The Iron Woman 
 
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Title: The Iron Woman 
Author: Margaret Deland 
Release Date: September, 2004 [EBook #6474] [Yes, we are more than 
one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on December 18, 
2002] 
Edition: 10
Language: English 
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IRON 
WOMAN *** 
 
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THE IRON WOMAN 
BY 
MARGARET DELAND 
"_This was the iniquity ... fulness of bread, and abundance of 
idleness...._"--EZEKIEL, xvi., 49 
 
TO MY 
PATIENT, RUTHLESS, INSPIRING CRITIC LORIN DELAND 
August 12, 1911 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
"LOOK!" "BLAIR IS IN LOVE WITH ME!" "I THINK YOU ARE 
REASONABLE ENOUGH FOR BOTH OF US" "ELIZABETH, 
MARRY ME!" "OF COURSE YOU KNOW MY OPINION OF YOU" 
SHE WHEELED ABOUT, AND STOOD, SWAYING WITH 
FRIGHT "WILL YOU LIVE? WILL YOU GIVE ME LIFE?" 
CLUTCHING HER SHOULDER, SHE LOOKED HARD INTO THE 
YOUNGER WOMAN'S FACE 
 
THE IRON WOMAN 
 
CHAPTER I 
"Climb up in this tree, and play house!" Elizabeth Ferguson 
commanded. She herself had climbed to the lowest branch of an
apple-tree in the Maitland orchard, and sat there, swinging her 
white-stockinged legs so recklessly that the three children whom she 
had summoned to her side, backed away for safety. "If you don't," she 
said, looking down at them, "I'm afraid, perhaps, maybe, I'll get mad." 
Her foreboding was tempered by a giggle and by the deepening dimple 
in her cheek, but all the same she sighed with a sort of impersonal 
regret at the prospect of any unpleasantness. "It would be too bad if I 
got mad, wouldn't it?" she said thoughtfully. The others looked at one 
another in consternation. They knew so well what it meant to have 
Elizabeth "mad," that Nannie Maitland, the oldest of the little group, 
said at once, helplessly, "Well." 
Nannie was always helpless with Elizabeth, just as she was helpless 
with her half-brother, Blair, though she was ten and Elizabeth and Blair 
were only eight; but how could a little girl like Nannie be anything but 
helpless before a brother whom she adored, and a wonderful being like 
Elizabeth?--Elizabeth! who always knew exactly what she wanted to do, 
and who instantly "got mad," if you wouldn't say you'd do it, too; got 
mad, and then repented, and hugged you and kissed you, and actually 
cried (or got mad again), if you refused to accept as a sign of your 
forgiveness her new slate-pencil, decorated with strips of red- 
and-white paper just like a little barber's pole! No wonder Nannie, 
timid and good-natured, was helpless before such a sweet, furious little 
creature! Blair had more backbone than his sister, but even he felt 
Elizabeth's heel upon his neck. David Richie, a silent, candid, very 
stubborn small boy, was, after a momentary struggle, as meek as the 
rest of them. Now, when she commanded them all to climb, it was 
David who demurred, because, he said, he spoke first for Indians 
tomahawking you in the back parlor. 
"Very well!" said the despot; "play your old Indians! I'll never speak to 
any of you again as long as I live!" 
"I've got on my new pants," David objected. 
"Take 'em off!" said Elizabeth. And there is no knowing what might 
have happened if the decorous Nannie had not come to the rescue.
"That's not proper to do out-of-doors; and Miss White says not to say 
'pants.'" 
Elizabeth looked thoughtful. "Maybe it isn't proper," she admitted; "but 
David, honest, I took a hate to being tommy-hocked the last time we 
played it; so please, dear David! If you'll play house in the tree, I'll give 
you a piece of my taffy." She took a little sticky package out of her 
pocket and licked her lips to indicate its contents;--David yielded, 
shinning up the trunk    
    
		
	
	
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