Chapter V





CHAPTER V

Anne's History


"Do you know," said Anne confidentially, "I've made up
my mind to enjoy this drive.  It's been my experience that
you can nearly always enjoy things if you make up your mind
firmly that you will.  Of course, you must make it up
FIRMLY.  I am not going to think about going back to the
asylum while we're having our drive.  I'm just going to
think about the drive.  Oh, look, there's one little early
wild rose out!  Isn't it lovely?  Don't you think it must be
glad to be a rose?  Wouldn't it be nice if roses could talk?
I'm sure they could tell us such lovely things.  And isn't
pink the most bewitching color in the world?  I love it, but
I can't wear it.  Redheaded people can't wear pink, not
even in imagination.  Did you ever know of anybody whose
hair was red when she was young, but got to be another
color when she grew up?"

"No, I don't know as I ever did," said Marilla mercilessly,
"and I shouldn't think it likely to happen in your case either."

Anne sighed.

"Well, that is another hope gone.  `My life is a perfect
graveyard of buried hopes.'  That's a sentence I read in a
book once, and I say it over to comfort myself whenever
I'm disappointed in anything."

"I don't see where the comforting comes in myself,"
said Marilla.

"Why, because it sounds so nice and romantic, just as if
I were a heroine in a book, you know.  I am so fond of
romantic things, and a graveyard full of buried hopes is
about as romantic a thing as one can imagine isn't it?  I'm
rather glad I have one.  Are we going across the Lake of
Shining Waters today?"

"We're not going over Barry's pond, if that's what you
mean by your Lake of Shining Waters.  We're going by the
shore road."

"Shore road sounds nice," said Anne dreamily.  "Is it as
nice as it sounds?  Just when you said `shore road' I saw it
in a picture in my mind, as quick as that!  And White
Sands is a pretty name, too; but I don't like it as well as
Avonlea.  Avonlea is a lovely name.  It just sounds like
music.  How far is it to White Sands?"

"It's five miles; and as you're evidently bent on talking
you might as well talk to some purpose by telling me what
you know about yourself."

"Oh, what I KNOW about myself isn't really worth telling,"
said Anne eagerly.  "If you'll only let me tell you
what I IMAGINE about myself you'll think it ever so much
more interesting."

"No, I don't want any of your imaginings.  Just you stick
to bald facts.  Begin at the beginning.  Where were you
born and how old are you?"

"I was eleven last March," said Anne, resigning herself
to bald facts with a little sigh.  "And I was born in
Bolingbroke, Nova Scotia.  My father's name was Walter
Shirley, and he was a teacher in the Bolingbroke High
School.  My mother's name was Bertha Shirley.  Aren't
Walter and Bertha lovely names?  I'm so glad my parents
had nice names.  It would be a real disgrace to have a
father named--well, say Jedediah, wouldn't it?"

"I guess it doesn't matter what a person's name is as
long as he behaves himself," said Marilla, feeling herself
called upon to inculcate a good and useful moral.

"Well, I don't know." Anne looked thoughtful.  "I read
in a book once that a rose by any other name would smell
as sweet, but I've never been able to believe it.  I don't
believe a rose WOULD be as nice if it was called a thistle
or a skunk cabbage.  I suppose my father could have been a
good man even if he had been called Jedediah; but I'm
sure it would have been a cross.  Well, my mother was a
teacher in the High school, too, but when she married
father she gave up teaching, of course.  A husband was
enough responsibility.  Mrs. Thomas said that they were a
pair of babies and as poor as church mice.  They went to
live in a weeny-teeny little yellow house in Bolingbroke.
I've never seen that house, but I've imagined it thousands
of times.  I think it must have had honeysuckle over the
parlor window and lilacs in the front yard and lilies of the
valley just inside the gate.  Yes, and muslin curtains in
all the windows.  Muslin curtains give a house such an air.
I was born in that house.  Mrs. Thomas said I was the
homeliest baby she ever saw, I was so scrawny and tiny
and nothing but eyes, but that mother thought I was
perfectly beautiful.  I should think a mother would be a
better judge than a poor woman who came in to scrub,
wouldn't you?  I'm glad she was satisfied with me anyhow,
I would feel so sad if I thought I was a disappointment to
her--because she didn't live very long after that, you see.
She died of fever when I was just three months old.  I do
wish she'd lived long enough for me to remember calling
her mother.  I think it would be so sweet to say `mother,'
don't you?  And father died four days afterwards from
fever too.  That left me an orphan and folks were at their
wits' end, so Mrs. Thomas said, what to do with me.  You
see, nobody wanted me even then.  It seems to be my fate.
Father and mother had both come from places far away
and it was well known they hadn't any relatives living.
Finally Mrs. Thomas said she'd take me, though she was
poor and had a drunken husband.  She brought me up by
hand.  Do you know if there is anything in being brought
up by hand that ought to make people who are brought up
that way better than other people?  Because whenever I
was naughty Mrs. Thomas would ask me how I could be
such a bad girl when she had brought me up by hand--
reproachful-like.

"Mr. and Mrs. Thomas moved away from Bolingbroke
to Marysville, and I lived with them until I was eight
years old.  I helped look after the Thomas children--there
were four of them younger than me--and I can tell you
they took a lot of looking after.  Then Mr. Thomas was
killed falling under a train and his mother offered to take
Mrs. Thomas and the children, but she didn't want me.
Mrs. Thomas was at HER wits' end, so she said, what to do
with me.  Then Mrs. Hammond from up the river came
down and said she'd take me, seeing I was handy with
children, and I went up the river to live with her in a
little clearing among the stumps.  It was a very lonesome
place.  I'm sure I could never have lived there if I hadn't
had an imagination.  Mr. Hammond worked a little sawmill
up there, and Mrs. Hammond had eight children.  She had
twins three times.  I like babies in moderation, but twins
three times in succession is TOO MUCH.  I told Mrs.
Hammond so firmly, when the last pair came.  I used to get
so dreadfully tired carrying them about.

"I lived up river with Mrs. Hammond over two years,
and then Mr. Hammond died and Mrs. Hammond broke up
housekeeping.  She divided her children among her relatives
and went to the States.  I had to go to the asylum at
Hopeton, because nobody would take me.  They didn't
want me at the asylum, either; they said they were over-
crowded as it was.  But they had to take me and I was
there four months until Mrs. Spencer came."

Anne finished up with another sigh, of relief this time.
Evidently she did not like talking about her experiences in
a world that had not wanted her.

"Did you ever go to school?" demanded Marilla, turning
the sorrel mare down the shore road.

"Not a great deal.  I went a little the last year I stayed
with Mrs. Thomas.  When I went up river we were so far
from a school that I couldn't walk it in winter and there
was a vacation in summer, so I could only go in the spring
and fall.  But of course I went while I was at the asylum.
I can read pretty well and I know ever so many pieces of
poetry off by heart--`The Battle of Hohenlinden' and
`Edinburgh after Flodden,' and `Bingen of the Rhine,' and
lost of the `Lady of the Lake' and most of `The Seasons' by
James Thompson.  Don't you just love poetry that gives
you a crinkly feeling up and down your back?  There is a
piece in the Fifth Reader--`The Downfall of Poland'--that
is just full of thrills.  Of course, I wasn't in the Fifth
Reader--I was only in the Fourth--but the big girls used
to lend me theirs to read."

"Were those women--Mrs. Thomas and Mrs. Hammond--good to
you?" asked Marilla, looking at Anne out of the corner
of her eye.

"O-o-o-h," faltered Anne.  Her sensitive little face
suddenly flushed scarlet and embarrassment sat on her brow.
"Oh, they MEANT to be--I know they meant to be just as
good and kind as possible.  And when people mean to be
good to you, you don't mind very much when they're not
quite--always.  They had a good deal to worry them, you
know.  It's very trying to have a drunken husband, you see;
and it must be very trying to have twins three times in
succession, don't you think?  But I feel sure they meant
to be good to me."

Marilla asked no more questions.  Anne gave herself up
to a silent rapture over the shore road and Marilla guided
the sorrel abstractedly while she pondered deeply.  Pity
was suddenly stirring in her heart for the child.  What a
starved, unloved life she had had--a life of drudgery and
poverty and neglect; for Marilla was shrewd enough to
read between the lines of Anne's history and divine the
truth.  No wonder she had been so delighted at the prospect
of a real home.  It was a pity she had to be sent back.
What if she, Marilla, should indulge Matthew's unaccountable
whim and let her stay?  He was set on it; and the child
seemed a nice, teachable little thing.

"She's got too much to say," thought Marilla, "but she
might be trained out of that.  And there's nothing rude or
slangy in what she does say.  She's ladylike.  It's likely
her people were nice folks."

The shore road was "woodsy and wild and lonesome."
On the right hand, scrub firs, their spirits quite unbroken
by long years of tussle with the gulf winds, grew thickly.
On the left were the steep red sandstone cliffs, so near the
track in places that a mare of less steadiness than the
sorrel might have tried the nerves of the people behind
her.  Down at the base of the cliffs were heaps of surf-worn
rocks or little sandy coves inlaid with pebbles as with
ocean jewels; beyond lay the sea, shimmering and blue,
and over it soared the gulls, their pinions flashing silvery
in the sunlight.

"Isn't the sea wonderful?" said Anne, rousing from a
long, wide-eyed silence.  "Once, when I lived in Marysville,
Mr. Thomas hired an express wagon and took us all to
spend the day at the shore ten miles away.  I enjoyed
every moment of that day, even if I had to look after the
children all the time.  I lived it over in happy dreams for
years.  But this shore is nicer than the Marysville shore.
Aren't those gulls splendid?  Would you like to be a gull?
I think I would--that is, if I couldn't be a human girl.
Don't you think it would be nice to wake up at sunrise and
swoop down over the water and away out over that lovely
blue all day; and then at night to fly back to one's nest?
Oh, I can just imagine myself doing it.  What big house is
that just ahead, please?"

"That's the White Sands Hotel.  Mr. Kirke runs it, but
the season hasn't begun yet.  There are heaps of Americans
come there for the summer.  They think this shore is just
about right."

"I was afraid it might be Mrs. Spencer's place," said
Anne mournfully.  "I don't want to get there.  Somehow, it
will seem like the end of everything."



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