Colin Clink, Volume 2 (of 3) - Charles Hooton

Colin Clink, Volume 2 (of 3)

CONTENTS

Displays Miss Sowersoft's character in a degree of perfection unparalleled on any previous exhibition.—Fanny's obstinacy incites Mrs. Clink to turn her adrift upon the world.
HAVING entered the room, Miss Sowersoft first peeped out to see that no listeners were in the neighbourhood, and then cautiously closed the door,—all the blood in her veins mustering up in red rebellion against poor Fanny, as she stared at that young woman through two dilated eyes, with something of the expression of a hand-grenade with a newly-lit fusee.
“Take a chair, Mrs. Clink,” said Miss Sowersoft, in a tone which denoted more than her ordinary attention to etiquette, as she still kept her eyes on Fanny, in order to make her feel her own insignificance the more keenly by the contrast; “do be seated;” and she drew up another chair for herself, while Fanny was left standing, as best became a servant—and a culprit. “Now, I am quite ready to begin.”
“Have it out of her at once—I would not stand on ceremony with anybody like her!”
“What is it, Fanny,” asked Mrs. Clink, “that the doctor has been talking to you about?”
“I cannot answer that,” replied Fanny. “I have promised to tell nobody, and I must keep my word.”
“There!—that's sufficient!” cried Miss Sowersoft, “that is plenty! You see what it is. She has promised , and will not explain it. I knew before, as well as if I had heard, how it would all be. She has compromised' herself, just as such a young face-proud hussy was sure to do. It is a wonder to me, Mrs. Clink, how you have contrived to keep her respectable so long.”
“I did not intend to talk to you , Miss Sowersoft,” replied, Fanny; “but I will tell you that I have always been too respectable for what you seem to think.”

Charles Hooton
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2014-02-14

Темы

England -- Social life and customs -- 19th century -- Fiction; Man-woman relationships -- England -- Fiction

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