Elder Conklin and Other Stories by Frank Harris
page 22 of 216 (10%)
page 22 of 216 (10%)
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He did as he was told, and in ten minutes was by her side again. After a
long pause, she began, with quivering lips: "George, I'm sorry--so sorry. 'Twas all my fault! But I didn't know"-- and she choked down a sob--"I didn't think. "I want you to tell me how your sisters act and--an' what they wear and do. I'll try to act like them. Then I'd be good, shouldn't I? "They play the pianner, don't they?" He was forced to confess that one of them did. "An' they talk like you?" "Yes." "An' they're good always? Oh, George, I'm jest too sorry for anythin', an' now--now I'm too glad!" and she burst into tears. He kissed and consoled her as in duty bound. He understood this mood as little as he had understood her challenge to love. He was not in sympathy with her; she had no ideal of conduct, no notion of dignity. Some suspicion of this estrangement must have dawned upon the girl, or else she was irritated by his acquiescence in her various phases of self-humiliation. All at once she dashed the tears from her eyes, and winding herself out of his arms, exclaimed: "See here, George Bancroft! I'll jest learn all they know--pianner and all. I ken, and I will. I'll begin right now. You'll see!" And her blue eyes flashed with the glitter of steel, while her chin was thrown up in defiant vanity and self-assertion. |
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