[Only an Incident by Grace Denio Litchfield]@TWC D-Link book
Only an Incident

CHAPTER VI
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CHAPTER VI.
THE PICNIC.
Gerald's and Olly's visit was quite an event in the quiet Lane household.
Olly flagrantly broke every existing custom in it with the sublime autocracy of childhood, and regained his health at the cost of the peace of mind of every individual with whom he came in contact, from nervous Miss Lydia down to the protesting servants; while Gerald was one of those intense personalities whose influence seems to recreate the entire atmosphere about them at once, go where they will.

Poor Miss Lydia was afraid of her quick speech and brusque ways and decided opinions, and spent more hours than usual upstairs alone in her own little room, and wore her best cap whenever she appeared below, as a sort of mute appeal to the young lady's indulgence.

But Gerald, in her robust health, had no sympathy whatever with invalids as a class, and for "chronic nerves" she had an absolute contempt, unmitigated by even the best cap's gay ribbons.
"It's altogether a matter of will," she asserted.

"People needn't be ill if they are only resolved not to be so." "Humph!" said Mrs.Lane, who had chanced to overhear; and there was a trifle more tenderness than usual in her manner when she went up later to put the mid-day cup of beef-tea into her sister's thin hands, and stood looking compassionately down at her.

"Nothing is easier than to insist that a thing is so and so, just because there's no way to prove that it isn't so." "How you do always talk in proverbs, Sister Sophy!" said Miss Lydia, admiringly.


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