Эдит Несбит

The Incomplete Amorist


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       Edith Nesbit

      The Incomplete Amorist

      Published by Good Press, 2020

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066422967

       Chapter I. The Inevitable

       Chapter II. The Irresistible

       Chapter III. Voluntary

       Chapter IV. Involuntary

       Chapter V. The Prisoner

       Chapter VI. The Criminal

       Chapter VII. The Escape

       Chapter VIII. The One and the Other

       Chapter IX. The Opportunity

       Chapter X. Seeing Life

       Chapter XI. The Thought

       Chapter XII. The Rescue

       Chapter XIII. Contrasts

       Chapter XIV. Renunciation

       Chapter XV. On Mount Parnassus

       Chapter XVI. "Love and Tupper"

       Chapter XVII. Interventions

       Chapter XVIII. The Truth

       Chapter XIX. The Truth with a Vengeance

       Chapter XX. Waking-up Time

       Chapter XXI. The Flight

       Chapter XXII. The Lunatic

       Chapter XXIII. Temperatures

       Chapter XXIV. The Confessional

       Chapter XXV. The Forest

       Chapter XXVI. The Miracle

       Chapter XXVII. The Pink Silk Story

       Chapter XXVIII. "And so—"

      Chapter I. The Inevitable

      Book I.—The Girl

       Table of Contents

      CHAPTER I.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      The Inevitable

      "No. The chemises aren't cut out. I haven't had time. There are enough shirts to go on with, aren't there, Mrs. James?" said Betty.

      "We can make do for this afternoon, Miss, but the men they're getting blowed out with shirts. It's the children's shifts as we can't make shift without much longer." Mrs. James, habitually doleful, punctuated her speech with sniffs.

      "That's a joke, Mrs. James," said Betty. "How clever you are!"

      "I try to be what's fitting," said Mrs. James, complacently.

      "Talk of fitting," said Betty, "If you like I'll fit on that black bodice for you, Mrs. Symes. If the other ladies don't mind waiting for the reading a little bit."

      "I'd as lief talk as read, myself," said a red-faced sandy-haired woman; "books ain't what they was in my young days."

      "If it's the same to you, Miss," said Mrs. Symes in a thick rich voice, "I'll not be tried on afore a room full. If we are poor we can all be clean's what I say, and I keeps my unders as I keeps my outside. But not before persons as has real imitation lace on their petticoat bodies. I see them when I was a-nursing her with her fourth. No, Miss, and thanking you kindly, but begging your pardon all the same."

      "Don't mention it," said Betty absently. "Oh, Mrs. Smith, you can't have lost your thimble already. Why what's that you've got in your mouth?"

      "So it is!" Mrs. Smith's face beamed at the gratifying coincidence. "It always was my habit, from a child, to put things there for safety."

      "These cheap thimbles ain't fit to put in your mouth, no more than coppers," said Mrs. James, her mouth full of pins.

      "Oh, nothing hurts you if you like it," said Betty recklessly. She had been reading the works of Mr. G. K. Chesterton.

      A shocked murmur arose.

      "Oh, Miss, what about the publy kows?" said Mrs. Symes heavily. The others nodded acquiescence.

      "Don't you think we might have a window open?" said Betty. The May sunshine beat on the schoolroom windows. The room, crowded with the stout members of the "Mother's Meeting and Mutual Clothing Club," was stuffy, unbearable.

      A murmur arose far more shocked than the first.

      "I was just a-goin' to say why not close the door, that being what doors is made for, after all," said Mrs. Symes. "I feel a sort of draught a-creeping up my legs as it is."

      The door was shut.

      "You can't be too careful," said the red-faced woman; "we never know what a chill mayn't bring forth. My cousin's sister-in-law, she had twins, and her aunt come in and says she, 'You're a bit stuffy here, ain't you?' and with that she opens the window