I didn"t hear the name clear, but Dempster introduced me to a young lady that had just sat down by me.
"Are those men who are chatting and laughing so, really ministers?" says I to her.
"Most of them are; the rest are connected with the Legation," says she.
"Elegant, don"t you think so?"
Before I could ask her what newfangled society had been got up under the name of Legation, a young gentleman with a round gold gla.s.s screwed into one eye, came out from the hive of ministers, and walked toward us, moving along slow and lazy, as if walking were too much for him.
The girl was all in a flutter when she saw him a-coming our way. She looked at me as if I had a seat that she wanted for some one else, but I didn"t move; and after shaking out her dress as a cross hen flutters its feathers, she pretended to look the other way, as if she didn"t care a mite whether the young minister came up or not.
Oh, the airs some of these school-girls put on is disgusting.
The young divinity student came up with a sort of half-dancing step.
"Miss," says he, a-bowing and chewing up his words as if he"d a piece of sweet flag-root in his mouth, "delighted to--aw--aw--have the honor of seeing you here--am, indeed."
She bowed, she prismed up her mouth, waved her fan a trifle, and says she--
"Of course you ought to have expected me. I am a little exclusive, but always make a point of coming here."
The young--no, he wasn"t over young, but did his best to look so. Well, this foreign student just turned his gla.s.s on me, his impudent little eye stared right through at my bonnet. Then he looked at that finefied girl, and they both smiled at each other.
This riled me.
Then a couple of young ladies crowded by us, laughing a little. The divinity student turned his gla.s.s--eye and all--upon them, then he turned to the young creature by my side, and says he, curling up his wisp of a mustache:
"Now, really, miss, what is the reason all the American young ladies have the manners of chambermaids?"
I felt my Yankee heart spring straight up into my New England mouth; but the foreign snipe wasn"t speaking to me, so I sat still and listened for what that young creature would say.
"The manners of chambermaids!" says she, "did you mean that?"
"Really--yes--I think they have, you know."
"Well, I will not contradict you, for you generally are right," says she, as meek as Moses--yes, Moses in the bulrushes, "but not quite all, I hope."
The mean thing couldn"t keep from trying to wring a compliment for herself out of this insult to the general American female.
The fellow had sense enough to see what she wanted, and he gave it to her.
"Aw--aw--of course there are a few lovely exceptions, you know," says he, a-bowing so low that his eye-gla.s.s dropped out of his poor little eye that looked like a green gooseberry without it. "I speak of American women, generally, as having the manners of chambermaids."
I couldn"t hold in one minute more. No coffee-grounds, twice soaked, ever riled up like my temper.
"If _you_ find American ladies acting like chambermaids," says I, "it"s because they feel compelled to adapt themselves to the company they are in."
Here I bent my head with a low, dignified bow, and waved my fan with a calm but decided motion.
That little humbug of a young lady looked half scared to death. The divinity student ground his gla.s.s into his eye, looked at me from head to foot, and says he:
"Aw, aw!" and walked away.
The girl looked after him as if she wanted to cry, but just then a great whirl of music burst from the next room, and I thought the meeting was about to organize, when a tall fellow, with his mustache quirled up like an ox-horn, came tetering up to the young female by my side.
"May I have the honor?" says he.
The girl turned her head sideways, and rolled up her eyes like a pullet drinking.
"It is a quadrille, Count," says she, "and I never join in one."
"A quadrille, pardonne! You are right. When you daunce--if you daunce--why, of course, you daunce a round daunce."
The fellow flung out his white hands, making a little dive forward with each word; then he saw my face, which must have spoken volumes, and slacked off his antics. I don"t think he liked the cut of my smile, for, crooking up his elbow, he leaned forward, and says he:
"May I be honored with a promenade?"
She took his arm, and the two fluttered off into the crowd, which was pouring off into a large room beyond the one we were in.
"The meeting is going to commence now in good earnest," I thought. "I"ll try and get a seat where I can hear."
Cousin Dempster and E. E. came up, and I joined in. The lecture-room was long, and lighted up beautifully. Right in front of the door was the singers" gallery, hung round with red cloth, and over that hung great wreaths of flowers, but I saw neither pulpit nor reading-desk.
"Where will the minister be?" I whispered to Cousin Dempster.
"Oh, he will open the ball."
"Open the ball! What _do_ you mean?" says I. "A minister dancing! I won"t believe it."
"Why, they all do," says he, innocent as a lamb. "No better dancers in Washington."
Sisters, what _do_ you think of that? Was I to blame when I insisted on leaving that house at once? Would you have had me sit by and witness this degradation? "No," says I to Cousin Dempster, "I won"t stay. If ministers of the Gospel will do such things, I, as a New England woman--girl I mean--would be committing a sin to look on."
"But you do not understand. They are Foreign Ministers, sent here by other nations, which they represent."
"So much the worse--how dare they set such examples?" says I.
"Amba.s.sadors! can"t you understand?"
"Of course I understand. All ministers are amba.s.sadors from the Lord; but I never heard of their dancing, except that Shaking Quakers do now and then, which is a part of their religion, and they are only elders, anyhow."
"But there is no religion in these things!"
"I should rather think not," says I, a-walking resolutely toward the door. "Now it"s of no use explaining and apologizing to me. Dancing ministers ain"t of my sort. I"m going right straight home."
Sisters, I went.