[The History of David Grieve by Mrs. Humphry Ward]@TWC D-Link book
The History of David Grieve

CHAPTER XI
12/41

'Yo jes go whoam.
Wigson, he'll be out direckly, an he'll do yo a hurt iv he finds yo.

Coom, I'll put yo i' the way for Kinder.' And before he could gather his will to resist, she had dragged him up with her strong countrywoman's arms and was leading him along the road to the entrance of the lane he had come by.
'Lor, yo _are_ bleedin,' she said compassionately; 'he shud ha thowt as how yo wor nobbut a lad--an it wor he begun aggin fust.
He's a big bully is Wigson.' And impulsively raising her apron she applied it to the blood, David quite passive all the while.

The great clumsy lass nearly kissed him for pity.
'Now then,' she said at last, turning him into the lane, 'yo know your way, an I mun goo, or they'll be raisin the parish arter me.
Gude neet to yo, an keep out o' Wigson's seet.

Rest yursel a bit theer--agen th' wall.' And leaving him leaning against the wall, she reluctantly departed, stopping to look back at him two or three times in spite of the rain, till the angle of the wall hid him from view.
The rain poured down and the wind whistled through the rough lane.
David presently slipped down upon a rock jutting from the wall, and a fevered, intermittent sleep seized him--the result of the spirits he had been drinking.

His will could oppose no resistance; he slept on hour after hour, sheltered a little by an angle of the wall, but still soaked by rain and buffeted by the wind.
When he awoke he staggered suddenly to his feet.


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