[Robbery Under Arms by Thomas Alexander Browne]@TWC D-Link bookRobbery Under Arms CHAPTER 9 8/13
I'll send to know how it gets on to-morrow.' 'No, miss; my grateful thanks, miss,' said Jim, opening his eyes and looking as if he'd like to drop down on his knees and pray to her.
'I shall never forget your goodness, Miss Falkland, if I live till I'm a hundred.' Then Jim bent his head a bit--I don't suppose he ever made a bow in his life before--and then drew himself up as straight as a soldier, and Miss Falkland made a kind of bow and smile to us all and passed out. Jim did shear all the same that afternoon, though the tally wasn't any great things.
'I can't go and lie down in a bunk in the men's hut,' he said; 'I must chance it,' and he did.
Next day it was worse and very painful, but Jim stuck to the shears, though he used to turn white with the pain at times, and I thought he'd faint.
However, it gradually got better, and, except a scar, Jim's hand was as good as ever. Jim sent back Mr.Falkland's handkerchief after getting the cook to wash it and iron it out with a bit of a broken axletree; but the strips of white handkerchief--one had C.F.in the corner--he put away in his swag, and made some foolish excuse when I laughed at him about it. She sent down a boy from the house next day to ask how Jim's hand was, and the day after that, but she never came to the shed any more.
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