Five little peppers and.., p.1
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Five Little Peppers and How They Grew Complete Text (Charming Classics), page 1

 

Five Little Peppers and How They Grew Complete Text (Charming Classics)
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Five Little Peppers and How They Grew Complete Text (Charming Classics)


  Five Little Peppers and How They Grew

  By Margaret Sidney

  To the Memory of

  MY MOTHER:

  wise in counsel, tender in judgment, and in all charity,

  strong in Christian faith

  and purpose,

  I dedicate, with reverence, this simple book

  Contents

  1 A Home View

  2 Making Happiness for Mamsie

  3 Mamsie’s Birthday

  4 Trouble for the Little Brown House

  5 More Trouble

  6 Hard Days for Polly

  7 The Cloud over the Little Brown House

  8 Joel’s Turn

  9 Sunshine Again

  10 A Threatened Blow

  11 Safe

  12 New Friends

  13 Phronsie Pays a Debt of Gratitude

  14 A Letter to Jasper

  15 Jolly Days

  16 Getting a Christmas for the Little Ones

  17 Christmas Bells!

  18 Education Ahead

  19 Brave Work and the Reward

  20 Polly Is Comforted

  21 Phronsie

  22 Getting Ready for Mamsie and the Boys

  23 Which Treats of a Good Many Matters

  24 Polly’s Dismal Morning

  25 Polly’s Big Bundle

  About the Author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  1

  A Home View

  The little old kitchen had quieted down from the bustle and confusion of midday; and now, with its afternoon manners on, presented a holiday aspect that, as the principal room in the brown house, it was eminently proper it should have. It was just on the edge of the twilight; and the little Peppers, all except Ben, the oldest of the flock, were enjoying a “breathing spell” as their mother called it, which meant some quiet work suitable for the hour. It was all the “breathing spell” they could remember, however, poor things; for times were hard with them now. The father died when Phronsie was a baby and since then Mrs. Pepper had had hard work to scrape together money enough to put bread into her children’s mouths, and to pay the rent of the Little Brown House.

  But she had met life too bravely to be beaten down now. So with a stout heart and a cheery face, she had worked away day after day at making coats, and tailoring and mending of all descriptions; and she had seen with pride that couldn’t be concealed, her noisy, happy brood growing up around her, and filling her heart with comfort, and making the Little Brown House fairly ring with jollity and fun.

  “Poor things!” she would say to herself, “they haven’t had any bringing up; they’ve just scrambled up!” And then she would set her lips together tightly, and fly at her work faster than ever. “I must get learning for ’em some way, but I don’t see how!”

  Once or twice she had thought, “Now the time’s coming!” but it never did: for winter shut in very cold, and it took so much more to feed and warm them that the money went faster than ever. And then, when the way seemed clear again, the store changed hands, so that for a long time she failed to get her usual supply of sacks and coats to make; and that made sad havoc in the quarters and half-dollars laid up as her nest egg. But—“Well, it’ll come some time,” she would say to herself; “because it must!” And so at it again she would fly, brisker than ever.

  “To help mother,” was the great ambition of all the children, older and younger; but in Polly’s and Ben’s souls, the desire grew so overwhelmingly great as to absorb all lesser things. Many and vast were their secret plans, by which they were to astonish her at some future day, which they would only confide—as they did everything else—to one another. For this brother and sister were everything to each other, and stood loyally together through thick and thin.

  Polly was ten, and Ben one year older; and the younger three of the “Five Little Peppers,” as they were always called, looked up to them with the intensest admiration and love. What they failed to do, couldn’t very well be done by any one!

  “O dear!” exclaimed Polly as she sat over in the corner by the window, helping her mother pull out basting threads from a coat she had just finished, and giving an impatient twitch to the sleeve, “I do wish we could ever have any light—just as much as we want!”

  “You don’t need any light to see these threads,” said Mrs. Pepper, winding up hers carefully, as she spoke, on an old spool. “Take care, Polly, you broke that; thread’s dear now.”

  “I couldn’t help it,” said Polly, vexedly; “it snapped; everything’s dear now, it seems to me! I wish we could have—oh! ever an’ ever so many candles; as many as we wanted! I’d light ’em all, so there! and have it light here one night, anyway!”

  “Yes, and go dark all the rest of the year, like as anyway,” observed Mrs. Pepper, stopping to untie a knot. “Folks who do so never have any candles,” she added, sententiously.

  “How many’d you have, Polly?” asked Joel, curiously, laying down his hammer, and regarding her with the utmost anxiety.

  “Oh, two hundred!” said Polly, decidedly. “I’d have two hundred, all in a row!”

  “Two hundred candles!” echoed Joel, in amazement. “My whockety! what a lot!”

  “Don’t say such dreadful words, Joel,” put in Polly, nervously, stopping to pick up her spool of basting thread that was racing away all by itself; “’tisn’t nice.”

  “’Tisn’t worse’n than to wish you’d got things you haven’t,” retorted Joel. “I don’t believe you’d light ’em all at once,” he added, incredulously.

  “Yes, I would, too!” replied Polly, recklessly; “two hundred of ’em, if I had a chance; all at once, so there, Joey Pepper!”

  “Oh,” said little Davie, drawing a long sigh. “Why, ’twould be just like heaven, Polly! but wouldn’t it cost money, though!”

  “I don’t care,” said Polly, giving a flounce in her chair, which snapped another thread; “O dear me! I didn’t mean to, mammy; well, I wouldn’t care how much money it cost, we’d have as much light as we wanted, for once; so!”

  “Goodness!” said Mrs. Pepper, “you’d have the house afire! Two hundred candles! who ever heard of such a thing!”

  “Would they burn?” asked Phronsie, anxiously, getting up from the floor where she was crouching with David, overseeing Joel nail on the cover of an old box; and going to Polly’s side she awaited her answer patiently.

  “Burn?” said Polly. “There, that’s done now, mamsie dear!” And she put the coat, with a last little pat, into her mother’s lap. “I guess they would, Phronsie, pet.” And Polly caught up the little girl, and spun round and round the old kitchen till they were both glad to stop.

  “Then,” said Phronsie, as Polly put her down and stood breathless after her last glorious spin, “I do so wish we might, Polly; oh, just this very one minute!” And Phronsie clasped her fat little hands in rapture at the thought.

  “Well,” said Polly, giving a look up at the old clock in the corner; “goodness me! it’s half-past five; and ’most time for Ben to come home!”

  Away she flew to get supper. So for the next few moments nothing was heard but the pulling out of the old table into the middle of the floor, the laying of the cloth, and all the other bustle attendant upon the getting ready for Ben. Polly went skipping around, cutting the bread, and bringing dishes; only stopping long enough to fling some scraps of reassuring nonsense to the two boys, who were thoroughly dismayed at being obliged to remove their traps into a corner.

  Phronsie still stood just where Polly left her. Two hundred candles! oh! what could it mean! She gazed up to the old beams overhead, and around the dingy walls, and to the old black stove with the fire nearly out, and then over everything the kitchen contained, trying to think how it would seem. To have it bright and winsome and warm! to suit Polly—“Oh!” she screamed.

  “Goodness!” cried Polly, taking her head out of the old cupboard in the corner, “how you scared me, Phronsie!”

  “Would they never go out?” asked the child gravely, still standing where Polly left her.

  “What?” asked Polly, stopping with a dish of cold potatoes in her hand. “What, Phronsie?”

  “Why, the candles,” said the child, “the ever-an’-ever so many pretty lights!”

  “Oh, my senses!” cried Polly, with a little laugh, “haven’t you forgotten that! Yes—no, that is, Phronsie, if we could have ’em at all, we wouldn’t ever let ’em go out!”

  “Not once?” asked Phronsie, coming up to Polly with a little skip, and nearly upsetting her, potatoes and all—“not once, Polly, truly?”

  “No, not forever-an’-ever,” said Polly; “take care, Phronsie! there goes a potato; no, we’d keep ’em always!”

  “No, you don’t want to,” said Mrs. Pepper, coming out of the bedroom in time to catch the last words; “they won’t be good to-morrow; better have them to-night, Polly.”

  “Ma’am!” said Polly, setting down her potato-dish on the table, and staring at her mother with all her might—“have what, mother?”

  “Why, the potatoes, to be sure,” replied Mrs. Pepper; “didn’t you say you better keep ’em, child?”

  “’Twasn’t potatoes—at all,” said Polly, with a little gasp; “’twas—O dear me! here’s Ben!” for the door opened, and Phronsie, with a scream of delight, bounded int
o Ben’s arms.

  “It’s just jolly,” said Ben, coming in, his chubby face all aglow, and his big blue eyes shining so