The Four Million eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 198 pages of information about The Four Million.

The Four Million eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 198 pages of information about The Four Million.

Mutual satisfaction resulted from the agreement.  Schulenberg’s patrons now knew what the food they ate was called even if its nature sometimes puzzled them.  And Sarah had food during a cold, dull winter, which was the main thing with her.

And then the almanac lied, and said that spring had come.  Spring comes when it comes.  The frozen snows of January still lay like adamant in the crosstown streets.  The hand-organs still played “In the Good Old Summertime,” with their December vivacity and expression.  Men began to make thirty-day notes to buy Easter dresses.  Janitors shut off steam.  And when these things happen one may know that the city is still in the clutches of winter.

One afternoon Sarah shivered in her elegant hall bedroom; “house heated; scrupulously clean; conveniences; seen to be appreciated.”  She had no work to do except Schulenberg’s menu cards.  Sarah sat in her squeaky willow rocker, and looked out the window.  The calendar on the wall kept crying to her:  “Springtime is here, Sarah—­springtime is here, I tell you.  Look at me, Sarah, my figures show it.  You’ve got a neat figure yourself, Sarah—­a—­nice springtime figure—­why do you look out the window so sadly?”

Sarah’s room was at the back of the house.  Looking out the window she could see the windowless rear brick wall of the box factory on the next street.  But the wall was clearest crystal; and Sarah was looking down a grassy lane shaded with cherry trees and elms and bordered with raspberry bushes and Cherokee roses.

Spring’s real harbingers are too subtle for the eye and ear.  Some must have the flowering crocus, the wood-starring dogwood, the voice of bluebird—­even so gross a reminder as the farewell handshake of the retiring buckwheat and oyster before they can welcome the Lady in Green to their dull bosoms.  But to old earth’s choicest kin there come straight, sweet messages from his newest bride, telling them they shall be no stepchildren unless they choose to be.

On the previous summer Sarah had gone into the country and loved a farmer.

(In writing your story never hark back thus.  It is bad art, and cripples interest.  Let it march, march.)

Sarah stayed two weeks at Sunnybrook Farm.  There she learned to love old Farmer Franklin’s son Walter.  Farmers have been loved and wedded and turned out to grass in less time.  But young Walter Franklin was a modern agriculturist.  He had a telephone in his cow house, and he could figure up exactly what effect next year’s Canada wheat crop would have on potatoes planted in the dark of the moon.

It was in this shaded and raspberried lane that Walter had wooed and won her.  And together they had sat and woven a crown of dandelions for her hair.  He had immoderately praised the effect of the yellow blossoms against her brown tresses; and she had left the chaplet there, and walked back to the house swinging her straw sailor in her hands.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Four Million from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.