own household. She “could not fuss”
to keep so many rooms clean. If in winter time
she kept a fire in the front room, where in one corner
her own bed was curtained off, and if in summer she
always sat there when her work was done, it was all
that could be required of her, and was just as they
used to do at her father’s, in Vermont, thirty
years ago. Her kitchen was larger than Mrs. Jones’,
which was rather uncomfortable on a hot day when there
was washing to be done; the odor of the soap-suds
was a little sickening then, she admitted, but in
her kitchen it was different; she had had an eye to
comfort when they were building, and had seen that
the kitchen was the largest, airiest, lightest room
in the house, with four windows, two outside doors,
and a fireplace, where, although they had a stove,
she dearly loved to cook just as her mother had done
in Vermont, and where hung an old-fashioned crane,
with iron hooks suspended from it. Here she washed,
and ironed, and ate, and performed her ablutions in
the bright tin basin which stood in the sink near
to the pail, with the gourd swinging in the top, and
wiped her face on the rolling towel and combed her
hair before the clock, which served the double purpose
of looking-glass and timepiece. When company
came—and Mrs. Markham was not inhospitable—the
east room, where the bed stood, was opened; and if
the company, as was sometimes the case, chanced to
be Richard’s friends, she used the west room
across the hall, where the chocolate-colored paper
and Daisy’s picture hung, and where, upon the
high mantel, there was a plaster image of little Samuel,
and two plaster vases filled with colored fruit.
The carpet was a very pretty Brussels, but it did not
quite cover the floor on either side. It was a
small pattern, and on this account had been offered
a shilling cheaper a yard, and so the economical Mrs.
Markham had bought it, intending to eke out the deficiency
with drugget of a corresponding shade; but the merchant
did not bring the drugget, and the carpet was put
down, and time went on, and the strips of painted
board were still uncovered, save by the straight row
of haircloth chairs, which stood upon one side, and
the old-fashioned sofa, which had cost fifty dollars,
and ought to last at least as many years. There
was a Boston rocker, and a center table, with the
family Bible on it, and a volume of Scott’s Commentaries,
and frosted candlesticks on the mantel and two sperm
candles in them, with colored paper, pink and green,
all fancifully notched and put around them, and a
bureau in the corner, which held the boys’ Sunday
shirts and Mrs. Markham’s black silk dress,
with Daisy’s clothes in the bottom drawer, and
the silver plate taken from her coffin. There
was a gilt-framed looking-glass on the wall, and blue
paper curtains at the windows, which were further
ornamented with muslin drapery. This was the
great room—the parlor—where Daisy
had died, and which, on that account, was a kind of
sacred place to those who held the memory of that