[Little Women by Louisa May Alcott]@TWC D-Link bookLittle Women CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR 7/25
Her readers were not particular about such trifles as grammar, punctuation, and probability, and Mr.Dashwood graciously permitted her to fill his columns at the lowest prices, not thinking it necessary to tell her that the real cause of his hospitality was the fact that one of his hacks, on being offered higher wages, had basely left him in the lurch. She soon became interested in her work, for her emaciated purse grew stout, and the little hoard she was making to take Beth to the mountains next summer grew slowly but surely as the weeks passed.
One thing disturbed her satisfaction, and that was that she did not tell them at home.
She had a feeling that Father and Mother would not approve, and preferred to have her own way first, and beg pardon afterward.
It was easy to keep her secret, for no name appeared with her stories.
Mr.Dashwood had of course found it out very soon, but promised to be dumb, and for a wonder kept his word. She thought it would do her no harm, for she sincerely meant to write nothing of which she would be ashamed, and quieted all pricks of conscience by anticipations of the happy minute when she should show her earnings and laugh over her well-kept secret. But Mr.Dashwood rejected any but thrilling tales, and as thrills could not be produced except by harrowing up the souls of the readers, history and romance, land and sea, science and art, police records and lunatic asylums, had to be ransacked for the purpose.
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