“Aunt Beulah has changed too. She has become 165 a suffragette and thinks only of getting women their rights and their privileges.

“Maggie Lou is an anti, and we have long arguments about the cause. She says that woman’s place is in the home, but I say look at me, who have no home, how can I wash and bake and brew like the women of my grandfather’s day, visiting around the way I do? And she says that it is the principle of the thing that is involved, and I ought to take a stand for or against. Everybody has so many different arguments that I don’t know what I think yet, but some day I shall make up my mind for good.

“Well, that about brings me up to the present. I meant to describe a few things in detail, but I guess I will not begin on the past in that way. I don’t get so awfully much time to write in this diary because of the many interruptions of school life, and the way the monitors snoop in study hours. I don’t know who I am going to spend my Christmas holidays with. I sent Uncle Peter a poem three days ago, but he has not answered it yet. I’m afraid he thought it was very silly. I don’t hardly know what it means myself. It goes as follows: 166

“A Song
“The moon is very pale to-night,
The summer wind swings high,
I seek the temple of delight,
And feel my love draw nigh.

“I seem to feel his fragrant breath
Upon my glowing cheek.
Between us blows the wind of death,—
I shall not hear him speak.

“I don’t know why I like to write love poems, but most of the women poets did. This one made me cry.”


167

CHAPTER XIV

Merry Christmas

Margaret in mauve velvet and violets, and Gertrude in a frock of smart black and white were in the act of meeting by appointment at Sherry’s one December afternoon, with a comfortable cup of tea in mind. Gertrude emerged from the recess of the revolving door and Margaret, sitting eagerly by the entrance, almost upset the attendant in her rush to her friend’s side.