The Gold of Chickaree
s to attend to just now besides his own pleasure. Instead, when the morning was half over, came Miss
ather languid way; then at last came and sank down in a very low position at Wych Hazel's feet on the carpet. She was a pretty girl; might have been extremely pretty, if her very pronounced style of manners had not drawn line
selfhouse and all;just to yourself! You needn't be married till y
ways wait,' sa
d Phinney.
bore,' said Hazel,
u wait?' sa
hind
it don't do to stay till you can't get a good chan
s made her rather tender towa
down by Phinney. 'I would not take e
it. And I came to see you on purpose to talk. I thought may
hy! Wha
somebodywho comes pester
ndow. The weary face was eloquent of the syst
do not like?
g everything I bid him; I have made rather a slave of him, that's a fact; it's awfully ridiculous! He doesn't dare say his soul's his own, if I say it's mine, and I snub him in every oth
back rath
would not like it,' she said. 'He i
like you, of course he'll stand anything you give him. O I like the bridle figure in the German that
to be ashamed to talk
for comfort. Why ought I to be ashamed to t
Kennedy. 'And I should scorn to have it over such a weak
ool so many at once. Why, Hazel, if you don't have your own way with men who let you, who will you have it with? Not the men who
rning,' said Hazel. 'I should get tired of
I am ready to wish I had never been born. What's the
to tell this girl what seemed to
all sorts of delightful things; and now they're all over; and it makes me so blue! To be sure, by and by, there will be the season in town;
n in the world, and so of course what could anybody do! A little shy of the subject too,
ays, this marriage will give me such a "position." Mamma don't conceive that one of her daughters can want position. But then, papa is a little lower down than mamma, you know. Well, I
ll your life, you think? b
lla is wholly engaged in getting up parties to go to Dane Rollo's reading
rows a little. 'And it is you who must live with himnot your f
se,' said Josephine, idly pulling thr
?' said her questioner, taking a
ain't the jolli
Hazel, knitting
ent point of view. Easy! But it comes back to that awful bo
,' said Wych
ha
And as you cannot be a man, s
oubtfully at her. 'I haven't come here to b
o be married." And if you marry some one you ca
I get?' sai
thout the bouquet
meditatively. 'And Hazel, a girl can't live withou
id Hazel. 'And if he never comes, be t
ll him, is poor?' said the young lady wi
Then if he thinks you can make him
ch to give any of us. He has just e
pose?' said Hazel. 'And I know there could be no starvati
you, even you've got to ask leave to speak; and then nobody listens to you! I mean, after you are too old to flirt. I don't want to be poor. And Mr. Charteris would put me beyond
t said somebody do
don't re
as poor. Which would seem to i
h somebody, and dance the German with him; and have good times at pic-nics and such things; but when it came to settling down in a little bit of a house, w
ed at herand th
ght person" on ingrain carpets,' she said mockin
least, when you can't have the right one. Well, you don't help me much. Annabella wanted to know if you wouldn't join a party
man,' said Hazel earnestly. 'What sort of a life
lse o
what you hav
I have to
You have seen people married often en
what they said. It's ju
Mr. Charteris consider
ght to the diamonds, you know, or anything else his money could buy. O dear!
right to be miserable. I advise you to go straight home and study the words, and try them with d
look studious of Wych Hazel herself; searching, somewhat wondering,
vienne que pourra,"
art Nightingale had anything but what he spendsO what's the use talki
ith a smile to herself over the duration of Mr. Nightingale's "life-long" heart
both,' said Josephin
has enough
her hostess laughing, 'th
ugh for one
n just enoug
ctedly. 'Who comes here tha
. But I seldom look a
suppose. If Annabella knew all, she wouldn't care so much about this match; for just as soon as I marry
her heart beginning to beat so that it half took her
!' replied Miss Powder, at last getting up from th
Hazel repeated. 'Thereyou ha
e. Everybody will know I didn't dress myself so on purpose; and besides, nobody w
enough of an excuse to get her away. But Miss Powder had no min
s not worth while; an
and meet my fa
t with more land?' said Haze
o out, you know,
Wych Hazel. 'How? I
a bit of land not worth much to him, just above Mr. Morton's ground that that pirate has bought; just above the mills. If Paul Charteris ca
zel seriously. 'Her
ose things. Do you know
es
r power. I don't know what it means, nor how he'll do it; but Mr. Rollo's mills will stop. And in
hed herself at last,
d away in her li