"Oh, I"ll come, of course," I said. "I didn"t dream they wanted to see me." But I would much rather have stopped where I was and read the book. Of course it"s only prejudice, and the way one has been brought up which makes one feel as if it were odd to meet tradespeople, and it"s nonsense, too; for as soon as they get horribly rich n.o.body seems to mind nowadays, which shows how little sense there is in the idea.
Still, I did want to laugh, though I was ashamed of myself; but a picture of Mother being called on formally by a steam cleaner would come up before me.
Mr. and Mrs. Engelhorn had put on their best clothes, and they were dears. I was as agreeable as I knew how to be, and after I had been with them a little while, I felt that it was they who were superior.
They talked about the most interesting and learned things, just as Mr.
Trowbridge does, and in the same simple, modest way. We went into the parlour, where Mrs. Engelhorn played as well as a professional, and sang exquisitely, in a cultivated contralto voice. I could have cried to see how work-worn her hands looked, as they flew so cleverly over the keys of Mrs. Trowbridge"s splendid Steinway Grand piano, which is much finer and in better condition than ours at home. After they had gone, Mr. Trowbridge told me that Mr. Engelhorn is the greatest authority on geology in the State of Ohio, that he knows just as much about botany, and is a fine Greek and Latin scholar, having picked up all his knowledge himself without any University training. Americans are wonderful!
Other people just as interesting in different ways have been, since, and there was only one I didn"t like. He came yesterday, and is a dissenting parson, a Congregationalist, I think, though I don"t know what that means, or how it"s different from a Methodist or a Presbyterian. He and his wife arrived to noon dinner, and I had to be civil because the Trowbridges respect them very much; but it was difficult when the man said that England was the most immoral and decaying country in the world, and his wife echoed him. He is a smug old fellow with a fringe of grey fluff growing out all round under his chin; and his upper lip, very long and shaved, is like the straight cover you see on mantelpieces in country hotels.
I summoned courage to stand up for England, and the wife--a fat, sallow creature with three chins and a dissenting-looking chignon--glared at me as if she expected white bears to crawl out from under the table and gobble me up.
"Why do you think England is such a wicked country?" I asked.
"Because, to mention only one reason [as if the others were too bad to tell] your clergymen are put into their places by patronage, without any regard to their qualifications as teachers of religion."
"At least they"re gentlemen," I snapped.
"Superficially, they _may_ be," he admitted, as if to pry under the surface would be worse than "scratching a Russian to find a Tartar."
"But they are Puppets and Sycophants."
Unluckily I don"t know what a sycophant is exactly, so it would have been dangerous to argue; and anyway, before I could get out another word he had gone on again.
"Mrs. Panter and myself had a chance to go to Great Britain last year,"
he said. "Our congregation offered us the trip with Cook"s tickets, for ten weeks, to show their appreciation of my services. But after reflection, we decided not to undertake the tour. I have no wish to see England as it is to-day. Such illusions as are left to me I would rather keep. It would depress me to visit a country which is going down hill as Britain is, morally, financially and intellectually. Trade is leaving her, and coming to us. We are getting her shipping, we are taking away her steel and iron market for all the world, and she deserves to have lost what she is losing; still, London must be a sad sight to those who have eyes to see, and----"
"I don"t think you"d find that gra.s.s has begun to grow in Bond Street yet," said I. "And if you fancy that our finances are in such a bad way, you had better read the Blue Book."
I did think this was smart of me, for I hardly know the Blue Book from a Book of Beauty, but I"ve heard Stan say that you"re obliged to believe it, and that it proves England to be increasing every year in prosperity. So I was glad I remembered to speak of it, and catching Mr.
Brett"s eyes I saw such a twinkling smile in them that I hurried to look away, or I should have laughed and spoiled everything.
There couldn"t be a greater contrast between two men than between the Reverend Jonas Panter and the great Whit Walker of the Emporium at Hermann"s Corners. We drove to Mr. Walker"s after the Panters had gone, as we all felt (though n.o.body put it precisely into words) that we wanted some enlivening.
We didn"t start until after "tea," as the Emporium is always open till half past nine, and there was going to be an "ice cream festival" there that night. I didn"t know what an ice cream festival meant, but Mr.
Trowbridge said I should see for myself, and it would probably be different from anything I had yet experienced.
Everybody from the farm went except Elisha, who didn"t wish to, as he is not quite happy yet, and is practising the flute of evenings. Mr.
Trowbridge and Mr. Brett and I all drove in the buggy. It was rather a squeeze in one seat, but it was fun, and we were very merry. I like buggies, though they do sound almost improper to an English ear, and it makes it seem more amusing, somehow, because they talk about going for "a ride" instead of a drive.
The rest all squashed into a big wagon, and sat on the hay. I would have gone in that way too, but Mr. Trowbridge wanted me to try his horse; and we could hear the others laughing every minute as they came jolting on behind us.
It was about seven miles to Hermann"s Corners, and after a lovely drive through charming, peaceful country we arrived just as it was beginning to be dusk.
I couldn"t have imagined such a place as the Emporium, and when I was in the thick of it I said to myself that it would be worth one"s while coming over to the States just to visit it, if nothing else. If I had to choose between, I believe I"d rather see it than Niagara Falls; for one knows Niagara Falls from biographs and things, and nothing short of actually seeing could give one the slightest idea of Mr. Whit Walker and his Emporium.
My first impression of the Emporium was a huge, rambling wooden building rather like a vast barn with a dozen smaller barns tacked on to it, and windows let in. It is painted pea-green, and has a rough verandah running partly round it--a high verandah with no steps, or if any, at such long intervals that you must search for them. But as there"s no pavement we just scrambled out of the buggy and cart onto the verandah, and there we were landed among the most extraordinary collection of things I ever dreamed of. The stock in the Emporium having overflowed from the inside onto the verandah, we stumbled about among boxes of eggs, sewing machines, crates of dishes, garden tools, brooms, rocking chairs, perambulators, boots, "canned" fruit, children"s toys, luggage, green vegetables, ice cream freezers, bales of calico, men"s suits, piled-up books, clothes lines, and a thousand other "goods."
A number of young men were sitting about on the biggest of the boxes, and on chicken coops, wherever they could clear a s.p.a.ce, and had the air of being in a club. Our party knew them, almost all, and they exchanged "how do you do"s." Mr. Brett seemed the only stranger; but as he told me, he hasn"t often visited his cousins.
From the open doors and windows of the Emporium streamed out the strangely mingled smells of all the things in the world which happened to be missing on the verandah, and most of those that were there. As a fragrance it was indescribable, but it was nice, and rather exciting, I don"t know why, unless there was a quant.i.ty of spice in it.
Just as we threaded our way through the groups of young men, who looked at us a good deal, people were lighting the gas in the Emporium. It was incandescent, and blazed up suddenly with a fierce light as if it were a volcano having an eruption. All the women inside (there was quite a crowd of them, bareheaded, or in perfectly fascinating frilled sunbonnets), shrieked and then giggled. A man who was surrounded by girls said something we couldn"t hear, which made everybody laugh; and Mr. Trowbridge exclaimed:
"That"s Whit, sure, holding court. Couldn"t be anybody else."
"And I guess that"s the Honourable," said the voice we had heard--such a nice voice; it was enough to make you laugh with pleasure just to hear it--and the head we could see towering over the sunbonnets began to move towards us. The girls edged away good-naturedly, and there was a man almost as fine-looking as Mr. Brett, smiling at us, and holding out his big hand.
Everything was big about him; his voice, his brown throat, his shoulders, and his good white smile, shining with kindness and two rows of perfect teeth; his nature, too, as you could see by his beaming, humorous grey eyes, and the generous dimple in his square chin.
"Whit, this is the little English ladyship I"ve told you about, who"s staying over at our house," said Mr. Trowbridge. So we were introduced, and the great Whit shook my hand with a vigorous magnetism which made me feel I would like to clap, and give him three cheers.
He is the sort of man I should try to make President of the United States, if I were an American; and I"m sure he would get lots of votes from his part of the country if he were nominated.
"I"m real pleased to meet you," said he, "and I"m honoured to have you visit my store. Say, I guess some of our American leading ladies will have to get a hustle on if they want to save themselves now you"re over here. I didn"t know they made "em like that on your side. I tell you what it is, Honourable, I won"t have much use for some of our fellows if they let her go back, eh? Now, ma"am, you just tell me what handle I"m to put to your name, so I won"t make any fool mistake, and then we can get ahead like a house on fire."
"I"m usually called Lady Betty," I said, feeling an idiot, as everyone was standing round in a ring.
"What, at the first go? No, ma"am, I couldn"t do it. I haven"t got the cool, ingrowing nerve. Couldn"t I make it Countess, to show my respect?"
"But I"m not a Countess," I laughed.
"Well, I guess I"ll just go one better and raise you to Princess, then.
It"s the best I can do, having been reared with plain Misses and Mississes. You look like a Princess, anyhow, and the Queen might be proud to have you for a cousin. Now we"ve fixed that up, maybe you"ll let me show you around the premises, and you can tell me if the Emporium bears any resemblance to your London stores."
"Very well, Prince, I shall be delighted," said I, and he laughed a nice, mellow roar.
It was a great thing, I soon found, for a visitor to be escorted by the proprietor of the Emporium. Never was such a popular and much-sought-for man as he. He was wanted everywhere by everybody.
People felt aggrieved if they had to go away without at least a hearty "How do you do?" from Whit. There were several attendants, quite dashing young men, but they were mere ciphers compared to the "boss."
Accompanied by Mr. Walker and Patty, whom he chose as the companion of our explorations, we went upstairs and downstairs, and left no corner of the Emporium unvisited.
"Aren"t you afraid to leave so many things outside on the verandah?" I asked. "Suppose they should be stolen?"
The great man only laughed, but a lanky customer who overheard drawled out:
"What, steal from Whit Walker of Hermann"s Corners? Wa"al, I guess the skunk mean enough to do that would get himself lynched by every decent chap in this darned county."
"I"ve got one friend, you see, Princess," chuckled my king of the Emporium.
"You"ve got two," said I.
"Well, now, that"s mighty pretty of you. Say, do you mean it, honour bright?"
"Honour bright," I repeated.
"Then I wonder if I might ask a little favour of you?"
"Of course. What is it?"
"I"ll tell you before we part. But come on down now, girls. I want you should both choose a present to take home."