[Jeremy by Hugh Walpole]@TWC D-Link book
Jeremy

CHAPTER VI
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Then turning to Mary he added: "We'll pretend to do what she tells us and not do it really.

That's much the easiest." A week is a short time, especially at the beginning of a shining and burning May, but Aunt Amy did her best not only with the children but with the servants, and even old Jordan, the gardener, who had been with the Cole family for twenty years.

During that short week the cook, the parlourmaid, Rose, the housemaid, and the bootboy all gave notice, and Mrs.Cole was only able to keep them (on her return) by raising the wages of all of them.

Jordan, who was an old man with a long white beard, said to her when she advised him to plant pinks where he had planted tulips and tulips where he had planted pinks, and further inquired why the cauliflower that he sent in was so poor and the cabbages so small: "Leave things alone, Miss, Nature's wiser than we be, not but what you mayn't mean well, but fussin's never done any good where Nature's concerned, nor never will"; and when she said that he was very rude to her, he shook his head and answered: "Maybe yes, and maybe no.

What's rude to one ain't rude to another"-- out of which answer she could make nothing at all.
In the schoolroom she sustained complete defeat.


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