Life and sayings of Mrs. Partington and others
of the family | ||
DON'T CUT IT, MISS.
“Don't you think my dress much too long?” asked
Seraphina, the youngest of the seven, of old Roger.
“Don't cut it, miss, even if it is. I beg of you as a
friend not to cut it,” said the old man seriously.
“Why not?” inquired she, timidly.
“Because, miss, I remember a difficulty of my own
once, under like circumstances, which was a source of
much shame to me. Overtaken by a severe shower far
from home, I was terribly drenched, and a new pair of
sheepskin inexpressibles that I wore, tied close at the
knee, as was the fashion then, received the dripping
streams from my body, and, distended like a bad case of
the dropsy, fell below my calves; like your dress, they
were too long, and I cut them off at the knee. But the
warm sun came out, the sheepskin contracted; inch by
inch I felt it creeping up my legs; and, by the time I
got home, you may be sure I was a sight to behold.
Don't cut it, miss, unless you feel perfectly sure it will
not shrink more.”
There was a smile at the old gentleman's delicacy in
the matter, but there could be no fear of danger, and
they did n't see how the cases were parallel at all.
Life and sayings of Mrs. Partington and others
of the family | ||