登陆注册
5288900000044

第44章 CHAPTER XV. A MODEL LETTER TO A FRIEND(3)

"Georgie Bassett, you may read your letter next."

The neat Georgie rose, nothing loath, and began: "'Dear Teacher--'"

There was a slight titter, which Miss Spence suppressed. Georgie was not at all discomfited.

"'My mother says,'" he continued, reading his manuscript, "'we should treat our teacher as a friend, and so _I_ will write YOU a letter.'"

This penetrated Penrod's trance, and he lifted his eyes to fix them upon the back of Georgie Bassett's head in a long and inscrutable stare. It was inscrutable, and yet if Georgie had been sensitive to thought waves, it is probable that he would have uttered a loud shriek; but he remained placidly unaware, continuing:

"'I thought I would write you about a subject of general interest, and so I will write you about the flowers. There are many kinds of flowers, spring flowers, and summer flowers, and autumn flowers, but no winter flowers. Wild flowers grow in the woods, and it is nice to hunt them in springtime, and we must remember to give some to the poor and hospitals, also. Flowers can be made to grow in flower-beds and placed in vases in houses.

There are many names for flowers, but _I_ call them "nature's ornaments.--'"

Penrod's gaze had relaxed, drooped to his button again, and his lethargy was renewed. The outer world grew vaguer; voices seemed to drone at a distance; sluggish time passed heavily--but some of it did pass.

"Penrod!"

Miss Spence's searching eye had taken note of the bent head and the twisting button. She found it necessary to speak again.

"Penrod Schofield!"

He came languidly to life.

"Ma'am?"

"You may read your letter."

"Yes'm."

And he began to paw clumsily among his books, whereupon Miss Spence's glance fired with suspicion.

"Have you prepared one?" she demanded.

"Yes'm," said Penrod dreamily.

"But you're going to find you forgot to bring it, aren't you?"

"I got it," said Penrod, discovering the paper in his "Principles of English Composition."

"Well, we'll listen to what you've found time to prepare," she said, adding coldly, "for once!"

The frankest pessimism concerning Penrod permeated the whole room; even the eyes of those whose letters had not met with favour turned upon him with obvious assurance that here was every prospect of a performance that would, by comparison, lend a measure of credit to the worst preceding it. But Penrod was unaffected by the general gaze; he rose, still blinking from his lethargy, and in no true sense wholly alive.

He had one idea: to read as rapidly as possible, so as to be done with the task, and he began in a high-pitched monotone, reading with a blind mind and no sense of the significance of the words.

"'Dear friend,"' he declaimed. "'You call me beautiful, but I am not really beautiful, and there are times when I doubt if I am even pretty, though perhaps my hair is beautiful, and if it is true that my eyes are like blue stars in heaven--'"

Simultaneously he lost his breath and there burst upon him a perception of the results to which he was being committed by this calamitous reading. And also simultaneous the outbreak of the class into cachinnations of delight, severely repressed by the perplexed but indignant Miss Spence.

"Go on!" she commanded grimly, when she had restored order.

"Ma'am?" he gulped, looking wretchedly upon the rosy faces all about him.

"Go on with the description of yourself," she said. "We'd like to hear some more about your eyes being like blue stars in heaven."

Here many of Penrod's little comrades were forced to clasp their faces tightly in both hands; and his dismayed gaze, in refuge, sought the treacherous paper in his hand.

What it beheld there was horrible.

"Proceed!" Miss Spence said.

"'I--often think,'" he faltered, "'and a-a tree-more th-thrills my bein' when I REcall your last words to me--that last--that last--that--'"

"GO ON!"

"'That last evening in the moonlight when you--you-- you--'"

"Penrod," Miss Spence said dangerously, "you go on, and stop that stammering."

"'You--you said you would wait for--for years to--to--to--to--"

"PENROD!"

"'To win me!'" the miserable Penrod managed to gasp. "'I should not have pre--premitted--permitted you to speak so until we have our--our parents' con-consent; but oh, how sweet it--'" He exhaled a sigh of agony, and then concluded briskly, "'Yours respectfully, Penrod Schofield.'"

But Miss Spence had at last divined something, for she knew the Schofield family.

"Bring me that letter!" she said.

And the scarlet boy passed forward between rows of mystified but immoderately uplifted children.

Miss Spence herself grew rather pink as she examined the missive, and the intensity with which she afterward extended her examination to cover the complete field of Penrod Schofield caused him to find a remote centre of interest whereon to rest his embarrassed gaze. She let him stand before her throughout a silence, equalled, perhaps, by the tenser pauses during trials for murder, and then, containing herself, she sweepingly gestured him to the pillory--a chair upon the platform, facing the school.

Here he suffered for the unusual term of an hour, with many jocular and cunning eyes constantly upon him; and, when he was released at noon, horrid shouts and shrieks pursued him every step of his homeward way. For his laughter-loving little schoolmates spared him not--neither boy nor girl.

"Yay, Penrod!" they shouted. "How's your beautiful hair?" And, "Hi, Penrod! When you goin' to get your parents' consent?" And, "Say, blue stars in heaven, how's your beautiful eyes?" And, "Say, Penrod, how's your tree-mores?" "Does your tree-mores thrill your bein', Penrod?" And many other facetious inquiries, hard to bear in public.

And when he reached the temporary shelter of his home, he experienced no relief upon finding that Margaret was out for lunch. He was as deeply embittered toward her as toward any other, and, considering her largely responsible for his misfortune, he would have welcomed an opportunity to show her what he thought of her.

同类推荐
  • 明伦汇编宫闱典皇后部

    明伦汇编宫闱典皇后部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 平番始末

    平番始末

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Good Indian

    Good Indian

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大洞炼真宝经修伏灵砂妙诀

    大洞炼真宝经修伏灵砂妙诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 略法华三昧补助仪

    略法华三昧补助仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 莲华面经

    莲华面经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 三世荼蘼为君倾

    三世荼蘼为君倾

    这是一个外表仙气飘飘内心腹黑闷骚的师父带着呆萌小徒弟一起四处“祸害”人间的故事。“师父,何为王道?”“遇到不听话的人,就揍他”“何为霸道?”“听话的也揍”“何为孔孟之道?”“揍之前和他说一声”。小徒弟双眸清澈如水,问:“师父,那什么是爱?”男子如墨玉般的眸子浅浅含笑,摸了摸徒弟的头,答:“爱就是乖乖听师父的话”。神秘的彩虹之石,被遗忘的刻骨之恋,跨越时空,哪怕千年,感人肺腑的倾世之恋,耳目一新的奇幻之旅,欢脱宠文,欢迎入坑~
  • 仁孝皇后

    仁孝皇后

    行走在历史的画卷,还原一段史实爱情。以康熙与赫舍里皇后的爱情为主线,书写大清入关后的第二位皇帝康熙的元后,赫舍里皇后的传奇人生,将这位历史上甚少被提及的皇后的一生。
  • 河仙

    河仙

    以河为根本,吸收水灵气,水下世界,挑虾兵蟹将、战龙王……水塑神功,无形无状,变化莫测。水下世界光怪陆离,问世人所知有多少,本书主角畅游水下世界,做一逍遥水仙!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 称扬诸佛功德经

    称扬诸佛功德经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 凤逆天行:纨绔嫡小姐

    凤逆天行:纨绔嫡小姐

    曾经,她亲眼见证了娘亲被喂慢性毒而死,却无能为力。曾经,她从堂堂嫡小姐变成任人欺凌的傻女,一朝凤眸睁开之时,便是她凤临天下之日!太子被废,便是她一手造成的。她不仅仅是君府大小姐君芊韵,还是千冰韵,云散阁阁主千冰韵,太后封的朦沐公主千冰韵。复仇之时,即将到来,九尾猫族少主夜暮辰,神秘身份的少年分别助她一臂之力,在这表面上风平浪静的乱世上,到底有那些阴谋陷阱。从死亡之中走出,斗姨娘渣妹,斗庞大的李家,斗兮晋王朝!凤逆天行,佛挡杀佛,神挡弑神!我让你们知道,什么叫所向披靡,天下无敌!【女强爽文,看女主角如何逆天而行!欢迎入坑,前期文笔不是很好,请待文笔蠕变(笑哭)力荐免费文《最强凰女:傲娇大小姐》】
  • 女性主义者的饭票

    女性主义者的饭票

    这是一系列治愈风格的关于爱情的小故事与小领悟。每个时代男女的爱情心态,都是这个时代的图腾。全书由慧黠的短章组成,上谈文人掌故,下涉尘世生活,笔调自由出入想象与现实,轻松剖析中国当代都市生活中男与女、爱情与饭票、精神与物质等话题。文字幽默犀利,立意不落窠臼,是一个都市女子对爱情独立且不失温柔的解读。在这些属于中产阶级的小品文中,因着作者悲悯的情怀,使整本书仿佛冬日午后的阳光,在俏皮幽默中也充满了爱意。
  • 夏有乔木:雅望天堂2

    夏有乔木:雅望天堂2

    无数网友读者疯狂追捧的青春虐文神作!《致青春》制作班底重磅打造电影!曲蔚然是个品学兼优的好孩子,他总是轻柔优雅的轻笑着,像个贵族一般让所有少年少女们仰望着。可养父的出现,将他的面具击碎,将他不堪的一面暴露在人群中,让所有人都知道,他不过是一个被家庭暴力摧残的可怜虫而已。这样阴暗的少年,内心却还装着一个女孩,夏彤。温柔的夏彤,怯怯的夏彤,是他唯一爱着的女孩。可同父异母的少年曲宁远,也喜欢上了她,曲蔚然不甘心,明明他什么都有了,有父亲,有家世,有荣誉,集万千宠爱于一身的他,却想将他最后一点幸福都抢去。曲蔚然终于决定报复,报复所有伤害他,遗弃他的人,他要将原来属于他的一切全部抢回来。一场以爱为名的阴谋正式开场了。
  • 倾世桃花醉

    倾世桃花醉

    生逢乱世,本是女儿身的她,一出生便成了太子,一身戎装,策马奔腾,呼啸战场,一剑定江山。他,天下首富,狂傲不羁,是各国竞相拉拢之人,却愿为她倾尽所有。此爱无双,此爱绝世,生不相弃,死不相离。
  • 富有的鸭太太

    富有的鸭太太

    本书包含两个故事:富有的鸭太太很有钱,吃得太多却不羞于承认,最后她怎么样了呢?两只狗请了一群朋友参加派对,结果宴会上发生了很多意外……