racing away with her booty. That lamented pudding-bag
string is but a type of strings in general. They
are fleeting possessions, always hiding, always misplaced,
never in order. You fit up a string-drawer, perhaps,
with a fine assortment, and pride yourself upon its
nice arrangement. Go to it a week after, and
see if you can find one ball where you left it!
Can you lay your hand upon a single piece that you
want? No, indeed! Twine is considered common
property. If any one has a use for it, he takes
it without leave or license, without even inquiring
who is the owner, and you may be sure he will never
bring any of it back again. O the misery endured
for the want of an errant piece of twine, when you
are in a nervous hurry to do up a parcel, some one
waiting at the door meanwhile! After an immense
deal of pains, you have it at last folded to your
liking, with every corner squared and even, every wrinkle
smoothed. Then, clasping tightly with one hand
the stiff wrapper, you search distractedly with the
other for a ball of twine, which you distinctly remember
tossing into the paper-drawer only the day before.
In vain you surround yourself with newspaper and brown
paper, and useless rubbish, tumbling your whole drawer
into confusion. In vain you relinquish your nicely
packed parcel, and see its contents scattered in all
directions. In vain you grumble and scold.
The ball is not forthcoming. Your little brother
has seized it to fly his kite, or your sister is even
now tying up her trailing morning-glories, or sweet
peas, with the stolen booty. You plunge your hand
exploringly into the drawer, and bring up a long roll
wound thickly with twine of all kinds and colors.
Your eyes sparkle at the prize; but, alas! the first
energetic pull leaves in your hand a piece about four
inches long, and a quantity of dangling ends and rough
knots convince you that you have nothing to hope in
that quarter. A second plunge brings up a handful
of odds and ends, strong pieces clumsy and rough, coarse
red quill-cord, delicate two-colored bits far too short,
cotton twine breaking at a touch, fine long pieces
hopelessly tangled together, so that not even an end
is visible. The more you twitch at the loops,
the more desperate is the snarl. Poor mortal!
Your pride gives way before the urgency of haste.
You send off your nice packet miserably tied together
by two kinds of twine.
All the rest of the day you are tormented by a superfluity of the very thing you needed so much. It was impossible to get it when you wanted it; but now it is pertinaciously in your way when you do not want it. You almost break your neck tripping over a long, firm cord, which proves to be a pair of reins left hanging on a chair by some careless urchin. The carpet and furniture are strewed with long, straggling pieces of packthread. You find a white end dangling conspicuously from your waistcoat pocket. As you walk the streets you see twine flying from fences, or lying useless on the sidewalk,