Section 20
Chapter 20 — The Judgment Sunday explained simply
The Story Girl by L. M. Montgomery
Original excerpt
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Sunday morning broke, dull and gray. The rain had ceased, but the clouds hung dark and brooding above a world which, in its windless calm, following the spent storm-throe, seemed to us to be waiting "till judgment spoke the doom of fate." We were all up early. None of us, it appeared, had slept...
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Sunday morning broke, dull and gray. The rain had ceased, but the
clouds hung dark and brooding above a world which, in its windless
calm, following the spent storm-throe, seemed to us to be waiting "till
judgment spoke the doom of fate." We were all up early. None of us, it
appeared, had slept well, and some of us not at all. The Story Girl
had been among the latter, and she looked very pale and wan, with black
shadows under her deep-set eyes. Peter, however, had slept soundly
enough after twelve o’clock.
"When you’ve been stumping out elderberries all the afternoon it’ll take
more than the Judgment Day to keep you awake all night," he said. "But
when I woke up this morning it was just awful. I’d forgot it for a
moment, and then it all came back with a rush, and I was worse scared
than before."
Cecily was pale but brave. For the first time in years she had not put
her hair up in curlers on Saturday night. It was brushed and braided
with Puritan simplicity.
"If it’s the Judgment Day I don’t care whether my hair is curly or not,"
she said.
"Well," said Aunt Janet, when we all descended to the kitchen, "this is
the first time you young ones have ever all got up without being called,
and that’s a fact."
At breakfast our appetites were poor. How could the grown-ups eat
as they did? After breakfast and the necessary chores there was the
forenoon to be lived through. Peter, true to his word, got out his Bible
and began to read from the first chapter in Genesis.
"I won’t have time to read it all through, I s’pose," he said, "but I’ll
get along as far as I can."
There was no preaching in Carlisle that day, and Sunday School was not
till the evening. Cecily got out her Lesson Slip and studied the lesson
conscientiously. The rest of us did not see how she could do it. We
could not, that was very certain.
"If it isn’t the Judgment Day, I want to have the lesson learned," she
said, "and if it is I’ll feel I’ve done what was right. But I never
found it so hard to remember the Golden Text before."
The long dragging hours were hard to endure. We roamed restlessly about,
and went to and fro—all save Peter, who still steadily read away at his
Bible. He was through Genesis by eleven and beginning on Exodus.
"There’s a good deal of it I don’t understand," he said, "but I read
every word, and that’s the main thing. That story about Joseph and his
brother was so int’resting I almost forgot about the Judgment Day."
But the long drawn out dread was beginning to get on Dan’s nerves.
"If it is the Judgment Day," he growled, as we went in to dinner, "I
wish it’d hurry up and have it over."
"Oh, Dan!" cried Felicity and Cecily together, in a chorus of horror.
But the Story Girl looked as if she rather sympathized with Dan.
If we had eaten little at breakfast we could eat still less at dinner.
After dinner the clouds rolled away, and the sun came joyously and
gloriously out. This, we thought, was a good omen. Felicity opined that
it wouldn’t have cleared up if it was the Judgment Day. Nevertheless, we
dressed ourselves carefully, and the girls put on their white dresses.
Sara Ray came up, still crying, of course. She increased our uneasiness
by saying that her mother believed the _Enterprise_ paragraph, and was
afraid that the end of the world was really at hand.
"That’s why she let me come up," she sobbed. "If she hadn’t been afraid
I don’t believe she would have let me come up. But I’d have died if I
couldn’t have come. And she wasn’t a bit cross when I told her I had
gone to the magic lantern show. That’s an awful bad sign. I hadn’t a
white dress, but I put on my white muslin apron with the frills."
"That seems kind of queer," said Felicity doubtfully. "You wouldn’t put
on an apron to go to church, and so it doesn’t seem as if it was proper
to put it on for Judgment Day either."
"Well, it’s the best I could do," said Sara disconsolately. "I wanted to
have something white on. It’s just like a dress only it hasn’t sleeves."
"Let’s go into the orchard and wait," said the Story Girl. "It’s one
o’clock now, so in another hour we’ll know the worst. We’ll leave the
front door open, and we’ll hear the big clock when it strikes two."
No better plan being suggested, we betook ourselves to the orchard, and
sat on the boughs of Uncle Alec’s tree because the grass was wet. The
world was beautiful and peaceful and green. Overhead was a dazzling blue
sky, spotted with heaps of white cloud.
"Pshaw, I don’t believe there’s any fear of it being the last day," said
Dan, beginning a whistle out of sheer bravado.
"Well, don’t whistle on Sunday anyhow," said Felicity severely.
"I don’t see a thing about Methodists or Presbyterians, as far as I’ve
gone, and I’m most through Exodus," said Peter suddenly. "When does it
begin to tell about them?"
"There’s nothing about Methodists or Presbyterians in the Bible," said
Felicity scornfully.
Peter looked amazed.
"Well, how did they happen then?" he asked. "When did they begin to be?"
"I’ve often thought it such a strange thing that there isn’t a word
about either of them in the Bible," said Cecily. "Especially when it
mentions Baptists—or at least one Baptist."
"Well, anyhow," said Peter, "even if it isn’t the Judgment Day I’m
going to keep on reading the Bible until I’ve got clean through. I never
thought it was such an int’resting book."
"It sounds simply dreadful to hear you call the Bible an interesting
book," said Felicity, with a shudder at the sacrilege. "Why, you might
be talking about ANY common book."
"I didn’t mean any harm," said Peter, crestfallen.
"The Bible IS an interesting book," said the Story Girl, coming to
Peter’s rescue. "And there are magnificent stories in it—yes, Felicity,
MAGNIFICENT. If the world doesn’t come to an end I’ll tell you the
story of Ruth next Sunday—or look here! I’ll tell it anyhow. That’s a
promise. Wherever we are next Sunday I’ll tell you about Ruth."
"Why, you wouldn’t tell stories in heaven," said Cecily, in a very timid
voice.
"Why not?" said the Story Girl, with a flash of her eyes. "Indeed I
shall. I’ll tell stories as long as I’ve a tongue to talk with, or any
one to listen."
Ay, doubtless. That dauntless spirit would soar triumphantly above the
wreck of matter and the crash of worlds, taking with it all its own wild
sweetness and daring. Even the young-eyed cherubim, choiring on meadows
of asphodel, might cease their harping for a time to listen to a tale
of the vanished earth, told by that golden tongue. Some vague thought of
this was in our minds as we looked at her; and somehow it comforted us.
Not even the Judgment was so greatly to be feared if after it we were
the SAME, our own precious little identities unchanged.
"It must be getting handy two," said Cecily. "It seems as if we’d been
waiting here for ever so much longer than an hour."
Conversation languished. We watched and waited nervously. The moments
dragged by, each seeming an hour. Would two o’clock never come and end
the suspense? We all became very tense. Even Peter had to stop reading.
Any unaccustomed sound or sight in the world about us struck on our taut
senses like the trump of doom. A cloud passed over the sun and as the
sudden shadow swept across the orchard we turned pale and trembled. A
wagon rumbling over a plank bridge in the hollow made Sara Ray start up
with a shriek. The slamming of a barn door over at Uncle Roger’s caused
the cold perspiration to break out on our faces.
"I don’t believe it’s the Judgment Day," said Felix, "and I never have
believed it. But oh, I wish that clock would strike two."
"Can’t you tell us a story to pass the time?" I entreated the Story
Girl.
She shook her head.
"No, it would be no use to try. But if this isn’t the Judgment Day I’ll
have a great one to tell of us being so scared."
Pat presently came galloping up the orchard, carrying in his mouth a big
field mouse, which, sitting down before us, he proceeded to devour, body
and bones, afterwards licking his chops with great satisfaction.
"It can’t be the Judgment Day," said Sara Ray, brightening up. "Paddy
would never be eating mice if it was."
"If that clock doesn’t soon strike two I shall go out of my seven
senses," declared Cecily with unusual vehemence.
"Time always seems long when you’re waiting," said the Story Girl. "But
it does seem as if we had been here more than an hour."
"Maybe the clock struck and we didn’t hear it," suggested Dan.
"Somebody’d better go and see."
"I’ll go," said Cecily. "I suppose, even if anything happens, I’ll have
time to get back to you."
We watched her white-clad figure pass through the gate and enter the
front door. A few minutes passed—or a few years—we could not have told
which. Then Cecily came running at full speed back to us. But when she
reached us she trembled so much that at first she could not speak.
"What is it? Is it past two?" implored the Story Girl.
"It’s—it’s four," said Cecily with a gasp. "The old clock isn’t going.
Mother forgot to wind it up last night and it stopped. But it’s four by
the kitchen clock—so it isn’t the Judgment Day—and tea is ready—and
mother says to come in."
We looked at each other, realizing what our dread had been, now that it
was lifted. It was not the Judgment Day. The world and life were still
before us, with all their potent lure of years unknown.
"I’ll never believe anything I read in the papers again," said Dan,
rushing to the opposite extreme.
"I told you the Bible was more to be depended on than the newspapers,"
said Cecily triumphantly.
Sara Ray and Peter and the Story Girl went home, and we went in to
tea with royal appetites. Afterwards, as we dressed for Sunday School
upstairs, our spirits carried us away to such an extent that Aunt
Janet had to come twice to the foot of the stairs and inquire severely,
"Children, have you forgotten what day this is?"
"Isn’t it nice that we’re going to live a spell longer in this nice
world?" said Felix, as we walked down the hill.
"Yes, and Felicity and the Story Girl are speaking again," said Cecily
happily.
"And Felicity DID speak first," I said.
"Yes, but it took the Judgment Day to make her. I wish," added Cecily
with a sigh, "that I hadn’t been in quite such a hurry giving away my
forget-me-not jug."
"And I wish I hadn’t been in such a hurry deciding I’d be a
Presbyterian," said Peter.
"Well, it’s not too late for that," said Dan. "You can change your mind
now."
"No, sir," said Peter with a flash of spirit, "I ain’t one of the kind
that says they’ll be something just because they’re scared, and when the
scare is over go back on it. I said I’d be Presbyterian and I mean to
stick to it."
"You said you knew a story that had something to do with Presbyterians,"
I said to the Story Girl. "Tell us it now."
"Oh, no, it isn’t the right kind of story to tell on Sunday," she
replied. "But I’ll tell it to-morrow morning."
Accordingly, we heard it the next morning in the orchard.
"Long ago, when Judy Pineau was young," said the Story Girl, "she was
hired with Mrs. Elder Frewen—the first Mrs. Elder Frewen. Mrs. Frewen
had been a school-teacher, and she was very particular as to how people
talked, and the grammar they used. And she didn’t like anything but
refined words. One very hot day she heard Judy Pineau say she was ’all
in a sweat.’ Mrs. Frewen was greatly shocked, and said, ’Judy, you
shouldn’t say that. It’s horses that sweat. You should say you are in
a perspiration.’ Well, Judy promised she’d remember, because she liked
Mrs. Frewen and was anxious to please her. Not long afterwards Judy was
scrubbing the kitchen floor one morning, and when Mrs. Frewen came in
Judy looked up and said, quite proud over using the right word, ’Oh,
Mees Frewen, ain’t it awful hot? I declare I’m all in a Presbyterian.’"
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What happens here
Chapter 20 — The Judgment Sunday 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.