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  

• How do we judge the people around us — by their money, wealth


and possessions? Or is there something of more enduring value
to look for in a person?
• This story is a sensitive account of how a poor young girl is
judged by her classmates. Wanda Petronski is a young Polish
girl who goes to school with other American children in an American
town. These other children see Wanda as ‘different’ in many
ways. Can you guess how they treat her?
• Read the information in the box below. Find out more about this
community (or about a related topic) from an encyclopedia, or
the Internet.

The Polish-American Community


in the United States
The first Polish immigrants arrived in America in 1608, but
the largest wave of Polish immigration occurred in the early
twentieth century, when more than one million Poles migrated
to the United States. The Polish State did not exist at that
time, and the immigrants were identified according to their
country of origin rather than to ethnicity. They were identified
as Russian Poles, German Poles and Austrian Poles.
One of the most notable Polish-American communities
is in Chicago and its suburbs; so Chicago is sometimes called
the second largest ‘Polish’ city in the world, next only to
Warsaw, the capital of Poland. Polish-Americans were
sometimes discriminated against in the United States, as
were the Irish, Italians, and Jews.
According to the United States 2000 Census, 667,414
Americans of age five years and older reported Polish as the
language spoken at home, which is about 1.4 per cent of
the people who speak languages other than English, or
0.25 per cent of the U.S. population.

2022-23
T ODAY , Monday, Wanda Petronski was not in her
seat. But nobody, not even Peggy and Madeline, the
girls who started all the fun, noticed her absence. Seating arrangement in
Usually Wanda sat in the seat next to the last seat room 13
in the last row in Room Thirteen. She sat in the
corner of the room where the rough boys who did
not make good marks sat, the corner of the room
where there was most scuffling of feet, most roars   
of laughter when anything funny was said, and most 
mud and dirt on the floor.   

Wanda did not sit there because she was rough
and noisy. On the contrary, she was very quiet and
rarely said anything at all. And nobody had ever
heard her laugh out loud. Sometimes she twisted
her mouth into a crooked sort of smile, but that
was all.
Financial condition Nobody knew exactly why Wanda sat in that seat,
of Wanda


unless it was because she came all the way from


Boggins Heights and her feet were usually caked
with dry mud. But no one really thought much
about Wanda Petronski, once she sat in the corner
of the room.
 The time when they thought about Wanda was
outside of school hours — at noon-time when they
were coming back to school or in the morning early
before school began, when groups of two or three,

WANDA
or even more, would be talking and laughing on
their way to the school yard.
Then, sometimes, they waited for Wanda — to
have fun with her.
The next day, Tuesday, Wanda was not in school,
either. And nobody noticed her absence again.
But on Wednesday, Peggy and Maddie, who sat
down front with other children who got good marks
and who didn’t track in a whole lot of mud, did
notice that Wanda wasn’t there. Peggy was the most
popular girl in school. She was pretty, she had
many pretty clothes and her hair was curly. Maddie What was the reason that only
was her closest friend. The reason Peggy and Maddie Maddie and Peggy noticed Wanda's
absence?
noticed Wanda’s absence was because Wanda had
made them late to school. They had waited and

2022-23
Maddie
waited for Wanda, to have some fun with her, and
she just hadn’t come.
They often waited for Wanda Petronski — to have

Peggy
fun with her.
  
1. Where in the classroom does Wanda sit and why?
2. Where does Wanda live? What kind of a place do you think it is?
3. When and why do Peggy and Maddie notice Wanda’s absence?
4. What do you think “to have fun with her” means?

Wanda Petronski. Most of the children in Room


Thirteen didn’t have names like that. They had
names easy to say, like Thomas, Smith or Allen.
There was one boy named Bounce, Willie Bounce, Funny name other than
and people thought that was funny, but not funny Wanda Petronski
in the same way that Petronski was.
Wanda didn’t have any friends. She came to
school alone and went home alone. She always Do Wanda had any friends?
wore a faded blue dress that didn’t hang right. It   
was clean, but it looked as though it had never 
been ironed properly. She didn’t have any friends, 
but a lot of girls talked to her. Sometimes, they
surrounded her in the school yard as she stood
watching the little girls play hopscotch on the worn 
hard ground.    

“Wanda,” Peggy would say in a most courteous 
manner as though she were talking to Miss Mason. 
“Wanda,” she’d say, giving one of her friends a nudge,   
“tell us. How many dresses did you say you had 
hanging up in your closet?”
How did the girls mock Wanda

MADDIE PEGGY
WANDA
2022-23
“A hundred,” Wanda would say.
“A hundred!” exclaimed all the little girls
incredulously, and the little ones would stop playing 
hopscotch and listen. 

“Yeah, a hundred, all lined up,” said Wanda. 
Then her thin lips drew together in silence.
“What are they like? All silk, I bet,” said Peggy.
“Yeah, all silk, all colours.”
“Velvet, too?”
“Yeah, velvet too. A hundred dresses,” Wanda
Wanda would repeat stolidly. “All lined up in my closet.” 
Then they’d let her go. And then before she’d 

gone very far, they couldn’t help bursting into
shrieks and peals of laughter.
A hundred dresses! Obviously, the only dress Wanda's answer over
Wanda had was the blue one she wore every day. So how many dresses and
why did she say she had a hundred? What a story! shoes she have


“How many shoes did you say you had?”


“Sixty pairs. All lined up in my closet.”
Cries of exaggerated politeness greeted this. “All
alike?”
“Oh, no. Every pair is different. All colours. All
 lined up.”
Peggy, who had thought up this game, and
Maddie, her inseparable friend, were always the
last to leave. Finally Wanda would move up the
street, her eyes dull and her mouth closed, hitching
her left shoulder every now and then in the funny
way she had, finishing the walk to school alone. Peggy's explanation when
she was being termed as
Peggy was not really cruel. She protected small cruel to Wanda
children from bullies. And she cried for hours if she 
saw an animal mistreated. If anybody had said to 
her, “Don’t you think that is a cruel way to treat 

Wanda?” she would have been very surprised. Cruel? 
Why did the girl say she had a hundred dresses?
Anybody could tell that that was a lie. Why did she
want to lie? And she wasn’t just an ordinary person,
else why did she have a name like that? Anyway,
they never made her cry.
As for Maddie, this business of asking Wanda
every day how many dresses and how many hats,

How was Maddie different but similar to Wanda?


Maddie was different from Wanda as her name was not as funny and meaningless as that of Wanda.
Secondly, though she was poor, she managed to dress well with the old dresses given by others.
She also did not tell lies about the hundred dresses like Wanda.

2022-23
Maddie's financial condition
and how many this and that she had was bothering Why Maddie was thankful to god that
her. Maddie was poor herself. She usually wore she doesn't live in Boggins Height?
somebody’s hand-me-down clothes. Thank goodness, 
she didn’t live up on Boggins Heights or have a 
  
funny name.
  
Sometimes, when Peggy was asking Wanda those 
questions in that mocking polite voice, Maddie felt

embarrassed and studied the marbles in the palm   
of her hand, rolling them around and saying nothing 
herself. Not that she felt sorry for Wanda, exactly. 
She would never have paid any attention to Wanda 
if Peggy hadn’t invented the dresses game. But
suppose Peggy and all the others started in on her Why Maddie was embarrased?
next? She wasn’t as poor as Wanda, perhaps, but
Maddie is embarrassed by the questions Peggy asks
she was poor. Of course she would have more sense Wanda because she is also poor and understands what
Wanda must be going through. She also wears dresses
than to say she had a hundred dresses. Still she handed down by a rich family. Though she is an American,
she can relate to Wanda in some ways and doesn't want
anyone to tease Wanda because of her dress or her name.
would not like for them to begin on her. She wished
Peggy would stop teasing Wanda Petronski.
  
1. In what way was Wanda different from the other children? 
2. Did Wanda have a hundred dresses? Why do you think she said
she did?
3. Why is Maddie embarrassed by the questions Peggy asks Wanda? Is
she also like Wanda, or is she different?
Why Maddie started writing a note to Peggy and why at the end she tore it?
Today, even though they had been late to school,
Maddie was glad she had not had to make fun of Peggy  
Wanda. She worked her arithmetic problems absent-
mindedly. “Eight times eight — let’s see…” She
wished she had the nerve to write Peggy a note,
because she knew she never would have the courage
to speak right out to Peggy, to say, “Hey, Peg, let’s
stop asking Wanda how many dresses she has.”
When she finished her arithmetic she did start a
note to Peggy. Suddenly she paused and shuddered.
Wanda Maddie
She pictured herself in the school yard, a new target 
for Peggy and the girls. Peggy might ask her where 

she got the dress that she had on, and Maddie 
would have to say it was one of Peggy’s old ones
that Maddie’s mother had tried to disguise with
Why could'nt Maddie gather the courage to stop Peggy from bullying Wanda?
Though Maddie wanted Peggy to stop teasing Wanda,
she didn't ask her to do so as she was afraid of being
the next target of such taunts and teasing.

2022-23
new trimmings so no one in Room Thirteen would
recognise it.
If only Peggy would decide of her own accord to
stop having fun with Wanda. Oh, well! Maddie ran
her hand through her short blonde hair as though to
push the uncomfortable thoughts away. What
difference did it make? Slowly Maddie tore into bits
the note she had started. She was Peggy’s best friend,
and Peggy was the best-liked girl in the whole room.
Peggy could not possibly do anything that was really
wrong, she thought.
As for Wanda, she was just some girl who lived
up on Boggins Heights and stood alone in the school
yard. She scarcely ever said anything to anybody.
The only time she talked was in the school yard about
her hundred dresses. Maddie remembered her telling
about one of her dresses, pale blue with coloured


trimmings. And she remembered another that was


brilliant jungle green with a red sash. “You’d look
like a Christmas tree in that,” the girls had said in
pretended admiration. 
Thinking about Wanda and her hundred dresses 
 all lined up in the closet, Maddie began to wonder
who was going to win the drawing and colouring
contest. For girls, this contest consisted of designing Why everyone believed that
dresses and for boys, of designing motorboats. Peggy will win the drawing
Probably Peggy would win the girls’ medal. Peggy drew competition? were they
right?
better than anyone else in the room. At least, that’s
what everybody thought. She could copy a picture in
a magazine or some film star’s head so that you could
almost tell who it was. Oh, Maddie was sure Peggy
would win. Well, tomorrow the teacher was going to
announce the winners. Then they’d know.
The next day it was drizzling. Maddie and Peggy 
hurried to school under Peggy’s umbrella. Naturally, 

on a day like this, they didn’t wait for Wanda
Petronski on the corner of Oliver Street, the street
that far, far away, under the railroad tracks and up
the hill, led to Boggins Heights. Anyway, they
weren’t taking chances on being late today, because
today was important.

2022-23
“Do you think Miss Mason will announce the
winners today?” asked Peggy.
“Oh, I hope so, the minute we get in,” said
Maddie. “Of course, you’ll win, Peg.”
“Hope so,” said Peggy eagerly.
The minute they entered the classroom, they
stopped short and gasped. There were drawings all
over the room, on every ledge and windowsill, dazzling
colours and brilliant, lavish designs, all drawn on 
great sheets of wrapping paper. There must have been 
a hundred of them, all lined up. These must be the
drawings for the contest. They were! Everybody
stopped and whistled or murmured admiringly. Who won among boys?
As soon as the class had assembled, Miss Mason
announced the winners. Jack Beggles had won for
the boys, she said, and his design for an outboard
motor was on exhibition in Room Twelve, along with
the sketches by all the other boys.
“As for the girls,” she said, “although just one or
two sketches were submitted by most, one girl —
and Room Thirteen should be proud of her — this 
one girl actually drew one hundred designs — all
different and all beautiful. In the opinion of the Winner among girls
judges, any one of the drawings is worthy of winning
the prize. I am very happy to say that Wanda
Petronski is the winner of the girls’ medal.

 

2022-23
Unfortunately, Wanda has been absent from school
for some days and is not here to receive the
applause that is due to her. Let us hope she will be
back tomorrow. Now class, you may file around the
room quietly and look at her exquisite drawings.” 
The children burst into applause, and even the  
 
boys were glad to have a chance to stamp on the
floor, put their fingers in their mouths and whistle,  



though they were not interested in dresses.



“Look, Peg,” whispered Maddie. “There’s that blue 
one she told us about. Isn’t it beautiful?” 
“Yes,” said Peggy, “And here’s that green one.
Boy, and I thought I could draw.”
Was Wanda telling the truth from beginning
 about her dresses?
  
1. Why didn’t Maddie ask Peggie to stop teasing Wanda? What was she
afraid of?
2. Who did Maddie think would win the drawing contest? Why?
3. Who won the drawing contest? What had the winner drawn?

1. How is Wanda seen as different by the other girls? How do they treat her?
2. How does Wanda feel about the dresses game? Why does she say that she
has a hundred dresses?
3. Why does Maddie stand by and not do anything? How is she different from
Peggy? (Was Peggy’s friendship important to Maddie? Why? Which lines in
the text tell you this?)
4. What does Miss Mason think of Wanda’s drawings? What do the children
think of them? How do you know?

Did Wanda have a hundred dresses? Why do you think she said she did?

No, she did not have a hundred dresses because she was poor and wore the same faded dress to school everyday.
She had an inferiority complex. In order to hide the complex and impress the other girls, she always said that she had a hundred dresses.

2022-23
MCQ's
1. Why does Wanda say that she has a hundred dresses?
(a) Because she has
(b) To counter other girls
(c) She loves to rant
(d) None of the Above

2. Why does Maddie stand by and not do anything?

(a) Because she was herself victim

(b) Because she doesn’t have courage

(c) Because she doesn’t want to

(d) None of the Above

3. Who secretly disliked how Wanda was being treated?

(a) Peggy

(b) Cecile

(c) Maddie

(d) Jake

4. What was Wanda’s full name?

(a) Wanda Polenski

(b) Wanda Petronski

(c) Wanda Patrick

(d) Wanda Polish

5. What tells you that Peggy wasn’t cruel?

(a) protected small children from bullies

(b) couldn’t stand animals getting mistreated

(c) did not make Wanda cry

(d) all of the above

6. Which classroom did they all sit in?

(a) Room fifteen

(b) Room thirteen

(c) Room twelve

(d) Room eleven

7. Who is the author of “The Hundred Dresses”?


(a) Liam O’ Flaherty
(b) Frederick Forsyth
(c) Roal Dahl
(d) El Bsor Ester

8. Why did Wanda used to sit there?

A) she didn’t score very good marks

B) her feet were filled with dirt and mud

C) her friends sat there

D) no one really knows


BOGGINS HEIGHTS
9. Who was the most popular girl in school?

A) Wanda

B) Maddie

C) Peggy

D) all of them

Answers-
1b, 2b, 3c, 4b, 5d, 6b, 7a, 8b, 9c

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