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The English Orphans by Mary Jane Holmes
page 69 of 371 (18%)
"Miss Grundy, if you will only let me wash Alice in my room, I'll
promise she shan't disturb you again."

After a great deal of scolding and fretting about whims stuck-up
notions, and paupers trying to be somebody, Miss Grundy, who really
did not care a copper where Alice was washed, consented, and Mary ran
joyfully up stairs with the bucket of clear, cold water, which was so
soothing in its effects upon the feeble child, that in a short time
she fell into a deep slumber. Mary gently laid her down, and then
smoothing back the few silken curls which grew around her forehead,
and kissing her white cheek, she returned to the kitchen, determined
to please Miss Grundy that day, if possible.

But Miss Grundy was in the worst of humors, and the moment Mary
appeared she called out, "Go straight back, and fetch that young one
down here. Nobody's a goin' to have you racin' up stairs every ten
minutes to see whether or no she sleeps with her eyes open or shet.
She can stay here as well as not, and if she begins to stir, Patsy can
jog the cradle."

Mary cast a fearful glance at Patsy, who nodded and smiled as if in
approbation of Miss Grundy's command. She dared not disobey, so Alice
and her cradle were transferred to the kitchen, which was all day long
kept at nearly boiling heat from the stove room adjoining. Twice Mary
attempted to shut the door between, but Miss Grundy bade her open it
so she could "keep an eye on all that was going on." The new sights
and faces round her, and more than all, Patsy's strange appearance,
frightened Alice, who set up such loud screams that Miss Grundy shook
her lustily, and then cuffed Patsy, who cried because the baby did,
and pulling Mary's hair because she "most knew she felt gritty," she
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