| PART 2
27. CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
 (continued)She was just recovering from one of these attacks when she was
 prevailed upon to escort Miss Crocker to a lecture, and in return
 for her virtue was rewarded with a new idea.  It was a People's
 Course, the lecture on the Pyramids, and Jo rather wondered at the
 choice of such a subject for such an audience, but took it for
 granted that some great social evil would be remedied or some great want
 supplied by unfolding the glories of the Pharaohs to an audience
 whose thoughts were busy with the price of coal and flour, and whose
 lives were spent in trying to solve harder riddles than that of the Sphinx. They were early, and while Miss Crocker set the heel of her
 stocking, Jo amused herself by examining the faces of the people who
 occupied the seat with them.  On her left were two matrons, with
 massive foreheads and bonnets to match, discussing Women's Rights and
 making tatting.  Beyond sat a pair of humble lovers, artlessly
 holding each other by the hand, a somber spinster eating peppermints out
 of a paper bag, and an old gentleman taking his preparatory nap
 behind a yellow bandanna.  On her right, her only neighbor was a
 studious looking lad absorbed in a newspaper. It was a pictorial sheet, and Jo examined the work of art nearest
 her, idly wondering what fortuitous concatenation of circumstances
 needed the melodramatic illustration of an Indian in full war costume, 
 tumbling over a precipice with a wolf at his throat, while two
 infuriated young gentlemen, with unnaturally small feet and big eyes,
 were stabbing each other close by, and a disheveled female was flying away
 in the background with her mouth wide open.  Pausing to turn a page, 
 the lad saw her looking and, with boyish good nature offered half his
 paper, saying bluntly, "want to read it? That's a first-rate story." Jo accepted it with a smile, for she had never outgrown her
 liking for lads, and soon found herself involved in the usual labyrinth
 of love, mystery, and murder, for the story belonged to that class of
 light literature in which the passions have a holiday, and when the
 author's invention fails, a grand catastrophe clears the stage of one
 half the dramatis personae, leaving the other half to exult over
 their downfall. |