To his Neolithic neighbors, Who were startled and surprised, Said he, "My friends, in course of time, We shall be civilized! We are going to live in cities! We are going to fight in wars! We are going to turn life upside down We are going to want the earth, and take We are going to wear great piles of stuff Outside our proper skins! We are going to have Diseases! And Accomplishments!! And Sins!!! Then they all rose up in fury For prehistoric patience Cometh quickly to an end: Said one, "This is chimerical! Utopian! Absurd!” Said another, "What a stupid life! Too dull, upon my word!" Cried all, "Before such things can come, You idiotic child, You must alter Human Nature!" And they all sat back and smiled: Thought they, "An answer to that last It will be hard to find!” It was a clinching argument To the Neolithic Mind! THE OLD MAID'S HOUSE: IN PLAN BY ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS Corona had five hundred dollars and some pluck for her enterprise. She had also at her command a trifle for furnishing. But that seemed very small capital. Her friends at large discouraged her generously. Even Tom said he didn't know about that, and offered her three hundred more. This manly offer she declined in a womanly manner. "It is to be my house, thank you, Tom, dear. I can live in yours at home.” Corona's architectural library was small. She found on the top shelf one book on the construction of chickenroosts, a pamphlet in explanation of the kindergarten system, a cook-book that had belonged to her grandmother, and a treatise on crochet. There her domestic literature came to an end. She accordingly bought a book entitled "North American Homes"; then, having, in addition, begged or borrowed everything within two covers relating to architecture that was to be found in her immediate circle of acquaintance, she plunged into that unfamiliar science with hopeful zeal. The result of her studies was a mixed one. It was necessary, it seemed, to construct the North American home in so many contradictory methods, or else fail forever of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, that Corona felt herself to be laboring under a chronic aberra tion of mind. Then the plans. Well, the plans, it must be confessed, Corona did find it difficult to understand. She always had found it difficult to understand such things; but then she had hoped several weeks of close architectural study would shed light upon the density of the subject. She grew quite morbid about it. She counted. the steps when she went up-stairs to bed at night. She estimated the bedroom post when she walked in the cold gray dawn. But the most perplexing thing about the plans was how one story ever got upon another. Corona's imagination. never fully grappled with this fact, although her intellect accepted it. She took her books down-stairs one night, and Susy came and looked them over. "Why, these houses are all one-story," said Susy. "Besides, they 're nothing but lines, anyway. I should n't draw a house so." Corona laughed with some embarrassment and no effort at enlightenment. She was not used to finding herself and Susy so nearly on the same intellectual level as in this instance. She merely asked: "How should you draw it ?" "Why, so," said Susy, after some severe thought. So she took her little blunt lead pencil, that the baby had chewed, and drew her plan as follows: Corona made no comment upon this plan, except to ask Susy if that were the way to spell L; and then to look in the dictionary, and find that it was not spelled at all. Tom came in, and asked to see what they were doing. "I'm helping Corona," said Susy, with much complacency. "These architects' things don't look any more like houses than they do like the first proposition in Euclid; and the poor girl is puzzled." "I'll help you to-morrow, Co," said Tom, who was in too much of a hurry to glance at his wife's plan. But tomorrow Tom went into town by the early train, and when Corona emerged from her "North American Homes," with wild eye and knotted brow, at 5 o'clock P. M., she found Susy crying over a telegram which ran: Called to California immediately. Those lost cargoes A No. I hides turned up. Can't get home to say good-by. Send overcoat and flannels by Simpson on midnight express. Gone four weeks. Love to all. TOM. This unexpected event threw Corona entirely upon her own resources; and, after a few days more of patient research, she put on her hat, and stole away at dusk to a builder she knew of down-town-a nice, fatherly man who had once built a piazza for Tom and had just been elected superintendent of the Sunday-school. These combined facts gave Corona confidence to trust her case to his hands. She carried a neat little plan of her own with her, the result of several days' hard labor. Susy's plan she had taken the precaution to cut into paper dolls for the baby. Corona found the good man at home, and in her most business-like manner presented her points. "Got any plan in yer own head?" asked the builder, hearing her in silence. In silence Corona laid before him the paper which had cost her so much toil. "Well," said the builder, after a silence,-"well, I've seen worse.' "Thank you," said Corona, faintly. "How does she set?" asked the builder. "Who set?" said Corona, a little wildly. She could think of nothing that set but hens. "Why, the house. Where's the points o' compass?" "I hadn't thought of those," said Corona. |