[Jerome, A Poor Man by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman]@TWC D-Link book
Jerome, A Poor Man

CHAPTER XV
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When spring came, too, old pauper women and wretched, half-witted girls and children squatted like toads in the green fields outside the ploughed ones, digging greens in company with grazing cows, and looked up with unexpected flashes of human life when footsteps drew near.

There was a thrifty Overseer in the poorhouse, and the village paupers, unless they were actually crippled and past labor, found small repose in the bosom of the town.

They grubbed as hard for their lodging and daily bread of charity, with its bitterest of sauces, as if they worked for hire.
Old Peter Thomas, for one, had never toiled harder to keep the roof of independence over his head than he toiled tilling the town fields.
Old Peter, even in his age and indigence, had an active mind.

Only one panacea was there for its workings, and that was tobacco.

When the old man had--which was seldom--a comfortable quid with which to busy his jaws, his mind was at rest; otherwise it gnawed constantly one bitter cud of questioning, which never reached digestion.


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