Sandra Belloni — Volume 2 by George Meredith
page 85 of 102 (83%)
page 85 of 102 (83%)
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again, making her voice distincter. The hand now returned her pressure
with force. She could feel that the person, whoever it was, stood collecting strength to speak. Then the words came-- "What do you mean by imitating that woman's brogue?" "Papa!" said Cornelia. "Why do you talk Irish in the dark? There, goodnight. I've just come up from the library; my candle dropped. I shouldn't have been frightened, but you talked with such a twang." "But I have just come from the library myself," said Cornelia. "I mean from the dining-room," her father corrected himself hastily. "I can't sit in the library; shall have it altered--full of draughts. Don't you think so, my dear? Good-night. What's this in your arm? Books! Ah, you study! I can get a light for myself." The dialogue was sustained in the hard-whispered tones prescribed by darkness. Cornelia kissed her father's forehead, and they parted. At breakfast in the morning it was the habit of all the ladies to assemble, partly to countenance the decency of matin-prayers, and also to give the head of the household their dutiful society till business called him away. Adela, in earlier days, had maintained that early rising was not fashionable; but she soon grasped the idea that a great rivalry with Fashion, in minor matters (where the support of the satirist might be counted on), was the proper policy of Brookfield. Mrs. Chump was given to be extremely fashionable in her hours, and began her Brookfield career |
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