A Little Rebel by Mrs. (Margaret Wolfe Hamilton) Hungerford
page 7 of 134 (05%)
page 7 of 134 (05%)
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Yes. It is all right! Why on earth hadn't he read it _first?_ So the girl is to be sent to live with her aunt after all--an old lady--maiden lady. Evidently living somewhere in Bloomsbury. Miss Jane Majendie. Mother's sister evidently. Wynter's sisters would never have been old maids, if they had resembled him, which probably they did--if he had any. What a handsome fellow he was! and such a good-natured fellow too. The professor colors here in his queer sensitive way, and pushes his spectacles up and down his nose, in another nervous fashion of his. After all, it was only this minute he had been accusing old Wynter of anything but good nature. Well! He had wronged him there. He glances at the letter again. He has only been appointed her guardian, it seems. Guardian of her fortune, rather than of her. The old aunt will have the charge of her body, the--er--pleasure of her society--_he,_ of the estate only. Fancy Wynter, of all men, dying rich--actually _rich_. The professor pulls his beard, and involuntarily glances round the somewhat meagre apartment, that not all his learning, not all his success in the scientific world--and it has been not unnoteworthy, so far--has enabled him to improve upon. It has helped him to live, no doubt, and distinctly outside the line of _want,_ a thing to be grateful for, as his family having in a measure abandoned him, he, on his part, had abandoned his family in a _measure_ also (and with reservations), and it would have been impossible to him, of all men, |
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