| PART 1
9. CHAPTER NINE
 (continued)As Meg went rustling after, with her long skirts trailing, 
 her earrings tinkling, her curls waving, and her heart beating, 
 she felt as if her fun had really begun at last, for the mirror
 had plainly told her that she was `a little beauty'.  Her friends
 repeated the pleasing phrase enthusiastically, and for several
 minutes she stood, like a jackdaw in the fable, enjoying her
 borrowed plumes, while the rest chattered like a party of magpies. "While I dress, do you drill her, Nan, in the management of her
 skirt and those French heels, or she will trip herself up.  Take
 your silver butterfly, and catch up that long curl on the left side
 of her head, Clara, and don't any of you disturb the charming work
 of my hands," said Belle, as she hurried away, looking well pleased
 with her success. "You don't look a bit like yourself, but you are very nice.
 I'm nowhere beside you, for Belle has heaps of taste, and you're
 quite French, I assure you.  Let your flowers hang, don't be so
 careful of them, and be sure you don't trip," returned Sallie, trying
 not to care that Meg was prettier than herself. Keeping that warning carefully in mind, Margaret got safely
 downstairs and sailed into the drawing rooms where the Moffats and
 a few early guests were assembled.  She very soon discovered that
 there is a charm about fine clothes which attracts a certain class
 of people and secures their respect.  Several young ladies, who
 had taken no notice of her before, were very affectionate all of
 a sudden.  Several young gentlemen, who had only stared at her at
 the other party, now not only stared, but asked to be introduced, 
 and said all manner of foolish but agreeable things to her, and
 several old ladies, who sat on the sofas, and criticized the rest
 of the party, inquired who she was with an air of interest.  She
 heard Mrs. Moffat reply to one of them... "Daisy March--father a colonel in the army--one of our first
 families, but reverses of fortune, you know; intimate friends of
 the Laurences; sweet creature, I assure you; my Ned is quite wild
 about her." |