"No," said Phronsie. "I don't; but I remember Seraphina's bonnet."
"It was trimmed with some of Grandma Bascom's chicken's feathers," said
Joel.
"And Mamsie made it out of an old bonnet string," said Polly. "Oh dear, if only Mamsie were here to-day!" And a cloud came over her face.
"But we've Baby Fisher now," said Ben cheerfully, looking down at her.
"He's worth staying at home for, Polly."
"Of course he is," said Polly, her gayety returning. "And dear Papa Fisher was master of ceremonies then; but he wouldn't enjoy it to-day without Mamsie. So we oughtn't to wish him here."
[Illustration: "And did we," cried Phronsie "find it out,
Polly, and spoil it all?">[
"I wish you wouldn't begin about that Little Brown House, and what
elegant times you had in it," exclaimed Alexia, twitching at a present
Joel had just tied on, to be sure it was secure; "I shall think this
Tree is perfectly horrid, if you do, Polly Pepper."
"Go on—do go on," begged several voices. Meanwhile, Jack Loughead had come silently up into the long hall, and deposited a neat boxful of the gleaming frost on the table, without any comments.
"Dear me, there is so much to tell," cried Polly, with a little laugh, "if we begin about Jappy's Tree."
"Who's Tree?" cried Livingston Bayley, who had been wrinkling his brows in great perplexity all through the recital.