dear daddy,
we started to walk to town today, but mercy! how it poured.
i like winter to be winter with snow instead of rain.
julia's desirable uncle called again this afternoon--and brought
a five-pound box of chocolates. there are advantages, you see,
about rooming with julia.
our innocent prattle appeared to amuse him and he waited for a later
train in order to take tea in the study. we had an awful lot of
trouble getting permission. it's hard enough entertaining fathers
and grandfathers, but uncles are a step worse; and as for brothers
and cousins, they are next to impossible. julia had to swear
that he was her uncle before a notary public and then have the
county clerk's certificate attached. (don't i know a lot of law?)
and even then i doubt if we could have had our tea if the dean
had chanced to see how youngish and good-looking uncle jervis is.
anyway, we had it, with brown bread swiss cheese sandwiches.
he helped make them and then ate four. i told him that i had
spent last summer at lock willow, and we had a beautiful gossipy
time about the semples, and the horses and cows and chickens.
all the horses that he used to know are dead, except grover,
who was a baby colt at the time of his last visit--and poor grove
now is so old he can just limp about the pasture.
he asked if they still kept doughnuts in a yellow crock with a blue
plate over it on the bottom shelf of the pantry--and they do!
he wanted to know if there was still a woodchuck's hole under the pile
of rocks in the night pasture--and there is! amasai caught a big,
fat, grey one there this summer, the twenty-fifth great-grandson
of the one master jervis caught when he was a little boy.
i called him `master jervie' to his face, but he didn't appear
to be insulted. julia says she has never seen him so amiable;
he's usually pretty unapproachable. but julia hasn't a bit of tact;
and men, i find, require a great deal. they purr if you rub them the
right way and spit if you don't. (that isn't a very elegant metaphor.
i mean it figuratively.)
we're reading marie bashkirtseff's journal. isn't it amazing?
listen to this: `last night i was seized by a fit of despair
that found utterance in moans, and that finally drove me to throw
the dining-room clock into the sea.'
it makes me almost hope i'm not a genius; they must be very wearing
to have about--and awfully destructive to the furniture.
mercy! how it keeps pouring. we shall have to swim to chapel tonight.
yours ever,
judy