The Argosy - Vol. 51, No. 5, May, 1891 by Various
page 114 of 151 (75%)
page 114 of 151 (75%)
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slowly, remarking, as she did so, "I don't want this glass to crack. I
might do nothing else but buy lamp-glasses if I left the turning-up of them to Sarah Ann. This one has been boiled, which, Mrs. Dodd says, is a good thing to make them stand heat." Then she broke off suddenly, and stared at her apprentice, exclaiming, "Nancy, child, how pale you look! You must leave off and go home. You shall have a nice cup of tea first. Where do you feel bad?" The sympathetic tone brought the tears to Nancy's eyes, perhaps more than the words, but she answered hastily: "Oh, indeed, dear Miss Michin, I need not go home. I have a headache, that is all, and I must not leave off before my time. I ought to stop later, and you so busy." "That frock of Emma Dodd's is just on finished, isn't it?" said Miss Michin, in answer. "All but the hooks," replied Nancy. "Then sew them on while I make some tea, and you can leave it at the post-office as you go." Nancy protested, but Miss Michin insisted, and in a short time the dress was pinned up in a dark cloth, and Nancy having drunk the tea, more to please her kind friend than because she thought it would cure her headache, donned the little jacket and fantastic hat, and went across to the post-office, which was also a shop of a general description. Mrs. Dodd was engaged in lighting her shop-window when Nancy entered. "I have brought Emma's dress, Mrs. Dodd," she began, when that lady had |
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