The Story of Bessie Costrell by Mrs. Humphry Ward
page 34 of 93 (36%)
page 34 of 93 (36%)
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'Oh my God!' she said to herself. 'My God!'
When she was halfway up, she met a neighbour. 'Have yer seen Isaac?' Bessie asked her, panting. 'Ee's at the club, arn't 'ee?' said the woman. 'Well they won't be up yet. Jim tolt me as Muster Perris'--'Muster Perris' was the vicar of Clinton Magna--''ad got a strange gen'leman stayin with 'im, and was goin to take him into the club to-night to speak to 'em. 'Ee's a bishop, they ses--someun from furrin parts.' Bessie threw her good-night and climbed on. When she reached the cottage the lamp was flaming on the table and the fire was bright. Her lame boy had done all she had told him, and her miserable heart softened. She hurriedly put out some food for Isaac. Then she lit a candle and went up to look at the children. They were all asleep in the room to the right of the stairs--the two little boys in one bed, the two little girls in the other, each pair huddled together against the cold, like dormice in a nest. Then she looked, conscience-stricken, at the untidiness of the room. She had bought the children a wonderful number of new clothes lately, and the family being quite unused to such abundance, there was no place to keep them in. A new frock was flung down in a corner just as it had been taken off; the kitten was sleeping on Arthur's last new jacket; a smart hat with a bunch of poppies in it was lying about the floor; and under the iron beds could be seen a confusion of dusty boots, new and old. The children were naturally reckless like their mother, and they had been |
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