”

“Would you just as soon run up to the attic and get the blanket sheets out of the trunk?” asked her mother when she had finished her dinner.  “I was cold in bed last night.”  Migwan went up promptly.  She found the sheets and laid them out, and was then seized with a desire to rummage among the things in the trunk.  She pawed over old valentines, bonnets of a by-gone day, lace mitts, and all the useless relics that are usually found in mother’s trunk that had been her mother’s.  Down at the bottom, however, there was a paper package of considerable size.  Migwan opened it carefully and brought to view a dress made of white brocaded satin, yellowed with age.  A sudden inspiration struck her, and, laying it carefully on top of the blankets, she ran downstairs to her mother.  “What is this dress?” she asked eagerly.

Mrs. Gardiner’s face lighted tenderly when she saw it.  “Why, that’s my wedding dress,” she said.

“Oh,” said Migwan in a disappointed tone, laying the dress down.

“What did you want with it?” asked her mother.

“Why, I thought if it was just a dress,” replied Migwan, “I could make it over to wear to Gladys’s party, but of course if it is your wedding dress you wouldn’t care to have it changed.”

“I don’t see why not,” said Mrs. Gardiner.  “It’s no good as it is.  I’ve never had it on since my wedding day.  The material in that dress cost two dollars a yard and is better than what you get at that price nowadays.”  A sudden recollection illumined her face.  “The night of the party is my wedding anniversary,” she said.  “There couldn’t be a better occasion to wear it!”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Camp Fire Girls at School from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.