The Torch and Other Tales by Eden Phillpotts
page 26 of 301 (08%)
page 26 of 301 (08%)
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"And, if she don't?" asked Mr. Cobley. "Then Jane's in the street and it will be her death, because at her age you can't transplant her. You hook her out of that nice little house and she'll wilt away like a flower and very soon die of it." Jack said no more, for he seldom wasted words, but he turned the matter over in his mind and took occasion to see Jane Pedlar a few days after and find out if what his mother had said was true. "Because, ma'am," he said; "such things sound a thought contrary to religion and justice in my mind." "They be," admitted Jane. "They be clean contrary to justice and religion both; but justice and religion are got so weak in Little Silver, that nothing don't surprise me." Well, Jack was all for caution, and he said but little. He ordained, however, to look into the problem on his mother's account, and no better man could have done it. His first thought was whether farmer might not be reasonable. "Maybe the maiden's only holding off the young man as maidens will, and be the right one for him after all," he said. "Maybe 'tis so," his mother replied, "but meantime poor dear Jane Pedlar be suffering far too much for an old woman." So Jack, he takes occasion to have a sight of young Bewes. They met riding |
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