Charlotte Perkins Gilman

The Greatest Works of Charlotte Perkins Gilman


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Mr. Bell laid down his finished paper and his emptied pipe and said, "Now then. Out with it."

      This was not a felicitious opening. It is really astonishing how little diplomacy parents exhibit, how difficult they make it for the young to introduce a proposition. There was nothing for it but a bald statement, so Diantha made it baldly.

      "I have decided to leave home and go to work," she said.

      "Don't you have work enough to do at home?" he inquired, with the same air of quizzical superiority which had always annoyed her so intensely, even as a little child.

      She would cut short this form of discussion: "I am going away to earn my living. I have given up school-teaching—I don't like it, and, there isn't money enough in it. I have plans—which will speak for themselves later."

      "So," said Mr. Bell, "Plans all made, eh? I suppose you've considered your Mother in these plans?"

      "I have," said his daughter. "It is largely on her account that I'm going."

      "You think it'll be good for your Mother's health to lose your assistance, do you?"

      "I know she'll miss me; but I haven't left the work on her shoulders. I am going to pay for a girl—to do the work I've done. It won't cost you any more, Father; and you'll save some—for she'll do the washing too. You didn't object to Henderson's going—at eighteen. You didn't object to Minnie's going—at seventeen. Why should you object to my going—at twenty-one."

      "I haven't objected—so far," replied her father. "Have your plans also allowed for the affection and duty you owe your parents?"

      "I have done my duty—as well as I know how," she answered. "Now I am twenty-one, and self-supporting—and have a right to go."

      "O yes. You have a right—a legal right—if that's what you base your idea of a child's duty on! And while you're talking of rights—how about a parent's rights? How about common gratitude! How about what you owe to me—for all the care and pains and cost it's been to bring you up. A child's a rather expensive investment these days."

      Diantha flushed, she had expected this, and yet it struck her like a blow. It was not the first time she had heard it—this claim of filial obligation.

      "I have considered that position, Father. I know you feel that way—you've often made me feel it. So I've been at some pains to work it out—on a money basis. Here is an account—as full as I could make it." She handed him a paper covered with neat figures. The totals read as follows:

      Miss Diantha Bell,

       To Mr. Henderson R. Bell, Dr.

       To medical and dental expenses... $110.00

       To school expenses... $76.00

       To clothing, in full... $1,130.00

       To board and lodging at $3.00 a week... $2,184.00

       To incidentals... $100.00

       ———— $3.600.00

      He studied the various items carefully, stroking his beard, half in anger, half in unavoidable amusement. Perhaps there was a tender feeling too, as he remembered that doctor's bill—the first he ever paid, with the other, when she had scarlet fever; and saw the exact price of the high chair which had served all three of the children, but of which she magnanimously shouldered the whole expense.

      The clothing total was so large that it made him whistle—he knew he had never spent $1,130.00 on one girl's clothes. But the items explained it.

      Materials, three years at an average of $10 a year... $30.00

       Five years averaging $20 each year... $100.00

       Five years averaging $30 each year... $50.00

       Five years averaging $50 each year... $250.00

       ———- $530.00

      The rest was "Mother's labor", averaging twenty full days a year at $2 a day, $40 a year. For fifteen years, $600.00. Mother's labor—on one child's, clothes—footing up to $600.00. It looked strange to see cash value attached to that unfailing source of family comfort and advantage.

      The school expenses puzzled him a bit, for she had only gone to public schools; but she was counting books and slates and even pencils—it brought up evenings long passed by, the sewing wife, the studying children, the "Say, Father, I've got to have a new slate—mine's broke!"

      "Broken, Dina," her Mother would gently correct, while he demanded, "How did you break it?" and scolded her for her careless tomboy ways. Slates—three, $1.50—they were all down. And slates didn't cost so much come to think of it, even the red-edged ones, wound with black, that she always wanted.

      Board and lodging was put low, at $3.00 per week, but the items had a footnote as to house-rent in the country, and food raised on the farm. Yes, he guessed that was a full rate for the plain food and bare little bedroom they always had.

      "It's what Aunt Esther paid the winter she was here," said Diantha.

      Circuses—three... $1.50

       Share in melodeon... $50.00

      Yes, she was one of five to use and enjoy it.

      Music lessons... $30.00

      And quite a large margin left here, called miscellaneous, which he smiled to observe made just an even figure, and suspected she had put in for that purpose as well as from generosity.

      "This board account looks kind of funny," he said—"only fourteen years of it!"

      "I didn't take table-board—nor a room—the first year—nor much the second. I've allowed $1.00 a week for that, and $2.00 for the third—that takes out two, you see. Then it's $156 a year till I was fourteen and earned board and wages, two more years at $156—and I've paid since I was seventeen, you know."

      "Well—I guess you did—I guess you did." He grinned genially. "Yes," he continued slowly, "I guess that's a fair enough account. 'Cording to this, you owe me $3,600.00, young woman! I didn't think it cost that much to raise a girl."

      "I know it," said she. "But here's the other side."

      It was the other side. He had never once thought of such a side to the case. This account was as clear and honest as the first and full of exasperating detail. She laid before him the second sheet of figures and watched while he read, explaining hurriedly:

      "It was a clear expense for ten years—not counting help with the babies. Then I began to do housework regularly—when I was ten or eleven, two hours a day; three when I was twelve and thirteen—real work you'd have had to pay for, and I've only put it at ten cents an hour. When Mother was sick the year I was fourteen, and I did it all but the washing—all a servant would have done for $3.00 a week. Ever since then I have done three hours a day outside of school, full grown work now, at twenty cents an hour. That's what we have to pay here, you know."

      Thus it mounted up:

      Mr. Henderson R. Bell,

       To Miss Diantha Bell, Dr.

       For labor and services!!!!!

       Two years, two hours a day at 10c. an hour... $146.00

       Two years, three hours a day at 10c. an hour... $219.00

       One year, full wages at $5.00 a week... $260.00

       Six years and a half, three hours a day at 20c... $1423.50

       ———— $2048.50

      Mr. Bell meditated carefully on these figures. To think of that child's labor footing up to two thousand dollars and over! It was lucky a man had a wife and daughters to do this work, or he could never support a family.

      Then came her school-teaching years. She had always been a fine scholar and he had felt very proud of his girl when she got a good school position in her eighteenth year.

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