Cinderella
crimped, or pleated afresh for them. They could talk of nothing but their ball dresses.
‘For my part,’ said the elder, ‘I shall wear a velvet cramoisie trimmed à l’Anglaise’—for she had a passion for cramoisie, and could not perceive how ill the colour went with her complexion. ‘I had thought of cloth-of-gold, but there’s the cost of the underskirt to be considered; and underskirts seem to grow dearer and dearer in these days. What a relief,’ she went on, ‘it must be to have money and not be forced to set one thing against another!’
‘I,’ said the younger, ‘must make shift with my old underskirt; that is, unless I can wheedle some money out of Papa’—for so, in their affection, they called their stepfather. ‘Cinderella can take out the worst stains to-morrow with a little eau-de-Cologne. I believe that, if she tries, she can make it look as good as new; and, at all events, it will give her something to do instead of wasting an afternoon. I don’t pretend that I like wearing an old underskirt, and I hope to make dear Papa sensible of this; but against it I shall have the gold-flowered robe, on which I am determined,
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