Oldfield: A Kentucky Tale of the Last Century
The old white curtain was slightly too short. Its quaint border of little cotton snowballs swung clear of the window ledge, letting in the sunbeams. The flood of light streaming far across the faded carpet reached the high bed, and awakened Miss Judy earlier than usual on that bright March morning, in the Pennyroyal Region of Kentucky, a half century ago.
Miss Judy was always awake early, and usually arose while her sister lay still fast asleep on the other side of the big bed. She had learned, however, to creep so softly from beneath the covers, and to climb so quietly down the bed's steep incline, that Miss Sophia was hardly ever in the least disturbed. Moreover, Miss Judy always kept a split-bottomed chair standing near her pillow at night. This served not only as a stand for the candlestick and matches,—so that the candle need not be blown out before Miss Sophia was comfortably cuddled down and Miss Judy was in bed,—but it also furnished a dignified and comparatively easy means of ascending the bed's heights. On descending, Miss Judy had but to step decorously from the mound of feathers to the chair and to drop delicately from the chair to the floor.
To have seen Miss Judy doing this must have been a sight well worth seeing. She was so very pretty, so small, so slight, so exquisite altogether. Old as she was, she had still the movements of a bird. Her sweet old face was as fair as any girl's, and as ready with its delicate blushes. Her soft hair, white as falling snowflakes and as curly as a child's, was burnished by a silver gloss lovelier than the sheen of youth. And her beautiful eyes were still the blue of the flax flowers.
Lifting her shining, curly head on that sunny morning, Miss Judy cast a glance of dismay at the ruthless sunbeams lying on the carpet, and she could not help a slight start. Then she held her breath for a moment, turning her blue eyes on the back of Miss Sophia's nightcap, in a look of anxious love. It always gave Miss Sophia a headache to be aroused suddenly. Miss Judy was afraid that the involuntary movement might have startled her. They were very tender of each other, these two poor little sisters. And they were very, very polite to one another; more polite to one another than they were to others, if that were possible. Miss Sophia, who could not always remember the smaller matters of fine breeding where other people were concerned, never forgot the smallest courtesy toward her sister. Miss Judy, who was ever the pink—the sweetest, old-fashioned clovepink—of politeness to everybody, always treated Miss Sophia with such distinguished consideration as was a lesson in manners to see. And no one ever smiled: it was too lovely to be laughed at—too sincere to be absurd. Lying down side by side every night of their long and blameless lives, they formally wished each other pleasant dreams, and bade one another a ceremonious good night. Rising every morning—separately, with delicate regard for the simple mysteries of one another's toilet—they greeted each other at breakfast as two high-bred strangers might meet in some grand drawing-room.
Nancy Huston Banks
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OLDFIELD
A KENTUCKY TALE OF THE LAST CENTURY
To My Father
CONTENTS
OLDFIELD
THE LITTLE SISTERS
THE OLDFIELD PEOPLE
PHASES OF VILLAGE LIFE
THE CHILD OF MISS JUDY'S HEART
AN UNCONSCIOUS PHILOSOPHER
LYNN GORDON
THE DOCTOR'S DILEMMA
AT OLD LADY GORDON'S
A ROMANTIC REGION
RELIGION IN OLDFIELD
BODY OR SOUL
MISS JUDY'S LITTLE WAYS
THE DANCING LESSON
MAKING PEACE
SIDNEY DOES HER DUTY
THE SHOCK AND THE FRIGHT
LOVE'S AWAKENING
AN EMBARRASSING ACCIDENT
INVOKING THE LAW
THE CONFLICT BETWEEN FAITH AND LOVE
WHAT OLDFIELD THOUGHT AND SAID
THE UPAS TREE
THE BEGINNING OF THE END
OLD LADY GORDON'S ANGER
THE REVELATION OF THE TRUTH
THE TRAGEDY
THE LAST ARTFULNESS OF MISS JUDY