A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches by Sarah Orne Jewett
page 135 of 454 (29%)
page 135 of 454 (29%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
village children. I had such splendid ideas about that, but they all
faded out. I went into the school-house one day, and I thought I would rather die than be shut up there from one week's end to another." "No," said Dr. Leslie, with grave composure. "No, I don't feel sure that you would do well to make a teacher of yourself." "I wish that I had known when school was over that I must take care of myself, as one or two of the girls meant to do, and sometimes it seems as if I ought," said Nan, after a silence of a few minutes, and this time it was very hard to speak. "You have been so kind, and have done so much for me; I supposed at first there was money enough of my own, but I know now." "Dear child!" the doctor exclaimed, "you will never know, unless you are left alone as I was, what a blessing it is to have somebody to take care of and to love; I have put you in the place of my own little child, and have watched you grow up here, with more thankfulness every year. Don't ever say another word to me about the money part of it. What had I to spend money for? And now I hear you say all these despairing things; but I am an old man, and I take them for what they are worth. You have a few hard months before you, perhaps, but before you know it they will be over with. Don't worry yourself; look after Marilla a little, and that new hand-maid, and drive about with me. To-morrow I must be on the road all day, and, to tell the truth, I must think over one or two of my cases before I go to bed. Won't you hand me my old prescription book? I was trying to remember something as I came home." Nan, half-comforted, went to find the book, while Dr. Leslie, puffing |
|