The Romantic by May Sinclair
page 12 of 208 (05%)
page 12 of 208 (05%)
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She stood leaning over the white gate, looking and thinking. Funny things, colts grazing. Short bodies that stopped at their shoulders; long, long necks hanging down like tails, pushing their heads along the ground. She could hear their nostrils breathing and the scrinch, scrinch of their teeth tearing the grass. You could be happy living on a farm, looking after the animals. You could learn farming. People paid. Suddenly she knew what she would do. She would do _that_. It wasn't reasonable to go on sitting in a stuffy office doing work you hated when you could pack up and go. She couldn't have stuck to it for five years if it hadn't been for Gibson--falling in love with him, the most unreasonable thing of all. She didn't care if you had to pay to learn farming. You had to pay for everything you learned. There were the two hundred pounds poor dear Daddy left, doing nothing. She could pay. She would go down to the farm now, this minute, and see if they would take her. As she crossed the field she heard the farmyard gate open and shut. The man came up towards her in the narrow path. He was looking at her as he came, tilting his head back to get her clear into his eyes under the shade of his slouched hat. She called to him. "Is this your farm?" And he halted. |
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