A Great Emergency and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 242 pages of information about A Great Emergency and Other Tales.

A Great Emergency and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 242 pages of information about A Great Emergency and Other Tales.

To break the mystery in which it always pleased Madam Liberality to shroud her small preparations, was to give her dire offence.  As a rule, the others respected this caprice, and would even feign a little more surprise than they felt, upon occasion.  But if during her preparations she had given umbrage to one of the boys, her retreat was soon invaded with cries of—­“Ah!  I see you, making birthday presents out of nothing and a quarter of a yard of ribbon!” Or—­“There you are!  At it again, with two old visiting cards and a ha’porth of flannel!” And only Darling’s tenderest kisses could appease Madam Liberality’s wrath and dry her tears.

She had never made a grander project for Christmas, or had greater difficulty in carrying it out, than in the winter which followed her visit to the seaside.  It was in the house of her cousin that she had first heard of Christmas-trees, and to surprise the others with a Christmas-tree she was quite resolved.  But as the time drew near, poor Madam Liberality was almost in despair about her presents, and this was doubly provoking, because a nice little fir-tree had been promised her.  There was no blinking the fact that “Mother” had been provided with pincushions to repletion.  And most of these made the needles rusty, from being stuffed with damp pig-meal, when the pigs and the pincushions were both being fattened for Christmas.

Madam Liberality sat with her little pale face on her hand and her slate before her, making her calculations.  She wondered what emery-powder cost.  Supposing it to be very cheap, and that she could get a quarter of a pound for “next to nothing,” how useful a present might be made for “Mother” in the shape of an emery pincushion, to counteract the evil effects of the pig-meal ones!  It would be a novelty even to Darling, especially if hers were made by glueing a tiny bag of emery into the mouth of a “boiled fowl cowry.”  Madam Liberality had seen such a pincushion in Podmore’s work-basket.  She had a shell of the kind, and the village carpenter would always let her put a stick into his glue-pot if she went to the shop.

But then, if emery were only a penny a pound, Madam Liberality had not a farthing to buy a quarter of a pound with.  As she thought of this her brow contracted, partly with vexation, and partly because of a jumping pain in a big tooth, which, either from much illness or many medicines, or both, was now but the wreck of what a tooth should be.  But as the toothache grew worse, a new hope dawned upon Madam Liberality.  Perhaps one of her troubles would mend the other!

Being very tender-hearted over children’s sufferings, it was her mother’s custom to bribe rather than coerce when teeth had to be taken out.  The fixed scale of reward was sixpence for a tooth without fangs, and a shilling for one with them.  If pain were any evidence, this tooth certainly had fangs.  But one does not have a tooth taken out if one can avoid it, and Madam Liberality bore bad nights and painful days till they could be endured no longer; and then, because she knew it distressed her mother to be present, she went alone to the doctor’s house to ask him to take out her tooth.

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A Great Emergency and Other Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.