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The Rosary

Chapter 2 INTRODUCES THE HONOURABLE JANE

Word Count: 1556    |    Released on: 29/11/2017

that the Honourable Jane was the one person who might invite herself to Overdene or Portland Place, arrive when she chose, stay as long as she pleased, and leave when it suited

of Meldrum a peculiarly undesirable acquisition. So Jane was given to understand that she might come whenever she liked, and stay as long as she liked, but on the same footing

for a blind lover who, not having eyes for the plainness of her face or the massiveness of her figure, might have drawn nearer, and apprehended the wonder of her as a woman, experiencing the wealth of tenderness of which she was capable, the blessed comfort of the shelter of her love,

twithstanding their superficial loveliness, possessed few of the

ies, she, whose motherhood would have

ence was rarely suspected; and as she accompanied to perfection,

e absolutely first with any one. Her mother's death had occurred during her infancy, so that she had not even the most shadowy re

f her mistress, chancing to be in the neighbourhood some twelve years later, call

into the schoolroom to see Miss Jane, her heart full of memories of the "swe

he flow of good Sarah's reminiscences, poured forth so freely in the housekeeper's room below, and reduced her to looking tearfully around the room, remarking that she remembered choosing the blessed wall-paper

ongst others, that her mother used to kiss her little hands, "ah, many a time

r eyelids. Thus Sarah departed under the impression that Miss Jane had grown up into a rather a heartless young lady. But Fraulein and Jebbie never knew why, from that day onward, the hands, of which they had so often had cause to

was to advertise for Sarah Matthews and engage her as her own maid, at a sala

ng a girl, for having inherited his plainness rather than her mother's beauty. Parents are apt to see no injustice in the fact that they are

home during vacations, his mother and his profession took precedence in his mind of the lonely child, whose devotion pleased him and whose strong character and original mental development interested him. Later on he married a lovely girl, as unlike Jane as one woman could possibly be to another; but stil

it difficult for her to understand or tolerate the little artificialities of society, or the trivial weaknesses of her own sex. Women to whom she had shown special kin

ge and mess-room scrapes, as they would never have dreamed of doing to their own mothers. She knew perfectly well that they called her "old Jane" and "pretty Jane" and "dea

t to cut blooms in her rose-garden. Only, as Jane found out, you cannot decorously lead up to a scolding if you are very keen on golf, and go golfing with a person who is equally enthusiastic, and who

ng number seven in three and not talking about it! I've jolly well made up my mind to send no more bouquets to Tou-Tou. Hang it, boys! You can't see yourself at champagne suppers with a dancing-woman, when you've walked round the links, on a day l

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