A Pair of Silk Stockings
by Kate Chopin
Little Missus Sommers one day found
herself the unexpected owner of fifteen dollars. It seemed to her a very large
amount of money. The way it filled up her worn money holder gave her a feeling
of importance that she had not enjoyed for years.
The question of investment was one
she considered carefully. For a day or two she walked around in a dreamy state
as she thought about her choices. She did not wish to act quickly and do
anything she might regret. During the quiet hours of the night she lay awake
considering ideas.
A dollar or two could be added to
the price she usually paid for her daughter Janie’s shoes. This would guarantee
they would last a great deal longer than usual. She would buy cloth for new
shirts for the boys. Her daughter Mag should have another dress. And still
there would be enough left for new stockings — two pairs per child. What time
that would save her in always repairing old stockings! The idea of her little
family looking fresh and new for once in their lives made her restless with
excitement.
The neighbors sometimes talked of
the «better days» that little Missus Sommers had known before she had ever
thought of being Missus Sommers. She herself never looked back to her younger
days. She had no time to think about the past. The needs of the present took
all her energy.
Missus Sommers knew the value of
finding things for sale at reduced prices. She could stand for hours making her
way little by little toward the desired object that was selling below cost. She
could push her way if need be.
But that day she was tired and a
little bit weak. She had eaten a light meal—no! She thought about her day.
Between getting the children fed and the house cleaned, and preparing herself
to go shopping, she had forgotten to eat at all!
When she arrived at the large
department store, she sat in front of an empty counter. She was trying to
gather strength and courage to push through a mass of busy shoppers. She rested
her hand upon the counter.
She wore no gloves. She slowly grew
aware that her hand had felt something very pleasant to touch. She looked down
to see that her hand lay upon a pile of silk stockings. A sign nearby announced
that they had been reduced in price. A young girl who stood behind the counter
asked her if she wished to examine the silky leg coverings.
She smiled as if she had been asked
to inspect diamond jewelry with the aim of purchasing it. But she went on
feeling the soft, costly items. Now she used both hands, holding the stockings
up to see the light shine through them.
Two red marks suddenly showed on her
pale face. She looked up at the shop girl.
«Do you think there are any size
eights-and-a-half among these?»
There were a great number of
stockings in her size. Missus Sommers chose a black pair and looked at them
closely.
«A dollar and ninety-eight cents,»
she said aloud. «Well, I will buy this pair.»
She handed the girl a five dollar
bill and waited for her change and the wrapped box with the stockings. What a
very small box it was! It seemed lost in her worn old shopping bag.
Missus Sommers then took the
elevator which carried her to an upper floor into the ladies’ rest area. In an
empty corner, she replaced her cotton stockings for the new silk ones.
For the first time she seemed to be taking a rest from the tiring act of thought. She had let herself be controlled by some machine-like force that directed her actions and freed her of responsibility.
For the first time she seemed to be taking a rest from the tiring act of thought. She had let herself be controlled by some machine-like force that directed her actions and freed her of responsibility.
How good was the touch of the silk
on her skin! She felt like lying back in the soft chair and enjoying the
richness of it. She did for a little while. Then she put her shoes back on and
put her old stockings into her bag. Next, she went to the shoe department, sat
down and waited to be fitted.
The young shoe salesman was unable
to guess about her background. He could not resolve her worn, old shoes with
her beautiful, new stockings. She tried on a pair of new boots.
She held back her skirts and turned
her feet one way and her head another way as she looked down at the shiny,
pointed boots. Her foot and ankle looked very lovely. She could not believe
that they were a part of herself. She told the young salesman that she wanted
an excellent and stylish fit. She said she did not mind paying extra as long as
she got what she desired.
After buying the new boots, she went
to the glove department. It was a long time since Missus Sommers had been
fitted with gloves. When she had bought a pair they were always «bargains,» so
cheap that it would have been unreasonable to have expected them to be fitted
to her hand.
Now she rested her arm on the
counter where gloves were for sale. A young shop girl drew a soft, leather
glove over Missus Sommers’s hand. She smoothed it down over the wrist and
buttoned it neatly. Both women lost themselves for a second or two as they
quietly praised the little gloved hand.
There were other places where money
might be spent. A store down the street sold books and magazines. Missus
Sommers bought two costly magazines that she used to read back when she had
been able to enjoy other pleasant things.
She lifted her skirts as she crossed
the street. Her new stockings and boots and gloves had worked wonders for her
appearance. They had given her a feeling of satisfaction, a sense of belonging
to the well-dressed crowds.
She was very hungry. Another time
she would have ignored the desire for food until reaching her own home. But the
force that was guiding her would not permit her to act on such a thought.
There was a restaurant at the
corner. She had never entered its doors. She had sometimes looked through the
windows. She had noted the white table cloths, shining glasses and waiters
serving wealthy people.
When she entered, her appearance
created no surprise or concern, as she had half feared it might.
She seated herself at a small table.
A waiter came at once to take her order. She ordered six oysters, a chop,
something sweet, a glass of wine and a cup of coffee. While waiting to be
served she removed her gloves very slowly and set them beside her. Then she
picked up her magazine and looked through it.
It was all very agreeable. The table
cloths were even more clean and white than they had seemed through the window.
And the crystal drinking glasses shined even more brightly. There were ladies
and gentlemen, who did not notice her, lunching at the small tables like her
own.
A pleasing piece of music could be
heard, and a gentle wind was blowing through the window. She tasted a bite, and
she read a word or two and she slowly drank the wine. She moved her toes around
in the silk stockings. The price of it all made no difference.
When she was finished, she counted
the money out to the waiter and left an extra coin on his tray. He bowed to her
as if she were a princess of royal blood.
There was still money in her purse,
and her next gift to herself presented itself as a theater advertisement. When
she entered the theater, the play had already begun. She sat between richly
dressed women who were there to spend the day eating sweets and showing off
their costly clothing. There were many others who were there only to watch the
play.
It is safe to say there was no one
there who had the same respect that Missus Sommers did for her surroundings.
She gathered in everything — stage and players and people — in one wide
sensation. She laughed and cried at the play. She even talked a little with the
women. One woman wiped her eyes with a small square of lace and passed Missus
Sommers her box of candy.
The play was over, the music
stopped, the crowd flowed outside. It was like a dream ended. Missus Sommers
went to wait for the cable car.
A man with sharp eyes sat opposite
her. It was hard for him to fully understand what he saw in her expression. In
truth, he saw nothing — unless he was a magician. Then he would sense her
heartbreaking wish that the cable car would never stop anywhere, but go on and
on with her forever.
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