~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
"I asked you," he said, "as a
special favor, not to be too flowery. But
our poetess . . ." Betsy squirmed and
blushed . . . "is not only flowery.
Her flowers are the wrong color. I haven't
read your story, Betsy, and I don't intend
to. The opening sentence is enough for me.
He read aloud scornfully:
"Under a tree hung with rosy apple
blossoms . . ."
"Rosy apple blossoms! Rosy apple
blossoms! Who ever heard of rosy apple
blossoms? Apple blossoms, my dear young
lady, are not pink. They are white."
Betsy's blushes receded. She turned, in
fact, a little pale.
"I think they are pink, Mr.
Gaston."
"You think they are pink?" Mr.
Gaston glared at her through his thick
glasses. "But I know they are
white."
"It's the under part of the
petals," Betsy said falteringly.
"They're pinkish, sort of."
"Pinkish, sort of!" Mr. Gaston
mocked.
Betsy looked around a little wildly. Joe
Willard was staring out the window. She
brought her gaze back to Mr. Gaston
stubbornly. "We had lots of apple trees when
we lived up on Hill Street. I always liked
to look at them in May."
"You should have examined them
accurately. You would have found that they
are white."
"But they aren't white." Betsy was
near tears, but it was from anger.
"They must have been peach trees,"
Mr. Gaston said.
"They were apples. I've eaten the
apples."
"Betsy," said Mr. Gaston with a
maddening, condescending smile. "If you were
a little younger, I'd ask you to write a
hundred times, 'Apple blossoms are white.'
As it is, I merely ask you to rewrite your
story, and eliminate any inaccuracies."
He picked up another paper.
But the subject was not quite done with.
Joe Willard turned from his study of the
trees beyond the window and raised his hand.
"Yes, Joe?" Mr. Gaston said
changing his tone.
"It is my opinion sir, that apple
blossoms are pink."
Mr. Gaston was silent, stunned.
"Pinkish, rather." Joe continued.
"I think Betsy's word 'pinkish' is
excellent. They're colored just enough to
make the effect rosy."
The silence in the room had width, height,
depth, mass, and substance.
From Betsy in Spite of Herself by Maud Hart Lovelace
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
As you can see in the photo, Betsy and Joe are quite right - apple blossoms are pinkish.
And they smell simply divine!!
P.S.
If you've never read the Betsy~Tacy books by Maud Hart Lovelace, you should.
Really, you should.
They're simply delightful.
As you can see in the photo, Betsy and Joe are quite right - apple blossoms are pinkish.
And they smell simply divine!!
P.S.
If you've never read the Betsy~Tacy books by Maud Hart Lovelace, you should.
Really, you should.
They're simply delightful.