Patchwork
“It does make me feel ashamed, I declare,” said Mrs. Halford; “the idea of Zebulon’s grandma asking Mrs. Lemuel Lawson for a piece of her new cambric for patchwork. You should have seen Mrs. Lawson’s eyes as she answered:
“‘Oh, certainly, madam,’ and offered her the scissors to cut it off herself; and Zebulon’s grandma said: ‘Thanky; I’ll take jest the least tenty piece, lest you mightn’t have a good patron.’ Yes, she said ‘patron.’ Oh, Amelia, it did make me so angry.”
“I don’t think it was anything so very dreadful, Frances,” said the more placid Amelia. “I’m sure your Zebulon’s grandma is a very nice old lady; and who is Mrs. Lawson, I’d like to know?—a flaunting thing, with rouge on her cheeks, not half so respectable as good, clean Grannie Hardbake.”
“Oh, Amelia,” said Mrs. Halford, “can’t you see the difference between people yet? Mrs. Lawson is at the very top of the ladder, has been in the highest society abroad, has photographs of princesses and duchesses that were her bosom friends, and puts up at the St. Bridget Hotel when she’s in New York. You know Cousin Kate is there, and I took grandma to see her, and Mrs. Lawson, who had been shopping, came in to show us her purchases. She’s ever so sociable with Kate; often lunches with her there. Why do you say ‘no doubt,’ and laugh? You’d like everybody to be chimney-sweeps, no doubt. You’ve the spirit of Jack Cade.”
“Gracious! Frances,” cried Amelia; “how you go on! I’m sure I like wealth and style and good birth as well as you do; but though she may wear velvet and diamonds, and board at the St. Bridget, Mrs. Lawson is a vulgar woman; and if she despises Zeb’s grannie—”
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