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"I am glad I am one of the first sort," said Norton, disposing of a very large strawberry.
"But isn't it strange?"
"That is what I said, Pink."
"It don't seem right," said Matilda, thoughtfully
"Yes, it does."
"It doesn't to me."
"How can you help it?"
"Why _I_ cannot help it, Norton; but if everybody that is rich chose, they could help it."
"How?"
"Don't you think they ought?"
"Well how, Pink? If people were industrious and behaved right, they wouldn't be poor, you see."
"Oh, but, Norton, they would sometimes. There is Mrs. Eldridge, and there are the poor women at Mrs. Rogers', and a great many more like them."
"Well if _somebody_ hadn't behaved wrong," said Norton, "they wouldn't be so hard up."
"Oh, but that does not help them."
"Not much."
"And they ought to be helped," said Matilda, slowly examining the painted flowers on the china in her hand, and remembering Mrs.
Eldridge's cracked delf tea-cup.
"That plate would buy up the whole concern where we were yesterday, wouldn't it?"
Matilda looked up suddenly, at Norton's thus touching her thought; but she did not like to pursue it. Norton, however, had no scruples.
"Yes; and these strawberries, I suppose, would feed her for a week--the old woman, I mean. And one of our drawing-room chairs would furnish her house, pretty near. Yes, I guess it would. And I really think one week of the coal we burned a few months ago would keep her, and Mrs. Rogers too, warm all winter. And I am certain one of mamma's dresses would clothe her for a year. Seems queer, don't it."
"And she is cold, and hungry, and uncomfortable," said Matilda. The two looked at each other.
"But then, you know, if mamma gave one of her dresses to clothe this old woman, she would have to give another to clothe some other old woman; and the end would be, she would have no dresses for herself. And if she tried to warm all the cold houses, she wouldn't have firing to cook her own dinner. You see it has to be so, Pink; some rich and some poor. And suppose these strawberries had been changed into some poor somebody's dinner, I couldn't have had them to give to you. Do you see, Pink?"
"But, O Norton!" Matilda began, and stopped. "These strawberries are very nice."
"But you would rather turn them into mutton-chops and give them away?"
said Norton. "I dare say you would! Wouldn't you?"
"Norton," said Matilda, cautiously, "do you think anything I _could_ have bought with that dollar would have given me so much pleasure as that tea-kettle yesterday?"
"It was a good investment," said Norton. "But it is right to eat strawberries, Pink. Where are you going to stop?"
"I'll take Mrs. Eldridge some strawberries," said Matilda, smiling, "when they get plenty."
"Well, agreed," said Norton. "Let us take her some other things too.
I've got money. Stop--let me put these plates in the house and fetch a piece of paper;--then we'll see what we'll take her."
Matilda sat while he was gone, looking at the golden mist on the mountains and dreaming.
"Now," said Norton, throwing himself on the turf beside her, with his piece of paper, and thrusting his hand deep down in his pocket to get at his pencil, "Now, let us see what we will do."
"Norton," said Matilda, joyously, "this is better than croquet."
Norton looked up with those bright eyes of his, but his reply was to proceed to business.
"Now for it, Pink. What shall we do for the old lady? What does she want? Pooh! she wants everything; but what to begin with?"
"Strawberries, you said."
"Strawberries! Not at all. That's the last thing. I mean we'll fix her up, Pink. Now what does she want to be comfortable. It is only one old woman; but we shall feel better if she is comfortable. Or you will."
"But what do you mean, Norton? how much can we do?"
"Just as much as we've a mind to. I've got money, I tell you. Come; begin. What goes down first?"
"Why, Norton," said Matilda, in an ecstasy, "it is like a fairy story."
"What?"
"This, that we are doing. It is like a fairy story exactly."
"How is it like fairy stories?" said Norton. "_I_ don't know."
"Did you never read fairy stories?"
"Never. What are they like?"
"Why some of them are just like this," said Matilda. "People are rich, and can do what they please; and they set out to get things together for a feast, or to prepare a palace for some princess; and first one nice thing is got, and then another, and then some thing else; until by and by you feel as if you had been at the feast, or seen the palace, or had done the shopping. I do."
"This isn't for a princess," said Norton.
"No, nor a palace," said Matilda; "but it seems just as good."
"Go on, Pink; let us quit princesses and get to the real business. What do you want to get, first thing?"
"_First_ thing," said Matilda, "I think would be to get somebody to clean the house. There are only two little rooms. It wouldn't be much.
Don't you think so, Norton?"
"As we cannot build a palace, and have it new, I should say the old one had better be cleaned."