Section 13
Chapter 13 — An Old Proverb with a New Meaning explained simply
The Story Girl by L. M. Montgomery
Original excerpt
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"Oh, dear me, I overslept myself. Uncle Roger wanted breakfast at six. Well, I suppose the fire is on anyhow, for the Story Girl is up. I guess she got up early to knead the bread. She couldn’t sleep all night for worrying over it."
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It was half-past five when we boys got up the next morning. We were
joined on the stairs by Felicity, yawning and rosy.
"Oh, dear me, I overslept myself. Uncle Roger wanted breakfast at six.
Well, I suppose the fire is on anyhow, for the Story Girl is up. I guess
she got up early to knead the bread. She couldn’t sleep all night for
worrying over it."
The fire was on, and a flushed and triumphant Story Girl was taking a
loaf of bread from the oven.
"Just look," she said proudly. "I have every bit of the bread baked. I
got up at three, and it was lovely and light, so I just gave it a right
good kneading and popped it into the oven. And it’s all done and out of
the way. But the loaves don’t seem quite as big as they should be," she
added doubtfully.
"Sara Stanley!" Felicity flew across the kitchen. "Do you mean that you
put the bread right into the oven after you kneaded it without leaving
it to rise a second time?"
The Story Girl turned quite pale.
"Yes, I did," she faltered. "Oh, Felicity, wasn’t it right?"
"You’ve ruined the bread," said Felicity flatly. "It’s as heavy as a
stone. I declare, Sara Stanley, I’d rather have a little common sense
than be a great story teller."
Bitter indeed was the poor Story Girl’s mortification.
"Don’t tell Uncle Roger," she implored humbly.
"Oh, I won’t tell him," promised Felicity amiably. "It’s lucky there’s
enough old bread to do to-day. This will go to the hens. But it’s an
awful waste of good flour."
The Story Girl crept out with Felix and me to the morning orchard, while
Dan and Peter went to do the barn work.
"It isn’t ANY use for me to try to learn to cook," she said.
"Never mind," I said consolingly. "You can tell splendid stories."
"But what good would that do a hungry boy?" wailed the Story Girl.
"Boys ain’t ALWAYS hungry," said Felix gravely. "There’s times when they
ain’t."
"I don’t believe it," said the Story Girl drearily.
"Besides," added Felix in the tone of one who says while there is life
there is yet hope, "you may learn to cook yet if you keep on trying."
"But Aunt Olivia won’t let me waste the stuff. My only hope was to learn
this week. But I suppose Felicity is so disgusted with me now that she
won’t give me any more lessons."
"I don’t care," said Felix. "I like you better than Felicity, even if
you can’t cook. There’s lots of folks can make bread. But there isn’t
many who can tell a story like you."
"But it’s better to be useful than just interesting," sighed the Story
Girl bitterly.
And Felicity, who was useful, would, in her secret soul, have given
anything to be interesting. Which is the way of human nature.
Company descended on us that afternoon. First came Aunt Janet’s sister,
Mrs. Patterson, with a daughter of sixteen years and a son of two. They
were followed by a buggy-load of Markdale people; and finally, Mrs.
Elder Frewen and her sister from Vancouver, with two small daughters of
the latter, arrived.
"It never rains but it pours," said Uncle Roger, as he went out to take
their horse. But Felicity’s foot was on her native heath. She had been
baking all the afternoon, and, with a pantry well stocked with biscuits,
cookies, cakes, and pies, she cared not if all Carlisle came to tea.
Cecily set the table, and the Story Girl waited on it and washed all the
dishes afterwards. But all the blushing honours fell to Felicity, who
received so many compliments that her airs were quite unbearable for
the rest of the week. She presided at the head of the table with as much
grace and dignity as if she had been five times twelve years old, and
seemed to know by instinct just who took sugar and who took it not. She
was flushed with excitement and pleasure, and was so pretty that I could
hardly eat for looking at her—which is the highest compliment in a
boy’s power to pay.
The Story Girl, on the contrary, was under eclipse. She was pale and
lustreless from her disturbed night and early rising; and no opportunity
offered to tell a melting tale. Nobody took any notice of her. It was
Felicity’s day.
After tea Mrs. Frewen and her sister wished to visit their father’s
grave in the Carlisle churchyard. It appeared that everybody wanted to
go with them; but it was evident that somebody must stay home with Jimmy
Patterson, who had just fallen sound asleep on the kitchen sofa. Dan
finally volunteered to look after him. He had a new Henty book which he
wanted to finish, and that, he said, was better fun than a walk to the
graveyard.
"I think we’ll be back before he wakes," said Mrs. Patterson, "and
anyhow he is very good and won’t be any trouble. Don’t let him go
outside, though. He has a cold now."
We went away, leaving Dan sitting on the door-sill reading his book, and
Jimmy P. snoozing blissfully on the sofa. When we returned—Felix and
the girls and I were ahead of the others—Dan was still sitting in
precisely the same place and attitude; but there was no Jimmy in sight.
"Dan, where’s the baby?" cried Felicity.
Dan looked around. His jaw fell in blank amazement. I never saw any one
look as foolish as Dan at that moment.
"Good gracious, I don’t know," he said helplessly.
"You’ve been so deep in that wretched book that he’s got out, and dear
knows where he is," cried Felicity distractedly.
"I wasn’t," cried Dan. "He MUST be in the house. I’ve been sitting right
across the door ever since you left, and he couldn’t have got out unless
he crawled right over me. He must be in the house."
"He isn’t in the kitchen," said Felicity rushing about wildly, "and he
couldn’t get into the other part of the house, for I shut the hall door
tight, and no baby could open it—and it’s shut tight yet. So are all
the windows. He MUST have gone out of that door, Dan King, and it’s your
fault."
"He DIDN’T go out of this door," reiterated Dan stubbornly. "I know
that."
"Well, where is he, then? He isn’t here. Did he melt into air?" demanded
Felicity. "Oh, come and look for him, all of you. Don’t stand round like
ninnies. We MUST find him before his mother gets here. Dan King, you’re
an idiot!"
Dan was too frightened to resent this, at the time. However and wherever
Jimmy had gone, he WAS gone, so much was certain. We tore about the
house and yard like maniacs; we looked into every likely and unlikely
place. But Jimmy we could not find, anymore than if he had indeed melted
into air. Mrs. Patterson came, and we had not found him. Things were
getting serious. Uncle Roger and Peter were summoned from the field.
Mrs. Patterson became hysterical, and was taken into the spare room with
such remedies as could be suggested. Everybody blamed poor Dan. Cecily
asked him what he would feel like if Jimmy was never, never found. The
Story Girl had a gruesome recollection of some baby at Markdale who had
wandered away like that—
"And they never found him till the next spring, and all they found
was—HIS SKELETON, with the grass growing through it," she whispered.
"This beats me," said Uncle Roger, when a fruitless hour had elapsed. "I
do hope that baby hasn’t wandered down to the swamp. It seems impossible
he could walk so far; but I must go and see. Felicity, hand me my high
boots out from under the sofa, there’s a girl."
Felicity, pale and tearful, dropped on her knees and lifted the cretonne
frill of the sofa. There, his head pillowed hardly on Uncle Roger’s
boots, lay Jimmy Patterson, still sound asleep!
"Well, I’ll be—jiggered!" said Uncle Roger.
"I KNEW he never went out of the door," cried Dan triumphantly.
When the last buggy had driven away, Felicity set a batch of bread, and
the rest of us sat around the back porch steps in the cat’s light and
ate cherries, shooting the stones at each other. Cecily was in quest of
information.
"What does ’it never rains but it pours’ mean?"
"Oh, it means if anything happens something else is sure to happen,"
said the Story Girl. "I’ll illustrate. There’s Mrs. Murphy. She never
had a proposal in her life till she was forty, and then she had three
in the one week, and she was so flustered she took the wrong one and has
been sorry ever since. Do you see what it means now?"
"Yes, I guess so," said Cecily somewhat doubtfully. Later on we heard
her imparting her newly acquired knowledge to Felicity in the pantry.
"’It never rains but it pours’ means that nobody wants to marry you for
ever so long, and then lots of people do."
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What happens here
Chapter 13 — An Old Proverb with a New Meaning continues The Story Girl, focusing on childhood, storytelling, memory, friendship, family, and rural life. The chapter moves the reader through a specific pressure, choice, or change in the story.
Why this scene matters
This section matters because it shows one part of The Story Girl's larger pattern: childhood, storytelling, memory, friendship, family, and rural life. Reading the situation first makes the older prose easier to follow.
Characters in this scene
- Main characters: The people whose choices carry this part of The Story Girl.
- Family or social world: The relationships, class pressures, rules, or expectations shaping the chapter.
- Narrative pressure: The conflict, secret, desire, or consequence that keeps this section moving.