Brothers of Pity and Other Tales of Beasts and Men by Juliana Horatia Gatty Ewing
page 36 of 188 (19%)
page 36 of 188 (19%)
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I was about to remonstrate with them for their imprudence, when I found
out that it was the old woman who was moaning and muttering to herself." "What is the matter with her?" asked Mrs. Hedgehog. "I was curious to know myself," said I, "and from what I have overheard, I think I can inform you. She is the tinker's mother, and judging from what he said the other night, was not by any means indulgent to him when he was a child. She is harsh enough to his young brats now; but it appears that she was devoted to an older son, one of the children of his first wife; and that it is for the loss of this grandchild that she vexes herself." "Is he dead?" "No, my dear, but--" "Has he been flitted?" "Something of the kind, I fear. He has been taken to prison." "Dear, dear!" said Mrs. Hedgehog; "what a trial to a mother's feelings! Will they bake him?" "I think not," said I. "I fancy that he is tethered up as a punishment for taking what did not belong to him; and the grandmother's grievance seems to be that she believes he was unjustly convicted. She thinks the real robber was a gipsy. Just as if I were taken, and my skin nailed to the keeper's door for pheasant's eggs which I had never had the pleasure of eating." |
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