Putney met Annie at the door, and led her into the parlour beside the hall.

He had a little crippled boy on his right arm, and he gave her his left

hand. In the parlour he set his burden down in a chair, and the child drew

up under his thin arms a pair of crutches that stood beside it. His white

face had the eager purity and the waxen translucence which we see in

sufferers from hip-disease.

"This is our Winthrop," said his father, beginning to talk at once. "We

receive the company and do the honours while mother's looking after the

tea. We only keep one undersized girl," he explained more directly to

Annie, "and Ellen has to be chief cook and bottlewasher herself. She'll

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be in directly. Just lay off your bonnet anywhere."

She was taking in the humility of the house and its belongings while she

received the impression of an unimagined simplicity in its life from his

easy explanations. The furniture was in green terry, the carpet a harsh,

brilliant tapestry; on the marble-topped centre table was a big clasp Bible

and a basket with a stereoscope and views; the marbleised iron shelf above

the stove-pipe hole supported two glass vases and a French clock under a

glass bell; through the open door, across the oil-cloth of the hallway, she

saw the white-painted pine balusters of the steep, cramped stairs. It was

clear that neither Putney nor his wife had been touched by the aesthetic

craze; the parlour was in the tastelessness of fifteen years before; but

after the decoration of South Hatboro', she found a delicious repose in

it. Her eyes dwelt with relief on the wall-paper of French grey, sprigged

with small gilt flowers, and broken by a few cold engravings and framed

photographs.

Putney himself was as little decorated as the parlour. He had put on a

clean shirt, but the bulging bosom had broken away from its single button,

and showed two serrated edges of ragged linen; his collar lost itself from

time to time under the rise of his plastron scarf band, which kept escaping

from the stud that ought to have held it down behind. His hair was brushed

smoothly across a forehead which looked as innocent and gentle as the

little boy's.

"We don't often give these festivities," he went on, "but you don't come

home once in twelve years every day, Annie. I can't tell you how glad I am

to see you in our house; and Ellen's just as excited as the rest of us; she

was sorry to miss you when she called."




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