No Name eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 995 pages of information about No Name.

No Name eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 995 pages of information about No Name.

“No,” replied Magdalen, wondering at the strange inquiry.

“That’s where the Buzzing in my head first began,” said Mrs. Wragge, following the new clew with the deepest attention and anxiety.  “I was employed to wait on the gentlemen at Darch’s Dining-rooms—­I was.  The gentlemen all came together; the gentlemen were all hungry together; the gentlemen all gave their orders together—­” She stopped, and tapped her head again, despondently, with the tattered old book.

“And you had to keep all their orders in your memory, separate one from the other?” suggested Magdalen, helping her out.  “And the trying to do that confused you?”

“That’s it!” said Mrs. Wragge, becoming violently excited in a moment.  “Boiled pork and greens and pease-pudding, for Number One.  Stewed beef and carrots and gooseberry tart, for Number Two.  Cut of mutton, and quick about it, well done, and plenty of fat, for Number Three.  Codfish and parsnips, two chops to follow, hot-and-hot, or I’ll be the death of you, for Number Four.  Five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten.  Carrots and gooseberry tart—­pease-pudding and plenty of fat—­pork and beef and mutton, and cut ’em all, and quick about it—­stout for one, and ale for t’other—­and stale bread here, and new bread there—­and this gentleman likes cheese, and that gentleman doesn’t—­Matilda, Tilda, Tilda, Tilda, fifty times over, till I didn’t know my own name again—­oh lord! oh lord!! oh lord!!! all together, all at the same time, all out of temper, all buzzing in my poor head like forty thousand million bees—­don’t tell the captain! don’t tell the captain!” The unfortunate creature dropped the tattered old book, and beat both her hands on her head, with a look of blank terror fixed on the door.

“Hush! hush!” said Magdalen.  “The captain hasn’t heard you.  I know what is the matter with your head now.  Let me cool it.”

She dipped a towel in water, and pressed it on the hot and helpless head which Mrs. Wragge submitted to her with the docility of a sick child.

“What a pretty hand you’ve got!” said the poor creature, feeling the relief of the coolness and taking Magdalen’s hand, admiringly, in her own.  “How soft and white it is!  I try to be a lady; I always keep my gloves on—­but I can’t get my hands like yours.  I’m nicely dressed, though, ain’t I?  I like dress; it’s a comfort to me.  I’m always happy when I’m looking at my things.  I say—­you won’t be angry with me?—­I should so like to try your bonnet on.”

Magdalen humored her, with the ready compassion of the young.  She stood smiling and nodding at herself in the glass, with the bonnet perched on the top of her head.  “I had one as pretty as this, once,” she said—­“only it was white, not black.  I wore it when the captain married me.”

“Where did you meet with him?” asked Magdalen, putting the question as a chance means of increasing her scanty stock of information on the subject of Captain Wragge.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
No Name from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.