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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69532 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69532)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of What luck!, by Abbie Farwell Brown
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: What luck!
- A study in opposites
-
-Author: Abbie Farwell Brown
-
-Release Date: December 13, 2022 [eBook #69532]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Bob Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT LUCK! ***
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note
-
-Italic text displayed as: _italic_
-
-
-
-
- WHAT LUCK!
-
-[Illustration: Kids with nurses]
-
-
-
-
- WHAT LUCK!
-
- A STUDY IN OPPOSITES
-
- BY
- ABBIE FARWELL BROWN
-
-
- MASSACHUSETTS CHARITABLE EYE AND
- EAR INFIRMARY
- BOSTON
-
-
- ISSUED _for private distribution only by
- the_ MASSACHUSETTS CHARITABLE EYE
- AND EAR INFIRMARY _and presented to
- their friends with their compliments_
-
- 1827-1920
-
-
-
-
- WHAT LUCK!
-
-
-Side by side on the crowded waiting bench of the Infirmary sat two
-women, each with a child at her elbow, who had been eyeing one
-another furtively. They were silently criticizing in different
-languages.
-
-“Her mourning must have cost much money!” thought Mrs. Rogazrovitch,
-enviously, looking down at her own painful saffron coat.
-
-“Cielo! What a terrible hat!” mused the other woman, considering the
-purple velvet creation that crowned the frowzy locks of her neighbor.
-“She can have no care to hold the love of her husband!” And she wiped
-a tear with her black-bordered handkerchief.
-
-The eyes of little Stephanie, who stood at the knee of Mrs.
-Rogazrovitch, were red and swollen; but not with weeping. Even the
-subdued light of the waiting-room made her squint horribly, and she
-kept her eyes turned from the window. This brought in direct line
-her neighbor, the pale, emaciated little boy at the other woman’s
-side. Stephanie was five; the boy seemed older. He hung his head and
-never looked up. Stephanie was ready to make friends, for she had
-grown tired of the long wait, but Paolo’s mother was in the way. She
-was continually bending over the boy, smoothing his hair or kissing
-his forehead, in what seemed to Stephanie a very silly fashion.
-Stephanie’s mother never kissed her at all.
-
-Gradually Stephanie edged nearer. “Hello!” she said in a stage
-whisper suited to the solemn occasion. “Is your eyes sick, too?”
-
-The boy stared, gave a blinking glance from big, brown eyes, and
-nodded.
-
-“They look red, like mine,—only worse,” commented Stephanie, after
-this revealing look. “But they will fix them all right, if we’re
-lucky. The lady said so.” Again the boy glanced at her pitifully, but
-said nothing.
-
-“Do you go to Kindergarten?” asked Stephanie. The boy shook his head.
-“I don’t go nowhere,” he said.
-
-“I guess you are too big for Kindergarten. Oh, it’s the grandest
-place!” went on Stephanie ecstatically. “But I had to stop when my
-eyes got sick.—What makes your mother wear those black clothes? I
-hate black clothes.”
-
-“My father died,” said Paolo solemnly.
-
-“My father ran off,” volunteered Stephanie. “I think he went to be a
-soldier. Mrs. Raftery says it was because—”
-
-“Stephanie! You shut up!” Mrs. Rogazrovitch jerked her by the arm.
-The attendant was saying something.
-
-“Eighty-six!” he repeated. It was the number on the red ticket that
-Mrs. Rogazrovitch clutched in not over-clean fingers.
-
-“Come on, you Stephanie!” snapped the mother. And the slatternly
-woman with the curly-haired child stepped forward to the table.
-
-Yes; there was no doubt about it. Stephanie was a case of that
-tubercular eye trouble which affects so many children of the poor;
-a trouble caused by constitutional weakness, lack of care and of
-wholesome food. Unless properly treated Stephanie would become
-partially or wholly blind some day. And the pretty blue eyes would
-never play their part in a world where all the eyes are needed. But
-Stephanie was in one respect luckier than Paolo, who still waited,
-encircled by his affectionate mother’s arm. Strange negative “luck”
-that consisted in not being _too-much_ loved by any one!
-
-“You’d better leave her here,” said the Doctor, after he had examined
-the poor little eyes.
-
-The woman blinked. “How long must she to stay?” she asked cautiously.
-
-“Well, maybe three weeks; it’s an average case, I should say. We’ll
-take the best care of her,” he added kindly. But Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-was not worrying as he surmised.
-
-“I don’ care. But will she grow well forever?” she asked. “She not be
-blind, eh?”
-
-“She can be cured if you keep up the treatment as we tell you, after
-she goes home. You must bring her back for examination; give her milk
-and wholesome food, well cooked,—no doughnuts and candy; and,”—the
-doctor referred to Stephanie’s card,—“clean up your house and keep it
-in better condition. We shall keep an eye on Stephanie. And if you
-can’t do all this, we must find a better home for her.”
-
-The woman looked sulky. “How much it costs to keep in the Hospital?”
-she asked. She was told that the usual charge was seventeen dollars
-and a half for a week, but that if she could not afford so much, the
-Superintendent would probably arrange to let her pay what she could.
-
-“I can’t to pay anything for sick child!” exclaimed the woman. “I can
-just to pay rent and get some food. Two years ago my man goes off. I
-don’ know. Maybe he’s fighting; but I don’ get nothing.”
-
-“That’s all right,” said the Doctor. “You go see the Superintendent.
-We’ll look after Stephanie anyway.—By the way, will you sign this
-paper giving us permission to fix her adenoids and tonsils while she
-is here? I daresay you don’t care?”
-
-“No; _I_ don’ care,” said the woman casually, with the air of one
-conferring a favor.
-
-Of course she did not realize how great a privilege Stephanie was
-getting. Few citizens know that the Massachusetts Eye and Ear
-Infirmary is the only Hospital in the city where a child with a
-trouble like Stephanie’s would be so taken in and cared for. All such
-cases are referred to the Infirmary. How should Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-guess that the kind hands which were to care for the child and the
-kind faces surrounding her belonged to the best specialists and the
-best nurses anywhere to be found? She only knew that for the time
-being a burden was lifted. And this was Stephanie’s advantage over
-Paolo, whose mother loved him too fatuously to give him his only
-chance.
-
-“Eighty-seven!” called the attendant, after Stephanie and her mother
-had passed on. It was Paolo’s turn.
-
-“She says,—she could not spare me; she loves me too much. And
-besides, my father would not let her,” the boy answered a question in
-a hollow voice. “He was very sick, and last week he died. He would
-not let me be in a Hospital.” Helplessly he raised to the doctor eyes
-which should have been very beautiful; the eyes of a poet or painter.
-
-“But why then did not your mother bring you back for treatment, as I
-told her?” asked the doctor again. The woman began to weep. “She says
-she could not leave my father,” interpreted the boy. “She loved him
-very much. Once she did try to come here with me, after the Visitor
-called. But she could not find the way. She says her head is sick.
-And she lost her ring. That made her very sad indeed.”
-
-“Did she give you the medicine regularly?”
-
-The boy hesitated. “Sometimes,” he said; “when the Visitor came. I
-think my mother forgot; she was so sad about my father. She sat in a
-chair and rocked all day. She is very kind and loving. She held me on
-her lap and cried, and cried.”
-
-The Doctor frowned. “Is there any one here who can speak Italian?”
-he called out to the waiting crowd. A man stepped forward, while the
-Doctor sent Paolo aside. “Tell her, please, that unless she brings
-Paolo here regularly, and gives him the medicine every day, I will
-not answer for the consequences.—Do you see that boy over there?” The
-Doctor indicated a tiny fellow with fine Greek features, whose mother
-was crying over him in the corner. “Well; that woman would not leave
-him in our care, because she was too obstinate. And although she
-lives close by, she would not take the time and trouble to bring him
-in for treatment. So now he will lose the sight of one eye at least.
-Tell Mrs. Valentino that Paolo’s eyes are very bad, and he will fare
-worse than that boy, unless she does as I say.”
-
-The woman burst into hysterical grief, and clasped Paolo
-passionately, mumbling endearing syllables in her musical tongue. The
-boy’s brown eyes filled too, and he tried to comfort her. Pitying
-herself for her many troubles, the mother led Paolo away.
-
-“She will not come back,” thought the Doctor. “I see it in her face.
-The Social Service Department will have to get busy.”
-
-The Social Service Department of the Infirmary did get busy, as in
-all such cases. When Paolo did not reappear, they went to look him
-up. The Visitor coaxed and re-urged the dazed, inefficient mother.
-But it was hopeless. Finally the case was reported to the proper
-authorities. But already Paolo’s mother had loved him to death.
-Stephanie was not to see her little neighbor again.
-
-Meanwhile, for Stephanie herself there had begun what was—apart from
-a little discomfort at the beginning—the happiest three weeks she
-had ever known. To begin with, her poor ragged clothes were taken
-away, and she had a lovely warm bath in a tub; in itself a novel
-experience. With her yellow curls nicely brushed, sweet and clean
-from top to toe, she was then tucked away in a little white cot all
-by herself,—this also was an unheard-of luxury!—in a sunny, airy room
-where other clean children were playing about like a happy family.
-At first poor little Stephanie was too miserable to do more than
-snuggle into the soft, sweet pillow, and allow herself sulkily to
-be fed with easily swallowed things. A kind Voice, associated with
-strong and gentle hands, attended to her wants. But Stephanie slept
-most of the time; dreaming of happy faces, merry laughter, and feet
-running about a Kindergarten.
-
-After two days of existing as a mere little mollusc, one morning
-Stephanie sat up and began to take notice. A beautiful white-clad
-Being put her into a neat cotton frock and pinafore. Only Stephanie’s
-scarred shoes were left to remind her of the home that seemed
-mercifully far away. They tied a shade over her eyes, to help the
-squint, and for the first time she looked around with interest at the
-nursery.
-
-What a pleasant place it was! Stephanie had never seen anything
-nearly so beautiful; except the Kindergarten. Poor little Stephanie!
-It had been hard luck to give up the Kindergarten, just when she was
-growing so happy there. The school nurse had seen that she must stop.
-But—there was a rose on the table here, too! A red rose! And children
-playing games, just like a real kindergarten! But these children were
-not all of Stephanie’s age. Some were bigger; some much littler. Why,
-in the very next cot to her lay a wee baby, sucking a bottle. Nurse
-said its mother was sick in another room. Stephanie thought this baby
-would be nicer than a doll to play with. And oh, _oh_! Over there
-was a little black live doll, with eyes that rolled and blinked, and
-real hair standing up all over her head; and a big red bow! Stephanie
-grinned at the doll; and oh, _oh_! The doll grinned back! Stephanie
-waved her arms up and down. And the funny doll stretched her mouth
-in white-toothed glee, and did just what Stephanie did. This was
-better even than Kindergarten!
-
-What else was there in the lovely room? Stephanie looked around.
-There were nine little beds against the walls, and as many more in
-the next ward, as she soon learned when she began to investigate.
-Most of the beds were empty in the daytime. Across the room from
-Stephanie a big boy sat up among pillows, reading. He laughed when
-Nurse told him a funny story, but could only whisper in reply,
-holding on to his throat. Stephanie understood perfectly, and was
-very sorry for poor Tom. She was sorrier still when dinner-time came;
-when she and the other dressed children gathered about little low
-tables, with bibs on. Soup was all that poor Tom could swallow. But
-Stephanie could eat fish, and potato; and there was a nice pudding,
-too! Poor Tom! Stephanie ate ravenously, after her two days’ fast.
-No puddings ever happened in the home she had left.
-
-The twenty little children were too busy eating to talk. “More bread
-and butter? More milk? Yes, indeed. All you want.” Just think;
-Stephanie could have all the milk she wanted! That had never happened
-before in her life. She thought she must be in Heaven. The children
-were of all shades and manners,—perhaps that was like Heaven, too;
-who knows? Most of them wore curious foreign names, but they all
-spoke English, after a fashion. Some of them were just learning the
-ways of good Americans at the table and elsewhere. Frank, who sat
-next Stephanie, was a little pig. He made faces, spilled his milk
-and scattered his crumbs, so that She,—the Angel in white,—scolded
-him, and made him sit by himself at another table, till he should be
-more careful.
-
-But Stephanie liked John, with the big grey eyes, who was a little
-gentleman; though he wore such a funny thing like a bonnet on his
-head,—and he a big boy of eight! Stephanie loved at first sight
-Dottie Dimple with the pink cheeks and one lovely blue eye. She cried
-when John explained that one day Dottie had poked a pair of scissors
-into the other eye, so that it would never see any more.
-
-Then there was Sammy, with the funny face and big nose, who looked
-like a little old man in a baby’s dress. Sammy could not hear when
-you spoke to him.—But mostly the children forgot all about eyes and
-ears between dressing-times, they had so much to make them happy.
-
-After dinner the children put back their chairs nicely, and then the
-victrola played lovely music. It was pleasant to see all the little
-children stand at salute when they heard the Star-Spangled Banner.
-Even the deaf ones did as they saw the others do.
-
-On sunny days they played out on the balcony of the ward below. It
-was a pity that they had no balcony of their own, leading from the
-nursery. Greatly it is needed. But it will come, no doubt, with a
-great many other needed things, when more people know about the
-Infirmary on Charles Street, and the good luck it brings to little
-children and big; when more parents, reading the story of Paolo,
-Stephanie, and these others, will understand that what helps such
-children protects the health of the whole community, including their
-own little ones.
-
-The ounce of prevention has gone up in the scale of modern values. It
-is worth not pounds but _tons_ of possible cure. Every child kept out
-of an asylum is a civic asset. Every penny spent in the prevention
-of blindness or deafness is an investment placed on interest a
-thousandfold.
-
-Those were wonderful days for babies like Stephanie who had seen too
-little luck in their lives. Breakfast at half past six; a luncheon of
-fruit and milk at nine; dinner at eleven, and supper at four. All the
-bread and butter a child could eat; all the milk she wished to drink.
-And most of the children drank a quart of milk every day. No wonder
-Stephanie began to be less pale and thin before the nurse’s eyes.
-No wonder her eyes began to be better almost directly. Soon she was
-running and racing about the nursery among the liveliest of them all.
-
-One day a visitor came to talk for a minute with the nurse. She had
-been to the clinic, and after that they had given her this extra
-privilege. To Stephanie this Person seemed a beautiful grown-up
-lady. But Mamie was really only a nice girl of sixteen, with happy,
-sunburned face and shining brown eyes. Stephanie squirmed with
-delight when Mamie took her up on her lap while she talked with Nurse.
-
-“She has eyes like mine were,” said Mamie in an aside to the nurse.
-But Stephanie heard, and hoped. Would her grey-blue eyes ever get big
-and brown like this nice Person’s, she wondered?
-
-“Oh, sure! I’m all right now,” said the visitor, in answer to a
-question. “They pronounced me O. K. Just look how fat and brown I
-am. Say, it don’t seem possible. Why, I was sicker than Stephanie
-here when I came, wasn’t I?” The nurse assented. “I’ll never forget
-how I felt, working in the store: my eyes all swollen and weepy. I
-was down and out, all right. For, of course, I haven’t a relation on
-God’s earth. And with my salary,—how could I go to a specialist?
-Then a lady gave me a hunch about this Infirmary. So here I came; and
-everybody was mighty good to me. You know, don’t you, Dearie?” She
-caught Stephanie up close.
-
-“Yes!” affirmed Stephanie, snuggling.
-
-“I came here all in,” Mamie went on. “But what a difference when I
-left! Just to think of going to the country for a rest, instead of
-right back to the store. And nothing to pay for it all, either. Some
-dream!”
-
-“Did you have a good time in the country?” asked the nurse
-sympathetically.
-
-“I’ll say so!” cried Mamie. “I just lived out doors four solid weeks,
-sitting on the piazza or walking in the garden, like a lady. They
-made me lie down to rest after dinner. Rest! Well; the chief thing
-I had to do to tire me was _eat_! And such eats! Um! Eggs and milk
-between meals, too. Say, the girls at the store will sure think I’m
-kidding when I tell them about it.”
-
-“You’ll be sure to come back here, as the Doctor said?” charged the
-nurse. “You know, you will have to be careful still.”
-
-“You bet I’ll be careful!” said Mamie earnestly. “I am not going to
-take any chances. The Doctor made it plain enough what I’ve got to
-do. I’ll keep my eyes, thanks, now I’ve got ’em back.”
-
-The trouble that Stephanie and Paolo and Mamie had cannot certainly
-be cured, once for all. It is likely to recur, if care is relaxed;
-and each time it makes a worse scar on the eye, with increased
-handicaps. The hardest part of the follow-up work of the Infirmary is
-to make the parents understand this, and to watch patiently.
-
-Three weeks in a country home, at a cost of five dollars a week,
-following three weeks’ treatment at the Eye and Ear Infirmary, had
-stood between Mamie and blindness. The Infirmary has an emergency
-fund, all too inadequate, for such cases.
-
-“What is the Country?” asked Stephanie, when Mamie had gone. “Is it
-My Country-Tiz?” She had an idea that it might have something to
-do with a relative of the Star Spangled Banner. “Shall I have to
-_salute_ it?”
-
-“Bless you!” cried the nurse. “I guess you will want to salute it,
-when you see it for the first time!”
-
-On the last Sunday of her stay Stephanie had a surprise. The Doctor
-had pronounced her eyes so much better that she could leave the
-following week. Plump, and rosy, and bright-eyed, Stephanie was as
-pretty a little girl as one could wish to see. To be sure there was a
-fly in her ointment. The Doctor had not succeeded in turning her eyes
-into big brown ones like Mamie’s, as Stephanie had suggested. But
-nurse assured her that blue eyes would probably wear better in the
-long run.
-
-Stephanie was playing peacefully by herself, while the other children
-visited with their parents, during the one hour allowed for this
-every Sunday.
-
-“Here’s a visitor to see you, Stephanie,” said the nurse. And in
-walked Mrs. Rogazrovitch, saffron coat, purple hat, and all. She was
-a little cleaner than usual; there was more black upon her boots than
-upon her hands. But she was still a striking contrast to Hospital
-standards. Stephanie greeted her without enthusiasm. Indeed, when she
-spied the familiar face, she shrank back to the skirts of Nurse, with
-a little gasp that told more than words. The mother flushed. Other
-mothers were watching.
-
-“Well, Stephanie!” she cried in astonishment mingled with pride. “You
-do look good! Ain’t ye glad to see me, eh?” Still Stephanie held
-back. “Your eyes get well, Stephanie? You’ll be coming home soon,
-yes?” But Stephanie pouted and kicked the floor with her toe. Mrs.
-Rogazrovitch turned to the nurse. The latter shook her head dubiously.
-
-“Have you fixed up your house as the Doctor said? You know she will
-have to be kept clean, and sleep in an airy room. And you’ll have to
-feed her right and bring her here often for examination.”
-
-The mother twisted uneasily. “I’ll fix the house up yet,” she
-promised. “I ain’t had time, but I will.” Two weeks alone in the
-childless tenement had put a new value on Stephanie. And the pretty,
-bright-eyed child seemed no longer a mere burden. “I’ll come back for
-you next week,” she finished, touching Stephanie’s curls with the
-first real tenderness she had ever shown. “Good bye, Stephanie.”
-
-But at the end of her three weeks Stephanie did not go home, though
-her eyes no longer needed Hospital care. When Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-appeared, ready to reclaim her child, she was staggered with the
-counter-suggestion that Stephanie should go to the sea-shore for a
-month.
-
-“Stephanie needs a vacation,” was the report. “You must not deprive
-her of the chance. It may keep her from having a relapse. Every
-relapse is dangerous. And the month will give you time to fix up your
-house and get it ready for such a nice little girl to live in.”
-
-The desired result came not without argument. For now Mrs.
-Rogazrovitch was set upon having her pretty child back again. But
-luckily she was not deaf to reason, as Mrs. Valentino had been. And
-the assurance that Stephanie would receive four weeks’ board in
-the country free had some weight in the matter. Reluctantly she
-consented that Stephanie should go. So the very week that ushered
-poor little Paolo into a still further country, from which there
-is no return, saw Stephanie saluting the wonders of green fields,
-flowers, and ocean shore.
-
-Her mother returned with a slow step to the empty tenement. Mrs.
-Raftery, next door, was consumed with curiosity, when with her head
-out of window she spied the saffron coat and purple hat entering
-dejectedly the door below, unaccompanied.
-
-“Why, where’s Stephanie?” she cried. “I thought you was afther goin’
-to fetch home the child.”
-
-The purple hat rose to the occasion with a jerk. “Stephanie is going
-for a vacation to the sea-shore,” said Mrs. Rogazrovitch with dignity.
-
-“Glory be!” ejaculated Mrs. Raftery, pulling in her head and sinking
-into a chair. The news, swiftly imparted, raised considerably the
-standing of Mrs. Rogazrovitch in that neighborhood.
-
-Presently Stephanie’s luck began to take another turn for the better;
-for as soon as she was well out of reach on the Island, Stephanie’s
-mother began to repent that she had let her go so easily. Others
-might covet the now precious possession. She began to suspect a
-conspiracy to keep Stephanie permanently exiled. There had been
-conditions set upon her return. For the first time Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-began to consider seriously the instructions she had received about
-hygiene and sanitation.
-
-One morning the neighbors were surprised by an unwonted activity in
-the fourth floor back. Clouds of dust, followed by the smell of soap,
-issued from the long unopened windows. Dingy articles were banged
-viciously and hung out to imbibe the unaccustomed sun. That week was
-a perpetual wash-day. Mrs. Raftery had her theory. At last she could
-stand the suspense no longer, but put her theory squarely to the
-test, with a question.
-
-“I’m making ready for Stephanie’s home-coming,” answered Mrs.
-Rogazrovitch tartly. “What do you suppose, anyhow?”
-
-“Blessed Saints!” ejaculated Mrs. Raftery. “I thought you was goin’
-to take one lodger at least, the way you’re makin’ everything so
-grand an’ tidy. La sakes! An’ it’s only for Stephanie!”
-
-But it was her neighbor’s next remark that smote Mrs. Raftery nearly
-dumb. It was made with some hesitation. “Will you—tell me—about
-making—soup?—I want to learn to cook.”
-
-When she could recover Mrs. Raftery gasped, “Cookin’, is it? Hivenly
-powers! Why, I’ll show ye meself. I’ve been a cook all my life, till
-this lameness took me. And sure, there’s a diet kitchen around the
-corner, I’m told, where they’ll give ye points.”
-
-It was this repeated conversation that made the neighborhood
-hysterical. Mrs. Rogazrovitch cleaning house! Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-learning to cook!
-
-“It’s a changed craytur she is entirely!” exclaimed Mrs. Raftery,
-to her gossip. “An’ it’s a changed home into which Stephanie will
-be comin’ from her vacation at the sea-shore. It’s small blame to
-her man that he ran away from that home two years ago, I’m thinkin’.
-But the woman will have no trouble at all gettin’ a lodger these
-days, the way her rooms be lookin’ so nice and dacint. Say, she’s
-been afther tellin’ me that my childher ought to have more fresh
-air o’ nights! And doughnuts, she says, is not healthy for infants.
-The knowingness of her! Sure, they’ll soon be afther makin’ Mrs.
-Rogazrovitch the Prisidint of the Improvemint Society, the way she’s
-gettin’ intelligint an’ forthcomin’. An’ she with a child visitin’ at
-the sea-shore!”
-
-So when Corporal Rogazrovitch, newly discharged, returned to take a
-secret reconnaissance of the home which he had deserted for the sake
-of his Country,—and for his own peace of mind,—he heard and saw such
-changes as made him decide not to re-enlist. This was another bit of
-luck for Stephanie; if you look at it from the right angle.
-
-And then,—there was the Kindergarten, too, for to-morrow!
-
-There was to be no anti-climax after all in Stephanie’s home-coming.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
- pg 20 Added hyphen to: heard the Star Spangled
-
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-<!DOCTYPE html>
-<html lang="en">
-<head>
- <meta charset="UTF-8">
- <title>
- What Luck!, by Abbie Farwell Brown—A Project Gutenberg eBook
- </title>
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-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of What luck!, by Abbie Farwell Brown</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: What luck!</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A study in opposites</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Abbie Farwell Brown</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: December 13, 2022 [eBook #69532]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Bob Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT LUCK! ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 35%">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover">
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1 class="nobreak" id="WHAT_LUCK">WHAT LUCK!</h1>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i002" style="max-width: 87em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i002.jpg" alt="">
- <div class="caption"></div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center fs150">WHAT LUCK!</p>
-</div>
-<p class="center fs120">A STUDY IN OPPOSITES<br>
-<br></p>
-<p class="center fs80">BY</p>
-<p class="center fs120">ABBIE FARWELL BROWN</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<p class="center">MASSACHUSETTS CHARITABLE EYE AND<br>
-EAR INFIRMARY<br>
-BOSTON<br>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span style="margin-left: 5em;"><span class="smcap">Issued</span> <em>for private distribution only by</em></span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: 7em;"><em>the</em> <span class="smcap">Massachusetts Charitable Eye</span></span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: 7em;"><span class="smcap">and Ear Infirmary</span> <em>and presented to</em></span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: 7em;"><em>their friends with their compliments</em></span></p>
-<p class="center">1827-1920</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="WHAT_LUCK3">WHAT LUCK!</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p class="drop-cap">Side by side on the crowded waiting
-bench of the Infirmary sat two
-women, each with a child at her
-elbow, who had been eyeing one another
-furtively. They were silently criticizing
-in different languages.</p>
-
-<p>“Her mourning must have cost much
-money!” thought Mrs. Rogazrovitch, enviously,
-looking down at her own painful
-saffron coat.</p>
-
-<p>“Cielo! What a terrible hat!” mused
-the other woman, considering the purple
-velvet creation that crowned the frowzy
-locks of her neighbor. “She can have no
-care to hold the love of her husband!”
-And she wiped a tear with her black-bordered
-handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of little Stephanie, who stood
-at the knee of Mrs. Rogazrovitch, were red
-and swollen; but not with weeping. Even
-the subdued light of the waiting-room
-made her squint horribly, and she kept
-her eyes turned from the window. This
-brought in direct line her neighbor, the
-pale, emaciated little boy at the other
-woman’s side. Stephanie was five; the
-boy seemed older. He hung his head and
-never looked up. Stephanie was ready to
-make friends, for she had grown tired
-of the long wait, but Paolo’s mother was
-in the way. She was continually bending
-over the boy, smoothing his hair or
-kissing his forehead, in what seemed to
-Stephanie a very silly fashion. Stephanie’s
-mother never kissed her at all.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually Stephanie edged nearer.
-“Hello!” she said in a stage whisper
-suited to the solemn occasion. “Is your
-eyes sick, too?”</p>
-
-<p>The boy stared, gave a blinking glance
-from big, brown eyes, and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“They look red, like mine,—only
-worse,” commented Stephanie, after this
-revealing look. “But they will fix them
-all right, if we’re lucky. The lady said
-so.” Again the boy glanced at her pitifully,
-but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you go to Kindergarten?” asked
-Stephanie. The boy shook his head. “I
-don’t go nowhere,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you are too big for Kindergarten.
-Oh, it’s the grandest place!”
-went on Stephanie ecstatically. “But I
-had to stop when my eyes got sick.—What
-makes your mother wear those black
-clothes? I hate black clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“My father died,” said Paolo solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>“My father ran off,” volunteered
-Stephanie. “I think he went to be a soldier.
-Mrs. Raftery says it was because—”</p>
-
-<p>“Stephanie! You shut up!” Mrs.
-Rogazrovitch jerked her by the arm. The
-attendant was saying something.</p>
-
-<p>“Eighty-six!” he repeated. It was the
-number on the red ticket that Mrs.
-Rogazrovitch clutched in not over-clean
-fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, you Stephanie!” snapped the
-mother. And the slatternly woman with
-the curly-haired child stepped forward to
-the table.</p>
-
-<p>Yes; there was no doubt about it.
-Stephanie was a case of that tubercular eye
-trouble which affects so many children of
-the poor; a trouble caused by constitutional
-weakness, lack of care and of wholesome
-food. Unless properly treated
-Stephanie would become partially or
-wholly blind some day. And the pretty
-blue eyes would never play their part in a
-world where all the eyes are needed. But
-Stephanie was in one respect luckier than
-Paolo, who still waited, encircled by his
-affectionate mother’s arm. Strange negative
-“luck” that consisted in not being
-<em>too-much</em> loved by any one!</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better leave her here,” said the
-Doctor, after he had examined the poor
-little eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The woman blinked. “How long must
-she to stay?” she asked cautiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe three weeks; it’s an average
-case, I should say. We’ll take the
-best care of her,” he added kindly. But
-Mrs. Rogazrovitch was not worrying as
-he surmised.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’ care. But will she grow well
-forever?” she asked. “She not be blind,
-eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“She can be cured if you keep up the
-treatment as we tell you, after she goes
-home. You must bring her back for examination;
-give her milk and wholesome
-food, well cooked,—no doughnuts and
-candy; and,”—the doctor referred to
-Stephanie’s card,—“clean up your house
-and keep it in better condition. We shall
-keep an eye on Stephanie. And if you
-can’t do all this, we must find a better
-home for her.”</p>
-
-<p>The woman looked sulky. “How much
-it costs to keep in the Hospital?” she
-asked. She was told that the usual
-charge was seventeen dollars and a half for
-a week, but that if she could not afford so
-much, the Superintendent would probably
-arrange to let her pay what she could.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t to pay anything for sick
-child!” exclaimed the woman. “I can
-just to pay rent and get some food. Two
-years ago my man goes off. I don’ know.
-Maybe he’s fighting; but I don’ get nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” said the Doctor.
-“You go see the Superintendent. We’ll
-look after Stephanie anyway.—By the
-way, will you sign this paper giving us
-permission to fix her adenoids and tonsils
-while she is here? I daresay you don’t
-care?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; <em>I</em> don’ care,” said the woman
-casually, with the air of one conferring a
-favor.</p>
-
-<p>Of course she did not realize how great
-a privilege Stephanie was getting. Few
-citizens know that the Massachusetts Eye
-and Ear Infirmary is the only Hospital in
-the city where a child with a trouble like
-Stephanie’s would be so taken in and
-cared for. All such cases are referred to
-the Infirmary. How should Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-guess that the kind hands which
-were to care for the child and the kind
-faces surrounding her belonged to the best
-specialists and the best nurses anywhere
-to be found? She only knew that for the
-time being a burden was lifted. And this
-was Stephanie’s advantage over Paolo,
-whose mother loved him too fatuously to
-give him his only chance.</p>
-
-<p>“Eighty-seven!” called the attendant,
-after Stephanie and her mother had
-passed on. It was Paolo’s turn.</p>
-
-<p>“She says,—she could not spare me; she
-loves me too much. And besides, my
-father would not let her,” the boy answered
-a question in a hollow voice. “He
-was very sick, and last week he died. He
-would not let me be in a Hospital.”
-Helplessly he raised to the doctor eyes
-which should have been very beautiful;
-the eyes of a poet or painter.</p>
-
-<p>“But why then did not your mother
-bring you back for treatment, as I told
-her?” asked the doctor again. The
-woman began to weep. “She says she
-could not leave my father,” interpreted
-the boy. “She loved him very much.
-Once she did try to come here with me,
-after the Visitor called. But she could
-not find the way. She says her head is
-sick. And she lost her ring. That made
-her very sad indeed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did she give you the medicine regularly?”</p>
-
-<p>The boy hesitated. “Sometimes,” he
-said; “when the Visitor came. I think
-my mother forgot; she was so sad about my
-father. She sat in a chair and rocked all
-day. She is very kind and loving. She
-held me on her lap and cried, and cried.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor frowned. “Is there any
-one here who can speak Italian?” he called
-out to the waiting crowd. A man stepped
-forward, while the Doctor sent Paolo
-aside. “Tell her, please, that unless she
-brings Paolo here regularly, and gives him
-the medicine every day, I will not answer
-for the consequences.—Do you see that
-boy over there?” The Doctor indicated
-a tiny fellow with fine Greek features,
-whose mother was crying over him in the
-corner. “Well; that woman would not
-leave him in our care, because she was too
-obstinate. And although she lives close
-by, she would not take the time and
-trouble to bring him in for treatment. So
-now he will lose the sight of one eye at
-least. Tell Mrs. Valentino that Paolo’s
-eyes are very bad, and he will fare worse
-than that boy, unless she does as I say.”</p>
-
-<p>The woman burst into hysterical grief,
-and clasped Paolo passionately, mumbling
-endearing syllables in her musical tongue.
-The boy’s brown eyes filled too, and he
-tried to comfort her. Pitying herself for
-her many troubles, the mother led Paolo
-away.</p>
-
-<p>“She will not come back,” thought the
-Doctor. “I see it in her face. The Social
-Service Department will have to get
-busy.”</p>
-
-<p>The Social Service Department of the
-Infirmary did get busy, as in all such cases.
-When Paolo did not reappear, they went
-to look him up. The Visitor coaxed and
-re-urged the dazed, inefficient mother.
-But it was hopeless. Finally the case
-was reported to the proper authorities.
-But already Paolo’s mother had loved him
-to death. Stephanie was not to see her
-little neighbor again.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, for Stephanie herself there
-had begun what was—apart from a little
-discomfort at the beginning—the happiest
-three weeks she had ever known. To
-begin with, her poor ragged clothes were
-taken away, and she had a lovely warm
-bath in a tub; in itself a novel experience.
-With her yellow curls nicely brushed,
-sweet and clean from top to toe, she was
-then tucked away in a little white cot all
-by herself,—this also was an unheard-of
-luxury!—in a sunny, airy room where
-other clean children were playing about
-like a happy family. At first poor little
-Stephanie was too miserable to do more
-than snuggle into the soft, sweet pillow,
-and allow herself sulkily to be fed with
-easily swallowed things. A kind Voice,
-associated with strong and gentle hands,
-attended to her wants. But Stephanie
-slept most of the time; dreaming of happy
-faces, merry laughter, and feet running
-about a Kindergarten.</p>
-
-<p>After two days of existing as a mere little
-mollusc, one morning Stephanie sat
-up and began to take notice. A beautiful
-white-clad Being put her into a neat cotton
-frock and pinafore. Only Stephanie’s
-scarred shoes were left to remind her
-of the home that seemed mercifully far
-away. They tied a shade over her eyes,
-to help the squint, and for the first time
-she looked around with interest at the nursery.</p>
-
-<p>What a pleasant place it was! Stephanie
-had never seen anything nearly so
-beautiful; except the Kindergarten. Poor
-little Stephanie! It had been hard luck
-to give up the Kindergarten, just when
-she was growing so happy there. The
-school nurse had seen that she must stop.
-But—there was a rose on the table here,
-too! A red rose! And children playing
-games, just like a real kindergarten! But
-these children were not all of Stephanie’s
-age. Some were bigger; some much littler.
-Why, in the very next cot to her lay
-a wee baby, sucking a bottle. Nurse said
-its mother was sick in another room.
-Stephanie thought this baby would be nicer
-than a doll to play with. And oh, <em>oh</em>!
-Over there was a little black live doll, with
-eyes that rolled and blinked, and real hair
-standing up all over her head; and a big
-red bow! Stephanie grinned at the doll;
-and oh, <em>oh</em>! The doll grinned back!
-Stephanie waved her arms up and down.
-And the funny doll stretched her mouth in
-white-toothed glee, and did just what
-Stephanie did. This was better even than
-Kindergarten!</p>
-
-<p>What else was there in the lovely room?
-Stephanie looked around. There were
-nine little beds against the walls, and as
-many more in the next ward, as she soon
-learned when she began to investigate.
-Most of the beds were empty in the daytime.
-Across the room from Stephanie a
-big boy sat up among pillows, reading.
-He laughed when Nurse told him a funny
-story, but could only whisper in reply,
-holding on to his throat. Stephanie understood
-perfectly, and was very sorry for
-poor Tom. She was sorrier still when dinner-time
-came; when she and the other
-dressed children gathered about little low
-tables, with bibs on. Soup was all that
-poor Tom could swallow. But Stephanie
-could eat fish, and potato; and there was
-a nice pudding, too! Poor Tom! Stephanie
-ate ravenously, after her two days’
-fast. No puddings ever happened in the
-home she had left.</p>
-
-<p>The twenty little children were too busy
-eating to talk. “More bread and butter?
-More milk? Yes, indeed. All you
-want.” Just think; Stephanie could have
-all the milk she wanted! That had never
-happened before in her life. She thought
-she must be in Heaven. The children were
-of all shades and manners,—perhaps that
-was like Heaven, too; who knows?
-Most of them wore curious foreign names,
-but they all spoke English, after a fashion.
-Some of them were just learning the ways
-of good Americans at the table and elsewhere.
-Frank, who sat next Stephanie,
-was a little pig. He made faces, spilled
-his milk and scattered his crumbs, so that
-She,—the Angel in white,—scolded him,
-and made him sit by himself at another
-table, till he should be more careful.</p>
-
-<p>But Stephanie liked John, with the big
-grey eyes, who was a little gentleman;
-though he wore such a funny thing like a
-bonnet on his head,—and he a big boy of
-eight! Stephanie loved at first sight Dottie
-Dimple with the pink cheeks and one
-lovely blue eye. She cried when John explained
-that one day Dottie had poked a
-pair of scissors into the other eye, so that it
-would never see any more.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was Sammy, with the funny
-face and big nose, who looked like a little
-old man in a baby’s dress. Sammy could
-not hear when you spoke to him.—But
-mostly the children forgot all about eyes
-and ears between dressing-times, they had
-so much to make them happy.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner the children put back their
-chairs nicely, and then the victrola played
-lovely music. It was pleasant to see all
-the little children stand at salute when
-they heard the Star-Spangled Banner.
-Even the deaf ones did as they saw the
-others do.</p>
-
-<p>On sunny days they played out on the
-balcony of the ward below. It was a
-pity that they had no balcony of their
-own, leading from the nursery. Greatly
-it is needed. But it will come, no doubt,
-with a great many other needed things,
-when more people know about the Infirmary
-on Charles Street, and the good luck
-it brings to little children and big; when
-more parents, reading the story of Paolo,
-Stephanie, and these others, will understand
-that what helps such children protects
-the health of the whole community,
-including their own little ones.</p>
-
-<p>The ounce of prevention has gone up
-in the scale of modern values. It is worth
-not pounds but <em>tons</em> of possible cure.
-Every child kept out of an asylum is a
-civic asset. Every penny spent in the
-prevention of blindness or deafness is
-an investment placed on interest a thousandfold.</p>
-
-<p>Those were wonderful days for babies
-like Stephanie who had seen too little luck
-in their lives. Breakfast at half past six;
-a luncheon of fruit and milk at nine; dinner
-at eleven, and supper at four. All the
-bread and butter a child could eat; all the
-milk she wished to drink. And most of
-the children drank a quart of milk every
-day. No wonder Stephanie began to be
-less pale and thin before the nurse’s eyes.
-No wonder her eyes began to be better almost
-directly. Soon she was running and
-racing about the nursery among the liveliest
-of them all.</p>
-
-<p>One day a visitor came to talk for a
-minute with the nurse. She had been to
-the clinic, and after that they had given
-her this extra privilege. To Stephanie
-this Person seemed a beautiful grown-up
-lady. But Mamie was really only a nice
-girl of sixteen, with happy, sunburned face
-and shining brown eyes. Stephanie
-squirmed with delight when Mamie took
-her up on her lap while she talked with
-Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>“She has eyes like mine were,” said
-Mamie in an aside to the nurse. But Stephanie
-heard, and hoped. Would her
-grey-blue eyes ever get big and brown like
-this nice Person’s, she wondered?</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, sure! I’m all right now,” said
-the visitor, in answer to a question.
-“They pronounced me O. K. Just look
-how fat and brown I am. Say, it don’t
-seem possible. Why, I was sicker than
-Stephanie here when I came, wasn’t I?”
-The nurse assented. “I’ll never forget
-how I felt, working in the store: my eyes
-all swollen and weepy. I was down and
-out, all right. For, of course, I haven’t a
-relation on God’s earth. And with my
-salary,—how could I go to a specialist?
-Then a lady gave me a hunch about this
-Infirmary. So here I came; and everybody
-was mighty good to me. You know,
-don’t you, Dearie?” She caught Stephanie
-up close.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!” affirmed Stephanie, snuggling.</p>
-
-<p>“I came here all in,” Mamie went on.
-“But what a difference when I left! Just
-to think of going to the country for a rest,
-instead of right back to the store. And
-nothing to pay for it all, either. Some
-dream!”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you have a good time in the country?”
-asked the nurse sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll say so!” cried Mamie. “I just
-lived out doors four solid weeks, sitting on
-the piazza or walking in the garden, like a
-lady. They made me lie down to rest
-after dinner. Rest! Well; the chief
-thing I had to do to tire me was <em>eat</em>!
-And such eats! Um! Eggs and milk
-between meals, too. Say, the girls at the
-store will sure think I’m kidding when I
-tell them about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be sure to come back here, as the
-Doctor said?” charged the nurse. “You
-know, you will have to be careful still.”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet I’ll be careful!” said Mamie
-earnestly. “I am not going to take any
-chances. The Doctor made it plain
-enough what I’ve got to do. I’ll keep my
-eyes, thanks, now I’ve got ’em back.”</p>
-
-<p>The trouble that Stephanie and Paolo
-and Mamie had cannot certainly be cured,
-once for all. It is likely to recur, if care
-is relaxed; and each time it makes a worse
-scar on the eye, with increased handicaps.
-The hardest part of the follow-up work of
-the Infirmary is to make the parents understand
-this, and to watch patiently.</p>
-
-<p>Three weeks in a country home, at a cost
-of five dollars a week, following three
-weeks’ treatment at the Eye and Ear Infirmary,
-had stood between Mamie and
-blindness. The Infirmary has an emergency
-fund, all too inadequate, for such
-cases.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the Country?” asked Stephanie,
-when Mamie had gone. “Is it
-My Country-Tiz?” She had an idea that
-it might have something to do with a relative
-of the Star Spangled Banner. “Shall
-I have to <em>salute</em> it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bless you!” cried the nurse. “I guess
-you will want to salute it, when you see it
-for the first time!”</p>
-
-<p>On the last Sunday of her stay Stephanie
-had a surprise. The Doctor had
-pronounced her eyes so much better that
-she could leave the following week.
-Plump, and rosy, and bright-eyed, Stephanie
-was as pretty a little girl as one
-could wish to see. To be sure there was a
-fly in her ointment. The Doctor had not
-succeeded in turning her eyes into big
-brown ones like Mamie’s, as Stephanie had
-suggested. But nurse assured her that
-blue eyes would probably wear better in
-the long run.</p>
-
-<p>Stephanie was playing peacefully by
-herself, while the other children visited
-with their parents, during the one hour
-allowed for this every Sunday.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s a visitor to see you, Stephanie,”
-said the nurse. And in walked Mrs. Rogazrovitch,
-saffron coat, purple hat, and
-all. She was a little cleaner than usual;
-there was more black upon her boots than
-upon her hands. But she was still a striking
-contrast to Hospital standards. Stephanie
-greeted her without enthusiasm.
-Indeed, when she spied the familiar face,
-she shrank back to the skirts of Nurse, with
-a little gasp that told more than words.
-The mother flushed. Other mothers were
-watching.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Stephanie!” she cried in astonishment
-mingled with pride. “You do
-look good! Ain’t ye glad to see me, eh?”
-Still Stephanie held back. “Your eyes
-get well, Stephanie? You’ll be coming
-home soon, yes?” But Stephanie pouted
-and kicked the floor with her toe. Mrs.
-Rogazrovitch turned to the nurse. The
-latter shook her head dubiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you fixed up your house as the
-Doctor said? You know she will have to
-be kept clean, and sleep in an airy room.
-And you’ll have to feed her right and bring
-her here often for examination.”</p>
-
-<p>The mother twisted uneasily. “I’ll fix
-the house up yet,” she promised. “I ain’t
-had time, but I will.” Two weeks alone
-in the childless tenement had put a new
-value on Stephanie. And the pretty,
-bright-eyed child seemed no longer a mere
-burden. “I’ll come back for you next
-week,” she finished, touching Stephanie’s
-curls with the first real tenderness she had
-ever shown. “Good bye, Stephanie.”</p>
-
-<p>But at the end of her three weeks Stephanie
-did not go home, though her eyes
-no longer needed Hospital care. When
-Mrs. Rogazrovitch appeared, ready to reclaim
-her child, she was staggered with the
-counter-suggestion that Stephanie should
-go to the sea-shore for a month.</p>
-
-<p>“Stephanie needs a vacation,” was the
-report. “You must not deprive her of the
-chance. It may keep her from having a
-relapse. Every relapse is dangerous.
-And the month will give you time to fix up
-your house and get it ready for such a nice
-little girl to live in.”</p>
-
-<p>The desired result came not without
-argument. For now Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-was set upon having her pretty child back
-again. But luckily she was not deaf to
-reason, as Mrs. Valentino had been. And
-the assurance that Stephanie would receive
-four weeks’ board in the country free had
-some weight in the matter. Reluctantly
-she consented that Stephanie should go.
-So the very week that ushered poor little
-Paolo into a still further country, from
-which there is no return, saw Stephanie saluting
-the wonders of green fields, flowers,
-and ocean shore.</p>
-
-<p>Her mother returned with a slow step to
-the empty tenement. Mrs. Raftery, next
-door, was consumed with curiosity, when
-with her head out of window she spied the
-saffron coat and purple hat entering dejectedly
-the door below, unaccompanied.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, where’s Stephanie?” she cried.
-“I thought you was afther goin’ to fetch
-home the child.”</p>
-
-<p>The purple hat rose to the occasion with
-a jerk. “Stephanie is going for a vacation
-to the sea-shore,” said Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-with dignity.</p>
-
-<p>“Glory be!” ejaculated Mrs. Raftery,
-pulling in her head and sinking into a
-chair. The news, swiftly imparted, raised
-considerably the standing of Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-in that neighborhood.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Stephanie’s luck began to take
-another turn for the better; for as soon as
-she was well out of reach on the Island,
-Stephanie’s mother began to repent that
-she had let her go so easily. Others might
-covet the now precious possession. She
-began to suspect a conspiracy to keep Stephanie
-permanently exiled. There had
-been conditions set upon her return. For
-the first time Mrs. Rogazrovitch began to
-consider seriously the instructions she had
-received about hygiene and sanitation.</p>
-
-<p>One morning the neighbors were surprised
-by an unwonted activity in the
-fourth floor back. Clouds of dust, followed
-by the smell of soap, issued from the
-long unopened windows. Dingy articles
-were banged viciously and hung out to imbibe
-the unaccustomed sun. That week
-was a perpetual wash-day. Mrs. Raftery
-had her theory. At last she could stand
-the suspense no longer, but put her theory
-squarely to the test, with a question.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m making ready for Stephanie’s
-home-coming,” answered Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-tartly. “What do you suppose,
-anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Blessed Saints!” ejaculated Mrs. Raftery.
-“I thought you was goin’ to take
-one lodger at least, the way you’re makin’
-everything so grand an’ tidy. La sakes!
-An’ it’s only for Stephanie!”</p>
-
-<p>But it was her neighbor’s next remark
-that smote Mrs. Raftery nearly dumb.
-It was made with some hesitation. “Will
-you—tell me—about making—soup?—I
-want to learn to cook.”</p>
-
-<p>When she could recover Mrs. Raftery
-gasped, “Cookin’, is it? Hivenly powers!
-Why, I’ll show ye meself. I’ve
-been a cook all my life, till this lameness
-took me. And sure, there’s a diet kitchen
-around the corner, I’m told, where they’ll
-give ye points.”</p>
-
-<p>It was this repeated conversation that
-made the neighborhood hysterical. Mrs.
-Rogazrovitch cleaning house! Mrs. Rogazrovitch
-learning to cook!</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a changed craytur she is entirely!”
-exclaimed Mrs. Raftery, to her gossip.
-“An’ it’s a changed home into which Stephanie
-will be comin’ from her vacation at
-the sea-shore. It’s small blame to her
-man that he ran away from that home two
-years ago, I’m thinkin’. But the woman
-will have no trouble at all gettin’ a lodger
-these days, the way her rooms be lookin’
-so nice and dacint. Say, she’s been afther
-tellin’ me that my childher ought to have
-more fresh air o’ nights! And doughnuts,
-she says, is not healthy for infants. The
-knowingness of her! Sure, they’ll soon
-be afther makin’ Mrs. Rogazrovitch the
-Prisidint of the Improvemint Society, the
-way she’s gettin’ intelligint an’ forthcomin’.
-An’ she with a child visitin’ at
-the sea-shore!”</p>
-
-<p>So when Corporal Rogazrovitch, newly
-discharged, returned to take a secret reconnaissance
-of the home which he had deserted
-for the sake of his Country,—and
-for his own peace of mind,—he heard and
-saw such changes as made him decide not
-to re-enlist. This was another bit of luck
-for Stephanie; if you look at it from the
-right angle.</p>
-
-<p>And then,—there was the Kindergarten,
-too, for to-morrow!</p>
-
-<p>There was to be no anti-climax after all
-in Stephanie’s home-coming.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">pg 20 Added hyphen to: heard the Star Spangled</span><br>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT LUCK! ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
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