The White Riband - A Young Female's Folly by Fryniwyd Tennyson Jesse
page 30 of 70 (42%)
page 30 of 70 (42%)
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Primrose, but it was one into which she could only penetrate fitly
clad. What wonder then that, brought up without any tutoring in the excellencies of Nature, she should display the sad lack of true feeling so deplored in her later by that nice arbiter of taste, Miss Flora Le Pettit? CHAPTER V: IN WHICH LOVEDAY ESSAYS THE WHITE GOWN Chapter V IN WHICH LOVEDAY ESSAYS THE WHITE GOWN With morning came thoughts of the practical side of the business and, the worst of her daily duties performed, Loveday ascended to her chamber to examine the scanty contents of her small oaken chest. It was a sea-chest, legacy from her roving father, who had given it to her mother, and often enough had Aunt Senath expressed scruples about allowing her to keep a gift obtained so godlessly. Perhaps the fact that it was a good chest and better than anything she could have bought had something to do with Aunt Senath's complaisance in permitting it to remain. Perhaps Loveday's fierce look in defence of it was not without influence also. The chest stayed in the little attic room, and made of it, to Loveday's eyes, a place peculiarly her own, and rich because of |
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