News from the Duchy by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
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page 16 of 243 (06%)
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kept wavin' back to us as they went out o' sight around the curve,
an' maybe for a mile beyond. I never heard," Mr. Tucker wound up meditatively, "if they ever reached the Land's End. I wonder?" "But, excuse me once more," said I. "How came the train to stop as it did?" "To be sure. I said just now that the curiousest things in life were, gen'rally speakin', the simplest. One o' the schoolchildren in the fore part of the train--a small nipper of nine--had put his head out o' the carriage window and got his cap blown away. That's all. Bein' a nipper of some resource, he wasted no time, but touched off the communicatin' button an' fetched the whole train to a standstill. George Simmons, the guard, told me all about it last week, when I happened across him an' asked the same question you've been askin'. George was huntin' through the corridors to find out what had gone wrong; that's how the blind men stepped out without his noticin'. He pretended to be pretty angry wi' the young tacker. 'Do 'ee know,' says George, 'it's a five pound fine if you stop a train without good reason?' 'But I _had_ a good reason,' says the child. 'My mother gave 'levenpence for that cap, an' 'tis a bran' new one.'" OUR LADY OF GWITHIAN. "Mary, mother, well thou be! Mary, mother, think on me; Sweete Lady, maiden clean, |
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