My Neighbors eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about My Neighbors.

My Neighbors eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about My Neighbors.

Lisbeth had her share, and Olwen had her share, and each applauded Charlie, Lisbeth assuring him:  “You’ll never regret it”; and this is how Charlie applauded himself:  “No one else could have got so much.”

“The house and cash will be a nice egg-nest for Jennie,” Olwen announced.

“And number seven and mine will make it more,” added Lisbeth.

“It’s a great comfort that she’ll never want a roof over her,” said Olwen.

Mindful of their vows to their father, the sisters lived at peace and held their peace in the presence of their prattling neighbors.  On Sundays, togged in black gowns on which were ornaments of jet, they worshiped in the Congregational Chapel; and as they stood up in their pew, you saw that Olwen was as the tall trunk of a tree at whose shoulders are the stumps of chopped branches, and that Lisbeth’s body was as a billhook.  Once they journeyed to Aberporth and they laid a wreath of wax flowers and a thick layer of gravel on their mother’s grave.  They tore a gap in the wall which divided their little gardens, and their feet, so often did one visit the other, trod a path from backdoor to backdoor.

Nor was their love confused in the joy that each had in Jennie, for whom sacrifices were made and treasures hoarded.

But Jennie was discontented, puling for what she could not have, mourning her lowly fortune, deploring her spinsterhood.

“Bert and me are getting married Christmas,” she said on a day.

“Hadn’t you better wait a while,” said Olwen.  “You’re young.”

“We talked of that.  Charlie is getting on.  He’s thirty-eight, or will be in January.  We’ll keep on in the shop and have sleep-out vouchers and come here week-ends.”

As the manner is, the mother wept.

“You’ve nothing to worry about,” Lisbeth assuaged her sister.  “He’s steady and respectable.  We must see that she does it in style.  You look after the other arrangements and I’ll see to her clothes.”

She walked through wind and rain and sewed by day and night, without heed of the numbness which was creeping into her limbs; and on the floor of a box she put six jugs which had been owned by the Welshwoman who was Adam’s grandmother, and over the jugs she arrayed the clothes she had made, and over all she put a piece of paper on which she had written, “To my darling niece from her Aunt Lisbeth.”

Jennie examined her aunt’s handiwork and was exceedingly wrathful.

“I shan’t wear them,” she cried.  “She might have spoken to me before she started.  After all, it’s my wedding.  Not hers.  Pwf!  I can buy better jugs in the six-pence-apenny bazaar.”

“Aunt Liz will alter them,” Olwen began.

“I agree with her,” said Charlie.  “Aunt Liz should be more considerate seeing what I have done for her.  But for me she wouldn’t have any money at all.”

Charlie and Jennie stirred their rage and gave utterance to the harshest sayings they could devise about Lisbeth; “and I don’t care if she’s listening outside the door,” said Charlie; “and you can tell her it’s me speaking,” said Jennie.

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Project Gutenberg
My Neighbors from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.