“Maw, does it say that in the Book of Hiram?” asked Clematis.
“It says that, an’ more, too. It says, ‘The words of the wise are an expense, but the lovin’ parent don’t grudge ’em.’”
Mary Carmichael had noticed, as her alien presence came to be less of a check on Mrs. Yellett’s natural medium of expression, that she was much addicted to a species of quotation with which she impartially adorned her conversation, pointed family morals, or administered an occasional reproof. These family aphorisms were sometimes semi-legal, sometimes semi-scriptural in turn of phrase, and built on a foundation of homely philosophy. They were ascribed to the “Book of Hiram” and never failed of salutary effect in the family circle. But the apt quotations that she had just heard piqued Mary’s curiosity more than before.
“Do you happen to have a copy of the Book of Hiram, Mrs. Yellett?” she asked, in all innocence, supposing that the ‘homely apothegms were to be found at the back of some patent-medicine almanac. Judith Rodney listened in wonder. The question had never before been asked in her hearing.
“I lost mine.” Mrs. Yellett folded her arms and looked at her questioner with something of a challenging mien.
“What a pity! I’ve been so interested in the quotations I’ve heard you make from it.”
“What’s the matter with ’em?” she demanded, pride and apprehension equally commingled.
Judith Rodney rushed to the rescue:
“Nothing is the matter with them, Mrs. Yellett,” she said, with her disarming smile, “except that there is not quite enough to go around.”
The matriarch had the air of gathering herself together for something really worth while. Then she tossed off: