like her mother in some respects, isn't she, dearie?" And then he would lapse into audible musings over his extraordinary feeling for little girls, which had come over him since his own daughter's birth, and with the most pitifully tense, unsmiling sweetness he would say, "How do you think she would like me for her father?" or, "Just think, Nan, how grand it is to be a father!" and I would pat his hand and swallow to keep back my tears for I knew he was but remarking his very heart's desires.
Often in her two-and-a-half-to-three-year-old days I would call Elizabeth Ann into my room, which was at the far end of the apartment, front, and she would come trudging down the hall, her "Harding book" under one arm, and her other favorite, an abridged edition of Webster's Dictionary sometimes dragged along by a few of its leaves, which was the easiest way for her small hand to grasp such a grown-up volume. And once, when we snapped her picture in the back yard beside her doll carriage, her Harding book lay in the carriage, open to Mr. Harding's picture, and the whole "took" very distinctly.
Here in New York in 1924, when I brought her on from Chicago to be with me, she was five years old. She had the same love for Mr. Harding then as when she was more babyish, but spoke of it now in an amazingly grown-up fashion. For instance, she listened when those present thought she was not listening, and naturally heard Mr. Harding discussed pro and con. But whatever she heard did not influence her deep-rooted love for the man who was her father. She so often said to me during that winter of 1924-25, raising the question herself, "We won't let anybody talk about our dear Mr. Harding, will we, Nan dear?" And I would gaze at her and reiterate softly, "No, indeed, precious Bijiba, we won't let anybody talk about our dear Mr. Harding," knowing she meant "against" him, when she said