A Woman's Impression of the Philippines by Mary Helen Fee
page 45 of 244 (18%)
page 45 of 244 (18%)
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excused herself on the ground of a previous engagement. She went away
blithely, leaving him in the hands of the three. Nor was he seen or heard of on those premises again. Doubtless he still thinks bitterly of the effects of higher education on the feminine temperament. It was duplicity--duplicity not to be expected of a girl who could stick her head out of a window and hail the chance passer-by as innocently as she did. CHAPTER VI From Manila to Capiz I Am Appointed to a School at Capiz, on Panay Island--We Anchor at the Lovely Harbor of Romblon--The Beauty of the Night Trip to Iloilo--We Halt There for a Few Days--Examples Showing That the Philippines Are a "MaƱana" Country--Kindness of Some Nurses to the Teachers--An Uncomfortable Journey from Iloilo to Charming Capiz. In due time our appointments were made, and great was the wrath that swelled about the Exposition Building! The curly-haired maiden who had fallen in love with a waiter on the _Thomas_ wept openly on his shoulder, to the envy of staring males. A very tall young woman who was the possessor of an M.A. degree in mathematics from the University of California, and who was supposed to know more about conic sections than any woman ought to know, was sent up among the Macabebes, who may in ten generations arrive at an elementary idea of what is meant by conic sections. Whether she was embittered by the thought of her |
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