A Maid of the Silver Sea by John Oxenham
page 91 of 332 (27%)
page 91 of 332 (27%)
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CHAPTER XI HOW GARD DREW NEARER TO HIS HEART'S DESIRE Gard's isolation was brought home to him when he endeavoured to find another lodging in Little Sark. Accommodation was, of course, limited. Many of the miners had to tramp in each day from Sark. There was still, in spite of all his tact and efforts, somewhat of a feeling against him as a new-comer, an innovator, a tightener of loose cords, and no one offered to change quarters to oblige him. And so, in the end, he took Grannie's advice and found a room in one of the thatch-roofed cottages which offered their white-washed shoulders to the road just where it rose out of the further side of the Coupée into Sark. They were quiet, farmer-fisher folk who lived there, having nothing to do with the mines and little beyond a general interest in them. When not at work, he was thrown much upon himself, and if in his rambles he chanced upon Bernel Hamon it was a treat, and if, as happened all too seldom, upon Nance as well, an enjoyment beyond words. But Nance was a busy maid, with hens and chickens, and cows and calves, and pigs and piglets claiming her constant attention, and it was only |
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