A Houseful of Girls

Mrs George de Horne Vaizey
A Houseful of Girls
By Mrs George de Horne Vaizey
CHAPTER ONE.
HALF A DOZEN DAUGHTERS.
There were six of them altogether--six great big girls,--and they lived in
a great big house, in the middle of a long high road, one end of which
loses itself in London town, while the other goes stretching away over
the county of Hertford. Years ago, John Gilpin had ridden his famous
race down that very road, and Christabel loved to look out of her
bedroom window and imagine that she saw him flying along, with his
poor bald head bared to the breeze, and the bottles swinging on either
side. She had cut a picture of him out of a book and tacked it on her
wall, for, as she explained to Agatha, her special sister, she felt it a duty
to support "local talent," and, so far as she could discover, Gilpin was
the only celebrity who had ever patronised the neighbourhood.
Christabel was the youngest of the family--a position which, as every
one knows, is only second in importance to that of the eldest, and, in
this instance, Maud was so sweet and unassuming that the haughty
young person of fourteen ruled her with a rod of iron.
Fair-haired Lilias was a full-fledged young lady, and Nan had had all
her dresses let down, and was supposed to have her hair up; but as a
matter of fact it was more often down than not, for it was heavy and
plentiful, and Nan's ten thumbs could by no chance fasten it securely.
Hair-pins littered the schoolroom floor, hair-pins stood out aggressively
against the white paint on the stairs, hair-pins nestled in the little
creases of velvet chairs: there were hair-pins, hair-pins everywhere,
except just where they should have been--on Nan's dressing- table; and

here there was such a dearth of these useful articles, that on one
memorable occasion she had been compelled to effect a coiffure with
the aid of a piece of string and a broken comb. The effect was striking
for a good ten minutes, and then came the inevitable collapse; but,
"Dear me," as Nan observed, "accidents will happen, and what is the
use of making a fuss about a thing like that, when the world is full of
suffering!"
Elsie thanked her stars that she was only sixteen, and need not be
"grown-up" for two long years to come; but when her younger sisters
grew obtrusive, she suddenly remembered that she would be seventeen
in three months' time, and would have them know that she was to be
treated with respect; and, in spite of daily discussions, feuds, and
battles, the girls all loved each other dearly, and believed that such a
charming and highly endowed family had never before existed in the
annals of Christendom.
As a matter of fact, the Rendell girls had claim to one great
distinction--promiscuous accomplishments had been discarded in their
case, and each had been brought up to do some one thing well. Maud
was musical, and practised scales two hours a day as a preliminary
before settling down for another two or three hours of sonatas and
fugues. Elsie locked herself in her bedroom for a like period, and the
wails of her violin came floating downstairs like the lament of a lost
soul. Nan appropriated a chilly attic, carved wood and her fingers at the
same time, and clanged away at copper work, knocking her nails black
and blue with ill-directed strokes of the hammer, as she manufactured
the panels which were fitted into her oak carving with such artistic
effect. Lilias declared sweetly that she was too stupid to do anything,
but privately reflected that at least she had mastered the art of looking
charming; and what did it matter if she were useless, since with her
beauty she would certainly marry a duke on the first opportunity, and
be spirited away to a life of luxury! As for Agatha and Christabel, they
were supposed to devote themselves to the study of languages and the
domestic arts, but in private conclave they had already decided on their
future career. They were to keep a select academy for young ladies, in
which they would correct all those glaring errors of governess and

mother under which they themselves had groaned.
"I can bear it better when I feel it is for a good end. Our girls shall
never suffer as I am suffering!" said Chrissie, with an air of martyrdom,
when she was ordered to bed at nine o'clock, and remorselessly roused
from slumber at seven a.m. "If grown-ups were sensible, they would
allow a child to follow its own instinct. Nature must surely know better
than mothers; and my nature tells me to sit up at nights and have
breakfast in
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