“As the door creaketh on his hinges, so the slugger turneth on his bed.” Liza Wopp’s voice was compelling in its significance. Through the rose-lit dreams of Moses, the sound and the awful words were like the threatenings of an approaching storm.
 
“Yeh , I’m comin’.”
 
Moses’ teeth . It was not cold, but wash-day meant to the unhappy boy a  round of duties.
 
“Oh Mosey,” cried Betty at the breakfast table, being first on the scene to arrange her flowers, “we’ll hev a spellin’ match to-day I bet.”
 
“Don’t care a doughnut,” answered Moses , “I’d ruther turn the washin’ machine any day than stand like a goose spellin’ words any arss can spell.”
 
Betty playfully thrust a small  into one of the fresh biscuits on the table and bore it,  on the  weapon,  to her plate. This was for the amusement of Moses, but instead of laughing as he was expected to do, he eyed his little sister with assumed .
 
“You carnt spell so smart anyways,” he ventured. Betty turned her  nose up at him and suddenly bounced up from the table.
 
“Oh, poor li’l Nancy wants in!” She raised the window and gently lifted the cat into the room. Running to her place at the table, she poured half of her cup of milk into a saucer and set it in a sunny spot on the floor.
 
“There Nancy,” she whispered, “is a sunbeam for breakfast dipped in milk.”
 
The sunbeam somehow got into the internal decorations of Nancy and filtered out through her eyes. Their  depths seemed to have turned into liquid gold.
 
Jethro, lying on a mat at the door, was   a bone. Nancy, having finished her milk, and still enjoying its flavor from her whiskers, as Betty remarked, stealthily approached her  playmate. A slight  took place concerning the ownership of the bone. It was not long before Jethro walked out of the room, perceptibly toeing in, and probably reflecting that life was too short to  over a bare bone anyway.
 
Mrs. Wopp was too busy to eat breakfast in the orthodox fashion. She could be heard in the kitchen preparing for the trying  of wash-day. Out in the yard the head of the house was busy feeding the .
 
Clank! Clank! Clank!
 
The sound was an  warning to Moses, to finish his breakfast with all possible speed.
 
“Good-by Dad and Mar and Mosey,” called Betty as she sped down the path toward the school-house.
 
Moses heaved a sigh, as he entered the kitchen and took his stand at the washing-machine. One hundred and thirty-seven times that  barrel had to be turned before the dirt accumulated by the Wopp family during the week could be .
 
The chinking began in earnest. Moses stood, turning till each  on his ruddy face shone with honest sweat.
 
“Now Moses,” announced his mother, “Jist for a change an’ rest like, turn this here separator.”
 
Another sound in a somewhat higher key was heard. Moses had simply  in his domestic symphony of  from a major task to a  one. As a change and  recreation, Moses was allowed to turn the small wheat-mill. Ninety soul-stirring turns it required to empty the hopper once, and he must turn out enough flour for a  of bread. His youthful soul was in revolt at such servitude. He had no sympathy to  on the children of Israel in  . Making bricks for Pharoah was infantile amusement compared to his labor.
 
“The Lord loveth a cheerful liver, Moses,” said his mother encouragingly, as she saw the growing  of the boy’s . Mrs. Wopp had never forgotten a certain  service, during which she had studied a text in gold lettering of old English type on the wall. The uncertain light of stained glass falling on the last word had made it difficult to read. But at last realizing that a sound liver and cheerfulness are closely associated, she had seen no  in her translation of the text.
 
“All this turnin’ is good for the liver too you know,” she continued, as her son’s vinegary expression remained unaltered.
 
“Yeh,”  Moses, “this here turnin’ machines every Monday makes me sick. I aint got no liver left to be cheerful.”
 
Mrs. Wopp was much too energetically engaged to enter into fuller argument. She busied herself preparing the tubs for , singing in a high tremolo, “Shall we gather at the river?”
 
“Now Moses,” she called at the end of the third verse, “git the water for the rinsin’.” The clanking  and slowly died down to a complaining . It might have been some monster suffering from indigestion.
 
Mrs. Wopp’s eagle eye, again rested on the lowering face of her offspring.
 
“Moses iny boy, yer bile must be riz; this very night you git a dose of physic.” Moses lower lip dropped lower and lower.
 
“Take care ole boy, you’ll trip on yer lip in another minute.”
 
Moses, his feelings by this time  to a state of down-right rebellion, grasped a pail in either hand and sought the peaceful atmosphere of the river.
 
When Betty returned from school in the afternoon, she  snowy billowing apparel on the clothes-line. Mrs. Wopp, being very  in the matter of using up flour and sugar sacks for underwear, had a motley collection of garments suspended by wooden . A night-shirt of Mr. Wopp’s bore the  “Three Roses” dimly outlined in pink, while on the southern portion of a pair of more intimate garments could be discerned, fading into palest blue. “Great Western Mills.” The wind was causing a  time among the cheerful array of reconstructed sacks, and as Betty ran down the path singing “Twenty froggies went to school,” a sugar sack sleeve of Moses’ shirt embraced a flour sack  of his father’s undergarment; and “Pure  Sugar“  “Ogiveme’s Mills.” Betty cheerfully performed her task of bringing in the clothes  with wind and sunshine. She thought the sweetest smell in the world next to morning-glories and nasturtiums was the smell of clean clothes fresh from the line.
 
“They smell like the sunbeams was sprinklin’ them with scent,” she declared as she and Moses brought the last basketful into the house. Mrs. Wopp’s nightgown of ample proportions was left out a little longer being still somewhat damp.
 
As she went about her work, Betty’s braids of fair hair tied with wisps of faded red ribbon stood out stiffly from her head. Her  were not quite grown in yet and she presented a comical appearance blinking in the sun as she regarded Moses who was  her.
 
“Gee! Betty,” laughed the boy, “yer eyes look orful yet, this is the fust good shake my sides hev felt to-day, it’s jist been ’orrible the way Mar was jawred.”
 
The basket piled high with snowy  and cotton seemed almost to  the brim. Betty pressed the clothes down with her brown hands, while the complaining boy enlarged on the  details of that trying wash-day and on the manner in which his mother had teased him. The child’s sense of humor outbalanced even her sympathy and a  of laughter rang out. Her laugh was a long delicious trill, as though a bird had dropped from the clouds singing still with the sunrise  in its notes. Moses paused long enough for a procession of commas and semicolons to pass by. Then seeing his disappointment in her apparent lack of sympathy, Betty hastened to console him.
 
“Never mind Mosey, Next Monday I’m goin’ to ask Mar to let me stay home and turn the nasty mouldy machine.”
 
“Oh no Betty,” Moses tones were of an elder-brotherly authority, “yer li’l han’s aint meant fer sich servitood. I’d not stan’ by an’ see you do that.” With all his teasing at times, Moses adored his little foster-sister. He idealized her, and as Mrs. Wopp had often remarked, whenever Betty left his presence he saw her  into heaven in a “Whirlwin’ of fire, an’ go-cart of flame.”
 
As that energetic lady  about the kitchen the same evening setting the bread, her voice rose in a series of trills and other embellishments as she sang “Where is my wanderin’ boy to-night?”
 
Balancing her voice on a very high note she popped her head through the dining-room door to speak to her husband. He was seated at the table reading “The Family .” His straggling grey locks were disordered with his mental effort and formed a  of irregular design on his shining forehead. Mrs. Wopp’s voice, in a moment, was safe on terra firma.
 
“Ebenezer, you might bring in my  robe, bein’s I’m so busy an’ Mose an’ Betty’s gone to bed.”
 
“All right Lize, I’ll jist make a note of that.”
 
There was room on the slip of paper for only this last item, so numerous had been the demands, during this busy day, on Mr. Wopp’s memory.
 
He returned his notes to his pocket with the assurance of one whose unreliable memory has been  and rendered infallible. Nevertheless the voluminous folds of Eliza Wopp’s cotton nightgown fluttered all night under the  heavens.
	
				 
		   			
		
        