[Springhaven by R. D. Blackmore]@TWC D-Link book
Springhaven

CHAPTER XXXIV
6/15

For here she saw in plenteous show, and appetising excellence, a many many of the very things she had vainly craved from Mr.Swipes.And if it was so now in November, what must it have been two months ago?
Why, poor Miss Faith--Mary Knuckledown's idol, because of her kindness and sad disappointment--had asked a little while ago for a bit of salsify, not for herself--she never thought of herself--but for a guest who was fond of it; also the Admiral himself had called out for a good dish of skirrets.

But no; Mr.Swipes said the weather and the black blight had destroyed them.

Yet here they were; Mary could swear to them both, with their necks above-ground, as if waiting for the washing! Cauliflowers also (as the cooks call broccoli of every kind), here they were in abundance, ten long rows all across the middle square, very beautiful to behold.

Some were just curling in their crinkled coronets, to conceal the young heart that was forming, as Miss in her teens draws her tresses around the first peep of her own palpitation; others were showing their broad candid bosoms, with bold sprigs of nature's green lace crisping round; while others had their ripe breasts shielded from the air by the breakage of their own broad fringe upon them.
Mary knew that this was done by Mr.Swipes himself, because he had brought her some in that condition; but the unsuspicious master had accepted his assurance that "they was only fit for pigs as soon as the break-stalk blight come on 'em"; and then the next day he had bought the very same, perhaps at ninepence apiece, from Mr.Cheeseman's window, trimmed and shorn close, like the head of a monk.

"I'll see every bit of 'un, now that I be here." Mrs.Knuckledown spoke aloud, to keep up her courage.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books