I have to restrain myself from starting this post in my finest Dickensian style: “Alone: In which the family begins to speculate about how MUCH trouble they’re in, and how truly dire this winter will be.”
We open this chapter with Laura and Mary working on their needlework projects in the sunny front room of the story building, expecting the company of friends Minnie Johnson and Mary Power. Mary Ingalls, in talking about the possibility of going to college, tells Laura she wishes that Laura could go to college, too. Laura counters that it’s likely she’ll be teaching school, and “I guess you care more about it than I do.”
Mary, in one of those rare moments of self-actualization, declares she really does want to go, and study “on and on.” She really hopes and prays that college will be in her future, and Laura encourages her.
Right until Laura can no longer see the stitches in the lace she’s knitting. The light is gone, the “air was gray and the note of the wind was rising.”
Pa had been out at the claim to haul in hay, and there’s a moment when all the women in the house, Ma included, fear for his safety. But before they can worry too much about him, Pa appears through the back door, laughing about his near miss.
Ma’s not laughing. But there’s not much she can do about Pa at this point, anyway, I suspect.
He goes out to do the chores while Ma gets dinner, and Ma’s question about whether the trains will get through stops the action. Pa responds cheerfully about how they’d lived without a railroad before, but gives Ma a warning look. And we’re all now worrying about the trains, in that one warning look Pa gives Ma.
As if it’s not enough to be enduring the blizzard, after supper, Pa uses the fiddle to repeat the melody of the winds outside. Ma’s had enough for the day, and quietly says, “We’ll likely hear enough of that without your playing it, Charles.” I get the feeling that Ma’s a little tired of Pa and his cheeriness.
Laura asks for music to warm them up, and Pa plays a variety of marches and jigs as Laura and Carrie dance, and even Ma’s toes are tapping.
At bedtime, no one wants to leave the cozy room with its music, but they dutifully march upstairs to a room so cold the nails in the ceiling are fuzzy with frost, making Laura feel “much colder.” Laura wraps hot irons from the stove in flannels to warm the beds, and the girls change quickly. Mary ducks under the covers first, and in another rare I’m-a-real-person moment, says, “God will hear us if we say our prayers under the covers.” Must’ve been cold!!
While Mary and Carrie snuggle down in their beds, shivering, trying to warm up, Laura goes to the window. She wants to see if she can see any kind of light at all. But “in the roaring night outside, there was not one speck of light.”
Mary’s grumpy at this point, and entreats Laura to come to bed to help warm it. The pair talk for a minute about Laura’s inability to see even the light from their own downstairs window. Carrie, with the help of the warm stove pipe beside her bed and the warm flatiron, was asleep as Ma brought Grace upstairs to tuck in next to her.
Ma asks if her girls are warm enough. They say they’re getting there.
And Laura contemplates this feeling of aloneness as she settles into bed. No light can be seen; no cry from outside, besides that constant wind, can be heard. The storm, she thought, had wild voices and an unnatural light of its own.
Though she was finally warm, Laura shivers. The family is truly, truly, alone.
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My mom hates (well, hates as in it makes her feel cold) the description of the frost on the nails are frequently brings it up whenever its cold out. I also find myself thinking about Laura’s blizzards when I want to complain about the cold…especially this winter with the Snowpocalypse!
I wonder why they didn’t sleep downstairs where it was warmer? I know they wouldn’t have fuel to keep the fire up at night but at least they wouldn’t have been in the drafty attic. And I know that there was another couple living with them but they could be upstairs ;-0
When I first read this chapter I worried over the whereabouts of Minnie Johnson and Mary Power. Laura expected them at any moment just before the storm shook the house and snuffed out the daylight. Had they started out for the Ingalls’ and been stranded in the sudden blast of the storm?! We learn that wasn’t the case, but I wondered about them as the girls went to sleep, a bit surprised that the Laura hadn’t made mention of them either.
Dr. Laura you stated there was another couple living with them. Can you tell us more about that or give us where to find out about that? I don’t know about that bit of history.
Thanks Joan
http://www.dahoudek.com/liw/laura/?p=589
At the end of the page, there is a a mention of the other couple: George and Maggie Masters.(note the name Masters)
I too have wondered why they all didn’t sleep downstairs together. It seem like they would sleep close and pile all the blankets on top to spread the body heat. Doesn’t sound like fun, but beats freezing to death!
I wondered why Pa didn’t take Laura with him to help with the hay, then they would make it back to town that much quicker.
I’ve always had a hard time comprehending exactly how cold that house must have been. With all the insulation our home have, it’s hard to grasp that they must have had one board between them and the outside world. The frost comes through!
I have a feeling they didn’t all sleep in the main room because of a Victorian sense of how it would look.
He wouldn’t have put his daughter in that much danger. There was a very real chance he could be caught out there in a blizzard and he wouldn’t have put her at risk.
It is such a shame that only the work train got through. I was wondering why they couldn’t bring something with them, but I’m sure they thought it would come the next day.
I think Ma didn’t like the sound of the wind being played, as it was a reminder of the blizzard, probably not in the mood for whimsy, I suppose that is a form of cheerfulness.
I live in an isolated place, and it is awful knowing that past the town, and ours isn’t much bigger, maybe 10 times bigger and not very wide, there is just miles and miles of trees to get to a larger place. I know there are people along the way in farms, but really there is us, then nothing it feels like.
They were probably quite warm upstairs after the initial shock of the cold. When I was little there were cold beds, though not like how cold their would have been. I am not sure why our beds are not as cold these days. I think mainly the loungerooms were heated in the 60s, but more the whole house these days where I live.
I think Minnie and Mary would have only taken a short time to cross the street, like on the day they got home from school in the blizzard. I think people crossed like Pa to visit the shops. Unlikely the storm would have hit just in that short time perhaps?
I think Pa would not have liked the possibility that Laura could get caught in the storm hauling hay. Only the Wilder boys and Pa went out of town during that winter to haul things.
I think Pa said that building was ceiled, I imagine that means the walls were lined?
It means they had a ceiling, not just a roof.
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