The Morning in Question(s)
Posted: Sat Apr 11, 2026 2:13 pm
Abby is supposedly facing 3 tasks in a fairly tight morning window:
1. She has to get the meat home in enough time for Bridget to prepare the noon meal.
2. She is supposedly going on a sick call, which is the most important errand, and may also be time-sensitive.
3. And in the middle of that, she is supposedly still fussing upstairs with decorative pillowcases for a bed that won’t be needed until Monday, and Lizzie suggests maybe she decided to sew new cotton pillowcases not just slip existing pillowcases on the throw pillows at the foot of the bed.
The meat errand is the most concretely time-sensitive. It is already after 9 a.m. If Abby is going out, visiting someone sick, shopping for meat, and getting back in time for dinner (noon meal term back then, supper to them is what we call dinner now) preparation, how much spare time does she really have? And if the sick call matters, how long can she politely stay when she still has shopping to do and the household dinner schedule is bearing down on her?
So why, under those constraints, would she choose that moment to go back upstairs and mess with pillow slips or possible sewing work for a room not needed for three more days?
And if this is really the household situation, wouldn’t the practical thing be one of these:
“Bridget, the windows can be done another time, go get the meat for dinner.” or, “Lizzie, instead of reading magazines and idling, go get the meat. Bridget is busy with the windows and I have to go out.”
That seems far more natural than:
- Bridget is occupied,
- Abby has an outside errand,
- noon meal logistics are pending,
- All this and Abby is still devoting attention to upstairs pillowcase business.
To me this makes the pillowcase story feel less like a natural household priority and more like a narrative filler for Abby’s missing time.
I'm off to Fall River for the first time tomorrow. I'll try to get plenty of relevant photos, including camgarsky's request of the view from the sink area door by the screen door back into the kitchen.
1. She has to get the meat home in enough time for Bridget to prepare the noon meal.
2. She is supposedly going on a sick call, which is the most important errand, and may also be time-sensitive.
3. And in the middle of that, she is supposedly still fussing upstairs with decorative pillowcases for a bed that won’t be needed until Monday, and Lizzie suggests maybe she decided to sew new cotton pillowcases not just slip existing pillowcases on the throw pillows at the foot of the bed.
The meat errand is the most concretely time-sensitive. It is already after 9 a.m. If Abby is going out, visiting someone sick, shopping for meat, and getting back in time for dinner (noon meal term back then, supper to them is what we call dinner now) preparation, how much spare time does she really have? And if the sick call matters, how long can she politely stay when she still has shopping to do and the household dinner schedule is bearing down on her?
So why, under those constraints, would she choose that moment to go back upstairs and mess with pillow slips or possible sewing work for a room not needed for three more days?
And if this is really the household situation, wouldn’t the practical thing be one of these:
“Bridget, the windows can be done another time, go get the meat for dinner.” or, “Lizzie, instead of reading magazines and idling, go get the meat. Bridget is busy with the windows and I have to go out.”
That seems far more natural than:
- Bridget is occupied,
- Abby has an outside errand,
- noon meal logistics are pending,
- All this and Abby is still devoting attention to upstairs pillowcase business.
To me this makes the pillowcase story feel less like a natural household priority and more like a narrative filler for Abby’s missing time.
I'm off to Fall River for the first time tomorrow. I'll try to get plenty of relevant photos, including camgarsky's request of the view from the sink area door by the screen door back into the kitchen.